Friday, April 22, 2022

HAPPY EARTH DAY

Of the Earth


Photograph by NASA


#TheOverview
04.22.2022


WORDS BY WILLOW DEFEBAUGH

The Earth is not a day or a month, it’s something we belong to. Now more than ever, it needs our love—and protection.


“To be whole. To be complete. Wildness reminds us what it means to be human, what we are connected to rather than what we are separate from.”
TERRY TEMPEST WILLIAMS


Hello, dear reader. I’m afraid April has nearly passed us by and I’ve yet to address the elephant in the room: Earth Month, that special time of year where everyone and every corporation is an environmentalist. I don’t know about you, but I’ve always felt strange about the word environmentalist. Does loving life’s tree really warrant a special identity? That it is not simply another word for human is a reflection of how we see the Earth: as something separate.

What we call “environmentalism” is treated much the same—to our planet’s detriment. It creates a paradigm in which some people believe that because a special group of us is advocating for the Earth, they don’t have to. And it builds a barrier for those who do want to join in; I personally know many people who feel like they “aren’t enough of an environmentalist” to be able to get involved or use their voice to speak up about the climate crisis. I’m sure you do, too.

But we don’t need everyone to become an environmentalist. We need everyone to realize that standing up for our only home should be an inherent aspect of being human. We need everyone to realize that they belong to the Earth in an irrevocable sense. When you understand that you’re intertwined with something so deeply, you begin to understand that to act on behalf of its well-being is to act on behalf of your own—that your very destiny is the same.

Don’t get me wrong: I love that we have a month dedicated to this beautiful planet. My problem is with the rest of the year. I feel about it the way I feel about fast fashion brands that have “sustainable” collections; yes, it’s great that you’re doing this, but by default, aren’t you admitting that the rest of your products are unsustainable? This is why I prefer the word “holistic.” One aspect of something might be sustainable, but if the rest is poison, what good does it do? Above all else, our orientation must be toward wholeness.

You cannot abuse someone 11 months out of the year and then claim to love them for one. Not when they love you every day under the sun. And make no mistake, love is what we are talking about here. As I’ve written about for this newsletter before, the climate crisis is a crisis of love—for what is love if not a longing for unity, an expression of wholeness? And it’s not just love for what we call “nature,” but for each other as well—for everything is of the Earth.


I believe that people are afraid to explore the full depths of their love for this world out of a fear of losing it. But all this equates to is more climate doomism and apathy, which is exactly what the extractionists want. It’s easier to dismiss something as already gone than to give ourselves to saving it, therefore making it easier to destroy. To give your heart to something you know you might lose is perhaps one of the most courageous acts there is. And it’s our greatest hope.


When you love someone, they are a part of you. They are part of the breath you breathe and the reason that you breathe it. They are the oxygen in your lungs, the blood in your veins, the salt in your seas. You see, when someone you love cries for help, you don’t pretend not to hear. You don’t tell them it’s not the right time of year. The Earth is not a day or a month, it’s an hourglass, a thousand grains of sand slipping past. It’s now or never.

 

Earth Day: Stark images of climate change captured in action by Google doodle time-lapse video

Visuals from Tanzania, Greenland, Australia, and Germany.





  • How a California Disaster Inspired the
    First Earth Day


    A 1969 oil spill off the shore of Santa Barbara helped
    serve as a catalyst for environmental action.


    By Soumya Karlamangla
    April 22, 2022

    Workers raked oil-soaked hay along the beach in Santa Barbara in 1969,
    as part of the cleanup effort after a massive oil spill.
    Credit...Bettmann, via Getty Images


    Happy Earth Day.

    As you probably know, April 22 is a day set aside for appreciating the environment and demonstrating support for laws that protect it.

    The tradition dates back to the first Earth Day in 1970, which led to the passage of landmark environmental legislation in the United States. It was a momentous event that helped create the modern environmental movement — one whose origins can be traced to the shores of California.

    Here’s a little history: Americans in the 1960s were becoming increasingly aware of the ways their behavior could be harming the natural world.

    Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring,” published in 1962, detailed how pesticides hurt the environment. The polluted Cuyahoga River in Cleveland kept catching fire. The California condor faced extinction. Panic was brewing about a global overpopulation crisis.

    But it was a massive oil spill in 1969 off the coast of Santa Barbara that ultimately served as a catalyst for Earth Day.

    “Santa Barbara brought it home to people — that this could affect the well-to-do, this could affect the poor and, of course, the natural environment,” said Denis Hayes, national coordinator of the original Earth Day. “It began to weave all of these issues into a common narrative.”

    In late January 1969, millions of gallons of crude oil began to pour into the waters off Santa Barbara. It was the biggest oil spill in U.S. history at the time (though not anymore) — and it was televised.

    From their living rooms, Americans watched as sandy California beaches turned black and birds’ feathers were slathered in tar. The corpses of seals and dolphins washed in with the tide.

    The catastrophe gave Gaylord Nelson, a senator from Wisconsin, the idea to hold a national teach-in about environmentalism. In the fall of 1969, Nelson recruited Hayes, then a 25-year-old graduate student at Harvard, to organize the event, which would eventually turn into Earth Day.

    Hayes told me that it has never been entirely clear to him why the oil spill captured the public’s imagination the way it did. “There was something about Santa Barbara that I think no one could explain, except that I think the time was ripe,” he told me.


    Denis Hayes, coordinator of the first Earth Day, at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle.
    Credit...Grant Hindsley for The New York Times

    Hayes and a team of young activists began working to organize marches and other events to take place across the country on April 22, 1970. In an article published in March that year, The New York Times described Hayes as a man who “hops around the country like an ecological Dustin Hoffman, preaching mobilization for environmental reform with sober but evangelical militance.” (If you’re interested, my colleague John Schwartz wrote an excellent profile of Hayes a few years back.)

    The coast-to-coast demonstrations on that first Earth Day drew a stunning 20 million Americans, one-tenth of the country’s population at the time. The enormous turnout helped prompt unprecedented action at the state and federal levels to safeguard the environment.

    In the Golden State, where the oil spill began to heavily influence political discourse, the California Environmental Quality Act was adopted in 1970. Two years later, voters approved the creation of the California Coastal Commission, a state agency in charge of protecting the seashore.

    At the national level, Congress passed the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act and the Endangered Species Act, and President Richard M. Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency. “All of a sudden, in rapid succession, they pass law after law after law,” said Kathleen Rodgers, president of EarthDay.org, the nonprofit behind the annual events.

    She called it nothing short of a miracle.

    Today, Earth Day is celebrated in 192 countries. Its mission includes curbing plastic pollution, supporting regenerative agriculture and combating climate change.

    Hayes, now 77, spearheaded Earth Day events for half a century. He lived in Seattle for many years, but had long promised his wife that they would retire “somewhere sunny.”

    Now, the pair has settled in, of all places, Santa Barbara. 

Earth Day 2022: Save polar bears by protecting mothers and cubs, experts say

The ability for polar bears to survive is becoming more uncertain, they warn.

The ability for polar bears to survive in coming decades is becoming more uncertain as global warming continues to melt the Arctic at unprecedented rates, experts warn.

Now, biologists and conservationists determined to save the species have zeroed in on a plan to increase populations: focus on the survival of mothers and cubs, who find themselves increasingly vulnerable to dwindling habitat and food sources, they tell ABC News.

The "fundamental" key to the survival of polar bears is the availability of sea ice cover, Louise Archer, a researcher at the University of Toronto Scarborough's Department of Biological Sciences, told ABC News.

The Arctic is currently warming twice as fast as the rest of the planet, according to the Arctic Report Card published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in December, leaving the Arctic in a "dramatically different state," with a substantial decline since 1979.

It takes an incredible amount of energy for mothers to raise their cubs, but ironically they are not the most efficient hunters, Archer said. They rely on the sea ice as a platform from which to access marine mammals from.

"So having access to sea ice is extremely important to ensure the survival of adults, but also, so that females can support the survival of their cubs," Archer said. One of the "biggest challenges" from global warming is bears will have to respond to sea ice conditions, or the lack thereof, that have never been experienced in the Arctic before, she said.

Polar bear mothers, especially, need nutrients because they lactate for up to two-and-a-half years, the entire time "the cubs are taking in energy from their moms," Archer said.

When the cubs are born in the den, they only weigh about a pound or two, she said. But their mother has to raise them to about 10 to 20 pounds before she can go out onto the sea ice and hunt again.

All the months in hibernation are not spent sleeping. The mother is nursing, grooming the cubs and maintaining the den, which involves scratching the ceiling and walls with her claws to allow airflow. Otherwise, the den would get completely iced over, and no oxygen would be able to get in, Geoff York, senior director of conservation group Polar Bears International, told ABC News.

The mothers and cubs begin to emerge from their dens after four to eight months of not eating or drinking. The priority is to build up fat stores before the sea ice begins to melt in the summer. But if the sea ice is melting sooner, that's less time for the mothers to hunt -- and to teach her children to do so -- and less time to regain the fat stores they lost while fasting and lactating in the den.

"Anything that sort of interrupts that sequence is potentially fatal to the reproductive attempt of the female," Andrew Derocher, a professor of biological science at the University of Alberta, told ABC News. "It's a chain of events that is incredibly sensitive to things like sea ice break up in the springtime -- and that's one of the key metrics that we monitor, is when is the ice breaking out."

Derocher believes the mother-cub relationship is so integral is because it is an "incredible part of their life history." After they leave the den, the mothers have an incredible task of teaching the cubs to swim, hunt and one day survive on their own.

It is that relationship that provides a "powerful emotion and a very forceful narrative" for Disney's new film "Polar Bear," which follows a mother with her cubs as they embark on that journey, Alastair Fothergill, one of the directors of the film, told ABC News.

In the first years of a polar bear's life, they are "extraordinarily dependent on their mother," said Fothergill, who has been filming in the Arctic for more than 25 years.

The biggest change Fothergill has witnessed as a result of the ice melting is the new tricks mothers are teaching their cubs, such as climbing cliffs to get bird eggs and chicks, as well as learning to hunt walrus calves -- a dangerous feat, as the mother walruses defend their young with their tusks. Previously, seals served as their primary source of food.

Experts have found that the health of a polar bear population can be determined by "three good winters," York said. Last year, he witnessed a mother with triplet cubs in the Western Hudson Bay of Canada -- an increasingly rare sight in a population that has declined 30% in the last 40 years.

"That's kind of what polar bears need," he said. "They need three good years to bring cubs from birth to sub adulthood and get them out of the sub population."

One of the most profound phases of the mother-cub relationship is the moment the mother must leave her cubs, a "really risky and dangerous time for the polar bear, " said.

"We say in the narrative that she knew she had taught her cubs everything she could, which is true," he said. "But at the same time, she has to move on. She has to go and have another set of cubs."

Researchers have found that in more solitary populations of polar bears that have had less access to sea ice, the bears are forced to fast for longer periods of time, Archer said. This has led to a decline of body condition, the decline in the survival of colds and the decline in the overall population abundance, she added.

The bears who live in the most southern regions are more at risk, and there could very well be a time when the subpopulations in the Arctic are the only ones to persist, Archer said. Places like Wrangel Island off of Russia offer a place for polar bears to retreat during times of significant ice loss, where they have access to walrus, York said.

Given the current climate change conditions, the ability for polar bears to feed and survive will become increasingly precarious -- unless they can adapt and learn how to survive on terrestrial land, Archer hypothesized.

"Once the ice is inaccessible to bears, survival of bears is severely compromised," she said.

When Derocher published a paper in 1993 about the potential effects of warming on polar bears, he did not think he would see those effects within his lifetime, he said.

"We thought this is something for future generations far away," he said. "And what has surprised me is that the changes have been manifest in the populations so much sooner than we anticipated."

It will be human activity and the ability for it to properly mitigate climate change that will ultimately determine the chances for polar bears to survive, York said. They are currently listed as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species

"That's directly tied to actions we may or may not take to curb our greenhouse gas reductions," he said.

You can stream Disney's "Polar Bear" starting on April 22 on Disney+. The Walt Disney Company is the parent company of ABC News.





Biden Signs Executive Order to Shield Old Growth Forests


(Bloomberg) -- President Joe Biden will sign an Earth Day executive order designed to safeguard old-growth forests that have come under threat from wildfires and drought.

The federal government will inventory the old-growth forests on federal lands and conduct an analysis of the threats facing them - as well as policies that could reduce those risks. 

That work will help determine how the administration spends $8 billion in forest and land management funds provided in the bipartisan infrastructure bill passed last year, as well as $5.7 billion for wild land fire management included in this year’s government funding bill.

Scientists have identified old-growth trees as critical to fighting climate change, because they function as reservoirs for carbon dioxide -- a key greenhouse gas. But timber companies have resisted restrictions regarding their logging operations on federal land, while others have argued that dense forests can fuel more extreme forest fires.

The executive order, which Biden intends to sign at an event on Friday in Seattle, will also require the government to develop reforestation targets, and seeks to bolster federal cone and seed collection and nursery capacity. Shortages of location-specific seeds have hindered efforts to plant new trees in the aftermath of devastating wildfires.

The president will also direct the State Department to find ways to discourage deforestation abroad, particularly in countries that clear woods to produce agricultural commodities like beef, soy, and palm oil. 

The order will be signed as the White House has faced criticism from environmental activists over the inability to secure legislation to provide significant funding for his climate agenda, as well as his recent efforts to encourage oil production as gasoline prices rose following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But aides have insisted in recent days that funding secured through the infrastructure bill as well as other executive actions have left the U.S. on track in the campaign to address climate change.

“We are going to continue to meet our climate goals,” White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said Thursday.

Friday’s focus on forest protection also allows Biden to draw implicit contrast with his predecessor. Former President Donald Trump frequently clashed with elected officials in Western states when he blamed them for poor forest management and downplayed the role of climate change in the surge of large-scale oilfires.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Biden order aims to protect old-growth forests from wildfire

MATTHEW DALY AND JOSH BOAK

April 22, 2022


SEATTLE (AP) — President Joe Biden is taking steps to restore national forests that have been devastated by wildfires, drought and blight, using an Earth Day visit to Seattle to sign an executive order protecting some of the nation’s largest and oldest trees.

Old-growth trees are key buffers against climate change and provide crucial carbon sinks that absorb significant amounts of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.

Biden's order directs federal land managers to define and inventory mature and old-growth forests nationwide within a year. The order requires the Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the National Park Service to identify threats to older trees, such as wildfire and climate change, and develop policies to safeguard them.

The order does not ban logging of mature or old-growth trees, the White House said.

By signing the order on Friday, Biden can publicly reassert his environmentalist credentials at a time when his administration has been preoccupied by high oil and gasoline prices following Russia's invasion of UkraineGas costs have been a drag on Biden's popularity and created short-term political pressures going into this year's midterm elections, yet the Democratic president has been focused on wildfires that are intensifying because of climate change.

The measure is intended to safeguard national forests that been severely damaged by wildfires, drought and blight, including recent fires that killed thousands of giant sequoias in California. Redwood forests are among the world’s most efficient at removing and storing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and provide critical habitat for native wildlife and watersheds that supply farms and communities in the West.

Blazes so intense to kill trees once considered virtually fire-proof have alarmed land managers, environmentalists and tree lovers the world over — and demonstrated the grave impacts of climate change. A warming planet that has created longer and hotter droughts, combined with a century of fire suppression that choked forests with thick undergrowth, has fueled flames that extinguished trees dating to ancient civilizations.

A senior administration official noted that forests absorb more than 10% of U.S. annual greenhouse gases, while also providing flood control, clean water, clear air and a home to wildlife. The official insisted on anonymity to discuss details of Biden’s order before it was made public.

Biden's ambitious climate agenda has been marred by setbacks, a year after he took office amid a flurry of climate-related promises. The president hosted a virtual summit on global warming at the White House last Earth Day. He used the moment to nearly double the United States’ goal for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, vaulting the country to the front lines in the fight against climate change.

A year later, his most sweeping proposals remain stalled on Capitol Hill despite renewed warnings from scientists that the world is hurtling toward a dangerous future marked by extreme heat, drought and weather.

In addition, Russia’s war in Ukraine has reshuffled the politics of climate change, leading Biden to release oil from the nation’s strategic reserve and encourage more domestic drilling in hopes of lowering sky-high gas prices that are emptying American wallets.

While Biden is raising fuel economy standards for vehicles and included green policies in last year’s bipartisan infrastructure law, the lack of greater progress casts a shadow over his second Earth Day as president.

Timber industry representative Nick Smith said before the order was made public that loggers are worried it will add more bureaucracy to a forest management framework already unable to keep up with growing wildfires due to climate change.

That would undercut the Biden administration’s goal of doubling the amount of logging and controlled burns over the next decade to thin forests in the tinder-dry West, said Smith, a spokesman for the American Forest Resource Council, an Oregon-based industry group.

“The federal government has an urgent need to reduce massive greenhouse gas emissions from severe wildfires, which can only be accomplished by actively managing our unhealthy and overstocked federal forests,” he said.

But former U.S. Forest Service Deputy Chief Jim Furnish said wildfire risks and climate change would be better addressed by removing smaller trees that can fuel uncontrolled blazes, while leaving mature trees in place.

For many years the Forest Service allowed older trees that are worth more to be logged, to bring in money for removal of smaller trees, Furnish said. But that’s no longer necessary after Congress approved more than $5 billion to reduce wildfire risks in last year’s infrastructure bill, he said. The law includes money to hire 1,500 firefighters and ensure they earn at least $15 an hour.

Timber sales from federal forests nationwide more than doubled over the past 20 years, as Republicans and Democrats have pushed more aggressive thinning of stands to reduce small trees and vegetation that fuel wildfires.

Critics, including many forest scientists, say officials are allowing removal of too many older trees that can withstand fire.

A letter signed by 135 scientists called on Biden to protect mature and old-growth forests as a critical climate solution.

"Older forests provide the most above-ground carbon storage potential on Earth, with mature forests and larger trees driving most accumulation of forest carbon in the critical next few decades. Left vulnerable to logging, though, they cannot fulfill these vital functions,'' the scientists wrote Thursday. Former Forest Service Chief Mike Dombeck and Norman Christensen, founding dean and professor emeritus at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment, were among those signing the letter.

Protecting mature forests also "would set an important, highly visible example for other major forest-holding nations to follow as they address climate change threats,'' the scientists wrote.

___

Associated Press writer Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana, contributed to this story

Top Philippine Bank Wants Tougher Laws Against Cybercrimes


(Bloomberg) -- BDO Unibank Inc., the Philippines’ largest lender by assets, wants the country’s next president to be tough against cybercrimes.

Financial service providers that are outside the scope of central bank regulations have proliferated, and “for the health of the industry and the public, they should look at how these entities should be managed relative to banks” which are “extremely” regulated, BDO Unibank President Nestor Tan said during an annual general meeting. Legislation and regulation must be tough enough to discourage cybercrimes, he also said.

BDO, owned by the family of late billionaire Henry Sy, in December lost money to an online fraud in which funds were channeled to accounts at another Philippine lender. Tan, at Friday’s meeting, said it will sustain digital innovation and strengthen its business strategies.

After expanding by more than half in 2021, BDO expects profits to grow 5% to 10% this year as pandemic restrictions ease and even as inflation remains a worry. Its loan portfolio will likely increase by 8% to 12%, Tan said. First-quarter net income was up 13% at 11.7 billion pesos ($223.5 million) in the first quarter.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

AUTHORITARIAN TECH

Outside the US, Elon Musk’s vision of a rules-free Twitter is expected to unlock violence and civil strife


Musk’s free speech absolutism could stoke conflict in countries like India and Ethiopia


IMTIYAZ KHAN/ANADOLU AGENCY VIA GETTY IMAGES

BY ELLERY BIDDLE
22 APRIL, 2022

While protest movements have risen and fallen, and political parties spend untold resources promoting their agendas, Twitter has long struggled to remove or at least contain hate speech, incitement to violence and trolling operations on its platform.

What would happen in countries vulnerable to social unrest and communal violence if the company threw its content rules out the window and embraced an absolute commitment to free speech?

Elon Musk wants to find out. In his recent bid to buy the company, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO wrote of his belief in Twitter’s “potential to be the platform for free speech around the globe.” Musk pledged to “unlock” that potential, implying that he would ditch the company’s content rules and simply let the tweets flow.

In case you missed it: Musk bought 9% of shares in the company in mid-March, a figure that only became public last week, prompting Twitter’s leadership to offer him a seat on its board of directors. Musk entertained the offer, but then had a second thought: Why not just buy the whole company? The board opted to deploy a so-called “poison pill” strategy, effectively preventing a Musk takeover.

But there was still time to wonder what might happen if the world’s wealthiest person got his way. Academic experts cautioned that an absolute free speech policy would turn the platform into a cesspool of hate speech, spam, and porn. Veteran tech critics pointed out that Musk’s ideas about content moderation were popular in the earlier days of the internet, and that time has proven that they really don’t work at scale. Across the political spectrum in the U.S., pundits speculated on whether this would pave the way for Donald Trump to return to the platform.

What would it mean for the majority of Twitter users, who live outside the U.S.?

“That just doesn’t work in a country like India,” said Nikhil Pahwa, a tech expert and founder of Medianama, an India-focused tech policy publication based in New Delhi. India is Twitter’s third-largest market after the U.S. and Japan.

“We have real world consequences from the kind of speech that Twitter enables. Our political parties are really, really adept at understanding how the algorithms work, how to create trends, how to make something shareable,” Pahwa said. “What they excel at is essentially fueling hate.”

In recent years, India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and other hardline Hindu nationalist groups have made Twitter, alongside Facebook and WhatsApp, an essential platform for promoting their agendas, sometimes inciting violence against religious minorities, Muslims in particular.




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“I think we’re in a situation where we need more moderation of hateful content and not less. I don’t think Musk understands or cares for whether people are getting polarized or killed in India,” Pahwa told me.

While more than 20 million Indians use Twitter on a regular basis, others have left or avoided the platform for exactly these reasons. A female researcher I spoke with, who studies gender-based harassment online, declined to be quoted for this story, citing concern that she would be attacked as a result.

Twitter’s policies prohibit hate speech, harassment, and incitement to violence, but it has a poor track record of enforcing these rules, especially for posts that are not in English.

“Everyone thinks they know how to do content moderation until it becomes their job,” said Mishi Choudhary, who directs the Software Freedom Law Center, a tech policy group in New Delhi.

“I am not sure how [Musk] plans to address censorship by proxy that countries like India demand,” she wrote in a message.

The Modi government is known for pressuring the company to remove certain posts and reinstate others. In 2021, officials updated India’s IT Rules and began requiring large foreign tech platforms to create locally-staffed grievance programs for content removal and related disputes. It took several months, and a police visit to Twitter’s local offices, before the company complied.

Twitter has faced similar kinds of pressure in sub-Saharan Africa, where it plays a significant role in national politics in the region’s largest markets, Nigeria and Ethiopia.

In Nigeria, Twitter in 2020 became the digital ground zero for #EndSARS, a social movement protesting police brutality that played out both online and in cities across the country.

“Twitter created a special emoji for the EndSARS protest, and also verified some major handles that promoted the protests. [Former CEO Jack Dorsey] himself raised some money for them via Bitcoin,” said Nwachukwu Egbunike, a media and communications scholar at Pan-Atlantic University in Lagos.

“The feeling around government quarters is that Twitter really sided with protesters,” he said.

Less than a year later, the government banned Twitter altogether, after moderators took down a tweet posted by President Muhammadu Buhari that contained a veiled threat against Igbos, one of the country’s largest ethnic groups.

This went on for seven months. When they lifted the ban, officials announced that they had reached an agreement with Twitter, under which the company would “act with a respectful acknowledgement of Nigerian laws and the national culture and history,” and alluded to a code of conduct meant to govern the relationship. This document has not been made public.

“One has the impression that Twitter gave in or compromised Nigerian digital rights in order to get unbanned,” said Egbunike. “If this agreement is true, and the Nigerian government has the power to pull down tweets, where does that leave Nigerians?” he asked.

Egbunike’s question would be a good one for Elon Musk. The governments of both Nigeria and India have demonstrated that if companies like Twitter want to stay accessible in their countries, they need to be prepared to comply with censorship demands and the whims of whichever party is in power.

In theory, regular people can still say whatever they like online, but between rules like these and political parties’ online influence operations and troll armies, the costs of doing so can be pretty high.

Victims of violence stoked on the platforms pay the highest price of all. Endalk Chala, a communications professor at Hamline University and former blogger, described the role Twitter has come to play in Ethiopia’s ongoing civil conflict. Twitter has made some efforts to curb problematic speech coming from pro-government voices, Chala explained, but different ethnic groups continue to promote violence and hate on the platform.

“On Twitter, if a person from one ethnolinguistic group makes fun of a person from another, and that speech is available for people who feel attacked and derided, [members of the target group] will be harmed,” said Chala. “People are dying every day now for things like this,” he said.

“There is really bad content, in English, Amharic and in other Ethiopian languages. The content moderation on Twitter doesn’t work really well,” he said.

What if, as Musk advocates, the company simply stopped trying to moderate speech in Ethiopia?

“I am all for free speech,” Chala said. “But if it’s this messy now, you can’t imagine what would happen without it.”


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Ellery Biddle is a consulting editor at Coda Story. She was editorial projects director at Ranking Digital Rights and an editor at Global Voices.@ellerybiddle
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW
Wife of activist Osman Kavala pre-trial: 'I don't expect anything' from Turkish justice


Issued on: 22/04/2022 - 


02:27  Osman Kavala's wife Ayse Bugra in Istanbul, Turkey, April 2022 



Video by: Shona BHATTACHARYYA


Days before Osman Kavala’s appearance in a Turkish court on Friday, his wife, Ayse Bugra, gave an exclusive interview to FRANCE 24. She spoke about the accusations faced by the so-called "red billionaire", a prominent member of Turkish civil society who has been behind bars without a sentence since October 2017. He risks life in prison if he is found guilty of "attempting to overthrow the government".

Osman Kavala, a philanthropist and entrepreneur nicknamed the "red billionaire" by the pro-government press for his left-wing activism, is set to appear in an Istanbul court on April 22. He is accused of "attempting to destabilise Turkey" during the failed coup of 2016. In the same file is a different charge related to another event: Kavala is also accused of organising and financing the Gezi protests of 2013. He has been in jail since October 2017 and risks spending the rest of his life there.

Ayse Bugra's voice has become a familiar one in international media, and if her speech seems hesitant at times, her English is impeccable and the words she chooses reveal the extent of the ordeal this academic has been undergoing for four and a half years now.

We began by asking why the Turkish justice system has been so relentless in its pursuit of her husband. "There are several theories, several hypotheses," she starts. "One of them, which actually is in harmony with the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights, is that it serves to intimidate civil society activists. So, it has an ulterior political purpose – civil society activists and human rights defenders in the country. As I said, this is in harmony with the ECHR ruling which said in [December 2019] that the detention of my husband constituted a violation of several articles of the European Convention of Human Rights."

Indeed, after several calls for Turkey, one of its founding members, to release Osman Kavala, in February 2022 the Council of Europe launched infringement proceedings against Ankara. Ayse Bugra goes on: "There are other theories about the influence of a certain group of politicians, people, who are in favour of severing, cutting the relationships between Turkey and Western democracies. So, the detention of my husband serves to detach Turkey from the Western democratic world." For Ayse Bugra this theory is absurd: her husband, she says, has never been affiliated with a political party or movement.

Kavala is an ideal target. Recep Tayyip Erdogan has elevated him to the level of public enemy number one of the Turkish nation and calls him the "agent of George Soros in Turkey". The 64-year-old embodies everything the Turkish President claims to oppose: "An internal enemy collaborating with external enemies", Ayse Bugra explains. "It is a particular political strategy which uses a polarising discourse and divides the population into "us" and "them"…I think my husband has been used in that particular strategy of polarisation."

'Absurd', incoherent charges

Accused of spying one day, attempting to overthrow the government the next, Osman Kavala was acquitted of certain charges then re-arrested for the same ones the same day. Different files, different accusations were combined. All seemed coordinated to prevent him from being able to leave the high security Silivri prison, in western Istanbul.

Born in Paris to a wealthy family, and raised in the United Kingdom, the philanthropist dedicated his fortune to the promotion of dialogue between Turkey’s different cultures and minorities, including the Kurds and the Armenians. He was awarded the European Archaeological Heritage Prize in 2019 and set up a number of initiatives including Anadolu Kültür, in Istanbul, where we met with his wife, located just a stone’s throw from the famous Gezi Park, whose planned destruction was the catalyst for a social protest movement in 2013. "Gezi is here, this is Gezi", Ayse Bugra says with a smile and a wave of her hand in the direction of the window that looks out onto a rare patch of greenery in central Istanbul. "Osman’s office is here, his mother lives here, this is a family building. Something extremely interesting was happening there, Gezi was an extremely interesting event. There were all kinds of people there – young, old, rich, poor. So of course, he would go there, and he would try to prevent the construction of a commercial building in that park."

No detail seems too small or insignificant to include it in the accusations against Osman Kavala. Among the elements put forth by the plaintiffs is a map with the distribution of bee colonies across Turkey, found in the art patron’s mobile phone. The document was presented as proof that Kavala was seeking to redesign the country's borders. To prove he had organised and financed the Gezi protests, the prosecution noted he had bought protesters some plastic tables and chairs, as well as poÄŸaça, a kind of Turkish bread roll.

"The absurdity is in the charges themselves," explains the university professor. "These were nationwide protests, they were all through the country, and [they] involved, according to official figures, 3.5 million people. Imagine a single person organising and financing a national protest movement of that dimension. So, this in itself is absurd."

Culture as a weapon and a shield

When Ayse Bugra talks about the man she has called her husband for close to 35 years, her voice changes, and the faraway look in her eyes tells of the pain of their separation. "He has the right to make one 10-minute phone call every week, it was this morning. And that is basically to talk to his mother. She is quite old, it’s difficult for her. And then I see him every week, the visits were rare during the pandemic but now I go every week. We talk with a glass panel between us, by telephone, for an hour". The professor of political economy at the prestigious Bogazici University – also on the government's radar – displays the manners of an aristocrat and the speech patterns of a sage. "I don’t expect anything anymore. After having been subjected to a very long and very painful process which is very hard to explain in legal or even logical terms, I cannot predict anything. I don’t expect anything and I’m trying not to hope. Especially not hope. Because hope that ends with disappointment can be devastating." No matter what her husband does, Ayse Bugra tells us, it doesn’t seem to matter. "It’s really hard. During the last two hearings I refused to enter the courtroom, because it was too much. Lawyers present [a] very articulate, very substantive defence, and then, it is as if nothing was said. It’s always the same decision with the same wording that is repeated."

And yet, Ayse Bugra travels to the court every time, to show up for the friends, journalists and diplomats who are there to support her and her husband. "I feel that I have to be there, otherwise I wouldn’t go." How does she cope? Again, the same tight smile. "One manages. My husband and I are lucky because we really like literature, fiction."

A glimpse into Osman Kavala’s office shows books stacked on every surface, including one by Thomas Mann. In "The Magic Mountain", the German author writes, "A man lives not only his personal life, as an individual, but also, consciously or unconsciously, the life of his epoch and his contemporaries."

Turkey's jailed rights defender makes final appeal before verdict


For his supporters, Osman Kavala has turned into a symbol of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's intolerance of dissent
 (AFP/OZAN KOSE)

Fulya OZERKAN
Fri, April 22, 2022,

One of Turkey's most famous prisoners made his final appeal for freedom on Friday, at the culmination of a years-long trial that has come to define Ankara's tense ties with Western allies in the wake of a failed 2016 coup.

Paris-born activist and philanthropist Osman Kavala was a relative unknown when he was detained on his arrival at Istanbul's airport from a trip to a cultural centre in the Turkish city of Gaziantep in October 2017.

But his continued imprisonment without a conviction has turned the 64-year-old into a hero for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's opponents -- and a focus of Western worries about the Turkish leader's comprehensive crackdown on dissent.

Prosecutors want Kavala found guilty of "attempting to overthrow" Erdogan's socially conservative government by financing a wave of 2013 protests and then being directly involved in the coup plot.


The verdict and sentence, expected to be issued by a panel of three judges on Monday, could see Kavala jailed for life without the possibility of parole if found guilty.

The marathon trial has been faithfully attended by Western diplomats, underscoring the continued importance of rights issues in their relations with Turkey, a strategic member of the NATO defence alliance.

"The fact that I have spent 4.5 years of my life in prison is a loss that cannot be compensated," Kavala told the court a closing statement issued by video link from his high-security prison outside Istanbul.

"The only thing that would console me is the possibility that what I have gone through helps to put an end to grave judicial mistakes."

- Personal enmity -


Kavala was acquitted of the first count linked to the 2013 protests in February 2020.

But he was detained before he had a chance to return home and then charged with the coup attempt the same night.

Kavala is now facing both charges in a trial that looks back on some of the most turbulent years of Erdogan's dominant 20-year rule.

The Turkish leader has made no secret of his personal enmity for Kavala.

Erdogan calls Kavala a communist agent of the Hungarian-born US philanthropist George Soros who is allegedly using foreign money to try and topple the state.

"We can never be together with people like Kavala," Erdogan declared in 2020.

But Kavala's treatment has prompted the Council of Europe to launch disciplinary proceedings against Turkey that could ultimately see Ankara's membership suspended in the continent's main human rights organisation.

- 'Emblematic case' -


Kavala is being tried with 16 other defendants implicated in the 2013 protests.

Nine of them currently live abroad while the remaining seven took turns on Friday to make their final statements in court.

Defendant Mucella Yapici -- also facing the threat of life in jail without the possibility of parole -- told the court the 2013 protests were the "most democratic, most creative and peaceful collective movement in this country's history".

Human rights advocates say Kavala's release would send a signal to Turkey's Western allies that its justice system is free from Erdogan's pressure.

"His unconditional release may mark a turning point in de-politicisation of judicial prosecutions in Turkey," Amnesty International's Turkey researcher Guney Yildiz told AFP.

"That's why the result of the emblematic case is quite serious."

Emma Sinclair-Webb of Human Rights Watch called the entire hearing a "show trial".

But Erdogan has seethed at the international publicity and condemnation generated by the case.

The tensions nearly caused an all-out diplomatic war when the United States and nine other Western embassies issued a joint letter of support for Kavala last October.

Media reports said Erdogan's advisers managed to convince him to walk back on his threat to expel the 10 countries' ambassadors after being briefed on the harm this might do to Turkey's investment climate.

fo/zak/pvh


South Africa reels from 'worst' floods

South Africa is grappling with one of the biggest natural disasters in the country's history. Floods have killed more than 400 people and destroyed thousands of homes.


The floods brought wanton destruction in and around Durban


Lungile Nene is still trying to come to terms with what happened. She walks through what remains of her family home in the Ntuzuma township in Durban.

She was inside their house when the soil started moving, collapsing half of it and killing her 10-year-old cousin Azanda.

"It felt like my heart broke in 1,000 pieces," Nene says, while fighting back the tears and going through Azanda's recovered school bag. "She was a bubbly girl, joyful, always happy."

Last week's floods completely washed away Nene's neighbor's house. Its occupants were an old lady with her three grandchildren. Rescuers pulled out one of the children, covered in the rubble. But, tragically, all the others passed away. The youngest was just two years old.


Many residents have been left without basic needs, such as clean drinking water

At least 4,000 homes destroyed

Days of heavy rains on South Africa's eastern coast left at least 448 people dead when rivers burst their banks and mudslides swept through the city of Durban and the province of KwaZulu Natal.

The waters washed away roads and bridges.

Nearly 4,000 homes were destroyed, and more than 600 schools were affected.

Sachin Harisunker's company, Grindrod Intermodal, stored about 1,500 shipping containers at a depot near the port. He says the floods swept away hundreds of them like toys, blocking roads and damaging bridges. Harisunker and his team are now trying to recover them. But he faces another challenge.

"What added to this atrocity is the looting," Harisuker told DW.

"They raided the offices, stole computers. Microwaves, fridges, spares. They even cut off all the cables. Whatever they could salvage, they took," the logistics manager said, adding that it was heartbreaking.

"All our hard work. But it is what it is, and we just have to rebuild from here."


The torrential rains have caused massive destruction to infrastructure


Climate change to blame

While visiting a school-turned-shelter, South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa blamed changing weather patterns for the natural catastrophe.

"This disaster obviously is part of climate change," Ramaphosa said, vowing to rebuild damaged infrastructure and assist the flood victims by providing basic necessities.

"It is telling us that climate change is serious. It is here," Ramaphosa said. "We no longer can postpone the measures we need to take to deal with climate change. Our disaster management capability needs to be at a higher level."

President Ramaphosa declared a national state of disaster to deal with the emergency. He also promised to deploy up to 10,000 soldiers to help in the flood relief and restore power and water supply.

The government also announced more than 1 billion rands (€60 million, $65 million) worth of relief funds. However, Ramaphosa issued a stern warning over corruption.

"There must be transparency and accountability right from the beginning," Ramaphosa said during a speech to the nation. "Not after the money has either been wasted or stolen."

Corruption and mistrust persist


But in Ntuzuma, Lungile Nene doubts the government will fulfill what it has pledged. She found shelter at her grandmother's home and now even questions whether she would receive any help from the government.

Her mother is also pessimistic, telling DW that she doesn't expect much to change: A few people will get rich, and the needy won't get help.

"They will buy blankets for 200 rand and pocket 500 from the government. We have seen that many times," she said, referring to the multiple corruption cases concerning pandemic relief funds.

Neighbour Lebo Mokoena says some are still waiting for promised compensation and new houses from the government after heavy flooding in 2019.

"We are pleading for assistance," he said. "We don't want empty promises again."


President Cyril Ramaphosa blames climate change for the natural disaster

Perennial floods

During this time of the year, heavy rainfalls and floods are not uncommon in this part of South Africa. In 2019, floodwaters killed 85 people. But this time, the amount of rain that poured down was more than double that of previous years.

"We were all surprised by the magnitude of this storm," Durban's mayor, Mxolisi Kaunda, said. On April 11, the port city received almost 300mm of rainfall in 24 hours. In comparison, it received 165mm of rain three years ago over the same period of time.

Scientists say severe and extreme weather events in the region are becoming more frequent due to climate change.

In the past years, other Southern African countries like Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Madagascar have faced massive destruction due to tropical storms, displacing tens of thousands of people as a result.

Edited by: Chrispin Mwakideu and Ineke Mules

TRUMP TOO
Brazil: Bolsonaro to pardon ally after top court conviction


The Brazilian president pardoned Daniel Silveira, despite a top court established that the Bolsonaro ally had interfered with the "free exercise" of government and threatened Brazil's judicial authorities.



Last month, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, Jair's eldest son, visited Daniel Silveira and asked the Supreme Court to reconsider a decision on his electronic ankle bracelet



Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Thursday said he would pardon federal congressman and ally Daniel Silveira, a day after he was convicted by Brazil's top court, the STF.

Silveira was sentenced to nearly nine years in prison after a 10-1 ruling by the STF on Wednesday. The court established that he had interfered with the "free exercise" of government and threatened the country's judicial authorities.

The court levied a fine equivalent to roughly $41,500 (€38,500) and requested the removal of the right-wing former police officer's current parliamentary position.

This comes after Silveira questioned the integrity of several STF ministers and called on his supporters to invade the court last year. Silveira had also called for the re-institution of an anti-democratic decree that was in place during Brazil's 1964-1985 military dictatorship.

In a decree published in the official gazette and read out by the president, Bolsonaro said his move to pardon Silveira was to preserve "freedom of expression" as an essential pillar of society.


Silveira, one of the more outspoken new political allies of Bolsonaro, had taken great glee in the legal troubles of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (Lula), who is back in front line politics and narrowly ahead in the polls for October's election.

Bolsonaro is a former army captain with close ties to Rio de Janeiro, where Silveira is also from, and is himself often openly nostalgic about Brazil's time under military rule.
Leading to the October election

Bolsonaro's critics hailed the verdict as they fear that the right-wing former army captain and his allies were a threat to democracy. But the president and people close to him complained of increasing judicial overreach by the STF.

The Brazilian president's decision comes as the latest escalation between Brazil's executive led by the president and the judiciary ahead of October’s presidential vote, in which the incumbent president is seeking re-election.

Bolsonaro's main rival, former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, has had a slight but narrowing lead in recent polls.

see/msh (Reuters, AFP)
AFRICA
When capitalism and Indigenous rights collide

A legal dispute involving retail giant Amazon and Indigenous South Africans has highlighted a global dilemma: Are sacred sites more important than job creation? Indigenous groups have been fighting back.


Protests such as this led to the suspension of the Amazon project in Cape Town


The River Club development was under construction on sacred land, the spiritual home to the Khoi and San ethnic groups ⁠— the earliest inhabitants of southern Africa. And it lies in the middle of one of South Africa's most important metropolitan regions.

Online retail giant Amazon's Africa headquarters was planned for the development, which lies at the confluence of the Black and Liesbeek rivers.

But, now, the cranes are at a standstill, and the High Court in Cape Town has banned work from continuing until the Indigenous peoples affected are meaningfully involved. They are protesting and demanding a definitive halt to the €260 million ($283 million) project.

"Jeff Bezos, the richest man in the world with his Amazon headquarters on our sacred land!" Bradley van Sitters, a Khoisan activist, told DW.

"For him to build this African headquarters is a great shame. This river is sacred to us," van Sitters said, adding that it was where the groups went to hold ceremonies and rituals.

"We also want to bring our children here. This must be declared a world heritage site," van Sitters said.

Historical significance

The Khoisan people associate fond memories with the land at the foot of Cape Town's Table Mountain.

In the early 16th century, invading Portuguese troops were repelled by the Khoi and San peoples on that same site. Some 150 years later, the Indigenous people resisted the Dutch settlers who began their land expropriations from the river.

But the project could also be an opportunity for Cape Town. Amazon already employs thousands of people at various data processing centers in the city.

Once completed, the new complex is expected to provide jobs for at least 1,000 people ⁠— and many more would have received employment during the construction phase.

Apart from the Amazon headquarters, homes, retail stores and offices are to be constructed on the site. In a written statement, the US-based multinational e-commerce company said that the majority of the Cape's Khoi and San people support the development.


Amazon's multimillion-dollar investment would have created jobs for at least 1,000 people

Amazon's bid to honor Indigenes

To honor the heritage of the Khoi and San, the developers said they had planned a media center, a "heritage garden" and an amphitheater.

"The small group of activists opposing the River Club project have been spreading falsehoods about the current property, the redevelopment, and the impact on intangible heritage, the environment and biodiversity," Liesbeek Leisure Properties Trust said in a statement.

According to Statistics South Africa (Stats SA), South Africa's unemployment rate is 35.3%. Furthermore, the youth unemployment rate has remained stubbornly high at 65.5%.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has been seeking to woo foreign investment to create job opportunities.

But that should not happen at the expense of Indigenous peoples, said Genevieve Rose, head of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR).

"We are not saying that development is not important. Indigenous peoples would also like to have electricity. They also need jobs," Rose told DW.

"But the reality is that their land is being taken away — they're not being consulted. They are not getting information in their language. They don't get real jobs," Rose said.

"If they are relocated, it's to worse land," Rose said, "and they are worse off than before."

Call for recognition

The only thing Indigenous peoples would ask for, Rose said, is for their rights to the land where the development is taking place be recognized and that they are given proper consideration.

"Then they can participate constructively in the project and try to find a solution that works for them and that they also benefit from. But right now, that's not the case," Rose said.

Similar scenarios have happened elsewhere in Africa. For example, in the 1970s, the Kenyan government evicted hundreds of Endorois families from their land to create a wildlife sanctuary for tourists.

The Endorois filed and won a lawsuit. In 2010, the ACHPR ruled that the Kenyan government had violated the Endorois' rights to religious worship, property, culture, free disposal of natural resources, and development. It recommended recognizing property rights, returning ancestral lands to the Endorois, compensating them for their losses, and ensuring that the Endorois benefit from the game reserve employment opportunities.

But, according to the International Network for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ESCR-Net), Nairobi has largely ignored the recommendations so far.


Kenya's Endorois people won a legal battle to be compensated for their land
Indigenous and corporate collaboration


"Governments, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, must first recognize that Indigenous peoples live on the land and also have traditional ownership of that land," Rose said.

"That many governments don't want to recognize these people is a problem in itself," Rose said, adding that recognition means giving them the right to the land. "You can't sell the land or get these investment projects. So they prefer not to recognize their existence or the fact that they own the land as a community."

Batwa land has also been converted into national parks and forest reserves against their will in Burundi and Uganda. And in Ethiopia, pastoralist peoples were forced off their land so foreign and national companies could lease it. Rose also sees these companies as having a role to play.

"Companies can have a really big impact and put pressure on the government that they're not going to do business unless these people are involved in the whole process," Rose said.

That includes figuring out what the land means to the people, calculating fair compensation and establishing how to offer them work in the long term, she said.

Adequate compensation

Then, cases like the one in Kenya and its Lake Turkana Wind Project (LTWP) would not arise.

In a historic ruling in 2021, the Kenyan Environment and Land Court in Meru declared the title deeds to the land on which the LTWP stands "irregular and unlawful."

Indigenous people had complained that the wind energy project did not obtain consent, did not pay adequate compensation and violated applicable land laws.

The court gave the county government one year to correct the process, or the land would revert to the community.

Mali Ole Kaunga, director of the Indigenous Movement for Peace Advancement and Conflict Transformation (IMPACT), described the ruling as a victory for the El Molo, Turkana, Samburu, and Rendille communities.

He also praised the ruling as a win for "all Kenyan communities at risk of displacement and human rights violations from large-scale land investments."

What could help an Indigenous community, Rose said, is to have its protocols in place in case a company comes onto its land.

Rose said she is confident that cooperation is possible with a fair compromise for both sides. But she stressed that, above all, recognition is critical.

Okeri Ngutjinazo and Adrian Kriesch contributed to this article

Edited by Keith Walker.
Why is Donbas so important for Russia?

The Russian army has regrouped and is concentrating its attacks on eastern Ukraine. So why exactly is Russian President Vladimir Putin interested in Luhansk and Donetsk?


"We are Russian Donbass" reads this poster but not everybody agrees with the sentiment


At the beginning of April, Russia suddenly withdrew its troops from the region around the capital Kyiv in northern Ukraine. It apparently wanted to concentrate its forces on Donbas in eastern Ukraine for a fresh offensive that began this week. Why is the region so crucial?

Special ties with Russia?


Like the Crimean peninsula, the administrative regions (oblasts) of Luhansk and Donetsk are regions where a particularly large proportion of the population speaks Russian as its mother tongue and is ethnically Russian. The situation is similar in Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, and also Odesa. But only in Crimea do ethnic Russians make up the majority of the population.

After the Orange Revolution of 2004, and the Maidan protests of 2013 and 2014, it was in these parts of Ukraine where the opposition to Ukraine turning more towards the West was strongest. Militant Russian separatists — presumably with support from Moscow — began fighting for control of the region while at the same time, Russia made the most of the power vacuum in Kyiv and annexed Crimea.

"These are two of the many examples where the Russians acted according to the idea that 'opportunity makes the thief,'" said Andreas Heinemann-Grüder, Eastern Europe specialist at the Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies. He doesn't think there was a large-scale plan behind this.

Eastern Ukraine is a crucial industrial region


What's the historical context?


Until the mid-19th century, Donbas was scarcely populated but it became one of the most important hubs of Russian industrialization because of its coal reserves.

"During this period, public use of Ukrainian was suppressed in the Russian Empire, and Russian established itself as the language of education," explained historian Guido Hausmann from the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies in Regensburg. "Many Russian peasants also flocked to the new industrial region."

Donbas was not part of Ukraine during its brief spell of independence in 1918 but it was incorporated into the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic after the Russian Civil War. More and more Russians came into the region during the Soviet period. Hausmann explained that there were indeed a lot of people with ties to Russia or rather the Soviet Union. "However, the people in Donbas always also spoke Ukrainian and the majority still had a strong connection to Ukraine too," he said.

Heinemann-Grüder said that it was wrong to assume that ethnicity or mother tongue could give clues as to national identity among the Ukrainian population. "Russian was even spoken by some of the Ukrainian army battalions that fought against the separatists in 2014/15," he said.

He added that this was probably no longer the case because the use of Russian had declined everywhere: "If there has been any contribution to forming a Ukrainian nation then it has been the Russian aggressions of the past eight years," he said. "Russian bombs have united Ukraine all the more."
Is eastern Ukraine economically important?

After World War II, the industrial regions of Siberia gained more importance than Donbas for the Soviet Union as a whole. But for Ukraine, it remained the most significant industrial zone up until 2014.

It has suffered considerably though, with many mines — particularly in separatist areas — now derelict or in a very poor state. Even more industrial facilities and infrastructure have been destroyed in the past weeks.

Hausman said that the region's economic importance mattered less to Russia than to Ukraine if it wanted to be economically independent. "A crucial war aim for Russia is to make Ukraine permanently dependent on Russia — politically, culturally and economically."

Symbolic importance

War has raged in Donbas for eight years: In 2014, pro-Russian separatists proclaimed the oblasts of Luhansk and Donetsk as independent "people's republics." In 2015, after a period of open battles between the separatists and the Ukrainian army, a fragile ceasefire and a "line of contact" separating Ukrainian-controlled parts from separatist areas in the region bordering Russia were agreed as part of the Minsk II agreement."

On February 21, 2022 — three days before its invasion of Ukraine — Russia officially recognized the self-proclaimed People's Republics of Luhansk and Donetsk. "By this, the Russian government meant all of Donbas," according to Heinemann-Grüder, who explained that Russia would have to conquer the entire territory in order to implement the annexation that it prepared with this recognition. "Then it could declare a victory at home and possibly declare an end to the war."
Successful 'denazification'?

Furthermore, Ukrainian combat units with far-right, nationalist tendencies, for example the Azov Battalion that helped prevent pro-Russian separatists take Mariupol in 2014, are also fighting in the region. This has been used by the Kremlin to fuel its claims the Ukrainian government has been infiltrated by "nazis."

"If he were to win against these troops, Putin could declare that the so-called 'denazification' mission had been achieved, at least in Donbas," said Heinemann-Grüder.


Ukrainian soldiers have been fighting to keep Donbas for years

It would also be a symbolic victory if Russia were able to capture the industrial port city of Mariupol, which has come to represent Ukrainian perseverance during weeks of siege and shelling.

"The outcome of the war in Donbas will decide what remains of Ukraine," Heinemann-Grüder said. By annexing Crimea, Russia had not only conquered the former home port of Russia's once-proud Black Sea fleet but also gained a port that is ice-free all year round near its European part for the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

However, for now, Crimea is still an exclave. It is only connected to the Russian mainland via a bridge over the Kerch Strait that opened in 2018. By conquering all of Donbas, Russia would gain Mariupol as another important port with links to Crimea and the Mediterranean.

Heimann-Grüder thinks that Russia might well be setting its sights on its next targets, especially the land connection along the coast with Crimea, though this would depend on the state of its army and access to supplies.

He said that there might well be new military prospects on the cards: "If Putin sees an opportunity to dissolve Ukraine as an independent state, he will take it," he said. For the Ukrainian government, the question would then be: "In order to save Kyiv, do we have to give up Donbas?"

This article has been translated from German.
Rare hepatitis virus afflicts children across EU, US and UK

Doctors are scratching their heads over a new, unknown form of hepatitis that is causing severe illness in some cases. Does the coronavirus pandemic have a role to play?



Doctors are unsure what's causing a new outbreak of an unknown hepatitis virus in young children, most under the age of five


Health officials in the European Union, the US and the UK are looking into an outbreak of unexplained cases of hepatitis in young children. Some of them have been severe, requiring liver transplants.

It's very rare to come across serious cases of hepatitis in children, said William Irving, a professor of virology at the University of Nottingham. He said in normal years, hepatitis cases in children in the UK have likely been in the single digits. Last week, 60 cases were reported across the country.

"I find this absolutely extraordinary," Irving said. "I've not come across anything like this in my clinical practice. It's worrying because we don't know what's going on."
A mysterious liver inflammation in young children

All of the reported patients are under the age of 10, and many are under the age of 5. The children aren't testing positive for the typical hepatitis viruses — A, B, C, D or E — a situation Alastair Sutcliffe, a professor of general pediatrics at the University College of London, called "very unusual."

The outbreak was first reported by UK health officials at the start of April. On April 19, the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control announced additional cases in Spain, Denmark, the Netherlands and Ireland. It also flagged cases in the US state of Alabama.

So far, a quick survey of children hepatology centers in Germany did not detect any cases similar to those noted by the UK health authorities, said Burkhard Rodeck, secretary general of the German Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine e.V.

Hepatitis means inflammation of the liver and has many causes, Irving said. It can result from infections caused by viruses and toxins in alcohol or by problems like obesity. He said although the cause of this specific outbreak is still unclear, it's being widely believed it could be related to the adenovirus.
Adenovirus a potential cause

Doctors found that some of the children diagnosed with the mysterious illness tested positive for a specific type of adenovirus infection: adenovirus 41. Irving said adenovirus 41 hadn't been found in all the cases, and it hasn't been looked for in all the cases, but it's been observed in enough cases to potentially be more than coincidental.

Adenovirus 41 is a common infection in young children that normally causes a bit of diarrhea and vomiting, Irving said, adding that it isn't known for being associated with hepatitis.

There could be something unusual about this specific adenovirus, Irving said. Or it could be interacting with something else that's causing hepatitis. Or it could be a brand new infectious agent, or a toxin, or some kind of environmental factor, or a combination of all these possibilities, he said.
What about COVID-19?

Whether it's related to COVID-19 is also up in the air, Irving said. It's possible some of these children had COVID, which impacted their immune system, making it harder to fight typical childhood viruses.

There are ample testing results available for the 13 cases found in Scotland. Of those 13, three tested positive for COVID infection, five tested negative and two had gotten the virus in the past three months. Only 11 of the 13 cases got tested for the adenovirus with five of them returning positive.

If COVID-19 infection is not the root of the problem, the pandemic's effect on children's health could be a part of it, Irving said.

"You've got a cohort of children who have been largely shielded, the very young children. So they've not been exposed to the range of virus infections that they would normally have been exposed to," Irving said.

"We have seen this winter much higher levels of a whole range of virus infections in children, including adenoviruses," he said. "Maybe there's something about the fact that they've sort of had two years of relative sterility where they're not being exposed and all of a sudden, they've got a whole pile of infections, including adenoviruses that they're not dealing with in the normal way."
Rise in hepatitis cases no need to panic

Sutcliffe said one thing is clear: The hepatitis isn't being caused by COVID-19 vaccines, because the children who have gotten the illness weren't vaccinated.

He cautioned parents to stay calm.

"My understanding is quite a lot of [the children with hepatitis] have gotten better, which is the usual. If we narrow it down to a risk of liver failure, the risk is very small. And so I think let's not exaggerate," he said.

Irving said he expected to see many more cases reported in the coming weeks as health authorities become aware of and start tracking the outbreak. The fact the UK caught it first is likely due to the country's rigorous reporting systems, he said.

"I don't understand Alabama," Irving said. "I mean, why you would have nine cases in one state and no cases from the other 49 states. It doesn't make any sense. I think that's got to be a function of surveillance. I think if it's occurring in Alabama, it is occurring elsewhere. It's just they don't know about it."