Thursday, July 07, 2022

KALI IS A FAVORITE OF THELEMITES
Goddess Kaali smoking cigarette on film poster sparks massive uproar on Internet, complaint filed

Leena Manimekalai said that the documentary revolves around the events that take place one evening, when Goddess Kali appears and strolls on the streets of Toronto.
















THE REAL REASON FOR THE PROTEST IS THE 
LGBTQ FLAG NOT SMOKING

 The poster depicts a woman dressed in the costume of Goddess Kaali while waving an LGBTQ+ flag. She is seen smoking a cigarette in the photo.

New Delhi
Updated on: July 05, 2022

Goddess Kaali, Leena Manimekalai

A controversial poster showing goddess Kaali smoking a cigarette has sparked off a massive uproar on the Internet. Netizens have been calling out the makers and accusing them of hurting religious sentiments. Filmmaker Ashoke Pandit was also one of them. He slammed the poster drawing parallel between it and Nupur Sharma's statement. He also called for the arrest of the film's director Leena Manimekalai.

Not just him, but there were many who alleged that the Hindu deity was being disrespected and demanded strict action against the filmmaker. Many also raised points on freedom of expression and noted that they want the Indian judiciary system to intervene and take strict action against the film.

Police complaint filed against Director Leena Manimekalai

A Delhi-based lawyer on Monday filed a police complaint against Director Leena Manimekalai over a controversial poster of her new documentary. The said controversial poster was shared by Manimekalai on social media on July 2. In the poster, Goddess Kaali has been shown smoking a cigarette.

It has sparked off a massive uproar on social media with demands to arrest the director trending on Twitter. "The Director has hurt my religious sentiments by showing Goddess Kali smoking which is highly objectionable and not acceptable in any manner," Jindal told IANS.

Demanding an immediate registration of FIR against the independent director, Jindal said that such a deplorable picture in context to the Hindu Goddess is extremely outrageous, atrocious and hurting the sentiments and belief of Hindu community.

"This deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of Hindu Community through highly objectionable video and photo from her twitter account by the accused which is well circulated in social media and all public platforms is an offence under section 295A ,298, 505, 67 I.T Act and 34 IPC and therefore penal action should be taken against the accused," the complaint filed with the Cyber Cell of Delhi Police read.

The lawyer further said that the objectionable video clip and photo must be banned and removed from the internet on immediate basis considering the defamatory impact and enrage it would cause to Hindus as it has disparaged the religious beliefs of a particular community.
About Leena Manimekalai's documentary 'Kaali'

According to a Tamil news portal, Manimekalai said that the documentary revolves around the events that take place one evening, when Goddess Kali appears and strolls on the streets of Toronto.

--with IANS inputs

Netizens slam poster of goddess Kali smoking a cigarette







THIS IS RIDICULOUS SINCE KALI IS ABOUT TRANSGRESSION AND TABOO BREAKING, SMOKING A CIGARETTE IS HARDLY HER WORST TRANSGRESSION, AS WE CAN SEE IN THESE PICTURES OF HER






















TMC's Mahua Moitra Claims Kali Is Meat-eating, Alcohol-accepting Goddess To Her

Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra while talking about a controversial film poster has said that it is up to individuals how they view their gods.


Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra File Photo

UPDATED: 05 JUL 2022 8:39 PM

Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra on Tuesday stirred a controversy by saying that she has every right as an individual to imagine Goddess Kali as a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess, as every person has the right to worship God and goddess in his or her own way.

While the BJP went hammer and tongs against Moitra and wondered if it was the official stand of West Bengal’s ruling party to insult Hindu gods and goddesses, the TMC distanced itself from the comment and condemned it.

While taking part in India Today Conclave East held in Kolkata, the Krishnanagar MP said it is up to individuals how they view their gods.

“If you go to Bhutan or Sikkim, for example, when they do puja, they give whisky to their god. Now, if you go to Uttar Pradesh and say that you give whisky to your god as prasad, they will say that is blasphemous,” she said. Moitra said that people have the right to imagine their gods or goddess in the way they want.

“For me, Goddess Kali is a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess. And if you go to Tarapith (a major Shakti peeth in West Bengal's Birbhum district), you will see sadhus smoking. That is the version of Kali people worship (there). I, within Hinduism, being a Kali worshipper, have the right to imagine Kali in that way; that is my freedom,” she said.

Moitra said this when asked about a film that had courted controversy after it had put up posters showing Goddess Kali smoking. Moitra said, “I have the freedom to do it (envision a meat-eating goddess) as much as you have the freedom to worship your god as vegetarian and white-clothed.” After her comments went viral, Moitra issued a clarification attacking the Sangh Parivar.

“To all you sanghis - lying will NOT make you better Hindus. I NEVER backed any film or poster or mentioned the word smoking. Suggest you visit my Maa Kali in Tarapith to see what food & drink is offered as bhog. Joy Ma Tara,” she tweeted. The BJP wondered whether insulting Hindu gods and goddess is the official stand of the TMC.

“TMC supremo and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee should clarify it. This is not the first time that such instances have been reported. Earlier too TMC leaders have done the same. We think this is the official stand of the ruling TMC to hurt the sentiment of Hindus to get votes,” BJP state vice-president Rathindra Bose said. The ruling TMC, however, distanced itself from the comments and condemned the remarks by Moitra.

“The comments made by @MahuaMoitra at the #IndiaTodayConclaveEast2022 and her views expressed on Goddess Kali have been made in her personal capacity and are NOT ENDORSED BY THE PARTY in ANY MANNER OR FORM. All India Trinamool Congress strongly condemns such comments,” the party said in a Twitter post.

‘Kali’ Controversy: Shashi Tharoor Says Taken Aback By ‘Attack’ On Mahua Moitra

‘Kali’ Controversy: TMC MP Moitra has stirred a controversy with her remarks that she has every right as ‘an individual to imagine Goddess Kali as a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess’.

TMC MP Mohua Moitra.(File photo) LSTV/PTI Photo

UPDATED: 06 JUL 2022 2:55 PM

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Wednesday said he is "taken aback by the attack" on Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra for her comments on Goddess Kali, and urged people to "lighten up and leave religion" to individuals to practice privately.

Moitra on Tuesday stirred a controversy with her remarks that she has every right as "an individual to imagine Goddess Kali as a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess", as every person has the right to worship god and goddess in his or her own way

While the BJP severely criticised Moitra and asked if it was the official stand of West Bengal's ruling party to insult Hindu gods and goddesses, the TMC distanced itself from the comment and condemned it.

Reacting to the row, Tharoor said on Twitter, "I am no stranger to malicious manufactured controversy, but am still taken aback by the attack on @MahuaMoitra for saying what every Hindu knows, that our forms of worship vary widely across the country. What devotees offer as bhog (offering) says more about them than about the goddess".

"We have reached a stage where no one can say anything publicly about any aspect of religion without someone claiming to be offended. It’s obvious that
@MahuaMoitra wasn’t trying to offend anyone. I urge every1 to lighten up & leave religion to individuals to practice privately," he said.

While taking part in India Today Conclave East held in Kolkata, Moitra had said it is up to individuals how they view their gods.

"If you go to Bhutan or Sikkim, for example, when they do puja, they give whisky to their god. Now, if you go to Uttar Pradesh and say that you give whisky to your god as prasad, they will say that is blasphemous,” she had said.

(With PTI inputs)

The 'Kaali' Controversy, Freedom Of Expression And Remarks By Mahua Moitra: All You Need To Know

Answering a question on the row over a poster depicting an actor dressed up as the Goddess Kaali smoking a cigarette, TMC leader Mahua Moitra said that she personally has no problem with the poster.

TMC MP Mahua Moitra.

UPDATED: 07 JUL 2022 

Following the controversy over the 'Kaali' row, Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP Mahua Moitra's recent remarks on Goddess Kaali have stirred another controversy. Answering a question on the row over a poster depicting an actor dressed up as the Goddess smoking a cigarette, Moitra said that she personally has no problem with the poster depicting Kali the way the director wanted to.

Speaking at a media conclave, she said, "When you go to Sikkim, you will see that they offer whiskey to Goddess Kaali. But if you go to Uttar Pradesh, and if you tell them that you offer whiskey to the goddess as ‘prasad’, they will call it blasphemy."

She further said, "Kaali to me is a meat-eating, alcohol-accepting Goddess."

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Don't Approve Hurting Religious Sentiments: Congress On 'Kaali' Poster


However, Moitra's fierce statement was quick enough to garner angry comments and responses from leaders and people over hurting religious sentiments. Police in BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh on Wednesday registered a case against Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra over her remark about Goddess Kaali. The First Information Report (FIR) was registered by the crime branch in state capital Bhopal under section 295A of the Indian Penal Code (outraging religious feelings).

"Moitra's statement has hurt religious feelings of Hindus. We will not tolerate disrespect to any Hindu Gods and Goddesses at any cost," said Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan in a statement.


Moitra on Tuesday stirred a controversy with her remarks that she has every right as "an individual to imagine Goddess Kaali as a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess", as every person has the right to worship god and goddess in his or her own way.

While the BJP severely criticised her, her party, TMC, distanced itself from the comment and condemned it.

TMC's official Twitter account also issued a statement on social media condemning her remarks. "The comments made by @MahuaMoitra at the #IndiaTodayConclaveEast2022 and her views expressed on Goddess Kali have been made in her personal capacity and are NOT ENDORSED BY THE PARTY in ANY MANNER OR FORM. All India Trinamool Congress strongly condemns such comments," the tweet put out by the official handle of TMC read.
Rajya Sabha MP Priyanka Chaturvedi said, "Freedom of expression cannot be reserved for Hindu Gods and Goddesses while for the rest one must tip toe around religious sensibilities. I am offended with the movie poster on Ma Kali, respect has to be equal for all&FoE should never become a tool to offend- deliberately."
Reacting to the statement, MEA official Varun Puri said, "#MahuaMoitra comments on Maa Kali hurt religious sentiments of Hindus. Her upbringing is such that these offending remarks are expected from her mouth. I demand strict actions against her with immediate effect."
In her defence, Moitra said, "To all you sanghis- lying will NOT make you better hindus. I NEVER backed any film or poster or mentioned the word smoking. Suggest you visit my Maa Kali in Tarapith to see what food & drink is offered as bhog. Joy Ma Tara."

According to media reports, Moitra has unfollowed the official Twitter handle of the TMC after her party distanced itself from her comments on Goddess Kaali.
Further, Moitra said she, a “worshipper of the deity”, was not afraid of saffron camp “goons”. She also said that “truth doesn't need back up forces”.

"Jai Ma Kali! The goddess Bengalis worship is fearless & non-appeasing." she tweeted. "Bring it on BJP! Am a Kali worshipper. I am not afraid of anything. Not your ignoramuses. Not your goons. Not your police. And most certainly not your trolls. Truth doesn't need back up forces," Moitra added.
Opposition Hits Out

Shortly after, the BJP went at the remark hammer and tongs and wondered if the ruling party of West Bengal had adopted a policy of "insulting Hindu gods and goddesses".

"According to the norms of the Sanatan Hindu dharma, Goddess Kali is never worshipped as a goddess who consumes alcohol and meat. Hindus had been revering Goddess Kali for ages as a symbol of power against evil. Her comments have hurt religious sentiments. We demand her arrest in the light of the statement against Goddess Kali," BJP state president Sukanta Majumdar said.


Leader of Opposition in the Assembly Suvendu Adhikari said hundreds of police complaints had been lodged against Moitra across the state.

"The TMC government and the state police have been very active in seeking police action against Nupur Sharma. But they have not taken any action against Mahua Moitra. There can't be a different set of rules for BJP and TMC leaders. We will wait for ten days and then move the court," the saffron camp MLA said.
Social media draws a parallel between Moitra and Nupur Sharma

Moitra stirred up a hornet’s nest just days after now-suspended BJP leader Nupur Sharma created a controversy with her remarks on Prophet Mohammad, which triggered protests across the nation.

Following Moitra's 'offensive' statement, Twitter soon compared Moitra's statement with Nupur Sharma's controversial remarks, which had incited violence across many states, demanding the arrest of Moitra.

One user said, " #MahuaMoitra said Goddess Kali is a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess. Freedom of speech is only for insulting Hindu Gods? Who gave them this freedom? What if we Hindu do the same as Muslims are doing against #NupurSharma."

What is the Kaali controversy?

The controversy erupted after filmmaker Leena Manimekalai shared the poster of the film on social media. The poster depicts a woman dressed in the costume of Goddess Kaali while waving an LGBTQ+ flag. She is seen smoking a cigarette in the photo.

The Toronto-based Aga Khan Museum that hosted the event, where the film poster was shown, landed in trouble. It has expressed deep regret for "inadvertently causing offence" to members of the Hindu and other faiths.

The Indian High Commission in Canada has urged the organizers to withdraw all provocative material.

In a statement, the High Commission said that they have received complaints from leaders of the Hindu community in Canada about the "disrespectful depiction of Hindu Gods on the poster of a film showcased as part of the 'Under the Tent' project at the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto."

"Our Consulate General in Toronto has conveyed these concerns to the organizers of the event," read the statement.

"Toronto Metropolitan University's project presentation was hosted at the Aga Khan Museum in the context of the Museum's mission to foster intercultural understanding and dialogue through the arts. Respect for diverse religious expressions and faith communities forms an integral part of that mission," the statement said.

The poster was shared by Manimekalai on social media on July 2.

FIR against filmmaker


An FIR has been lodged against filmmaker Leena Manimekalai in Lucknow over a poster of her documentary 'Kaali' allegedly depicting the goddess in a disrespectful manner. Earlier, an FIR against her was lodged in Delhi as well.

The FIR was registered at the Hazratganj police station against Manimekalai, a filmmaker based in Canada's Toronto, producer of 'Kaali' Asha Associates and editor Shravan Onachan on Monday night, police said.

The FIR was lodged under sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 153B (imputations, assertions prejudicial to national integration) and 295 (injuring or defiling place of worship with intent to insult the religion of any class) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), and sections 66 and 67 of the Information Technology Act.

Under attack for the poster, Manimekalai on Monday said she will continue to use her voice fearlessly till she is alive.
"I have nothing to lose. Till the time I live, I wish to live with a voice that speaks what I believe without fear. If the price for that is my life, it can be given," she wrote in a tweet in Tamil in response to an article on the controversy.

The filmmaker also urged people to watch the documentary to understand the context behind the poster.

The President of a right-wing organisation was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly issuing a death threat and abusing through video the maker of the film 'Kaali'.

(With inputs from PTI)

Mahua Moitra's Comment On Kali: 
Has TMC Sacrificed Its Bengali Identity Before National Aspirations?

Madyapana-pramattikang or intoxicated with consumption of alcohol is how goddess Kali has been visualised in Svatantra-tantra.


Beautifully decorated clay made idols of Hindu Goddess Kali in Kalighat, Kolkata
 Getty Images

UPDATED: 07 JUL 2022 

The poster of filmmaker Leena Manimekalai’s Kaali, described as a performance documentary, showed a person dressed as goddess Kali smoking a cigarette. As some people found the poster to be offensive to their religious sentiments, Trinamool Congress (TMC) Lok Sabha MP was asked during an interview at a TV channel for her comments on the controversy. Moitra said she visualised goddess Kali as a deity who accepted alcohol and meat and that there existed the practise of offering the goddess meat and alcohol.

Hell broke loose on the MP following her comment, as not only did some people find her comments to have hurt their sentiments but also her own party was quick to distance itself from her comment and condemned her remarks in a rather surprising move.

People whose sentiments were hurt by seeing a person dressed as Kali smoking a cigarette may not be aware that during the height of the swadeshi movement in Kolkata and other parts of West Bengal, in the first decade of the twentieth century, the ‘bishuddho swadeshi’ Kali brand cigarette had gained significant popularity.

 The Kolkata-based East India Cigarette Manufacturing Company had appealed to ‘Hindu brothers’ in advertisements to smoke Kali cigarettes if they wanted to improve the conditions of the native people. No sentiment was reported to have been hurt in Kolkata, the heartland of Kali worshippers. Etymologists have often suggested that the name Kolkata came from Kalikshetra, or the land of Kali.

While Goddess Kali may not have been seen in any of her avatars to be smoking cigarettes, it’s a different case altogether when it comes to meat and alcohol.


Madyapanapramattikang or intoxicated with consumption of alcohol is how goddess Kali has been visualised in Svatantra-tantra, according to sixteenth-century Tantra practitioner and scholar Krishnananda Agambagish’s book, Brihat Tantrasar. The same book says the Shmashan Kali has been visualised as bamahastena madyapurna samangsakang, or a pot full of meat and wine in her left hand.

 
Goddess Kali idol decorated at Puja pandal, Kali puja also known as Shyama Puja
 | Photo: Getty Images

In Tarapith, one of West Bengal’s major Shakti peeth located in Birbhum district, the bhog offered to goddess Kali includes fried shol fish, goat meat and karonbari or alcohol. Tara is worshipped as Shyama on the day of Kali puja. Whiskey bottles are offered to the goddess. Devotees are given one drop of alcohol each after it has been offered to the goddess. These are all common knowledge.

Moitra herself had cited the case of Tarapith but such practice of having alcohol as an offering to goddess Kali is no exception in West Bengal. At the famed Shmashan Kali temple at Andharia in the Beliabera area in Jhargram district attracts devotees from Jharkhand and Odisha, the bhog is prepared with goat meat, wax gourd and alcohol. At Siddheshwari Kali puja at Dainhat in East Bardhaman district, alcohol is used in place of Gangajaal and five types of fish are offered as bhog. At Nalateshwari Kali puja in Nalhati of Birbhum district, the bhog includes rice, meat, spinach and alcohol.


Not just in West Bengal, temples established by Bengalis outside the state boundary have similar examples. At the century-old temple of Chhinnamasta, an avatar of Kali, at Rajrappa in Ramgarh district of Jharkhand founded by a Ghosal family, meat and alcohol are mandatory for the puja.

Keeping the temples aside, more than 20,000 community Kali pujas take place in West Bengal and in a majority of such community pujas in makeshift pandals alcohol is used during the puja. The most common practice is to offer country liquor, called Deshi or Bangla, but rum and whiskey are also offered.

Temples of Shmashan Kali, which is worshipped in Hindu crematoriums, and Dakat Kali, another form of Kali puja which was started by dacoits decades ago, are many in West Bengal and alcohol and meat are an integral part of these pujas.


It is, though, not mandatory that alcohol must be offered to the goddess. At Dakshineswar Kali temple where the puja follows Ramakrishna Paramahamsa’s traditions, no meat is offered and coconut water is used instead of alcohol. But they offer five types of fish dishes. Alcohol is not part of the puja at Kolkata’s Kalighat either but goat meat and several types of fish are offered as bhog.

A vegetarian bhog to goddess Kali, as is offered at Adyapith in Kolkata, is also part of the practice. But examples of the use of alcohol and meat will be endless.

All these make the TMC’s condemnation of Moitra’s comments surprising from a party that is born and based in West Bengal, all the more so because the party chief herself is an avowed devotee of Kali and the puja is also organised at her residence. Besides, a majority of TMC leaders in Kolkata and in the districts are involved in the organising of community Kali pujas.

It is difficult to imagine she and her party’s leaders are unaware of the diverse practices of Kali puja observed in the state, especially when it is one of the state’s biggest religious events.

On Tuesday, soon after leaders and supporters of the BJP started targeting Moitra and her party for her comments on Kali, on social media and in statements to the media, stating that it hurt their religious sentiments, the TMC jumped on to condemn her statement.

What did the party think while responding to the controversy? Did it consider whose sentiments were getting hurt? Which side should the party take when one group of Hindus are offended by the practice of another group of Hindus? This is what the party seemingly failed to decide.

The TMC had earlier pegged itself as a force defending Bengal’s cultural and religious practices from northern and western Indian practices of Hinduism. In April 2017, when Ram Navami and Annapurna Puja coincided, and the organisations belonging to the BJP-Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) camp took out massive Ram Navami processions across the state in an unprecedented scale, the chief minister accused the BJP of imposing alien culture on Bengal and disrespecting Annapurna, who is Bengal’s own.

That Bengali cultural regionalism dominated the TMC’s political moves to a large extent till the 2021 assembly elections when they repeatedly branded the BJP as outsider and Borgi (eighteenth-century Maratha invaders to Bengal). They, however, were often in doubt and did not want to miss out on the devotees of Ram and Hanuman as well and therefore started organising Ram Navami and Hanuman Jayanti themselves, even though they were never major religious events in the state.

However, the party’s national aspirations, as reflected since the 2021 Assembly election victory in its expansion drive outside West Bengal, eying the 2024 Lok Sabha election, seem to have weakened the party’s Bengali regionalist plank so much that they are now even scared to defend their home state’s popular religious practices.
THEY JOIN THE ANTI KURD/PKK ALLIANCE
Canada 1st country to ratify Sweden and Finland's NATO membership bids

Canada has full confidence in Finland and Sweden's ability to integrate quickly and effectively into NATO, PM Trudeau says

Seyit Aydogan |06.07.2022

TORONTO

Canada has become the first country to ratify Sweden and Finland's NATO membership bids, the country's prime minister announced, as member states signed accession protocols for the Nordic countries on Tuesday.

"Canada has full confidence in Finland and Sweden's ability to integrate quickly and effectively into NATO and contribute to the Alliance’s collective defence," Justin Trudeau said in a statement.

"Their membership will make NATO stronger and we call on all NATO members to move swiftly to complete their ratification processes to limit opportunities for interference by adversaries," he added.

Representatives from NATO's 30 member states signed accession protocols for Finland and Sweden, after formally inviting them to the military alliance at the historic summit in Madrid last week.

The accession protocols need to be ratified by the parliaments of all members. Canada’s House of Commons debated and voted on a motion signaling their support on June 1 and June 2, respectively, ahead of closing for the summer break.


In May, the parliament's Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security had adopted a motion expressing “strong support” for the Scandinavian countries’ NATO membership, and called on all members to approve their applications “as quickly as possible.”

"Canada enthusiastically supports Finland and Sweden joining NATO. This morning, we were the first to formally ratify their accession to the Alliance. We are stronger together," Foreign Minister Melanie Jolie tweeted on Tuesday.

NATO countries sign the accession documents for Finland and Sweden to join the alliance

5 JULY 2022


NATO Ambassadors signed the Accession Protocols for Finland and Sweden at NATO Headquarters on Tuesday (5 July 2022), in the presence of Finnish Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto and Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said: “This is truly an historic moment. For Finland, for Sweden, for NATO, and for our shared security.”

Last week at the Madrid Summit, Allied leaders agreed to invite Finland and Sweden to join NATO following the agreement of a trilateral memorandum between Türkiye, Finland, and Sweden. Today, the Accession Protocols were signed, marking the start of the ratification process.

The Secretary General said that NATO’s door remains open to European democracies who are ready and willing to contribute to our shared security: “


With 32 nations around the table, we will be even stronger and our people will be even safer, as we face the biggest security crisis in decades.”
related content on commonspace.eu: The decision of Sweden and Finland to apply for NATO membership is the right one and should be supported

The protocols now need to be approved by the countries of all thirty member states, and this procedure will take a while. But for many practical purposes Sweden and Finland are now members of the alliance, breaking with decades of neutrality as Europe continues to face Russian aggression against Ukraine.

photo: The signing of the Finland and Sweden accession protocols at NATO headquarters on 5 July 2022 (picture courtesy of the NATO press service)

FROM THE TURKISH VIEW
Sweden’s PM condemns MPs posing with PKK flag amid Turkey NATO row


Sweden’s PM Magdalena Andersson speaks during a press conference after her visit to the Gotland’s regiment P18 of the Swedish Armed Forces, in Visby, Sweden, July 3, 2022.
 (Henrik Montgomery/TT News Agency/via Reuters)

AFP
Published: 06 July ,2022: 10:00 PM GSTUpdated: 06 July ,2022: 10:21 PM GST

Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson on Wednesday condemned a group of left-wing MPs who posed with flags from Kurdish militants as the country’s NATO membership bid faces Turkish pressure over such groups.

NATO on Tuesday kicked off the accession procedures for Sweden and Finland after a deal was struck with Turkey, which had blocked the Nordic nations from joining.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had accused them of being havens for Kurdish militants, specifically highlighting the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) he has sought to crush, and for promoting “terrorism.”

On Tuesday, images spread on social media showing parliamentarians from the Left Party, which opposed Sweden’s decision to apply for NATO membership, posing with flags from the PKK, as well as militant group YPG and the all-female YPJ, considered terrorist groups by Turkey.


The images were taken during an annual political gathering on the island of Gotland.

“The PKK is a designated terror organization, not just in Sweden, but in the EU and posing with such flags is extremely inappropriate,” Andersson told news agency TT.

Left Party MP Lorena Delgado Varas, who was one of those involved in the political stunt, criticized what she called the hypocrisy of the other parties for supporting Kurdish groups while they were fighting the Islamic state group.


“Now they want to turn around, willing
 to cosy up with the dictator Erdogan. All to join NATO,” Delgado Varas wrote on Twitter

Sweden’s Left Party is not part of the government but is helping prop up Andersson’s Social Democrat cabinet.

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Sweden and Finland reversed decades of military non-alignment by applying for NATO membership in mid-May.

While Turkey approved formally inviting Sweden to join, the accession bid still needs to be ratified by all 30 NATO members.

Erdogan has warned that his country could still block Sweden and Finland if they fail to implement the deal with Ankara.

Turkey has also said it is seeking the extradition of 12 suspects from Finland and 21 from Sweden
.
BREXIT FUXIT UP
UK food exports to EU fell 19% in 15 months after Brexit, show figures

The £2.4bn fall driven by decline in exports of perishable goods due to red tape and costs


The fall was driven by a decline in exports of perishable goods, 
from British strawberries to cheese. 
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images


Lisa O'Carroll 
Brexit correspondent
THE GUARDIAN
Wed 6 Jul 2022 

The value of food exports to the EU dropped by £2.4bn in the first 15 months after Brexit, according to analysis of HMRC data.

However, overall exports, which were hit by the double whammy of Brexit red tape as well as decreased demand in hospitality due to the pandemic in 2021, recovered in the first three months of this year, the figures show.

Data tracking exports since 1 January 2021, when the Brexit transition year ended, show UK food exports dropped by 19% to £10.4bn in the 15 months to 31 March 2022.

This was down from £12.8bn in the previous 15 months, according to the review of the detailed commodity data by Hazlewoods chartered accountancy firm.
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The fall was driven by a decline in exports of perishable goods, from British strawberries to cheese.

Fruit and vegetable exports took the greatest hit, down 44% from £1.5bn in the 15 months before Brexit to £847m in the 15 months after.

Meat and fish exports fell 16%, from £3.5bn to £2.9bn, over the same period, while dairy exports also decreased 13% from £1.6bn to £1.4bn.

Tightening custom requirements and long port delays mean many UK food producers are no longer able to send perishable goods to the EU. The increase in red tape and costs means it can be very difficult to make a profit exporting fresh produce.

“For an industry where the UK can justifiably call itself a world leader, that is a real shame,” said Rebecca Copping, associate partner at Hazlewoods.

The figures chime with those of Eurostat, the statistical office of the EU.

Eurostat figures put overall imports to the EU from the UK falling from €169bn (£144bn) in 2020 to €146bn in 2021 – a drop of 13.6%.

The UK’s decision to opt for a hard Brexit with the departure from the single market means customs declarations and evidence of standards compliance is now required on all commodities entering the bloc.

HMRC official commentary on the first three months of data indicates that exporters are adapting their operations to the new barriers.

In the first three months of 2022, exports to the Republic of Ireland jumped by 67% while exports to France rose by 28.5% and the Netherlands 40%.




HMRC data for exports for the first three months of 2022. Photograph: HMRC


The increase in export to the Netherlands and Ireland could be linked to the energy crisis and the war in Ukraine, with a 50% month-on-month jump in March in exports of mineral fuels to those countries.
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HMRC said in its monthly commentary: “The increase in exports of mineral fuels on last month was led by the Netherlands and Ireland, up £327m (50%) and £23m (62%) respectively.

“The increase on March 2021 was also led by the Netherlands and Ireland, up £548m (to more than double th
Florida pediatrician is axed from state board after pushing for under-5s to receive COVID vaccine and accusing officials of 'obstructing' access to the shot

Dr. Lisa Gwynn, a pediatrician with University of Miami Health System who had advocated for vaccine access for poor young kids, was removed from board

State claims she publicly criticized Florida's decision to delay access to the COVID-19 vaccine for children under 5

Email from the office of Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis told her she would be removed from her position on the Florida Healthy Kids Board

State says Gwynn made 'some very political statements that do not reflect the CFO's point of view'

Email sent to her claimed she went 'so far as to say that the state is 'obstructing' access to vaccines

Gwynn had been critical of the state's refusal to pre-order COVID-19 shots for children from 6 months to 5 years old - the only state in the county to do that

Florida pediatricians and parents have criticized the decision

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has argued vaccinating young children is not 'appropriate'

442 children have died from the coronavirus since April 2020 out of more than 1 million deaths across the United States


By JAMES GORDON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED:3 July 2022

A Florida pediatrician has been removed from a state health board for pushing for under-5s to receive COVID vaccines - and accusing her colleagues of 'obstructing' access to the shots.

Dr. Lisa Gwynn, who works as a pediatrician in the University of Miami Health System, revealed she'd been ousted from her role on the Florida Healthy Kids Board June 29, and took to Twitter to share her outrage.

'On the same day that we began administering COVID-19 vaccine to infants and children under 5, I was removed from the Florida Healthy Kids Board for advocating for equitable access for the underserved and for pediatricians. Disappointing.'

Gwynn was told on Wednesday that she was being removed from her position on the Florida Healthy Kids Board of directors because of 'some very political statements that do not reflect the CFO's point of view.'

Controversy over vaccinating under 5s has roiled much of the US, with many parents who've themselves chosen to get the shot hesitant to get their children inoculated.

CDC figures showed that just 422 children aged under five have died of COVID in the US since the start of the pandemic.

The shots carry a very low risk of potentially-serious complications in young people, including inflammation of the heart.

That has seen many parents opt to avoid seeking vaccines for children who are unlikely to experience serious side effects, many of whom also likely have natural immunity from prior COVID infections.

But experts highlight the unknowns about long-term COVID infections in children, as well as potentially deadly inflammatory conditions caused by the disease in youngsters, when explaining why under-5s should be vaccinated.

Dr. Lisa Gwynn, a pediatrician with University of Miami Health System who had advocated for vaccine access for poor young kids, was removed from board




Dr. Lisa Gwynn tweeted about her removal from the children's health board. She had only been on the board since March. The appointment was supposed to last three years

Gywnn had held the board position, which was supposed to be for three years, since March.

The email went on to suggest that Dr. Gwynn had been claiming 'the state is 'obstructing' access to vaccines' but noted that the state's Chief Financial Officer of the state of Florida, Jimmy Patronis, a Republican, disagreed with her view.


'The CFO does not share your opinion and believes that the state has gone to great lengths to protect lives in the face of the coronavirus,' the email said, as seen by Florida Politics.

Gwynn said all of her decision are made with health in mind rather rather than anything political - although the words 'equity' and 'equitable' have become synonymous with hard-left policy making.

Gwynn used the woke buzzword - which pushes for equality of outcome instead of equality of opportunity - again in a Miami Herald interview, saying: 'Quite frankly, we're just trying to advocate for things, for equitable access to the vaccine.'





Gwynn had been critical of the state's refusal to pre-order COVID-19 shots for children from six months to five-years old - the only state in the county to do that. She is pictures receiving her shot

'I'm not a politician, I'm a pediatrician. And there's no other reason for me to do what I do other than to improve the health of children in our state.'

Florida is the only state in the country that has not ordered COVID-19 vaccines for children under 5, despite the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention endorsing the plan.

Parents are free to seek the shots out for their under-5s in the Sunshine State, and they won't be charged for them.
 


An email from the office of Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, pictured, told her she would be removed from her position on the Florida Healthy Kids Board

Some 442 children have died from the coronavirus since April 2020. The numbers make up a tiny proportion of the just over one million deaths from the disease.

By comparison, the group most affected are aged over 75, with more than half of U.S. deaths making up the set with 517,000 fatalities.

Those ages between 45 and 74 make up the next largest group of those succumbing to the disease with 445,000 deaths.

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, 2.7 million shots have been delivered to vaccine providers around the U.S., with up to ten million doses to be delivered as part of this first batch.

President Joe Biden, who has long been a proponent of expanding America's COVID-19 vaccine eligibility, remarked Tuesday that America was the only country in the world vaccinating children as young as six months.

It comes as Covid cases in the U.S. remain steady at around 100,000 per day, and deaths remain in the 300 per day area.


But many parents have mixed feelings about vaccinating their children.

Although some are seeking it out for their kids, others are holding back, concerned over whether there has been enough research on the vaccines and their impact on young children.



Florida is the only state in America that has not requested shots of the COVID-19 vaccines for children aged six months to five years old. It comes after the state recommended against healthy people 17 and younger getting jabbed in March. Pictured: Florida Gov Ron DeSantis speaks at an event in New York City in May

The most concerning, and most publicized, side-effects of the COVID-19 vaccines are the heart inflammation conditions myocarditis and pericarditis.

'I encourage parents and caregivers with questions to talk to their doctor, nurse, or local pharmacist to learn more about the benefits of vaccinations and the importance of protecting their children by getting them vaccinated,' CDC Director Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky said in June.

Florida is the only state in America that has not pre-ordered shots of COVID-19 vaccines for children in the newly approved age groups believing the risk outweighs the benefits.

The Florida Department of Health is leaving the ordering of vaccines up to individual doctors instead of placing a bulk order from the federal government.

Polling for the Kaiser Family Foundation found that only about one in five parents of children under age five (18 percent) are eager to get their child vaccinated right away, while a larger share (38 percent) say they plan to wait a while to see how the vaccine is working for others.

CDC director announces COVID vaccines approved for under fives



According to the CDC's own statistics, 442 children ages four and under have died in the US from Covid-19

About four in ten parents of children under five are more reluctant to get their child vaccinated, with 27 percent saying they will 'definitely not' get their child vaccinated and 11 percent saying they will only do so if they are required.


There was also limited demand for the shots last time the FDA made them eligible for a younger age group, children aged five to 11.


The Governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, has previously said the vaccinating of young children is not 'appropriate.'

'There is not going to be any state program that are going to be trying to get COVID jabs to infants and toddlers and newborns,' he said last month.



'Although the state surgeon general is affirmatively recommending against COVID vaccines for ages 0-5, neither he nor the governor, nor any state entity, has ever 'obstructed' healthcare providers from ordering the vaccines for this age group as soon as they received emergency use authorization from the federal government,' said Christina Pushaw, a spokesperson for DeSantis.

'The decision to relieve Dr. Gwynn of her duties was made by the CFO, who has full authority over this appointment. Our office did not need to give approval for this decision to be made, but the logic of the CFO's decision is clear: A board member making public, false accusations about state policies runs the risk of jeopardizing the constructive working relationship between the Florida Healthy Kids board and the state agencies they work closely with, including DOH and AHCA.'

 


ANTI CAPITALI$M MEMES



 

Artist creates stunning work in Italian field with an important environmental message about drought

https://youtube.com/shorts/4sIHq-xFCKM?feature=share


Dario Gambarin's artwork - Copyright Credit: AP Photo
By Euronews and AP • Updated: 06/07/2022 -




A farmer has turned to art to send a message about northern Italy's worst drought in 70 years.

Dario Gambarin created his artwork on dry wheat and corn fields in the Veneto countryside using a tractor, plough and a rotary harrow.

In one field, he carved out a huge drop of water enclosing a globe. On another, he wrote the word "water" in massive letters.

Italy is in the midst of an unusually early summer heatwave and northern regions have had barely any rainfall for around four months. The Po River is seven metres below average and suffering its worst drought since 1952.


https://libcom.org/article/murdering-dead-amadeo-bordiga-capitalism-and-other-disasters-antagonism

Jul 6, 2009 ... Murdering the dead: Amadeo Bordiga on capitalism and other disasters - Antagonism ... Antagonism's introduction to a collection of articles by ..



The Italian government on Monday declared a state of emergency for much of the rain-parched north, freeing up €36.5 million in funds for the heavily agricultural regions.

Emergency decrees were decided for five regions: Emilia Romagna, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Lombardy, Piedmont and Veneto, reflecting droughts in the Po River and eastern Alpine basins.

Some cities and towns in the north, including Verona, in Veneto, have put restrictions on water use.

"The images speak for themselves," declared Gambarin, in a statement released to the press.

Gambarin, born in Verona in 1958, has previously produced several land-art pieces, many focusing on environmental issues such as COP26 Glasgow, radioactivity, and environmental activist Greta Thunberg.

He has also used his tractor to depict political, cultural and historic figures including Dante, Nelson Mandela, Leonardo Da Vinci, Joe Biden and Pope Francis.



52 wildfires break out in the last 24 hours across Greece



Updated: 06/07/2022

An easing of winds overnight helped the Fire Service contain several blazes in different parts of Greece.

According to the Fire Service, 52 wildfires broke out on Monday, stoked by strong winds and high temperatures.

A wildfire burning uncontrollably on Monday evening across three fronts near the town of Amfissa, in the municipality of Delphi, central Greece, was partly brought under control on Tuesday, the Fire Service said.

Firefighters and volunteers battled with the flames through the night, taking advantage of the improved weather conditions.

Efforts were also being made to contain a fire front heading towards Itea, which was still burning areas near Galaxidi, while a second front was heading towards Delphi.

Fanned by strong breezes of up to Force 6, the fire burned its way through olive groves towards the convent of Profitis Ilias and also towards the coastal town of Itea.

The convent has been evacuated and firefighters were trying to prevent the blaze from reaching a forested region nearby.

High winds made it extremely hard for the firefighters to contain the blaze. Some 50 firefighters with 15 fire engines and 3 ground teams were being assisted by 5 water-bombing aircraft, as well as municipal water tanks.

Texas drought burns up the corn crop and has ranchers selling off cattle


by Bettie Cross
CBS NEWS
Wednesday, July 6th 2022




Unrelenting heat and drought conditions are burning up the Central Texas corn crop. 
Ranchers are also being forced to buy hay because pastures have dried up.
(Photo: Bettie Cross)


CENTRAL, Texas — Unrelenting heat and drought conditions are burning up the Central Texas corn crop. Ranchers are also being forced to buy hay for their cattle because pastures have dried up.

"We missed the last couple of good rains," said Milam County rancher Heath Rieger.

Rieger says the stock tanks on his family’s ranch are getting low and pastures have shriveled to the point he’s having to provide cattle with supplemental feeding.

"This is when we should be putting up hay to make it through the winter. We're having to buy hay to feed our cattle in July when we should be making hay," said Rieger.

To make matters worse, hay prices have nearly doubled since last winter.

“A lot of people are at the point where they're going to have to decide do I want to buy hay to keep my cattle or do I want to sell out and possibly not get back in the game,” said Rieger.

The 3rd generation rancher says the last year that was this tough was 2011.

“A lot of people, including ourselves, sold off a lot of cattle and it takes years to build that back up,” said Rieger.

A dry, scorching forecast has farmers and ranchers saying they'll just try to push through and survive the summer.

“Keep praying for rain and doing rain dances,” said Rieger.

Warming world creates hazard for Alpine glaciers

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUBLISHED: 5 July 2022 

Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common.

Seven hikers died and several others are unaccounted for after large chunks of ice and rock from the Marmolada glacier sped down the mountain in an avalanche. Higher temperatures coupled with below-average winter snowfall were among the factors that may have triggered the event, experts said.

The exact role of climate change in specific events is complicated and large portions of ice can break off Alpine glaciers naturally. But climate change is fueling hotter temperatures that can lead to more ice and snow melt, said Brian Menounos, a professor at the University of Northern British Columbia who researches climate change and glaciers.

"Glaciers are directly responding to a warmer climate, a warmer planet," said Menounos. "They can respond to long-term changes, but they can also respond to these extreme events," like heat waves.

The Marmolada glacier is in the Dolomite mountains, a range of steep, dramatic peaks in northeast Italy. The region is already being altered by climate change. Between the late 19th and early 21st century, temperatures in the Alps have increased twice as quickly as the global average, according to Copernicus, the European climate modeling group. The U.N. has identified the Mediterranean basin that includes Italy as a climate change hot spot prone to heat waves. Glaciers are in retreat throughout Italy, the Alps and across the world.

The government's National Research Council said the Marmolada glacier has been shrinking for decades and may vanish in 25 to 30 years.


FILE - A rescue helicopter hovers over the Punta Rocca glacier near Canazei, in the Italian Alps in northern Italy, July 4, 2022, a day after a huge chunk of the glacier broke loose, sending an avalanche of ice, snow, and rocks onto hikers. Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of the Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common.
(AP Photo/Luca Bruno, File)

Before the avalanche, daytime temperatures at the glacier´s altitude were around 50F (10C) when they normally don't rise much above freezing. The prolonged period of hot weather at high altitudes created a special set of circumstances, said Tobias Bolch who researches glaciers at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.

Guglielmina Adele Diolaiuti, a professor at the University of Milan studying glaciers, said pictures of the ice that remains part of the glacier tell a story about what likely happened.

The top two thirds of the ice face appears slightly dirty, indicating it was exposed to air.

"It´s clear that this part of the vertical ice cliff was the internal part of a crevasse," she said. A crevasse is a deep opening in a glacier.

The bottom is bluer, indicating it was attached, said Diolaiuti.

Water may have accumulated in the crevasse, adding weight and pressure on the glacier. It may also have loosened the glacier´s grip on the steep rock it was sitting on, experts said.

Anyone who has tried to shovel ice off a cold driveway knows that it fastens itself to the pavement, said Richard Alley, a Penn State professor who studies ice sheets. But when the weather warms, the ice loosens its hold.

"All of a sudden, whoosh, you can get it off," Alley said.

A local official said the portion that broke loose is estimated to be 220 yards (200 meters) wide, 85 yards (80 meters) high and 65 yards (60 meters) deep. It rushed down the mountain at nearly 200 miles per hour (300 kph).

The hikers were likely taken completely by surprise.

In addition to the heat, there was below normal snowfall this winter. Northern Italy is struggling through its worst drought in 70 years. When there is less snow, ice is exposed and impurities can collect on the surface of the glacier, turning the surface a darker color that traps more heat. The extra heat melts the ice and snow faster, St. Andrews' Bolch said.

On Tuesday, rescue efforts turned up equipment and body parts. After rain made rescue difficult on Monday, the sun reappeared on Tuesday.

According to Daniel Farinotti, a professor of glaciology at ETH Zurich and WSL Birmensdorf, Switzerland, climate change might reduce the risk of certain avalanches. Glaciers need cold weather and snowfall to grow. If glaciers grow on a steep slope, ice that is pushed over ledges can break and cause avalanches. But with warming temperatures, glaciers retreat, and smaller glaciers create fewer hazards, he said.

In the case of the avalanche on Sunday, melting ice and snow is the likely culprit, experts said.

"The ice, the snow, is very sensitive to increases in temperatures, so we expect that these kinds of events will increase in frequency and intensity in the future," said Roberta Paranuzio who researches climate change at the National Research Council of Italy.

While some avalanches occur in isolated areas, the area around the Marmolada glacier is popular with hikers.

"The really warm weather was one of the reasons why the event occurred, but on the other hand, this really warm weather made it attractive for mountaineers to climb it," Bolch said.

___

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP´s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/environment


A rescuer pilots a helicopter to conduct searches for the victims of the Punta Rocca glacier avalanche in Canazei, in the Italian Alps in northern Italy, Tuesday, July 5, 2022, two days after a huge chunk of the glacier broke loose, sending an avalanche of ice, snow, and rocks onto hikers. Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of the Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)


A view taken from a rescue helicopter of the Punta Rocca glacier near Canazei, in the Italian Alps in northern Italy, Tuesday, July 5, 2022, two days after a huge chunk of the glacier broke loose, sending an avalanche of ice, snow, and rocks onto hikers. Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)


Debris and blocks of ice are seen on the Punta Rocca glacier near Canazei, in the Italian Alps in northern Italy, Tuesday, July 5, 2022, two days after a huge chunk of the glacier broke loose, sending an avalanche of ice, snow, and rocks onto hikers. Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of the Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)


A view taken from a rescue helicopter of the Punta Rocca glacier near Canazei, in the Italian Alps in northern Italy, Tuesday, July 5, 2022, two days after a huge chunk of the glacier broke loose, sending an avalanche of ice, snow, and rocks onto hikers. Italy was enduring a prolonged heat wave before a massive piece of the Alpine glacier broke off and killed hikers on Sunday and experts say climate change will make those hot, destabilizing conditions more common. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)