Friday, November 20, 2020

'We are not afraid of you, Mike': Activists react to Pompeo's move against pro-BDS groups

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo designated any group that supports Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as antisemitic

Palestinians demonstrate near Israeli settlement of Psagot against visit by Mike Pompeo on 18 November (AFP/File photo)

By Sheren Khalel Published date: 19 November 2020 


Pro-Palestine and human rights advocates condemned US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's policy announcement targeting groups affiliated with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign.

Pompeo said on Thursday that the US officially regards the BDS movement as antisemitic and plans to cut any government funding to groups that have voiced support for the campaign - which urges individuals, companies and countries to hold Israel accountable for its human rights violations.

According to J Street's November National Jewish Survey, 22 percent of all Jewish Americans under 40 support the BDS movement, as do several members of Congress.

Under Pompeo's new order, essentially all groups that advocate for Palestinian rights in the US, such as Students for Justice in Palestine; Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP); Code Pink; US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN); US Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR); the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) and many more will be labelled antisemitic.

'I was deported by Israel in 2018, following that country's ban on BDS activists, and am ashamed to see my own country today following in Israel's footsteps of repressing free speech'
- Ariel Gold, national co-director at CodePink

"This is the last gasp of a dying regime," Hatem Abudayyeh, the national chair at USPCN told Middle East Eye.

While USPCN does not receive any government funding, it still objects to the idea that it will be officially designated as antisemitic because of its critical stance towards Israeli human rights violations.

"I believe the main issue for us is the criminalisation and delegitimisation of our movement," Abudayyeh said, warning that the new policy is likely to severely affect the ability of young activists on college campuses to freely express their support for Palestinian rights.

With the Trump administration using the controversial definition of antisemitism laid out by International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), any group that singles out Israel for criticism without at the same time criticising other countries that violate rights, will fall under the category of antisemitic.

The IHRA definition has been condemned by dozens of Jewish groups worldwide and by hundreds of leading Jewish and Israeli scholars.
'A last-ditch effort'

In addition to targeting groups that are supportive of BDS, Pompeo also announced that products made in Israeli settlements, considered illegal by most world bodies, will now be labelled as "Made in Israel" instead of the decades-old US norm of "Made in West Bank" labels, making it more difficult for consumers to boycott Israeli settlement goods.

While the Trump administration only has two months left before President-elect Joe Biden takes over, Abudayyeh said he was sceptical that the new Democratic administration would overturn either measure, given Biden's outspoken pro-Israel stance.

"Pompeo and Trump are trying to establish 'facts on the ground' for the next administration," he said.

"Yes, [Biden] has talked about reversing the decision of cutting funding to UNRWA," he continued, referring to the Trump administration's 2018 decision to cut aid to the UN Palestinian refugee agency. "But he has not talked about reversing the decision about the US embassy being moved to Jerusalem. He and Harris both are clearly huge fans of Israel."

Ahmad Abuznaid, executive director at USCPR, told MEE that the announcement was the latest push by the Trump administration to establish blanket US support for Israel.

Senators urge Trump to axe 'Made in West Bank' settlement labels before end of term
Read More »

"It's a last-ditch effort by Pompeo and Trump to destroy what they can from the Palestinian perspective and support what they can from the Israeli perspective. Their days are numbered, and I think these are desperate moves of [the] assumed to be ending administration," Abuznaid said.

"The State Department and Israel are moving forward with plans of annexation, of blurring the lines between settlements and non-settlements," he added, warning that the move may still backfire.

"They are really doing the work of clarifying for people that there is in fact a settler-colonial apartheid system at play here that seeks to occupy maximum Palestinian land with minimal Palestinians and rights for Palestinians," he said.

Jamil Dakwar, director of the ACLU's Human Rights Program, warned that it is "dangerous to weaponize the fight against anti-Semitism for political ends" and "personal political ambitions".

"By equating criticism of Israel or Zionism with anti-Semitism, Pompeo aims to suppress and chill legitimate advocacy in support of Palestinian human rights," Dakwar tweeted.

It’s very dangerous to weaponize the fight against anti-Semitism for political ends (and personal political ambitions).

By equating criticism of Israel or Zionism with anti-Semitism, Pompeo aims to suppress and chill legitimate advocacy in support of Palestinian human rights. https://t.co/OtXiSRdYQ4— Jamil Dakwar (@jdakwar) November 19, 2020

Pompeo's anti-BDS announcement follows a 2018 law passed by Israel that blocks entry into the country of anyone affiliated with the movement.

Ariel Gold, the national co-director at CodePink, a US-based anti-war group, was deported from Israel following the law's passing that year.

In an emailed statement she slammed the Trump administration for taking a similar stance.

"It is particularly appalling to me as an American Jew and as someone who is committed to ending Israel's violations of Palestinian rights," Gold said. "I was deported by Israel in 2018, following that country's ban on BDS activists, and am ashamed to see my own country today following in Israel's footsteps of repressing free speech."

Sari Bashi, a human rights lawyer and co-founder of Gisha, an Israeli human rights NGO, called Pompeo's move an "insult to the legacy of the brave women and men throughout history who gave their lives to fight anti-Semitism".

"BDS supporters oppose the Israeli government because it oppresses Palestinians. Not because it's run by Jews," she said in a post to Twitter.

Pompeo, how dare you insult the legacy of the brave women and men throughout history who gave their lives to fight anti-Semitism and other forms of racism? BDS supporters oppose the Israeli government because it oppresses Palestinians. Not because it's run by Jews. https://t.co/PFnvz7cCwZ— Sari Bashi (@saribashi) November 19, 2020

"People who endorse bigotry against Palestinians should not be trusted to determine what constitutes bigotry against Jews," said Peter Beinart, a Jewish activist and political commentator.

Meanwhile, other activists expressed concerns that larger and more established human rights groups including Human Rights Watch (HRW), Amnesty International, Oxfam and others that have been critical of Israel's rights violations may be targeted with the antisemitic label.
Groups vow to continue human rights work

HRW, which has already been targeted in Israel, Venezuela and Iran, spoke out against the move, which it said went against US freedom of speech norms.

"Americans have a long history of supporting peaceful boycotts to promote social justice and human rights, like the civil rights boycott in Mississippi, or those against apartheid in South Africa," Eric Goldstein, director of HRW's Middle East and North Africa division, said in a statement on Thursday.

"The Trump administration has no business trying to tar groups because they back boycotts," he said.

Last year, Israel deported HRW's Israel and Palestine director, Omar Shakir, for his work, and in October stopped granting any visas to employees at the United Nations' human rights agency, effectively forcing the body’s top staff to leave.

US @SecPompeo today falsely equated peaceful support for boycotts of Israel with antisemitism. @hrw responds: pic.twitter.com/gi8fbxzODB— Omar Shakir (@OmarSShakir) November 19, 2020

Amnesty International USA, in a lengthy statement on its website, also condemned Pompeo's announcement as a threat to freedom of expression and human rights work.

"The US administration is following the Israeli government's approach in using false and politically motivated accusations of antisemitism to harm peaceful activists, including human rights defenders, and shield from accountability those responsible for illegal actions that harm people in Israel, in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and here at home," Bob Goodfellow, the interim executive director of Amnesty International USA, said in a statement on Thursday.

"The process comes across as particularly hypocritical and deceitful coming from an administration that has emboldened neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other groups who advocate violence and discrimination, shown a callous disregard for international law, and favored Israeli policies that result in institutionalized discrimination and systematic human rights violations against millions of Palestinians," Goodfellow said. 


Groups critical of Israel to be branded 'antisemitic' under Pompeo plan: Report Read More »

He also warned that the policy "hurts Jewish people by equating Israel with Judaism and likening criticism of Israeli government policies and practices to antisemitism".

Still, Amnesty vowed not to allow the new policy to affect its ongoing human rights work, saying the group will "continue to support our Israeli and Palestinian colleagues, including BDS activists, who like human rights defenders around the world, speak up when justice, freedom, truth, and dignity are denied".

Jewish Voice for Peace has also committed to continuing its pro-BDS work, despite this new threat.

"We are proudly Jewish, proudly anti-Zionist, and proudly pro-BDS," the group said on Twitter. "We are part of the movement for Palestinian rights because ALL people should live in freedom and with justice. BDS is a powerful tool in the work for Palestinian rights. We are not afraid of you, Mike."

For its part, the BDS National Committee accused the US government of "fraudulent revision of the definition of antisemitism".

"The fanatic Trump-Netanyahu alliance is intentionally conflating opposition to Israel’s regime of occupation, colonization and apartheid against Palestinians and calls for nonviolent pressure to end this regime on the one hand with anti-Jewish racism on the other, in order to suppress advocacy of Palestinian rights under international law," the group said.

"BDS has consistently and categorically rejected all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish racism, as a matter of principle."

Pompeo says Israel boycott a 'cancer,' visits West Bank settlements

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (L) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu depart after a joint news conference in Jerusalem, Israel, on Thursday. Photo by Maya Alleruzzo/UPI/Pool | License Photo

Nov. 19 (UPI) -- U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday became the first top American official to visit settlements in the Israeli-controlled West Bank -- and vowed that the United States will cut funding over a boycott linked to what he said is an anti-Semitic movement.

Pompeo made the funding threat during a joint news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called the promise "simply wonderful.

The Boycott, Disinvestment and Sanctions movement was started in 2005 and aims to use economic pressure to compel Israel to end its control in the West Bank and other disputed territories.

In his remarks Thursday, Pompeo labeled the BDS movement "hateful" and said groups or businesses associated with it will see an economic backlash.

"We want to stand with all other nations that recognize the BDS movement for the cancer that it is, and we're committed to combating it," Pompeo said. "Our record speaks for itself.

"During the Trump administration, America stands with Israel like never before. Indeed, the commitment we've made, the ironclad commitment we've made to the Jewish state, will continue."

Also Thursday, Pompeo also became the first U.S. secretary of state to visit an Israeli settlement in the West Bank. He traveled to to Judea and Samaria and made a stop at the Psagot Winery and Shaar Binyamin Industrial Park.

"Today the United States Department of State stands strongly to the recognition that settlements can be done in a way that are lawful and appropriate and proper," he said.

Israel's building settlements in Palestinian areas of the West Bank has been condemned by most of the international community. A year ago, Pompeo said the settlements don't violate international laws -- a reversal of a long-held U.S. position.

Thursday, Netanyahu thanked Pompeo and the Trump administration for various decisions over the last four years that benefited Israel -- including moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, helping to normalize relations with the United Arab Emirates and supporting Israeli settlements in the Golan Heights.

"Thanks to President Trump, the United States proposed the first truly realistic plan for peace between Israelis and Palestinians," Netanyahu said. "And thanks to President Trump, Israel was able to forge peace with three Arab countries: the UAE, Bahrain and Sudan."

Both Netanyahu and Israeli President Reuven Rivlin have congratulated President-elect Joe Biden on his victory and invited him to meet in Jerusalem early next year.

Pompeo's visit in Israel is part of a 10-day, seven-nation tour in Europe and the Middle East. He will next visit the UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia before returning to the United State
BDS: US to label Israel boycott movement as 'antisemitic'

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also announces that settlement products will be labelled 'made in Israel'


Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his wife Susan are seen past American and Israeli flags as they step off a plane at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv (AFP)


MEE and agencies
Published date: 19 November 2020 

The United States will label the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign, which seeks to isolate Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians, as antisemitic, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Thursday.

Calling the movement "a cancer", Pompeo said the US "will regard the global anti-Israel BDS campaign as antisemitic... We want to stand with all other nations that recognise the BDS movement for the cancer that it is."

The outgoing secretary of state also revealed that the United States will begin labelling Israeli products from illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank as "made in Israel".


'We want to stand with all other nations that recognise the BDS movement for the cancer that it is'

- Mike Pompeo

"Proud to support American policy and stand with our great ally Israel. New guidelines outlined today protect Israeli producers and put the United States, and the world, on track towards recognizing reality," he tweeted.

Pompeo's statements came as he visited Israel in a trip that upended decades of US and international protocol, and stoked Palestinian animosity at a time when Palestinian and Israeli officials looked to begin thawing relations in the wake of US President Donald Trump's 3 November election loss.

Pompeo's itinerary included trips to the Psagot settlement in the West Bank, where he was presented with an eponymous wine at a vineyard, and the Golan Heights, Syrian territory occupied by Israel since 1967. He is the first secretary of state to do so.
'Fanatic alliance'

In response to the antisemitism label, the Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) issued a statement saying Trump's administration and Israel had enabled white supremacy and antisemitism in the US and worldwide, "while simultaneously smearing BDS... as antisemitic".

"BDS has consistently and categorically rejected all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish racism, as a matter of principle," the statement said.

BDS said that the Trump-Netanyahu "fanatic alliance" had fused criticism of "Israel's regime of occupation, colonisation and apartheid against Palestinians" with "anti-Jewish racism... in order to suppress advocacy of Palestinian rights under international law".

Meanwhile, Palestine Liberation Organisation official Nabil Abu Rudeineh said Pompeo's visit to the Israeli settlement is "a severe challenge" to United Nations decisions and that the US administration is "insisting to actively participate in occupied Palestinian lands".

Yousef Jabareen, an Israeli MP representing Palestinian citizens of Israel, said Pompeo's tour of occupied territories and Israeli settlements "undermines international law".

Israel boycott: What is the BDS movement?
Read More »

"The settlements represent an ongoing crime against the Palestinian people; they perpetuate the occupation and are the primary barrier to establishing a Palestinian state," he said, calling on President-elect Joe Biden to backtrack "dangerous steps" taken during Trump's term.

Hundreds of Palestinian protesters rallied on Wednesday against the first visit of a US diplomat to an illegal settlement, while Israel’s military were quick to respond with tear gas and sound bombs.

Psagot winery is one of several in which US evangelical Christians volunteer to help Jewish farmers harvest their vineyards. It is also one of a number of Israeli companies that, following a ruling by the European Union's top court, has to label the products it sells in EU countries as being made in settlements.

With Trump on his way out after losing the presidential election to Joe Biden, it is believed Pompeo is plotting a run for the presidency in 2024, and Israel is considered a major issue for the Christian Evangelical base of the Republican party.

He and his wife notably stopped by Qasr Al-Yahud, the site of Jesus's baptism on the Jordan River near Jericho.

Established in 2005, the BDS movement seeks to apply financial pressure on Israel to address its violation of Palestinians' rights, a tactic the Israeli government has actively sought to discredit. The movement is inspired by the international pressure placed on South Africa's apartheid regime.

Over the years, Israeli authorities have increased efforts to fight BDS, passing a number of laws seeking to criminalise calls for a boycott of Israel or Israeli companies.

Settlement-building is seen by many as the greatest obstacle to Israeli-Palestinian peace. Many more settlement units have been built since Trump, a staunch supporter of Israel, took office in 2016.

Black models increasingly visible on Brazil's catwalks

Issued on: 20/11/2020 - 
At 21, the portfolio of Brazilian model Shirley Pitta already includes work for Vogue, Elle and Marie Claire 
NELSON ALMEIDA AFP/File

Sao Paulo (AFP)

Afro-Brazilian models Shirley Pitta and Gloria Maria Fonseca Siqueira had dreamed of the catwalk since they were girls, but in a Brazilian fashion world much whiter than the country itself, it remained a far-away fantasy until recently.

In a sign of changing times in Brazil and elsewhere, the pair saw their dreams come true at this year's Sao Paulo Fashion Week.

SPFW, one of the industry's premier events, this year implemented a requirement for at least half of every label's models to be people of color, in a move hailed by black and indigenous rights activists.

"It took me a long time to see myself as a beautiful person, a person who exists. Because on television, I always saw things I wasn't," says Pitta, 21, whose portfolio already includes work for leading fashion magazines Vogue, Elle and Marie Claire.

She calls herself a "black favela girl from the Northeast," referring to the slums of Brazil's most impoverished region.

Her modern-day Cinderella story has captured as much attention as her striking appearance.

Before she was discovered in 2018, she spent her days selling grilled kebabs outside the zoo in her hometown, Salvador.

"We were there every day, including Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. We got there in the morning and we worked into the night," she told AFP in between gigs at SPFW, as Brazil prepared to celebrate Black Consciousness Day on Friday.

With her short hair, high cheekbones and piercing gaze, Pitta exudes a confidence she says does not come as easily at it might appear.

"When I was little I used to wrap towels around my head," ashamed of the way her hair looked, she says.

"It's important to talk about these things, because our children won't have long, straight hair when they grow up, and they need to know that's not a problem. It's something beautiful."

In Brazil, the last country in the Americas to abolish slavery -- in 1888 -- around 55 percent of the population identifies as black or mixed-race.

But although whites earn 74 percent more than people of color on average, a national debate on racial inequality has only begun relatively recently.

The conversation was perhaps delayed by a long-held idea among the Brazilian elite that the country was a "racial democracy" protected from racism by the fact that most people have some black or indigenous ancestry.

So it was a sign of radical change when SPFW, which was held remotely this year because of the coronavirus pandemic, required more inclusive casting.

That opened the doors to Pitta and 17-year-old Siqueira.

- 'I'll never make it' -

Tall and thin, with an exuberant afro, Siqueira says it took her a long time to realize she could have a future in the fashion world, despite people telling her she had potential as a model.

"I'll never make it," she remembers thinking when she saw the model catalogue at Ford Models, one of the industry's top agencies, as a 15-year-old.

Now, she gives interviews from the agency's headquarters in Sao Paulo.

"I wasn't confident. I thought I wasn't beautiful enough," she says.

"But now I know I can travel the world through this."

The youngest of seven children from a lower-middle-class family, Siqueira grew up admiring models like Naomi Campbell and Adut Akech.

She sees Brazil, home to supermodel Gisele Bundchen, as a country of diversity, something she would like to see it embrace for its positive aspects.

"Sometimes people feel like they're less because they're different, and they try to fit a standard that isn't them. They don't realize that being different is unique," she says.

Pitta sees the industry at a turning point.

"We're breaking through. I'm not going to sit there thinking about the past. We're moving forward," she says.

© 2020 AFP
VIVE CUBA LIBRE
Cuba reopens but faces challenge wooing back tourists

Issued on: 20/11/2020 - 21:18
A receptionist sanitizes her hands at the Melia Habana Hotel in Havana -- Cuba is reopening its doors to foreign tourists after months of coronavirus-related closures, but will travelers return?  YAMIL LAGE AFP

Havana (AFP)

Cuba is reopening its doors to foreign tourists after an eight-month shutdown due to the coronavirus pandemic, but the cash-strapped country faces an uphill struggle to woo back wary travelers.

Tourism chiefs are banking on the island's track record of keeping the virus in check to win back holidaymakers.
"This is a major challenge," said Francisco Camps, deputy general manager of Melia, a Spanish hotel chain that currently is operating only 10 of its 34 locations in Cuba.ADVERTISING


The industry is pinning its hopes for the November-April high season on the capital Havana, the country's main tourist draw, which opened its international airport last weekend.

With its old fashioned Caribbean charm, the UNESCO World Heritage city attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.

"Havana is important because it has regular flights, which allows connections with Europe," says Camps.

"It also allows a flow of visitors who do not only come to see the city but also do tours" -- bringing more tourist dollars than mere beachgoers.

The rest of the country's six international airports reopened last month to charter flights.

Tourism was worth $2.6 billion to Cuba in 2019. Deprived of that revenue this year, the island had to drastically reduce imports -- the source of 80 percent of its food.

Across the country, lines outside supermarkets are getting longer, with shortages of basics like coffee, milk and even toilet paper increasingly common.

"The shortages we are experiencing are quite significant -- I think it's the worst since the 1990s," said economist Ricardo Torres of the University of Havana.

That decade was dominated by a period of extreme austerity known as the Special Period, following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

- 'Safe destination' -

Torres said tourism "is the sector that really managed to pull Cuba out of its worst economic crisis," after that period.

But these days, opening the country's doors to international visitors is not risk-free.

Several cases of coronavirus have been detected on flights of British and Russian tourists who have recently come to visit the island's beaches, forcing dozens of travelers into isolation.

"This is undoubtedly a great risk," said Francisco Duran, chief epidemiologist at Cuba's health ministry.

"I think our population needs to be aware of this, so that they can protect themselves as well as the people who arrive."

Case numbers here are among the lowest in the Americas, with just over 7,700 infections in a population of 11.2 million.

"Cuba, a safe destination" has been adopted as a slogan designed to reassure travellers.

Cuba's protocols require new arrivals to take a PCR test costing $30 on arrival and limit their movements until results are made available 24 hours later.

Every hotel will have a permanent medical team in place, due to a national health network that boasts 82 doctors per 10,000 inhabitants -- compared with 32 in France and 26 in the United States.

"Cuba's very successful strategy in controlling the epidemic is also an asset when it comes to opening up," said Torres, "because the tourists in the coming months will be looking for safe destinations from a health perspective."

"So, yes, we have to protect people's lives, but we also need to revive our economy, which is in a downward spiral," he said.

- Teleworking from Cuba? -

Cuba hosted a seminar for a group of 150 German travel agents earlier this month. Such is the importance of the German market that Prime Minister Manuel Marrero went to meet them.

But several European countries such as France are still not allowing citizens to travel abroad for pure tourism due to a second wave of the pandemic.

Canada, Cuba's biggest tourist market, is imposing a quarantine on people returning from the island.

The World Tourism Organization does not foresee a rebound in the industry before the end of 2021 -- hence the need for Cubans to be creative.

Melia now offers long stays -- of two to three months -- to Canadian "snowbirds" seeking to escape the harsh northern winter.

The industry is also seeking to exploit the new trend of teleworking, but that poses a challenge in a country where internet connections are often slow and unstable.

"One thing that is obviously important is the need to ensure connectivity," said Camps.

"So, for each of the five pilot hotels selected, we have acquired a gigabyte of bandwidth."

But Melia will keep a third of its Cuban hotels closed in 2021, believing a return to normal is unlikely for at least two years.

© 2020 AFP 


How To Make A Classic Cuba Libre Cocktail
Written by 
Colleen Graham
Updated 09/09/19

 

Nutritional Guidelines (per serving)141 Calories
0g Fat
4g Carbs
0g Protein

See Full Nutritional Guidelines
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

The Cuba Libre recipe is an easy and popular mixed drink that you will find very familiar. Translated from Spanish, the name means “Free Cuba,” a phrase that was popularized around the end of the Spanish-American War and used to celebrate that Cuba was freed from Spanish rule.


This simple mixed drink is similar to a rum and Coke, but the addition of fresh lime juice lightens up the mix and cuts through the sweetness of the cola. The lime is the single element that defines the Cuba Libre as a separate drink and it should be fresh (not from a bottle) to keep the drink authentic.


Ingredients

1/2 lime (juiced)
2 ounces light rum
4 ounces cola (Coca-Cola)

Steps to Make It

Gather the ingredients.

Squeeze the juice of half a lime into a collins glass or highball glass.

Add ice cubes and pour the rum into the glass.

Fill with cola and stir well.

Serve and enjoy!


Tips

If you want to make a more complex drink, after squeezing the lime, drop it into the serving glass and muddle it to release the citrus oil from the rind. Remove the fruit before adding the other ingredients.


A collins glass is taller and narrower than a highball glass, so it would maintain the carbonation of the cola longer. However, you can make a Cuba Libre at home in any tall glass you have handy.

If you can source some Mexican Coca-Cola that is sweetened with cane sugar, it will be more authentic than the American Coca-Cola sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS). You can use other brands of cola or artisanal colas as you prefer.

Light rum is usually chosen for the Cuba Libre, and to be traditional you should use a Cuban-style rum. 
HAVANA CLUB AMBER
However, if you like dark rum, you can give that a try in your cocktail.


History

While the origins of the Cuba Libre and the rum and Coke claim to come from the end of the Spanish-American War in 1898, that is doubtful. Coca-Cola did not arrive in Cuba until 1900. If there was a Cuba Libre before 1900, it was made with rum, water, and brown sugar.


A Bacardi advertising executive claims he was in Havana in 1900 when the drink was first mixed with Bacardi Rum and Coca-Cola. A competing story is that the Cuba Libre was first mixed at La Florida restaurant in Havana in 1902 on the anniversary of Cuban independence.


Iced drinks had been popular in Cuba since the 1800s. Although Cuba didn't make its own ice in those days, they had plenty of ice because it was imported by ice entrepreneur Frederic Tudor to the Caribbean islands in the early 1800s.


The popularity of rum and Coke spread to the U.S. and during Prohibition, Coca-Cola was useful in hiding the flavor of low-quality booze. When the U.S. placed an embargo on Coca-Cola imports to Cuba in 1960, Cubans began making Cuba Libres with TuKola instead.


How Strong Is a Cuba Libre?


The Cuba Libre is a rather mild mixed drink. Its actual alcohol content will vary depending on the strength of your rum and the amount of cola you end up pouring. On average, though, it will mix up to just 11 percent ABV (22 proof). It's perfectly normal for highball drinks and about as strong as a glass of wine.

ALTERNATE RECIPE 
THE NOSEY CHEF
Cuba Libre
Ingredients
60ml Havana Club Especial rum (this is not the place for white Bacardi, people)
7.5ml freshly squeezed lime juice
2 dashes Angostura bitters
150ml Coca-Cola
BESIDES WE WOULD NEVER USE A REACTIONARY ANTI CUBA  BACARDI


 SPACE WARS

FRANCE PLANS FOR SPACE LASERS

Satellite to track rising seas as climate warms

Issued on: 20/11/2020 - 
Sentinel-6 is set to be hoisted into a low-Earth 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) orbit by a Space X Falcon 9 rocket from California on Saturday - EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY/AFP/File

Paris (AFP)

An Earth-observation satellite developed by European and US space agencies set to lift off Saturday will measure sea level rise, tracking changes threatening to disrupt tens of millions of lives within a generation.

If all goes according to plan, the payload will be hoisted into a low-Earth 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) orbit by a Space X Falcon 9 rocket, with lift-off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California at 17:17 GMT.

Sentinel-6a will be the first of two identical satellites -- the second to be launched in five years -- that will provide measurements of unprecedented precision until at least 2030.

Each Sentinel-6 probe carries a radar altimeter, which measures the time it takes for radar pulses to travel to Earth’s surface and back again.

The satellites will circle the planet in the same orbit as earlier missions that supplied sea-surface height data over the last three decades, mapping 95 percent of Earth’s ice-free ocean every ten days.

Accelerating sea level rise is arguably the climate change impact that will affect the largest number of people over the next three decades.

Nearly 800 million people live within five metres of sea level, and even an increase in sea level of a few centimetres can translate into vastly more damage from high tides and storm surges.

- Sea level rise accelerating -

Already today, there are more than 100 million people living below high tide levels.

"Extreme sea level events that are historically rare -- once per century in the recent past -- are projected to occur frequently, at least once per year, at many locations by 2050," especially in the tropics, the UN climate science advisory panel, the IPCC, concluded in a major report last year.

Satellites tracking the world's oceans since 1993 show that global mean sea level has risen, on average, by over three millimetres (more than a tenth of an inch) annually.

More recently, that rate has increased to 5 mm per year.

"It is crucial that we are able to see these accelerations," said Alain Ratier, outgoing Director-General of Europe’s meteorological satellite agency, EUMETSAT.

China, Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand are home to the greatest number of people who today live on land that could be threatened by permanent inundation by 2100.

The IPCC forecasts an increase in global sea level rise of up to 1.1 metres (43 inches) by the end of the century.

The Copernicus Sentinel-6 mission is a collaboration of the European Commission, the European Space Agency (ESA), EUMETSAT, NASA and the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The Sentinel satellites are each about the size and shape of a large minivan topped with slanted solar panels, and weigh nearly 1,200 kilos (2,600 pounds), including rocket fuel.

They are designed to last for five-and-a-half years, but could provide data for far longer.

© 2020 AFP
Antimicrobial resistance as dangerous as pandemic: WHO

Issued on: 20/11/2020 - 
Intensive animal farming can be a petri dish for antibiotic-resistant bacteria to develop
 STR AFP/File


Geneva (AFP)

The World Health Organization warned Friday that growing antimicrobial resistance was every bit as dangerous as the coronavirus pandemic -- and threatened to reverse a century of medical progress.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called the issue "one of the greatest health threats of our time".


Antibiotic resistance happens when bugs become immune to existing drugs, rendering minor injuries and common infections potentially deadly.


Resistance has grown in recent years due to overuse in humans, but also in farm animals.


"Antimicrobial resistance may not seem as urgent as a pandemic but it is just as dangerous," Tedros told a virtual press conference.

"It threatens to unwind a century of medical progress and leave us defenceless against infections that today can be treated easily," he said.


The WHO said antimicrobial resistance was endangering food security, economic development and the planet's ability to fight diseases.

Resistance has led to increased health care costs, hospital admissions, treatment failures, severe illnesses and deaths, the UN health agency said.

The WHO joined forces with the Food and Agriculture Organization and with the World Organisation for Animal Health to launch a new group to advocate for urgent action to combat the threat.

The One Health Global Leaders Group on Antimicrobial Resistance will bring together heads of government, company chief executives and civil society leaders.

The group is co-chaired by Prime Ministers Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh and Mia Mottley of Barbados.

The International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations said superbugs that are resistant to existing antibiotics were already taking an heavy toll.

"About 700,000 people globally die each year due to antimicrobial resistance. Without strong action to ensure appropriate use of existing antibiotics, as well as new and better treatments, that figure could rise to 10 million by 2050," the IFPMA said in a statement welcoming the new group.


© 2020 AFP
Protect the living, honour the dead: Ending violence against women in France


Issued on: 20/11/2020 -
By:Mélina HUET

Ahead of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25, we bring you a special documentary on the scourge of domestic violence. Every year in France, more than 220,000 women are victims of violence inflicted by a partner or ex-partner. This abuse usually takes place behind closed doors and takes many forms: beatings, rapes, sexual mutilations, kidnappings. Tragically, last year saw more than 150 femicides. FRANCE 24's Mélina Huet followed four women – a policewoman, a lawyer, a gynaecologist and an activist – who are trying to change the status quo.
CSIRO research ship captures the moment a meteor breaks up over Tasmania’s south coast



Erin Cooper
NOV. 19, 2020

The live-stream camera on board the CSIRO’s research vessel Investigator operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, but rarely does it pick up a remarkable event.

Just before 9.30pm on Wednesday, crew on board the vessel about 100 kilometres south of Tasmania were treated to the sight of a meteor breaking up over the ocean.

The bright flash of light, which appeared green to the naked eye but was captured on video in black and white, descended from space and disintegrated before their eyes.

Voyage manager John Hooper said capturing the moment was just “a stroke of luck”.

“What we saw on reviewing the live-stream footage astounded us, the size and brightness of the meteor was incredible,” he said.

“It was amazing to watch the footage and we were very fortunate that we captured it all on the ship live-stream.”

Glen Nagle from CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science said while more than 100 tonnes of natural space debris enters Earth’s atmosphere daily, most of it flies over unpopulated areas, making this sighting all the more special

Mr Nagle said friction is what gives meteors their spectacular appearance.

“When a meteor enters the Earth’s atmosphere at high speed, it is the friction of rock with the atmosphere that makes them burn, as their kinetic energy is converted to other forms like heat, light and sound,” he said.

“Many meteors were once asteroids, travelling through space on their own trajectory, but this changes as they pass close to Earth, where they can be affected by its gravitational pull.

“As they enter our atmosphere, they become meteors and their entry can be visually spectacular.”


The RV Investigator crew were undertaking routine seafloor mapping and trialling marine equipment when the extraordinary sight occurred – a sight they don’t think anyone else has managed to get on camera.

“Cameras are everywhere, in our pockets and around our cities, but they have to be pointed in the right place at the right time and RV Investigator was in that place and time,” Mr Nagle said.-ABC


SOUTH AFRICA
White Knight passes blame on ‘ineffective’ hand sanitiser


VIDEO Substandard sanitisers scrutinised

There is growing concern about the safety of hand sanitisers. But, South Africa is reportedly behind the curve in putting in place measures to ensure products are safe. Lise Korsten from the Centre for Excellence in Food Security at the University of Pretoria speaks to Jeremy Maggs on this. Courtesy #DStv403

Cathryn Boyes Social Media Reporter

The company behind a popular sanitiser blasted as “ineffective” by the consumer watchdog has blamed the product’s manufacturer.

On Thursday, consumer watchdog Choice urged Australians not to buy White Knight antibacterial hand sanitiser after it failed independent lab testing.

Choice said customers who had already bought the product from United petrol stations and online should “stop using it immediately”, as it did not contain enough alcohol to be effective.


Senior campaigner Dean Price said the sanitiser claimed to contain 75 per cent alcohol, but lab testing found it was only 52 per cent.

According to Choice, an hand sanitiser must be 60-80 per cent alcohol, depending on the type of alcohol used.
Tweet from @choiceaustralia

The New Daily contacted White Knight to see if the company was aware of the discrepancy between what its product claimed and what was in the bottle.

White Knight responded with a statement blaming the manufacturer of its sanitiser, Teddie Group, and listing the group’s other sanitiser brands.

“The Teddie Group Pty Ltd manufactured the product for White Knight and had given assurances to White Knight of its quality and alcohol percentage,” it said.

“The volumes of ethanol supplied to Teddie Group were also reconciled to the production purchased from them.”
Tweet from @RitaTunstall

According to its website, Teddie Group makes health and beauty products for several brands, including Linea Derma, Lior, Wipe it Now, Nueo and Askmedica.

Mr Price said the amount of alcohol in the White Knight hand sanitiser was “well below” the amount required to be effective against COVID-19 and similar viruses.


“If you’ve bought White Knight sanitiser, we recommend you stop using it immediately,” he said.

The New Daily understands White Knight and United Petroleum have removed the product from shelves, and plan to return it to the manufacturer.
I bought six bottles of this – what now?

Some good news for customers who have stocked up on White Knight sanitiser – the company will refund your purchase.

White Knight said customers should return the product to get refund. They will need to return to their place of purchase, with a receipt.

The New Daily has contacted Teddie Group for comment.