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It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
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Kind regards, The Brazil Solidarity Initiative Team P.S. Thank you to everyone who has donated so far, hosting important actions and events like these costs time and money, without your support, none of this would be possible. Please consider donating £20 or whatever you can afford here and ensure we can keep our campaigning up at this vital time for Brazil, Latin America and the globe. Image 1: Lula at the Convenção Nacional do PSB july 29th, 2022. Photo credit PSB Nacional 40 under Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0) Featured image: The mobilisation that supported Lula's registration as a candidate for the presidential election, held at the Superior Electoral Court, in Brasília (August 15th, 2018). Photo credit: Ricardo Cifuentes under Attribution- Image 3: Featured image: Lula and Dilma on September 8th, 2022 photo credit Marcelo Freixo under Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0) |
A U.S. citizen has been arrested in Saudi Arabia, tortured and sentenced to 16 years in prison over tweets he sent while in the United States, his son said Tuesday.
Saad Ibrahim Almadi, a 72-year-old retired project manager living in Florida, was arrested last November while visiting family in the kingdom and was sentenced earlier this month, his son Ibrahim Almadi told The Associated Press, confirming details that were first reported by the Washington Post. Almadi is a citizen of both Saudi Arabia and the U.S.
There was no immediate comment from Saudi officials.
Speaking at a press briefing, U.S. State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel confirmed Almadi's detention and said Washington first raised its concerns with Riyadh in December 2021, as soon as it was made aware of the arrest.
"We have consistently and intensively raised our concerns regarding the case at senior levels of the Saudi government ... and we will continue to do so. We have raised this with members of the Saudi government as recently as yesterday," Patel said.
He did not say what Almadi was charged with but said: "Exercising the freedom of expression should never be criminalized."
It appeared to be the latest in a series of recent cases in which Saudis received long jail sentences for social media posts critical of the government.
Saudi authorities have tightened their crackdown on dissent following the rise of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is seeking to open up and transform the ultraconservative kingdom but has adopted a hard line towards any criticism.
A Saudi court recently sentenced a woman, Nourah bint Saeed al-Qahtani, to 45 years in prison for allegedly damaging the country through her social media activity. A Saudi doctoral student at Leeds University in England, Salma al-Shehab, was sentenced to 34 years for spreading "rumours" and retweeting dissidents, a case that drew international outrage.
Ibrahim says his father was detained over 14 "mild tweets" sent over the past seven years, mostly criticizing government policies and alleged corruption.
He says his father was not an activist but a private citizen expressing his opinion while in the U.S., where freedom of speech is a constitutional right.
U.S. President Joe Biden travelled to the oil-rich kingdom in July for a meeting with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, in which he said he confronted him about human rights.
Their meeting — and a widely criticized fist-bump — marked a sharp turnaround from Biden's earlier vow to make the kingdom a "pariah" over the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
THE NOW INFAMOUS FIST BUMP WITH
MOHAMMED 'BONESAW' SALMAN
Ibrahim said that on Oct. 3, his father was sentenced to 16 years in prison on charges of supporting terrorism. The father was also charged with failing to report terrorism, over tweets that Ibrahim had posted.
He said his father was also slapped with a 16-year travel ban. If the sentence is carried out, the 72-year-old would be 87 upon his release and barred from returning home to the U.S. unless he reaches the age of 104.
Ibrahim said Saudi authorities warned his family to stay quiet about the case and to not involve the U.S. government. He said his father was tortured after the family contacted the State Department in March.
Ibrahim also accused the State Department of neglecting his father's case by not declaring him a "wrongfully detained" American, which would elevate his file.
"They manipulated me. They told me to stay quiet so they can get him out," Ibrahim said, explaining his decision to go public this week. "I am not willing to take a gamble on the Department of State anymore."
With files from Reuters
US citizen jailed in Saudi for tweets on Khashoggi, Yemen: son
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 19 2022
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, shown here at a news conference in 2014, was murdered in 2018 in Turkey.
By AFP
A US citizen jailed in Saudi Arabia is being punished for "mild" Twitter posts on topics including the war in Yemen and the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, his son told AFP on Wednesday.
Saad Ibrahim Almadi, a 72-year-old of Saudi origin, was this month sentenced to 16 years in prison, the latest in a spate of what human rights groups describe as draconian sentences for social media criticism of the government.
The case risks further ratcheting up tensions between Riyadh and Washington, longtime partners currently at odds over oil output cuts approved by the OPEC+ cartel, which the White House says amount to "aligning with Russia" in the Ukraine war.
Almadi was detained on arrival in Saudi Arabia in November last year for what was meant to be a two-week trip, said his son Ibrahim, who went public with the case this week, criticising US officials for failing to do more to secure his release.
The State Department said on Tuesday it had "consistently and intensively raised our concerns regarding the case at senior levels of the Saudi government", and that "exercising freedom of expression should never be criminalised".
On Wednesday, Ibrahim shared with AFP a list of Twitter posts he said had been used in evidence against his father -- information he said had been confirmed by the State Department.
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They include posts on taxes as well as controversial demolition work in the Red Sea city of Jeddah.
One post questions why Saudi Arabia is unable to prevent attacks by Huthi rebels in war-wracked Yemen, where the kingdom heads a military coalition in support of the internationally recognised government.
Another refers to the "sacrifice" of Khashoggi, whose killing by Saudi agents in the kingdom's Istanbul consulate sparked global outrage.
Saudi officials also found an unflattering caricature of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom's de facto ruler, on Almadi's phone, Ibrahim said.
- Case 'mishandled' -
Almadi was charged in part with supporting and funding terrorism and trying to destabilise the kingdom, Ibrahim said.
Ibrahim accused the State Department of having "mishandled" his father's case, including by not sending a representative to the October 3 sentencing -- something the State Department acknowledged on Tuesday, saying Saudi Arabia originally gave a later date for the hearing before moving it up.
"My father should be their biggest worry from day one," Ibrahim said, referring to US officials.
"The problems and the tensions between Saudi and the US shouldn't start because of oil. It should start because senior American citizens are detained over tweets."
Ibrahim also expressed concern for his father's health.
"They prevent him from sleeping. They make him stand up. He's 72 years old and his health condition is just decreasing," Ibrahim said by phone from the US, where he lives.
"He had back problems. He needs surgery done as soon as possible in his back. I already have an appointment for him here."
Saudi officials have not commented on Almadi's case or on other recent verdicts against people who criticised the government on social media.
Nourah al-Qahtani, a mother of five in her late 40s, was recently sentenced for 45 years for using Twitter to "challenge" the country's leaders.
Salma al-Shehab, a doctoral candidate at Britain's University of Leeds, was sentenced to 34 years in prison for allegedly aiding dissidents seeking to "disrupt public order" by retweeting their posts.
Democracy for the Arab World Now, a US-based rights group founded by Khashoggi, said last week the verdicts could reflect recent appointments to the Specialised Criminal Court, which handles such cases.
"The Crown Prince is appointing loyalist security officials who lack even basic training as judges to its kangaroo 'counter-terrorism' court, punishing the mildest social dissent with shocking sentences," said Abdullah Alaoudh, DAWN's Gulf director.
Ali Shihabi, a Saudi analyst close to the government, said on Twitter on Tuesday that Saudi authorities were "managing a tricky transition that could easily slip into civil strife".
"Govt. is prioritizing stability as it imposes change on a very polarized society," he said.
"This is a very imperfect process + prosecutorial/judicial overreach is happening."
Breast Cancer Awareness Month: Lebanon facing scarcity of life-saving drugs
Cancer patients are withstanding the worst of Lebanon's financial crisis, with hospitals facing a shortage of life-saving drugs and an exodus of critical medical staff. FRANCE 24 reports.
Women with breast cancer in the Gaza Strip suffer from various problems that begin with the treatment phase and its difficulties, but some of the most trying challenges often come from a cancer patient's husband. A large percentage of women with breast cancer are subjected to violence and ostracism by their husbands after learning of their illness. FRANCE 24’s Maha Abu al-Kas reports.
Australia said it would no longer recognise west Jerusalem as Israel's capital Tuesday, a policy reversal that prompted a curt rebuke from the Jewish state but was cheered by Palestinians. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the city's status should be decided by Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, unwinding a contentious decision by the previous conservative government. For more on Australia's major foreign policy reversal, and the ensuing diplomatic fallout, FRANCE 24 is joined by Allison Kaplan Sommer, Journalist at Haaretz, host of the Haaretz Weekend podcast and co-host of The Promised Podcast.
British Prime Minister Liz Truss insisted she would not quit on Wednesday as she faced questions from booing MPs at her first Question Time session since abandoning her disastrous tax-slashing economic policies. FRANCE 24's International Affairs Commentator Douglas Herbert tells us more.
Europe joins the ‘white gold’ rush for lithium and faces an energy transition challenge
With the EU committed to making electric vehicles widely available by 2035, the demand for metals required to produce batteries, particularly lithium, is expected to explode. The market is currently dominated by a handful of countries, but Europe wants to join the club by exploiting its subsoil.
Shortly before arriving at the Paris Motor Show on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron told the financial daily Les Echos that his administration wanted to make electric vehicles “accessible to everyone”.
Macron then proceeded to announce a series of measures to enable households to acquire electric vehicles. With the EU seeking to ban the sale of combustion engine vehicles from 2035, France is trying to gradually phase out fossil-fuel cars. While the move is seen as an essential step on the road to energy transition, it also poses a serious problem: it will require massive quantities of metals needed to manufacture batteries, especially lithium.
The figures speak for themselves. Since 2015, production volumes of lithium – also known as “white gold” – have tripled worldwide, reaching 100,000 tonnes per year by 2021, according to the International Energy Agency. The volumes could increase sevenfold by 2030. At the European level, about 35 times more lithium will be needed in 2050 than today, according to an April study by KU Leuven, a Catholic research university in Belgium.
“We are at a stage where all countries are starting their energy transition more or less at the same time and this generates very significant metal needs,” noted Olivier Vidal, a geologist and director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS). “This will certainly create tensions in the coming years, with expected increases in costs and, possibly, supply difficulties. So, there is a real strategic and sovereignty issue for states.”
The European Commission is well aware of these concerns and included lithium in the list of critical raw materials with a risk of shortage, back in 2020. Lithium “will soon be even more important than oil and gas”, said European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in September 2022.
Extraction projects in their infancyLithium production today is dominated by just a handful of countries: Australia, which has 20% of the world’s reserves of “white gold”, and Argentina, Chile and Bolivia, which have 60%. China, on the other hand, was an early investor in refining and controls 17% of the world’s lithium production. With just five countries controlling 90% of world production, the International Energy Agency calls it a “quasi-monopoly” situation.
Europe hopes to make the most of the new “white gold” rush by exploiting its own subsoil. The continent’s main reserves are in Portugal, Germany, Austria and Finland. In France, the French Geological and Mining Research Bureau (BRGM) drew up an inventory in 2018 highlighting reserves in Alsace, the Massif Central region, as well as in the Armorican Massif area in Brittany.
Europe’s lithium extraction and production projects have been mostly undertaken by small and medium-scale companies across the continent. “The most successful ones are in Finland. Lithium production could start in 2024 thanks to the exploitation of a small mining site located about 600 km north of Helsinki,” explained Christian Hocquard, a geologist-economist and co-author of a book on lithium energy transition. “In the Czech Republic, an Australian company, European Metals, wants to exploit old tin mines located north of Prague. There are similar projects in Germany and Austria,” he noted.
“These are generally minor projects, carried out by small companies. The big ones prefer to invest in Australia or Latin America,” explained Hocquard. “Few of them will see the light of day, blocked by the difficulties of obtaining permits but above all due to resistance from local communities,” he predicted.
Facing the environmental consequences of our consumptionMining projects often faced public discontent. In Portugal, an open-pit mine – the largest in Western Europe – was supposed to be built in 2026 in the village of Covas do Barroso. Work has however been currently suspended following numerous protests. In Serbia, the opening of the Jedar mine was cancelled a few months before the January 2022 presidential election. In France, Barbara Pompili, former ecological transition minister, floated the idea of exploiting lithium in the tiny village of Tréguennec, in Brittany’s Finistère region back in February 2021. The area however is classified as a protected zone and sparked a local outcry.
Lithium extraction “produces considerable volumes of waste that must then be stored. The waste can also lead to water or air pollution,” explained Vidal.
While Vidal views the outcry as “completely understandable”, he nevertheless supports these projects. “It would be much more ethical. We consume lithium daily, it would be normal for us to suffer the impacts related to our use. Today, this pollution already exists, but in other countries, far from our eyes. This would raise awareness among users, who would be confronted with the impacts of their consumption,” he said.
France looks to ‘green lithium’France, for its part, is studying an alternative, called the extraction of “green lithium”. Unlike extractions from rocks or salt deserts, which function like traditional mines, “green lithium” is produced from geothermal sources, with an extraction method similar to that of a well. In France’s Alsace region, the European project EuGeLi (for European Geothermal Lithium) is a pioneer in this field. It recently succeeded in extracting its first kilograms of lithium using this technique. “For the time being, however, the technique remains too expensive to be considered on an industrial level,” noted Hocquard.
The other alternative is to focus on refining lithium rather than mining it. A project was announced in Germany in early June and the Strasbourg-based company Viridian Lithium plans to open the first French lithium factory for batteries there by the end of 2025. It will source ores from Latin America and aims to produce 100,000 tons of lithium hydroxide by 2030. “This would not solve the issue of dependence, but it would create know-how and jobs,” said Vidal.
From an ecological perspective, this would also have a major advantage. At present, lithium is almost systematically transited through China to be refined. The EU now plans to open three “gigafactories” for battery production.
Focusing on battery recyclingVidal warns that even if all these projects come to fruition, they would still not be able to compete with the salt deserts of South America or with Australian production. “On the other hand, where the European Union could really make its mark in the coming years is in battery recycling,” he noted.
“Currently, the quantities of metals to be recycled are still limited since lithium batteries did not exist ten years ago. But by 2035, we will have batteries for electric vehicles at the end of their life and therefore a stock that can be recycled,” he explained. According to the University of Leuven, 40% to 75% of the EU’s metal needs could be met through recycling by 2050. This would guarantee supply security as well as reduce the environmental impact.
“For that to happen, we have to act now,” said Vidal. “We need to design products that will be easily recyclable, at lower cost, to reassure investors.”
But most important, according to Vidal, is our consumption habits. “We need to think about our uses. Lithium is certainly used in car batteries, but also in many everyday gadgets,” he explained. “One of the levers is also to learn to move towards more material sobriety.”
This article has been translated from the original in French.