Sunday, December 20, 2020

UK
Why We Need an Eco-Socialist Movement

The relationship between environmentalists and socialists has at times been a fraught one – but if the fight against climate disaster is to be won, we'll have to work together.



By Sam Knights 
19.12.2020

In the last ten years, mass movements have defined our political and cultural landscape. There have been more mass movements demanding radical change than in any other period since the Second World War. It felt, at times, as if we were entering a new era of protest. And then, earlier this year, the outbreak of a deadly virus enforced an unprecedented pause in the history of civil unrest.

The pandemic has certainly slowed the trend towards a more radical politics, but it has not been able to suppress it altogether. In the last year, there has been a proliferation of mutual aid networks and many social movements have found innovative ways of sustaining their political activity online. Other movements have also emerged to push back on the most pressing issues of the day. In Spain, hundreds of families are refusing to pay rent. In Poland, thousands of women are on strike over abortion rights. In the United States, the murder of George Floyd triggered global protests for racial and economic justice.

You might think, given the scale of the climate crisis, that the environmental movement would be on a similar footing. But in Britain, at least, it has been slower to respond. There has been the occasional online rally, and the odd seminar or panel discussion. At their best, these events have made politics more accessible and been the start of some really important conversations. At their worst, they have accentuated how disparate and ineffective our organising has become. There have been some genuine attempts to create change, but generally these have either failed to take off or been destined to failure from the very beginning; take the campaign to ‘build back better’, for example, which is now a slogan used routinely by Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party.

For good reason, there have been very few attempts at mass mobilisation over the last year. The obvious exception to that is Extinction Rebellion, which held a week of protest in September. These protests have previously attracted thousands of people, but this time the protests were attended by a few hundred and received little to no attention in the press. Organisers knew, therefore, that the focus had to shift onto smaller, more targeted actions. In one particularly striking action, activists blocked the road outside a major print works, preventing The Sun, The Daily Mail, The Times, and The Daily Telegraph from reaching the shop floor. It was a brave action which the movement will undoubtedly be punished for.

Speak to any of the organisers, however, and a different story begins to emerge. Extinction Rebellion was losing public support long before the pandemic. Many activists were teetering on the brink of burnout, the movement was running out of money, and a coherent strategy was nowhere to be seen. It’s about time we said in public what everybody is already saying in private: the climate movement is running out of ideas. The energy is waning. The movement is splintering. The halcyon days of the previous summer seems, now, like a lifetime ago.

Social movements tend to operate in cycles. There are years of action and years of inaction. Moments of success and periods of failure. Of course, for many activists, the ultimate goal is to build movements that will endure. But that is far easier said than done. In the few movements that last longer than one or two years, we can also observe peaks and troughs in activity. Other movements fail before they have even begun. Some go through periods of bureaucratisation, and others simply fail to stay relevant. Often, there are years where nothing really happens.

We cannot afford for that to happen now. Whether you consider yourself a part of the climate movement or not, the science is clear. We are teetering on the precipice of catastrophe. The next few years are, arguably, the most important years in the struggle for climate and ecological justice. We must, therefore, jumpstart the natural lifecycle of the climate movement and ensure that the pandemic does not put a stop to radical action.

There are millions of people who are receptive to this message. Contrary to popular belief, most people have a very good understanding of this crisis. People know, deep down, that the climate crisis is the product of a dangerous and deadly system. They live with the consequences of capitalism, and they are painfully aware of its deficiencies. One of the mistakes that activists often make is to forget how perceptive and intelligent most people are. They want a radical response to the climate crisis. They know that recycling alone is not enough. They are crying out for real change, but it has to be a change that they believe in.

This is where the Left has an important role to play. Unlike the mainstream climate movement, the Left has a coherent analysis of capitalism and an understanding of what needs to happen next. Indeed, many of the solutions that are needed to tackle climate change have been conceptualised and developed by the Left over a long period of time. If the Left and the climate movement can start working together, then real change might just be possible.
A Year in the Climate Movement

Two years ago, the world changed. In Britain, we had just lived through the hottest summer on record. We watched the grass die, the crops fail, and the water run dry, and then, just as everyone began to wonder what was happening, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published The Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C.

This landmark report warned that limiting global warming to a safe level would require ‘rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society’. In other words, the top scientists in the world were giving us a very clear choice: we could either choose to accept the unbearable horror of climate and ecological breakdown, or we could choose to do something about it. To democratise our society, decarbonise our economy, and dismantle the failing systems that were driving these crises.

Across the western world, people began to finally wake up. People marched through the streets of the city, blocking roads, shutting down buildings, and demanding system change. In London, Extinction Rebellion organised one of the largest campaigns of nonviolent civil disobedience in history. Over a thousand people were arrested during eleven days of rolling rebellion. Extinction Rebellion had held its first ever protest in the autumn of the previous year; now, just six months later, the United Kingdom became the first country in the world to declare a climate emergency.

It is always difficult to measure the success of a protest, but it certainly felt like something was changing. For those of us who were there, it was like living in the eye of a tornado. The previous year, I had quit my job and started volunteering for the movement full time. Six months later, I was coordinating the political strategy of the first rebellion. On my departure, I wrote a letter to the movement which said publicly what many of us had been arguing privately for months: that Extinction Rebellion needed to change, or it would die. A lot had changed in a very short space of time.

The letter was read and shared thousands of times and I thought, naively, that it might lead to a change in strategy. At least, I thought, it would be the start of an important conversation. Unfortunately, Extinction Rebellion did not change. The core team resisted the call for a fourth demand on climate justice, despite evidence that showed the majority of their activists supported it, and controversial actions distracted the movement from more important discussions about strategy. A lack of internal democracy led to a divided and increasingly confrontational movement.

Today, Extinction Rebellion is failing to tell the truth about climate change. It stubbornly refuses to admit that capitalism is driving the climate crisis or to point towards any real solutions in order to address it. The movement has no coherent strategy and no democratic way for a new strategy to emerge. It is struggling under the weight of its own history, and it is barely two years old.
The Left Respond

The Left, one might assume, is therefore in the perfect place to respond. Whether the movements that currently exist are going to adapt or die, a new left-wing climate movement is exactly what we should be building. But, once again, an honest analysis is necessary.

We were lucky last year. At the most significant moments, the climate movement and the labour movement worked together. One of the greatest achievements of Extinction Rebellion was creating the social conditions in which the Green New Deal could be championed so loudly and so vociferously in the mainstream media. Time and time again, the climate movement pushed for something and the Labour Party helped to deliver it.

Unfortunately, this brief moment of unity was not sustained. The Labour Party lost the last general election and now has a new leader with a new electoral strategy. His recent commentary on the Black Lives Matter protests show that we are no longer dealing with a leadership that understands social movements, and is even less prepared to cede any ground to them. Keir Starmer once promised to champion the Green New Deal – but now seems to be running away from it as fast as he can.

I had previously believed that Ed Miliband would try to build on the climate policies of his predecessor. He is an experienced politician who has much less to lose than many of his colleagues, but his recent report on a Green Economic Recovery was disappointing. It waters down many of the core components of a Green New Deal and positions the Labour Party as a party of green capitalism. Perhaps Miliband believes that he can bide his time until the next general election and needs to prepare the ground for a more radical vision of the future; if so, this is a dangerous approach that underestimates the scale of the crisis.

We may, therefore, end up with a version of the Green New Deal that is not rooted in the principles of equality and justice, but which replicates the poisonous and extractive mindset of neoliberalism. Yet, there is still hope. A younger generation of socialists are beginning to emerge with a very different understanding of politics. Unlike the people currently in charge, these activists understand the severity of the climate crisis and are prepared to take bold policy positions in order to confront it.

The Labour Party is still an important site of struggle, but we can no longer afford to attach ourselves to a single political project. Now, we also need to look outside of its confines and realise that radical social change must take place in all parts of society. This means seriously engaging with mass movement politics and developing a better, and more nuanced, understanding of civil disobedience.

When it first emerged, the left-wing response to Extinction Rebellion was counterproductive. Climate activists organised one of the largest campaigns of civil disobedience in history and, instead of engaging with them and helping them to change, people just sat on the side-lines and criticised. Had the Left genuinely engaged with the movement, we might be in a very different place today. After all, Extinction Rebellion is a social movement, not a hierarchical campaign group. It is made up of thousands of people in over sixty different countries, all with their own individual experience and understanding of the world. Mass movements are always riddled with contradictions and being clever enough to point out those contradictions is rarely as impressive as you might think. We can all see the problems. The more important question is how they are going to change.

There are, of course, many good reasons why people cannot take part in civil disobedience. The arrest strategy of Extinction Rebellion was articulated badly and alienated many people who would otherwise have wanted to get involved. However, direct action tactics are not the preserve of the well-off: they were created and developed by the poor and the oppressed. They were an essential part of labour, civil rights and anti-imperial struggles, and are still relevant today. If we are going to confront organised capital, then we have to use every tool at our disposal.

The Left needs to marry radical politics with a radical strategy. For too long, the environmental Left has been dominated by professional activists from third sector organisations. Their organising is constrained by the timid ambitions of the organisations they work for and, on the rare occasion they attempt to involve ordinary members of the public, their campaigns often rely on ineffective tactics, such as letter writing and petitions. Meanwhile, most grassroots groups struggle to garner any attention. While calls for climate and ecological justice are shared and liked thousands of times online, most climate justice groups struggle to get over fifty or sixty people at their protests.

We can, and we must, develop new forms of direct action that empower the working class. We need to start designing protests that directly target the companies who are fuelling this crisis – the fossil fuel industry and the banks. We need to support liberation struggles across the world, model new forms of direct democracy, and get people onto the streets. That means mass mobilisations. It means civil disobedience. It means direct action. It means creating a mess. It means building the alternative and showing people how beautiful that can be. If the Left are going to remain relevant within the climate movement, then we need to build movements that will take on and confront power.
We Have to Get Political

The climate crisis is a complex crisis, and it would be wrong to assume that any one side has all of the answers. There are many things we simply do not yet know or understand, and too many variables to be certain about anything. In truth, there is also a huge part of the climate movement who are simply not very engaged with politics at all and prefer, therefore, to avoid it. They treat every party with disdain, especially the Labour Party, which disappointed them far too many times in the past. Many climate activists also failed to understand that the Labour Party had drastically changed under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.

One of my most morbid and depressing pastimes is asking friends in the climate movement what they would have liked to have seen in the last Labour Party manifesto that was not there. Normally, they fail to produce a single policy and are genuinely surprised at everything the manifesto contained. So why, then, during the general election campaign, did climate activists dress up as giant bumblebees and glue themselves to the Labour Party campaign bus? Was it really in the best interests of the climate movement to target the party with the most radical climate policies in Europe?

We must never make the same mistake again, and we should not deceive ourselves about the enormity of this task. When Extinction Rebellion first emerged, many seasoned activists were, quite rightly, frustrated by it. The politics of the movement were deeply confused. The arrest strategy was divisive. The vision seemed lacking. Many of the core team refused to talk about class, or race, or inequality. It seemed, surely, that we had moved past this.

However, it is important to remember that fighting the same battles and having the same conversations is a fundamental part of any functioning democracy. Effective activism relies on effective political education and, for effective political education to take place, we need to create spaces and structures for the sharing of knowledge. We will always need to have these conversations. The sooner we get used to that the better.

The old climate movement used to talk about being ‘not left, not right, but out in front’. The modern climate movement similarly attempts to categorise itself as ‘apolitical’ and ‘beyond politics’. At best, these slogans are strategically naïve; at worst, they are ideologically harmful. In holding the movement back, and preventing genuinely radical ideas from being debated, we are doing an incredible disservice both to our own politics and the people who we claim to be talking to.

If we are going to tackle the climate and ecological emergency, then we will need to transition to a different economic system. The climate movement has to accept this. It has to stop lying about its politics. Saral Sarkar put it best when he wrote, many years ago, that any version of the ecological utopia ‘retains so many elements of the socialist ideal that it would be tantamount to deception if I were not to call it eco-socialism’.

There is no shortcut to revolution. We cannot trick and dissemble our way to success. On the contrary, any serious attempt to tackle the climate and ecological emergency must go hand-in-hand with efforts to extend and reform our broken democracy. Likewise, we cannot tackle the climate and ecological emergency without also tackling the crises of capitalism and colonialism. Those crises are not just a part of the emergency; they are the emergency. It is absurd to pretend otherwise.
A New Set of Demands

The three demands of Extinction Rebellion were a good tool at the beginning of the campaign; they were ambiguous enough to appeal to a wide range of people and were an effective strategy for mass mobilisation. But the world changes quickly. What might have seemed radical then seems lame and unambitious now. This is not because we have failed, but because we have been so successful.

Last year, the United Kingdom became the first country in the world to declare a climate emergency. This fulfilled the first demand of Extinction Rebellion. A week later, parliamentarians announced the creation of a citizen’s assembly on climate change. This fulfilled another. However, instead of welcoming these exciting developments, Extinction Rebellion sought to actively downplay them. Many activists believed that acknowledging our success undermined the case for mass civil disobedience. In fact, it does the opposite. It holds back change. Instead, we should acknowledge our success and move on to the next phase of the strategy.

I believe that a new movement is now vital to further the conversation. This new movement should have new demands on reparations, wealth redistribution, and migrant rights. It should call for a shorter working week and a strengthening of trade union rights. It should adopt specific policies to prosecute polluters, decarbonise the economy, and revolutionise democracy. It should provide a blueprint for radical system change, and it should take radical action in order to achieve it.
Practical Hope

On the final day of the April Rebellion, Banksy painted a small mural in Marble Arch. It shows a young girl wearing a hijab. She is planting a seedling, and behind her are the words: ‘from this moment, despair ends and tactics begin’. The quotation comes from the Belgian radical Raoul Vaneigem in his book The Revolution of Everyday Life. Hope, he suggests, is a matter of strategy. Or, to paraphrase Raymond Williams, to be truly radical is to make ‘hope practical’, rather than ‘despair convincing’.

Every question about strategy is, ultimately, a question about hope. It is a question that many of us in the climate movement are painfully accustomed to answering. The question we get asked the most has nothing to do with tipping points nor climate targets; the only thing people ever want to know is whether we have any hope. And, if you do have hope, they want to know how.

I often find this debate pretty tedious. Questions about hope and climate change are often bound up in attempts to downplay the severity of the crisis and offer a sort of false optimism to legitimise inaction. I do not want to share my hope with everyone. My hope is not for the bankers and the politicians. They do not get to take my hope, to extract my hope, and use it for themselves.

Hope is, after all, a strange thing. Over the years, many great poets have tried to define hope. Emily Dickinson famously called it ‘the thing with feathers’. For John Keats, it was the ‘ethereal balm’. For Emily Brontë, it was the ‘timid friend’. For Carl Sandburg, it was the ‘tattered flag’, the ‘dream of time’, the ‘blue hills beyond the smoke of the steel works’. Hope is a notoriously elusive emotion. It means different things to different people. It manages, somehow, to defy categorisation.

Many brilliant minds have failed to define hope. Yet, as activists, we are constantly forced to struggle with this question and to provide a satisfactory response. Last year, I found that simple enough. The climate movement was in the ascendancy and socialists were in control of the Labour Party. Today, I find it a much trickier question.

I hope, in the coming years, we can build a left-wing climate movement. I hope we can create networks on the left that strengthen and solidify our movement. I hope we make spaces in which to listen and to learn from one another. I hope we put democracy and justice at the heart of everything that we go. I also know that none of that is just going to happen. We have to build it together.

About the Author


Sam is an actor, writer, and activist who helped set up Extinction Rebellion. He is a member of the Labour Party and a committee member of the Labour Campaign for Human Rights.



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THE CANADIAN CONNECTION

New York Times to return award for podcast on terrorism


New-York-Times-1-750

The offices of the New York Times in New York City. AFP

Gulf  Today Report

In an era when a tsunami of news swamps social media, it can be hard to differentiate between what’s fake and the genuine article. Despite applying the rigorous standards of editing and fact-checking, there can be slip-ups sometimes. Result: tall stories grab the headlines. Fake news takes centre stage, as happened with a podcast of the New York Times.

The New York Times admitted on Friday that it could not verify the claims of a Canadian man whose account of committing atrocities for Daesh in Syria was a central part of its 2018 podcast "Caliphate.”

The series had won a Peabody Award, the first ever for a podcast produced by the newspaper, but within hours administrators said the Times would return the award. The Overseas Press Club of America said it was rescinding its honour for "Caliphate.”


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With a major hole blown in the narrative, the Times affixed an audio correction to the beginning of each part of the 12-part podcast and published an investigation into what went wrong with the story in Friday's newspaper. The story's central reporter, Rukmini Callimachi, will be reassigned off the terrorism beat, the Times said.

Dean Baquet, the paper's executive editor, said in a podcast that "this failing wasn't about any one reporter. I think this was an institutional failing.”

The Times assigned an investigative team to look into the story after Canadian police in September arrested Shehroze Chaudhry, who used the alias Abu Huzayfah, for perpetrating a terrorist hoax. He told the Times that as a Daesh soldier, he had shot one man in the head and stabbed another in the heart.

New-York-Times-2-750
Andy Mills (left) and Rukmini Callimachi hold the award for their 2018 podcast "Caliphate” at the 78th annual Peabody Awards in New York on May 18, 2019. AP

Chaudhry's story fell apart upon further examination. Investigators concluded they couldn't be sure he'd ever been in Syria and almost certainly didn't commit the atrocities he'd claimed. Supposed evidence he offered to back up his story, including photos from Syria, were gathered from other sources.

Misrepresentations

The Times concluded he was a "fabulist” who concocted stories as an escape from his mundane life in a Toronto suburb or living with grandparents in Pakistan.

"All the evidence that he presented that he went to Syria was either ripped from somewhere else, was inconclusive or just didn't hold up,” Mark Mazzetti, who led the Times' investigative team on Chaudhry, said in the podcast. "We found a lot of misrepresentations by him, and nothing that independently corroborated his claims of being a Daesh executioner inside Syria.”


The episode raises questions about whether the New York Times applies the same journalistic rigour to stories done by its audio unit as it does for print pieces.


Chaudhry’s lawyer, Nader Hasan, would not comment on the Times’ story. He said Chaudhry was not guilty of the Canadian charges and will "vigorously defend himself.”

The Times had ample reason to be suspicious of Chaudhry’s account, since an episode of "Caliphate” was devoted to discrepancies in his story and its own fact-checking. But Baquet likened it to confirmation bias, of wanting to believe what seemed like a great story.

"This is one of those cases where I think we just didn't listen hard enough to the stuff that challenged the story or to the signs that the story wasn't as strong as we thought it was,” he said.

Callimachi said on Friday that it was "gutting” to let down her colleagues. She said she should have caught more of the "lies” Chaudhry told her, and tried to make clear what the newspaper did and didn't know.

New-York-Times-2-750-3-750
This photo shows the exterior of the New York Times building in New York. File/AP

"It wasn't enough,” she said in a statement. "To our listeners, I apologise for what we missed and what we got wrong. We are correcting the record and I commit to doing better in the future.”

Callimachi worked at the Associated Press from 2003 to 2014. The news organisation said on Friday that her reporting on terrorism "went through a rigorous editing process at all stages of the reporting and prior to publication. We stand by the stories.”

Discrepancies

As a result of an investigation into her work, the Times attached editor's notes correcting some of the details in two other stories under her byline. In a 2014 story about a Syrian journalist who claimed he saw American hostages being held in a former factory in Syria, the Times notes that the source had given inconsistent stories to others. The Times also called into question the documents that were the basis for a 2019 story that Daesh leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had been hidden at the base of a rival group because he had paid protection money.

The brother of murdered American journalist James Foley had in the past called into question details of a Callimachi story about her brother, but the Times backed her work.


Rukmini Callimachi said on Friday that it was "gutting” to let down her colleagues. She said she should have caught more of the "lies” Chaudhry told her, and tried to make clear what the newspaper did and didn't know.


Baquet noted the difficulty of covering terrorism and faulted himself and top deputies for not paying closer attention to "Caliphate.” In contrast, he said he looked at so many versions of the newspaper's investigation into President Donald Trump's finances that "I could almost do Trump's taxes at this point.”

"I didn't personally pay enough attention to this one,” he said.

The episode raises questions about whether the Times applies the same journalistic rigour to stories done by its audio unit as it does for print pieces. The Times moved more aggressively into audio about four years ago and produces "The Daily,” one of the most successful podcasts on the market.

In an interview with NPR, Baquet said editors accustomed to print pieces were deferential to an ambitious audio team presenting a compelling narrative yarn.

That angered Madhulika Sikka, a former top NPR executive who was also audio executive producer at The Washington Post before getting into publishing. She tweeted that if audio products operated under different rules than the rest of the newsroom, the problem is with the newsroom, not the platform.

"If this had been a print story, would there have been different rules applied?” Sikka said in an interview. "I don't know. It was the implication in Dean Baquet's quote that I found objectionable".

AFGHANISTAN
Police confiscate ancient relics in Bamyan
 December 19, 2020

AT News

KABUL: Officials in Bamyan province say that police seized and confiscated three ancient relics.

The relics are a pitcher, a finger bowl and a samovar seized in the Yakawlang district’s village of Deh Sorkhak.

Provincial culture department said Saturday that the seized relics need more research.

“A number of little boys along with a shepherd found the relics and took them in the Deh Sorkhak,” Ishaq Mowahed, head of provincial culture department said.

Officials said that the relics would had been probably smuggled, adding that they were seized and confiscated timely.

Bamyan in the center of Afghanistan is rich for ancient and historic relics and monuments. The two giant Buddha statues are standing in the heart of mountains in the central Bamyan. The statues were exploded by Taliban in March 2001 months before the group was collapsed by a US-led international invasion of Afghanistan.

Smuggling of ancient relics has been a matter of concern for the province’s residents.

They blame the government for not fighting ancient relics smuggling.

“Smuggling of ancient relics and illegal excavations happen in Bamyan which is a matter of concern, while the government holds no plan to protect them,” said Wazir Ahmad Setiz, an intellectual in Bamyan.

NOT A CONSPIRACY THEORY
French study finds 5G increases risk to climate


Deployment of the new mobile internet technology is likely to cause a 'significant increase' in greenhouse gas emissions, an independent climate council has found

19 December 2020
  
France's 5G rollout has already begun and eventually the technology will be available in the whole country By Connexion journalist

France’s roll-out of 5G technology could cause a large increase in carbon emissions, a report published today (December 19) by the Haut Conseil pour le Climat (HCC) has found.

The study, the first of its kind in France, looked at the environmental impact of deploying 5G mobile phone technology in the country - a process that is already underway.

The HCC is an independent body tasked with issuing advice to the government on policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

It found that 5G technology will lead to a significant increase in the carbon footprint of digital technology.


The additional emissions will come mainly from the manufacturing of new devices - smartphones, headsets, etc. - and of network and data centre equipment.

The deployment of 5G will also lead to an increase in electricity production in France, the HCC found.

The carbon footprint of digital technology in France is currently around 15 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year. This equates to around 2% of France’s overall carbon footprint, implying the average CO2 emissions is 11 tonnes per person.


To put this amount in perspective, energy information website Energuide states that the average CO2 emissions of a person living in Belgium is eight tonnes per year.

To limit global warming to two degrees celsius, the average level of CO2 emission per capita on our planet must not exceed 2.1 tonnes by 2050, the website states.

The HCC report found that 5G technology could add between 2.7 to 6.7 million tonnes of CO2 equivalents per year by 2030.


The report stated that there have been insufficient evaluations into the theoretical positive impact of 5G on the environment, such as a decrease in transport demand, improvements in energy efficiency, etc.

The HCC issued five recommendations to the government.

These included clarifying climate issues before deploying new technologies, such as 5G, imposing carbon footprint limits on phone operators deploying 5G and better informing the public about waste or disproportionate use of energy associated with digital services.

France’s 5G roll-out

Eventually, all sites in France will be required to provide a 5G service, but the initial phases are as followed:

5G in 3,000 sites by 2022, 8,000 sites by 2024 and 10,500 sites by 2025.

At least 25% of these sites must be in “sparsely populated areas and industrial areas, outside the main metropolitan zones,” France’s telecommunications regulatory agency Arcep states.

A spokesperson at Arcep said that there is also an obligation for the four telecoms operators to increase 4G coverage.

From 2022, at least 75% of sites [in France] should benefit from a mobile internet download speed of at least 240Mbps (megabits per second). By the end of 2025, 90% of sites should offer this speed.

France is not the first country in Europe to introduce 5G.

It has already been launched in Spain, Italy, Germany, the UK and Switzerland.

Worldwide, South Korea is leading the way in deployment and marketing of 5G on frequencies similar to Europe.

Arcep will be publishing maps at the beginning of 2021 to chart the rollout of 5G.

This will include the locations of the sites that the operators plan to bring into service within three months and the locations of the sites for which an application for planning permission has been filed.


DUAL POWER COUNTER ECONOMICS
Hezbollah steps up support for low-income Lebanese with grocery stores, microloans

BACKHANDED COMPLIMENT FROM SAUDI PRESS

Food supplies being packaged at a centre run by Hezbollah during a media tour organised by Hezbollah officials, as the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Beirut's southern suburb, Lebanon March 31, 2020. (Reuters)

Mona Alami, Al Arabiya English
Sunday 20 December 2020

Hezbollah has begun to back several charitable initiatives that target low-income households as Lebanon’s economy continues to crumble.

These have taken the form of cooperative grocery shops known as Makahzen Nour, and the Iran-backed political party and militia has also started giving direct aid to low-income families. Hezbollah is also expanding Qard al-Hasan, a financial institution providing microloans to its popular base.

Hezbollah has been hurting financially, and when popular protests erupted in 2019, prior supporters of the group began to criticize it. When the novel coronavirus pandemic broke out in March, Hezbollah stepped up its public relations efforts to combat the virus, but its fighters said they received less support from the organization.

Faced with increased popular criticism for its corruption and mismanagement along other Lebanese political factionser the last few years, the party is seeking to provide for its supporters and poor Lebanese families.

In Beirut’s southern suburbs, known as a Hezbollah stronghold, the group has opened Makhazen Nour.

Al Arabiya English attempted to visit one of the cooperatives on the corner of a gated alley in the Roueiss southern suburb, but was told by a Hezbollah militant guarding the entrance that the cooperative is only accessible “to customers holding a discount card provided by the party as well people accompanying them.”



The Al Sajjad Card is distributed to low-income families in Lebanon and grants families access to Hezbollah-run supermarkets. (Photo courtesy of Mona Alami)

The cooperative is located behind Hezbollah’s Martyr’s square, colloquially known as Moujamaa al-Shuhada, where Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah speeches are transmitted on a regular basis to party supporters.

According to an article by local media outlet Janoubia, the cooperative has opened branches in different areas, including Kfadajal and Wadi Jilo in the south, Baalbek and Bednayel in the eastern Bekaa Valley, as well as the one in Roueiss.

“There are two types of cards, one labeled Nour attributed to Hezbollah fighters and another called Sajjad, which is distributed to low-income families,” journalist Ali Amine said.


The cooperative sells furniture, foodstuff and other household items. Most of the merchandise comes from Iran, he added.

Looking at food items sold by Makhazen Nour, most were made in Iran and some in Lebanon.

According to a source close to Hezbollah’s commanders who spoke to Al Arabiya English on condition of anonymity, Hezbollah is also providing direct aid to low-income families in the south of Lebanon, regardless of their political affiliations.


“They are now targeting poor households where both parents are unemployed,” the source said.

Since 2019 Lebanon has faced an unprecedented economic and financial meltdown. The Lebanese pound has lost over 80 percent of its value, and now nearly half of the population lives below the poverty line.



Iranian goods are shown in a Hezbollah-run supermarket in Lebanon. (Photo courtesy of Mona Alami)

Lebanese are struggling to buy basic goods with soaring inflation of over 112 percent, and unemployment surging past 30 percent.

Microloans

Hezbollah has also expanded another of its charitable ventures known as Qard al-Hasan in the wake of the crisis. The financial organization, which provides interest free microloans and is not subject to the Lebanese monetary and credit law employs nearly 500 people and has around 30 branches across the country, according to an article published by Lebanese business publication Le Commerce du Levant.


“My husband stopped working and my salary was too low to settle my daughter’s medical needs. I gave my jewelry as a collateral and was able to take a $500 loan,” said a client of Qard al-Hasan speaking to Al Arabiya English on condition of anonymity.

Read more: US-sanctioned Hezbollah’s Qard al-Hasan installs ATMs, violating Lebanon's fiscal law

Qard al-Hasan has been sanctioned by the US Treasury since 2007, and according to its website it operates in accordance with the principles of Islamic finance.

According to its website, the institution has more than 406,000 contributors and over the years has given out over $3 billion, as of the end of 2019.


Microloans are capped at $5,000 (in “fresh dollars,” or dollars not trapped in the current Lebanese banking system) and are repayable over a maximum period of 30 months. According to Le Commerce du Levant, it allocated over 200,000 microloans in 2019 alone, totaling $500 million.

These type of loans are politically beneficial to Hezbollah as they help strengthen the group’s influence and control over the country’s Shia community, especially with the prevailing catastrophic economic situation in Lebanon, Joseph Daher, the author of “Hezbollah: Political Economy of the Party of God” told Al Arabiya English.

“The Qard al-Hasan institution is part of Hezbollah’s network of organizations and associations falling within the party’s strategy of political domination. In the context of the economic crisis and the rise of poverty in Lebanon, and for lack of a political alternative, the Shiite popular classes, like other popular segments in the country, are forced to ask for the help [of parties] and their dependence on dominant faith-based parties, such as Hezbollah, will strengthen,” he said.

As Lebanon’s crisis deepens, the state also becomes weaker, and Hezbollah has found a way to fill gaps where the state cannot.

Last Update: Sunday, 20 December 2020 KSA 

Ilhan Omar blames Trump's 'criminal neglect' for her father's COVID-19 death during interview with MSNBC
Ilhan Omar speaks with media gathered outside Mercado Central in Minneapolis, Minnesota on August 11, 2020. Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

Ilhan Omar has blamed Donald Trump's "criminal neglect" for her father's death from COVID-19 during an interview on MSNBC.

She said: "My father should be here today. So many of our family members should be here today and they're not here with us because we have leaders who didn't care about their lives."
On June 16, the Congresswoman announced that her father had died of complications from COVID-19, aged 67, the day before.

Omar and her father came to the US in 1995 as refugees from Somalia during the country's civil war and eventually settled in Minneapolis which she has represented since 2019.

Ilhan Omar has blamed Donald Trump's "criminal neglect" for her father's death from COVID-19 during an interview on MSNBC.

The Congresswoman said: "My father and over 300,000 people have lost their lives because of dangerous criminal neglect by Trump and his administration. My father should be here today. So many of our family members should be here today and they're not here with us because we have leaders who didn't care about their lives.

"The President to this day has not shown an ounce of compassion to the people who have passed away. He has still not acknowledged the devastating loss, so many of us are feeling," Omar continued.

A video of the interview was tweeted by the Congresswoman's Senior Communications & Strategy Director, Jeremy Slevin.

Omar said: "I agree with Clyburn that it is not enough for us just to issue subpoenas. We have to investigate and prosecute these people who are responsible for these reckless deaths."

The House coronavirus subcommittee is currently investigating claims against former Health and Human Services (HSS) advisor Paul Alexander and the department's Assistant Secretary of Public Affairs, Michael Caputo, of meddling with the scientists' work.

A July email written by Alexander, obtained by the subcommittee and seen by The Sun read: "So the bottom line is if it is more infectiousness now, the issue is who cares? If it is causing more cases in the young, my word is who cares...as long as we make a sensible decision and protect the elderly and nursing homes, we must go on with life...who cares if we test more and get more positive tests.

"There is no other way, we need to establish herd, and it only come about allowing the non-high-risk groups expose themselves to the virus. Infants, kids, teens, young people, young adults, middle-aged with no conditions etc. have zero to little risk... so we use them to develop herd... we want them infected."

Omar's father died of complications from COVID-19 on June 15, 2020, aged 67. The next day, she tweeted: "Surely we belong to God, and to Him we shall return. It is with tremendous sadness and pain to say goodbye to my father, Nur Omar Mohamed. No words can describe what he meant to me and all who knew and loved him."

During the interview, she added that she supported House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, who released a memo on Wednesday which said that he had found evidence of "political interference" by Trump administration officials to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)'s pandemic response, The Independent reported.

Ilhan Omar and her father came to the United States in 1995 as refugees from Somalia during the country's civil war and eventually settled in Minneapolis, which she has represented since 2019.



 

Big Pharma business model 'serious obstacle to wiping out Covid-19'

By agency reporter
DECEMBER 20, 2020

New research by Global Justice Now examines the history of some of the leading corporations producing coronavirus medicines, warning that their business model is likely to make controlling the pandemic more difficult, despite the rapid production of vaccines.

The report, The horrible history of Big Pharma: Why we can’t leave pharmaceutical corporations in the driving seat of the Covid-19 response, finds that six of the biggest corporations in the coronavirus market generated $266 billion last year, with profits totalling $46 billion. Judged by revenue, Johnson & Johnson is more wealthy than rich countries like New Zealand and Hungary. Pfizer’s revenues are bigger than oil-rich Kuwait or Malaysia. 

Yet these same corporations have taken billions of dollars from governments like the UK in research and manufacturing funding, as well as presales of medicines, campaigners point out. 

While this vast mobilisation of public money has been effective in producing vaccines in record time, the Big Pharma model means that these vaccines and treatments have essentially been privatised. That matters, campaigners claim, because it means rich countries being prioritised in terms of distribution, and it leaves governments with no leverage over the pricing of these drugs, making it harder to control coronavirus.

The report examines the history of some of the corporations producing these medicines:

  • Pfizer and its UK distributor hiked the price of on anti-epilepsy drug which 48,000 NHS patients relied upon. As a result, NHS annual expenditure on their capsules rose from about £2 million to £50 million in a year. UK wholesalers and pharmacies faced price hikes of 2,300  to 2,600 per cent. 
  • GlaxoSmithKlein was handed a $3 billion fine after it admitted to giving kickbacks to doctors in the US and encouraging the prescription of unsuitable antidepressants to children. Doctors and their spouses were flown to five-star resorts, given $750, and access to snorkelling, golf and deep-sea fishing.
  • Gilead introduced a Hepatitis C drug to the US market at $84,000 per course. A US Senate investigation concluded: “it was always Gilead’s plan to max out revenue, and that accessibility and affordability were pretty much an afterthought." Gilead corporate profits increased fivefold to $21.7 billion after the release of this and another very highly priced Hep-C drug.  
  • Pfizer and GSK produce a vitally important pneumonia vaccine, which health NGO MSF claim has earned the companies over $50 billion while 55 million children are unable to access to the pneumonia vaccine, largely due to high prices.  

Campaigners claim these examples are inherent in a model driven by the need for very high returns, and that these trends are already at play during the pandemic: 

  • Pfizer has made no promise to limit profits, and has pre-sold over 1 billion doses to rich governments, representing just 14 per cent of the world’s population.
  • Moderna’s corporate executive have made tens of millions of dollars this year in automated share sales which former US regulators have called "highly problematic" and worthy of investigation. Moderna’s vaccine has been made with public money, yet the company is expected to charge between $64 and $74 per person for immunisation.
  • Gilead made an extraordinary application for ‘orphan status’ on its drug remdesivir, which would have given it special protection owing to the fact the drug would be useful to a tiny number of patients – the very opposite of a pandemic. A public outcry led to withdrawal of the request.  
  • The vaccine being developed by Oxford University was to be produced on a nonexclusive, royalty-free basis. However, on entering a deal with AstraZeneca, the situation changed. The deal is now exclusive and while the company maintains it will not profit during the pandemic, it has failed to release details of its contract and how it calculates research costs.

Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now, said: “What’s been achieved during this pandemic by dedicated scientists and researchers is incredible. It’s amazing that they’ve discovered these potential vaccines in just under a year. That’s thanks to unprecedented amounts of government money poured into research. But given the public has paid for most of this research, any vaccines that come out should be owned by the public – true people’s vaccines. That would mean we could get vaccines out to those who need them in a fair way, prioritising the most vulnerable wherever they live.

“It’s beyond disgusting that a group of wealthy corporate executives and hedge funds are using this opportunity to further enrich themselves. Sadly, coronavirus has shown, once again, that the way we research and develop new medicines is not fit for purpose. We have a bunch of companies more interested in raking in massive profits than they are in providing for the needs of people around the UK and around the world. We must change that.”

* Read The horrible history of Big Pharma: Why we can’t leave pharmaceutical corporations in the driving seat of the Covid-19 response here

* Global Justice Now https://www.globaljustice.org.uk/

CLIMATE CHANGE
Deadly Fiji super cyclone sparks disease fears

Disease threatens to worsen an already desperate situation in Fiji, an official warned Sunday, where thousands of lives have been devastated in the wake of the deadly super cyclone Yasa.
 Four people died and entire villages were wiped out after super cyclone Yasa smashed into the northern islands of Fiji on Thursday

Agencies rushed food and clean water to areas where the storm smashed into the northern islands of the South Pacific nation on Thursday night, forcing more than 23,000 people to flee their homes.

Four people died and entire villages were wiped out, with crops and livestock destroyed.

Agriculture officials are being sent to hard-hit areas to help farmers dispose of dead livestock to reduce the risk of disease, National Disaster Management Office director Vasiti Soko said.

Fiji is prone to violent storms at this time of year, with Cyclone Winston killing 44 people when it slammed into the islands in 2016.

"We're going to be doing a lot of work around shelter and the provision of clean water because we have seen the diseases that follow these cyclones... leptospirosis, diarrhoea, dengue, and especially if access to hospitals is limited," Ilisapeci Rokotunidau, the Fiji Red Cross director general, told AFP.
© Handout Authorities have put the damage from the storm in the hundreds of millions of dollars, and thousands have been displaced

"From our experience from Winston, three months after Winston one of the biggest things was malnutrition."

Authorities on Saturday put the damage from the storm in the hundreds of millions of dollars, with one senior aid worker comparing the destruction to a war zone.

The Red Cross is now focused on providing relief to Bua and other areas in the north of Fiji hit hard by the storm.

One local man who had lost his job in the major city of Nadi due to the Covid-19 pandemic and returned to Bua to rebuild his life was reported to have lost everything after the super cyclone hit.

"Now, everything is gone and he is saying 'there is no more use in living'," Rokotunidau said. "We suspect that is the beginning of stories we will be hearing."

"The sad thing for a lot of people is 'what now'. Christmas is supposed to be a happy time of year and this is going to be a very dismal one."

cf/hr/oho
AOC calls Amazon jobs a 'scam' because more than 4,000 of its employees are on food stamps
© Erin Scott/Reuters Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the U.S. Capitol this month. 

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Friday called Amazon jobs a "scam" because some workers have struggled to pay bills. 

In nine states, more than 4,000 Amazon employees are on food stamps, according to Bloomberg News.

"A 'job' that leaves you homeless & on food stamps isn't a job. It's a scam," said Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Friday said Amazon's jobs are a "scam" because they're not creating financial security for workers.

"A 'job' that leaves you homeless & on food stamps isn't a job. It's a scam," she said on Twitter.

Ocasio-Cortez referenced a Bloomberg News report detailing how many Amazon warehouse workers struggle to pay bills, with as many as 4,000 on food stamps.

The report said Amazon has turned logistics work from a professional career option to "entry-level" work for many. As Amazon's workforce has soared during the pandemic, safety conditions in its warehouses have failed to keep pace, according to the report.

"This is why 'Amazon jobs' aren't it & we should instead focus our public investments + incentives on small businesses, public infrastructure, & worker cooperatives that actually support dignified life," said Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter. 

A worker gathers items for delivery from the warehouse floor at Amazon's distribution center in Phoenix. Ralph D. Freso/Reuters

"Bloomberg's conclusion is false - it violates over 50 years of economic thought, and suspends the law of supply and demand," an Amazon representative told Bloomberg.

The daily lives of the workforce in Amazon's warehouses has long been a point of interest on Capitol Hill. Earlier this month, a group of lawmakers led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren called for greater transparency into injuries in warehouses.

"We are now at the beginning of another dangerous season for Amazon warehouse workers, and the company's responses to repeated Congressional inquiries have only escalated our concern about Amazon's unwillingness to value worker safety above corporate profit," the group said in a joint statement.

Amazon did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

The US National Labor Relations Board this week said it had found merit in the claims that Gerald Bryson, who worked at Amazon's Staten Island fulfillment center, was fired in retaliation for protesting health and safety policies in the warehouse.

Ocasio-Cortez has taken aim at Amazon repeatedly, often calling into question the amount of corporate tax it pays. Taxes from corporations could help pay for schools, hospitals, and other public infrastructure, she has often said.

In 2019, she called into question why Amazon paid zero in federal income taxes on more than $11 billion in profit.

"Why should corporations that contribute nothing to the pot be in a position to take billions from the public?" she said at the time on Twitter.



 





Private mining firms and arms companies are exerting a hidden and unhealthy influence on the fate of the deep-sea bed, 
according to a new report highlighting the threats facing the world’s biggest intact ecosystem.

An investigation by Greenpeace found a handful of corporations in Europe and North America are increasingly dominating exploration contracts, mainly in search of cobalt and nickel, and have at times taken the place of government representatives at meetings of the oversight body, the UN’s International Seabed Authority (ISA).


Greenpeace said this undermines effective environmental management and fair distribution of risks and rewards from the ocean floor, which some states and companies want to open up for exploitation next year.

Given the potential risks of fisheries disturbance, water contamination, sound pollution and habitat destruction for dumbo octopuses, sea pangolins and other species, the campaign group said no new licences should be approved. It has said governments should instead implement an ocean treaty, to ensure adequate protections.
Machines intended for use in deep-sea mining off Papua New Guinea. Greenpeace have warned about the risks to wildlife. Photograph: Nautilus minerals

Mining firms see the deep-sea bed as the last frontier for a mineral extraction boom. Technological hurdles have been overcome, and the ISA’s recently re-appointed secretary-general Michael Lodge – from the UK – wants member states to agree on a rulebook next year that would set standards for working practices and allow commercial mining to begin.


David Attenborough calls for ban on 'devastating' deep sea mining


The new Greenpeace report, released on Wednesday, suggests this would be premature, because the industry is secretive and inadequately regulated. Among its findings are:

Deep sea mining is deeply destructive. Excavation of mineral nodes, for example, is done by giant tractors that chew through the sea bed

The oversight organisation, ISA, has no environmental or scientific assessment group. Instead, applications are vetted by a legal and technical commission, which is dominated by lawyers and geologists. Only three of the 30 members of the commission are biologists or environmental specialists

ISA has not rejected any of the 30 exploration applications it has received. It has potential conflict of interest because it receives $500,000 (£374,000) for each licence

Seabed resources are supposed to benefit all of humanity and promote sustainable development, but just three companies from wealthy nations have a hand in eight of the nine contracts to explore for minerals in the Pacific Clarion-Clipperton zone that have been awarded since 2010: Canadian-registered DeepGreen, Belgian corporate Dredging Environmental and Marine Engineering NV (Deme), and a UK-based subsidiary of the US arms manufacturer Lockheed Martin

The role of these companies is opaque. None of these parent companies are listed by the ISA in its list of contractors. Many operate through subsidiaries or by taking shares in partners in small island states, often in conjunction with national governments. This leads to concerns about accountability in the event of an accident – the subsidiaries are often small, which could leave poor nations with huge liabilities

Corporate influence on some governments is so great at ISA that DeepGreen executives temporarily stood in for Nauru delegates in a February 2019 session of the ISA council, where Deme executives also spoke on behalf of Belgium

Ties between the UK government and the industry have also been unhealthily cosy. Cabinet-office officials have worked for Lockheed Martin after retirement. Former prime minister David Cameron used Lockheed Martin estimates of the potential value of the deep-sea mining industry, rather than independent analysis
The government of the tiny island nation of Nauru, known for its diverse marine life, has formed a partnership with deep-sea mining company DeepGreen. Photograph: Paul Hilton/Greenpeace

The dangers of this system were apparent in 2019, when the deep-sea mining firm Nautilus went bankrupt, leaving its partner state, Papua New Guinea, with substantial clean-up losses. Papua New Guinea is now among a growing number of nations calling for a moratorium on the industry, along with conservationists including David Attenborough and Chris Packham.

But exploration permits for the international seabed already cover an area equivalent in size to France and Germany combined, and that area is likely to expand rapidly, despite the risks to biodiversity and ocean carbon deposits.

Greenpeace said the biggest problem was the lack of transparency and oversight. “We need to shine a light on the industry at this gold-rush moment because most people don’t realise this is going on,” said the report’s author, Louisa Casson, from the Protect the Oceans campaign.

Rather than open up a whole new field of resource extraction, nations should focus more on reusing and recycling existing supplies of minerals, she said.

“We think the deep sea ocean should be off limits because it not possible to have good enough environmental rules, especially now that scientists are warning of irreversible harm and potential extinctions. The ISA is supposed to be protecting the oceans and it’s not doing its job.”

Climate-impacted communities vowed to seek ‘climate justice’ at the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference.
Photograph: Steven Lyon/Greenpeace

In a response to Greenpeace, DeepGreen Metals Inc said deep sea mining could supply “critical minerals for the global transition off fossil fuels at a fraction of environmental and social costs associated with metal production from conventional land ores”.

It added: “Without investment in this industry from private sector companies such as ours, Pacific island nations like Nauru, Kiribati and the Kingdom of Tonga would not otherwise have an opportunity to participate in the benefits of this new resource opportunity to diversify and develop their economies. Until recently, deep-sea exploration was carried out only by the rich industrialised countries, further increasing the potential for global wealth disparity.”

Peter Ruddock, director of UK Seabed Resources Ltd and chief executive of Lockheed Martin UK, said in a statement to Greenpeace: “UK Seabed Resources has been, and continues to be, entirely transparent with Greenpeace, the wider NGO and stakeholder community, the International Seabed Authority (ISA), and the public, about its structure and relationships with the UK government and Ocean Minerals Singapore (OMS), and indeed all our partners and stakeholders.

“Seabed minerals have a potentially critical role to play in the decarbonisation of the planet by providing a vital and reliable alternative source of critical minerals for, among other things, clean energy including battery technologies. We intend to continue to work towards the realisation of this potential opportunity with our valued stakeholders and partners.”

In a letter to Greenpeace, Deme said: “20 countries are now actively engaged in deep-sea mining exploration. All have an interest in a clear and settled regulatory regime to govern exploitation, as indeed does humankind as a whole.”