Monday, March 28, 2022

Chat and Encrypted Messaging Apps Are the New Battlefields in the Propaganda War

By Inga Kristina Trauthig 
Sunday, March 27, 2022


Ukrainians fleeing the war check their phones while on a train to Poland on Feb. 28, 2022. Photo credit: Pakkin Leung via Wikimedia; CC BY 4.0.

Editor’s Note: Just as the military conflict in Ukraine rages, so too does the propaganda war. Russia has long been a master of wartime (and peacetime) propaganda, and Ukraine has surprised many observers by adeptly telling its story and winning the hearts of much of the world. Inga Kristina Trauthig of the University of Texas at Austin shows how both sides are using chat and encrypted messaging apps as part of the propaganda struggle and explains why this may be the new normal for future conflicts.

Daniel Byman

***

The war on Ukraine has intensified the importance of chat and encrypted messaging apps (EMAs). Ukrainian users rely on these apps for up-to-date information and advice on personal safety and public health, but they are also central to the propaganda war and are being manipulated by both sides. EMAs are used widely in Ukraine: Viber appears to be the most popular chat or encrypted messaging app, with Telegram second and Facebook Messenger third (with penetration rates of 98 percent, 86 percent and 76 percent, respectively). These apps are especially effective for spreading Russian propaganda in Ukraine, but the apps are also used widely in Russia, where they are exploited to spread propaganda that focuses on Russia’s domestic audience. Russian users spend more time on Telegram than the global average, and the current war has made the app more important for both activists and pro-government media. For instance, Russian propagandists exploit the dissemination of disinformation on Telegram by re-reporting it as “leaked” information on Russian state channels that amplify the false claims. At the same time, Telegram has established itself as a way for Russian activists to access independent information after the Russian government shut down the few remaining independent news channels.

Propagandists adapt to changing circumstances, and how they use these new technologies will likely change over the course of the conflict. What is clear so far is that EMAs will be an important medium for actors fighting for control of narratives about the war. Ukraine and Russia are taking different approaches, with Ukraine adapting its state-supported infrastructure on the apps for public messaging and Russia using the apps to source or spread new disinformation in support of its messaging campaign. The companies that run these apps are only just waking up to the ways their platforms are being used, and there is no clear path forward for preventing the apps’ exploitation for propaganda purposes. These apps are now a battlefield in their own way, representing a new normal for how propaganda wars are fought.

Ukraine: Adapting Public Communication for Wartime

The ubiquity of EMAs in Ukraine led to local journalists and politicians building new infrastructure for communicating to mass audiences on these platforms. This shift had been developing for several years prior to the invasion. These actors had begun relying on EMAs to offer their audiences unfiltered messages. Research that my colleagues and I conducted in 2021 at the Propaganda Research Lab at the University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Media Engagement captured how Telegram and Viber in particular had grown in importance for political messaging by Ukrainian leaders. A Ukrainian academic who advises politicians on effective communication with citizens told us in an interview that “Telegram is the major source that brings politically relevant information” to the Ukrainian public, as most major news outlets, parties and individual politicians have their own Telegram channels with large numbers of subscribers.

Over the past two years, the Ukrainian Ministry of Health’s coronavirus communications relied heavily on Telegram and Viber. Following the Russian escalation, these established lines of communication were repurposed. The primary Telegram channel that was dedicated to reliable coronavirus news in Ukraine is run by a private company but works closely with the government and is verified by Telegram. The channel asked whether subscribers wanted updates on the latest “socio-political” news. Following a positive vote, the channel changed its purpose and has since mostly provided updates on the war. This exemplifies a radical change, with a nominally nonpolitical channel shifting to become an important tool of citizen communication during wartime. The existing EMA infrastructure—which journalists relied on to identify news stories and politicians used for political campaigning—has become vital for Ukrainians trying to find the most recent information and analysis about the conflict.

On EMAs, as in other media, it can be difficult to distinguish between nonpolitical communication and reliable information on the one hand, and propaganda built on half-truths or even lies on the other. Russia was already aware of the importance of Telegram for the Ukrainian public prior to the invasion and used anonymous Telegram channels and other propaganda strategies on these apps to push its agenda. For example, after Ukraine banned the Russian Sputnik V vaccine in 2021, Russia increased personal attacks targeting key Ukrainian politicians, including President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian minister of health, on Telegram channels that were purportedly set up to share news by local journalists in Ukraine. Political messaging on EMAs is part of a broader ecosystem of computational propaganda, which is a business in Ukraine as it is in any other country and includes Ukrainian political actors’ messaging to domestic audiences. One interviewee, who previously worked in the Ukrainian parliament but now works for a media nongovernmental organization, described to us how the earnings scale of “political consultants” running Telegram channels related to the previous Ukrainian president’s office depended on the subscriber numbers of channels they ran, which creates incentives for polarizing messaging and exploitative gimmicks. These apps are pervasive, but the information on these channels is as unreliable as other forms of social media.

Ukrainians are learning from their unfortunate history of having been attacked by Russia in the recent past. Both new and repurposed channels and groups on EMAs are now being used to provide practical information, from advice on safety to self-defense. Recently, Ukraine’s deputy minister for digital policies has turned to Telegram, setting up an “IT Army of Ukraine” group, which has reached over 260,000 members. Overall, Ukraine is capitalizing on its advanced digital ecosystem. Ukrainians are using these apps to push back on Russian propaganda and document the gruesome war for foreign audiences with the aim of fostering international support.

Russia: New Tools, Old Tactics

Russian propagandists have capitalized on the rising use of EMAs in Ukraine by setting up their own channels aiming to attract Ukrainian subscribers, with even the state broadcaster RT running Telegram channels. More than just an additional avenue for propaganda output, Russia’s state media have been relying on “leaked” videos, images and claims—often unverified or outright disinformation—from Telegram channels to fuel its propaganda. Despite coming from dubious sources pursuing their own agendas, Russian media use these so-called “leaks” to implicitly increase the legitimacy of their state-controlled channels by relying on what they claim is “authentic” input from Ukrainian citizens.

For example, a video from the Telegram channel of the DNR People’s Militia, a Russian-supported militant group operating in Donetsk, allegedly showing Polish-speaking attackers trying to blow up chlorine containers in separatist-controlled eastern Ukraine was picked up by Russian state media. TASS and RIA Novosti took the video and the separatists’ claims at face value and amplified them to a wider audience. Eliot Higgins, founder of Bellingcat, described the video as “the laziest, dumbest disinformation I’ve seen in forever.” However, by the time accurate, fact-checked information could spread, Russian state media had already moved on to the next news item. Even when fact-checking happens simultaneously, these corrections are unlikely to reach the audience on which it has the biggest effect: the Russian people.

Russian propagandists seek to counter two dynamics that have disrupted propaganda efforts since the Cold War. First, specific propaganda campaigns have become less effective due to the sheer increase in volume and related noise that adversely affects targeted campaigns. Second, propaganda has become harder to control than in previous eras when it was conveyed from the top down, from the professional news media to the public. Now, the emphasis of two-way communication in Web 2.0 makes a consistent message more difficult, but Russia is adapting by creating a disinformation ecosystem that seeds false reports and convenient narratives abroad through social media that propagandists can then seize on and claim as “authentic” reporting. In 2014, for example, the Internet Research Agency generated blog posts pretending to be first-hand accounts from inside Ukraine and ginned up comments to make them look real and generate traffic; we are witnessing similar tactics in the current conflict. These tactics and the exploitation of social media has increased the relevance of traditional journalism as an amplifier of disinformation operations—both because traditional journalism can promote these false claims, intentionally or inadvertently, and pass them on to a broader audience and because traditional journalism exposes how these disinformation operations work.

The New Normal


Propagandists and local activists have benefited from features that have made it more difficult to access EMA content—either to surveil or to fact-check. Telegram does not suggest trending topics to navigate its broadcast channels, which complicates finding problematic spaces, for instance. Also, users must request access to join private groups, and when communications are end-to-end encrypted this stands in the way of established content moderation regimes like the ones implemented by Meta. But interventions to limit the spread of disinformation can still be established by analyzing metadata, promoting verified information by the company or relying on third-party efforts.

The companies that run EMAs are aware that their platforms are being used as critical lifelines by some actors and exploited to spread propaganda by others, but their responses have been inconsistent. Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, recently announced that the company would crack down on Russian propaganda, offer users in Russia and Ukraine encrypted direct messaging on Instagram, and demote Facebook posts by Russian state media outlets. The spread of false information on Telegram prompted its founder, Pavel Durov, to consider restricting access to the platform, and Signal’s creator, Moxie Marlinspike, tweeted a reminder to users that Telegram is not always end-to-end encrypted and leaves communications more exposed. WhatsApp’s Will Cathcart emphasized the app’s usefulness, tweeting that the State Emergency Service of Ukraine had launched a helpline on WhatsApp with the aim of providing advice on how to stay safe.

Combating propaganda is largely falling to journalists and open-source analysts. Local Ukrainian fact-checkers have increased their efforts on EMAs, as part of an ongoing process described to us by a Ukrainian journalist in 2021. VoxUkraine is one example; it has acted to counter Russian propaganda since 2014.

Identifying the creators of propaganda campaigns remains the greatest challenge. Propagandists can take advantage of online anonymity, automation and the scale of the internet to remain in the shadows as they sow deceptive political messaging. Manipulation and deception have always been part of politics, and no state or society will be able to eliminate them. Instead, new technological developments must be incorporated into existing analysis. With the global success of EMAs, the political manipulation of these chat apps is now a significant conduit for propaganda.


Inga Kristina Trauthig is a senior research fellow with the Propaganda Research Lab at the Center for Media Engagement at the University of Texas at Austin.
    Published by the Lawfare Institute in Cooperation With

    How North Korean Cyberattacks Threaten the Developing World

    North Korea once fostered supportive relationships with the Global South, but it now uses cyber attacks against developing countries for its own purposes.
    March 27, 2022

    The North Korean government of the Cold War era expressed solidarity with Third World liberation movements and decolonization. From supporting African anti-colonial struggles to sending pilots to fight alongside the communists in the Vietnam War, the North Korean leadership saw itself as part of a global anti-imperialist front. However, North Korea retreated inwards after the fall of the communist bloc in the 1990s and became much more nationalistic in its foreign policy. Now, North Korean cyberattacks increasingly target countries in the developing world.

    Pyongyang began to devote significant resources to its cyber capabilities in the 1990s. Cyber operations became a way for North Korea to aggressively assert itself in the international arena and inflict pain on its strategic foes, principally the United States and Republic of Korea. Nonetheless, in recent years, Pyongyang’s cyber operatives have stretched beyond North Korea’s traditional adversaries. They now increasingly target financial institutions in the developing world. In an effort to bolster the coffers of the political elite and also gather intelligence for military purposes, North Korean hackers see the developing world as a vulnerable target for increasingly sophisticated cyber attacks. In fact, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) remains the only government in the world that brazenly uses cyber attacks for monetary gain.

    The most well-known North Korean cyber attack in the developing world took place in 2016. North Korean hackers stole around $81 million from the Central Bank of Bangladesh (CBC). The CBC was targeted due to its relatively lax security standards and outdated systems. North Korean hackers manipulated the SWIFT system and tricked the U.S Federal Reserve into sending funds to their fraudulent bank accounts that appeared to be the CBC’s, but were in fact accounts set up by Pyongyang’s hackers. The North Korean cyber theft of the Bangladesh Central Bank shocked the international community.

    After the CBC bank heist, North Korean hackers continued to target financial institutions in the developing world. In March 2018, a North Korean hacker unit, known as “Hidden Cobra,” targeted Turkish banks. Using a spear-phishing email campaign, the North Korean hackers lured targets with a fake cryptocurrency scheme and acquired sensitive information for potential future cyber attacks. In 2019, a UN report said that North Korean hackers attacked banks and cryptocurrency exchanges in India, Bangladesh, Chile, Costa Rica, Gambia, Guatemala, Kuwait, Liberia, Malaysia, Malta, Nigeria, South Africa, Tunisia, and Vietnam. Two years later, in April 2021, North Korean cyber agents attacked a South African logistics company and took control of their computers for purposes of intelligence gathering.

    North Korean hackers now use developing countries as physical and virtual locations to obfuscate Pyongyang’s involvement in illicit cyber activity. In fact, the 2014 Sony Pictures hack came from a WiFi network in a five-star Thai hotel. North Korean hackers have also likely used India as a physical base for some of their cyber operations. In Africa, North Korean hackers have found “safe havens” in Kenya and Mozambique. Passing themselves off as workers at legitimate businesses, North Korean hackers utilize the cyber infrastructure of developing countries to attack financially lucrative targets on behalf of the Korean Workers’ Party. It seems that North Korean hackers use lax visa regimes and weak sanctions enforcement measures in developing countries as a way to disguise Pyongyang’s role in these cyber operations.

    North Korean cyberattacks in the developing world are dual purpose. In addition to revenue generation for the Kim family regime, North Korean cyberattacks are meant to acquire sensitive information on weapons systems and critical infrastructure. The collection of this intelligence is vital for the heavily sanctioned regime that is cut off from global supply chains. During the Covid-19 pandemic, North Korean hackers have even targeted pharmaceutical companies, such as Pfizer, for information related to COVID vaccines. Under Kim Jong Un, the regime’s propaganda has emphasized a return to economic self-reliance and self-sufficiency. North Korea’s cyber operations can be seen as part of this broader internal effort to promote autarky.

    It is clear now that North Korean hackers view the Global South as vulnerable cyber terrain. It is imperative that governments and banks in the developing world bolster their cyber defenses and indicate to their employees the importance of up-to-date cybersecurity measures in preventing cyber intrusions. Cybersecurity training is imperative in order to deter North Korea’s increasingly sophisticated and aggressive cyber attacks.

    In addition, governments in the Global South need to reevaluate their visa agreements with the North Koreans. Pyongyang’s willingness to abuse visa regimes and diplomatic immunity should be cause for concern. North Korean diplomats and overseas agents are expected to send loyalty funds back to Pyongyang. This self-funding expectation makes the Kim family regime’s diplomatic presence abroad a potential source for future cyber espionage and criminal activity. North Korea is no longer a friend or an ally to the developing world. Pyongyang’s cyber agents exploit and abuse the security vulnerabilities of Latin America, Africa, and southern Asia. The days of North Korea’s Third World solidarity are long gone.

    Benjamin R. Young is an assistant professor of homeland security and emergency preparedness in the Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University. He is the author of the book Guns, Guerillas, and the Great Leader: North Korea and the Third World, and his writing has appeared in a range of media outlets and peer-reviewed scholarly journals. Follow him on Twitter @DubstepInDPRK.
    Russians Ditch Instagram Following Ban, Study Shows



    Russians have ditched the popular U.S. social-media platform Instagram after the country's communications regulator banned it for "extremism," opening the door to persecution, a study shows.

    Russian-language posts on the picture-sharing platform dropped 30 percent between February 24 -- the day Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine -- and March 24, Moscow-based Brand Analytics reported.

    The number of active users also declined by 31 percent during the period, Brand Analytics reported.

    Usage of Facebook and Twitter, which were also banned earlier in the month, declined as well but at a lower rate, while Russian social-media platforms including Vkontakte and Telegram saw an increase.


    SEE ALSO:
    Interview: Will The Russian Internet Resemble China's 'Great Firewall'?


    Instagram had been the most popular of the three U.S. platforms, explaining its sharper decline.

    Roskomnadzor on March 11 announced it would ban Instagram effective March 14. A week later, a Moscow court reiterated the ban on the grounds the platform was "extremist."

    The ruling outlaws Russian individuals or entitles from transacting on the platform, including paying for advertisement or buying goods and services.

    Some Russians initially slowed down posting on Instagram following the start of the war due to shock, while others felt doing so was inappropriate or "tone deaf," social-media-content marketers have said.


    SEE ALSO:
    Russian Instagrammers Face Uncertain Future As Government Tightens Control Over Social Media


    The decline in activity on the platform accelerated after March 11, with some influencers saying their views fell by as much as 50 percent.

    Many Russians entrepreneurs -- including photographers, artists, shop owners, content marketers, and influencers to name a few -- heavily depend on Instagram to generate income and the ban has been a blow to their livelihood.

    Russian Artist Doused In Fake Blood In Anti-War Protests

    A Russian artist doused herself in fake blood in a solo protest in St. Petersburg on March 27, before the police came and took her away. Yevgenia Isayeva stood on the steps of the municipal assembly, repeating the phrase "my heart bleeds." She also put a canvas at her feet with an appeal to passersby not to support "bloodshed" in Ukraine.

    George Takei got reparations. He says they 'strengthen the integrity of America'

    NEDA ULABY
    NPR

    George Takei testifies before the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians in California in 1981.
    Kaz Takeuchi/Visual Communications Photographic Archive

    On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. It sent about 70,000 U.S. citizens into internment camps for years, including a very young George Takei.

    "I was 5 years old at the time," recalls the actor. "It was a terrorizing morning I will never be able to forget. Literally at gunpoint, we were ordered out of our home."

    Best known for playing Mr. Sulu in the original Star Trek, Takei is a longtime activist whose causes have included LGBTQ rights and reparations for Japanese American survivors of internment camps. In 1942, his family was sent to Rohwer War Relocation Center in Arkansas, then later to Tule Lake Segregation Center in northern California. The Takeis were among thousands of Americans who lost their homes, farms, stores, cars, churches, temples and countless belongings because of xenophobia and racism.

    "Some people had their life savings taken from them just because we looked like the people who bombed Pearl Harbor," Takei says.


    An "I AM AN AMERICAN" sign is displayed at a Oakland, Calif., on Dec. 8, 1941, the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor. The store was closed and the Matsuda family, who owned it, was relocated and incarcerated under the US government's policy of internment of Japanese Americans.
    Dorothea N/Getty Images

    Collectively, Japanese Americans forced into internment camps lost more than $6 billion adjusted for inflation, according to an estimate from the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians. This is a story George Takei has told over and over: in a memoir, on Broadway, and to members of Congress in 1981. Takei testified at a hearing as part of an effort to push for redress.
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    "I urge restitution for the incarceration of Japanese Americans because that restitution would, at the same time, be a bold move to strengthen the integrity of America," Takei told a federal commission.

    Working with other activists, he succeeded. In 1988, President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, signed legislation to give $20,000 and a formal apology to Japanese Americans who had survived internment.


    Actor George Takei, who received reparations, is a passionate supporter of redress for descendants of enslaved people in the U.S. "For us, it was four horrific years. For African-Americans, it's four torturous centuries."Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

    George Takei dedicated the money he received from the federal government to the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. Now, he's a passionate supporter of redress for descendants of enslaved people in the U.S.

    "For us, it was four horrific years," Takei says. "For African-Americans, it's four torturous centuries."

    Such solidarity warms the heart of Andre Perry, a renowned scholar of reparations and a fellow at the Brookings Institute. "George is exerting a level of patriotism that we don't see today," he says. "You can be of a different persuasion but share a common cause, a common purpose. I may not be related to you, but civically, I'm your brother. I'm your sister. I'm your friend."

    "If he were around, I'd give him a big hug," he adds.

    Perry notes that the historic experiences of Black Americans and Japanese Americans are obviously very different, but ultimately, he says, it's about getting to a similar place.

    "Even with slavery, it's not impossible to find out who deserves reparations," he points out. "And it's clearly not impossible with redlining and criminal justice atrocities. That was not that long ago. We can identify who is injured and who deserves how much. It's really about willingness."

    Last year, composer Kenji Bunch set George Takei's testimony before Congress to music. His piece, called Lost Freedom: A Memory, premiered at the Moab Music Festival. Takei himself provided narration. "I believe that American today is strong enough and confident enough to recognize a grievous failure," he reads in his inimitable baritone. "I believe that it is honest enough to acknowledge that damage was done. And I would like to think it is honorable enough to provide proper restitution to the injury that was done."

    Does George Takei still believe that in 2022? He says he does.

    He says he believes America — and Americans — are still strong and honorable enough for the best of this country's ideals to prevail.
    ‘A striking work of nature’: the search for a rare flower in the Philippines jungle

    Chris Thorogood had to venture deep into the Luzon rainforest to set eyes on the extraordinary Rafflesia banaoana

    ‘the world’s most whopping weird plant’

    The Rafflesia banaoana flower, in the Luzon rainforest. 
    Photograph: Dr Chris Thorogood

    Josh Halliday
    Sun 27 Mar 2022 

    It was after travelling 6,600 miles and battling through the tropical assault course of the Luzon rainforest that Chris Thorogood set his eyes upon the rare and extraordinary flower that ignited his childhood imagination 30 years ago.

    Thorogood, 38, last month became the first westerner to see the Rafflesia banaoana – an otherworldly-looking red spotted species that spans half a metre across – in an experience that reduced him to tears.

    “It’s hard to put into words the feeling,” he said on Sunday. “It’s a combination of the exertion of the trek, which is quite intense, but also a feeling of sharing a moment with something ephemeral, rare, and a striking work of nature that you can’t see anywhere else. It’s a bit of a tear-jerker to sit with something like that.”

    The Rafflesia banaoana is the rarest and most elusive species of the genus named after Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder of modern Singapore. The flowers are found only in the deep rainforests of Luzon island in the Philippines.

    Thorogood, the deputy director of the Oxford Botanic Garden and Arboretum, describes it as “the world’s most whopping weird plant”.

    The botanist is quick to point out that although he is the first westerner to set eyes on the Rafflesia, the experience would not have been possible without the work of Pastor Malabrigo Jr and Adriane Tobias, of the University of the Philippines, the only two other botanists to have seen the flower.

    Chris Thorogood with ‘the world’s most whopping weird plant’. 
    Photograph: Dr Chris Thorogood

    The trio gained permission to enter the farthest reaches of the rainforest by the indigenous Banao community, who own the land and escorted them to the flower by hacking a trail through the dense and hostile vegetation.
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    By the time they reached the Rafflesia, Thorogood’s arms were covered in blood from leeches and he nursed a plant sting that “felt like someone poured boiling water” on his skin.

    The two-week expedition was the culmination of years of planning, but its genesis goes back to Thorogood’s childhood bedroom in Chelmsford, Essex. From the age of eight, he would marvel at photographs of alien species of rare flowers in the remotest corners of the planet.

    “There were these extraordinary photographs of these flowers in the jungle somewhere that seems so remote and inaccessible and alien to me, as a child, having never really travelled very far,” he said.

    “It’s almost like they were a magnet from the other side of the globe luring me to go and see them. I remember quite clearly as a child being entranced by these photographs in books of these otherworldly botanical enigmas. I think I subconsciously made my plans then that I was going to make it my life’s work to go and see them.”

    Rafflesias can grow to 1.5 metres across and weigh 10kg, making them the largest flowers on earth. There are 13 species of Rafflesia in the Philippines and they remain something of a mystery in the scientific world.

    Thorogood, the author of a book titled Weird Plants, said it was vital to understand rare species so they can be better protected.

    “Two in three of the world’s plant species are threatened with extinction, which is alarming, and we’re losing plant species possibly more quickly than we can describe and discover them,” he said. “We can’t conserve or protect something if we don’t know it exists.”

    As for his next expedition, Thorogood is remaining tight-lipped: “With 400,000 or so different plants, there’s a bewildering diversity of plants out there. So it’s very difficult to narrow it down to one or two. But there will be plenty of plants lying in wait for me, I’m sure.”
    Scholz’s Social Democrats win big in Saarland election — exit poll

    Party of German chancellor set for majority in small western German state, ousting center-right Christian Democrats from power.


    Anke Rehlinger, top candidate of the Social Democratic Party SPD in the Saarland state elections
    | Jean-Christophe Verhaegen/AFP via Getty Images

    BY HANS VON DER BURCHARD
    March 27, 2022 

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats look set for a major victory in the small western German state of Saarland on Sunday, exit polls show, putting the party on top in the first of four regional elections taking place this year.

    The Social Democratic Party (SPD) is predicted to get 43.2 percent of the votes, according to the first projections by public broadcaster ZDF. That puts Scholz’s party way ahead of the Christian Democratic Party (CDU) of current state premier Tobias Hans, trailing on just 28 percent.

    It means the SPD’s lead candidate, Anke Rehlinger, is set to oust Hans, who had previously governed with the SPD as a junior partner.

    If the exit poll numbers are confirmed by final results, the Social Democrats would be on track to achieve a majority in the Saarland state parliament and they could govern without the need for a coalition partner.


    Of the other parties in the running, only two more are currently set to make it past the 5 percent hurdle needed for entry to the state parliament. They are the Greens — on 5.5 percent, per the ZDF projection — and the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) on 5.4 percent. It’s still uncertain whether the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), which got 4.9 percent, according to the projections, will make it into parliament.

    Although Saarland is Germany’s second-smallest federal state in terms of population, with just below 1 million inhabitants, the vote is likely to bolster the power of Scholz, who was elected chancellor at the end of last year following a surprise victory in the September federal elections. Those elections saw the SPD oust the CDU of former chancellor Angela Merkel, who did not run for re-election, after 16 years in office.

    The SPD’s Secretary General Kevin Kühnert spoke of a “landslide victory” in the wake of the vote, arguing it would also have an effect on nationwide politics. “This gives an insane tailwind,” he told ZDF.

    Germany faces three even more important state elections this year: in Schleswig-Holstein on May 8; in North Rhine-Westphalia, the biggest state in terms of population, on May 15; and in Lower Saxony on October 9.
    Taliban Ban VOA, BBC News Shows in Afghanistan

    March 27, 2022 
    Ayaz Gul
    A screenshot of VOA Pashto website, March 27, 2022.


    ISLAMABAD —

    The Taliban have barred private television stations in Afghanistan from airing Voice of America (VOA) and British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) news programs.

    The ban is the latest in a series of restrictions the Islamist group has imposed on Afghan media to stifle freedom of expression since taking control of the country last August.

    VOA, which is headquartered in Washington, has swiftly denounced the Taliban for taking its programs off air.

    “We ask the Taliban to reconsider this troubling and unfortunate decision,” Acting VOA Director Yolanda LÏŒpez said in a statement Sunday. “The content restrictions that the Taliban are attempting to impose are antithetical to freedom of expression that the people of Afghanistan deserve,” said LÏŒpez.

    The American broadcaster produces a half-hour news bulletin in Pashto and Dari, the two main languages spoken in Afghanistan, five days a week for its Afghan partners, TOLO news and Shamshad TV.

    LÏŒpez added “while we are disappointed and saddened by the Taliban’s orders to our television affiliate partners in the country, our commitment to providing factual information to the people of Afghanistan is one that the Voice of America will continue on television, radio, and the internet on www.pashtovoa.com and www.darivoa.com, as well as on social media.”

    The head of languages at BBC World Service also called on the Taliban to immediately remove the ban on its news bulletins.

    "The BBC's TV news bulletins in Pashto, Persian and Uzbek have been taken off air in Afghanistan, after the Taliban ordered our TV partners to remove international broadcasters from their airwaves," Tarik Kafala confirmed in a statement Sunday.

    “This is a worrying development at a time of uncertainty and turbulence for the people of Afghanistan,” Kafala said.

    He noted that “more than six million Afghans consume the BBC’s independent and impartial journalism on TV every week and it is crucial they are not denied access to it in the future.”

    A Taliban information ministry spokesman, when asked for his comments on whether they have ordered Afghan channels to remove the international broadcasters from their airways, told VOA he would collect information and get back.

    Domestic and international critics say media and freedom of speech have worsened under Taliban rule in Afghanistan.

    Afghan journalists have been repeatedly detained and subjected to violence by security forces. The interim Taliban government has issued a set of “journalism rules,” including media compliance with the group's interpretation of Islamic doctrine on “enjoying good and forbidding wrong.”

    In December, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released a survey, showing that at least 40% of Afghan media outlets have disappeared and more than 80% of women journalists lost their jobs since the Taliban takeover of the country.

    The research found that the environment for journalists in the capital, Kabul, and the rest of the country has become “extremely fraught.” Critics say conditions for local journalists to work freely have since further deteriorated.

    Hundreds of journalists have also left Afghanistan since August for fear of Taliban reprisals or because of problems associated with practicing their profession under the new rulers.

    More than 6,400 journalists and media employees have lost their jobs since August 15 when the Taliban seized control of the Afghan capital, Kabul, according to the RSF survey.

    The ban on VOA and BBC programs comes as the Taliban are under increased international pressure and condemnation for keeping schools shuttered for teenage Afghan girls.

    The Taliban reopened secondary schools after the winter break Wednesday, March 23, which also marks the start of the school year for most Afghan provinces.

    But the de facto authorities at the last minute decided against allowing girls above the sixth grade to return to the classroom, citing a lack of arrangements for them, including school uniforms, in accordance with Sharia or Islamic law.

    Afghan women’s rights activists and girls took to the streets Saturday to demand the Taliban reopen schools to girls. They have pledged to launch a wave of countrywide protests if authorities fail to open girls’ schools within a week.

    The international community has not yet recognized the Taliban as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan, citing continued concerns over human rights, terrorism and a lack of inclusivity in the male-only government in Kabul.
    FAKE FOOD--STAR TREK REPLICATOR
    3D-Printed Meat Substitutes Make a Splash in Europe


    ByChristiana Kontou
    March 27, 2022
    Redefine Meat is expanding its product categories to include whole cuts of meat. Credit: Redefine Meat

    Already massive food industry is expected to get even larger. The data firm Allied Market Research says that the meat substitute market is expected to reach $8.1 billion by 2026.

    Whether for health reasons or religious motivations, consumers have been increasingly turning to meat substitutes for their culinary enjoyment, both at home and when eating out.

    This trend has generated many companies that specialize in such meat substitutions. Companies such as California-based Impossible Foods Inc are bringing consumers Impossible Burgers to a supermarket near them, as well as the Impossible Whoppers that are now available at their nearest Burger King.

    3D Printed Whole Cuts of “Meat”

    Now, the Israeli-based start-up Redefine Meat is upping the ante, bringing 3D printed meat substitutes to markets throughout Europe. The company which was founded in 2018 had ten employees in 2019 with a first round of seed-funding; now in 2021 it has reached 100 employees.



    Redefine Meat boasts five product variations in ground meat substitutes, including burgers and sausages, but perhaps its greatest endeavor of all is whole cuts of plant-based meat alternatives, such as hanger steaks and skewers.

    In keeping with the industry’s innovative take on food, the company refers to its product line as “New Meat,” challenging the status quo.

    The company believes the whole cuts will broaden the appeal of alternative meat products that have mostly been limited to ground-beef dishes, acknowledging, however, that these larger cuts of alternative meat are more complicated to produce and are still evolving.

    But the goal is clear. “This is the money-maker. This is the reason we have meat,” CEO Eshchar Ben-Shitrit said.

    Currently, the major competition for Redefine Meat is in the United States, with behemoths such as Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat, but Spain’s Novameat has strong footing in Europe. Israel’s Redefine Meat is planning on opening factories in the United States, Asia, and European countries, hoping to give the older companies a run for their money.

    “We raised the largest amount by far that an Israeli alternative meat company has ever raised,” Ben-Shitrit said, having just secured $35 million in funding, on top of an additional undisclosed amount.

    All Redefine Meat products are made from plant-based ingredients, and are free from GMOs, antibiotics, cholesterol, and animal-based products. The start-up’s main appeal, however, is the combination of its product range, which unlike its competition goes beyond ground meat substitutes to include whole cuts, as well as its 3D-printing technology.


    This proprietary technology and its passion for excellent plant-based meat substitutes are what makes company members believe that it can become “the world’s largest meat company by offering every single cut that a cow does,” Ben-Shitrit says.

    The future of the company is based on not only selling the products to retailers but also selling their 3D printing technology to meat distributors, thus scaling their business exponentially.

    The industrial-scale digital manufacturing technology is patented and manages to fully replicate the muscle structure of beef, although the meat substitute products are made of a mix of pea protein, soy, beetroot, chickpeas, and coconut fat. The result is high in protein and has no cholesterol, yet looks, cooks, feels, and tastes like the real deal, according to the startup.

    If you are wondering how the company can accomplish the lofty goal of creating a true-to-taste meat substitute using only plant-based ingredients, perhaps it is because 75 of their 100 employees identify as carnivores, so they know good meat when they eat it.



    Putin popularity rose to 71% in February as tensions with West over Ukraine built up

    Putin popularity rose to 71% in February as tensions with West over Ukraine built up
    Russian President Vladimir Putin seems to have enjoyed a nationalist bump in the first months of this year, seeing his popularity rise to 71% as of February as tensions with the West built up.


    Russian President Vladimir Putin’s personal popularity was boosted thanks to the rising tensions with the West to its highest level since May 2018 of 71% in February, according to most recent data from independent pollster the Levada Center.

    The president’s popularity received a fillip from a surge in nationalism as tensions rose during the build up to the war that started after Russia's attack on Ukraine on February 24. Levada has yet to update its survey for March, the month when fighting began in earnest.

    Putin is enjoying a similar bump that followed the annexation of Crimea in 2014. The last time Putin’s popularity was over 71 was in May 2018, where his rating was in the 80s for most of the previous four years after the annexation. That May represented the end of the extra support due to the annexation and a return to normal.

    The Ukraine crisis began at the end of October after the Washington Post published a report that Russia was massing troops on the Ukraine border with the intention of invading. That was followed by two rounds of diplomacy with a meeting on January 10 in Geneva with the US and a second round of diplomacy starting with a visit to Moscow by French President Emmanuel Macron on February 8. Both rounds failed to find a compromise that resulted in the invasion of Ukraine by Russia at the end of February.

    Putin’s popularity rose throughout the rising tensions, going from a low of 61% in August of 2021 to end the year at 65% and continued to climb to 71% as of February, according to Levada.

    The approval of Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has also rising throughout the year to a high of 60% in February, its highest level since August 2020, when his popularity briefly jumped as Russia’s four-year-old recession came to an end.

    The approval rating of the Russian government has also risen modestly to 53%, and its disapproval rating falling to 42%. The government’s approval rating is at its highest level since December 2015, when it was enjoying the spillover glow from the annexation of Crimea a half a year previously.

    The state Duma has also enjoyed a bump to its approval, posting an approval rating of 47% in February, its highest level since April 2016, but the larger part of the population still disapprove (49%) of the Duma.

    Russia’s governors are also seeing a surge in their popularity, which posted an approval rating of 62% in February, Levada says, versus a disapproval rating of 27%.

    The governors remain the most popular institution after Putin, and nearly overtook him in popularity in 2020. While they are seeing their popularity growing again now, Putin’s popularity has risen faster and widened the gap between the two.

    Despite the mounting tensions with the West, the majority of the population (52%) thought that the country was going in the “right direction” in February as opposed to the “wrong direction” (38%), according to Levada. The last time the majority thought Russia was going in the right direction was last May, just before the coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdowns began.

    The relative calm and totally unexpected invasion of Ukraine came as the propensity to protest was rising slightly in the first months of this year, although overall this propensity remains subdued. The propensity to protest with political demands rose, with 29% of those surveyed saying such protests were possible, and another 18% saying they would participate if those protests happened.

    Likewise, 29% said protests with economic demands were possible and 23% of respondents said they would participate if those protests were to happen.

     

     

    By bne IntelliNews March 27, 2022