Wednesday, September 07, 2022

Tunisia opposition to boycott polls, slams electoral law written 'by president alone'

NEWS WIRES - 


Tunisia's main opposition alliance said Wednesday its members including the once-powerful Ennahdha party would boycott December polls to replace a parliament dissolved by President Kais Saied.


Tunisia opposition to boycott polls, slams electoral law written 'by president alone'© Fethi Belaid, AFP

The vote is set for nearly a year and a half after Saied suspended the Ennahdha-dominated assembly and sacked the government, later pushing through a constitution enshrining his one-man rule.

"The National Salvation Front has definitively decided to boycott the upcoming elections," said Ahmed Nejib Chebbi, head of the front which is made up of parties and movements opposed to Saied.

He said the move was in response to an electoral law written "by Saied alone", part of a "coup against constitutional legitimacy".

Saied's power grab was welcomed by many Tunisians tired of what they saw as a fractious and corrupt system established after the 2011 revolution.

But opposition forces say his moves, culminating in a new constitution confirmed by a widely boycotted July referendum, amount to a return to autocracy in the only democracy to have emerged from the Arab Spring.

(AFP)
Chelsea's new owners show ruthless streak in sacking Tuchel

Kieran CANNING
Wed, September 7, 2022 


Chelsea are still adjusting to life under their new regime but the ruthless sacking of manager Thomas Tuchel shows the change of ownership has not ushered in an era of patience at Stamford Bridge.

The German was well aware of the fate that befalls managers who stumble from the day he walked into the Premier League club, initially handed a contract for just 18 months despite his pedigree.

"What does it change?" said Tuchel as he was unveiled in January 2021. "If they are not happy with me, they will sack me anyway."

A hire-and-fire culture became the norm during Roman Abramovich's spectacularly successful reign, which ended in May when Todd Boehly's consortium took over.


Tuchel earned himself a two-year contract extension after winning the Champions League in May 2021, a triumph that came just four months after he inherited a squad that was under-performing under Frank Lampard.

But less than 16 months after Chelsea overcame Manchester City in Porto, and after a big-spending transfer window at Stamford Bridge, he finds himself out of a job.

Boehly's group spent a world-record £4.25 billion ($4.9 billion) to buy Chelsea in May after Russian billionaire Abramovich announced he was selling the club shortly after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The following week Abramovich was hit with UK sanctions, with the government describing him as part of Russian President Vladimir Putin's inner circle.



The new regime splashed out more than £200 million on a list of high-profile players including Raheem Sterling, Kalidou Koulibaly, Marc Cucurella, Wesley Fofana and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

And Tuchel appeared to have earned the trust of the new owners.

He pushed for the signing of Aubameyang after their time together at Borussia Dortmund and reportedly cooled Boehly's interest in Cristiano Ronaldo, who wanted to leave Manchester United.
- Erratic -

Yet, just seven games into the new season, the 49-year-old has been cut loose after damaging defeats to Leeds, Southampton and Dinamo Zagreb.

In keeping with his time at Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain, results have dipped after a bright start.

Chelsea won the Club World Cup, reached two domestic cup finals and finished in the top four of the Premier League last season despite the difficulties caused by the sanctions imposed on Abramovich, which affected the club's operations.

Yet the expected Premier League title challenge following the club-record £97-million signing of forward Romelu Lukaku never materialised.

Lukaku complained publicly of struggling to fit into Tuchel's preferred system and has been shipped back to Inter Milan on loan at huge cost to the Blues.

Reports in recent weeks suggested other attacking players were unhappy with Tuchel's methods, frustrated that they were not given the freedom to shine.

Kai Havertz, Christian Pulisic and Hakim Ziyech have all struggled to deliver on big transfer fees, while Timo Werner returned to RB Leipzig last month.

Scoring goals has been a persistent problem and the defensive solidity that was the hallmark of Tuchel's early success at the club has been absent this season.

Tuchel can point to an untimely injury to midfielder N'Golo Kante, a loss of form for goalkeeper Edouard Mendy and the need for time for the club's new signings to bed in.

But his own behaviour had grown more erratic as the pressure increased.

He was sent off for two physical confrontations with Tottenham boss Antonio Conte in a 2-2 draw last month and lambasted his players for a "soft mentality" in losing at Southampton.

A limp 1-0 defeat on Tuesday to a Zagreb side with a strikingly poor Champions League record was the final straw.

"We are clearly not where we need to be and where we can be," said Tuchel after the match.

Boehly has made the bold call that a man who has reached two Champions League finals with two different clubs in the past three seasons was the problem.

Now the pressure is on the American to make the right hire to turn his investment into results on the pitch.

kca/jw/dmc

Tuchel fired by Chelsea in ruthless call by US ownership

By STEVE DOUGLAS
today

1 of 5
Chelsea's head coach Thomas Tuchel leaves after the Champions League group E soccer match between Dinamo Zagreb and Chelsea at the Maksimir stadium in Zagreb, Croatia, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022. Thomas Tuchel has been fired by Chelsea only one month into the season. The decision by Chelsea’s new ownership comes a day after the team lost to Dinamo Zagreb 1-0 in its first group match in the Champions League. Chelsea has lost two of its first six games in the Premier League. 
(AP Photo/Darko Bandic)

Chelsea’s new American owners are proving to be just as ruthless as the man they replaced.

Thomas Tuchel was fired by the Premier League club on Wednesday, only one month into the season and just days after Chelsea’s recently installed ownership — fronted by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly — concluded a Europe-high spending spree of nearly $300 million in the transfer window.

Chelsea was renowned for regularly changing managers in the 19-year tenure of Roman Abramovich, the Russian oligarch who had to sell the London club after being sanctioned by the British government for what it called his enabling of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “brutal and barbaric invasion” of Ukraine.

Boehly was the face of the consortium that bought Chelsea for 2.5 billion pounds ($3.1 billion) in May and, despite having little soccer experience, quickly made himself chairman as well as interim sporting director in charge of transfers.

Not only has he overseen a record splurge on new players, Boehly has now decided Tuchel — the coach who led Chelsea to the Champions League title last year — is no longer the right person to lead the team in the new era.

The decision to fire Tuchel, who was manager for 20 months, came a day after Chelsea surprisingly lost to Dinamo Zagreb 1-0 in its first group match of the Champions League. Chelsea has also lost two of its first six games — to Leeds and Southampton — in an underwhelming start to the Premier League that has seen the team’s new signings fail to gel.

Tuchel has been a frustrated and prickly figure after matches this season. In interviews after the loss to Dinamo, he said “everything is missing” when asked to sum up Chelsea’s performance and complained that his players “lacked hunger.”

In a feisty Premier League game against Tottenham, Tuchel was sent off — along with rival manager Antonio Conte — and later fined after they went head-to-head in a post-match scuffle because Tuchel failed to let go of his grip in the traditional handshake.

“As the new ownership group reaches 100 days since taking over the club, and as it continues its hard work to take the club forward, the new owners believe it is the right time to make this transition,” Chelsea said in a statement, which also said Tuchel “will rightly have a place” in the club’s history.

After all, the 49-year-old German guided Chelsea to the Champions League title less than six months after taking over as manager in January 2021, as the replacement for Frank Lampard. Tuchel only had one full season at the helm and that saw Chelsea eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Champions League — to eventual champion Real Madrid — before finishing third in the Premier League, 19 points behind champion Manchester City.

A big reason why Chelsea faded in the second half of last season was the turbulence caused by the change of ownership and it was a wild offseason at Stamford Bridge, too, with dozens of players — including Cristiano Ronaldo — linked with a move to the London club as Boehly looked to make his presence felt in the transfer market.

Raheem Sterling, Kalidou Koulibaly and Marc Cucurella came in for big fees, before the final days of the transfer window saw Chelsea spend 75 million pounds ($87 million) on French center back Wesley Fofana and then bring in Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang from Barcelona to plug a gap in its striker options.

Aubameyang cited playing under Tuchel before — at Borussia Dortmund — as a benefit of the move and was handed a debut against Dinamo. That proved to be Tuchel’s last game in charge, perhaps leaving Aubameyang’s long-term status uncertain.

That will depend who comes in to replace Tuchel. British media has already linked Graham Potter, currently manager of in-form Premier League club Brighton, and Mauricio Pochettino, with the vacancy.

Potter has no real experience of handling a squad of star players but is highly regarded for his tactical astuteness and entertaining style of play. Pochettino has experience of overseeing a locker room of egos — he was recently coach of a Paris Saint-Germain team containing Kylian Mbappé, Lionel Messi and Neymar — and has been out of work since parting ways with the French champions in July.

___

More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

___

Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80
In Latest Reports, UN Watchdog Says Questions Swirl Over Iran's Nuclear Program

September 07, 2022
By RFE/RL
The IAEA says in one report that it's "not in a position to provide assurance that Iran's nuclear program is exclusively peaceful."

A report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium is nearing the level where further enrichment could be enough for a nuclear bomb and that Tehran has failed to provide credible answers on the origin of uranium particles found at three undeclared sites that the UN's nuclear watchdog has been investigating for years.

An IAEA quarterly report, released on September 7, says Iran's stockpile of uranium enriched up to 60 percent has grown to 55.6 kilograms, a 12.5-kilogram increase over the past three months. If enriched further, that would be more than enough for a nuclear bomb.

The report says that means that the IAEA is "not in a position to provide assurance that Iran's nuclear program is exclusively peaceful."

A second IAEA report issued the same day raises further concerns by noting that Iran has yet to provide credible answers on the origin of uranium particles found at three undeclared sites.

"The director-general is increasingly concerned that Iran has not engaged with the agency on the outstanding safeguards issues during this reporting period and, therefore, that there has been no progress towards resolving them," the second report notes.

Iran has been increasing its stockpile of enriched uranium since the United States unilaterally pulled out of a 2015 accord between Tehran and global powers to keep Iran's nuclear program in check in exchange for relief from sanctions.

The two sides have held 16 months of indirect talks that led to the European Union making a proposal last month to restore the deal, along with the lifting of U.S. sanctions.

But in its response, Iran demanded the IAEA halt the investigation into the probe.
Skateboarding group brings together young girls in Ethiopia

Issued on: 07/09/2022 - 
01:43

Ethiopian Girl Skaters is a female-only skateboarding group that brings together young girls from different backgrounds, building a community that challenges the stereotype that girls shouldn't be involved in extreme sports like skateboarding. The project, founded by female skater, Sosina Challa, invites many young girls to spend their leisure time learning a new sport that helps them with their physical and mental health.

School trains new generation in Mexican cowboy traditions


AFP
Issued on: 07/09/2022 - 


















Victor Teran, 17, practices with a lasso at a "charreria" school in Mexico
 ULISES RUIZ AFP

Tlajomulco de Zúñiga (Mexico) (AFP) – Wearing a wide-brimmed hat, silver-buttoned shirt and embroidered tie, teenager Victor Teran skillfully twirls a lasso at a Mexican school training younger generations in traditional cowboy skills.

Three years ago Teran's father gave him the choice of learning soccer or "charreria" -- cattle-ranching techniques that are recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage of humanity.

"I told him, 'let's go and do charreria right now!'" the 17-year-old said.

With the help of teachers at the school in Tlajomulco de Zuniga in the western state of Jalisco, Teran learned to ride a horse and to spin and throw a lasso so that it loops around the front legs of a horse.

The school, which opened in 2016, the same year that the tradition was inscribed by UNESCO, offers free classes to budding young "charros."

Novices and foreigners are welcome.


"Charreria has grown a lot at the national level," said school founder Victor Hugo de la Torre, who has 24 years as an instructor under his cowboy belt.

"Most of the students at the school don't come from a charro family, but they like it and join in," he added.

Today there are 100 regular students, of both sexes.

Beginner, intermediate and advanced groups of up to 15 students take part in three hours of training twice a week to hone their skills.

The first challenge is to learn to twirl a lasso and throw it around the neck of a docile bull.

When they have mastered that they progress to mounting a horse unaided using stirrups.

Then comes learning to ride the horse and eventually to lasso moving animals.

The girls also learn "escaramuzas" -- Spanish for "skirmishes" -- which involve performing tricky formations on galloping horses while riding sidesaddle.

"I started when I was four years old when my parents got me riding," said Alma de la Torre, 20, wearing traditional dress inspired by the garments of women who fought in the Mexican revolution.

Becoming a charro requires "a lot of dedication," but the financial rewards can be worth it, said school founder De la Torre.

Average salaries range from $1,500-4,000 a month, while those at the very top can take home around $7,500, he said -- a wage beyond the dreams of most Mexicans
.

While the ideal age to start learning is six years old, many students begin as teenagers, said school head Rocio Rodriguez.

"Anyone can learn, of any nationality, so long as they want to," she said.

© 2022 AFP


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  • The History of the Vaquero - American Cowboy

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  • French Court Upholds Assad Uncle's Conviction Over Ill-gotten Assets

    By Anne LEC'HVIEN
    09/07/22 
    Rifaat al-Assad (L) fled Syria after a failed coup against 
    his older brother Hafez, the president

    France's top administrative court on Wednesday confirmed the conviction of Rifaat al-Assad, uncle of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in an "ill-gotten gains" case over wealth estimated at 90 million euros ($89 million).

    Rifaat al-Assad, 85, is the younger brother of Bashar's father and former Syrian dictator Hafez al-Assad, and himself held the office of vice president but fled the country in 1984 after a failed coup.

    He had made a final appeal to France's Court of Cassation after a lower court last year confirmed his four-year jail sentence for conspiracy to launder Syrian public funds between 1996 and 2016.

    In the same judgement, he was convicted of concealing serious tax fraud and employing servants off the books, with authorities confiscating a slew of his properties.

    Rifaat, who has not attended hearings due to ill health, insists his property empire stretching across Spain, France and Britain stems from gifts from Saudi crown prince and later king Abdullah, who died in 2015.

    The case is the second in France under a law passed last year targeting fortunes fraudulently amassed by foreign leaders.

    Teodorin Obiang, the eldest son of the president of Equatorial Guinea, last year had his conviction to a three-year suspended sentence and 30 million euros in fines confirmed at appeal.

    In Syria, Rifaat al-Assad was the head of the elite Defence Brigades, internal security forces that violently quashed a 1982 Islamist uprising in the city of Hama.

    Having stayed away for three decades following his failed attempt to seize power, pro-government media reported that he returned to Syria last autumn.

    In 1984, he fled first to Switzerland then France, where he received the Legion of Honour -- the country's top award -- in 1986 for "services rendered".

    French investigators opened a probe into his property holdings in 2014 after complaints from watchdogs Transparency International and Sherpa.

    They seized two Paris townhouses, dozens of apartments in chic neighbourhoods of the French capital and office spaces.

    Since then, around 80 of his former employees living at an estate outside Paris have been mostly without water and electricity as no one was paying the bills.

    While Rifaat's age and poor health mean he is unlikely ever to serve jail time in France, Wednesday's ruling confirms the confiscation of the properties for good.

    That could set up Syria as one of the first countries to potentially benefit from a scheme to return funds recovered under the ill-gotten gains law.

    "The confiscation... is the first necessary condition to be able to plan for restitution of the ill-gotten gains," Transparency International France chief Patrick Lefas said in a statement welcoming the court ruling.

    But he added that it would be vital to get the resources to ordinary Syrians rather than simply returning them to the Assad regime -- which Transparency says could be achieved using another French law passed last year.

    "Restoring ill-gotten gains requires guarantees, without which it would be naive to hope to give them back to the populations of their countries of origin," Lefas said.

    Rifaat al-Assad also faces a court case in Spain over far larger suspicions of ill-gotten gains covering 500 properties, as well as a prosecution in Switzerland for war crimes dating back to the 1980s.
    SEXIST, CHAUVINIST MASCULINITY
    ‘I figured it was about time somebody told her no’: Woman says manager bragged about denying her a raise because she’s ‘one of those girls that never gets told no’

    Cecilia Lenzen - Yesterday - 
     The Daily Dot.

    Asking your boss for a raise can be hard, especially when they tell you "no" and then brag about telling you no in a work meeting. One TikToker says this is exactly what happened to her.


    woman eating in kitchen© Provided by Daily Dot

    The TikToker, Malorie Harris (@malorieharris), shared a video explaining what happened about three years ago in her corporate job. As of Tuesday, the video went semi-viral with about 30,000 views on TikTok.



    In the video, Harris says her coworkers at the time who had been at the company about as long as her were starting to get raises. So one of her managers told her she needed to ask the company's regional manager for a raise, assuring her the request would be approved. Harris says she took the regional manager out for lunch, which was common at the company, and she asked for the raise.

    "He said no right to my face," Harris says in the video. "He said 'what makes you think you deserve that?'"

    Being rejected to her face wasn't the worst part of the experience, the TikToker says. When the two returned to the office after lunch, Harris explains they went to an all-staff company meeting. During the meeting, the regional manager announced that Harris had asked him for a raise and that he told her no, Harris says.

    "Another manager out loud said 'why?' and [the regional manager] said, 'because she's one of those girls that never gets told no, so I figured it was about time somebody told her no,'" Harris says, recounting the meeting. "Corporate America is still broken."

    Multiple viewers commented on the TikTok, saying Harris' manager acted illegally.

    "That’s quite a few witnesses to some likely illegal behavior," one viewer commented.

    "Babe that’s illegal," a second viewer commented.

    Others commented, asking whether Harris found a new job after the incident.

    "Please tell me you found a different job soon after that," one user said.

    Another user wrote, "So tell me you found a new job with out telling me you got a new job."

    "Hope u Quit or got him fired," another user commented.

    Harris clarified in an update video that before she could decide what to do about the situation, the company laid off all the employees shortly after amidst the first wave of COVID-19.

    Some users had ideas for why Harris' manager felt the need to shut a woman down.

    "I have a feeling he's one of those guys that always gets told no!" one viewer wrote.

    "Oh that man has major issues!" a second viewer wrote.

    Another viewer commented, "he has probably been rejected by beautiful popular women all his life and this was his opportunity for revenge."

    The Daily Dot reached out to the creator via TikTok comment.
    TOXIC MASCULINITY
    Andrew Tate's been banned from social media. But his harmful content still reaches young men


    Brock Wilson - CBC


    Last month, controversial influencer Andrew Tate was banned on several social media platforms for violating their policies.


    Despite being banned from TikTok for nearly two weeks, a quick search produces countless videos, 
    like this one, of Andrew Tate.© @benleavitt/TikTok

    But nearly two weeks into these bans, platforms are still inundated with clips of Tate making derogatory comments about women — highlighting what some media experts suggest is part of a dangerous system whose algorithm can be manipulated to radicalize young men to adopt harmful views against women and the LGBTQ community.

    And as Tate's case shows, banning controversial figures can actually make the problem worse.

    Tate, a former kick-boxer, gained notoriety after appearing on the U.K. reality show Big Brother in 2016. He was removed from the show when a video of him appearing to assault a woman with a belt was made public. Tate has said the incident was consensual.

    Recently, he went viral for soundbites shared on platforms like TikTok. These clips feature Tate, often clad in sunglasses sans shirt, making offensive comments about women. One notable example includes clips of Tate saying that if a woman is dating a man she "belongs" to him. In another clip, Tate suggested women in relationships who have their own social media accounts are cheating.

    In a video posted to Vimeo on Aug. 23, Tate responded to the bans saying he's been "unfairly vilified" and his comments were taken out of context.

    Tate did not respond to a request from CBC News for comment.

    Content like Tate's often starts in a way that seems relatively harmless, but then it slowly becomes more nefarious, says Joanna Schroeder, a writer whose work focuses on gender and media representation.

    For example, she says, young boys often visit sites like YouTube to search for videos related to Minecraft, a wildly popular video game. But the YouTube algorithm will often guess their age and gender — and Schroeder says it might then push harmful content at them.

    "There are people who want to target this demographic who start showing them content that becomes more and more racy."

    Schroeder says Tate's appeal is, in part, because of how his views are framed. The idea that what he's saying is an "unpopular opinion that nobody else will say out loud" might suggest to a young person that it has value, she says.

    And since "edgy" content often presents itself as something a younger demographic should consider normal — or even find funny — it slowly becomes problematic.

    An example of that is the Pepe the Frog meme, something that started as a harmless cartoon frog and devolved into a symbol of hate.

    It began as an apolitical meme popular on sites like Myspace and 4chan in the 2000s. But as its popularity grew, it was appropriated by the alt-right movement.

    Schroeder says Pepe began to represent "anti-gay" and "anti-women" sentiments. And she says teens might initially perceive the memes as jokes, but over time it can influence how and what young people think.

    And clips like Tate's are a common way people are radicalized, says Ellen Chloë Bateman, a documentary and podcast producer who's researched online radicalization among young men and incel subculture.

    Violence against women gets normalized, she says, embedding itself into the psyches of young men through images and memes, in what she calls a "culture of intense competition and one-upmanship."

    Schroeder says this can often be seen on TikTok. Videos featuring clips of creators like Tate will often also share a screen showing video from games like Minecraft or Call of Duty to try to keep teens engaged.

    At this point, she says, some social media algorithms notice the user's high levels of engagement — and then begin to serve them more "overtly racist" content.

    "Algorithms push content that is often extreme. Extreme views, hate-filled views get a lot of traction on places like YouTube … and TikTok," Schroeder says.

    The parts of the internet where these memes, and oftentimes more outright racist or misogynistic content, circulate is a place Bateman calls the "manosphere."

    She describes it as a space where "men's rights activists, male separatists, nihilists, sexual predators and trolls — who often share membership with neo-Nazi and alt-right groups — congregate."

    "What unites them all is an extreme anti-feminist world view," Bateman says.

    And alt-right groups often use this space to target young and impressionable men, she says.

    Social media companies say they're actively working to remove this kind of content — as studies have found that hate speech online has correlated with an increase in physical violence and hate crimes.

    In Tate's case, TikTok, Facebook and Instagram removed his content.

    A TikTok spokesperson said "misogyny is a hateful ideology that is not tolerated on TikTok," and it continues to investigate other accounts and videos that violate its policies.

    The spokesperson also said that TikTok is looking at ways to "strengthen enforcement" against this type of harmful content.

    That includes a partnership with UN Women and other non-governmental organization seeking to stop Violence Against Women and Girls to launch a new in-app hub to educate users about gender-based violence.

    Bateman says partnerships like these are essential in order for social media spaces to become safer and more educational, especially for young people.

    Twitter has also taken action against controversial creators. The platform has issued temporary bans to creators like Jordan Peterson, Matt Walsh and Steven Crowder. (Each creator was later allowed back on the app.)

    But Schroeder says bans can sometimes be counterintuitive. In Tate's case, it may have, in some ways, actually helped him.

    "The bans are just drawing more attention to him," she said. "It's given him a very big microphone."

    Bateman agrees, pointing out that these creators often find new apps, like Reddit, Gab, Telegram and Discord, to post their content.

    She says some of these platforms are actually harder to monitor because of their closed-group structures or registration requirements, making it more difficult to study and track the content. A site for incel subculture, which promotes misogyny and violence, has upwards of 17,000 users, she found.

    "It's such a complicated online world. It's fluid … it's moving. It's spreading around and these groups are interconnecting basically into one big cesspool of hate."
    Western University gets court approval to rename scholarships honouring 'racist' professor

    Colin Butler - CBC

    An Ontario court has granted Western University permission to remove the name of an emeritus history professor from six academic prizes funded by his estate following criticism that he espoused radical, racist views.

    Kenneth Hilborn taught history and international relations at the London, Ont., university from 1961 to 1997. After his death in 2013 at age 79, Hilborn's estate bequeathed $1 million to Western, including $750,000 to the history department for four undergraduate and two graduate awards that have been handed out since 2016.

    In 2019, scholars began calling on the school to intervene, linking the scholarships with the legitimization of extreme right-wing beliefs by universities.

    "He openly opposed the equality of human beings," said Will Langford, who teaches history at Dalhousie University in Halifax.

    Langford wrote a 2020 essay in which he called Hilborn "a racist" and criticized Western for not acknowledging Hilborn's views in awarding the scholarships.


    A battle of essays


    Langford, who learned of Western's plans to remove Hilborn's name from the scholarships during a phone call from CBC News, called the development "a good news story."


    Students are shown participating in orientation events Tuesday at Western, a school Hilborn taught at from 1961 to 1997.© Colin Butler/CBC News

    "I think the department is taking the opportunity that is before them to engage with this history, the history of their own department, their own university, and I hope they're teaching about the scholarships in their courses.

    "I would hope too for some kind of acknowledgment, maybe on the department's website, so anyone in the public who wants to learn more can readily find it."

    Francine McKenzie, an assistant professor at Western who also teaches history and international relations, responded to Langford's 2020 essay with one of her own that same year entitled "Western's history department and the Hilborn student awards."

    "The Hilborn awards do good, now and forever," she wrote. "While the Hilborn awards are on a much more modest scale than Rhodes scholarships, the comparison is useful: The Rhodes Trust does not endorse Cecil Rhodes' views; the history department doesn't endorse Ken Hilborn's views."

    In the essay, she noted Western's history department "discussed the implications of having student awards created through his bequest and decided that the awards should stay."

    Three years later, Western University quietly made a 180-degree turn, applying to an Ontario court this year to remove Hilborn's name from the awards.

    Hilborn's work 'did harm,' says group

    "As the matter remains before the court, it would not be appropriate to comment at this time," Jordan Diacur, the Hamilton lawyer who represents Western in the legal case, wrote to CBC News in an email Friday.

    Newly discovered court filings from the university, in its application to the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee to remove Hilborn's name from the scholarships, do offer some insight into what might have prompted Western to change its mind.


    Students returned Tuesday to Western for the 2022-23 academic year.© Colin Butler/CBC News

    According to the documents, Western's history department created a research group to consider "whether the criticism levelled at Hilborn had merit."

    The research group believed Hilborn's academic work "did harm" and caused "epistemic violence by suppressing, dismissing and trivializing people who were oppressed, vulnerable or discriminated against."


    The court documents also state Hilborn's work "bolstered white supremacist arguments, attached importance to the safety of white people, never Black people, and affirmed the goodness and superiority of white people explicitly."


    The history department research group recommended removing Hilborn's name from the scholarships, court documents indicate, because if the school didn't, Western would "be seen as tacitly condoning and endorsing his views," something the researchers noted "runs counter to Western University's goals and values."


    Hilborn seemed to have died without living relatives. The court filings in the case make no mention of his family with the exception of his mother and father, who were already dead in 2013. Hilborn's obituary, which still exists on Western University's website, mentions no children or friends, and the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee is routinely called upon to make legal decisions for estates when there is no else to do so.

    The court filings do not indicate how Western would rename the scholarships or when it may happen.


    NOT THE FIRST TIME WESTERN HAS HAD CONTROVERSIAL RIGHT WING PROF'S
    Lethal rabbit disease 'strongly suspected' to be killing feral bunnies in Calgary communities


    Stephanie Babych - Yesterday - Calgary Herald

    As many feral bunnies are found dead in several Calgary neighbourhoods, concern is growing that a deadly disease known to wipe out rabbit populations is spreading in the city.



    Pictured is a bunny 
    HARE  in Lindsay Park outside the MNP Community
     and Sport Centre on Tuesday, September 6, 2022.© Provided by Calgary Herald

    Amanda Greening, the co-founder of Against All Odds Rabbit Rescue, said in the last several days, they’ve received reports from people who have spotted quite a few dead bunnies in Manchester Industrial and Seton — which both have large populations of feral rabbits.

    “Someone actually witnessed one die right in front of them,” said Greening. “It appeared to vomit blood, urinate and then die, which are common symptoms of rabbit hemorrhagic disease (RHD).”

    The disease is extremely contagious and lethal for rabbits, spreading among bunnies through physical contact or through contact with an infected rabbit’s blood or excretions. The disease causes organ damage and internal bleeding.

    Dr. Kelsey Chapman, with the Calgary Avian and Exotic Pet Clinic, said reports show that RHD has a 70 to 100 per cent fatality rate among bunnies.

    “These are bunnies that have been let out then bred themselves in the city,” she Chapman. “The feral rabbit population is the most at risk because they’re all living together in tight quarters. And it could be transmitted on people’s shoes to indoor rabbits.”

    Chapman explained that RHD is relatively new to Canada and has now been recorded in Edmonton and Lethbridge. Last year, a population of rabbits living in an Edmonton cemetery was wiped out by the disease . Alberta’s first case of RHD was detected in Taber in March 2021.

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    In May, there was the first official confirmation of RHD in an indoor, pet rabbit in Calgary, but the test results for several feral rabbits found dead in the city are still being processed so their cause of death remains unconfirmed.

    Against All Odds Rabbit Rescue has been taking in and rescuing rabbits since 2012, while working to educate people about proper rabbit care. The group estimates the feral rabbit population could be as high as 500 between Manchester Industrial, Erlton and the Talisman Centre area, while Seton likely has about 200 to 300.


    “If this is RHD, I would not be surprised if it wipes out 90 per cent or more of those populations,” said Greening.

    She said businesses in these areas have told the group they’ve gone from seeing many rabbits throughout the day to none.

    “If it is just the ferals, they are an invasive species — although, they are a food source for the coyote and bobcats. However, if this is a strain that affects native hares and cotton tails, the effects would be more severe,” Greening explained.



    Pictured are bunnies 
    HARES in Lindsay Park outside the MNP 
    Community and Sport Centre on Tuesday, September 6, 2022.

    Dr. Margo Pybus, the wildlife disease specialist with Alberta Environment and Parks, said they’re concerned about RHD spreading to the city’s wild rabbit population. Feral rabbits aren’t considered to be wildlife in the province so it’s not something Fish and Wildlife deals with directly.

    “But we do track this virus because, although it hasn’t been reported yet in wild rabbits like snowshoe hares or jackrabbits in Alberta, we are watching to see whether it will or will not spill over from feral or pet rabbits to them,” said Pybus. “We’re hoping to avoid it getting out into wild populations.”

    Pybus said it’s important for cases to be documented and to inform rabbit owners about the risks to their domestic bunnies. She said that it still isn’t confirmed the rabbits had RHD but it is strongly suspected.

    “Outbreaks usually happen quickly and then disappear because most of the rabbits are killed. It doesn’t stick around or persist in the soil or anything, so that’s likely what is helping to protect the wildlife, like the snowshoe hares. The virus is so hot that it burns out quickly,” said Pybus.

    The City of Calgary doesn’t currently have a policy on how to deal with feral rabbits and did not comment further about the situation when contacted by Postmedia on Tuesday.

    sbabych@postmedia.com
    Twitter: @BabychStephanie

    BUNNIES ARE DOMESTICATED RABBITS, WILD RABBITS ARE KNOWN AS HARES

    WILD HARES ARE NOT FERAL (WHICH IMPLIES DOMESTICATED BUNNIES RAN AWAY OR RELEASED FROM HUMAN CARE)