Thursday, October 20, 2022

AGREED SAUDI ARABIA SHOULD TAKE ITS PLACE

Former U.S. intelligence officials: Cuba shouldn't be on sponsor of terrorism list

Ed Augustin -

HAVANA — Along with Iran, Syria and North Korea, Cuba is listed as a “state sponsor of terrorism” by the U.S. Department of State.


Former U.S. intelligence officials: Cuba shouldn't be on sponsor of terrorism list© Provided by NBC News

The designation subjects it to sanctions “that penalize persons and countries engaging in certain trade with Cuba,” according to the State Department.

Scared of being accused of abetting terror and being hit by mammoth fines, most banks refuse to process Cuban payments, cementing the Caribbean nation’s pariah status in the international financial system.

“It’s lethal,” said Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez when asked about the designation’s effects at a press conference in Havana on Wednesday. He added that the listing prevents people from sending remittances to the country from abroad, and raises the price of vital products the country buys on the world market.

Cuba has called the sponsor of terrorism designation "illegitimate and immoral," arguing that it deprives it of financing and credit sources. The country is grappling with shortages in a moribund economy that has been buffeted by the pandemic, U.S. sanctions and the decadeslong embargo and a global rise in food prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Yet, according to half a dozen interviews with former intelligence analysts and officials who worked on Cuba policy in both Republican and Democratic administrations, the “consensus position” in the U.S. intelligence community has for decades been that the communist-led nation does not sponsor terrorism.

Fulton Armstrong, a former national intelligence officer for Latin America, the U.S. intelligence community’s most senior analyst for the region, described the designation as “bogus.”

Larry Wilkerson, who was the chief of staff to then-Secretary of State Colin Powell in the George W. Bush administration, agreed. “‘Cuba is not a state sponsor of terrorism’ was a mantra from the moment I walked into the State Department to the moment I walked out,” he said. “It’s a fiction that we have created … to reinforce the rationale for the blockade.”

The chasm between the designation and the evidence was so great, he said, that during his time in government, Cuba analysts at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research “laughed at it.”

Cuba was first put on the terror list in 1982, but was taken off in 2015 as part of the Obama administration’s rapprochement with it. The Trump administration, which battered the island with more than 200 new sanctions, put it back on the list just nine days before leaving office.

While the Biden administration has rolled back some Trump-era restrictions on Cuba, the continuing terror designation is now affecting travel to the United States: People from 40 countries this year lost the right to travel to the U.S. without a visa if they visited Cuba in the last decade. For U.S. travel, they must now apply for a visa and it can take months for an appointment.

“They say they want to empower Cuban society, specifically the Cuban private sector, but these measures impoverish Cuban society,” said tour guide Marlon Díaz, who worried that on top of the blackouts and the bad press the island has received following last year’s nationwide protests, the measure will keep European tourists away.

The general manager of a joint venture involving a European firm on the island, whose name is being withheld because his company had not authorized him to speak to reporters, said his bosses were unable to attend a recent board meeting because of the measure. “People from multinationals who work in multiple markets cannot now come to Cuba," he said. "That’s very negative because the exchange of ideas is essential if you want a more democratic and capitalistic society.”

As banks take fright and hard currency inflows are stifled, budgets for the import of food and medicine are crimped.

Those hit the hardest? The poorest — who must rely on the state for food and cannot afford to buy from a private sector which can now import all but directly.

The designation contributes to barren pharmacy shelves and the insufferable hours regular Cubans spend sweltering in lines for food.

'Delegitimizing what should be a tool'

Former security and law enforcement officials also argue that the listing damages U.S. national security interests.

“To weaponize the state sponsor of terrorism list like this for purely political ends of the United States, I think, is not only wrong with respect to Cuba, to me it risks delegitimizing what should be a tool that is used to punish actual state sponsors of terrorism,” said Ben Rhodes, who was then-President Barack Obama’s deputy national security adviser and his point man on Cuba.

U.S. intelligence did, in the past, conclude that the island sponsored terrorism. Throughout the 1980s, Cuba shared intelligence with, trained and apparently supplied weapons to revolutionary movements fighting military dictatorships in Central America.

But by the mid-1990s, after civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador had come to an end and after the Sandinistas in Nicaragua had accepted defeat at the ballot box, U.S. intelligence agencies concluded the island had abandoned its policy of “export of the Revolution.”

“After the Central American peace processes had run their full course, the Cubans really and truly did demonstrate that they were supporting peaceful resolutions,” Armstrong, the former intelligence officer, said. “The world was changing: they knew that the USSR was going to collapse before we did, so it was part of an overall redirection of their foreign policy.”

The Trump administration's decision to reinstate Cuba into the terrorism list chafed those on the island who have lost loved ones in terrorist attacks.

In 1976, plastic explosives disguised as Colgate toothpaste blew up a Cuban flight from Barbados to Jamaica as the plane flew over the Caribbean Sea, killing 73 people on board, including every member of the Cuban national fencing team. A now-deceased CIA-trained Cuban exile, Luis Posada Carriles, was linked to the bombing and accused of masterminding the operation.

The designation “is ironic because in the 1960s, the CIA sponsored assassinations attempts, sabotage and paramilitary raids against Cuba — what today would be called state-sponsored terrorism -- and CIA-trained Cuban exiles continued such attacks for the next several decades," said William LeoGrande, a professor of government at the American University in Washington.

When explaining his decision to relist the island as a sponsor of terrorism, then-President Donald Trump's secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, cited Havana’s support for Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro and its harboring of U.S. fugitives from justice.

But neither are “international terrorism,” according to U.S. law.

“Fugitives are not active terrorists. It’s an absurd argument,” Rhodes said. “Are we sanctioning France for Roman Polanski living there?” he asked, referring to the movie director who fled the United States on the eve of sentencing in a child sex abuse trial in 1978.

The Trump administration also cited the sanctuary Havana provides to the leadership of Colombia's National Liberation Army (ELN), a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization which took credit for a 2019 attack inside Colombia’s national police academy, in which 22 were killed.

But the ELN leaders were granted safe haven in Havana as part of peace negotiations with the Colombian government that were facilitated by Cuba and Norway, and backed by the Obama administration and the Vatican. Following those negotiations, the Colombian government and the guerrilla group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) reached a historic peace accord ending a half-century of bloody combat. Peace with the ELN, however, was not achieved.

New Colombian President Gustavo Petro has called Cuba’s inclusion on the list “an enormous injustice." He has announced his government will resume talks with the ELN next month. Cuba will once again be a “guarantor state.”

The Biden administration has provided no evidence that Cuba sponsors terrorism. When asked by NBC News to provide any proof, the State Department declined.

“The Department of State carefully and consistently reviews available information and intelligence, from many sources, to determine if a country meets the statutory criteria for designation or rescission," according to a State Department spokesperson. "We do not publicly discuss or comment on internal deliberations regarding designations.”

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
Early Polynesian / Australasian / South Indian settlement identified at Farallon Islands, Point Reyes, and San Francisco Bay area, California, in Coast Miwok and Ohlone traditional territories

Press Pool -

Early Polynesian / Australasian / South Indian settlement identified at Farallon Islands, Point Reyes, and San Francisco Bay area, California, in Coast Miwok and Ohlone traditional territories© Provided by Indian Country Today

News Release

Stephen D. Janes, M.A., Ph.D.

Lou-Anne Fauteck Makes-Marks, M.F.A., M.A., Ph.D.

Ancient, megalithic structures at Point Reyes, California, traditional Coast Miwok territory, have been found to be part of an ancient mortuary complex, with spirit paths to the Farallon Islands and ceremonial sites for the dead. Stone mounds and other structures there have been determined to be culturally Polynesian in origin. A related mortuary complex exists for the Ohlone at the West Berkeley Shellmound in San Francisco Bay.

The Farallon Islands are considered by both Coast Miwok and Ohlone to be part of these complexes, as their Islands of the Dead. These islands have now been identified as the most likely first settlement of early settlers—Polynesian, Australasian, and South Indian in origin — along the central California coast.

The Farallon islands are presently the approved target for rodent-poison bombing in the near future by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Point Blue Conservation Science. Point Reyes is the site of expanded dairy operations and culling of the native Tule elk. The Ohlone’s West Berkeley Shellmound is being threatened by commercial development.

Per Dr. Janes, “Protection and preservation of these structures are essential, as well as non-invasive testing to further describe them.”

Conclusions are based on observations, oral traditions of Coast Miwok, Ohlone, and other California Indian tribes, records of comparable cultural sites throughout the Pacific and Indian oceans, and other substantial academic and field research.

Dr. Makes-Marks, a scholar of Native American religions, said, “These mortuary complexes are among the ancient, traditional cultural places in the Americas and demand more attention.”

A book detailing this research is forthcoming.
Cuba calls U.S. trade embargo a 'hurricane' that never ends

HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba on Wednesday said the decades-old U.S. trade embargo has been causing record financial losses and untold human suffering in recent months, at a time when Cuba was also battling the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and Hurricane Ian.


Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez speaks in Havana



Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez made the comments at the launch of an annual campaign for a United Nations resolution condemning the trade embargo, which was put in place after Cuba's 1959 revolution.

The foreign minister's comments follow a Biden administration announcement on Tuesday saying it would provide $2 million to Cuba for emergency relief efforts following Hurricane Ian, a rare olive branch between the two long-time foes.

"Despite the positive announcements... the blockade has not changed in its scope or depth," Rodriguez told reporters in a news conference in Havana.

He said Cuba was grateful for the U.S. aid but was still crippled by the embargo, which he called a "hurricane" that never ceases to batter the island.

Related video: Hurricane Ian Makes Landfall in Cuba as It Approaches Florida
Duration 1:30
View on Watch

"The embargo is a permanent pandemic, a constant hurricane," he said. "Today the policy of President Biden's government towards Cuba is... the same Republican policy, no changes have been introduced in that policy."

Former U.S. President Trump, a Republican, introduced stiff new sanctions against Cuba, beginning in 2017. The administration of President Joe Biden, a Democrat, has since eased some policies around remittances, flights, tourism and more recently, migration, saying it would reopen full consular services in Havana in 2023.


Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez speaks in Havana
© Reuters/ALEXANDRE MENEGHINI

The broader embargo, however, has remained largely unchanged. The web of U.S. laws and regulations complicate financial transactions and the acquisition of goods and services by the Cuban government.

The United States has said its policies are aimed at channeling "funds toward the Cuban people and away from a regime that has failed to meet the most basic requirements of a free and just society."

Rodriguez on Tuesday blasted that assertion, saying the blockade was "aimed at causing the inability of the country to meet the fundamental needs of the population."

The U.N. General Assembly will vote on Nov. 2 and 3 on a non-binding resolution condemning the trade embargo. It will be the 30th time Cuba has marshaled international support against the embargo. The resolution has historically garnered near unanimous support from member nations and is expected to pass again this year.

Economic losses caused by the embargo from August 2021 through February 2022 amounted to $3.8 billion, a record for that seven month period, Rodriguez said, bringing the total cost to $154 billion since the embargo's inception.

(Reporting by Dave Sherwood and Nelson Acosta, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

Cuba estimates monthly losses due to U.S. blockade at more than 454 million euros

Daniel Stewart - Yesterday -
 News 360

The Government of Cuba has denounced this Wednesday that between August 2021 and February 2022 the island suffered losses amounting to 3,806 million dollars (a similar figure in euros), equivalent to more than 450 million per month, due to the blockade imposed by the United States six decades ago.


Cuba's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bruno Rodriguez - 
MINISTERIO DE EXTERIORES DE CUBA

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, who emphasized in a statement that this means monthly losses of 454 million dollars, denounced that during the first 14 months of U.S. President Joe Biden's term of office, Cuba has lost 6.364 billion dollars, a milestone he described as a "historic record".

"Between August 2021 and February 2022, the losses caused by the blockade are in the order of 3.806 billion dollars. This is an historic record amount for a reduced period such as these seven months. Cuba's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), according to very conservative data, could have grown, despite the adverse circumstances faced by the Cuban economy, by 4.5 percent in that period, had these measures not been applied," Rodriguez assured during a press conference.

Since the United States imposed a blockade against Cuba six decades ago, the island would have requested a total of 154.217 billion dollars, more than seven times the U.S. GDP.

"(This is an) exorbitant figure for a small economy, without great natural resources, insular, underdeveloped, like the Cuban one (...). Imagine, imagine, imagine what Cuba could have done with these resources. What Cuba would be like today if the country had had those resources," added the Cuban Foreign Minister.

The Cuban Executive has accused Biden of continuing "inertially" the same policy as his predecessor, Donald Trump, regarding the economic blockade of Cuba, which was strengthened by the previous tenant of the White House during his term in office.

He also remarked that the blockade "reaches and harms every Cuban family, Cubans living in the United States, U.S. citizens and people and businesses around the world", which is why he has called on Washington to remove it.

"Cuba has the right to live without a blockade, it has the right to live in peace. Cuba would be better off without a blockade, better off. Everyone would be better off without it. The United States would be a better country without a blockade against Cuba," Rodriguez said during the press conference.


SIX MILLION MORE THAN THE U$ GAVE

The UN provides almost 8 million euros to support the reconstruction of Cuba after hurricane ‘Ian’.

Daniel Stewart - Yesterday -

The United Nations has announced $7.8 million (a similar figure in euros) to support relief efforts following the devastation caused by Hurricane Ian in Cuba, where more than half a million people are in need of humanitarian aid and 3.2 million people have been affected.


Aerial view of hurricane 'Ian' as it advances towards Cuba
 - NOAA / ZUMA PRESS / CONTACTOPHOTO

UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Martin Griffiths, has ordered the release of funds from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to "enable relief efforts and kick-start recovery" on the island in the wake of the hurricane.

"The people of Cuba have shown tremendous resilience and have acted quickly with early warnings when faced with storms," Griffiths said, assuring that, however, the weather crisis "makes storms more intense and frequent."

"People were expecting 50 centimeters of rain, but they experienced three times that amount, losing their homes, family photos, school supplies for children and medicine for elderly parents. We must all help people respond and recover," the assistant secretary general said.

Related video: All of Cuba without power after Hurricane Ian
Duration 1:39

In this regard, he detailed that food, health supplies, hygiene kits, shelter supplies and other items that arrived prior to the hurricane "are already being distributed to people in need".

However, Griffiths warned that the Cuban population needs "much more support", since "Ian" damaged nearly 170 health clinics and more than 1,000 schools, affecting the education of 139,000 children.

"Several community food distribution centers and processing warehouses were lost, and many people lost fishing boats, livestock and other means of livelihood," he said.

In addition, he warned that the lack of electricity in much of the affected area and the limited availability of fuel are hampering the UN response.

Hurricane Ian claimed the lives of at least two people in the western Cuban province of Pinar del Rio and displaced more than 50,000 people in the west and center of the island.
‘A KNIFE TO THE HEART’: Louis Riel’s grave stone defaced

Dave Baxter Local Journalism Initiative reporter - 

The Manitoba Métis Federation say they are both outraged and insulted after damage done to the gravesite of Louis Riel in Winnipeg was discovered earlier this week.



Damage can be seen over the name and the image of Louis Riel on his gravestone in Winnipeg on Thursday. The Manitoba Métis Federation say they believe the defacement happened on Monday, and say they are outraged by the act, and have filed a police report. Dave Baxter/Winnipeg Sun/Local Journalism Initiative© Provided by Winnipeg Sun

“This deliberate, targeted attack and the complete disrespect shown to Louis Riel as the historic leader of the Red River Métis, the founder of Manitoba, and its first premier, is appalling,” MMF President David Chartrand said in a statement released on Thursday.

The statement comes after the discovery earlier this week of lines crossed over both the name of Riel and his image, on his gravestone on the grounds of the St. Boniface Cathedral in Winnipeg, where Riel was buried after being executed in 1885.

“This is not just offensive to our Nation, it is an insult to all Manitobans, and should be treated as such. It is made worse by the fact that this was done just days before the anniversary of Riel’s birth.”

Riel, who was born on Oct. 22, 1844, is recognized as the founder of Manitoba and as a historic leader of the Métis people.

After leading two resistance movements against the federal government, he was 41 when he was executed by the Canadian government after being convicted of high treason.

MMF said the defacement of the grave was first reported earlier this week on social media by a “vigilant witness” and they believe the act was committed sometime on Monday.

They also confirmed they have filed a police report, and want to see a full investigation undertaken and “justice” served to whoever defaced the grave.

“Louis Riel and his legacy are of vital importance to the history of our Nation. It is deeply disturbing that someone would do this to Riel’s final resting place, a site of many pilgrimages by our citizens and others who wish to honour his contributions to Canada’s confederation.

“We will take all steps necessary to remedy the defacement committed by the individual or individuals who were so disrespectful to this great man’s legacy. I can assure you, we will seek justice for this terrible insult.

“It’s like a knife to the heart of our Nation.”

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

MISOGYNIST INCEL LINKS
Liberals want House speaker to investigate hidden tags on Poilievre YouTube account


OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are demanding a formal investigation into the use of hidden tags embedded in Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's YouTube videos.


Liberals want House speaker to investigate hidden tags on Poilievre YouTube account© Provided by The Canadian Press

A letter to House Speaker Anthony Rota alleges that Poilievre is deliberately using tags that target misogynistic online groups and that questions remain unanswered even after the new leader denied having any knowledge of the tags.

Global News reported earlier this month that Poilievre's videos had long carried the hashtag #MGTOW, which stands for "Men Going Their Own Way" and is recognized as a nod to an anti-feminist movement.

The letter signed by Liberal MP Jennifer O'Connell calls for Rota and the House of Commons Board of Internal Economy to conduct a thorough investigation.

O'Connell is making the plea on the basis that the speaker can investigate matters that could violate parliamentary codes of conduct, and is tasked with overseeing a safe and respectful workplace.

Though the tags have now been removed from the videos, O'Connell says in the letter that MPs should be concerned about whether Poilievre takes online radicalization seriously enough.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 20, 2022.

The Canadian Press
TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings

MobileSyrup - TODAY


The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) chair Ian Scott has been under fire over meetings with telecom executives, particularly when Scott was photographed having beers with Bell CEO Mirko Bibic.

Now, independent internet service provider (ISP) TekSavvy obtained records detailing multiple undocumented, off-site meetings between Scott and unknown participants. In a blog post, TekSavvy explains it obtained documents through the Access to Information Act. The documents show several lunches or meetings Scott had in Ottawa between 2019 and 2021.

Specifically, the information in the documents comes from Scott’s calendar entries associated with the business uses of his vehicle. The documents don’t always include information about who attended the meetings or what topics were discussed. Moreover, TekSavvy said the CRTC didn’t provide additional details or documentation related to the meetings through a spokesperson or additional access-to-information requests.



TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup


TekSavvy reveals CRTC chair Ian Scott’s multiple mystery meetings© Provided by MobileSyrup

Highlights from the documents include that several of the meetings occurred at the high-end Rideau Club. Records show that Scott met with Quebecor CEO Pierre Karl Peladeau and former CBC executive vice-president and Telus advisor Richard Stursberg. TekSavvy says there’s no further documentation of those meetings, and neither meeting was logged in the federal lobbyist registry. A Quebecor spokesperson told TekSavvy that the CRTC requested the meeting with Peladeau and that it wasn’t logged because it didn’t pertain to matters covered by lobbying regulations.

TekSavvy argues that meetings like these are concerning since there’s no transparency around them. There’s no way to know what was discussed at the meetings and what impact (if any) the meetings had on CRTC decisions. The ISP even cites a 2o14 CRTC document advising against meetings like the ones Scott attended since they could appear to express favour or bias.

Finally, TekSavvy reiterated its call for Scott’s removal, noting that he presided over several anti-consumer decisions that the ISP says contributed to rising internet prices and the acquisition of several independent telecom companies by large players. However, Scott’s term as CRTC chairperson was extended until January 4th, 2023. It was initially set to end in September.

Source: TekSavvy
Rooftop wind energy invention is 16 times more efficient than solar panels

Anthony Cuthbertson - Yesterday 

A new rooftop wind harvesting device is capable of generating 50 per cent more electricity than solar panels for the same cost, according to its inventors.

wind power rooftop renewable.png© Aeromine Technologies

A much smaller footprint means a single unit can also provide the same amount of power as up to 16 solar panels.

The motionless design, created by Texas-based startup Aeromine Technologies, replaces the blades found in traditional wind turbines with an aerodynamic system that harvests energy from the airflow above a building.

This makes them virtually noiseless and safe for birds and other wildlife.

“This is a game-changer adding new value to the fast-growing rooftop power generation market, helping corporations meet their resilience and sustainability goals with an untapped distributed renewable energy source,” said Aeromine CEO David Asarnow.

Related video: How renewable energy on the grid may be easier than you think
Duration 2:03


“Aeromine’s proprietary technology brings the performance of wind energy to the onsite generation market, mitigating legacy constraints posed by spinning wind turbines and less efficient solar panels.”

Aeromine’s units require 10 per cent of the space needed for solar panels, while also being capable of producing electricity 24 hours a day throughout the year.

The firm said the technology will reduce a building’s need for energy storage capacity and could potentially even make the building energy independent, depending on the building’s design and location.

“The technology is a major leap forward from legacy distributed wind turbines that are ill-suited for most rooftop applications,” the site states.

“Aeromine’s founders have created a much more effective way to harness even moderate wind to create energy for large, flat rooftop buildings such as warehouses, data centres, office, and apartment buildings.”

The device is currently being tested at a manufacturing facility in Michigan, while future applications could include large residential buildings and electric car charging stations.

From news to politics, travel to sport, culture to climate – The Independent has a host of free newsletters to suit your interests. To find the stories you want to read, and more, in your inbox, click here.
Melting glaciers could spread mysterious pathogens that cause future pandemics, scientists warn

Matthew Rozsa - SALON - TODAY

Alpine Deglaciation Getty Images / Andrea Toffaletti / 500px

Situated on a Canadian body of land known as Ellesmere Island, Lake Hazen is drop-for-drop the largest freshwater lake in the High Arctic. While its surface area is surpassed in size by Lake Taymyr in Russia and Lake Inari in Finland, it contains more water than either of those bodies, owing its mammoth volume in large part to the numerous glaciers that feed it. Yet as climate change worsens, increased glacial melt — the kind that is causing glaciers from Mount Everest to Africa to disappear altogether — is going to spur all kinds of natural disasters. The most obvious one is sea level rise: for instance, the glaciers in the Greenland Ice Sheet just east of Lake Hazen are currently melting so dramatically that experts believe they could cause a mass rise in sea level displacing as much as 40% of the population.

As Mann put it, "there are actually a variety of mechanisms by which climate change could increase the spread of novel pathogens, of which this is just potentially one."

But beyond frozen water, there are other horrors lurking within the vicinity of the glacial ice, waiting patiently to spread anew across the landscape.

Enter a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The study raises the Lovecraftian prospect that glacier melt like that which will run off from Lake Hazen will help spread pandemics.

The scientists behind the study arrived at this conclusion by analyzing soil and lake sediments from Lake Hazen. Using DNA and RNA sequencing technology, they reconstructed the complete virosphere (or ecosystem of viruses) that exists in the Lake Mead area and then tried to ascertain the risk of "viral spillover," or events where a virus moves from a host in one species to a host in a different species. To do this, they studied how closely the viral evolutionary histories compared with those of nearby organisms. Their conclusion was, quite simply, that "spillover risk increases with runoff from glacier melt, a proxy for climate change." All it would take is for climate change to force species to move northwards, which would expose them to these new mysterious viruses that they can in turn spread to humans.

Related
Africa, home to only three glaciers, will lose all of them due to climate change

"We show that as glacier runoff increases, as it is predicted to do in a warming world, so does spillover risk," Dr. Stéphane Aris-Brosou, a biology professor at the University of Ottawa and the corresponding author behind the study, told Salon by email.

Dr. Michael E. Mann, Director of the Penn Center for Science, Sustainability & the Media (PCSSM) and a Presidential Distinguished Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, told Salon by email that he views the study as "interesting" but added that further research needs to be done about its larger implications. Aris-Brosou also told Salon that the study is only part of the larger research that needs to be done on this subject, writing that "as we adopted a global approach, based on the compared history (phylogeny) of the viruses and of their hosts, we do not predict any future pandemic." Indeed, this study is not even the first to cover the possibility that glacial melt will cause more pandemics.

Want more health and science stories in your inbox? Subscribe to Salon's weekly newsletter The Vulgar Scientist.

A paper published by the journal Nature in May also highlighted the fact that, as climate change causes animals to move to different regions, they will be exposed to new viromes and will in turn make humans more vulnerable to new types of viral infections. "Our findings highlight an urgent need to pair viral surveillance and discovery efforts with biodiversity surveys tracking species' range shifts, especially in tropical regions that harbor the most zoonoses and are experiencing rapid warming," the authors of the May study concluded.

"The problems arise from flows over the surface and especially contamination from feces from cattle and other animals."

Dr. Kevin E Trenberth, a Distinguished Scholar at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, wrote to Salon that flooding (which will be much more common) due to climate change will also increase the likelihood of new pandemics.

"The flows and percolation of waters through soils remarkably filters the waters, and the problems arise from flows over the surface and especially contamination from feces from cattle and other animals," Trenberth observed. "That leads to various outbreaks of things like cryptosporidia," a parasite that causes the diarrheal disease cryptosporidiosis.

As Mann put it, "there are actually a variety of mechanisms by which climate change could increase the spread of novel pathogens, of which this is just potentially one."

If human beings are going to survive these pandemics, the first thing they must do is raise awareness that they are likely to break out. Dr. Ken Caldeira, Senior Scientist (Emeritus) at the Carnegie Institution for Science, was pessimistic.

"Enough Americans are dying from COVID to nearly fill a jumbo jet full of people every day. Yet most seem to be acting like the pandemic is over," Caldeira wrote to Salon. "Many think that as climate damage and risks become more pronounced, we will do more to reduce emissions and avoid climate damage. But maybe we will just become immune to bad news."


Read more
about glaciers and climate change
THERE SHOULD BE NO WINDOW NOT EVEN A CRACK

'Little window': Coal mine supporters hope for change under new Alberta premier


EDMONTON — Supporters of open-pit coal mining say there's a chance new mines could be built in Alberta's Rockies after comments from the province's new premier.


'Little window': Coal mine supporters hope for change under new Alberta premier© Provided by The Canadian Press

"We're hoping with this little window with Danielle (Smith) that we can crack that open," said Eric Lowther, a southern Alberta resident and board member of Citizens Supportive of Crowsnest Coal.

Coal mining in the province's beloved Rockies was blocked in February 2021 by a ministerial order. The order was triggered by a public outcry after thousands of hectares of summits and foothills were permitted for exploration that was previously encouraged by the United Conservative Party government.

That outcry — which united urban environmentalists, ranchers, First Nations and municipalities — resulted in a coal policy panel that recommended no new mines be developed before land use plans are in place. Opponents worried developments would contaminate the headwaters of much of Alberta's water supply and despoil the landscape.


However, while campaigning in the party's recent leadership campaign, Smith visited the southern Alberta communities of Crowsnest Pass and Pincher Creek. She reportedlytold people she would be open to revisiting the idea if she became premier, especially on lands that have been previously disturbed.

Many in Crowsnest Passwere disappointed after a joint federal-provincial review panel turned down an application for the proposed Grassy Mountain coal mine.

"If there was a strong referendum in the area in support of it, (Smith) would be more inclined to help us out," said Lowther, who was present at both meetings.

Crowsnest Pass Mayor Blair Painter said he asked Smith about coal at the public meeting in his community. He refused to say what she told him, although others at the meeting contacted by The Canadian Press confirmed Lowther's version of her remarks.

Lowther said Smith repeated them late last month at a meeting in Pincher Creek.

"She said to a number of us if there was a referendum in the area in support of coal, she'd be more willing to bring (the issue) forward."

Some Albertans have also said on social media that Smith made similar statements to them during the leadership campaign.

Smith was asked during the campaign if she supported new or expanded coal mines in the Rockies. She did not commit either way, telling the Edmonton Journal that she would consult UCP legislature members before making any changes.

Contacted Wednesday, Smith's spokeswoman Rebecca Polak didn't address Smith's purported statements on coal.


"The premier travelled the province throughout her leadership campaign and spoke with Albertans on a variety of issues and topics," she said in an email.

"Responsible resource development is a top priority for Alberta’s government. Premier Smith continues to be briefed on this important topic and will be meeting with her caucus and future cabinet in the coming weeks, including the minister of environment, to discuss this matter further."

Smith is expected to announce her new cabinet later this week. A new energy minister could withdraw the ministerial order.

University of Calgary resource law professor Martin Olszynski said if Smith instructed a new energy minister to rescind the moratorium order, any new mines would still have to go through a lengthy environmental review, which would likely include the federal government.

As well, Olszynski said there's no legal channel Smith could use to revive Grassy Mountain. The decision to deny the proposal a permit has been upheld in two courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada, he said.

"There's basically nothing she can do about the (federal) denial of a permit for Grassy," he said.


Coal mining opponents decried Smith's apparent willingness to consider development.

"It shows how out-of-touch she is with mainstream Albertans," said New Democrat environment critic Marlin Schmidt.


Schmidt pointed to the work of Alberta's panel on coal policy committee, which received more than 1,000 emailed documents and 170 written submissions, most opposing open-pit coal mines in the Rockies.

The panel, which reported last spring, found 85 per cent of Albertans indicated that they were "not at all confident" that coal exploration and development are properly regulated.


"To even bring this up as a possibility after such extensive consultations … it boggles the mind to think (Smith believes) this is something that would pass muster with Albertans."

Katie Morrison of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society urged Smith to follow the panel's recommendations, which suggest comprehensive land use plans should be developed for the region before mines are permitted.

"The majority of Albertans across the province have been very clear that they do not want new coal mines in our headwaters," she said.

"I would encourage (Smith) to closely examine the documents of the (panel) … for direction on what Albertans want to see with respect to coal.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 19, 2022.

— Follow Bob Weber on Twitter at @row1960

Bob Weber, The Canadian Press

Note to readers: This is a corrected story; An earlier version said Eric Lowther was president of Citizens Supportive of Crowsnest Coal, when he is, in fact, a board member.
Feds apologize; compensate Niisaachewan Anishinaabe nation for 19th century flooding

The federal government apologized and compensated an Ontario First Nation for its role in the erection of two dams that ended up flooding the community’s lands more than a century ago.

The government’s unauthorized construction of the Rollerway Dam in 1887 – and a subsequent project, the Norman Dam, built in 1895 – resulted in rising water levels on the Winnipeg River and flooding in the nearby Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation community.

Lawsuits filed by the community in December 2000 and January 2001 called for governmental reparations for the century’s worth of flooding, and after two decades, the government finally apologized formally, as did the Ontario provincial government.

Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Chief Lorraine Cobiness said the community has been suffering as a result of the dam’s construction without authorization for more than a century.

“Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation has been suffering since 1887 from flooding and unnatural water flows on the Winnipeg River caused by dams at Kenora that impacted and nearly destroyed our way of life, our families, and our community,” she said. “But through the resiliency, strength, and courage of my people, we have been actively working on this claim with the Federal and Provincial Governments for over 20 years to see the resolution of this Settlement Agreement.”

The community was compensated to the tune of $83 million in total compensation, with Canada paying $63.2 million and Ontario paying $19.8 million.

Cobiness said the time has come to turn the page on the past and the community hopes to be part of substantive change in the future in the relationship between the federal government and Indigenous communities.

“In the spirit of reconciliation, we are committed to strengthening and renewing our nation-to-nation relationship by working together in a respectful and honest way to ensure this never happens again,” she said. “Our commitment to this relationship is to ensure the safety and success of my people, our children here now, our grandchildren, and those yet to come for generations by making meaningful change in western systems by asserting our inherent rights and sacred responsibilities through Anishinaabe law and ceremony.”

Federal Crown-Indigenous Relations minister Marc Miller formally apologized for the government’s misdeeds.

"On behalf of the Government of Canada, I acknowledge Canada's failure to protect Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation's interests and act without considering their loss of culture, heritage and traditional economy,” he said. “With the successful resolution of this settlement agreement, we are taking a step toward reconciliation and to renewing our nation-to-nation relationship with Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation."

The Ontario provincial government, represented by Ontario Indigenous Affairs minister Greg Rickford, also formally apologized.

Marc Lalonde, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Iori:wase