Monday, August 02, 2021

Which country is the world leader in renewable energy in 2021?

Norway is the leading country in renewable energy usage in the world
 Copyright Canva

By Maeve Campbell • Updated: 02/08/2021 - 18:06

Norway is the country with the highest share of renewable energy in the world, according to new data.

A study by energy tariff comparison platform Utility Bidder reveals the top 20 countries in the clean energy field, as well as those which rely most on fossil fuels.

The fossil fuels measured were coal, oil and natural gas, while renewable sources were biofuels and waste, wind, solar and hydro. The figures were sourced from the International Energy Agency (IEA).

56 per cent of Norway’s total energy usage comes from renewable sources, while the UK ranks 20th with clean energy only accounting for a dismal 13 per cent.
What do Norway, Brazil and New Zealand have in common?

These three countries are all world leaders when it comes to renewable energy. They came first, second and third respectively in the rankings.

Norway utilises hydropower more than any other country around the globe - it accounts for 45 per cent of its supply alone. The Nordic country is known for its many steep valleys and rivers, as well as increased rainfall due to climate change, meaning hydroelectricity is bountiful.

With the second highest supply of renewable energy, Brazil is the leader in biofuel and waste energy. These sources account for 32 per cent of its total energy supply.


It is the second-largest producer of ethanol fuel and is an industry leader, with sugarcane-based ethanol being touted as the most successful alternative fuel to date.

The countries that use the highest share of renewable energy in the world
Utility bidder

Renewable energy sources account for 42 per cent of New Zealand's energy supply. It is a world leader in wind and solar energy which make up 25 per cent of its energy supply.

Situated in the path of the ‘Roaring Forties’, a set of strong and constant westerly winds, the nation is perfectly positioned for wind power. It enjoys plenty of sunshine for solar energy too, as well as having an increasing market for solar hot water heating systems.

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Which five countries are most reliant on fossil fuels?

With 98 per cent reliance on fossil fuels, Singapore comes out as the worst in the world.

The country uses the highest proportion of oil in the world relative to total energy supply, with fossil fuels making up 73 per cent of its energy supply. It is home to major oil companies such as Exxon Mobil, due to its ideal trading location and perceived safe environment.

Singapore is closely followed by Australia, with 93 per cent reliance, and then South Africa with 91 per cent.

Luxembourg and the Netherlands take fourth and fifth spot with a joint 90 per cent fossil fuel dependence.

The countries that use the highest share of fossil fuels
Utility Bidder

The Netherlands has the highest supply of natural gas of any other country on the list. Fifty per cent of this comes from the Groningen gas field, the largest in Europe.

However, the Dutch government has committed to stop regular production from the Groningen field by 2022.
How Chinese investments are capturing Pakistan's economy

Despite security threats and growing local resentment, China continues to pump billions of dollars into Pakistan and invest in a wide range of sectors.



Many Pakistanis remain euphoric about Chinese investment, arguing that it's needed to pull the nation out of economic crisis


In 2015, China announced an ambitious multibillion-dollar initiative aimed at overhauling Pakistan's crumbling infrastructure and linking the nation's southern port of Gwadar to western China.

The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), part of Chinese President Xi Jinping's signature Belt and Road Initiative, was originally estimated to bring in $46 billion (€38.7 billion) of investment into Pakistan. But it's now estimated to have increased to about $65 billion.

During the first phase of CPEC, dozens of projects, mainly related to power and transport infrastructure, were carried out with the help of Chinese money.

The second phase of the initiative, which began last December and comprises 27 projects, has focused on boosting manufacturing capacity and job creation.

And Beijing has been pumping money not only to Pakistan's economic hubs, but also to places like Pakistan-administered Kashmir and northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Many Pakistanis remain euphoric about the growing Chinese investment in the country, arguing that it's needed to pull Pakistan out of a severe ongoing economic crisis.

Compounding the economic turmoil is the COVID pandemic, which has caused tens of thousands of small businesses to shut down and resulted in over 20 million people losing their jobs.


The strategically located Gwadar port, which is run by a Chinese company, is in insurgency-hit Baluchistan province

A 'source of blessing' for the Pakistani economy

Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province was badly hit by Islamist terrorism between 2004 and 2015. Tribal areas in the region were considered a hub for Islamists, including those affiliated to terror outfits like al Qaida and the Haqqani network.

Given this terrible law and order situation, many Western countries and businesses were not willing to invest in the province.

Qaiser Ahmed Shaikh, a former president of the Karachi Chambers of Commerce, said that China moved in to fill the gap left by the West.

Aneela Khalid of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Women's Chambers of Commerce believes that Chinese investment is a "source of blessing" for the Pakistani economy.

"First, China invested in our province under CPEC, working on various power and infrastructure projects," she told DW, adding that "now it is also investing in sanitation and other projects."

Undeterred by terror threats

In the southern province of Sindh, Chinese firms have not only completed several CPEC projects but have also bought a 40% stake in the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) company.

Ahmed Chinoy, a prominent businessman from the port city of Karachi and director of the PSX, told DW that the Chinese now have the powers to appoint the managing director, chief financial officer and chief regulatory officer of PSX.

Such appointments, nevertheless, have to be endorsed by the board of directors, he added.

Last June, the stock exchange was attacked by Baloch insurgents, who resent the Chinese investment in the insurgency-hit Baluchistan province. A Baloch insurgent group claimed responsibility for the attack.

But Beijing seems undeterred by these threats.

Multiple sources told DW that China is planning to buy a power utility in Karachi, which is one of the largest energy companies in the country.

"The Chinese are trying to invest everywhere in Sindh," said a regional government official on condition of anonymity.

He pointed out that recently, sanitation contracts in five districts had been given out to Chinese companies. A number of businessmen, the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation and various trade union members corroborated the official's claim.

They expressed anger at the government for giving away such lucrative contracts to Chinese firms, which they believe undermines the authority of civic bodies.

Khurrum Ali, secretary-general of the Awami Workers Party in Karachi, claims that various oil exploration blocs in Sindh have also been given to Chinese companies.

Western companies like the British Petroleum were operating such blocs in the past, he added.

Chinese presence in Baluchistan

Baluchistan is Pakistan's largest province of by area, housing the strategically located Gwadar port, which is run by a Chinese company. The province has witnessed a number of terrorist attacks in the last 17 years, some of which directed against the Chinese.

Baloch rebels have been fighting against the Pakistani state in a bid to gain independence for the region. They have often attacked non-Baloch as well as Baloch opponents besides targeting the police and the army.

While the region is considered risky for investment, the Chinese appear to have had no qualms so far in funneling money into the province.

They have been building an airport in Gwadar, along with a number of other major projects.

Rahim Zafar, a resident of the port city and a former adviser to ex-Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, told DW that the Chinese had set up three factories close to the port of Gwadar, which are not part of CPEC.

They are also involved in fishing business, bringing in deep sea trawlers, catching fish in a non-sustainable way and depriving the locals of the catch, he added.

Jan Muhammad Buledi, a former spokesman for the Baluchistan government, told DW that the Chinese businessmen are involved in the extraction of marble and minerals through local partners in various parts of the province.

Motivated by cheap labor and high profits?


Lahore-based analyst Ahsan Raza believes that the meeting of Prime Minister Imran Khan with around 100 Chinese investors last year encouraged the Chinese to invest in Pakistan.

"The government has reformed the regulatory framework for the investors in general and Chinese investors in particular. So, they are investing in hospitality, information technology, telecom, consultancy and other sectors," Raza said.

Shaik believes it is cheap labor and high profit margins that are driving the Chinese to invest in Pakistan.

"There is also less competition because although the government has announced relaxations and privileges for all investors, Western businesspeople are not ready to invest in Pakistan."

"In addition, the Chinese can repatriate 100% profits as there is no bar for reinvestment in the country," he added.

While some businesspeople in Pakistan claim that Chinese firms are being given preferential treatment when it comes to handing out public contracts, the government rejects such allegations.

Fazal Muhammad Khan, a member of parliament from the ruling party, told DW: "We neither give any preferential treatment to Chinese companies nor are contracts doled out. We take conflicts of interest and other factors into account. And the ground is open for both Chinese and Western companies."
German floods: Where did fake news about 600 dead babies come from?

Rumors that the bodies of 600 children have been found in Germany's flood disaster areas are rife on social media and other online platforms. DW looked into the story to find the origin of the false reports.




The flooding left behind a trail of destruction

First of all, it's important to point out that the Koblenz police has denied any and all reports that 600 bodies of children were found in the flooded areas of the Ahr Valley after the disastrous flash floods in mid-July.

In a written statement to DW, a spokesperson said that "rumors that a large number of bodies were found are circulating, but they have not been confirmed in any of the named places and it has not been brought to our attention that any large numbers of bodies have been found." In addition, police have warned the public against "unthinkingly" spreading the rumors online.

According to the latest police figures, the number of casualties from the floods in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate lies at 134, with 59 people still missing. At least 47 people died in neighboring North Rhine-Westphalia, and another 41 were killed in Belgium.
Where did these rumors come from?

As far as DW has been able to confirm, one news report — taken out of context — seems to have played a decisive role in triggering the rumors. A short excerpt from a report broadcast as part of a morning news program by the German television channel n-tv appears to have been turned into a 15-second video clip, which subsequently went viral.

The clip shows a German reporter standing in front of a mountain of rubble and talking about the situation on the ground. He can be heard saying the following words before the video stops: "… still live. On the one hand, of course, they have had a traumatic experience. We were able to talk with residents who found the bodies of children in their homes, washed up from somewhere further away. And on the other hand, the question is, will there be more flooding? They say …" This is where the clip ends.

DW asked n-tv for more information and a spokesperson for the media group RTL Deutschland, to which the channel belongs, confirmed that the video was "a much-shortened extract" of a conversation shown on the 9 a.m. morning news program on July 22. The reporter was in Altenburg near Altenahr, which was especially hard hit by the floods.

This screenshot of a Facebook post shows that the video began spreading online soon afterwards, at 10:55 a.m. that same day. At this point, however, there was no talk of 600 bodies.


This excerpt is thought to have triggered the rumor
Conspiracy theory spreads worldwide

But the first posts already indicated a more or less clear link to conspiracy theories such as those being spread by the far-right QAnon movement, which got its start in the US. According to those who follow QAnon, a global elite is conducting secret and deadly experiments on children who are being held in underground bunkers or tunnels. For those who promote this conspiracy theory, the floods would have brought the bodies to the surface.

It's difficult to determine, however, where the number 600 came from. There was no mention of this figure in the entire report, which DW was able to view.



The video clip soon spread around the world, and on July 26 it appeared on YouTube with an English title. The description implied that the German reporter had said that the bodies of 600 babies had been washed up by the floods. Some viewers posted the correct translation of the reporter's words, but were frequently dismissed or simply ignored.

DW also found similar examples in Japanese, Dutch and Spanish on social media and other online platforms. One tweet implied that the reporter had been deliberately interrupted.




Credible link to QAnon movement

Andre Wolf, a communications expert who works at the Austrian fact-checking site Mimikama that campaigns against online abuse, has also explored the origin of this false report. He found a plausible connection to the QAnon movement, and told DW that the fact that there was no evidence for the claim was typical for conspiracy theories, which often followed a simple pattern: "So long as there is no evidence to the contrary, what we say is right."

Wolf said that if those people spreading the fake news wanted to be believed, they would have at least tried to provide some sort of evidence after the police released their statements.But he said that this is where their self-protection mechanisms came into play; those who spread such rumors also believe that "the whole story is being kept secret from the public and those refuting it are part of the conspiracy." The fact that the authorities put out such statements are then seen as evidence that their beliefs are correct, because "the authorities would do anything to cover it up."

Babies and children are recurring themes in conspiracy theories, as they provide a simple way to dehumanize enemies such as elites or the government. "The worst thing that these enemies can be accused of is torturing or killing children," Wolf said, explaining that this allegation triggered a protective mechanism, a sort of primal instinct, among believers. "People tend to share these messages, get caught up in them and get angry," he said, adding that they then become less inhibited and more prone to attacking their enemies, such as the state. "The idea is to radicalize people."
But children's bodies were found, weren't they?

The fact is, rescue teams did find bodies among the rubble, and n-tv did talk about the bodies of children being found in two cases, once in an interview with a police officer in Altenahr and once in the above-mentioned report.

In response to DW's question about what sources the TV reporter had used, n-tv stated: "Some individuals told us about children who had died. One was [...] an Altenburg resident, who described her experiences during the night of the flood to our reporter and whose descriptions were included in the report."



Though some bodies have been found in the aftermath, police say there have been no reports of hundreds being found at once

When approached by DW, the Koblenz police said it would not comment on whether any corpses of babies or children had been found, pointing out that it was a sensitive issue. "Please understand that out of respect, we cannot provide any information on exact locations where the deceased were found, or other personal data. It could otherwise be possible to draw conclusions about the identity of the deceased in small towns," they said.

In conclusion: the reports of a large number of dead children being found in the German flood zones lack any basis in fact.

Editor's note: In an effort not to further promote the false reports, DW has deliberately chosen not to link to the original posts on the social networks. Instead, we have shown anonymized screenshots.

This article has been translated from German.

Europe remembers Sinti, Roma murdered under Nazi rule

On August 2, 1944, 4,300 Sinti and Roma were killed in the gas chambers of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp. Genocide survivors described the horrors. To this day, many of their descendants are refused compensation.



Before the Holocaust: The German-Sinti Bamberger family in the 1930s


"Dear Banetla, I have to tell you that my two youngest children have died." Those words were written by Margarete Bamberger in a 1943 letter to her sister in Berlin. It was smuggled out of what was known as the "gypsy camp" at the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. Margarete, her husband Willi and their children were all detained at the death camp. Margarete and Willi survived the ordeal. Their children did not.

Bamberger had desperately implored relatives to send parcels containing cod liver oil, cough syrup, vitamin C, washing powder and anything that could be used to combat scabies. "Whatever it is, and however small, it might help us here," she wrote. She also used the Romani language to send a hidden message, expressing the full horror of their situation: "Special greetings from Baro Nasslepin, Elenta and Marepin" — code for the three horrors "disease, misery and murder."


A memorial stone at the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp marks the genocide: 'Here lie their ashes, may their souls rest in peace'


The remains of this letter, as well as 60 other testimonies, can be studied in the original version in German, English and Romani at the Voices of the Victims portal of the RomArchive. Coordinated by historian Karola Fings, scholars from across Europe have collected letters and statements from persecuted minorities from 20 countries: Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Germany, Estonia, France, Italy, Croatia, Latvia, the Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Romania, Russia, Switzerland, Serbia, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Ukraine and Hungary.

Fings, of the Research Center on Antiziganism at the University of Heidelberg, told DW that what makes this resource so special is that the focus is not on the perpetrators. Instead, she said, the voices of the Sinti and Roma themselves are heard. The texts date from the time of the persecution itself, or from the period just a short while later when the victims began to bear witness to the crimes committed against their minority and early attempts were undertaken to bring the perpetrators to justice.


Like Margarete Bamberger's children, the vast majority of the prisoners killed at the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp died of hunger, disease or unbridled violence. The night of August 2, 1944, was the "horrific high point" of the racially motivated persecution of the Sinti and Roma, said Fings.

The SS liquidated the "family camp" at Auschwitz-Birkenau, driving 4,300 screaming and wailing people to their deaths. It was truly a day of horror in the Romani Holocaust, known also as the Porajmos. In 2015, the European Parliament declared August 2 as Roma Holocaust Memorial Day for Sinti and Roma.

However, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, this year the day will largely be commemorated in digital ceremonies.

Among those gassed to death on that terrible night in 1944 was the daughter of Zilli Schmidt: 4-year-old Gretel died together with her grandparents, her aunt and her six cousins. Like other inmates deemed fit to work, Gretel's mother had been transported elsewhere just a short while earlier. She had tried to escape from the train that was to carry her away and run to her family. But notorious SS doctor Josef Mengele slapped her about the head and forced her back into the wagon: "He saved my life, but he did me no service," remembered Schmidt.


Zilli Schmidt's most precious belonging was this photo of her daughter, Gretel


Mano Höllenreiner, 10, from Munich was among those who had, together with his parents, been transported to the Ravensbrück concentration camp. But he lost many relatives in Auschwitz: cousins with their children, aunts and "my poor grandmother who I loved so much — also gassed."
From a Catholic children's home to Auschwitz

Franziska Kurz lost four of her children: Otto, Sonja, Albert and Thomas were taken away and kept in a children's home before they were later deported.

In 1946, Kurz wrote to the mother superior of the St. Josefspflege Catholic children's home in southern Germany. The police had told her that "my four children were in Auschwitz." So, I asked them: "What on Earth do you still want from my poor children? The answer was short: "extermination."

She had been warned to "keep quiet." Otherwise, Kurz was told, both she and her youngest child, Maria, would be sent to a concentration camp.

Otto, Sonja, Thomas and Albert were all murdered at Auschwitz; the Catholic Church did not protect them. Thirty-nine Sinti children passed through the St. Josefspflege children's home, and only four survived.

It wasn't the only case of its kind. In May 1943, as deportation to Auschwitz and forced sterilization threatened, Oskar Rose wrote the following to the archbishop of Breslau: "If our Catholic Church fails to give us its protection, we shall be exposed to measures that, both morally and legally, make a mockery of all forms of humanity." He was at pains to point out that it was not merely a threat to the well-being of a few isolated families, "but to 14,000 members of the Roman Catholic Church."


Franziska Kurz wrote a letter asking about the fate of her four children, who had been deported to Auschwitz


However, this appeal and others like it fell on deaf ears. By way of contrast, said Karola Fings, there were examples from occupied territories in Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union, "where Muslim communities protected Roma neighbors, helping them to avoid deportation."

Genocide in Europe: Cruelly systematic, horrifically spontaneous

Wherever in Europe the Nazis gained ground, Sinti and Roma were persecuted and forced to fight for their lives. Many were murdered, in camps, or in mass shootings. "It all depended on local occupation policies and who the local proxies were," said Fings.

In German-occupied Poland, there were the death camps. However, there were also an estimated 180 other locations where massacres are known to have taken place. And when it comes to the Soviet Union or Yugoslavia, "most of the victims were not murdered in camps but wherever the killing happened to take place — on the spot."

In occupied Bohemia and Moravia — today's Czech Republic — Sinti and Roma were detained at the Lety and Hodonin camps before being deported to Auschwitz. In Croatia, Jasenovac "was a particularly horrific camp, where many were beaten to death."
Croatia: 'We were shipped here to die'

Josip Joka Nikolic was a musician, who lived his early years until 1942 in the small settlement of Predavac. Then the police and other men from the pro-fascist Croatian Ustasa movement that was loyal to the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) broke into the house and took his and other Roma families away.

It was said that they were being resettled, "from the oldest man to the youngest child." His wife, their 8-month-old daughter, parents, brothers and their families were all taken away in cattle trucks to the Jasenovac concentration camp.

Nikolic realized that they had been "brought there to die." He was brutally separated from his wife and child and led away with the other men to be executed. Somehow, though, he managed to escape and joined the resistance fighters, the partisans. But his whole family was killed at Jasenovac. Nikolic was a witness in a 1952 trial against the NDH interior minister, who however fled to the United States.
Serbia: Solving 'both the Jewish and the Gypsy question'

At the end of October 1941, reports Milena Stankovic, the Germans surrounded her Belgrade district. "Two agents and two gendarmes from the Serbian state security forces burst into our apartment," she remembered. Her husband and one brother were employed by the city authorities. Their stepson was a musician, and another brother was a laborer. All of them had children, and all had Serb citizenship. The men were taken away to a camp, where up to 1,500 Roma were interned. A few days later they were shot and killed outside the town.

Just over a month after the killing of the men, the Romnja — Romani women — were forced onto trucks together with their children and taken away to a concentration camp. The cold was extreme, as was the hunger. "My youngest child died because I could no longer breastfeed," reported Natalija Mirkovic.


The commemoration book at Auschwitz lists the names of almost 21,000 individuals deported from all across Europe

Anyone who could prove that they had a permanent place of residence was later allowed to go free. Some spoke out on behalf of their neighbors, and some were probably killed together with Jewish detainees. The head of the German military administration in Serbia boasted in August 1942 that Serbia was the only country in which both the "Jewish and the Gypsy questions" had been "solved."

Hungary: Shooting a pregnant woman with a machine gun

In February 1945, Angela Lakatos was in the late stages of pregnancy. Her contractions were painful. Suddenly, between 30 and 40 gendarmes arrived in her Roma settlement in western Hungary, determined to drive the Roma away. When Lakatos asked for help, one of the gendarmes answered: "Go to hell!" 120 Roma were forced inside a barn, and pleas for water were met with blows.

First, the men were taken away. Then the younger women. Another highly pregnant woman couldn't walk at all. One gendarme beat her. The next "used a machine gun to shoot the child out of her stomach." Lakatos and the others were driven into a pit: "I saw my father lying there dead. And both of my brothers. I myself half jumped into the pit, half fell."

She pulled her scarf over her head "to avoid seeing what was about to happen. But then it began to rain bullets." She was hit eight times: in her arm, her leg, her stomach. Others fell on top of her, their bodies catching the bullets. It was hours before she climbed out of the pit.

Lakatos survived, but she was severely wounded. She lost her whole family and her unborn child. After the war, she was a witness against the commander of the operation, Jozsef Pinter. She emphasized how thorough and systematic the operation had been. Pinter was found guilty of war crimes and in September 1948 he was executed — one of the very few perpetrators brought to justice for involvement in the killing of the Roma people.

Russia: Stripped naked and thrown into a pit alive

Lidija Nikiticna Krylova tells of a "nightmarish crime" committed by "German invaders in the village of Aleksandrovka on peace-loving Soviet citizens — members of a Roma collective farm." In April 1942, a German officer had a list that he used to call out the names of villagers one by one. Non-Roma were sent home.

Roma families were then forced to undress before being driven with whips "like cattle" to the edge of a pit. The older children were shot before the eyes of their mothers. Then babies were torn from their arms and thrown into the pit.

"Not only children were thrown alive into the pit," reported Nikiticna Krylova. "The Germans also shoved a sick old woman carried by her daughters into the pit. Krylova and others only escaped death at the very last moment. They later gave their testimony in Soviet investigations into Nazi war crimes.
Roma in Eastern Europe shut out from compensation

In many countries today there is still very little awareness that Sinti and Roma were victims of systematic genocide, said Karola Fings. She believes the full extent of the murderous violence will only become clear with a wider European perspective.

In response, researchers are working on an encyclopedia of Nazi genocide — a project that the German Foreign Office is backing with €1.2 million ($1.4 million).

Watch video02:11 Sinti, Roma memorial in Berlin threatened

In Germany, the genocide was largely ignored for decades. Members of the police continued to employ racist methods, using Nazis files in investigations and blocking acceptance that Sinti and Roma have been gravely persecuted. That, in turn, led to further trauma for survivors: trauma that has extended into the second and third generations, said Fings.

The historian was a member of the German government's Independent Commission on Antigypsyism which recently issued its final report. Alongside clear recognition of the genocide committed against Sinti and Roma and further investigation through the mediation of a truth commission, Fings said there must be material compensation — and not just in Germany.

"This also applies to those living in other countries, especially in Eastern Europe who after 1945 were completely shut out from compensation," she said.

The commission also said that, as is the case with Jewish victims of Nazi persecution and their descendants, Germany must also take responsibility for ensuring "that Roma and Romnja are recognized as an especially marginalized and vulnerable group."

This article has been translated from German


REMEMBERING NAZI GENOCIDE OF SINTI AND ROMA
Serving the fatherland
Many German Sinti fought for Germany not only in the First World War but also in the Wehrmacht from 1939 on. In 1941 the German high command ordered all "Gypsies and Gypsy half-breeds" to be dismissed from active military service for "racial-political reasons." Alfons Lampert and his wife Elsa were then deported to Auschwitz, where they were killed.
STALINIST ANTI-LGBTQ CHARGE
Hong Kong singer Anthony Wong charged with 'corrupt conduct'

Beijing has accused the pop star of misconduct after he sang at a 2018 rally for a pro-democracy candidate. But Wong is a seasoned and undaunted dissident.



Anthony Wong Yiu Ming (left) seen here with fellow Hong Kong singer Denise Ho Wan-see at a protest in 2019

Hong Kong's Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) has charged singer and pro-democracy activist Anthony Wong Yiu-ming with "corrupt conduct" for his live performances on a campaign trail during the Legislative Council by-elections back in 2018.

The anti-graft agency said in a statement that Wong had provided "entertainment to induce others to vote" for pro-democracy candidate Au Nok-hin, adding Wong had breached the Elections Corrupt and Illegal Conduct Ordinance, Reuters news agency reported.

If convicted, the 59-year-old could be jailed for up to seven years and fined HK$500,000 ($64,000, € 53,847), the ordinance says. Au, who went on to win the election, has also been charged. Both men are due to appear in court on Thursday.
 
Songs about choices and difficult questions


A video of Wong's 2018 performance that was posted on Au's Facebook page shows the former introducing a song entitled "A forbidden fruit per day" by saying, "This song is about choice, whether society has a choice."

Renowned for his poignant lyrics, Wong was a strong supporter of Hong Kong's 2014 pro-democracy "Umbrella Movement" and the 2019 anti-China protests. As only the second high-profile Hong Kong singer to come out as gay, he is also a vocal advocate of LGBTQ rights and founded the non-profit Big Love Alliance in 2013 to promote LGBTQ equality and freedoms.


The popular Hong Kong singer, songwriter, actor, record producer and political activist first rose to prominence in the 1980s as one half of the Cantopop duo Tat Ming Pair, before embarking on a solo career. He would however reunite with his band partner, Tats Lau, sporadically in the following years.

For instance in May 2019, the Tat Ming Pair released the song "Memory Is A Crime" to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy crackdown and honor its victims.

HONG KONG MARKS TIANANMEN ANNIVERSARY — IN PICTURES
Cleaning the Pillar of Shame
Hong Kong students clean the Pillar of Shame statue on the 32nd anniversary of the massacre on Tiananmen Square, which officially left 300 people dead, according to government statistics, after the Chinese military brutally suppressed protests in support of democracy. Independent international estimates put the toll at several thousand.   123456

Despite topping Hong Kong's iTunes chart, the song was immediately banned in mainland China, where discussion of the protests and the violent military crackdown is forbidden.

Back then Wong said that the song asked difficult questions as to what might constitute a crime of remembrance and commemoration under China's authoritarian one-party communist regime.

"Holding a candlelight vigil or just remembering what happened in the past could be a crime," Wong had said during the screening of a documentary on the 1989 crackdown by local broadcaster RTHK.

"Writing an article and singing a song could be a crime. One day, anything could be a crime," Wong had said then, dressed in a white T-shirt emblazoned with the words "Down With Big Brother."

Other Hong Kong entertainers were not spared either. For instance, various music streaming services, including Apple Music, removed a song by Jackie Cheung that had also referenced the 1989 crackdown.
 
The price of protest songs

However, speaking out ― or in Wong's case, singing out ― against the Chinese government has extracted a high price.

Wong actively supported the 2014 Umbrella Movement protests by performing for and camping with the protesters. Together with other popular local singers, he performed the song "Raise the Umbrella" in support of the protests.

Consequently, two of his performances were canceled, which eventually led to a total performing ban in mainland China. In 2017, all of Wong's music was removed from mainland Chinese streaming sites and his name blocked from mainland China's search engines. In 2019, Tat Ming Pair's music was also removed from streaming services.
 

The original Umbrella Revolution of 2014 demanded free elections and other democratic reforms


Undaunted, Wong remains a vocal supporter of democracy and freedom of expression in Hong Kong and also participated in the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests.

Hong Kong's Beijing-backed government says that the pro-democracy protests threaten stability in the former British colony and that the action taken against various people is necessary to uphold the law.

Many pro-democracy advocates have been detained, jailed or forced into exile. In June, pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily shut down following the arrest of several senior editors on national security grounds.
BIG PHARMA PROFITEERING
Pfizer, Moderna raise vaccine prices in EU

Vaccines from both drugmakers have been approved in the EU for children from 12 to 17 years of age.




The EU expects to receive more than a billion doses from four drugmakers by the end of September

Pfizer and Moderna have increased the prices of their vaccines in their latest European Union supply contracts, the Financial Times newspaper reported.

The new price for BioNTech-Pfizer's shot is €19.50 ($23.15), compared with €15.50 ($18.40) previously. The price of the Moderna shot is now €21.50, an increase of €2.50.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA), the EU's medicines watchdog, said last Friday that the bloc was likely to get 40 million more Moderna vaccine doses by October.

The European Commission said last week that the EU was on course to fully vaccinate at least 70% of its adult population by the end of the summer.

Overall, 57% of people over 18 are now fully vaccinated across 27 nations, Commission Chief Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement. She warned that people could not let their guard down since the "very dangerous" delta variant was still a threat.
UPDATED
EU sends help to Turkey as wildfires rage on

The bloc will send three air tankers as President Erdogan and his government face criticism for being out of touch and unprepared. 

Eight people have been killed over the past six days and thousands evacuated.

Fires have rages for six days and the Turkish government says it doesn't have enough equipment to fight them



The European Union announced on Monday that it would send three air tankers to Turkey to combat forest fires that have been burning near the Mediterranean coast in Antalya since last Wednesday, saying it "stands in full solidarity with Turkey at this very difficult time."

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu thanked Brussels for its support.

The EU aircraft — one from Croatia and two from Spain — will operate alongside teams from Russia, Iran, Ukraine and Azerbaijan in assisting locals and Turkey's regional and national efforts.

How is Turkey's Erdogan handling the crisis?

The aid comes as Turkey's strongman President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his government face criticism for their handling of the situation. Ankara initially sought to pin blame for the fires on Kurdish arsonists but was forced to drop that stance as the number of fires and deaths began to climb.

The affected region has been plagued by extreme drought for months and as fires continued to rage, the government's sluggish response was quickly compounded by an admission that it did not have enough aircraft to sufficiently battle back what are the country's deadliest wildfires in decades.

Moreover, President Erdogan was lampooned on social media as being entirely out of touch when he tossed bags full of tea to locals in one of the worst-hit regions in the country. The publicity stunt came as Erdogan, surrounded by a heavy police escort, delivered political speeches in and around Marmaris.

Currently, government planes and helicopters are at work as locals trek buckets of water up hillsides in doing their part.

Forestry Minister Bekir Pakdemirli says more than 130 fires have been recorded in dozens of towns and cities across Turkey since Wednesday. Seven of them — mainly near the southern resort towns of Antalya and Marmaris — are still burning.

Politician Engin Ozkoc of the Republican People's Party (CHP), Turkey's largest opposition party, demanded Pakdemirli step down, saying: "You don't deserve that ministry. You didn't foresee this and buy firefighting planes."

Europe dealing with 'climate threat' says official in neighboring Greece


Fires in Turkey have been fueled by high winds and low humidity, driving temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) across the region. They come as southern Europe finds itself in the grips of a prolonged heatwave with more large fires raging in Italy, Spain and Greece.

Across the Strait of Marmaris, neighboring Greece is battling more than 100 fires. "We are no longer talking about climate change but about a climate threat," said Greek Deputy Civil Protection Minister Nikos Hardalias, who drew a clear line between rising temperatures and the ferocity of fires across the continent.

Turkey's wildfires have now killed eight people and forced thousands to evacuate their homes.

Fire crews still battling Turkish blazes as some reignite 
DESPITE ERDOGAN'S DIVERTING PLANES AND BLAMING PKK 
Sun., August 1, 2021, 



ISTANBUL (AP) — More than 100 wildfires have been brought under control in Turkey, according to officials Sunday, as firefighters worked to battle blazes that continued in popular seaside destinations.

The Minister of Forestry and Agriculture, Bekir Pakdemirli, tweeted that five fires were continuing in the tourist destinations of Antalya and Mugla, while 107 fires were “under control.”

The fires in Antalya were continuing in two districts. In Mugla, they continued in the tourist destination of Marmaris, as well as other areas.

Police water cannons, usually used to control riots, assisted helicopters and fire trucks in a village of Mugla's popular district of Bodrum to fight fires. Turkish television showed fires had reignited after being extinguished earlier, with blazes and smoke approaching a village. Civilians were trying to help.

Fires were also encroaching on a village near the town of Manavgat, where helicopters were trying to extinguish blazes.

Panic-struck tourists were evacuated Saturday from some hotels in Bodrum as a fire rolled down the hill toward the seashore.

Pakdemirli’s list showed fires began in 32 provinces from Wednesday onward. Six people have died.

While Turkish authorities are investigating whether the fires may have started as an act of “sabotage” by outlawed Kurdish militants, experts mostly point to the climate crisis, as seen by the drastic increases in temperatures along with accidents caused by people.

A heat wave across southern Europe, fed by hot air from Africa, has led to wildfires across the Mediterranean, including in Italy and Greece.

Temperatures in Turkey and nearby countries in southeast Europe are expected to climb to 42 degrees Celsius (more than 107 Fahrenheit) Monday in many cities and towns. Antalya was already registering 41 degrees Celsius (106 Fahrenheit) Sunday.

The Associated Press

Turkey: Images from Space Show Dramatic Scenes of Fires in Turkey

World » SOUTHEAST EUROPE | August 2, 2021, Monday 
Bulgaria: Turkey: Images from Space Show Dramatic Scenes of Fires in Turkeytwitter european space imaging










High-resolution photos were taken by the American observation satellite WorldView-2 from Maxar from an altitude of 770 km.

High-resolution satellite images of large-scale forest fires in the Turkish resorts of Bodrum, Manavgat and Marmaris have been published by European Space Imaging.

“Using the power of 8-band multispectral imaging, we were able to manipulate image layers to better see through smoke and observe fires in greater detail,” the caption says.

It is reported that the photographs were taken by the American Earth observation satellite WorldView-2 from Maxar from an altitude of 770 km.

Earlier it was reported that the representative of the President of Turkey Ibrahim Kalin called large-scale forest fires “a national disaster”.


Tourists, villagers flee as wildfires ravage Turkish resorts

By MEHMET GUZEL and ZEYNEP BILGINSOY

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Tourists wait to be evacuated from smoke-engulfed Mazi area as wildfires rolled down the hill toward the seashore, in Bodrum, Mugla, Turkey, Sunday, Aug. 1, 2021. More than 100 wildfires have been brought under control in Turkey, according to officials. The forestry minister tweeted that five fires are continuing in the tourist destinations of Antalya and Mugla. (AP Photo/Emre Tazegul)


MAZIKOY, Turkey (AP) — Wildfires raged near Turkey’s holiday beach destinations of Antalya and Mugla and in the surrounding countryside for a fifth day Sunday as the discovery of more bodies raised the death toll to eight while villagers lost their homes and animals. Residents and tourists fled the danger in small boats while the coast guard and two navy ships waited out at sea in case a bigger evacuation was needed.

Fires also enveloped Mugla province’s Mazikoy, and villagers who evacuated were devastated.

Farmer Nurten Almaz said she lost everything. “I feel so much pain, like I lost a child,” she said. The 63-year-old woman lost her animals and her home as well as “one century of people’s labor.” She called for the death penalty for people who may have caused the fire.

Residents had to flee nearby Cokertme village as flames neared. Some got on boats and others left by cars as the fire got closer and closer. In one video, firetrucks and cars were rushing to escape fire raging on all sides. After nightfall, the village looked apocalyptic from a distance, with flames taking over the dark hills.

Bodrum mayor Ahmet Aras said Sunday evening that people experienced “hell” near Cokertme and Mazi as they drove away from the fire. He said the blaze could not be stopped and hoped to protect residential areas but said it was too late for the trees.

The area was engulfed by Sunday night, Turkish broadcasters said. Reporters said they had to get hurry to safety as the fire intensified with strong winds. Officials said precautions were being taken to protect two thermic power plants in the vicinity and at present the winds were blowing away from the plants.

Authorities warned tourists and residents to keep evacuating Turunc, a town in the seaside resort of Marmaris in Mugla province. Fires enveloped the area and strong winds made firefighting efforts more difficult. A helicopter attempted to extinguish the blazes, which were unreachable by land.

Aerial firefighting was not possible Sunday night and the fires raged, burning hectares (acres) of forests. Forestry official Mustafa Ozkaya said units continued to fight fires strategically, digging ditches and taking other measures. He said eight planes and 50 helicopters would fly in Mugla on Monday.

The European Commission announced it helped mobilized one firefighting Canadair plane from Croatia and two from Spain to aid Turkey. Planes from Ukraine, Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran have been helping.

Watching from out in the Mediterranean Sea, the area looked a bright orange.

As residents of villages around Marmaris pleaded for more help on social media, people boarded small boats carrying suitcases. Others waited anxiously to see if the fire would come down to the shore.

High temperatures and strong winds were making matters worse. Antalya registered 42 degrees Celsius (over 107 degrees Fahrenheit), about 5 to 6 degrees C higher than seasonal averages.

Earlier Sunday, police water cannons, usually used to control riots, helped helicopters and fire trucks in Mugla’s popular district of Bodrum to fight fires. Turkish television showed fires had reignited after being extinguished earlier, with flame and smoke approaching a village.

Social media videos showed tourists in Bodrum scampering down streets rolling their luggage to escape the nearby flames.

The health minister, Fahrettin Koca, said at least 27 people affected by the fires were still receiving treatment in hospitals while hundreds of others had been released.

The minister of forestry and agriculture, Bekir Pakdemirli, said 117 wildfires were “under control” across Turkey while eight continued. His tweets showed that since Wednesday, wildfires had ignited in 32 provinces.

While Turkish authorities say they are investigating whether the fires may have started as “sabotage” by outlawed Kurdish militants, experts mostly point to climate change along with accidents caused by people. Erdogan said one of the fires was started by children.

A heat wave across southern Europe, fed by hot air from North Africa, has led to wildfires across the Mediterranean, including on the Italian island of Sicily and in western Greece, where some residents had to be evacuated by boat to escape the flames.

On Sunday afternoon, bathers on an Italian beach south of the Adriatic city of Pescara fled when they spotted towering clouds of smoke and flames from a fire in a nearby pine forest, the Italian news agency LaPresse reported. Several people were reportedly injured when they tried to put out wind-whipped flames that had reached their homes. Local officials told state TV that an elderly home in Pescara had to be evacuated.

Meanwhile, in Turkey’s eastern Van province, floods over the weekend destroyed at least six houses after a small river overflowed amid heavy rains. Villagers were ordered to leave their homes and climb to higher locations.

___

Bilginsoy reported from Istanbul. Robert Badendieck in Istanbul and Frances D’Emilio in Rome contributed to this report.

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Follow all AP stories about climate change issues at https://apnews.com/hub/Climate.


Turkey wildfires: 'The animals are on fire,' say devastated farmers as wildfires sweep Turkey

By Gul Tuysuz and Arwa Damon, CNN 

In the small village of Kacarlar, on Turkey's southern coast, farmers are facing apocalyptic scenes as wildfires continue to sweep the country.

© AP Firefighters try to get the fire under control in Kirli village near the town of Manavgat, in Antalya province, early Friday July 30.

"The animals are on fire," 56-year-old resident, Muzeyyan Kacar, told CNN. "Everything is going to burn. Our land, our animals and our house. What else do we have anyway?"

Hundreds of miles west, in the tourist hotspot of Bodrum, more than 1,000 people were evacuated by boat on both Sunday and Saturday to escape the wildfires.

At least eight people have died in more than 100 blazes that broke out earlier this week, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency. The flames have been fueled by scorching summer temperatures and conditions that experts say have been worsened by climate change.

Seven people were killed in the fires in Manavgat, Antalya Province, and the eighth victim died in Marmaris, Anadolu reported. The latest victims include a Turkish-German couple who were found in a house, it said.

Two firefighters died battling the blazes on Saturday, according to the Turkish Agriculture and Forestry Ministry.

The ministry said that 111 fires have burned across the country since Wednesday, while six fires are still burning in three different cities as of Sunday.


Evacuation by sea


On Turkey's Mediterranean coast, more than 1,100 people were evacuated from the tourist resort of Bodrum by sea on Sunday for the second-straight day.

"We helped the evacuation of 1,140 people by 12 boats," Orhan Dinc, the president of the Bodrum Maritime Chamber, told CNN.

"We did evacuation by boats yesterday as well, but I have never witnessed something similar before in this region. This is the first time," he said.

Dinc said that while roads remain open and evacuations continue by land, evacuation by sea helps keep roads clear for fire trucks and ambulances.
© AP An aerial photo shows destruction by wildfires near the Mediterranean coastal town of Manavgat, Antalya, Turkey, Friday, July 30, 2021. The death toll in a string of wildfires raging in southern Turkey rose to four, officials said Friday, as fire crews continued to battle blazes that burned down homes and forced people to evacuate settlements and beach resorts. Firefighters were still tackling wildfires in 14 locations in six provinces in Turkey's Mediterranean and southern Aegean region, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters. (AP Photo)

Bodrum also evacuated 1,100 people using more than 20 boats on Saturday, the city's Mayor Ahmet Aras said. Bodrum is a popular destination for both Turkish and foreign tourists.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared parts of five provinces on Turkey's Mediterranean coast "disaster zones," following a helicopter visit to the devastated areas.


"We will continue to take all steps to heal the wounds of our people, to compensate for losses and to improve opportunities to better than before," the president added in a tweet Saturday.

Gul Tuysuz/CNN 
Gulay Kacar, 48, told CNN: "Everything is going to burn. Our land, our animals and our house."


'Gone, gone, it's gone'

The largest fire, in Manavgat, killed at least three people, according to the Turkish Natural Disaster and Emergency Directorate.

In the nearby village of Kacarlar, residents are grappling with seeing homes they built by hand burn to the ground.

"My father's house burned down," said 48-year-old Gulay Kacar. "Gone, gone, it's gone," Kacar said, before adding that she was "running to let the animals loose."

Namet Atik, a 37-year-old farmer from a neighboring village, said that he came to Kacarlar to help. "Whatever this village needs ... we are here for them," he told CNN

"We get them water, our cars, tractors, saws," he added. "We are forest villagers. Our livelihood is the forest. If this fire runs, there is no return."

Around 4,000 personnel, along with hundreds of emergency vehicles, have been deployed by the government to help fight the flames this week.

At least 77 houses have been damaged in the province of Antalya, and more than 2,000 farm animals have died, Turkey's Agriculture and Forestry Minister, Bekir Pakdemirli, told journalists on Thursday.

© AP 
A helicopter fights wildfires in Kacarlar village, near the Mediterranean coastal town of Manavgat, on Saturday, July 31.

Scorching temperatures


Hot and dry weather conditions had exacerbated the fires, Pakdemirli said on Thursday. He added that temperatures of 37 Celsius (98.6 Fahrenheit), less than 14% humidity and winds around 50 kilometers per hour (31 m.p.h.) had helped spread the flames.

Hikmet Ozturk, a forestry expert with the Turkish Foundation for Combating Soil Erosion, a nongovernmental organization that works to protect forests, told CNN that while 95% of fires in Turkey are caused by people, the spread of the fires is worsened by climate change.

The area of the fires are within the Mediterranean Basin which is one of the most susceptible to climate change risks, Ozturk said. "Typical weather conditions in the summer for the area is hot and dry, which means the risk of fires is already high, and climate change raises that risk," he said

The wildfires come as parts of western Europe have battle severe flooding in recent weeks. Scientists have for decades warned that climate change will make extreme weather events, including heavy rain and deadly flooding, more likely.

© Mahmut Serdar Alakus/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
 A vehicle burned in the fire that broke out in Mugla's Marmaris district in Turkey on July 30.

© Sevgin Ozkan/Reuters
 Plumes of smoke from a wildfire are seen near a residential area in the holiday resort of Bodrum, on Saturday July 31.
Greece faces worst heat wave in over three decades

As the southern European nation battles hundreds of wildfires, Prime Minister Mitsotakis has warned that the country is facing its worst heat wave for 30 years. Extreme weather in 1987 claimed more than 1,500 lives.



Greece is battling hundreds of wildfires amid soaring temperatures

Greece is being hit by its worst heat wave in more than 30 years, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Monday as temperatures hit as high 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in some regions.

His comments came as firefighters across the country battled to get hundreds of wildifres under control.

"We are facing the worst heat wave since 1987... [causing] a burden on the electricity network," Mitsotakis told journalists.

The country's July 1987 heat wave killed more than 1,000 people. Forecasts predict temperatures will peak later this week.


Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis warned the country faces its worst heat wave for over three decades

Which areas have been the worst affected?

The National Observatory of Athens, citing EU satellite images, said some 3,000 hectares (7,400 acres) of pine and olive groves have been destroyed by a fire that broke out near the city of Patras, 200 kilometers (125 miles) west of Athens.

Emergency services had failed to extinush that fire on Monday, according to Greek state news agency ANA.

Extra firefighting crews were being sent to the island of Rhodes, which is close to the Turkish border, to try and get fires there under control.

A popular hiking spot known as "the Valley of the Butterflies" was evacuated on Sunday.
How widespread are the fires?

Authorities said there had been 116 new blazes over the past 24 hours, with more than 1,500 fires being recorded in July alone, compared to 953 in 2019.

Deputy Minister of Civil Protection Nikos Hardalias told Greece's Star TV that "we are no longer talking about climate change but about a climate threat."

"We are in a phase of absolute climatic deregulation," he warned.


Water-dropping planes have been deployed across the affected areas in a bid to get the blazes under control

The hottest temperature ever recorded in Europe is 48 C, in 1977 in Athens.

Forecasters predict the temperature in Larissa, central Greece, will get close to that mark on Tuesday.

Countries such as Italy, Spain and Turkey have also battled wildfires in recent weeks amid soaring temperatures.


Turkey has also been hit by wildifres with the EU vowing to send help

The fires have forced thousands of people to be evacuated from their homes.

The European Union on Monday said it would send volunteers and firefighting planes to Turkey where blazes have claimed at least eight lives.
What role does climate change play?

Last month, the AFP news agency obtained a leaked draft of the latest UN report on climate change, ahead of a November summit in the British city of Glasgow.

It warned that the world could be heading for a point of no return in a bid to stem the effects of global warming.

"Life on Earth can recover from a drastic climate shift by evolving into new species and creating new ecosystems," AFP quoted the report as saying. "Humans cannot."

Dann Mitchell, a professor of climate science at the University of Bristol, said the heat wave in southeast Europe "is not at all unexpected, and very likely enhanced due to human-induced climate change.''

"The number of extreme heat events around the world is increasing year on year, with the top 10 hottest years on record all occurring since 2005,'' he said.

"These black swan events have always happened, but now they sit on the background of a hotter climate, so are even more deadly.''

jf/nm (AFP, AP, Reuters)
China floods: Officials put death toll at 302

The death toll from recent floods in the central Henan province rose to 302 as of Monday — triple the figure that was reported last week.




At least 39 were killed in underground areas alone


At least 302 people died in recent flooding in central China and 50 were still missing, officials said Monday.

Record downpours had dumped a year's worth of rain on the central Henan province in just three days, causing destruction and trapping residents in subway trains, underground car parks, and tunnels.

The figures mark a threefold increase compared to the previously announced death toll, 99.

What did officials say?

The Henan provincial government announced that 292 people were dead and 47 were missing in Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan.

Ten others died in three other cities, officials said at a news conference in Zhengzhou.

According to authorities, 189 people were killed by floods and mudslides, 54 in house collapses and 39 in underground areas. Six people died in an expressway tunnel, where 247 vehicles were removed as it was drained.

What about accountability?


Henan authorities have faced repeated calls for accountability. Social media users have criticized the government's handling of the crisis and demanded better disaster management systems.

According to Chinese media reports, the central government has set up a team to probe the disaster response and hold accountable those responsible for negligence.

However, criticism of the government's response to the disaster has not been met lightly.

Authorities removing a large floral tribute at the subway station in Zhengzhou was seen as a sign of sensitivity toward public criticism.



Authorities sealed off a large floral tribute at the subway in Zhengzhou

Last week, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian singled out the BBC for criticism, labeling it a "Fake News Broadcasting Company" that has "attacked and smeared China, seriously deviating from journalistic standards."

AFP news agency said some residents surrounded its journalists while reporting on a submerged traffic tunnel in Zhengzhou and forced them to delete footage.
What happened in Henan?

On July 20, record rainfall flooded Zhengzhou. The provincial capital was hit by 20 centimeters (8 inches) of rain in only one hour.

In the following days, the rains headed north, hitting Hebi, Anyang and Xinxiang in Henan, the inland county about 620 kilometers (380 miles) southwest of Beijing.



The disaster destroyed nearly 250,000 hectares (625,000 acres) of crops, according to officials. The estimated losses were at more than 90 billion yuan ($14 billion).

About 1.5 million people were evacuated because of the rains and flooding.

fb/aw (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)
Germany mulls manslaughter probe into deadly floods

Prosecutors could open an investigation into whether "possibly omitted or delayed warnings or evacuations" contributed to the death of 180 people in floods.




Massive flooding devastated towns and villages across western Germany

German prosecutors on Monday said they were looking into whether there were grounds to investigate negligence causing deaths in the recent floods.

At least 180 people were killed in severe floods that battered towns in western Germany in July.

The disaster prompted people to question whether authorities had done enough to warn residents ahead of time.

In a statement, Germany's public prosecutor office said that it was examining whether to initiate preliminary proceedings on "negligent homicide and negligent bodily harm as the result of possibly failed or delayed warnings or evacuations of the population."

The evidence could include police reports on the deaths of 12 people in a care facility in the town of Sinzig, as well as news reports of the disaster, according to the statement.

Germany floods: Could the catastrophe have been prevented?

Who was blamed?

Federal and state officials faced criticism that they had not done enough to warn locals in hard-hit areas.

German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said it would be "completely inconceivable for such a catastrophe to be managed centrally from any one place," noting that it was the state authorities' responsibility.

The German Meteorological Service (DWD) had also defended its crisis management, saying that local authorities did not pass on its warnings about the flooding.

Some state officials have admitted that their response to the crisis could have been better but have ultimately said they did what they could do.

What is the warning system in place?

Existing emergency notification systems in Germany include sirens, radio and a smartphone app called NINA.

Last week, Seehofer said he had given the order for emergency alerts to be sent to cell phones connected to specific local network antenna as needed when a crisis occurs.

Such mechanisms have been typically frowned upon in Germany amid privacy concerns, but many argue lives could have been saved with proper warning.

fb/aw (AFP, KNA)