Saturday, July 03, 2021

 THE PRIVATIZATION OF WAR

Why private foreign security companies are booming in Africa

The UN Security Council accuses Russian mercenaries of human rights violations in the Central African Republic. Western mercenaries and companies also operate in Africa — often in a highly opaque manner.

   

Mercenaries are funded by African governments, as well as actors from around the world

March 2020: A regiment of the French Foreign Legion patrols the Malian desert. The armored vehicles are moving in the dangerous border area with Niger. The region is a retreat for Islamist fighters. Suddenly shots are fired. Two men are the shooters. They jump off their motorcycle and take cover. The foreign legionnaires aim at both attackers, who succumb to their injuries a short time later.

In the Sahel, such attacks are occurring more and more frequently. In Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso alone, at least 4,800 civilians died last year in terrorist attacks and ethnic violence — 10 times as many as 2014.

Phasing out Foreign Legion

As part of Operation Barkhane, the French army has been fighting Islamist terrorism in the region since August 2014. In early summer 2021,  France deployed 5,100 soldiers and mercenaries. However, French President Emmanuel Macron has announced that most of them will leave before the end of 2021.


France aims to replace Operation Barkhane with support for local partners and counterterrorism efforts

The fact that France is not only deploying its own soldiers in the Sahel is rarely an issue. The 10,000 or so fighters in the Foreign Legion today come from around 150 countries. They have one thing in common: They like to go to war, are not afraid to kill, and earn money doing it. But, unlike soldiers, they are paid by a state that is not their home country.

The Foreign Legion was founded in 1831. It is now considered a discontinued model. However, since the end of the 1990s, a new industry has been booming: military and security companies. Their services range from radar surveillance and spy flights to front-line operations. Other companies provide more logistical support to the armed forces of numerous countries: in medical care, in kitchens and laundries, or the supply of food and ammunition.

From tanks to Kalashnikovs

According to Herbert Wulff, a political scientist specializing in peace and conflict research, some governments use these companies to evade their responsibilities. "For example, in the US or even Great Britain, it is not very popular to deploy one's own soldiers due to the number of fallen soldiers in wars and conflicts," Wulff says. "Or also, as in Russia's case, when you want to achieve goals — as in Ukraine, for example — but you don't want to take responsibility for it as the formally responsible government."


Countries from outside Africa are heavily involved in the sale of weapons to the continent.

It's a strategy that Russian President Vladimir Putin is also using in Syria and Africa by deploying the private Russian military company Wagner in the oil-rich country of Libya and the mineral-rich Central African Republic. Both these nations are embroiled in a bloody civil war. Moreover, Russia has significantly expanded its overt and covert military presence in Africa in recent years.

Additionally, the country has signed 19 military agreements with various African states, said Benno Müchler, who heads the office of the CDU-affiliated Konrad Adenauer Foundation in the Democratic Republic of Congo. "On the one hand, Russia offers military expertise; advice on strategies, armaments, and military action. But on the other hand, it also offers military material in very concrete terms," Müchler says. That could be anything from helicopters to tanks to Kalashnikov rifles.

Fierce competition

At the same time, Russia and Russian military suppliers are encountering strong Western competition. Whereby their activities are no more transparent than Russia's. In May 2018, footage of a drone appeared in US media showing an incident from October 2017. US special forces and soldiers from the Nigerien army were ambushed by Islamist militants in the West African country. Four US military personnel and five Nigerien soldiers lost their lives.


Four American soldiers and five Nigerien soldiers were killed in October 2017 in Niger

Only because of these images did the strong presence of US forces in the Sahel come to light, as did the close ties between the US Army and private military contractors. The US Department of Defense reported that the ten soldiers had been deployed with a so-called intelligence contractor, a private provider of intelligence information. However, the Pentagon did not provide further details on the contractor's identity and nationality.

As the drone footage showed, the wounded soldiers were recovered by a civilian helicopter. It belonged to the security contractor Erickson. For the US military command in the continent,  AFRICOM, based in Stuttgart, Germany, 21 American military service providers work in North Africa and the Sahel. Several other security and military contractors also earn their money there.

Private companies as new clients

Increasingly, their clients are not states, but private companies, for whom they secure land, oil facilities or mines. As a result, the market has become increasingly confusing in recent years, despite international efforts to control the use of such companies. Their goal: to prevent war crimes through possible sanctions and to protect the lives of civilians. Yet the situation is not that complicated, says international law expert Marco Sassoli.


Multinational companies increasingly use private security companies to secure strategic resources like oil facilities

"At least the Americans have the official policy that these companies should not participate directly in hostilities. The problem is the interpretation of the term: What is direct participation in hostilities?" Sassoli says. "The companies would say, 'We're not at war, we're just exercising the individual right of self-defense, or self-defense assistance: If you're attacked, I may defend you.'"

Currently, there are two approaches at the international level to regulate the behavior of private force providers: A UN working group has long sought a convention that would generally prohibit the use of military service providers. However, Sassoli is skeptical: "It's like war. War is also prohibited. But I don't believe that you can eliminate it through a convention or the rules of international humanitarian law. The questions would rather be to create a regulatory framework."

Work is now underway on such a framework. At Switzerland's initiative, an international code of conduct was launched 10 years ago with the so-called Montreux Document. Private security providers are supposed to get certified, commit to complying with certain rules, and submit to a complaints procedure if necessary. The code involves representatives from the security sector, nongovernmental organizations and governments. So far, however, only just under a hundred companies have signed up to the code. And, according to Sassoli, Chinese and Russian companies have not even joined.

 

Euro 2020: UEFA bans rainbow-colored advertising in Baku and St. Petersburg

Euro 2020 sponsors have been asked not to use rainbow-colored advertising at two quarterfinal venues, Volkswagen announced on Friday. The decision is the latest to cloud UEFA’s message of inclusivity in football.

   

Rainbow colors have been a predominant feature at Euro 2020

When it comes to the promotion of inclusivity and tolerance in football, UEFA continues to talk the talk whilst struggling to walk the walk. 

The latest decision from European football’s governing body has seen them ask Euro 2020 sponsors to refrain from using rainbow-colored advertising at stadiums in Baku, Azerbaijan, and St. Petersburg, Russia, during the quarterfinals, tournament partner Volkswagen said on Friday.

"Due to UEFA's concerns about the legal framework for venues in Russia and Azerbaijan, the association informed us it wouldn't be possible to use rainbow-colored advertising in St. Petersburg and Baku," the German carmakers said in a statement on Friday.

Pitch-side hoardings will remain in place in Munich, Germany, and Rome, Italy, as well as for the semifinals and final in the UK capital, London. Nevertheless, VW said they "regretted" UEFA's decision because they wanted to continue sending "a clear signal in favor of diversity."


Rainbow colors have been on full display during Euro 2020 despite UEFA sending mixed messages

Mixed messages from UEFA

Rainbow colors are the internationally recognized symbol for the LGBTQ communities and have hit the headlines more than once during the multi-country competition.

UEFA last week rejected a request from Munich's city council to have their stadium illuminated in rainbow colors for Germany's group game against Hungary, citing the political nature of the appeal.

Several Euro 2020 sponsors, including Volkswagen, instead used rainbow-colored adverts in stadiums during the round of 16 matches, although none of those games were played in Russia or Azerbaijan.

In response, UEFA put out a statement that claimed the colors of the rainbow were "a symbol that embodies our core values, promoting everything that we believe in — a more just and egalitarian society, tolerant of everyone, regardless of their background, belief or gender."

In the fight for respect, tolerance and equality, UEFA's latest decision continues to send mixed messages during their showpiece summer event.

 dpa/jt/mds/jw

DW RECOMMENDS

NATURAL GAS

Woman in a shop surrounded by plastic

Plastics: A lifeline for the fossil fuel industry?




Plastic: A lifeline for the fossil fuel industry?

DW MULTIMEDIA PRESENTATION

You can read the story at DW.

Sources, references and studies

This section lists all resources used.

The following sources contributed expertise to this article

IntervieweesAffiliation
Sian Sutherland (25.02.2021)A Plastic Planet
Andy Gheorghiu (26.04.2021)Campaigner & Consultant for climate/environmental protection, energy policy & further development of democratic processes
Mark van Baal (23.03.2021)Follow This
Cornelia Wolber (By email 16.03.2021)Shell Deutschland Oil GmbH
Philipp Roßkopf (By email 09.03)BASF
Jacob Duer (26.08.2020)Alliance to End Plastic Waste
Graham Forbes (19.03.2021)Greenpeace
Gerald Rebitzer (18.03.2021)Amcor
Emma Priestland (05.05.2021)Break Free from Plastic
Sven Weihe (17.03.2021)Plastics Europe

Further Reading

This is a selection of studies, reports and data sources that were useful in the research.

The Future of Petrochemicals, International Energy Agency

Fueling Plastics, Center for International Environmental Law

Plastic & Climate: The Hidden Costs of a Plastic Planet, Center for International Environmental Law

Fuels Europe

Sachet Packaging Market

Brand Audit Report, Break Free From Plastic

Shell Sustainability Report 2019

Shell Sustainability Report 2018

Shell New Energies

NOS

Follow This

BP 2019 Sustainability Report

BP Infinia Video

The Future is Not in Plastics, Carbon Tracker

Dirty Profits, Facing Finance

End Plastic Waste

P&G

SealedAir

Amcor

Bankrolling Plastics, Portfolio Earth

The New Plastics Economy, World Economic Forum

Plastic Atlas, Heinrich Böll Stiftung

Columbia Climate School

Global Witness

Sachet Economy, GAIA


Bullfighting: A cruel and dangerous spectator sport



Bloody bulls against blood sport

In northern Spain, about 100 seminaked animal rights activists called for an end to bullfighting by throwing red powder into the air in central Pamplona. Many wore plastic horns and wrote "Stop Bullfights" on their torsos in various languages 
 JULY 2,2021

DEATH OF A MATADOR REVENGE OF THE BULL




 


Zombies take on the G20 in Hamburg

Protesters dressed in grey clothes to make themselves look like zombies for an arts performance called "1,000 Gestalten" (1,000 Likenesses) prior the G20 summit in Hamburg. In the two-hour show,

 hundreds of actors took part in a creative public appeal for more humanity and collective responsibility.

Palestinians' rage grows — against their own governing authority

The death of an activist in custody last week sparked outrage in the West Bank, with some taking to the streets. It's the culmination of long-simmering anger against an authority many Palestinians feel is out of touch.


Palestinians in the West Bank are angry at their own governing body, the PA


The Israeli-occupied West Bank is no stranger to political upheaval. But in the past week, Palestinian protesters have directed rising anger against their own government, the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in parts of the territory.

Hundreds took to the streets in several towns over the past weekend to protest the violent death in Palestinian custody of Nizar Banat, a well-known critic of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority.

Last weekend in Ramallah, protesters waved Palestinian flags alongside pictures of Banat, with some calling for an end to the long-term rule of the Palestinian president. At one point, they were met with teargas fired by Palestinian security forces in full riot gear, while others were physically attacked by plainclothes officers.

Palestinian human rights organization Al Haq also reported that several journalists covering a demonstration were attacked and had their equipment confiscated.

Nizar Banat was a critic of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank


A spokesperson for the Palestinian security forces, Col. Talal Dweikat, said they acted in a "positive way" to avoid friction during the demonstrations. He added that the official committee investigating the circumstances around the death of Nizar Banat had begun its work.

"There will be full transparency regarding the committee. We want to reach the truth about what happened," Dweikat told DW.

Watch video 01:31Protesters clash with Palestinian security forces


Prominent critic killed


Banat had previously been detained several times over his candidness, on social media, alleging corruption and authoritarianism with regard to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his inner ruling circle.

Banat was a primary candidate on the "Dignity" party list in the runup to parliamentary elections, which were originally scheduled for May but have since been postponed.

According to his family, Banat was severely beaten and pepper-sprayed at his home by Palestinian security forces during his arrest and was taken away in the early morning hours on June 24 in Hebron. His death was announced afterwards.

In a statement by the Palestinian Independent Commission for Human Rights (ICHR), the initial findings of the autopsy showed injuries "represented by bruises and abrasions in many areas of the body, including the head, neck, shoulders, chest, back and upper and lower extremities, with binding marks on the wrist and rib fractures."

The preliminary results indicated that Banat's "death is abnormal" — although further laboratory testing would be necessary to determine the principal cause of death, the statement concluded.


Police used tear gas on protesters in Ramallah


As he announced the formation of the investigative committee, Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh said that those responsible for Banat's death "will be held accountable," according to the official WAFA news agency.

Banat's family, however, has deemed the results of the commission's work to be likely one-sided, and has said it will not accept them.
Public anger and growing backlash

The Palestinian Authority is facing growing criticism in recent years from Palestinians who view it as corrupt, ineffective and increasingly autocratic. Postponing long-overdue elections for the legislature added fuel to that criticism.

And during the latest military escalation in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah was politically sidelined by its own near-complete silence on the events.

"I think the government [regime] is in a deep political crisis. The political leadership can't really talk to the Palestinian public anymore," says Jihad Harb, a political analyst and writer in Ramallah. "They don't really seem to have answers for what people care about. They seem only to protect themselves and their interests."

The killing of Banat and the violence toward protesters mourning his death have dismayed ordinary Palestinians. "There were demonstrations because people value freedom — it's important to go out and demonstrate; but the authorities didn't accept that," said Jihad Kadami, a young teacher in Ramallah.

"It's normal that after what happened with Nizar Banat, people want to express themselves in a democratic manner."


Another Palestinian, Samer Khalil, said of Nizar Banat, "he was just criticizing and saying his opinion." And though Banat had a history of butting heads with the administration, this does not justify the authority's behavior, certainly "not to the extent of beating or brutally killing him."

Violence at the protests added to the frustration, with protests on previous occasions having also been met with heavy-handedness by the security forces. "It's very sad, I don't think it expresses people's values. I see a lot of people, among friends and co-workers, who are upset about it," added Khalil.

Some observers believe that at this point, another spark could trigger wider anti-government protests. Political analyst Jihad Harb said people are starting to realize "that what happened to Nizar Banat could happen to anybody who is critical or who has problems with the regime."
International support props up Abbas

Palestinian and international human rights groups have long criticized the Palestinian Authority and its security forces for being heavy-handed at demonstrations, and for becoming increasingly suppressive of dissent. They have also criticized President Abbas' rule by decree.

"We are lacking a legislative council where legislation should be made, that has the role to do it. And we need a government that goes in line with the separation of powers," said Catherine Abuamsha, an advocacy lawyer at the Palestinian human rights organization Al Haq.



Mahmoud Abbas has been in power for 16 years


Abbas was elected in 2005 for a four-year term, but has now been in office for 16 years.

The Palestinian Authority denies accusations of mistreatment of people for their political views or of the use of excessive force. And after the last war between Israel and Hamas in May, the Palestinian Authority continues to be the key partner to rebuild Gaza, which is ruled by the militant group Hamas.

Over the past two decades, the international community has consistently provided political backing to the Palestinian Authority, which is dominated by Abbas' Fatah party. The United States and the European Union have also provided it with financial support, and have extensively trained its security forces.

And Banat's death did prompt swift international reactions. The US, the EU and the United Nations have called for an investigation, with the EU mission to the Palestinians saying that the death of Banat is "of serious concern and takes place against the backdrop of an increasingly persistent practice by Palestinian security forces of detention."

Whether this can stave off further heavy-handedness — and wider protests — remains to be seen.
GERMANY
New ID Cards: More control, less freedom?

Very soon, digital fingerprinting will be mandatory in German ID cards. The question is: Will it make the cards more secure? Or is it an invasive threat to our freedom?


Fingerprints will soon be stored electronically on German ID cards


"It was a really creepy feeling," says data protection activist Leena Simon, describing the moment when she last visited the citizens' service center at her local town hall and they wanted to take her fingerprints.

She was instructed to press the index fingers of both hands on the glass surface of a scanner. The idea was that the resulting fingerprints would be included in her new passport. However, she used a trick that she's not willing to share to spoil the scan. Leena is a member of a German organization called Digitalcourage, which is committed to privacy and digital rights.

So, did it work? Leena says she can't be sure. But what she does know: "For the rest of the day, I felt awful." She says it is "invasive" when the state forces law-abiding citizens to allow their fingerprints to be taken. After all, she says, it's a tool ordinarily used by the police in criminal investigations: "I don't understand why I should have to give the state access to my prints when I haven't broken the law."



Simon has no ID card: In addition to her passport, she uses this photo ID, issued by Digitalcourage, with her preferred data

Fingerprinting mandatory for ID cards

There's a pressing reason why data protection activists like Leena Simon are raising the alarm: From August 2, authorities in Germany are planning to massively extend requirements for fingerprints to be registered. From that day on, all German citizens applying for a new government-issued ID will be obliged to permit their fingerprints to be stored electronically on the card. So far, this was a voluntary procedure for ID cards and obligatory only for separate passport documents.

More than 62 million Germans have an ID card. They have the same dimensions as a credit card and are valid for 10 years. Most people use them for everyday movements within the country, although they can also be used for traveling around the EU.
Two biometric characteristics

ID cards used in Germany and elsewhere in Europe include an integrated chip with the same biometric photo that is also visible on the front of the card. In the future, a second biometric characteristic will be registered: Fingerprints.

Watch video01:17 Networker: Jan Krissler, the Biometrics Hacker


According to Josef Oster, internal affairs expert for Germany's governing Christian Democrats (CDU), the new measure will make ID cards more secure: "It enables us to determine clearly and quickly whether person and card go together," he tells DW. Oster specializes in digital security as a member of the German parliament's Internal Affairs Committee. "We've imposed extremely high-security standards," he says, referring to the new ID cards with fingerprints. And, he says, there has been little resistance to the proposal.
Uniform standards across Europa

The new regulation won't apply only in Germany. Beginning on August 2, travel documents with a combination of photos and fingerprints will be issued across the European Union — as agreed in 2019 following a tight vote in the European Parliament. The main aim is to protect against counterfeiting.

If there is suspicion that a document has been forged or is being used illegally, the fingerprints stored in the chip can be used to establish whether the rightful holder is in possession of the document. For this purpose, special reading devices are available to the police, border guards and customs officials. In cases of uncertain identity, they have the authority to call up and read encrypted data on the chip.
Forgery rare

But will new ID cards with digital fingerprinting really guarantee more security? Critics are not convinced. German ID cards without fingerprinting "already enjoy such a high level of validity that they are only rarely forged or end up in the wrong hands," argues the lawyer and data protection specialist Thilo Weichert.


According to the Interior Ministry, 42.5% of the new ID cards issued in 2020 contained voluntary fingerprints

And that claim was confirmed by Interior Ministry data made available to DW, according to which, in the year 2020, only 34 forged versions of German ID cards were confiscated during border controls. In 2019, that figure was even lower, totaling just 26 cases. Given these figures, Thilo Weichert questions the necessity of registering the fingerprints of more than 60 million Germans. He calls it "a disproportionate violation of people's rights" that he believes is also unconstitutional.
Immutable data

For data protection activists, there is another serious concern: A growing number of digital systems are using fingerprinting because of the immutable biometric characteristics that it provides. It's a technology that is employed, for example, to unlock smartphones or open office doors. And it involves the kind of fingerprinting that will shortly be mandatory in ID cards.

Watch video 01:54 Security Check: Biometrics vs Passwords

Maja Smoltczyk, Berlin's commissioner for data protection, says the damage is especially serious in cases of document theft or misuse, as "biometric characteristics can't simply be replaced like a password." This explains why activists have been calling for printing only one little finger instead of both index fingers. So far, however, their calls have been in vain.
Central storage?

It is true that the proposed new legislation permits fingerprints to be stored only on the ID card's own chip and nowhere else. What's more, only a limited number of people have access to this data, such as officials at the relevant government agencies and members of the police. Still, Thilo Weichert warns: "I'm sure things are not going to stay that way." Hindsight shows that the state always tends to seek access to more and more sensitive private data.

Weichert, from the network 'Data protection expertise,' feels ID cards with fingerprints are unconstitutional


Weichert fears that sooner or later fingerprints will be stored in a central data bank and used to crosscheck with other data sources or fuel larger surveillance systems. "In China and many other authoritarian states, we've already begun to see how biometrics can be used to keep an entire population under control," he says.
 
Skepticism in many citizens' service centers


Through to August 2, providing fingerprints is voluntary. So, how have people who applied for a new ID card between the beginning of January and mid-June responded to the transition? DW asked that question at service centers in 20 German towns and cities.

The answer was surprising. In Nuremberg, Düsseldorf and Bochum, for instance, there was strong resistance: "There is minimal willingness to allow fingerprints to be included in ID cards. The attitude is one of suspicion," Bochum city representatives told DW.

In Düsseldorf meanwhile, only 15% of all applicants said that they accepted the integration of fingerprints. In Hamburg, Leipzig, Essen, and Dortmund, skepticism prevailed and between 54% and 60% of applications made since the beginning of the year did not include fingerprints.


German officials in charge of issuing ID cards currently have a lot of explaining to do


Opinions were evenly divided in three other cities: In Münster, Hannover and Bremen, support for and opposition to fingerprinting was more or less fifty-fifty. And only one German city gave broad backing to the proposed new regulation. That was Frankfurt, where nearly two-thirds of people said they would voluntarily support fingerprinting.
No rush for IDs without fingerprints

There was no perceptible rush to apply for "old-style" ID cards without fingerprints. On the contrary, many people were apparently unaware that a practice that is still voluntary will soon be compulsory.

What is for sure is that the relevant authorities had a lot of questions to answer. Why are fingerprints so important? Who has access to the data? And how is it protected? Officials in Essen said the public response, however, had been largely positive, "especially since the fingerprints are an additional security measure and taking them free of charge!



Legal challenge

Even when August 2 comes around, activist Leena Simon doesn't expect people to come out in huge numbers to protest. But she does herself plan to take legal action against fingerprinting. "I have to admit," she says," that when it comes to the sensitive issue of data protection, I simply don't trust the state."

Other opponents of fingerprinting have adopted a different strategy. Sources have let it be known to DW that they have been destroying their still-valid "old" ID cards by, for instance, "accidentally" leaving them in their microwave ovens. That enabled them to apply for a new document without fingerprints: an ID card valid, after all, for another 10 years. Quite a long time — even in a rapidly changing world.
'Zebra murders' convict dies in California medical prison

© Provided by The Canadian Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A man convicted along with three others in the racially motivated killing spree that terrorized San Francisco in the 1970s died in a prison cell while on hospice care, officials announced Thursday.

Jessie Lee Cooks, 76, was found dead Wednesday in his bed at the California Medical Facility, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said. The cause of death will be determined by the Solano County Coroner, officials said.

Cooks was sentenced in San Francisco County on March 29, 1976, to serve life with the possibility of parole for first-degree murder, kidnapping and first-degree robbery.

Cooks, Manuel More, J.C.X. Simon and Larry C. Green were convicted of targeting white victims between October 1973 and April 1974 in a rampage that terrorized San Francisco and left 14 people dead.

The murder victims included a woman who was beheaded with a machete, an 81-year-old man and a 19-year-old college student carrying a teddy bear as a Christmas present.


The attacks were known as the “Zebra murders” because investigators communicated their information in the case over the police broadcast band Z. The wounded included Art Agnos, who would go on to serve as San Francisco’s mayor.


The mayor at the time, Joseph L. Alioto, ordered a citywide dragnet to catch the killers. Police officers stopped and questioned nearly every young Black man they encountered between the ages of 20 and 30 who were 6 feet tall or a few inches shorter. Those questioned and cleared were given a card to show other officers who might detain them for questioning.

J.C.X. Simon passed away at San Quentin State Prison in 2015 at age 69. Manuel Moore passed away at California Health Care Facility in Stockton in 2017. He was 73.

Larry C. Green, 69, is incarcerated at California State Prison-Solano in Vacaville.


The Associated Press

  1. Zebra murders - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebra_murders

    The "Zebra" murders were a string of racially motivated murders and related attacks committed by seven Black Muslim serial killers in San Francisco, California, United States, from October 1973 to April 1974 ; they killed at least 15 people and wounded eight others. Police gave the case the name "Zebra" after the special police radio band they assigned to the investigation. Some authorities believe …

    On October 19, 1973, Richard Hague (30) and his wife, Quita (28), were walking near their Telegraph Hill home in San Francisco when they were kidnapped by a group of Black men and forced into a van. Quita was fondled by two of the men, and then nearly decapitated by a third man who cut her neck with a machete. One of the first pair attacked Richard and left him for dead, but he survived. …

    Wikipedia · Text under CC-BY-SA license