Sunday, May 29, 2022

Yemeni civil society pushes for opening of roads to the city of Taiz despite Houthi reluctance

29 MAY 2022


Yemeni civil society groups are campaigning actively for the opening of roads connecting the Yemeni city of Taiz with other major urban centres despite reluctance by the Houthi rebel group.

UN Special Envoy, Hans Grundberg, on Saturday (28 May) concluded an initial round of discussions in Amman, Jordan, attended by representatives of government and rebels on options to open key roads in Taiz and other governorates, as per the UN-mediated truce agreement signed in April.

A proposal for the phased re-opening of roads, including an implementation mechanism and guarantees for the safety of civilian travelers was drawn up based on the three-day discussions and options presented by both sides.

“It is promising that the parties met face-to-face to discuss the issue of road openings for the first time in years. I now call on the parties to conclude their internal deliberations urgently and deliver positive results to the Yemeni people,” said Mr. Grundberg. “Lifting restrictions on the freedom of movement of people and goods will not only have a positive impact on alleviating the suffering of the Yemeni people and reviving the economy, but will also help cultivate confidence in the political process.”

Civil society actors and local mediators, many of whom are from Taiz, also took part in the discussions by offering their insights and expertise as well as practical options for road openings.

“The role of civil society in those discussions proved to be indispensable, as they offered a compass to all those involved, including the UN, for prioritizing the interests and lived experiences of Yemeni women, men and children,” said Mr. Grundberg.

Media sources in Amman say that the talks were on the verge of collapse on Friday, with the Yemeni government threatening to walk away after the Houthis refused to open the main roads that link the city of Taiz with Hodeidah, Aden and Sanaa, suggesting only opening a narrow mountain route.

Maj. Mohammed Abdullah Al-Mahmoudi, deputy head of the Yemeni government delegation on Taiz, told Arab News that it had insisted on lifting the Houthis’ siege of the city by opening the main roads.

Dozens of human rights groups, activists, government officials and Taiz residents have launched a new campaign on social media, using hashtag #Siege_of_Taiz_crime, calling for the opening of roads to the city.

Yemenis widely circulated images of cars loaded with goods and fuel overturning on the steep and unpaved slopes drivers were forced to turn to after the Houthis blocked the city’s main entrances.


PARTIES’ MILITARY COORDINATION COMMITTEE CONVENES FIRST MEETING UNDER THE TRUCE


AMMAN, 28 May 2022 – The Office of the Special Envoy for Yemen convened today the first meeting of the military coordination committee comprised of representatives of the parties in Amman, Jordan.

The meeting was attended by military representatives of the Government of Yemen, Ansar Allah and the Coalition Joint Forces Command and chaired by the UN Envoy’s military adviser Brigadier General Antony Hayward. Constructive discussions focused on setting up a robust coordination mechanism for regular dialogue and communication to de-escalate and address incidents that impact civilians and threaten to derail the truce.

“It is critical that parties have a neutral space to talk and interact with each other honestly, respectfully and freely with a focus on solutions,” Brig. Gen. Hayward stressed.

Representatives discussed options for a joint mechanism that will be tasked with addressing and de-escalating strategic and operational military and security incidents of concern in a timely manner.

“This first in-person meeting of military representatives of the parties in a long time to discuss how to improve dialogue and communication between them is a crucial step towards building trust and supporting the political process,” said Mr. Grundberg. “The parties should continue those positive steps by ensuring the continuation of the work of this coordination committee.”

The representatives agreed to hold a follow up meeting.

AUSTRALIA
Historic gain for Greens as party claims victory in seat of Brisbane

Stephen Bates says the outcome reflects "an uprising by young people at this election".


Greens candidate for the seat of Brisbane Stephen Bates with Greens senator Larissa Waters. 
Credit: David Parry/PA

The Australian Greens Party has declared victory in the Queensland seat of Brisbane, gaining a fourth seat in the House of Representatives.

"Stephen Bates has won the seat of Brisbane for the Greens, taking the QLD seat from the Liberals," the party said in a statement.

The development comes after a close race and a tense week of vote counting in the inner city seat which covers the city of Brisbane.

Greens close in on record number of seats in federal parliament, Pauline Hanson likely to retain Senate spot

Mr Bates beat our Labor hopeful Madonna Jarrett in a tight contest.

The 29-year-old retail worker describes himself as a proud gay man who will make it his priority to advocate in particular for young people.

“There has been an uprising by young people at this election," he said.

“As one of the youngest members of the new Parliament, I believe my election is a message that the young people of Australia refuse to be pushed out any longer.

"We need action on climate, the housing and rental crisis, mental health into Medicare student debt and job insecurity."


The win is the third for the Greens in Queensland, who also took the seat of Ryan and Griffith. The party's leader, Adam Bandt, also holds the seat of Melbourne in Victoria.

Outgoing Liberal MP Trevor Evans conceded defeat last Saturday as despite leading the three-candidate preferred count, he is unlikely to retain his seat.

Greens leader Adam Bandt said the result reflects growing support for the party, which now also has 12 MPs in the Senate after winning six additional upper house seats at this election.

"The greenslide continues. The Greens will be the most powerful third party in the Parliament.


"Stephen’s fantastic win means the Liberals’ defeat is even more profound and we are in a stronger position to push the Albanese government to take action on climate and inequality."

The Australian Electoral Commission on Friday released new data showing an unusual three-candidate preferred status for Brisbane and Macnamara in Victoria, which still remains in doubt.

In Macnamara, incumbent Labor MP Josh Burns has taken a slight lead over his Greens rival Steph Hodgins-May with Liberal candidate Colleen Harkin trailing.

Liberal candidate Andrew Constance is 253 votes ahead of sitting Labor MP Fiona Phillips in the NSW electorate of Gilmore, with postal votes slightly favouring Mr Constance.

The commission had Labor with 75 seats to the coalition's 59, the Greens with three seats, and 12 on the cross bench.

Manitoba rural teachers' union calls for more support for gender-diverse students

Yesterday 
The Canadian Press

Arural Manitoba teachers' union says it’s time for the Seine River School Division (SRSD) to clearly lay out in writing the ways that they can and will support transgendered and gender-diverse students, because he said if those students don’t feel supported, it could have negative and long-lasting implications on their lives, and on their futures.

“We want to support our students, and we want to make sure they feel supported,” Seine River Teachers’ Association (SRTA), president Jonathan Waite said, while speaking to the Winnipeg Sun on Friday.

“We don’t ever want to go down the wrong path even once, because we know that can have serious implications on the path that students can go down.”

On May 24, Waite, the head of an organization that represents more than 350 educators and staff in SRSD, and a small delegation, appeared before the SRSD board of trustees, requesting they take steps to create regulations and policies specific to supporting transgendered and gender-diverse students.

Waite said the division, which has schools spread over a large area of rural southeastern Manitoba, in communities such as Lorette, St Adophe and La Salle, has “comprehensive” diversity and safety policies in place, but he feels those policies could be “enhanced” if there were more written policy specific to supporting transgendered youth.

“We want to walk hand in hand with those students and support them, so it is always good to have something written down, so an educator can say, ‘I can point to that to understand what I have to do, and what my role is.’”

Waite said the policy would cover issues such as self-identification, washroom access, parental consent, names and pronouns, dress codes, and field trips.

“We wanted to bring the trustees up to speed on all the great work that has happened in the division, and also on some of the challenges as well,” Waite said.

Waite said the SRSD board passed a motion during the meeting referring the matter to their governance committee, and do plan to continue having discussions about the issue, and about the need for policies to be put in place.

He called the SRSD board “very receptive” to the presentation, and said he does believe progress will be made on the issue moving forward.

“From what I could see and what the board was saying, I do believe they see this as an excellent idea, and want to work with us, and with their governance committee on this,” Waite said.

“This board has been really good about making sure they know how important it is that we are a diverse and accepting school division.”

A study released in 2018, by the National Library of Medicine, stated that mental health disparities faced by transgender youth in Canada are “considerable.”

“Transgender youth had a higher risk of reporting psychological distress, self-harm, major depressive episode, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempts,” the report states.

The report stated that the findings “underscore the need for policies and laws protecting transgender people from discrimination, and further development of transgender-specific interventions to promote positive mental health, and reduce mental health problems among transgender youth.”

Waite said it is now crucial that transgender and gender-diverse youth feel supported in SRSD, or the negative impacts on some students could be long-lasting and traumatic.

“If we don’ support the students as far as their identity and their future, then we are potentially causing harm and trauma,” he said. “So if this policy can help even one student from being harmed, than this will be a great policy.”

— Dave Baxter is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter who works out of the Winnipeg Sun. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

Dave Baxter, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Winnipeg Sun
Opinion: Protect Edmonton's river valley from death by a thousand ruts

Geoffrey Pounder - Yesterday 

Mountain bikers have spoken loud and clear. Now it is time for conservationists to speak up. No second chances to save our river valley.


© Provided by Edmonton Journal
A mountain biker on a trail near the Whitemud Equine centre. File photo.

Bikers are trying to roll back the conservation efforts of past generations. Strip protection from “preservation” areas — open only to foot-traffic. Even as green space dwindles , and the remainder faces increasing pressure from increasing traffic and climate change. Does this make sense?

As the city recognized decades ago, mountain biking in sensitive natural areas is unsustainable.

What about safety? Can fast-moving bikes on winding, narrow trails safely mix with pedestrians? No one likes to be startled by bikers coming from behind without warning. Why should a family on a Sunday stroll stay alert for bikers?

Horseback riders, golfers, sledders, and skiers all have their space. Bikers deserve space too. Outside sensitive natural areas.

But bikers want to go everywhere. They claim they cause no more damage to trails than foot traffic. But the issue is not what bikers do on city trails. The problem is the proliferation of new trails — most constructed without city oversight.

Do biking, new trails, tree-cutting, and obstacle courses really have the same impact as hikers keeping to the path?

An ever-expanding network of trails with increasing traffic fragments habitat, speeds erosion, increases run-off, and muddies streams. Bikes crush plants and compress the soil. Some ride in stream beds. Issues bikers ignore.

Bikers, not hikers, propose a network of new trails throughout the river valley. If they do not get their way, they warn that illegal trails will be built and used , regardless.

Inexplicably, parks officials permitted the Edmonton Mountain Bike Alliance (EMBA) to build trails in the river valley without oversight. Sidelining other stakeholders. The result? The city has no idea. As the “ Ribbon of Green + Mountain Biking FAQ ” states:

“ Most of the single-track trail network was built by trail users and the city has not had oversight of the construction of these trails, some of which are found in sensitive areas, so we don’t know the ecological impact they have had.”

The city failed to follow its own policies. The proposed solution? Downgrading trail status in preservation areas effectively strips protection from adjacent parkland. The city’s original decision to restrict preservation areas to foot traffic was correct. The science has not changed.

Will the city buckle? Will officials dither until sensitive natural areas and the biodiversity corridor are damaged beyond repair? How much more habitat is the city willing to sacrifice?

No, damage by hikers does not justify damage by bikers or vice versa. No, trail repair does not negate damage done by an expanding network of new trails, tree-cutting, off-trail riding, and landscape modification.

No, hikers do not want to keep the valley pristine wilderness for themselves and mountain goats. The balance has already tipped. Our duty is to pass on our natural legacy unimpaired to future generations. Save what little is left before it is gone — for all citizens, future generations, and other species.

No more outsourcing trail management. Close all unauthorized trails. Close bike trails in preservation areas. No more trails without oversight. Base parks policy on science. Identify and protect sensitive areas, restore ecological integrity, halt inappropriate activities, hire park rangers, and enforce the rules.

Across North America, this same battle has been replayed over and over. Now it is Edmonton’s turn to stand up. Protect our river valley.


Born and raised in Edmonton, Geoffrey Pounder is an advocate for nature and cycling — in the right places.





B.C. wants First Nations to agree before old-growth logging deferred on shared lands

Yesterday 

The British Columbia government wants First Nations to reach consensus before logging is deferred in old-growth forests on shared Indigenous territories.

Tara Marsden, sustainability director for the Gitanyow Nation's hereditary chiefs' office in northwestern B.C., said consensus represents a "high bar" in a complex process, which was not made clear when Forests Ministry staff introduced the province's deferral plan last November.

"I think the public who are concerned about old growth need to know that high bar, that it's very challenging to work in this landscape with multiple nations," said Marsden, the main point contact for her nation on deferrals.

Marsden said she had initially understood from the ministry's messaging that "if you support these (deferral areas), they're going to be protected."

Instead, there was an "unspoken expectation" from the province that consensus among nations with overlapping territories was needed, she said.

The B.C. government announced last fall that an independent panel of ecologists and forestry experts had mapped 2.6 million hectares of old-growth forests at risk of permanent biodiversity loss. It asked 204 First Nations to determine within 30 days whether they supported the temporary deferral of logging in those areas, or if they needed more time to decide.

Forests Minister Katrine Conroy told The Canadian Press that if consensus on deferrals could not be reached among First Nations with overlapping or shared territories, the province would assess the strengths of their claims.

"We can't automatically go with one deferral over another if nations aren't in agreement," Conroy said. "So we're trying to work that out and staff are working really hard with nations to look at, you know, what can we do to reach consensus, but in the end, it becomes an issue of strength of claim."

Asked how often shared territories are affecting deferrals,Conroy said there have been "some issues with some nations, but it hasn't been a lot."

Any deferrals would initially last two years, allowing for consultation with First Nations about forestry in their territories, the minister said last fall.

After that, the at-risk old growth would either remain off limits for logging or be included in new, more sustainable management plans, she said.

Last month, Conroy announced that the province had so far approved logging deferral on 1.05 million hectares of old growth identified by the expert panel. Out of the 204 First Nations, the province had heard from 188, of which 75 had agreed to the deferrals in their territories, she said.

Meanwhile, about 7,200 hectares of the at-risk old growth have been logged since the government announced the deferral plan, the Forests Ministry said.

The province was clear that 50,000 hectares of the 2.6 million identified by the panel overlap with cutting permits approved before November, it said.

Marsden said her nation hadworked hard to review and confirm their support for the deferrals in Gitanyow territory before Christmas.

It wasn't until she followed up with Forests Ministry staff this month that a regional manager told Marsden the deferrals weren't going ahead.

Portions of the proposed deferrals overlap with an area affected by the Nisga'a Treaty, and Marsden said she was told the Nisga'a weren't supporting the deferrals because they're invested in the forest industry in those areas.

The Forests Ministry later told The Canadian Press the deferrals in Gitanyow territory were implemented "with the exception of a small localized area."

A statement from the Nisga'a Lisims Government said the nation had yet to decide on the proposed deferral plan, "but instead continue to evaluate it and how it may affect our interests."

They've been meeting with forest licensees to understand how the deferrals may affect them and Nisga'a members working in the industry, it said.

Asked whether the ministry's communication could have be better, Conroy said "staff have been working full out" to help First Nations and determine if they need a portion of $12.7 million earmarked for the deferral process.

Terry Teegee, regional chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations, said the province's old-growth deferral process is still "a space where there's a lot of unknowns" and more clarity is needed when it comes to shared territories.

"On one hand, we as Indigenous nations do want to figure some of these things out on our own, but what if there is differences of opinion, then what?" he said.

First Nations are being asked to come to the decision-making table when many are stretched thin, with limited capacity and resources, Teegee said.

"Overall, what we need to do, is to really develop that space so we can have meaningful dialogue and come to an ability to make those decisions."

Gitanyow's situation underscores what Marsden sees as a problem with B.C.'s deferral process — a lack of compensation for First Nations and forestry companies that could lose revenue if old growth is off limits.

It puts the onus on multiple nations to agree on deferrals in shared or overlapping territories, she said, while "there's no financial compensation to say, 'Okay, well, you're actually not going to lose out on your investment.' "

The deferral process also lacks support for independent analysis that would help First Nations and the logging industry understand the potential effects on local jobs and revenue and how those could be managed, she added.

Conroy said First Nations hold diverse perspectives on managing old growth.

Some have "invested years getting involved in the forest industry, and they really consider it part of their path to economic independence," she said.

"We've had a number of people say to us, 'Well why didn't you just pay the nations?' and it's, you know, it's quite colonialist," Conroy said.

"We are respecting nations' wants, wishes and needs, and that's part of reconciliation. We need to respect that if a nation is involved in harvesting ... we need to respect that. If they want to defer, we need to respect that."

Compensation "never came up as an issue" in B.C.'s engagement on the deferral process with First Nations rights and title holders, Conroy added.

The province recognized that funding would be required to support permanent protection of old growth over the longer term, she said.

Where a First Nation has agreed to the proposed deferral areas,companies or communities who hold harvesting rights may voluntarily avoid those areas, or the minister may issue an order to prevent old-growth logging.

Under B.C.'s Forest Act, compensation is not required until at least four years have passed from the time the minister issues the order.

So far, the province has not had to issue any orders and "many" companies have indicated they will not proceed with logging in proposed deferral areas where discussions with First Nations are ongoing, the Forests Ministry said.

B.C.'s 2022 budget allocated $185 million over three years to support forestry workers, First Nations and others who may be affected by deferrals, as well as legislative changes that Conroy said would "reshape" forest management.

The vision is for a forest sector that "delivers higher value from our forests, with secure, long-term jobs and healthier ecosystems," she said last fall.

The province also announced last month that it was doubling the amount of Crown forestry revenues shared with First Nations, an increase of $63 million this year, while it works on a new revenue-sharing model for the long term.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 28, 2022.

Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press
The salt debate: Not all scientists agree on how much sodium is too much

When Dr. Salim Yusuf began publishing research and commentaries a decade ago suggesting that sharp reductions in salt intake don’t improve heart health, the medical world sat up and took notice.

Relying on the conventional scientific wisdom, the World Health Organization recommends consuming less than two grams of sodium — five grams of salt — a day. Health Canada, the Mayo Clinic and other health bodies suggest no more each day than 2.3 grams, about a teaspoon of salt.

Tom Blackwell - Tuesday
 National Post

Not only did the work contradict years of conventional wisdom, but Yusuf is among this country’s most celebrated cardiovascular scientists, an Order of Canada member and one of the top 20 most-cited health researchers ever.

The salt papers were published in some of the world’s foremost medical journals. Much of the attention they attracted, though, was less than flattering.

An international group of scientists recently accused the McMaster University professor and his collaborators of conducting fatally flawed studies, with findings that are further tainted by conflicts of interest with the drug and food industries.

The research has slowed efforts to get people to consume less sodium, a leading trigger of high blood pressure and the harm it causes, they say.

The critics group, led by Dr. Norman Campbell of the University of Calgary, recently took the complaints to a surprising new level, asking Jean-Yves Duclos, the federal health minister, to launch an inquiry into the work by Yusuf and his colleagues and alerting McMaster to its concerns.


Their efforts have not exactly borne fruit. Yusuf was just awarded the Canada Council’s $100,000 Killam prize for research excellence, the agency calling him “among the most accomplished medical researchers in the world.”

The Campbell group demanded that the prize be revoked. It was not. Meanwhile, Health Canada says it never even received the letter asking for an inquiry.


But debate over the issue continues, both sides convinced they’re right, guidelines on heart healthy diets perhaps hanging in the balance.

“They’re making inaccurate and false statements and misleading statements and misinterpretations and they’re not correcting things that are obviously flawed,” said Campbell in an interview. “This is a global aggravation for people who are trying to improve the health of their populations.”

In a paper published last October, he and 24 colleagues from Harvard to Johns Hopkins and the University of London, lambasted the McMaster research. Some scientists have “propagated a myth” that curbing sodium does not steadily reduce cardiovascular disease, they said, while noting pointedly that salt is an important profit-maker for the food industry.

But Yusuf and his colleagues say they’re bewildered by the fierce opposition their ideas have provoked. It seems like a case of scholars with entrenched opinions refusing to seriously consider evidence that challenges the status quo, they say.

To ask politicians now to intervene in what is essentially a scientific debate is wholly unwarranted, said Yusuf. He only learned about the request for a federal investigation when informed by the National Post.

“It’s almost like a vendetta,” he said. “I don’t know what the basis of this is…. It’s just mudslinging, there’s nothing in it at all.”

Health Canada said it could not comment on the call for an inquiry because it failed to receive the request, though the senders say other recipients copied on the same email did.

Ironically, both sides agree on one fact: excessive consumption of salt and other forms of sodium is dangerously unhealthy.

The more sodium humans take in, the more water the body retains to essentially wash it away, which in turn boosts the pressure at which blood is pushed through arteries and veins. And high blood pressure leads to heart attacks, strokes and death. In fact, hypertension has been called the world’s leading cause of mortality, with sodium a culprit in as many as 30 per cent of cases.

The difference of opinion comes down to exactly what constitutes too much sodium. And at the heart of that disagreement is a fight, oddly enough, over urine — or at least how it should be tested to accurately measure sodium intake.

Relying on the conventional scientific wisdom, the World Health Organization recommends consuming less than two grams of sodium — five grams of salt — a day. Health Canada, the Mayo Clinic and other health bodies suggest no more each day than 2.3 grams, about a teaspoon of salt.

A 2017 Health Canada report estimated the average intake in this country was 2.8 grams.

Underpinning those recommendations are studies like the Harvard University-led TOHP trial in the United States in the late 1980s and early 1990s. About 4,500 people were divided into groups of subjects who received either general healthy lifestyle advice, or weekly group and individual counselling on how to reduce their sodium intake.

Both sodium consumption and blood pressure fell in the sodium-counselling groups, the researchers found. And then in a later follow-up study, they concluded that those who had received the salt-reduction help were 25 per cent less likely to suffer strokes, heart attacks and other cardiovascular events in the subsequent 10 to 15 years.

Other carefully controlled studies have reached similar conclusions — a straight-line reduction in hypertension as people take in less sodium, said the recent paper by Campbell and colleagues.

One of the first, inadvertent challenges to that understanding came in 2009, when Yusuf and his colleagues decided to look at the issue as part of two large studies they ran, focused mainly on testing blood pressure drugs. About 28,000 people in 40 countries were enrolled in a sidebar sodium study.

Each of the participants — all at risk of cardiovascular disease — had their sodium intake measured by looking at secretions of the mineral in samples of their urine.

What the scientists found jolted them. Instead of that straight-line reduction in heart-and-stroke-related illness as sodium levels fell, the rate of those problems dipped, then actually rose again at estimated sodium intake amounts of lower than three grams a day — making for a J-shaped curve.

In other words, not only did cutting sodium below a certain point not lead to better cardiovascular health, it looked like those lower levels might actually increase the risk of disease.

“We thought ‘That’s peculiar,’” recalls McMaster epidemiology Prof. Andrew Mente, one of the study’s authors. “Then we sat on that data for two years. We did everything we could to make it go away, and we couldn’t make it go away, no matter how you analyze the data.”

They published the results in the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association in 2011, and the fight was on.

The team followed up with a parallel study of 102,000 subjects from 17 countries in another McMaster-led international research project called PURE.

The results, published in the equally high-profile New England Journal of Medicine, were similar to the earlier ones.

They also argue the earlier evidence, like the TOHP trials, failed to show that reducing sodium to the recommended levels improved health.

For Mente, the takeaway advice is to keep sodium consumption no higher than four or five grams a day, and not worry about cutting it much below three grams.

“The bottom line is, if low sodium is not helpful and may even increase the risk, it’s better to focus on the overall quality of the diet,” he said. “Reduce processed foods and focus on eating more fruits and vegetables and more potassium-containing foods — an all-around wellness diet.”

But critics of the work were quick to dismiss it as poorly conducted, not least because of a crucial, if esoteric, issue: how the levels of sodium intake were measured.

The gold-standard method is to collect all the urine someone produces in a 24-hour period and test for secreted sodium, then repeat the process on non-consecutive days. The McMaster-led team, though, did a single “fasting” or spot sample of urine right after their subjects woke up. Then they used what’s called the Kawasaki formula to essentially extrapolate how much sodium the person consumed over the course of a whole day.

Using the spot-sample method would necessarily distort the results, says the paper last fall critiquing the research, and not just because it paints an inaccurate picture of salt consumption.

That Kawasaki formula incorporates variables like age, weight and sex which themselves are independent predictors of cardiovascular illness, further muddying the results, said the paper.

A 2019 report by the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine came to a similar conclusion, saying the studies’ methods for measuring sodium intake “introduce important biases” that could affect the results.

“It’s tough and it’s tedious so people try to cut a lot of corners,” says Campbell about 24-hour sampling. With a single spot sample “studies are much easier to do, much less complex — and give you the wrong answers.”

Yusuf responds that conducting multiple 24-hour urine testing on a study population of 100,000 or more would be prohibitively expensive, and that the formula, while not perfect, has been shown to be reasonably accurate.

Meanwhile, some studies using the 24-hour method have had similar results, as have several others that employed spot-sampling, noted Mente.

Campbell also questions why the research was given such high-profile treatment. Big name medical journals appear too eager to publish such studies and overlook their alleged flaws, he says, perhaps because the controversial findings create a “man-bites-dog” sort of appeal that draws more readers.

Mente said their sodium studies have been subjected to intense peer review, which at the most prominent journals typically means vetting by half a dozen scientist-reviewers and two statisticians.

Then there is the question of conflict of interest, raised in both the letter to Duclos requesting a federal inquiry and the one to the Canada Council asking it to take back the award it gave Yusuf.

There’s some limited evidence of actual food industry funding in association with the McMaster group. A 2014 conference on nutrition and cardiovascular disease they ran received money from the Campbell Soup Company, ConAgra Foods Inc, Kraft Foods Group and PepsiCo Inc., its agenda indicated.

The PURE study lists about 70 funders, including several major public sector agencies, health charities and drug companies. And it says Brazil’s Unilever Health Institute and the South African Sugar Association gave money to branches of the project in those two countries.

But could there be another, more indirect conflict of interest in their research?

Juliet Guichon, a lawyer and University of Calgary professor of medicine who’s working with Campbell, points to the tens of millions of dollars in funding the McMaster group has received from pharmaceutical companies that produce blood pressure medication.

Yusuf and his colleagues have “consistently failed to acknowledge” money from such sources, said the letter asking that his Killam award be revoked, though at least some of that information is contained in journal papers and other material they’ve produced.


Mente dismisses the notion that funding from makers of blood pressure drugs could bias them against reducing salt consumption — a non-pharmaceutical approach to preventing hypertension and its consequences.

“That is completely far-fetched,” he said. “It’s ridiculous. I won’t even dignify that one.”

Campbell, meanwhile, contends that the sodium debate is not a clash between evenly matched scientific camps — it is “a relatively small group of dissenting scientists (versus) mainstream science.”

AS USUAL WITH RIGHT WINGERS AND LOBBYISTS

Yet those “dissenters” are providing ammunition to food companies loathe to reduce their products’ addictive salt content, he says. The industry is using the work to lobby countries against taking action to cut consumption, said the University of Calgary professor, undermining preventive health care that could save lives and curb spending.


But Yusuf says the science is in flux and their research has helped alter the sodium-hypertension paradigm. The critics are just unwilling to consider that things have changed, he said.

“(Campbell’s) enthusiasm for this as a crusader, you have to admire it,” says Dr. Martin O’Donnell, a professor of medicine at the National University of Ireland Galway and a regular collaborator with the McMaster group. “But at the same time, all scientific debate has to be based on respect, it has to be based on openness. It has to be based on entertaining different viewpoints.”
SORRY JOHN BUT IT IS

Jon Stewart Is ‘Frustrated’ Over Americans’ Absent Public Support For Veterans: ‘This Country Can’t Be This Broken’

Melissa Romualdi - Yesterday 7:38 p.m.
ET Canada
© Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Jon Stewart is standing up for former military personnel by calling out their lack of public support.

During AMVETS’ Rolling to Remember Rally in Washington, D.C., Stewart, an advocate for veterans’ and first responders’ rights, asked “Where are the American people?"
The Memorial Day weekend rally raises awareness for HR 3967, the Honouring our PACT Act of 2021, during the annual three-day motorcycle demonstration ride, shedding light on veterans’ issues like high suicide rates among former service people and those missing.

The PACT Act, on which Stewart was ordering congressional action, particularly aims to address “health care, presumption of service-connection, research, resources, and other matters related to veterans who were exposed to toxic substances during military service,” like burn pits.

Stewart was appalled by the small crowd and seemed to have an issue with the attendees present, which only included those with a personal connection to veterans’ rights.

Related video: Jon Stewart delivers powerful address on healthcare protections for veterans


“The people sitting behind me — it’s hard not to be here today and not get frustrated again because as I look out in the crowd, I see the same thing I always see: veterans and their families and caregivers. But where [are] the American people?” he asked during his speech.

The former host of “The Daily Show” criticized the surface-level and performative support for veterans which he said will surely appear on social media feeds.




“This is Memorial Day weekend. Man, you’re going to read the tweets this weekend. You’re going to look at the Facebook pages and you’re going to think to yourself, ‘Oh, does America love me. Boy, they love us.’ You’re going to go to Applebee’s. They’re going to give you them baby back ribs. Probably 20% off, not even 10%, because of how much they support you," Stewart said.

The comedian added that real action among nonveterans is often missing, despite the online support.



“And yet we come out here today looking for the support of the American people, and what do we have behind me? It’s veterans organizations. It’s veterans. It’s their families. This country can’t be this broken. If we can’t do the simple sh**, we have nothing,” he concluded.

In 2019, Stewart was awarded New York City’s highest civic honour, the Bronze Medallion, for his "tireless advocacy, inspiration, and leadership,” which gave rise to the passing of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund Act.




DISARM, DEFUND, DISBAND

‘Deployed out of frustration’: Charges stayed after judge rules Edmonton police broke own Taser policy
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“The state conduct here, as described, risks undermining the integrity of the judicial process.”

Matthew Black - EDMONTON JOURNAL - Yesterday 

© Provided by Edmonton Journal
A police officer's holstered Taser X26 stun gun.


Charges against a man have been stayed after a judge ruled an Edmonton city police officer broke policy and used excessive force when he deployed a stun gun.

Cory Badger of Edmonton was charged with being unlawfully in a dwelling house and obstructing a peace officer after a June 11, 2021, incident at a house near Whyte Avenue and 110 Street.

Police were called before 7:30 a.m. that morning when the woman renting the house found a man on her back deck and told police he was refusing to leave.

Two officers arrived, and a foot chase ensued that ended when the unarmed man was zapped with a Taser multiple times before his arrest.

Alberta Provincial Court Judge Olugbenga Shoyele ordered the charges be stayed and ruled the officer broke city police policy by using the Taser five times against the fleeing Badger, calling it “unnecessary and unreasonable.”

“The constable’s use of the Taser, in the circumstances here, where there was no clear or real risk to officer safety, was a blatant contravention of the EPS (Edmonton Police Service) Procedure,” he wrote in the May 6 ruling.

“It appears to me that the Taser was deployed out of frustration.”

‘Wasn’t sure what it was’

Two officers responded to the home after Badger was found sitting on the back deck, where he told the complainant his “feet hurt.”

The chase began when officers arrived to the call and Badger fled.

Const. Carson, one of the two officers, testified that Badger appeared to be reaching for something as he was being pursued.

“(He) turned and started reaching down to his waist or rotating by his waist and holding some sort of object. I wasn’t sure what it was.”

The object was later determined by a plastic sports drink bottle.

Carson eventually closed to within four metres of Badger and warned him that he would use his Taser as Badger began to climb a nearby fence.

When Badger continued to climb, Carson deployed the Taser, eventually cycling the device five times and sending Badger to the ground from his position near the top of the fence.

‘Could result in death’


Crown prosecutors noted the Criminal Code grants police the authority to use “an allowable degree of force” and that EMS personnel found no significant injuries to Badger after his arrest.

But Badger’s lawyer argued that he could not have been a threat to Carson as he was climbing the fence with his back turned to the officer at the time he was hit with the stun gun.

He also argued the use of force was disproportionate and violated EPS policy, given Badger was not accused of any violent conduct.

Shoyele sided with Badger and challenged Carson’s assertion that he was at risk.

“How is it feasible for someone to simultaneously rotate as if to pull a firearm and climb a fence?”

Shoyele also cited the five times the Taser was used and how it struck a fleeing Badger’s rear torso and head, noting both actions are against EPS policy.

“The EPS Procedure unequivocally discourages multiple deployments … particularly when a suspect is fleeing from an officer, given the possibility that multiple activations … could result in death,” he wrote.

The stay means Badger is found neither guilty or not guilty.

Shoyele wrote the stay was necessary to preserve confidence in the justice system.

“The state conduct here, as described, risks undermining the integrity of the judicial process.”

mblack@postmedia.com
@ByMatthewBlack

LGBTQ advocates fear monkeypox stigma could 'spread like a virus'

Friday
The Canadian Press

Advocates warn that stigma could pose a public health threat as a cluster of monkeypox cases stokes concern in the queer community.

Health authorities are investigating more than two dozen confirmed monkeypox cases in Canada as part of an unprecedented outbreak of the rare disease that seldom spreads outside Africa.

Twenty-five infections have been confirmed in Quebec and one in Ontario, the Public Health Agency of Canada said Thursday, predicting the tally will rise in coming days.

While everyone is susceptible to the virus, clusters of cases have been reported among men who have sex with men, officials say.

For some LGBTQ advocates, this raises the spectre of sexual stigmatization that saw gay and bisexual men scapegoated for the spread of HIV-AIDS in the 1980s. Others say the early detection of the monkeypox cases by sexual health clinics shows how the queer community has mobilized to dismantle shame and promote safe practices.


Canada's deputy chief public health officer said he's mindful of the potential for stigma and discrimination, reiterating that the virus's spread isn't limited to any specific group or sexual orientation.

The disease can be contracted through close contact with a sick person, including but not limited to sexual activity, Dr. Howard Njoo told a news conference Thursday. Scientists are still working to determine what's driving cross-border transmission of the virus.

But as early signs suggest the virus is currently circulating in certain communities, authorities are working with partners on the ground to raise awareness among those at elevated risk of exposure, Njoo said.

Quebec officials said both transparency and sensitivity are needed to contain the outbreak and provide care to those infected.

"Stigmatization is really a big challenge in controlling this disease, so we’re trying to fight it," Montreal public health official Dr. Geneviève Bergeron told reporters Thursday. "It's important to understand that our enemy is the virus, it's not the people who are affected."

Aaron Purdie, executive director of the Health Initiative for Men in B.C., said he worries that the spread of stigma could present a greater threat than the disease itself, citing the lasting legacy of the panic and prejudice around HIV-AIDS in the early years of the epidemic.

"Stigma spreads like a virus," Purdie said. "Yes, it's treatable. Yes, it's containable. But it spreads nonetheless."

Beyond its corrosive societal harms, stigma can deter people from accessing testing and treatment, as they fear how a diagnosis could jeopardize their social standing, employment and safety, Purdie said.

These concerns are particularly potent among LGBTQ people given their long history of discrimination by the health-care system, said Purdie. That's why it's vital that public health agencies assist queer activists, educators and clinicians in leading the monkeypox response.

"We all hold trauma from our histories, and the reality is when something like monkeypox comes in, it scares people," he said.

"We need to decrease the stigma. Because if we don't, people aren't able to fully express their identities, and ... (that has the) downstream effect of making the community sicker."

Dane Griffiths, director of the Gay Men's Sexual Health Alliance of Ontario, said stigma thrives in silence, so one of the most effective strategies to combat it is to provide timely and accurate information without "shame or blame."

The alliance is working to do just that by sharing the latest developments about the virus, encouraging people to pay attention to the risks and take steps to protect themselves.

Griffiths said obscuring the risk the virus poses to the queer community could prompt people to drop their guard.

"I wouldn't want that to be an opportunity for the community to tune this out," said Griffiths.

Instead, the queer community should be commended for helping authorities track the virus's spread by getting tested at sexual health clinics in such high numbers, which could be a factor in why so many cases have been identified in men who have sex with men, Griffiths said.

"There are gay and bisexual men who have been showing up around the world at clinics and doctor's offices and are being seen and therefore counted," said Griffiths. "That's a good thing, and it's actually to be encouraged within our community."

More than two years into the pandemic, University of Toronto bioethicist Kerry Bowman said he hopes people have realized infectious disease doesn't discriminate on the basis of identity, so we don't see a resurgence of the stigma and bigotry that pervaded our initial responses to both COVID-19 and HIV-AIDS.

"This is kind of a litmus test to see if we've moved on as a society, if we're capable of looking at illness without ... the cruelty of laying stigma on people," said Bowman.

— with files from Jacob Serebrin in Montreal

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 27, 2022.

Adina Bresge, The Canadian Press

 



Report From China Says Nio Is Hiring For Manufacturing Positions In The US
Andrei Nedelea - Yesterday
 InsideEVs


NIO ES6 production

If this report is true, then it would confirm other rumors that Nio was looking to set up manufacturing in America.

Rumors have been floating around for months that Nio is looking to set up a manufacturing location in the United States, but today is not the day we get official confirmation. We instead came across some information that indirectly confirms it, this time straight from China, claiming that Nio is already hiring people for manufacturing-related jobs in the US, even though it has not officially announced building the facility.

According to Yicai, Nio (known in China by its company name, Wei Lai) is not only hiring people for manufacturing-related jobs, but is also looking to build a factory in the United States. We don’t yet know if it will purchase an already existing plant and repurpose it or build one from scratch in a new location.

They are also looking for an experienced designer with 10 years or more of blueprint planning and design experience for for an established automaker. It is in this particular job description that it is directly stated that the person to be appointed for this position would be

Responsible for above two experience of general drawing projects, including at least one US factory project.

The others are infrastructure experts, logistics managers and park planning experts, exactly the kind of professionals they would need to set up a factory. Nio already has a research and development center in the United States, in San Jose, California, where its American headquarters are also located.

And the way the job ad is phrased, it makes it perfectly clear that Nio may not stop at just having one factory in the US if things go according to plan.

Nio is also looking to open a new R&D center in Singapore, which will focus on the development of self-driving technology and artificial intelligence (AI). Singapore was apparently chosen because it would enable Nio to link its facility up with local science and research institutions; the country’s financial sector is also very well connected and this too would be useful for the automaker.

The company also has a design office open in Munich, right in the heart of the German automotive industry, in Bavaria. Nio’s expansion strategy is seen as aggressive by industry analysts who point to the fact that it now wants to expand into Europe, Southeast Asia and North America; last year it built around 200,000 vehicles, most of which were sold in China.