It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Monday, March 28, 2022
ISRAEL
Settler leaders launch campaign calling to topple government
Yesha Council heads torch coalition's decision to 'freeze' Jewish construction in the West bank while ignoring illegal Arab construction, a move they say 'endangers national security'
SYRIA
Areas held by Autonomous Administration | Teachers go on strike for salary increase in Al-Raqqah and Al-Hasakah
With increasing numbers of teachers striking the educational process in Autonomous-Administration held areas in north and east Syria, SOHR activists have reported that teachers in Al-Qahtanyah area in the western countryside of Al-Raqqah have announced their strike to exert pressure on Autonomous-Administration and demand a pay increase.
This coincided with a strike initiated by teachers in Al-Arisha educational complex in Al-Hasakah countryside to demand a pay rise too.
On March 25, SOHR sources reported that teachers in the western countryside of Al-Raqqah issued a statement on March 24, announcing starting a strike and suspension of work until the Autonomous Administration fulfil their demands. Meanwhile, teachers at schools in the countryside of Al-Tabaqah started a similar strike, where they demanded salary increase, equality, improvement of their living conditions, dissolution of the Teacher’s Union and restructure of the education commission.
This development coincides with strikes by teachers of schools in Deir Ezzor and Al-Hasakah countryside, where the teachers have also demanded an increase in salaries and improvement of education.
On March 23, SOHR activists reported renewed popular protests in areas controlled by SDF in the eastern countryside of Deir Ezzor, where residents in Al-Jarazi Al-Sharqi town staged a protest, condemning the deteriorating living conditions, poor services and the lack of fuel. The residents also set fire to tyres.
While on March 20, SOHR activists reported that teachers and employees in Al-Shafa’a town in Deir Ezzor countryside went on a strike, protesting against low salaries, and in response to a call to strike in Deir Ezzor countryside, where people in several villages and towns participated in the strike.
Teachers demanded higher salaries and called to activate the role of organizations in the area and provide these organisations working freedom without imposing taxes on them, and appoint school guards in different SDF-held areas.
“This was a systematic machinery of death”: Syrian eyewitness details crimes against humanity
A key eyewitness to Syrian crimes against humanity is speaking out for the first time on CBS News, describing the atrocities he witnessed at a pivotal moment — as the West sounds alarms about civilian deaths in war-torn Ukraine.
“The Gravedigger,” a codename he is using because of ongoing threats against him and his family, described in an interview the wrenching details of the Russian-backed assaults on the Syrian population, and said they provide worrying indications of what is to come.
“I see the news coming out of Ukraine, my heart hurts because I know what Russia has done in Ukraine — what it can do — because I know what it’s done in Syria,” he said.
Russia’s support has been critical for years in keeping the government of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad in power. The human cost of the more than decadelong civil war has been staggering: United Nations estimates put the number of Syrians dead at 400,000 in the conflict that followed the peaceful Arab Spring pro-democracy movement.
“As far as Putin and Assad are concerned, they should go to the trash bin of history for what they’ve done in the world,” the eyewitness told CBS News.
Earlier this month, he spoke to committees on Capitol Hill about the heinous crimes in Syria, including the dumping of thousands of bodies in mass graves. CBS News has learned that he also briefed officials at the White House and the State Department. He is working with the advocacy group, the Syrian Emergency Task Force.
In a landmark decision in January, a German court found former Syrian colonel Anwar Raslan guilty of crimes against humanity, based on the Gravedigger’s account and other evidence.
“Twice a week, multiple trailer trucks would come and each truck would have upwards of 100 to 400 or more bodies,” he said. “They were tortured to death, you could see clearly the signs of torture on their bodies. … This was a systematic machinery of death.”
At one point during the interview, he put his head in his hands, saying one prisoner dumped at the mass grave was not yet dead.
“When the intelligence officer saw that this person was alive, he ordered the bulldozer driver to drive over the body and killed him on the spot,” he said.
He pointed CBS News to a site called Al Qutayfah near the Syrian capital, where satellite images show its transformation from a barren field to a series of trenches.
“Everything that was going on, the mass graves, were systematic and were part of what the Assad regime wanted to do,” he said.
Tehran, IRNA – Russian Ambassador to Iran Levan Dzhagaryan said on Sunday that a recent visit to Moscow by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi was a turning point in Tehran-Moscow ties.
Dzhagaryan made the remarks during a meeting with Governor-General of Iranian eastern province of East Azarbaijan Abeddin Khorram.
Noting that after a meeting in Moscow between the two presidents, three Iranian ministers also visited the Russian capital, the ambassador expressed hope that the two countries will witness further expansion of ties in the Persian New Year.
He said that he had frequently visited Tabriz, the capital city of East Azerbaijan Province, during his 10-year presence in Iran and is thus fully familiar with the capacities of the province.
Currently there are good relations between Tabriz and Russia’s Tatarstan, the ambassador said, adding that the head of Tatarstan Chamber of Commerce is scheduled to visit Iran within three months.
Dzhagaryan said that visiting Tabriz will be on the agenda of the visit to Iran by head of Tatarstan’s Chamber of Commerce.
9341**2050
Kourosh Ziabari
22 Mar, 2022
With so much global despair and uncertainty, Nowruz celebrations should be seen as a period of rejuvenation. Instead, the Iranian state has attempted to wash away its 3,000 year-old history, but the people won't let them, writes Kourosh Ziabari
Nowruz celebrations were widely celebrated worldwide in the hope that the Persian new year brings better days. [GETTY]
Our world is engulfed by chaos and grief. Two years after the deadly pandemic hit, at least 34 percent of the world’s population haven’t even been vaccinated yet. The Russian war on Ukraine, begetting a full-scale humanitarian disaster and flattening cities at the doorstep of the European Union, has upended the global order and portends the worst to come.
Amid the avalanche of ailments that have made it irrelevant to feel upbeat, the celebrations of Persian new year, Nowruz, heralded a respite from the many preoccupations that have submerged us in inertia and desolation.
Anchored in antiquity, Nowruz is documented to have been celebrated for at least 3,000 years. Its provenance is the Achaemenid Empire that ruled Persia, the modern-day Iran, and whose borders stretched from India to Egypt.
Today, a population of at least 300 million people worldwide join to rejoice at the advent of spring and the vernal equinox. Iranians not only enshrine Nowruz for the exquisiteness of its rituals, but also associate it with the grandeur of their ancestors, who once presided over one the world’s mightiest empires – a grandeur that has been supplanted in the 21st century by unsavoury geopolitical realities of vulnerability and fragility.
''Religious fundamentalists, for nearly four decades, have smeared Nowruz as a secular tradition that is a deviation from divine connections and resonates with Iran’s pre-Islamic, imperial past, thereby insisting that it should be expunged.''
Nowruz is observed in a number of countries where Persian-speaking populations maintain a presence: Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, India, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. But the list doesn’t end here. There are communities in as far places as Albania, Georgia, Kosovo and North Macedonia that also mark it.
Celebrating Nowruz is an imperative, particularly among the diaspora in Europe and North America. Families make sure they don’t miss the moment of the “transition of the year” while huddling around their elegantly-decorated Haft Seen tables, featuring at least seven blessed items whose names in Persian start with the letter sounding “s,” a gesture of welcoming the new year.
Each item on the symbolic table setting, broadly inspired by nature, epitomises a certain concept, derived from Persian mythology, including red apples for beauty, coins for wealth, wheat or lentil sprouts for rebirth, garlic for health, vinegar for patience, oleaster fruit for love, and the hyacinth flower – springtime. And let’s not forget the goldfish, candles and mirror, which are more recent additions to the arrangement.
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Nowruz is preceded by a set of customs that attest to its graceful nature. Families usually embark on a thorough spring cleaning a few weeks ahead of the new year, in a practice called “Khaneh-Tekani,” literally translated as “house-shaking,” which means they clean and tidy up every nook and cranny of their homes, wash carpets, replace old appliances and add some new furniture.
During Nowruz, it is traditional for households to throw parties with the members of the extended family, feasting upon delicious local meals, home-made pastries and sweets, and children and youngsters are expected to receive monetary gifts from parents and grandparents.
Philanthropic activities, ranging from donating to charities, raising funds for orphanages, distributing food among the underprivileged and donating blood go into high gear during what Iranians and others celebrating Nowruz consider as a ripe time for showing compassion and embracing the new year with good vibes.
But, however captivating and delightful Nowruz sounds to be, it has detractors that wish to wipe it off and dislodge it from the collective memory of Iranians. Religious fundamentalists, for nearly four decades, have smeared Nowruz as a secular tradition that is a deviation from divine connections and resonates with Iran’s pre-Islamic, imperial past, thereby insisting that it should be expunged.
It might appear hyperbolic, but in the eyes of an influential clique of radical clerics in Iran, Nowruz qualifies for obliteration because it is a festive occasion, and people shouldn’t be left to themselves to celebrate too much lest they consign their religious duties and the remembrance of God to oblivion.
For years, Nowruz has been treated as an alien creature in its birthplace. The state TV dedicated little airtime to special Nowruz shows, and even refused to screen Haft Seen tables. People were constantly reminded that every day in which no sin is committed can be a day of Eid, so there’s no point in singling out Nowruz as a unique occasion. Government officials, despite issuing new year messages, downplayed the cultural and civilisational aspects and infused inordinate religious talking points.
''Whether they are religious or secular, pro-government or dissident, affluent or disadvantaged, Iranians try to have a memorable celebration, awaiting better times.''
Those attitudes have been moderated as of late, and despite malignant intrigues to stamp out an ancient festival that has been intertwined with the Iranian identity, the voices of intolerance haven’t prevailed. Excluding their contorted readings of the religion recycled as sharia law and the tenets of Shia faith, there is nothing in Islamic teachings that has denigrated or outlawed Nowruz, or other cultural assets of the nations.
Nowruz continues to be a healing force and a sound connection between Iranians of all stripes. At a time the Iranian society is divided along ideological lines, people are frustrated at the nation’s chronic economic woes and ballooning isolation, the establishment is clueless on how to mitigate the crises induced by the sanctions, and such social vices as suicide and depression are spiralling due to endemic corruption, Nowruz interrupts the desolations that afflict the Iranians.
This year, Nowruz celebrations have been lively in the Iranian diaspora, particularly in the US, where a number of prominent Iranian-American TV personalities, academicians and entrepreneurs have acquainted their non-Iranian friends with the spirit of the ancient fiesta through their ornate “Haft Seen” tables and cordial get-togethers. In departure from the tense years of Trump’s presidency, the White House, instructed by President Biden, hosted a Nowruz ceremony with a Haft Seen. Google’s ‘doodle’ on March 20 was an observance of Nowruz featuring a bouquet of spring flowers.
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In Iran, municipalities and local authorities have just opted to look the other way without bothering to take the most rudimentary measures embellishing the cities for the arrival of the new year after the arduous months of pandemic-induced suffering.
But the everyday Iranians resist foreswearing the legacy of this centuries-long, intergenerational treasure. Whether they are religious or secular, pro-government or dissident, affluent or disadvantaged, Iranians try to have a memorable celebration, awaiting better times. In observing this cultural tradition, Iranians throw out their differences. It is safeguarding a nation’s cultural heritage that elevates its standing in the world. Political brinkmanship and vapid sloganeering cannot do the job.
Jason Kenney calls for halt to the scheduled federal carbon tax increase
By Paula Tran 770 CHQR
Posted March 28, 2022
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Finance Minister Travis Toews and Government House Leader Jason Nixon will make an announcement on Monday that will call for an end to the federal carbon tax increase scheduled for April 1.
The event comes after the Alberta government announced a temporary halt of the provincial gas tax in response to rising gasoline prices on Mar. 7.
Kenney previously called this move a “back-door way” to scrap the federal carbon tax in the province, which he said punishes people for consuming energy.
“Those economists, the NDP and Liberals are in favour of carbon taxes that drive up energy prices. This is a fundamental philosophical difference,” Kenney said on Mar. 10.
“Albertans spoke to this in the last provincial election and we are fulfilling our commitment in a way to scrap the carbon tax.”
READ MORE: Alberta’s fuel tax holiday is a ‘back-door’ way to scrapping federal carbon tax, says Premier Jason Kenney
A University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy report released that week, however, said the fuel tax holiday cannot be called a “reverse carbon tax” because it is tied to oil prices and only applies to two types of fuel: gasoline and diesel.
The report also said the tax holiday is more beneficial to higher-income families because they purchase more fuel compared to lower-income families.
“Relative to the carbon tax, which the government cites as an important motivation behind this policy, the holiday more than offsets it… The holiday, however, is not a ‘reverse carbon tax,'” the report reads.
“Wherever the federal carbon pricing system is in place, all direct proceeds are returned to the jurisdiction of origin – the federal government does not keep one penny,” an ECCC spokesperson said.
READ MORE: How carbon pricing works across the country
The ministry also said the policy is designed so that most households receive more in Climate Action Incentive payments than they pay in increased costs because of the carbon tax. The federal government uses most of the proceeds to support individuals and households through Climate Action Incentive payments in Alberta, according to ECCC.
“Carbon pricing has been in place across Canada since 2019 through a mix of federal, provincial and territorial pricing systems. The federal government sets minimum national stringency standards that all systems must meet,” the ECCC spokesperson said.
“The federal carbon pricing system applies in any jurisdiction that requests it, or that does not implement its own system that meets these minimum standards.”
Gas price analyst says Alberta initiative will make a ‘big difference’ – Mar 7, 2022
© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Motion calling in halt to carbon tax increase to be tabled in Alberta legislature
Alberta premier attacks ‘green left’ while defending Will Smith slap meme
Kenney defends Will Smith slap meme as making a point about green energy policies, Russian oil
By Elizabeth McSheffrey Global News
Posted March 27, 2022 10:47 am
A group of Indigenous peoples from across the country is making history with a journey to Vatican City for meetings with Pope Francis to talk about reconciliation. Neetu Garcha is in Rome and brings us the latest.
Warning: This story deals with disturbing subject matter that may upset and trigger some readers. Discretion is advised.
Outside the arrivals terminal at Rome’s Leonardo da Vinci International Airport, Métis Elder Angie Crerar stood up from her wheelchair right away when asked for an interview and a photo.
With a warm smile on her face, the 85-year-old residential school survivor said she was “totally humbled” to have two Métis national presidents standing next to her, and pulled them in tightly to be part of the conversation on camera.
“Unbelievable. I don’t know, I’m in a daze,” she said of her meeting with Pope Francis on Monday. “Very emotional, that’s very important to us and to my life too.”
The Grande Prairie, Alta., resident blew kisses at the camera as Audrey Poitras, Métis Nation of Alberta president, helped her to the bus that took the group to their hotel in Rome.
READ MORE: ‘Let’s think big’: Historic Indigenous delegation arrives in Rome to meet Pope Francis
On Sunday morning, 32 Indigenous representatives arrived in Rome for a week of meetings with the Pope, arranged by the Holy See and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. They flew nearly nine hours from Montreal, accompanied by a support team of friends, family, community members and staff.
They travelled in buses to their hotel, about 20 minutes from the Vatican, and spent the afternoon recharging for what is expected to be — like Crerar said — a “very emotional” week.
“I think it’s really important that everyone, not only our citizens, understand the significance of actually being able to bring our elders to Rome,” said Poitras.
“You know, I think about the times I’ve spent with Angie and the stories she’s told. What her wish has always been, is to have people understand what actually went on so that they can move past it and get to a better place.”
2:45Indigenous delegation to meet with Pope FrancisIndigenous delegation to meet with Pope Francis
Shortly after the delegates landed, Pope Francis delivered his weekly Angelus devotion to a crowd of thousands at St. Peter’s Square. Some waved rainbow flags and others waved the yellow and blue flag of Ukraine. He urged political leaders to end the violence in the Eastern European country, calling war a “barbarous and sacrilegious act.”
He also greeted congregants in the square from Rome and elsewhere in the world, giving special mention to the visiting faithful from Mexico, Madrid and Lyon, a student group from Spain, and runners in the Rome Marathon on Sunday.
He did not mention Canada or the Indigenous delegation.
More than 150,000 Indigenous children attended Canada’s 139 residential schools, described by some as institutions of assimilation. Their purpose, writes the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, was to “kill the Indian in the child.”
Thousands of children were beaten, raped and stripped of their culture by the priests and nuns charged with their care, studies say, and while estimates range between 4,000 and 6,000, the true number of Indigenous children who died is unknown.
Crear, who was born in Fort Resolution, N.W.T., was taken on a plane by the RCMP as a girl and spent 10 years in residential school. She said she was given the number ‘6,’ endured beatings, and was told she was a savage and a half-breed.
“We have a lot of work to do within the Métis Nation to really make sure that we have all of our stories captured so that we know the truth of what happened to Métis children in residential schools,” said Cassidy Caron, president of the Métis National Council.
“We’re really looking forward to sharing those stories with the Pope so that he understands there are three distinct Indigenous peoples in Canada, and that we share a history, but we all have very unique experiences.
“By bringing Angie and our elders together to the Pope to share their stories, it will be one really powerful moment.”
2:08Hope and optimism within Indigenous delegation heading to meet Pope FrancisHope and optimism within Indigenous delegation heading to meet Pope Francis
The Métis delegation of eight people meets the pontiff for one hour on Monday.
Asked what she would say to one of the most influential men in the world the next morning, Crerar choked up and said Pope Francis must understand that delegates are doing this for “our kids,” and that she is “no longer lost.”
“Nobody wanted us,” she said firmly, still holding Poitras and Caron. “I got news for them — I have an identity. I belong to the Métis Nation of Alberta and I have a wonderful life.”
Crerar is the president of Métis Local 1990 Grande Prairie, a founder of the Elders Caring Shelter in Grande Prairie, and a long-time volunteer for several organizations that promote healing and opportunities for Indigenous people and members of other underserved communities. In 2005, she received the Governor General’s Sovereign’s Medal for Volunteers.
The Indian Residential Schools Crisis Line (1-800-721-0066) is available 24 hours a day for anyone experiencing pain or distress as a result of their residential school experience.
VIDEO https://www.africanews.com/embed/1881804
Copyright © africanews
By Africanews
with AFP
A carved mask from Central Africa, dating from the 19th century, was sold in France for 4.2 million euros ($4.6 million) on Saturday, despite Gabonese protesters in the auction house calling for the item's "'restitution".
The rare wooden "Ngil" mask, used in ceremonies by the Fang ethnic people of Gabon, smashed its estimate of 300,000-400,000 euros at the auction in the southern French city of Montpellier.
"It's a case of receiving stolen goods," a man describing himself as a member of the Gabonese community in Montpellier exclaimed from the back of the auction room, surrounded by half a dozen compatriots.
"We'll file a complaint. Our ancestors, my ancestors, from the Fang community, we will recover this object", the protester added, describing the mask as a "colonial ill-gotten gain".
Auctioneer Jean-Christophe Giuseppi said the auction was "entirely legal", as far as he was aware.
Accompanied by security guards, the demonstrators left the auction hall calmly, but continued their protest against the sale of African works of art.
Saturday's auction also included a Congolese chair which sold for 44,000 euros.
With added costs and fees, the total paid by the successful bidder for the Fang mask was 5.25 million euros, close to a record for such an item.
In 2006 a similar Fang mask brought in 5.9 million euros at a Paris auction.
By Summer Concepcion
March 27, 2022
Big Lie efforts by Ginni Thomas, a conservative activist and the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, to overturn the 2020 election results reportedly extended to GOP members of Congress, according to NBC News. The report comes days after the Washington Post and CBS News revealed explosive text messages from Thomas to then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in the weeks after the election.
Days after the 2020 election, Thomas reportedly emailed an aide to then-incoming Republican Study Committee chair Jim Banks (R-IN), according to NBC News. Thomas reportedly wrote to Banks’ aide that she was more aligned with the far-right House Freedom Caucus, whose leaders spearheaded GOP efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s electoral victory in Congress.
Thomas reportedly wrote to Banks’ aide that she views Freedom Caucus members to be tougher than RSC members in terms of pushing the Big Lie. Additionally, Thomas threatened that she would not help the RSC, the largest caucus of conservatives in Congress, if she did not see its members “out in the streets” and in the fight, according to NBC News.
Despite the RSC representing the majority of conservative House members, the tea party-driven Freedom Caucus has increasingly gained more traction in recent years with its embrace of Trump and his election fraud falsehoods as Republicans look to take back Congress in the midterm elections later this year.
Thomas’ email to Banks in Nov. 2020 reportedly followed a request from the RSC to offer policy recommendations ahead of Banks’ term as chair of the caucus.
According to NBC News, Banks’ aide thanked Thomas for her suggestions and moved on. The email exchange reportedly made no specific references to GOP efforts to overturn the election results on the day of the joint session of Congress certifying Joe Biden’s electoral victory.
NBC News’ report comes days after Thomas’ reported efforts to pursue Big Lie efforts in a series of text exchanges with Meadows were revealed.
According to the Post, the text messages it obtained between Thomas and Meadows were among the 2,320 that the former Trump official provided to the Jan. 6 Select Committee during his short-lived cooperation with the panel. The Post and CBS News reviewed 21 messages sent by Thomas and eight messages sent by Meadows.
Days after major networks project Biden’s victory in Nov. 2020, Thomas reportedly complained about congressional Republicans in one text to Meadows on Nov. 10. Thomas wrote that she wished more Republican lawmakers proved their loyalty to Trump by being “out in street rallies” with his grassroots supporters who were also pushing the Big Lie.
“House and Senate guys are pathetic too… only 4 GOP House members seen out in street rallies with grassroots… Gohmert, Jordan, Gosar, and Roy,” Thomas reportedly texted Meadows, appearing to refer to Freedom Caucus members Reps. Louie Gohmert (R-TX), Jim Jordan (R-OH), Paul Gosar (R-AZ) and Chip Roy (R-TX).
The Jan. 6 Select Committee is reportedly discussing whether to call Thomas to come before the panel, according to CBS News and CNN.
The Committee’s meeting scheduled on Monday will reportedly include discussion of inviting Thomas to speak with the panel and issue a subpoena if necessary, according to CBS.
Thomas’ reported messages with Meadows follows her remarks the Washington Free Beacon earlier this month, in which she admitted to attending the Jan. 6 “Stop the Steal” rally that preceded the deadly Capitol insurrection — but only until she “got cold and left early.”
Thomas, however, claimed that she did not help organize the rally, despite her reported ties to the rally’s organizers. Thomas maintained that her attendance at the rally has “no bearing” on her husband’s work amid scrutiny over whether her conservative activism posts conflicts of interests for Justice Thomas’ role on the high Court, especially in cases related to the Jan. 6 insurrection and efforts to overturn the 2020 election
Summer Concepcion is a newswriter for TPM based in New York. She previously covered the 2016 election for Fusion, conducted investigative research for The Nation Institute, and has written for NBC Chicago and the Chicago Reader.