Thursday, September 30, 2021

Forced To Withdraw Complaint, Subjected To Banned Test, Alleges Sexually Assaulted IAF Officer

 


A 28-year old female Air Force officer at the Air Force Administrative College in Coimbatore, who was sexually assaulted, has levelled serious alllegations against the IAF authorities, including subjecting her to a banned finger test and also forcing her to withdraw the complaint against the accused Flight Lieutenant.

The charges found place in the FIR registered by the police based on the complaint by the woman officer at the All Woman Police Station, after the IAF authorities, including the Commandant, failed to take action till September 20 on the incident which happened on September 10.

The woman also alleged she was subjected to the ”two-finger test” at the Air Force Hospital to ascertain rape, which was banned by the Supreme Court a few years ago.

Police had arrested the accused Amitesh Harmukh on September 25 and he is in judicial custody.

Both the rape victim and the accused, hailing from Chhattisgarh, were part of a training course and had attended a party in the officers’ mess on the night of September 9.

The woman officer, in her complaint, said the incident occurred in the wee hours of the next day when she was sleeping after taking medicine for her leg injury and was assaulted by the drunk officer, who had narrated the incident to two of her batchmates who recorded the conversation between the trio.

She approached a Wing Commander over the incident, who came to the room along with a woman Wing Commander, who ”advised” her to think about the future, including the name and respect of the family, based on which she communicated to one of her friends that she was not going to lodge any complaint.

However, as both the Wing Commanders again approached her and told her to either file the complaint or give in writing that the episode was consensual, she subsequently mustered up courage and decided to file the complaint, amid the finger test in the evening in the hospital.

The victim further said she had handed over the mattress which had strains of the semen to two women doctors, the FIR said.

After cajoling by two senior officers, who informed her that the test was negative, the commandant asked her to withdraw the case in writing, saying if pursued, it will be flashed in the media and bring disrepute to the Air Force and herself, police said.

However, she went to the city police commissioner’s office on September 20 and from there the all-woman police station registered the case.

When contacted, a senior IAF officer, on condition of anonymity, refused to comment on the issue as the matter was in court and sensitive.

Meanwhile, the IAF had filed a petition in the court that the local police has no right to arrest the officer; it further said that the defence court is the only jurisdiction where a court martial can be conducted and therefore the accused should be handed over to the IAF.

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Active COVID-19 Cases Lowest In 194 Days

 

The death toll climbed to 4,47,751, with 378 fresh fatalities

The daily rise in coronavirus infections remained below 20,000 for the second consecutive day with 18,870 fresh cases recorded in a single day, while the active cases declined to 2,82,520, the lowest in 194 days, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Wednesday.

With the fresh cases, India's tally of COVID-19 cases rose to 3,37,16,451. 

The death toll climbed to 4,47,751 with 378 fresh fatalities, according to the data updated at 8 am.

The active cases comprise 0.84 per cent of the total infections, the lowest since March 2020, while the national COVID-19 recovery rate was recorded at 97.83 per cent, the highest since March 2020, the ministry said.

A decrease of 9,686 cases has been recorded in the active COVID-19 caseload in a span of 24 hours.

As many as 15,04,713 tests were conducted on Tuesday, taking the total cumulative tests conducted so far for detection of COVID-19 in the country to 56,74,50,185.

The daily positivity rate was recorded at 1.25 per cent. It has been less than three per cent for the last 30 days. The weekly positivity rate was recorded at 1.82 per cent. It has been below three per cent for the last 96 days, according to the ministry.

The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 3,29,86,180, while the case fatality rate was recorded at 1.33 per cent. 

The cumulative doses administered in the country so far under the nationwide COVID-19 vaccination drive has exceeded 87.66 crore.

India's COVID-19 tally had crossed the 20-lakh mark on August 7, 2020, 30 lakh on August 23, 40 lakh on September 5 and 50 lakh on September 16. It went past 60 lakh on September 28, 70 lakh on October 11, crossed 80 lakh on October 29, 90 lakh on November 20 and surpassed the one-crore mark on December 19. 

India crossed the grim milestone of two crore on May 4 and three crore on June 23. 

The 378 new fatalities include 149 from Kerala, 64 from Haryana and 60 from Maharashtra.  

A total of 4,47,751 deaths have been reported so far in the country, including 1,38,962 from Maharashtra, 37,763 from Karnataka, 35,526 from Tamil Nadu, 25,087 from Delhi, 24,810 from Kerala, 22,891 from Uttar Pradesh and 18,764 from West Bengal.

The ministry stressed that more than 70 per cent of the deaths occurred due to comorbidities.

"Our figures are being reconciled with the Indian Council of Medical Research," the ministry said on its website, adding that state-wise distribution of figures is subject to further verification and reconciliation. 

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Bharat Bandh Hits Life In Several Parts Of Country

Farmers block the train tracks at a railway station during their 'Bharat Bandh' against the central government's three farm laws, in Bahadurgarh, Haryana (PTI Photo)

The Bharat Bandh organised on Monday by farmers' groups protesting against the three contentious farm laws disrupted rail and road travel in many places across the country.

Punjab and Haryana

In Punjab and Haryana, the states considered the epicentre of the farmers' protests, protesters blocked highways and roads and squatted on railway tracks. The Congress, which rules Punjab, had announced its support for the bandh, leading to a near-total shutdown in the state, with transport services suspended during the bandh period, while shops and other commercial establishments remained shut at most places.

National and state highways in several districts, including Amritsar, Rupnagar, Jalandhar, Pathankot, Sangrur, Mohali, Ludhiana, Ferozepur and Bathinda were blocked by the protesters.

In neighbouring Haryana, the protesters blocked highways in Sirsa, Fatehabad, Kurukshetra, Panipat, Hisar, Charkhi Dadri, Karnal, Kaithal, Rohtak, Jhajjar and Panchkula districts.

The protesting farmers squatted on railway tracks at many places in the two states.

Ferozepur's Divisional Railway Manager Seema Sharma told PTI that some passenger trains have been cancelled while some other services have been rescheduled. Farmers squatted on railway tracks at many places in the two states, including at Shahbad near Kurukshetra, Sonipat, Bahadurgarh, Charkhi Dadri, Jind, Amritsar, Patiala, Barnala and Lalru near Derabassi.

Bihar

The opposition Congress and RJD had announced support for the Bharat Bandh in the state. While public transport remained largely unaffected, protesters had blocked highways, roads and rail tracks in several places.

RJD and Congress workers blocked roads in Patna, Bhojpur, Lakhisarai, Jahanabad, East Champaran, Begusarai, Madhepura and Nalanda districts, affecting traffic movement. RJD and CPI members also blocked railway lines in Patna, Ara, Jahanabad and Madhepura. Markets were open, while government and private offices registered usual attendance.

West Bengal

Activists of the opposition Left Front blocked roads and railway tracks in many places in West Bengal, though normal life was largely unaffected. In Kolkata, CPI (M) members blocked roads at College Street, Jadavpur and Shyambazar Five-Point Crossing but were swiftly removed by the police.

Road blockades were held in most of the major towns and cities in the state, including in the district headquarters of Jalpaiguri, West Midnapore, East Midnapore, Hooghly and Coochbehar.

The Left activists blocked railway tracks at Jadavpur in Eastern Railway's Sealdah division. Reports of rail blockades from the Howrah division also came in.

Odisha

Markets were shut and public transport stayed off the roads as the Bharat Bandh hit normal life in Odisha on Monday.

Activists of the opposition Congress and Left parties blocked roads at different places in Bhubaneswar, Balasore, Rourkela, Sambalpur, Bargarh, Bolangir, Rayagada and Subarnapur. The protesters also blocked the railway lines at Bhubaneswar station, affecting train services in the state capital.

Kerala

Public transport was hit in Kerala where the strike is supported by the ruling LDF and the opposition Congress-led UDF. KSRTC bus services were off the road with almost all trade unions in the state taking part. People who had to travel opted for private modes of transport while others stayed home.

Delhi-UP

In the national capital, autorickshaws and taxis plied normally and shops were open with unions and associations extending only "in-principle support" to the Bharat Bandh called by farmers. However, there was chaos at the city's borders, including at Ghazipur in western Uttar Pradesh, where farmers blocked the highway to prevent any movement of vehicles.

 

Monday, September 27, 2021

In Separate Stir, Farmers Confront Cops In Noida

 

Members of various farmer organisations participate in a 'Kisan Mazdoor Rally' in support of the ongoing farmers' agitation against the Centre's three farm laws, at New Grain Market in Barnala (PTI)

Hundreds of people from various villages and a large number of police personnel were involved in a confrontation on Tuesday during a demonstration over land compensation outside the Noida Authority Office on Delhi's outskirts, coinciding with the Bharat Bandh call given by farmer unions against the Centre's three agri laws.

The protestors, mostly supporters of the Bharatiya Kisan Parishad, have been staging a sit-in outside the Noida Authority's office for the past several days over a host of demands, including hiked compensation for their land acquired by the government.

Police officials said that security had been heightened in the area in view of the ongoing protest and barricades were also set up to prevent the protestors from moving towards the Authority's office in Sector 6.

While trying to pacify the demonstrators, led by farmer leader Sukhvir Pahalwan, Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police (Noida) Ranvijay Singh asked them not to take the law into their hands.

"You have all the right to hold a protest, but you should also be thoughtful of your actions causing problems to other people, affecting their movement," Singh told the protestors, including several women.

"We do not expect you to take the situation to a point wherein the police would be required to use force or initiate legal action against you all because that is not going to help anyone," the officer added.

This protest by the Bharatiya Kisan Parishad is not linked with the bigger ongoing farmers' stir against the three contentious farm laws, but is related to the residents of 81 villages of Noida whose land has been acquired in the past. 

Saturday, September 25, 2021

Stilt Houses Help People Withstand Floods In Assam

 


Ratan Pathuri watches floodwater swirl below his veranda. The swollen Dhansiri River has inundated Pathuri’s village, Nikori, in the district of Golaghat in Assam; necessitated the relocation of his livestock; and driven many people into relief shelters on higher ground in August, during The Third Pole’s visit. “This happens every year when the Dhansiri swells up with the rains,” 31-year-old Pathuri says. “At least this year we’re home and dry.”

Every year, floods occur in the basin of the Brahmaputra and its tributaries, such as the Dhansiri. Originating in the neighbouring state of Nagaland, the Dhansiri flows 352 kilometres before joining the Brahmaputra on its south bank. On its way, it passes low-lying areas like Golaghat, spilling over its banks during the monsoon.

Dangerous Housing

Pathuri says that in recent years, the floods have become more frequent and intense than ever before. Interspersed between larger and more destructive floods like the one in 2017 – considered the worst in 28 years – residents of Assam face multiple smaller deluges every year.

One of the resulting problems is sustained waterlogging. This is partly caused by the building of embankments that cannot prevent the swollen river from submerging the land. Instead, they prevent the floodwaters from receding back into the river. Traditional houses, built on stilts to withstand moderate flooding, are not designed to deal with this, and end up collapsing.

Assam is prone to floods, cyclones and earthquakes. During these disasters, loss of life and damage to property happen largely due to houses collapsing, according to architects associated with the Sustainable Environment and Ecological Development Society (SEEDS), a humanitarian non-profit organisation.

Multiple factors contribute to this: the flouting of land-use permits, leading to construction in vulnerable areas such as riverbeds; a lack of early warning systems; and poor disaster preparedness, such as embankments. The natural disaster is only part of the problem.

“We estimate that the country loses 1% of its housing stock to disasters every year,” says Anshu Sharma, co-founder of SEEDS. The Indian NGO has been working on disaster management and mitigation in the Indian subcontinent since 1994. Assam has been one of its focus areas since the 2017 flood.

“Across India, we’ve observed people are building homes where they didn’t earlier. They are eschewing vernacular architecture for more ‘modern’ concrete houses,” Manu Gupta, co-founder of SEEDS, adds. “In Assam, the construction of embankments and the replacement of fields, which have a higher water-holding capacity, with increasingly concretised settlements has created the perfect recipe for disaster.”

The situation may deteriorate further. A study published in November 2020 suggests that scientists’ predictions of destructive floods in the Brahmaputra basin might be off the mark by 24-38%.

“We analysed tree rings of centuries-old trees in the upper Brahmaputra basin to estimate rainfall patterns,” says Mukund P Rao, the study’s principal researcher and a postdoctoral research scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University. “Our research indicates that we’re in for an intensified monsoon through the 21st century.” Rao said that this, along with glacial melt accelerated by warming, will lead to greater flood hazard in the region than presently expected.

Coping With Climate Change, One Stilt House At A Time In Assam

While communities in the region can do little about the larger issues, they can take steps to deal with some things they have control over – like the houses they live in. Indigenous communities such as the Mising have traditionally lived in low-lying areas, and their houses have been adapted to deal with floods. Known as chang ghar, these are simple huts elevated on bamboo stilts with mud foundations – temporary structures that last about five years. More frequent flooding in parts of Assam has shortened the length of time the houses last.

Pathuri, a local builder who works with bamboo, used to live in one such hut. “The frequent flooding exposed its mud foundations and caused its stilts to rot,” he says. “In the 2017 flood, like others in my neighbourhood, water came inside the hut and I had to relocate my family to a relief shelter by boat.”

Chang Ghar 2.0

“When we assessed the flood damage in 2017, we found that within a single district, some areas were flooding more than others,” says Sharma. Starting in September 2017, after the monsoon and flood, SEEDS worked with local builders to develop an improved chang ghar design that could be adapted to the terrain.

“We studied flood-level patterns of the construction site and elevated our chang ghar at least three feet above that,” Sharma explains.

With funds from Godrej Group, the Indian multinational conglomerate, and a local field partner, SEEDS trained local builders like Ratan Pathuri to construct 80 of these houses within the next year.

The houses rest on rubberised bamboo columns set in a concrete base. A flexible joinery system allows homeowners to raise the floor higher if necessary, while cross-bracing bamboo supports make the structure capable of withstanding movement caused by floods and earthquakes.

The buildings occupy a core area of about 23 square meters and follow the Sphere Handbook, a set of universal minimum standards in humanitarian responses.

“It has a toilet, unlike our old hut,” says Ratan Pathuri. “This makes life much easier during floods.”

Constructed with sturdy, locally available species of bamboo, each house costs about USD 760 to build with community participation. This is about 20% more than a traditional chang ghar. It takes about seven days to construct the main frame of the house.

Umananda Pathuri, who also lost his home in the 2017 flood, moved into his chang ghar 2.0 around the same time as Ratan Pathuri.

“My wife, four-year-old and I live with my parents,” he says. “The new house has space for all of us.” In dry weather, they use the area under the hut to store looms, livestock and boats. In wet weather, the building’s elevation has so far ensured that the home remains dry.

Umananda says that in the past three years, around 10 other villagers have adopted the new design independently, having seen how much more flood-resilient it is.

A More Replicable Stilt House Design

Although SEEDS’ chang ghars 2.0 have withstood over seven floods since they were constructed, they are classified by the government as kutcha, or temporary. This classification is based on whether “The walls and/or roof… are made of material… such as un-burnt bricks, bamboos, mud, grass, reeds, thatch, loosely packed stones.”

Kutcha houses have a lower social cachet than ’modern’ concrete houses. There is another challenge: since kutcha houses are deemed temporary homes, they cannot be easily used as collateral for bank loans.

In response, SEEDS and its donor partner PricewaterhouseCoopers India Foundation is building a model community relief shelter in Nikori village (in Golaghat district in Assam) with a further tweak.

“As this is a larger structure meant for the community, we’ve used the same bamboo superstructure design as before, but replaced bamboo stilts with reinforced concrete columns to give the building greater stability and load-bearing strength,” says Gupta. The new design has amenities like piped water and is replicable in other flood-prone geographies. “The concrete foundation and stilts can support a variety of superstructures in inexpensive local materials and traditional design aesthetic,” adds Gupta.

As climate change causes more extreme precipitation events, impacting some of the poorest geographies on the planet, inexpensive stilt houses offer a solution to make low-lying communities more resilient to its impacts.

Meanwhile, in Nikori, Umananda’s toddler plays in the veranda as the floodwaters recede. “This house is good,” he says. “I’m happy now.”

TheThirdPole

Friday, September 24, 2021

Tikait Urges Indians In US To Protest During Modi’s Programme

 

BKU spokesperson Rakesh Tikait ahead of a protest march towards Parliament against the three farm laws, at Ghazipur border near New Delhi (PTI)

Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) leader Rakesh Tikait on Friday appealed to Indians living in the US to hold a protest during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s programme in New York on Saturday in support of the 10-month-long farmers’ agitation at Delhi’s borders.

He also urged US President Joe Biden to focus on concerns of the Indian farmers during his meeting with Modi.

Seeking the support of Indians in the US, the national spokesperson of the BKU claimed that over 750 farmers have lost their lives during the stir against the contentious new farm laws, but the Centre is still not willing to reconsider the legislations.

Modi reached the US on Wednesday on an official three-day visit for meetings with Biden and his deputy Kamala Harris, among others. He is scheduled to address the 76th session of the UN General Assembly on Saturday.

“We appeal to all Indians living in the US. India’s Prime Minister will be there on September 25 in New York for a programme. All Indians in the US should place a ‘farmers’ flag on their vehicles and raise banners of ‘No Farmer No Food’ and register your protest in support of farmers,” Tikait said in a video message.

“It’s been around 10 months since the protest started and we are all sitting here in Delhi. Over 750 of our farmers have died during the movement and the Indian government is not ready to hold talks. We have sat through winters, summers and rains in the stir,” he added.

In his appeal to the US president, Tikait tweeted, “Dear @POTUS, we the Indian farmers are protesting against 3 farm laws brought by PM Modi’s govt. 700 farmers have died in the last 11 months protesting. These black laws should be repealed to save us. Please focus on our concern while meeting PM Modi (sic).”

Hundreds of farmers are encamped on the three border sites of Delhi in Singhu, Tikri and Ghazipur since November 2020 under the banner of Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM), demanding that the three contentious farm laws be repealed and a legal guarantee provided to them on the minimum support price of crops.

Tikait has been leading his BKU at Ghazipur on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border.

The Centre, which has held 11 rounds of formal dialogues with the farmers, has maintained that the new laws are pro-farmer.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Climate Change Is Leading To More Lightning Strikes In India

Lightning strikes above the city of Jaisalmer, Rajasthan (Image: Alamy)

The frequency and intensity of lightning strikes have risen sharply in South Asia since the 1970s. So have fatalities, especially of farmers, during the monsoon cropping season.

Lightning is now the most fatal natural hazard in India: data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) reveals that over 100,000 people died due to lightning strikes between 1967 and 2019. This is 33% of all deaths caused by natural hazards over the 52-year period – more than twice the casualties due to floods.

Despite this, lightning has not yet been officially notified as a disaster by the federal Ministry of Home Affairs. The State Disaster Response Fund currently covers cyclones, droughts, earthquakes, fires, floods, tsunamis, hailstorms, landslides, avalanches, cloudbursts, pest attacks, frosts, cold waves and now Covid-19.

Until lightning is added to the official list, it is not mandatory to incorporate risks posed by the phenomenon into all development and disaster-management plans.

Rising Number Of Lightning Strikes In India

In recent years, there has been a significant rise in the frequency, intensity and geographical spread of lightning strikes in India. The 2020-21 Annual Lightning Report published by the non-profit Climate Resilient Observing Systems Promotion Council (CROPC) recorded a 34% jump in lightning strikes within a year.

A 2014 study by scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, found that lightning strikes in the US may increase by 12% for every degree of rise in the global average air temperature. The authors forecast a 50% rise in lightning strikes in the US by 2100. CROPC data shows India is already experiencing a sudden rise in lightning strikes, suggesting the situation is far more alarming in India.

Volatile Monsoon Means Higher Lightning Risk

Hot weather and humidity create ideal conditions for thunderstorms – so as climate change causes more heatwaves, more storms and lightning strikes will follow.

In South Asia, lightning frequency increases rapidly during pre-monsoon storms, stays high during the monsoon, and rises again when the monsoon is retreating in September.

The monsoon has become more erratic due to climate change. There are often periods of intensely hot sunny days between rainy days. This has also led to an increase in lightning strikes during the monsoon.

A count of lightning strikes in the past two years shows that while strikes remain highest in and around the monsoon, the sharpest rise between the two years was in the months of April and May – the hottest pre-monsoon months in South Asia. This seasonality – which is different in different parts of India – is important for disaster preparedness. CROPC has also identified lightning hotspots in each state. Together, this information can help local policymakers prepare for lightning strikes and prevent fatalities.

Unlike floods and cyclones, where early warning systems help to minimise the number of casualties, less work has been done in India to reduce the risks lightning poses.

Most victims of lightning are struck outdoors. This places farmers, herders, fishers, construction and agricultural labourers, and those working in outdoor factories such as brick kilns and construction sites at high risk. Anyone taking shelter under a tall isolated object like a tree, pole or building is at risk.

There is no time to react when lightning strikes; the only way is to avoid exposure.

Some states – Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Jharkhand, Kerala, Nagaland, Bihar – have taken comprehensive lightning risk management measures. As a result, there was a decrease of up to 70% in lightning deaths in Andhra Pradesh and Odisha between April 2019 and March 2021.

Raising Awareness Of The Risk

In 2019, CROPC launched its Lightning Resilient India Campaign 2019-2022. It uses a citizen science approach, and is in partnership with India Meteorological Department (IMD) and World Vision India and supported by a host of agencies inside and outside government. It is being run through an early warning system created by the IMD. In 2019, the IMD started a lightning and thunderstorms forecast, issuing them at ranges of three-five days, 24 hours and three-four hours.

The campaign, through its collective efforts, has already reduced lightning deaths considerably since its launch in April 2019. It now aims to reduce deaths and losses by 80% over three years.

Other steps taken include the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology’s launch of Damini, a mobile phone app. This provides a lightning forecast within a radius of at least 40 kilometres around a phone and also advises on preventive measures. The Indian Space Research Organisation has also set up a lightning detection network and an online lightning early warning system. This early warning is communicated by disaster-management authorities at state and district levels.

In addition, electronic and social media and volunteers spread information of potential lightning risks to raise awareness. More weather-monitoring stations are being set up across the country; more and more institutional buildings – schools, hospitals, community centres and so on – have lightning safety devices installed.

The National Disaster Management Authority has issued guidelines to state governments to prepare lightning action plans and provide early warning. It also has a list of dos and don’ts for the public. Seventeen state governments have notified lightning strikes as disasters.

CROPC has led the way in research and development, in collaboration with academia and scientific institutions. As a result, more studies are now being undertaken. CROPC’s report is even hosted on the World Meteorological Organisation’s website.

The need now is for state and local governments to play a more active role in raising vulnerable communities’ awareness of this deadly climate change impact.

TheThirdPole

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Vaccine Inequality Is ‘Moral Indictment’ Of Our World: UN Chief

 

Antonio Guterres, in his address to the 76th Session of the UN General Assembly, said that human rights are under fire, science is under assault and economic lifelines for the most vulnerable are coming too little and too late

The world has never been more threatened or more divided, and is facing the “greatest cascade” of crises, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres told global leaders on Tuesday, sounding an alarm over the COVID-19 pandemic, a climate crisis pummeling the planet and an upheaval in Afghanistan and other nations that is thwarting peace.

Guterres, in his address to the opening of the General Debate of the 76th Session of the UN General Assembly, said that human rights are under fire, science is under assault and economic lifelines for the most vulnerable are coming too little and too late, if they come at all, and solidarity is missing in action just when the world needs it the most.

“I am here to sound the alarm: The world must wake up. We are on the edge of an abyss — and moving in the wrong direction. Our world has never been more threatened. Or more divided. We face the greatest cascade of crises in our lifetimes,” he said.

The annual high-level week, which had to be held virtually last year due to the raging COVID-19 pandemic, returned to a hybrid format this year with over 100 Heads of State and Government as well as foreign ministers and diplomats scheduled to address world leaders in-person from the iconic General Assembly Hall in New York.

Outlining the crises facing the world today, Guterres said that the COVID-19 pandemic has supersized glaring inequalities, the climate crisis is pummeling the planet, the upheaval from Afghanistan to Ethiopia to Yemen and beyond has thwarted peace and a surge of mistrust and misinformation is polarising people and paralysing societies.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has killed more than 4.6 million people and infected over 228 million people globally, has exposed glaring inequalities among nations over vaccine access and affordability, he said.

More than 5.7 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered globally, but only 2 per cent of them in Africa, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

“Perhaps one image tells the tale of our times. The picture we have seen from some parts of the world of COVID-19 vaccines… in the garbage. Expired and unused,” Guterres said.

The UN chief noted that while on the one hand vaccines have been developed in a record time, on the other hand “we see that triumph undone by the tragedy of a lack of political will, selfishness and mistrust.”

“A surplus in some countries. Empty shelves in others. A majority of the wealthier world vaccinated. Over 90 per cent of Africans are still waiting for their first dose. This is a moral indictment of the state of our world. It is an obscenity,” Guterres said.

He said the world passed the science test when it produced vaccines in record time and highlighted the victory of science and human ingenuity, but “we are getting an F in Ethics.”

Guterres underlined the urgent need for a global vaccination plan to at least double vaccine production and ensure that vaccines reach 70 per cent of the world’s population in the first half of 2022.

On climate change, Guterres said that the climate alarm bells are ringing at “fever pitch” and there are warning signs in every continent and region.

“Scorching temperatures. Shocking biodiversity loss. Polluted air, water and natural spaces. And climate-related disasters at every turn,” he said.

Guterres warned that the window to keep alive the 1.5-degree goal of the Paris Climate Agreement is rapidly closing. The world needs a 45 per cent cut in emissions by 2030, yet with present national climate commitments, emissions will go up by 16 per cent by 2030.

“That would condemn us to a hellscape of temperature rises of at least 2.7 degrees above pre-industrial levels. COVID-19 and the climate crisis have exposed (our) profound fragilities as societies and as a planet,” the UN chief said.

Urging the world leaders that “now is the time to deliver”, Guterres outlined the six great divides, the “Grand Canyons” that must be bridged now.

He called on the world leaders to bridge the peace divide.

“For far too many around the world, peace and stability remain a distant dream. In Afghanistan….we must boost humanitarian assistance and defend human rights, especially of women and girls,” he said, adding that in Myanmar, the world must reaffirm unwavering support to the people in their pursuit of democracy, peace, human rights and the rule of law.

He said that the world must bridge the climate divide by bridging trust between North and South.

“We need more ambition from all countries in three key areas — mitigation, finance and adaptation. My message to every Member State is this: Don’t wait for others to make the first move. Do your part,” he said.

He called on nations to bridge the gap between rich and poor, within and among countries.

“That starts by ending the pandemic for everyone, everywhere,” Guterres said.

Warning that there is no time to lose, he said that a lopsided recovery from the pandemic is deepening inequalities as richer countries could reach pre-pandemic growth rates by the end of this year while the impact may last for years in low-income countries.

Underscoring that the gender divide must be bridged, Guterres said COVID-19 exposed and amplified the world’s most enduring injustice: the power imbalance between men and women.

“Bridging the gender divide is not only a matter of justice for women and girls. It’s a game-changer for humanity,” he said.

Guterres called on world leaders to bridge the digital divide and the divide among generations.

He said that half of humanity has no access to the internet and we must connect everyone by 2030.

“Young people will inherit the consequences of our decisions — good and bad. At the same time, we expect 10.9 billion people to be born by century’s end. We need their talents, ideas and energies. They need a seat at the table,” Guterres added.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

CIA Officer Showed Havana Syndrome Symptoms While In India

 

Some officials at the CIA viewed the chilling episode as a direct message to CIA Director William Burns that no one is safe, including those working directly for the nation's top spy

A CIA officer, who travelled to India with CIA Director William Burns this month, reported symptoms consistent with Havana Syndrome, a mysterious affliction that has struck US diplomats, spies and other government workers at home and abroad, US media reports said on Tuesday.

The official, who was not identified, had to receive medical attention, CNN reported, citing three unnamed sources.

The incident set off alarm bells within the US government and left Burns “fuming” with anger, one source explained. Some officials at the CIA viewed the chilling episode as a direct message to Burns that no one is safe, including those working directly for the nation’s top spy, the report quoted two other sources as saying.

The circumstances of the incident are still being investigated, and officials have not yet determined whether the CIA officer was targeted because the officer was travelling with the director, William Burns, or for other reasons. If the incident was caused by an adversarial intelligence service, it may not have known the officer was travelling with Burns, The New York Times reported.

A CIA spokeswoman declined to confirm the case in India but said the US government and the agency are taking every incident seriously.

“Director Burns has made it a top priority to ensure officers get the care they need and that we get to the bottom of this,” the NBC News quoted a spokeswoman as saying.

“We’ve strengthened efforts to determine the origins of the incidents, including assembling a team of our very best experts — bringing an intensity and expertise to this issue akin to our efforts to find [Osama] bin Laden,” she said.

The situation in India could have dramatic implications: the CIA director’s schedule is tightly held and there are deep concerns among US officials about how the perpetrator would have known about the visit and been able to plan for such aggression, the CNN report said.

The person travelling with Burns who experienced the symptoms in India received immediate medical attention when they returned to the US, it said.

Burns held extensive talks with NSA Ajit Doval on the Afghan crisis. The CIA chief, accompanied by a few officials, paid a quiet visit to India primarily to discuss the situation in Afghanistan after the US pulled out its troops.

When asked about the visit, the US embassy declined to comment. There was no comment from the Indian security establishment as well.

The event marks the latest reported case of a US government employee reporting symptoms associated with the mysterious ailment.

Havana syndrome first came into public view in 2017 after US diplomats and other government workers stationed in Cuba reported feeling unusual physical sensations after hearing strange high- and low-pitched sounds. US government employees have also reported cases in China and the Washington, DC area.

Late last month, at least two US diplomats were medically evacuated from Vietnam after Havana syndrome incidents were reported in the capital city, Hanoi, ahead of Vice President Kamala Harris’ arrival.

Under Burns and the Director of National Intelligence, Avril Haines, the intelligence community has undertaken a wide-ranging investigation into the mysterious attacks, including a 100-day probe into the potential causes that began earlier this summer.

“We don’t comment on specific incidents or officers. We have protocols in place for when individuals report possible anomalous health incidents that include receiving appropriate medical treatment,” a CIA spokesperson told CNN.

“The health and well-being of American public servants are of paramount importance to the administration, and we take extremely seriously any report by our personnel of an anomalous health incident,” a senior administration official was quoted as saying by NBC News.

The India incident has raised questions about whether a foreign adversary had intentionally targeted the CIA director’s staff, but the sources said the agency is unclear what exactly could have caused it, the report said.

The case is one of a number of new incidents in recent months involving CIA personnel who have experienced what US officials call “anomalous health incidents,” it said.

Many people who have experienced Havana Syndrome report experiencing vertigo, dizziness, fatigue, nausea and intense headaches. Some describe it as being hit by an invisible blast wave. Some have no longer been able to work.

Many US officials suspect that the incidents, which have caused permanent brain injuries in some victims, are a result of an attack or a surveillance operation by Russian spies, but the evidence is inconclusive.

The National Academies of Sciences said in a report last year that the most likely cause of the injuries was directed microwave energy, but the conclusion is being debated in the scientific community.

Last week, CIA Deputy Director David Cohen said that the agency is getting closer to solving the mystery but that there are limits. “In terms of have we gotten closer, I think the answer is yes — but not close enough to make an analytic judgment that people are waiting for,” he said. (PTI)

Monday, September 20, 2021

Farmers’ Protest Is ‘Sponsored’: Karnataka CM

 

Farmers in large numbers attend the Kisan Mahapanchayat in Karnal (PTI)

Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai's remarks, terming the farmers' protests around Delhi as ''sponsored,'' during his reply in the assembly on Monday over the issue of price rise, saw heated exchanges between the ruling and opposition benches. "It (farmers' protest) is sponsored by you (Congress) in Delhi. Farmers' protest happened around Delhi. It did not happen anywhere else in the country because it is sponsored," Bommai said.

Congress leaders and legislators took strong exception to this, with party state president D.K. Shivakumar even terming the statement as an "insult" to the farmers and demanded that he apologize to them.

Leader of the opposition Siddaramaiah too termed it as the "most irresponsible" remark.

Bommai's "sponsored protest" comments led to a heated exchange between ruling BJP and opposition Congress legislators, throwing the house into chaos for some time.

The CM, however, stood by his comments, saying the protest by farmers, who claim to be from Punjab and Haryana, was sponsored. "It has a political background, it has your sponsorship. It is for the sake of MSP (Minimum Support Price) politics," he said.

Alleging that commission agents at the markets were also behind the protest as they are worried by the new farm laws, he asked Congress not to ''mislead'' the people of the country.

Countering senior Congress MLA Ramesh Kumar's query to spell out whether the protest was sponsored by ''foreign hands'' and who was behind it, Bommai pointed out that during Indira Gandhi's tenure in 1972-75, these forces were blamed for every protest in the country, whether it was farmers or labourers. "But we are not saying foreign hands, as foreign agents have already been close to the administration....foreign agents and commission agents who want to control APMCs are sponsoring this protest," he added.

Rebuking Siddaramaiah for his recent comments, accusing BJP governments in the state and Centre of "criminal loot", Bommai, while initiating the debate, asked "does this mean governments of all parties in the past that increased prices have indulged in criminal loot?"

In reply, the LoP said the CM, by this statement, has admitted that criminal loot has taken place and pointed out that he had borrowed these words from former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who had used it when he was Jana Sangh MP in 1973 and Indira Gandhi was Prime Minister, in protest against the seven paise increase in fuel prices.

To Bommai's query on why he was in "pain" hearing his reply, Siddaramaiah said "why should I be in pain? Narendra Modi and you should be pained as you people have indulged in criminal loot."

Continuing his attack on Congress, Bommai said, "During our time there has been 30 per cent rise (in petrol price)...they (Congress or UPA) had raised 60 per cent during their time."

"If you are upset with the word criminal loot, let us call it Congress loot...there is no issue."

This irked Congress members and Siddaramaiah raised slogans like "BJP loot", "BJP is indulging in criminal loot", "Narendra Modi government is looting the country".

Bommai, reacting to it said, "what Congress and Siddaramaiah is doing is nothing but scriptures in the devil's mouth. With what authority are they saying such things to us? What moral right do you have after looting the country for so long?"

Both party members then shouted slogans, accusing each other of looting the country.

Noting that the price rise issue has been discussed several times in the assembly, irrespective of which party was in power or in the opposition, Bommai said rise in prices of petroleum products began in the 1960s-70s and there were various reasons for it.

"India is an importer and consumer of crude oil and not the producer. Eighty-five per cent we import, so price fluctuation in the international market will have its impact on consumer countries like ours," he said.

Pointing out that during the discussion, opposition MLAs targeted only the Narendra Modi government on the issue of price rise, the CM listed out the petrol price rise from 1973, which varied from 60 to 150 per cent.

"From 2014-2021, the price has risen from about Rs 77 to 100, almost 30 per cent. Whichever party is in power, the prices have consistently risen. So, blaming the current party in power is not right," he said.

Bommai said out of Rs 36 lakh crore revenue gained during 2014-21 from petroleum products, the Centre has given almost 40 per cent of it to states.

He also said procurement of paddy and wheat has exponentially increased during the NDA rule compared to UPA. Also, MSP for various crops have been increased and the benefits have been transferred to farmers.

The CM also charged the Congress with increasing excise duty over the years.

Stating that monetisation does not mean sale, he hit back at Congress' opposition to the National Monetisation Pipeline, saying it was also done during UPA rule. He cited the amount of Rs 80,000 crore raised by monetising the Bombay-Pune highway.

Bommai also hit out at Siddaramaiah and the Congress on the issue of sales tax and said they do not have any moral right to question the government as it was they who raised it and did not slash it, despite demands.

 





Saturday, September 18, 2021

Roundtable: Should COP26 Be Delayed?

 

Rescuers evacuate people from their flooded houses in South Sulawesi province, Indonesia, in 2019 (Image © Greenpeace/Sahrul Manda Tikupadang)

Earlier this month, Climate Action Network, the world’s largest network of NGOs, called for the postponement of the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) due to be held in Glasgow in November. It highlighted obstacles faced by negotiators from less developed countries and civil society groups in general.

With new Covid-19 cases once more on the rise, disrupted international travel, lengthy quarantines and unequal access to vaccines are expected to skew the attendance of the conference in favour of those able to bear the costs.

COP26 is still scheduled to go ahead as planned, according to the organisers, who have made a number of concessions. These include shortening the quarantine period from 10 to five days for vaccinated travellers from countries on the UK’s red list, accepting most types of Covid-19 vaccination and providing vaccinations for delegates. But civil society groups are having difficulty accessing some of these concessions, which will practically exclude them from the events.

So should COP26 still go ahead as scheduled? And if so, what changes will need to be made to make it an inclusive conference?

Hasan Mehedi

Member secretary, Bangladesh Working Group on External Debt (BWGED); chief executive, CLEAN (Coastal Livelihood and Environmental Action Network).

As a campaigner from Bangladesh, one of the most vulnerable countries, I think the Covid-related rules of the host country make a barrier for equal participation in COP26. Some of the most vulnerable countries, like Bangladesh, Maldives, Philippines and Seychelles, are on the UK’s red list, so the participants from these countries need to be isolated for at least five days (if fully vaccinated) or 10 days (if not fully vaccinated) before participating in the conference. Most of the civil society representatives are not capable of bearing the costs of quarantine. Besides, the psychological pressure of staying 10 days alone is really difficult. You may know that the number of civil society organisations that can participate has been cut almost 50% this year and a big number of climate activists will not be able to participate. Without active participation from civil society organisations from the global south, the COP will turn into a northern club to endorse business proposals of clean technology and climate insurance. In addition, according to the UNFCCC’s NDC Synthesis Report, the goal of the Paris Agreement has not been met. Extended Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are required but, as per the interim NDC Registry, only 12 countries have submitted extended NDCs. Before the COP, the NDCs should be updated to meet the goal of the Paris Agreement.

Sonam Phuntsho Wangdi

Chair of the Least Developed Countries Group; secretary of the National Environment Commission for the Royal Government of Bhutan. Statement first published by the LDC Group on 10 September 2021.

There are so many barriers to participation, and the uncertainty is causing a great deal of concern amongst our LDC [least developed country] delegates. We need assurances from the UK that COP26 will be fully inclusive and fair. Our countries and our people are among the worst affected by climate change. We must not be excluded from talks deciding how the world will deal with this crisis, determining the fate of our lives and livelihoods.

There are 20 countries from our group on the UK’s red list. Even if vaccinated, delegates would need to quarantine for five days. Some LDCs also have requirements to quarantine on return home, to keep communities safe during the pandemic. On top of quarantine requirements in the UK and our home countries, flight routes to Glasgow are not straightforward. Commercial flights out of Pacific island nations are almost non-existent, and some of the regular transiting hubs are not allowing non-residents to fly through.

As our leaders are meeting this month, at the head of delegation and ministerial level, to prepare and strategise, we look forward to attending COP26 in Glasgow. At the same time, we’re just not sure it will be possible for so many LDC negotiators to get to Glasgow. Without us there, how can COP26 be fair and inclusive? It’s our people who are hardest hit by this ever-worsening crisis. They must be well represented in the climate talks. The world cannot risk unambitious and unfair decisions being taken at COP26. There is far too much at stake.

Alok Sharma

COP26 president-designate. Statement first published by the UK Cabinet Office on 7 September 2021.

COP26 has already been postponed by one year, and we are all too aware climate change has not taken time off. The recent IPCC report underlines why COP26 must go ahead this November to allow world leaders to come together and set out decisive commitments to tackle climate change.

We are working tirelessly with all our partners… to ensure an inclusive, accessible and safe summit in Glasgow with a comprehensive set of Covid-mitigation measures. This includes an offer from the UK government to fund the required quarantine hotel stays for registered delegates arriving from red list areas and to vaccinate accredited delegates who would be unable otherwise to get vaccinated.

Ensuring that the voices of those most affected by climate change are heard is a priority for the COP26 presidency, and if we are to deliver for our planet, we need all countries and civil society to bring their ideas and ambition to Glasgow.

Tasneem Essop

Executive director, Climate Action Network

The statement from the COP26 president and some other countries that the COP will not be postponed or should go ahead as planned, does not change our position. We continue to remain concerned that even those promised the COP26 vaccines by the UK will not be able to receive them in time. There are new spikes in Covid cases in the UK and elsewhere.

The UK presidency’s immediate reaction to our statement was to announce it will now cover quarantine costs for red list country participants. This has been a long-standing ask from us over the last months through many internal briefings and letters.

Finally, our statement is also reflective of our position as civil society. Right now it is civil society, and of course from the poorest and most vulnerable countries, facing the most exclusion from this process. That will mean less pressure on polluters to act, less scrutiny on the outcomes and potentially watered-down climate action leading to more suffering for people around the world.

(TheThirdPole)

Friday, September 17, 2021

Scrap Farm Laws, Talk To Farmers: Amarinder To Centre

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Friday demanded immediate scrapping of the Centre’s new farm laws, calling for detailed discussions with farmers to find a way forward.

 

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Friday demanded immediate scrapping of the Centre's new farm laws, calling for detailed discussions with farmers to find a way forward.

Pointing out that many farmers had died in the protests against these laws, which were passed by the Parliament a year ago, he said the Centre should withdraw the legislations in the interest of farmers and the nation.

Singh was speaking after inaugurating the third state-level virtual Kisan Mela organised by the Punjab Agricultural University (PAU), Ludhiana. “It is high time the Central government realised its blunder and withdrew the legislations in the interest of farmers and the nation,” he said.

The Chief Minister, who wore a ‘No Farmers, No Food’ badge, said, “Till date, the Constitution of India has been amended as many as 127 times, so why can it not be amended once again to scrap the farm laws and resolve the imbroglio resulting from them? What is the problem in doing it a 128th time?” he sought to know from the BJP-led central government.

He also alleged that the Centre was out to “ruin the farmers”.

The senior Congress leader further said what was happening with the farmers today was “extremely sad”, given the immense contribution made by them to India's development and progress.

The two-day Kisan Mela is centred on the theme “Karie Parali Di Sambhal, Dharti Maa Hove Khushal”, in line with the state government's focus on eliminating stubble burning, an official statement said.

Recalling that he was asked by the Centre to stop Punjab's farmers from going to Delhi last November, Singh said he had outright refused to do so as protest is the democratic right of farmers.

He made it clear that he continues to stand with the farmers in their fight against the “draconian legislations”, with his government continuing to give compensation and jobs to families of deceased farmers.

Noting the contribution of Punjab and its farmers to the country's growth, the Chief Minister said the state, with only 1.53 per cent of total geographical area of India, produces about 18 per cent of the country's wheat, 11 per cent paddy, 4.4 per cent cotton and 10 per cent milk.

For the past many decades, Punjab has been contributing about 35-40 per cent of wheat and 25-30 per cent of rice to the central pool, he said, expressing pride in the achievements of the state's farmers.

Singh urged farmers to take full advantage of PAU's advancements in technologies, including seeds, among others. (PTI)

 

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Smriti Irani Defends Yogi’s ‘Abba Jaan’ Remark

 

The Amethi MP flayed "appeasement politics" and reminded the gathering of the statement of an opposition leader that Muslims should have first claim on resources

Union Minister Smriti Irani on Wednesday defended the controversial “abba jaan” remark by Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath, saying it is his constitutional right to put forward his views.

Earlier, at the same symposium where Irani spoke, Samajwadi Party President Yadav said the remark reflects the “sanskar” (values) held by the CM.

Adityanath had made the comment at a programme in Kushingar on Saturday, saying people who say “abba jaan” used to digest the ration earlier, an apparent attack against the Muslim community and the Samajwadi Party.

Speaking at the “Times Now-Navbharat” symposium, Irani said, “If you believe that the chief minister has the constitutional right to put fourth issues within the limit of the Constitution and work in the service of people without any discrimination, then why do you want to control it.”

The Amethi MP flayed “appeasement politics” and reminded the gathering of the statement of an opposition leader that Muslims should have first claim on resources.

Smriti Irani also highlighted development works carried out by the Narendra Modi government in the country and Yogi Adityanath in Uttar Pradesh.

Of the target of building 10 crore toilets across the country, two crore have been constructed in UP alone, she said.

Earlier in the day, Akhilesh said, commenting over the controversy, “That is the ”sanskar” (values) of Yogiji. I too could have said something but Netaji (Mulayam Singh Yadav) has inculcated values in us so as not to use such language.”

Akhilesh coined a new term for the adage “M-Y” (Muslim-Yadav) associated with his party, saying it stands for Mahila-Youth.

The women and the youth will help form the government of the Samajwadi Party, he said, when asked if the AIMIM led by Asaduddin Owaisi will eat into his Muslim votes.

Yadav also said nobody is against the Ram Temple but the BJP wants to contest elections in its name.

Taking a dig at Adityanath, he said, “Our CM says that he will give tablets. Till now, which tablet was he giving? Is it a tablet for fever?”

Asserting that his party will get 400 seats in the 2022 UP Assembly Elections, Akhilesh said when the BJP can get 300-plus seat, then why can’t his party get it.

He said the SP speaks about development while the BJP knows how to mislead people.

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Taliban Will Allow 400 Sports – If You’re A Man

 

Taliban's director of physical education and sports Bashir Ahmad Rustamzai (C) arrives to watch youth performing their skills during an event at a gymnasium in Kabul (AFP)

From swimming to soccer, running to horse riding, Afghanistan’s new sports chief said on Tuesday that the Taliban will allow 400 sports – but declined to confirm if women can play a single one.

“Please don’t ask more questions about women,” Bashir Ahmad Rustamzai told AFP, from an armchair where Afghanistan’s Olympic Committee president had sat until he fled the country last month.

Rustamzai, a heavily-built former kung fu and wrestling champion with a bushy black and white beard, was appointed by the hardline Islamist group to be Afghanistan’s director general for sports and physical education.

Once the wrestling federation chief when the Taliban were last in power, Rustamzai then worked with the Western-backed government, before falling out with them because of “their widespread corruption,” he said.

‘We Will Not Ban Any Sport’ 

Dressed in a black turban typical of the Taliban, Rustamzai repeatedly ducked questions on the issue of women’s sports.

During the extremists’ brutal and oppressive regime from 1996 to 2001, women were completely banned from playing any sport while men’s sport was tightly controlled. Women were also largely banned from education and work.

Sports stadiums were regularly used for public executions.

“We will not ban any sport, unless it does not comply with sharia law… there are 400 type of sports allowed,” Rustamzai said.

Shortly after, he watched a demonstration by young Afghan men, some zooming around on roller blades, and waving the white Taliban flag.

Rustamzai said that abiding by Islamic law meant little change in practice compared to other countries.

“It doesn’t change much,” he said, noting it would require, for example, football players or Muay Thai boxers to wear “shorts a little longer, which fall below the knee”.

Pushed on women’s participation, he said he was still awaiting decrees from the top Taliban leadership.

“We can imagine the same thing as in universities: allowing women to play sports, but separately from men,” one of his advisors said.

But Rustamzai would not confirm that directly.

New rules on universities allow for women to continue studying as long as they are strictly segregated from men, and adhere to a dress code of an abaya robe and niqab face veil. The curriculum will also be controlled.

Segregated Sport?

For now, the indications look bleak for women.

Last week, the deputy head of the Taliban’s cultural commission, Ahmadullah Wasiq, said that it was “not necessary” for women to play sport.

“In cricket, they might face a situation where their face and body will not be covered,” Wasiq told Australian broadcaster SBS. “Islam does not allow women to be seen like this.”

But the Taliban are already under pressure, especially for cricket, where international regulations state that nations must also have an active women’s team to take part in Test matches.

Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) chairman Azizullah Fazli later told SBS Radio Pashto he was still hopeful women will be able to play.

“Very soon, we will give you good news on how we will proceed,” he said.

But Rustamzai distanced himself from the future of women’s sport.

“The opinions of our elders (senior Taliban) are important,” he said. “If they ask us to authorise women, we will — otherwise, we will not. We await their announcement.”

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Men & Women Cannot Work Together: Taliban

 

Afghan women march holding placards as they take part in a protest against the Taliban in Herat on September 2, 2021 (AFP)

Afghan women should not be allowed to work alongside men, a senior figure in the ruling Taliban said, a position which, if formally implemented, would effectively bar them from employment in government offices, banks, media companies and beyond.

Waheedullah Hashimi, a senior figure in the Taliban who is close to the leadership, told Reuters the group would fully implement its version of sharia, or Islamic law, despite pressure from the international community to allow women the right to work where they want.

Since the movement swept to power last month, Taliban officials have said women would be able to work and study within the limits laid down by sharia.

But there has been widespread uncertainty about what practical effect that will have on their ability to keep their jobs. When the Taliban last ruled Afghanistan from 1996-2001, women were barred from employment and education.

The issue is of major importance to the international community and could impact the amount of aid.

“We have fought for almost 40 years to bring (the) sharia law system to Afghanistan,” Hashimi said in an interview. “Sharia … does not allow men and women to get together or sit together under one roof. Men and women cannot work together. That is clear. They are not allowed to come to our offices and work in our ministries.”

It was unclear to what extent Hashimi’s comments reflected the new government’s policies, although they appeared to go further than public comments made by some other officials.

In the days following the Taliban’s conquest of Kabul, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told reporters that women were an important part of the community and they would work “in different sectors”.

He also specifically included women employees in a call for government bureaucrats to return to their jobs.

All-men Cabinet

However, the cabinet appointments announced on September 7 did not include any women and there have been widespread reports of women being sent back home from their workplaces.

Hashimi said the ban on women would also apply to sectors like media, where women have become increasingly prominent since the Taliban fell in 2001 and a Western-backed government was installed.

Contact between men and women outside the home will be allowed in certain circumstances, for example when seeing a male doctor, he added.

Women should also be allowed to study and work in the education and medical sectors, where separate facilities can be set up for their exclusive use.

“We will of course need women, for example in medicine, in education. We will have separate institutions for them, separate hospitals, separate universities maybe, separate schools, separate madrassas.”

On Sunday, the Taliban’s new education minister said women could study at university, but must be segregated from men.

Women have staged several protests across Afghanistan, demanding that the rights they won over the last two decades be preserved. Some rallies have been broken up by Taliban gunmen firing shots into the air.

Improved women’s rights – more noticeable in urban centres than deeply conservative rural areas – were repeatedly cited by the United States as one of the biggest successes of its 20-year operation in the country that officially ended on Aug. 31.

The female labour participation rate stood at 23% in 2020, according to the World Bank, up from effectively zero when the Taliban last ruled.

(Reuters)

Monday, September 13, 2021

Capitol Rally Seeks To Rewrite January 6 By Exalting Rioters

 

FILE PHOTO: Protesters supporting Donald Trump swarmed the US Capitol, putting it on lockdown on Wednesday, January 6, 2021
 

First, some blamed the deadly January 6 attack at the US Capitol on left-wing antifa antagonists, a theory quickly debunked. Then came comparisons of the rioters to peaceful protesters or even tourists.

Now, allies of former US President Donald Trump are calling those charged in the Capitol riot “political prisoners," a stunning effort to revise the narrative of that deadly day.

The brazen rhetoric ahead of a rally planned for Saturday at the Capitol is the latest attempt to explain away the horrific assault and obscure what played out for all the world to see: rioters loyal to the then-president storming the building, battling police and trying to stop Congress from certifying the election of Democrat Joe Biden.

“Some people are calling it January 6 trutherism — they're rewriting the narrative to make it seem like January 6 was no big deal, and it was a damn big deal, and an attack on our democracy,” said Heidi Beirich, co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, who studies extremist movements.

All told, the attempted whitewashing of the January 6 attack threatens to further divide an already polarized nation that finds itself drifting from what had been common facts and a shared commitment to civic order toward an unsettling new normal.

Rather than a nation healing eight months after the deadly assault, it is at risk of tearing itself further apart, as the next election approaches.

The anticipated crowd size and the intensity of the Saturday rally are unclear, but law enforcement appears to be taking no chances.

Security fencing has been requested around the Capitol and reinforcements are being summoned to back up the Capitol Police, whose leadership was criticized and summarily dismissed for its handling of January 6.

While authorities have been bracing for a repeat appearance by right-wing extremist groups and other Trump loyalists who mobbed the Capitol, it's unclear if those actors will participate in the new event.

The extremist groups are concerning because, while members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers made up a small portion of the January 6 rioters, they are accused of some of the more serious crimes in the attack.

Rally organizer Matt Braynard, a former Trump campaign strategist, has been promoting the event and others like it in cities nationwide, focusing attention on what he calls the “prisoners” being unfairly prosecuted for their involvement in the Jan. 6 riot.

“I am so proud of all of the brave patriots who participated in these rallies under the same threat to their rights of so many who are being held in prison now for a non-violent expression of their First Amendment rights,” he said in a July news release.

Braynard declined to respond to additional questions by email, and The Associated Press declined to accept the conditions he made for an interview.

As Trump openly considers another run for the White House, many of the Republican lawmakers who joined his effort to challenge Biden's victory are staying away from the Saturday rally, even though many still echo his false claims that the election was rigged — despite numerous court cases by Trump's allies that have failed to confirm those allegations.

Representative Mo Brooks, who joined rally-goers near the White House on January 6 where Trump encouraged the crowd to go to the Capitol, declined to comment, his spokesman said by email. Brooks is now running for the Senate.

Another Republican, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who voted to challenge some Electoral College tallies, was unavailable for an interview, his office said.

Also declining an interview was Senator Josh Hawley, who was captured in a photo raising a fist in salute to the mob as he entered the Capitol that day.

Yet, even in their absence, some of the Republicans are telegraphing their views. When asked whether he would be attending, Hawley's office issued a comment on the Senator's behalf.

“Joe Biden should resign,” Hawley said in a statement.

More than 600 people are facing federal charges in the riot that injured dozens of officers and sent lawmakers into hiding.

Five people eventually died, including Trump supporter Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed by police as she tried to break into a lobby off the House chamber. Several police officers later took their own lives.

Hundreds of people were charged with misdemeanors for entering the Capitol illegally, but hundreds of others are facing more serious felony charges including assault, obstruction of an official proceeding or conspiracy.

The most serious cases have been brought against members of two far-right extremist groups — the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers — as authorities probe to what extent the attack was planned. No January 6 defendant has been charged with sedition, though it was initially considered by authorities.

More than 60 people have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeanor charges of demonstrating in the Capitol.

Only a fraction of the defendants remain locked up while they await trial. Lawyers have complained of overly harsh conditions for the January 6 defendants in the D.C. jail, saying they are being held in what has been dubbed the “Patriot Unit.”

Defenders of the alleged Capitol attackers claim they are facing harsher prosecutions because of their political views than others, including Black Lives Matter protesters, but a review of court cases by the AP refutes that claim.

Representative Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee and a member of the select panel investigating the January 6 attack, said those who broke the law need to be prosecuted, “otherwise, we just rationalize, excuse and encourage more of the same.”

Schiff laments that the nation had a chance to move on from the attack of January 6, but instead chose a different path.

“There was really an opportunity to repudiate everything that led up to January 6, and instead, Republican leadership has continued to embrace it,” he said. “So that is discouraging. It means that the recovery is going to take much longer than it should.”

The Capitol's leafy grounds, a park-like favourite spot for people to snap photos in front of the iconic dome, would typically see few lawmakers or staff on a Saturday. While the Senate returns to session on Monday, the House doesn't resume until after the Monday following the rally.

When the fence first went up around the Capitol after the January attack, it drew heavy criticism from those worried about the message being sent as a symbol of democracy was closed off. Now, it's increasingly seen as necessary precaution.

Saturday, September 11, 2021

'Environment Parliament' Calls For Sustained Growth

The first-of-its-kind Parliament was attended by Padma Shri Jadav Payeng of Assam, Narmada Bachao Andolan founder Medha Patkar, environmental activist Amit Bhatnagar, former MLA Dr Sunilam and several other prominent figures  
 

A National 'Environment Parliament' was held in Bhopal on Thursday to shine a light on the importance of sustained growth in minimising environmental destruction and ensuring a safer future for the coming generations.

The first-of-its-kind Parliament was attended by Padma Shri Jadav Payeng of Assam, Narmada Bachao Andolan founder Medha Patkar, environmental activist Amit Bhatnagar, former MLA Dr Sunilam and several other prominent figures.

Jadav Payeng, born in the indigenous ‘Mising’ Tribe of Assam, is an environmental activist and forestry worker who is also known as the Forest Man of India. Payeng has to his credit a forest reserve spanning an area of over 550 hectares in Assam's Jorhat area, which he has developed over the past few decades.

During the Parliament session, environment enthusiasts also discussed Environmental Impact Assessment and its lacunae. Also finding prominent place was the aim of safeguarding the forests of Buxwaha and preventing the felling of lakhs of trees under the Ken–Betwa river linking project.

Environmental activists from across the country joined in the Parliament session by means of video-conferencing in the post-lunch session.

In his address at the conclave, Bhopal-based green activist Dr Subhas C Pandey, quoting a research paper published in 2016, shared the alarming data that if things remain as they are, Bhopal city’s total green cover -- which stood at 66% in 1990 -- will deplete to a meagre 4% by 2025. Dr Pandey said, “Going by the prevailing circumstances in the city, the outcome only seems an understatement.”

Increased pollution, depleted groundwater level, hampered ecology and reduced oxygen percentage in air has caused irreparable harm to Bhopal's ecosystem, added the environment researcher. The Smart City project, too, has proved to be a menace for the city's green cover.

Meanwhile, Paryavaran Bachao Abhiyan convener Sharad Sigh Kumre said that besides drawing up a strategy for saving over 25 lakh trees, which are facing the axe in the Ken-Betwa river link project and the Buxwaha diamond mining project in MP's Chhatarpur district, a session was set aside specifically for political figures so that their stand on the environmental issues could be clarified.

“Besides saving the greenery, we will be devising a strategy for safeguarding the Stone Age culture and rock paintings that exist in the forests of Buxwaha. Around 382-hectare area of the forest in Bundelkhand region is being leased out to an Aditya Birla group company for the excavation of diamonds,” he said. “The mass destruction of forests is planned even though the area falls under an arid zone in Bundelkhand,” said Kumre, pressing for revision of developmental policies in line with environmental hazards.

A group of volunteers from MP and other states -- under the aegis of the Paryavaran Bachao Samiti -- are running a campaign to save 2.25 lakh trees in Buxwaha and around 23 lakh trees which are under threat due to the Ken–Betwa river link project.

Amit Bhatnagar, an activist involved with the Save Buxwaha Project, claimed that the local people don’t want diamond mining and are in favour of saving the vast natural forest which faces the axe due to the project in the area.

Environmentalists at this 'Parliament' claimed that the government should consider the use of technology to produce diamonds artificially and there is no need to destroy a vast flourishing forest for this purpose. Activist Anand Patel said that naturally-grown vast forests like Buxwaha can’t be re-planted by humans and have a unique environmental significance.

The ambitious Ken-Betwa river link project -- that is expected to be inaugurated ahead of the UP assembly polls -- also resonated at the event, with Bhatnagar saying that as an alternative, traditional water bodies could be revived to address the issue of  water scarcity in Bundelkhand.

The participants of the 'Environment Parliament' demanded sustained and planned growth for a safe and secure future. They also adopted a resolution to save the environment and strongly urge policymakers to make meaningful changes to the status quo.


Thursday, September 9, 2021

How Will Taliban Takeover Impact Militancy In Kashmir?

 

FILE PHOTO: Paramilitary forces personnel can be seen during an encounter with militants in Kashmir in August 2019

Kashmir is reportedly seeing a surge in foreign militants. Analysts warn that increasing disaffection among young Kashmiris in the region could have serious consequences.

On August 31, hours after the last of the US troops left Afghanistan, al-Qaeda hailed the Taliban for its victory in Kabul. In a statement, the militant group called for the “liberation” of Kashmir, Somalia, Yemen, and other “Islamic lands.”

The statement sent ripples through New Delhi.

According to official figures, Kashmir is seeing a surge in foreign militants. There are now between 40 and 50 foreign militants, and 11 local militants active in north Kashmir bordering Pakistan, a report by The Hindu stated. This would be the first time in a decade that there are more foreign militants than local ones in the region.

Fearing a new wave of violence, analysts are watching the new geopolitical developments closely to determine how they would impact militancy in the region.

“The Taliban takeover will not only impact Kashmir but the whole of South Asia will also be affected,” Shesh Paul Vaid, the former director-general of Jammu and Kashmir Police, told DW.

“The Taliban takeover will have a psychological impact on all terrorist groups operating all across the world, including in the Kashmir Valley. There is no denying of the fact that their morale has been boosted,” he said.

‘Kashmiri situation has a momentum of its own’

Vaid argued that organisations like Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) have helped the Taliban in taking control of Afghanistan. But he said it remains to be seen whether the Taliban will help them in return.

“The first thing the Taliban did after taking over was that they released all terrorists from prisons including those from the ‘Islamic State’ (IS), LeT and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) … Pakistan’s ISI could use its influence on the Taliban and shift its training camps in Pakistan-administered Kashmir to areas in Afghanistan,” he said, referring to Pakistan’s intelligence service.

Victoria Schofield, an author and historian, has assessed the situation differently. She called the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan a “national movement.”

“It’s essentially an Afghan movement and the Kashmiri situation has a momentum of its own which is different,” Schofield, who has researched the Kashmir conflict over the last 35 years, told DW.

“In the old days, you heard about Afghans going to fight and help their Muslim brothers in Kashmir but I don’t see that happening now… it’s not part of the Kashmiri psyche to get muddled up in the universal jihad,” she added.

How has Kashmir militancy changed over the years?

The insurgency in Kashmir, which began in 1989, has undergone several changes in the last three decades.

Most recently, the Indian government scrapped Jammu and Kashmir’s special constitutional status and divided the region into two federally administered territories.

“With these moves came a systematic change in the composition of terrorist organisations,” Vaid said.

In the early 1990s, the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front called for the independence of Kashmir. In the mid-90s, more radicalized groups like the Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) became prominent, he said.

From 1999 onward, the “infiltration of foreign terrorists started” and “pan-Islamic terrorist organisations (such as) LeT and JeM — that were mainly composed of foreign terrorists — took the center stage and started this phenomenon of fidayeen [suicide] attacks,” Vaid told DW.

Another change in militancy, he added, came about in 2014 when the LeT and JeM started recruiting local Kashmiri boys in their ranks.

What are the factors fueling militancy?

The killing of Hizbul commander Burhan Wani in 2016 is seen as a watershed moment in the conflict’s history. Wani was the face of “new militancy,” which went from being covert in the 1990s to becoming more open, Vaid said.

According to Schofield, Wani and the group of new militants would not have been able to develop the cult following around them if it were not for the power of social media.

“He had been able to achieve this through the use of social media, which had not been possible two decades previously when the insurgency took off,” she said.

“The death of Burhan Wani reactivated the movement because he had become a hero for the youth,” Schofield added.

In addition to the rise of social media, Vaid said a range of other factors — such as unemployment — have pushed young Kashmiris into joining militant organisations.

“A lot of boys are getting radicalised due to the jihadist ideology,” Vaid said. “There is also the sheer thrill of holding a weapon. It gives a sense of power to unemployed youth. He feels important in society.”

Schofield said “disaffection” among youth who have grown up in the restive region could also play a role.

“The older generation of militants is dying out and you have this young group who haven’t experienced the militancy of the early years of insurgency, but who have now taken up the cause,” she said.

What was the impact of special status abrogation on militancy?

Following the abrogation of Jammu and Kashmir’s special status in 2019, a strict security lockdown was imposed in Jammu & Kashmir. Additional troops were deployed across the region, which was already heavily militarised.

“Abrogation of Article 370 has had a tremendous impact. So far in the last two years, the level of violence has gone down and fewer boys are joining terror organisations,” Vaid said.

Schofield said the impact of the abrogation was “very dramatic” because it brought in “more rigorous control by the Indian government.” She said the move made militancy “much more difficult,” but warned that disaffection increased.

In the aftermath of the events of 2019, new militant organisations such as the Resistance Front (TRF) have sprung up. But Schofield said they, too, could end up like their predecessors.

“They are going to be stepping in the footsteps of their forebears. But ultimately they are undoubtedly going to be crushed in the same way as their forebears were because you cannot take on the Indian Army,” she said. “It’s a tragedy that so many young people have lost their lives because of this unresolved political issue.” (Deutsche Welle)

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