Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Brazil, Amazon, World: How the Munduruku Showed Up the Whole System

 

Photograph Source: Senado Federal – CC BY 2.0

To a degree that we seldom realize, we depend upon the participation of others in our lives, and upon our own participation in the lives of others.

– Roy Wagner, The Invention of Culture (p. 15).

The strategy works but it doesn’t mean that the strategist is intelligent, especially in an unintelligent system that’s destroying the planet. Brazil’s president, Jair Messias Bolsonaro knows how to hog the news with his despicable utterances, for example by comparing Indigenous reservations to a disease (“Our Amazon is like a child with chickenpox, every dot you see is an indigenous reservation”), thus remaining in the headlines and keeping racism (as well as sexism and other sociopathic views) alive and well. The mainstream press plays along, sometimes inertly echoing and sometimes playing shocked by his views which, after all, are just a more than usually brazen expression of the global system that breeds them. The system needs its Bolsonaros to make other faithful servants of the system look less noxious than they really are, and also to distract attention from things the general public aren’t supposed to know: in general, all the signs that, if humans are to thrive together with other species on this planet, a totally different social system is desperately needed.

The news that tends to be beamed out about Indigenous peoples, if not as crude as Bolsonaro’s views, tend to present them as dirt poor, backward, victims, quaint, exotic, or, in the artistic domain, set pieces aestheticising brutality and tragedy in a photograph by, say, Sebastião Salgado. The approximately 13,000 Munduruku people, who live along the Tapajós River in fourteen “Indigenous lands” in various phases of recognition by the state of Brazil, defy all the cliches. To begin with, they’re sending a powerful message to the government, the present one and the one that wins the elections in October this year: they’re not to be messed with, they understand and are exposing the rot at the heart of the system that wants to destroy them and, in doing so, have shown that history, as told today, is wrong.

The Munduruku—“fire ant people”, an allusion to their ancient fierce, swarming battle strategy—who call themselves Wuujuyû (“we are the people”) mostly live in some 130 villages along the banks of the upper reaches of the Tapajós River and its tributary, the Cururu River, in western Pará state. Their river and its tributaries, separately named on official maps made for the purposes of colonial exploitation, has one name: Idixidi, and their territory extends to where Idixidi flows because these waters are one, brought into being by the creator Karosakaybu when he threw three tucumã husks. The river is the essence of Munduruku life, providing food, water, transportation and, in particular, the centre of their cosmology. Any struggle against interference or invasion of their territory is about much more than just the land they live on. But this is how it is always presented by outsiders, who started to occupy the zone after the first recorded contacts in the second half of the eighteenth century and, especially, a hundred years later with the first missionaries in the area and the rubber boom, which catapulted the Amazon region into the world capitalist market and brought in thousands of non-Indigenous people who worked as semi-slaves in the plantations.

The incursions by outsiders continue to the present day, bringing violence and sickness, like the measles epidemic of the 1940s, which decimated the population, and now mercury poisoning from wildcat mining. More recently, since Bolsonaro took office in January 2019 attacks by illegal gold miners, and directly or indirectly, by large ranchers, soy planters, and other land grabbers have only increased, with the connivance of local and national authorities, especially following a Supreme Court ruling requiring the government to protect Yanomami and Munduruku Indigenous peoples. Bolsonaro has sworn not to keep “prehistoric men in zoos”, not to “demarcate one more centimetre” of the Amazon, and will whip up any kind of violence to get his way because for him, “Where there is indigenous land, there is wealth underneath it”. The Supreme Court is stymied, the Constitution is overridden, environmental law is sabotaged, and illegal logging and deforestation in the Amazon have been given a green light. Needless to say, the Munduruku aren’t the only Indigenous group organising and resisting the depredations of capitalism but, since Munduruku territory is one of Brazil’s most heavily mined Indigenous areas, the rampant general corruption has some of its worst and violent effects here. And they have brought it to light.

The Munduruku gold rush gives an idea of the scale of things. In 2018, the Tapajós basin produced some thirty tons of illegal gold, about a third of the country’s total and probably much more: The figures aren’t reliable as this is a secretive business, buying, processing, and selling from illegal hubs like Itaituba and Jacareacanga in Pará but with tentacles extending to other cities in Brazil, India, connecting up with drug trafficking via Colombia, French Guyana and Venezuela, and involving metal detecting, panning, cradling, sluicing, excavating and dredging, with equipment including airstrips, planes, helicopters, and excavators, through to satellite communications, generators, food supply chains, and shell companies laundering money. The business has long colonial roots, involving more than 800,000 slaves, going all the way back to the first global gold rush in 1690. The attacks on and poisoning of the Munduruku are part of a long offensive against Brazil’s Indigenous people, who have faced genocide, land appropriation and devastation for more than five centuries, in a process that was given new life by the developmental aims of the military dictatorship.

Murder is no stranger to the extractive industries. Last October Bolsonaro managed to dodge charges of genocide in a senate inquiry, although the final report found that he “commanded an anti-Indigenous policy that deliberately exposed the native peoples to neglect, harassment, invasion, and violence since before the pandemic.” Indeed, it was stated, he saw COVID-19 as “an opportunity” to harm them: “There is no disguise sufficient to cover up the president’s avowed willingness to target the Indigenous people”. The question of impunity was also raised, and also high-up complicity because everyone knows that Bolsonaro can’t act alone.

Article 231, paragraph 5 of Brazil’s 1988 Constitution reads, “Removal of Indigenous groups from their lands is prohibited, except […] in cases of catastrophe or epidemic that put the population at risk, or in the interest of the sovereignty of the country [… but] in any event, an immediate return is guaranteed as soon as the risk ceases”. Yet the law and government agencies provide no protection. They’re part of the problem. In fact, they’re “targeting nature reserves and protected areas using the Ministry of Environment to destroy legal protections and convert this land—including indigenous territories—into private property”. For example, the Munduruku Sawré Muybu territory, which hasn’t been fully confirmed as an Indigenous reserve, has been subject to thirteen mining applications, as well as fourteen more in Mato Grosso, from the UK-listed mining giant Anglo American (which got rich from exploiting black miners in apartheid South Africa). InfoAmazônia revealed in November 2020 that these applications made by Anglo American to mine in indigenous land in Mato Grasso and Pará had been approved by the National Mining Agency (ANM), regardless of the constitutional prohibition.

Worse, during the pandemic, when the Tapajós River basin had the highest mortality rate of all Brazil’s Indigenous health districts in Brazil, security forces were withdrawn from the region and, encouraged by soaring gold prices, the garimpeiros—poor, often desperate people, little able to resist the government’s nefarious plans for them—came in their thousands, setting up hundreds of illegal mining sites, invading protected Indigenous lands, poisoning the rivers, and infecting otherwise isolated communities. In May 2020 Environment minister Ricardo Salles demanded that the government should “make the most of the distractions arising from the pandemic” to bypass congress and push through further deregulation of environmental policy.

Not all the destruction of Indigenous lands has come from the right and, even if Bolsonaro is ousted and replaced by a progressive government in the elections of October this year, there is no guarantee it will stop. Yet, Brazil’s present situation is screaming out that past “development” models must be dropped. Another approach based on ancient knowledge is essential. In this regard, Brazil is fortunate that it still has groups of people who know how to live in harmony with the land. Now it needs a government that is willing to learn about it and apply it.

One major threat to the whole country today is development planning based on hydroelectric power generated by Amazon rivers, in which forty-three plants were initially envisaged. One of them—as Andy Robinson details in his excellent Gold, Oil and Avocadoes: A Recent History of Latin America in Sixteen Commodities (this article isn’t a review, but we strongly recommend this book)—was the São Luiz do Tapajós project, the second largest hydroelectric dam in Brazil after Belo Monte on the seasonably variable Xingu River, also in Pará state, and the key project of Lula’s Programme to Accelerate Growth of his second term in office. Largely thanks to Munduruku resistance, partly consisting of GPS-aided militant cartography, mapping as a strategy for community empowerment, defence of the land, producing evidence in the country’s courts, visibility, confrontation, insistence on rights, and self-determination, theSão Luiz do Tapajós project was shelved. The maps, made with cutting-edge technology and incorporating the places and narratives of ancient, mythological cosmology are used as evidence in community meetings and to challenge official maps expressing the ontology and geography of the state and of colonising intentions, scientifically rebutting the pronouncements of powerful figures like Maurício Tolmasquin, former Deputy Minister and Interim Minister for Mines and Energy in Lula’s first mandate who declared that there is “no human occupation” of land where the São Luiz and Jatobá plants were planned for the Tapajós River.

In fact, the struggles of the Amazon’s Indigenous peoples have drawn attention to the lies and misconceptions, taught by an imperial culture that believes it is superior. In his magnum opus 1499: o Brasil antes de Cabral (2017), which took Reinaldo José Lopes fifteen years to write because of the enormous amount of material he was handling, from the fields of archaeology, palaeontology and evolutionary biology amongst others, he shows that there were probably about eight million people in the Amazon rainforest before the Europeans arrived, living in multi-ethnic, politically organised groups of around 50,000 inhabitants, with complex trade networks and sophisticated artistic traditions. They built monumental squares and “a dense network of roads up to tens of metres wide; dykes and moats several metres deep that would be the envy of medieval castles, signs of large defensive palisades” (p. 12). And achieved, as Lopes told Andy Robinson (p. 328), “a subtle and gradual integration between inhabited areas, parks, and forested landscape”. The parks were “areas of managed forest that served as a source of food, medicine, construction materials, or an inspiration for art, sculpture, and worship”. The Portuguese and Spanish arms, cavalry, and strategy didn’t wipe out the people and their culture. Microorganisms brought by Europeans and their animals did most of the slaughter for them.

The vital point for Indigenous peoples fighting for their land and the rest of us who could learn from them, but that is largely ignored today (for example, Lopes’ important book isn’t translated into English) is that large areas of the Amazon jungle in the early twenty-first century, far from being virgin nature, were in fact “the result of a complex relationship between the raw material of biodiversity and human culture,” (Robinson citing Lopes, p.330). The “Amazonian flora is in part a surviving heritage of its past inhabitants” or as Manaus-based researcher, Charles Clementsays, “even areas of the Amazon that look empty today are crowded with ancient footprints”. Citing Lopes, Robinson writes, “The egalitarian orchard cities and cultural parklands that spread through the Amazon under collective land management and communal property before the arrival of the Europeans should be models even today” (p. 332).

The name “Amazon” is misleading. “There isn’t ‘one’ Amazon, but an immense variety of so-called ‘terra firme’ and flooded forests, areas of savannas and open fields, forests more or less subject to drought and even one or another mountainous region” (Lopes 2017: 86). The history of names is often a way of getting to the basics of the history of a concept, place, or object. In the case of “Amazon”, it tells a story of Indigenous peoples and colonial intrusion. Roughly speaking, multiple names refer to precolonial times and the single name to the colonial and postcolonial identity or, in other words, to insider and outsider stories.

Before Columbus reached the shores of South America, the river, the area, and rainforest had no general name as each tribe had its own name according to the area it occupied and its cultural and linguistic traditions. The Tupí-Guaraní tribes called the river Paranaguazu (Great Relative of the Sea), while the name given by the Amara Mayu meant “Mother Serpent of the World”. The conquistadores had other ideas. They had indiscriminate plans for conquering the whole area so, in 1500, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, commander of a Spanish expedition, after venturing some 50 miles upriver from the sea, called it Río Santa Maria de la Mar Dulce (St. Mary’s River of the Freshwater Sea), thus imposing the Catholic religious motif on a notion of the river’s great size. By 1502, it was known as Río Grande and, by 1515, Río Marañon, a name that is believed by some to derive from the Spanish word maraña (tangled mess), which now shifts from the river’s size to the difficulties of navigating it (for foreigners but not Indigenous people with their small craft and intimate knowledge of their habitat).

In 1541, the Spaniard Francisco de Orellana made the first descent along the river from the Andes to the sea. It is believed that, after a battle with a Pira-tapuya tribe in 1542, in which women fought alongside men, he began to refer to the “river of the Amazons”, thus evoking the mythical women warrior tribe of Amazons of Asia as described by the Greeks Herodotus and Diodorus. And the Amazon was like a woman to be ravished so, for Walter Raleigh, writing to his London financers, Guyana was a “country that hath yet her maidenhead, never sacked, turned, nor wrought; the face of the earth hath not been torn… never conquered or possessed”. The naming history shows different ways of thinking about the Amazon, one group suggesting respectful coexistence with the particularities of its different places, and the other conquest, imposing outside values, and wholesale pillage. Now, as befits the second way, “Amazon” has been appropriated by the world’s wealthiest man, Jeff Bezos to designate the world’s “No. 1 evil tech company”, at least partly because it suggests hugeness. These two world views—grandiose wholesale seizure and caring attention to local particularities—are manifested today in the form of the effects of mass destruction of the Amazon and resistance against it. Many scientists are trying to tell us that the only way it can be saved is by learning from the latter.

The Munduruku and other Indigenous rain forest defenders have shown up not only racism, corruption, violence, and incompetence in government circles, the turning of environmental licencing processes into mere rubber stamping, and weakness of laws but, with their history and their present actions they’re also challenging the damage caused by and failures of western ideas of development (including the Programme to Accelerate Growth) at a time when the whole planet is critically endangered by them. Dams aren’t just dams. Those already constructed and those in the pipeline on the Tapajós, Teles Pires and Juruena rivers, for example, through partnerships involving the Brazilian state energy company and enterprises from countries including China, France, Portugal and Spain, are also planned to provide cheap river routes for commodities like soy through to the Atlantic, and energy for exploiting the forest’s mineral reserves.

For the last ten years the Munduruku resistance movement Ipereğ Ayũ (I am strong, I can protect myself), now opposing dam projects beyond the Tapajós, has been focusing on environmental impact studies, joining with the Beiradeiros people to demand their right to be consulted as stipulated in Article 231 of the Constitution and with the ILO Convention No. 169 on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples (ratified by only 23 countries in 2019). They’ve produced their own ‘consultation protocols’ stating how they should be informed of government projects and the ways they would take collective decisions in keeping with their own cultural specificities. But the then Rousseff government responded with Operation Tapajós, sending heavily armed personnel to accompany researchers carrying out technical studies for the dam projects, because the region was “dangerous”. For the Indigenous inhabitants, the word pesquisador(researcher) was extremely negative as it had come to mean people working for the dam consortiums.

Finally, they won the battle, but probably not the war. The São Luiz do Tapajós project was suspended when IBAMA, the Environment Agency responsible for conceding the licence found that the Environmental Impact Studies were inadequate and unconstitutional. But the Belo Monte dam and the Teles Pires and São Manoel dams went ahead, although they didn’t meet the requirements of FUNAI (National Indian Foundation) and IPHAN (National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage) and it was found that the Environmental Impact Studies of both these dams systematically played down the risks and negative impacts of their construction. Some of these have become glaringly obvious with the Belo Monte dam which, for example, has spawned the violent, crime-ridden town of Altamira, which is sending its raw sewage into the Xingu because of lack of infrastructure. Apart from the social and environmental damage it has caused, the dam produces, even in high water season, just a fraction of the 11,233 MW per monthbragged about by its promotors and builders because the Amazon rivers with their changing seasonal rhythms are not amenable to this kind of harnessing. But not everyone loses. The $US10 billion project went ahead since there were mega-profits to be made from its construction. Bret Millikan of the NGO International Rivers observes, “There were big construction companies and political interests connecting to them through patronage networks, kickback schemes, and so forth, that stood to just make huge amounts of money from [building it]. I think part of the evidence for that is that all of those big construction companies all migrated away from Belo Monte’s [energy generation] investors.”

Now the cascade (literally: the famous Iguaçu Falls are now a mere trickle) effect is happening. Thanks to the combined effects of deforestation and drought, hydroelectric plants are operating at well below capacity (29%) in a “critical shortage of water resources”, energy and food prices are rising, and electricity rationing looms. For Bolsonaro, it’s simply a matter of bad luck: “This lack of rain. We’ve been really unlucky”. Scientists say otherwise: ongoing deforestation and global warning act together in a lethal loop (schematically shown in diagrammatic formbelow) making the rainforest more flammable than ever. And without the rios voladores—southward moving airborne rivers bearing twenty billion tonnes of water vapour (by comparison with the 17 billion tonnes discharged every day into the Atlantic by the Amazon river) of water vapour every day per day, exhaled by rainforest trees)—central and southern Brazil, with all the towns and cities, including São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte, could become desert.

Over 400 years, the whole Amazon Indian population has shrunk to perhaps 200,000. Everything we see now in the climate catastrophe is related with this figure. People, animals, birds, plants, habitats, rivers, soil, air, heat, water, winds, rain, not to mention wisdom, beauty, and human and animal rights, have been so harmed and desecrated that the whole planet is gravely affected. In 1972, Ursula Le Guin summed up what humans must learn with the title of one of her books, The Word for World Is Forest. But what we see today isn’t science fiction. If earthly forest dwellers have always understood their habitat as a world, a cosmos, a well-ordered whole of many harmoniously interacting parts, they also know that damaging the forest means damaging the world, perhaps beyond repair. In a letter they wrote to politicians in 2013, the Munduruku leaders warned, “People want to transform our precious wealth into business. What do they want to reach with this destruction, when we preserve and the destroyers tell us, who are keeping the balance in nature, that we are destroying it. This is opposed to our way of thinking. We never destroy our natural heritage, we are concerned about keeping it so as not to be destroyed ourselves. Man is not only destroying nature, he is destroying his own human nature. This they do not understand, they are destroying themselves.”

Mining firms targeting Brazil indigenous lands: report


As of November, the companies had a total of 225 active mining applications to Brazil's National Mining Agency (ANM) that overlap 34 indigenous lands, for a total area more than three times the size of London, it said.



Major mining companies are seeking to expand to currently protected indigenous lands in the Amazon rainforest, bolstered by billions of dollars in financing from international banks and investment firms, a report found Tuesday.

Nine mining giants including Brazil's Vale, Britain's Anglo American and Canada's Belo Sun have filed applications seeking authorization to mine on indigenous reservations in Brazil -- even though that is currently illegal, said the report by the environmental group Amazon Watch and the Association of Brazil's Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

The firms appear to be betting Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who has pushed to open protected lands to mining and agribusiness, will succeed in passing legislation introduced by his government that would allow them to operate on indigenous territories, it said.

As of November, the companies had a total of 225 active mining applications to Brazil's National Mining Agency (ANM) that overlap 34 indigenous lands, for a total area more than three times the size of London, it said.

"The environmental damages and threats against the lives of forest peoples by mining activities are brutal and have only worsened under Bolsonaro's administration," Ana Paula Vargas, Brazil program director at Amazon Watch, said in a statement.

"With the rainforest at the tipping point of ecological collapse, we need to involve all the actors behind this industry."

Experts say preserving indigenous lands is among the best ways to protect the world's biggest rainforest, a vital resource in the race to curb climate change.

- Alleged violations -

The report found the mining firms, which also included Glencore, AngloGold Ashanti, Rio Tinto, Potassio do Brasil and Grupo Minsur, received a total of $54.1 billion in financing from international investors over the past five years for their Brazilian operations.

It urged banks and financial firms backing such companies to pull out of them, saying many also had a history of human rights violations and environmental destruction.

Major backers of the nine mining companies include US firms BlackRock, Capital Group and Vanguard, which invested $14.8 billion in them over the past five years, it said.

Banks including France's Credit Agricole, US-based Bank of America and Citigroup and Germany's Commerzbank are also major financiers of the companies, with a total of $2.7 billion in loans and underwriting, it said.

Many of the companies denied the report's findings.

Anglo American said it had "legacy tenure applications" for indigenous lands that it had "fully and formally withdrawn several years ago."

Vale said it had done the same last year.

Belo Sun, Peru's Minsur and Potassio do Brasil said they had no activity relating to indigenous territory, and defended their social and environmental records.

A spokesperson for Vanguard meanwhile said the firm "regularly engages with mining companies" to promote sound environmental and social practices.

And Credit Agricole said it financed no mines in the Amazon.

"We have contacted Anglo American and Vale, which both confirmed they had no exploration permits for indigenous lands," it said.

Only nine percent of plastic recycled worldwide: OECD

Plastics contributed 3.4 percent of global greenhouse emissions in 2019, the report said
Plastics contributed 3.4 percent of global greenhouse emissions in 2019, the report said.

Less than 10 percent of the plastic used across the world is recycled, the OECD said Tuesday, calling for "coordinated and global solutions" ahead of expected talks on an international plastics treaty.

A new  by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development report found that 460 million tonnes of plastics were used in 2019, the number nearly doubling since 2000.

The amount of plastic waste had more than doubled during that time to 353 million tonnes, the Paris-based OECD said.

"After taking into account losses during recycling, only nine percent of plastic waste was ultimately recycled, while 19 percent was incinerated and almost 50 percent went to sanitary landfills," it said in its Global Plastics Outlook.

"The remaining 22 percent was disposed of in uncontrolled dumpsites, burned in open pits or leaked into the environment."

The Covid-19 pandemic saw the use of plastics drop by 2.2 percent in 2020 compared to the previous year. However single-use plastics rose and overall use is "projected to pick up again" as the economy rebounds.

Plastics contributed 3.4 percent of global greenhouse emissions in 2019, 90 percent of it from "production and conversion from fossil fuels", the report said.

Graphic showing what proportion of plastic waste is recycled, incinerated, landfilled or dumped into the environment
Graphic showing what proportion of plastic waste is recycled, incinerated, landfilled or 
dumped into the environment.

In the face of rampant global warming and pollution, it is "crucial that countries respond to the challenge with coordinated and global solutions", OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said in the report.

The OECD proposed a series of "levers" to address the issue, including developing the market for recycled plastics, which only represent six percent of the total—largely because they are more expensive.

It added that new technologies related to decreasing the environmental footprint of plastic represented only 1.2 percent of all innovation concerning the product.

While calling for "a more circular plastics lifecycle", the OECD said that policies must also restrain overall consumption.

It also called for "major investments in basic waste management infrastructure", including 25 billion euros ($28 billion) a year to go towards efforts in low and .

Plastics contributed 3.4 percent of global greenhouse emissions in 2019
Plastics contributed 3.4 percent of global greenhouse emissions in 2019.

Plastic treaty talks

The report comes less than a week before the UN Environment Assembly begins on February 28 in Nairobi, where formal talks are expected to begin on a future international plastics treaty, the scope of which will be discussed.

Shardul Agrawala, the head of the OECD's environment and economy integration division, said Tuesday's report "further accentuates the need for countries to come together to start looking towards a global agreement to address this very important problem".

Asked about the priorities of the treaty to be discussed in Nairobi, she said that "there is an urgent waste management problem which is responsible for the bulk of the leakage to the environment".

"But we should not limit our focus just to the end of pipe solutions, there is a greater need in the long term to forge international cooperation and agreement towards alignment of standards," she told an online press briefing Monday.

In a survey published Tuesday by polling firm Ipsos for the World Wildlife Fund, 88 percent of respondents stressed the importance of an international treaty to combat  pollution.

In the 28 countries surveyed, 23 percent of the respondents said such a  was "fairly important", 31 percent said it was "very important" and 34 percent found it "essential".

© 2022 AFP

Saudi Arabia for first time marks its founding, downplaying conservative roots

By Aziz El Yaakoubi 

RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia held celebrations on Tuesday to commemorate for the first time its foundation nearly 300 years ago, choosing a date that downplays the central role played by clerics from the ultra-conservative Wahhabi school of Islam.

The government lined up events that include musical performances on Saudi modern history, fireworks, drone shows and sound effects, with 3,500 performers taking part, state media reported.

The anniversary marks the day in 1727 when Mohammed bin Saud, founder of the first Saudi state, took over the emirate of Diriyah - a remote town which now lies on the northwest edge of the Saudi capital Riyadh.

That was about 18 years before what historians generally consider as the beginning of the Saudi state when bin Saud, a tribal leader, forged an alliance with Islamic preacher Mohammed ibn Abd al-Wahhab, whose purist doctrine is often referred to as Wahhabi Islam.

The agreement with the clergy boosted the legitimacy of the Al Saud rulers in exchange for lavish funding and influence granted to the conservative religious establishment over social issues, education and public morality - powers which have recently been curbed by the country's de facto leader.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has reined in the religious police, opened the country to concerts and cinemas, lifted a ban on women driving and eased the guardianship system, which gives men significant control over the lives of their female relatives.

A royal decree last month declared Feb. 22 an official holiday, known as "Founding Day", to be commemorated every year in recognition of "the commencement of the reign of Imam Muhammad bin Saud" and marking the start of the first Saudi state.

"Mohammed ibn Abd al-Wahhab is being erased from Saudi history," said Kristin Diwan, senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.


"This is the new Saudi nationalism. It celebrates the Al Saud - tying the people directly to the royal family - and downplays the pivotal role played by religion in the founding of the state," Diwan said.


Saudi Arabia's Shura Council, an influential advisory body to the government, also approved last month a proposal to amend the law regulating the national flag and anthem. It was unclear if it will alter the content of the flag which includes the profession of Islamic faith: "There is no god but God; Muhammad is the prophet of God".

The kingdom already celebrates National Day on Sept. 23, which commemorates the victory of Al Saud over rival tribes from Hejaz region and the conquest of the two holy sites of Islam, Mecca and Medina, in 1925. The kingdom was subsequently named the kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932.

(Reporting by Aziz El Yaakoubi; Editing by Dominic Evans and Nick Macfie)
Russia now has right to build military bases in eastern Ukraine under treaties

Under treaties signed by Putin, Russia has now acquired the right to build military bases in eastern Ukraine's two breakaway regions.

ReutersMoscow
February 22, 2022


Russia-Ukraine crisis news: Russia has acquired the right to build military bases in Ukraine's two breakaway regions under treaties signed by President Vladimir Putin with their separatist leaders.

Russia has acquired the right to build military bases in Ukraine's two breakaway regions under treaties signed by President Vladimir Putin with their separatist leaders.

Putin on Monday officially recognised the two breakaway regions - the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and the Lugansk People's Republic - as independent statelets, defying Western warnings that such a step would be illegal and kill peace negotiations.

Under the two identical friendship treaties, submitted by Putin for ratification by parliament, Russia has the right to build bases in the separatist regions and they, on paper, can do the same in Russia.

Read: Ukraine-Russia tensions: How Putin’s move could deepen existing tensions with the West

The parties commit to defend each other and sign separate agreements on military cooperation and on recognition of each other's borders.

The border issue is significant because the separatists claim parts of the two regions that are currently under the control of Ukraine. A Russian parliament member and former Donetsk political leader told Reuters last month that the separatists would look to Russia to help them wrest control of these areas.

The 31-point treaties also say Russia and the breakaway statelets will work to integrate their economies. Both of them are former industrial areas in need of massive support to rebuild after eight years of war with Ukrainian government forces.

The 10-year treaties are automatically renewable for further five-year periods unless one of the parties gives notice to withdraw.

 

 WE CAN ONLY HOPE SO

Will nine-to-five soon become a thing of the past?


Beijing Review, February 22, 2022

Soon after graduation, Wu Mengwei, an electronic and information engineering major, followed his passion and became a writer contributing to online novel websites. He usually works five to six hours every night and jots down some 4,000 to 6,000 words.

"I'm not really a social person. I enjoy letting my thoughts flow at night and write," Wu said. "But sitting down for too long has admittedly made me gain weight."

Wu is among China's 200 million who do not work for a company or any employer, a number recently released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

"Today, many people opt to work on their own or for themselves. They have more choices and can get more creative in their career pursuits, as well as can quickly respond to and change with market demand," Zhang Chenggang, a professor at the Capital University of Economics and Business, told Beijing Review, adding that the digital age has increased job opportunities and created room for more diversified development.

Job alternatives 

A guideline released by the State Council in 2020 highlighted flexible employment, including individual businesses, part-time jobs, and new occupational forms, as an important way to boost employment and increase labor income, as well as to broaden new work channels and nurture new drivers of progress.

Zhang added those who don't work full-time under one employer for a relatively long period fall into the flex work category.

Some 12.69 million new urban jobs were added last year, an increase of 830,000 from 2020, Ning Jizhe, head of the NBS, told a press conference in January. The surveyed urban unemployment rate, in turn, fell under the 5.5-percent target.

Ning attributed the job market performance partly to the job creation fueled by China's continuous economic recovery and development, as well as the country's pro-employment policy which has expanded job opportunities for college graduates and rural migrant workers.

Although employment in some industries such as service, manufacturing and construction contracted, that in certain other sectors expanded, contributing to overall job market stability, Ning said.

In addition, "new business forms boost the consumer market by making service consumption more convenient, and employ a large workforce to meet the needs of a widely dispersed clientele," Zhang said.

Food delivery is one such business form. When COVID-19 put China in a bind over the first half of 2020, the number of registered couriers on food delivery giant Meituan was nearly 4 million. "The delivery service market offered income opportunities for a large number of groups with a relatively low level of education and skills, or who were temporarily unemployed due to the epidemic," Zhang said.

On platforms like Meituan, people can register to become part-time couriers, taxi drivers or manicurists who offer house calls. Fixed working hours are usually not a requirement, which means one can work more or less according to their own schedule.

Zhang said job quality of flexible employment in the digital age has improved, mainly in terms of more secure income and flexible working hours. "Flexible employees who work through the platform are mainly paid for their hours and per order, which helps avoid wage arrears," he explained.

Digital technology has driven the development of the sharing and online economies, Ma Liang, a researcher with the National Academy of Development and Strategy under Renmin University of China (RUC), believes.

Ma said content platforms such as cloud customer service, short videos, and online education have created perfect conditions for flexible employment, expanded the extension of college students' career choices in terms of time, space and form, and enriched the variety of supply-side employment positions. 

China is expected to see 10.76 million new graduates pour into the job market from the country's universities and colleges this year, 1.67 million more than last year, according to the Ministry of Education.

Over the past two years, 16 percent of college graduates in China have opted for flexible employment, according to data from the China Higher Education Student Information and Career Center.

More than 1.6 million people are working in jobs related to live-streaming, an increase of nearly 300 percent between 2020 and 2021.

But some voices are saying that flexible employment is a nice way of saying you're unemployed. "I don't believe that flex work equals unemployment or taking on the odd job here and there. For me, it's a new way of life and a new way to carve out a career based on what I'm good at and interested in. This way, I can follow my heart and my passion," Huang Zixuan, a content creator with over 30,000 followers on popular platform Bilibili who mainly produces online gaming and electronic device unboxing videos, told Beijing Review.

However, Huang added he does face challenges in managing his time and striking a balance between work and life. He also gets stressed out by unstable income and unfriendly viewer comments.

Some people choose not to work at a company because they would like to manage their own schedules. Online store owner Wang Shenghui once signed up as a driver on ride-hailing platform DiDi Chuxing when business wasn't going well. "I drive to earn some extra cash whenever I want. Right now, my online store has picked up again, so I can stop driving and focus on my main business. When I'm worn-out, I can take a break and travel during the off-peak season as most people are, basically, at work. It feels great to have control over the rhythm of my life," Wang said.

"Sure, I might seek a stable job when I'm no longer able to support myself this way, but the important thing is that I do have a say in my career choice," Huang, the content creator, said.

The flex trend is not just limited to China. A document released by the International Labor Organization in 2015 read that over the past few decades, in industrialized and developing countries alike, there has been a marked shift away from standard to non-traditional employment, and the transformations in the world of work, regulatory changes and macroeconomic fluctuations and crises have all contributed to this evolution.

The transformation includes changes in economic structures, from agriculture and manufacturing to services, increased pressure from globalization, technological revolution as well as changes in entrepreneurial strategies.

Cost-effectiveness 

According to the China Development Report on Flexible Employment (2022) released by researchers at RUC, 61.14 percent of Chinese companies were hiring flexible workers in 2021, an increase of more than 5 percentage points over 2020.

Compared with the traditional long-term employment model, the advantage of flexible employment lies in its less rigorous entrance and exit mechanisms. On the one hand, job seekers enjoy a lower employment threshold and the option to leave at any given time. On the other hand, companies enjoy more leeway in terms of employee selection and allocation.

"Flexible work increases the ability of enterprises to cope with uncertainty, and can meet the seasonal, cyclical and other special personnel needs of enterprises," Zhang said.

The lower human resource costs of flexible workers are also a huge attraction for companies, according to a report released by Chinese online recruitment platform Zhaopin last year. Varied job models, less social security spending and tax burdens and greater resilience to uncertainty are their other main reasons for hiring part-time labor.

"Also, if I'm not satisfied with a person I hired ad interim, I can easily find a replacement," said Du Chunyong, Vice President of online recruitment platform Zbj.com.

However, some of the above reasons in fact add a sense of insecurity for flex workers. According to Zhaopin's report, many are reluctant to stay flexible partly because of job instability, possibly lower income, as well as a lack of social recognition and welfare.

Supporting mechanisms 

To address these concerns, and enable people to have more job options or even start up their own businesses, the country has rolled out several policies to protect the rights of people with non-standard occupations. In the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for Digital Economy Development released by the State Council in January, individuals are encouraged to use new online platforms such as social media, knowledge distribution, audio and video sharing websites for employment and entrepreneurship to promote flexible employment and part-time job innovation.

The guideline released in 2020 stated further efforts should focus on expanding the channels for flex working by encouraging people in this situation to establish small economic entities, with more policy support for key groups such as college graduates, migrant workers, and the unemployed. 

For fresh graduates, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security (MOHRSS) announced that social security subsidies will be granted to support their flexible undertakings through multiple channels and new types of occupation.

China's social security system is made up of five different insurance types, namely pension, medical, unemployment, work-related injury and maternity insurance.

Employers are obliged to make timely payments for themselves and their employees. It is the former's responsibility to correctly calculate or withhold payments for both parties. When unemployed, people still need to foot their social insurance bill on their own dime at local public service centers or neighborhood residential committees. 

For those graduates who are willing and able to start up their own business, the ministry will offer preferential backing, provide entrepreneurial training, guaranteed loans and venue support.

Some colleges and universities have introduced a series of measures such as setting innovation and entrepreneurship credits and relaxing the duration of academic studies, so that they can focus more on innovation and business strategizing. Some have also created platforms to provide business funding and cover daily living costs.

Due to difficulties in determining labor relations, high job mobility, and complications in investigating and obtaining evidence for work-related accidents, most flex workers have long been unable to enjoy work-related injury insurance benefits. The MOHRSS had already taken this into consideration and formulated policies accordingly. "The government, intermediary employment platforms and companies should all conduct their own research and prepare for future changes to protect the rights of all relevant parties," Zhang concluded.  

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Canada's Largest Trade Union Boycotts Nordic Flag Carrier SAS Over 'Unacceptable Labour Practices'

SAS aircraft are seen parked at the gates at terminal 4 of Arlanda Airport near Stockholm - Sputnik International, 1920, 22.02.2022
In the course of the pandemic, the Scandinavian flag carrier SAS has pink-slipped 5,000 employees and, upon receiving several tranches from the Danish and Swedish states, embarked on a controversial reorganisation to alleviate the looming threat of bankruptcy.
Canada's largest trade union, the Canadian Labour Congress (CLS), has initiated a national boycott of Scandinavian flag carrier SAS, due to the company's reorganisation.
The organisation, which has 3.3 million members in a country of 38 million, and covers all jobs from pilots to teachers and nurses, is strongly critical of the airline's reorganisation, which includes a renegotiation of collective agreements and may result in staff being laid-off and re-employed on worse terms.
According to Tim Perry, president of the Canadian Pilots' Association ALPA, the company has been employing "unacceptable labour practices".

"As we understand it, pilots at SAS have lost their jobs and been asked to apply for them again, but with significantly lower wages and working conditions. And we don't think it is an acceptable way to negotiate or treat your employees", Perry said, as quoted by Swedish national broadcaster SVT. "It is unacceptable here in Canada or anywhere else in the world either, I believe", he added.

Perry emphasised that this is the first time the Canadian Labour Congress is calling for a national boycott of an airline and expressed hope that many Canadian travellers will opt out of SAS, knowing the company's working methods.

SAS, by contrast, claimed that the reorganisation in question will lead to more job opportunities.

Swedish Minister of Trade and Industry Karl-Petter Thorwaldsson said the government expects state-owned companies to act in an exemplary manner, by having a healthy and safe working environment and decent working conditions, but emphasised that working conditions are a matter for the board and management, not the owners.
The pan-Scandinavian flag carrier SAS is co-owned by the Swedish and Danish governments at 21.8 percent apiece. Before the pandemic, SAS operated 180 aircraft to 90 destinations. Its main hubs include Copenhagen Kastrup, Stockholm Arlanda, and Oslo Gardermoen.
However, as dozens of flights were grounded amid the pandemic, the company sank into the doldrums, pink-slipping 5,000 employees, or 40 percent of its workforce, and receiving a series of substantial tranches from its shareholders to stay afloat.
Most recently, a forecast by the Norwegian bank DNB claiming that the Nordic flag carrier was teetering on the verge of bankruptcy has sent the airline's shares into freefall, with a plunge of over 25 percent.

 KOREAN SHIP BUILDER

HMM Reports Record Profits, Prompting Renewed Reports of Privatization

HMM profits and privitization
HMM added a dozen ultra-large containerships as it works to build capacity and modernize (HMM file photo)

PUBLISHED FEB 14, 2022 6:01 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

South Korea’s HMM reported record profits for 2021 more than offsetting nearly a decade of losses and immediately prompting renewed speculation that the government will proceed with the privatization of the country’s largest container shipping company. The shipping line, whose profits were only exceeded so far for 2021 by companies including Samsung and PSCO as the largest in the country, has been controlled by the Korea Development Bank and Korea Ocean Business Corporation for nearly six years after they saved the then Hyundai Marine from bankruptcy.

“Revenue and profits reached a record high in 2021, primarily driven by high freight rates and efficient fleet operations,” said HMM reporting its results. The strong market helped the company to more than double its 2021 revenues to over $11.5 billion while net profit went from essentially flat last year to $4.6 billion, a more than 40-fold increase. The profits exceeded analysts’ estimates by 11 percent according to a report in the Korea JoonAng Daily. 

"Fourth quarter is usually an off-season for the container shipping business, but increased loads for Asia-America routes, due to the major promotions like Black Friday, boosted the demand for shipping and drove up prices," the company said in its press release. Reflecting these strengths, HMM reported revenue more than doubled in the fourth quarter versus the prior year and were 10 percent ahead of the third quarter. Profits in the fourth quarter were up more than 19-fold.

The strong results led the Korean media to renew speculation of the pending privatization of the shipping company. Over the past five years, the banks have helped the company to modernize its operations and improve efficiency. HMM highlighted the addition of 12 containerships each with a capacity of 24,000 TEU and the addition of a total of 20 new ships in 2021. HMM currently has just over 800,000 TEU of total capacity and is targeting expansion to 1 million TEU. In June 2021, they announced an order for 12 new 13,000 TEU containerships.

Speculation over the timing of a privatization of the shipping company started a year ago when the chairman of KDB talked openly about exploring the possibility of selling the bank’s shares. They speculated that it would be a multi-stage deal involving the conversion of bonds into equity. Late in 2021, Korean government officials confirmed that discussions were underway to develop a plan for the privatization of the shipping company. The undersecretary of the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries said he expected a plan to be finalized by the first quarter of 2022. 

Some of the speculation in South Korea is that the government wanted to move while the container shipping market continued near its peak. Others have warned that the government might be moving too quickly that HMM needs to stabilize and consolidate its recent gains while continuing the modernization of its fleet.

Adding to the speculation, The Korea Times reported today that the creditors have selected former Hyundai Glovis and Hyundai Wia CEO Kim Kyung-bae to take over the leadership of HMM. The current CEO’s term is set to expire in March. The newspaper reports that the government approached Hyundai Glovis in 2016 to acquire HMM and based on Kim’s close ties to the company they are speculating that he could help to renew the acquisition plan. 

HMM in its earnings report cited the pressures on oil prices as one of the challenges for the year ahead. They said that about 80 percent of their capacity is on ships outfitted with exhaust scrubbers, which they predicted would give the company the ability to respond to rising oil prices.