Sunday, December 04, 2022

 POSTMODERN STALINISM

Arrests of aides highlight pre-party congress maneuvering in Vietnam

General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong has wielded anti-corruption as a political weapon.
A commentary by Zachary Abuza
2022.12.04



Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong [center] walks with Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh [right] and National Assembly Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue [left] as they attend the opening of the National Assembly's autumn session in Hanoi , Oct. 20, 2022.

On Nov. 28, Vietnamese police arrested Nguyen Van Trinh, the chief-of-staff to the country’s Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam. He was the second chief of staff to a deputy prime minister who has been arrested in the past few months. 

The arrests were ostensibly for corruption, both involving scandals during the Covid-19 Pandemic, but in a country like Vietnam where corruption is rife, and investigative/prosecutorial resources are so limited, all such cases are highly political. These arrests shed light on how elite politics are played and how they will shape the leadership moving forward. 

In 2020, Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam was a national hero, in charge of Vietnam’s stellar covid-19 response. Vietnam had mobilized society, called on combatting the virus as a patriotic struggle, sealed its borders, enforced quarantines, and superb and consistent public health messaging. 

Dam was in charge of the nationwide response. And many were surprised when, at the 13th Party Congress, the quinquennial leadership turnover in January 2021, he was not elevated from the Central Committee to the 19-member Politburo. Many recall the crushed Dam, caught on film leaving the Congress. And for many Vietnamese that a competent technocrat, who helped the country have the only positive economic growth in Southeast Asia in 2020, was passed over in favor of political hacks, was disheartening.

Things quickly went south for the new government that came to power in early 2021. Vietnam’s low covid numbers made it complacent about vaccine acquisition, and the country was hard hit by the Delta and Omicron variants, prompting Ho Chi Minh City and other Mekong delta cities to go into lockdown. Vietnam ended its own “Zero Covid” strategy.

At this time, Viet A, a medical testing firm won a license to produce inferior covid test kits, which it sold to all levels of the government at a 45 percent markup, wracking in $172 million in profits.  

Viet A’s CEO admitted to paying over $34 million in bribes. The investigations brought down 90 people, including two Central Committee members, one a former Minister of Health, the other a former Hanoi mayor. Two senior military officials were also prosecuted. Over a hundred have been investigated. 

Dam’s chief-of-staff was accused of helping Viet A register and receive government contracts. 

Vietnam’s Deputy Foreign Minister To Anh Dung [left] and Nguyen Quang Linh, the assistant to Pham Binh Minh, now Deputy Prime Minister, were arrested this year in connection with the scandal-ridden endeavor to repatriate Vietnamese nationals during the COVID-19 pandemic. Credit: Police [left]; Ministry of Public Security


Scandal-laden repatriation flights

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs was in charge of organizing repatriation flights for Vietnamese nationals during the pandemic, which became a completely scandal-laden endeavor. 70,000 citizens returned from 60 countries in this program.

In all some 22 diplomats have been investigated with several arrests. Others, including the owner of a travel agency that was used in the scheme, have also been arrested. The highest-ranking official, Deputy Foreign Minister To Anh Dung, was arrested in April 2022, expelled from the party, and prosecuted.  

On 27 September, authorities arrested Nguyen Quang Linh, the assistant to Pham Binh Minh, now Deputy Prime Minister, but formally the minister of Foreign Affairs, on whose watch the scandal unfolded. 

Minh is a member of the elite 18-member Politburo. And due to party rules, he’s one of six people eligible to become the Party’s General Secretary, however unlikely. Minh was also tipped to become president, a largely ceremonial and diplomatic role. 

In the 12th Central Committee, two Politburo members were sacked, one of whom was stripped of his party membership and put on trial. So there is a precedent to go after senior leaders. As mentioned above, two Central Committee members were stripped of their membership and prosecuted in 2022.

But what do these arrests say about the nature of Vietnamese politics?

First, Vietnamese politics are based on patron-client ties. 

If individuals like Minh and Dam are too senior or if going after them would cause too much intra-party dissension, targeting their top aides is a very effective tool. Given the routine use of torture by the police, which can result in in-custody death, the aides will talk. And that may be enough. 

Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong has wielded anti-corruption tactics as a political weapon. Credit: AFP
Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong has wielded anti-corruption tactics as a political weapon. Credit: AFP
Anti-corruption as a political weapon

In the unlikely case that they both survive until the 14th Party Congress is held in early 2026, their wings are clipped, and they will pose no threat to General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong who is maneuvering to have his protege elected.

The 78-year-old Trong, now in his third term, has already received two age waivers. He was expected to step down before the 14th Congress but shows no signs of retiring. Though he has made counter-corruption the theme of his leadership, constantly warning that it threatens the VCP’s legitimacy, the reality is that he has wielded anti-corruption as a political weapon.

Trong neutralized former Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung at the 12th Congress in 2016, and then went after Dung’s proteges, including Politburo member and rising political star Dinh La Thanh. 

Ahead of the 13th Congress, Trong unleashed the head of the Central Inspection Commission, Tran Quoc Vuong on political rivals. Here Trong may have overplayed his hand. 

Vuong was his own heir apparent to succeed him as General Secretary. With a shared threat, various factions united to prevent that from happening, and Vuong was not only not elected General Secretary but voted off the Politburo altogether.

Trong appears to have learned his lesson and has been more restrained in in targeting senior leaders, especially his rivals. He can’t give them another reason to rally against him. So Trong has set his sights on the aides and protégés of rivals, coming close enough to politically emasculate them.

It’s not clear whether Trong will last until 2026, but this time around, he’s laid the groundwork for his protege to be elected General Secretary.  

According to party statues, you can only be General Secretary if you have served two terms on the Politburo, leaving six eligible candidates: President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính, National Assembly chief Vương Đình Huệ, Minister of Public Security Tô Lâm, Vietnam Fatherland Front Chief Trương Thị Mai, and Deputy Prime Minister Phạm Bình Minh. 

Minh is out of the running for the corruption scandal, while To Lam has his own scandal from his $2,000 gold steak fiasco, and is vying for the presidency once his term as Minister of Public Security expires. Truong Thi Mai has the wrong chromosome. President Phuc, who vied for the post in 2021, has allegations of corruption hanging over him and may bow out to save himself. The last thing Phuc wants is a corruption investigation into him, his family, or close associates. 

That leaves Prime Minister Chinh, who would be acceptable to Trong, or his preferred choice and protege, Vuong Dinh Hue. 

Either way, Trong has used corruption investigations to neutralize opposing factions and individual rivals. To a degree he was thwarted in 2021; he won’t be in the run-up to 2026.


No laughing matter: the Vietnam Communist Party’s thin skin

Eyes glaze over legal or historical analyses, but humor goes viral.
A commentary by Zachary Abuza
2022.10.10



An event at Hanoi Medical University had a slide with the Health Ministry’s logo featuring a snake with an envelope in its mouth wrapped around a lancet, in a swipe at rampant medical corruption in the Southeast Asian country

Vietnam’s human rights record is grim. There are now over 150 political prisoners, and the regime is showing even less tolerance of dissent than before. But a recent spate of arrests is revealing one thing: the political elite’s fear of public mockery, as it’s hard to rule an authoritarian system when people have no fear of laughing at the leadership. As Mark Twain said, “Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.”

The Envelope

It was there for everyone to see and to quickly spread like wildfire across Vietnam’s vibrant and 60-million strong FaceBook community. 

Projected onto a screen that served as a backdrop to the 17 September 2022 Ministry of Health-sponsored event at Hanoi Medical University was the ministry’s logo, the familiar snake wrapped around a lancet. 

But this logo was different, for in the snake’s mouth was an envelope. And no one in Vietnam needs to be told what the envelope symbolizes. Even the state-owned media covered it without comment. 

In the eyes of the public that is inured to government corruption, the Ministry of Health’s recent scandals have made them a poster child for government graft and a distinct object of derision.

Earlier this year, a major bribery scandal involving Covid-19 test kits, brought down two members of the Communist Party’s elite Central Committee, including a former Minister of Health. Over 20 other officials in the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Science and Technology, and within the esteemed People’s Army’s medical establishment were felled in the $22 million bribery scandal. The current Minister of Health was formally reprimanded for his lax management.

While a $22 million bribery scandal is not unusual in Vietnam anymore, the fact that it touched the VCP General Secretary who awarded the firm a commendation, and so many other senior officials across the government and military, was. This scandal exposed rot across the government. 

Police were immediately dispatched to find who replaced the logo, and no doubt someone will be severely punished for this transgression because nothing threatens an authoritarian regime more than people laughing at them.

Noodle vendor and former activist Bui Tuan Lam, also known as “Onion Leaf Bae,” seasons a dish in the theatrical style of Turkish celebrity chef Salt Bae. Video courtesy of Bui Tuan Lam
Noodle vendor and former activist Bui Tuan Lam, also known as “Onion Leaf Bae,” seasons a dish in the theatrical style of Turkish celebrity chef Salt Bae. Video courtesy of Bui Tuan Lam
Onion Leaf Bae

Mockery is costly in Vietnam. Just ask “Onion Leaf Bae,” a noodle seller in Da Nang, who  recently ran afoul of the authorities for his satirical performance that poked fun at To Lam, the Minister of Public Security.

In November 2021, after placing a wreath at the tomb of Karl Marx in London, To Lam and his entourage were filmed being personally served gold-encrusted steaks by the flamboyant Turkish restauranteur Nusret Gökçe. “Salt Bae”, as Gökçe is known, is filmed with his trademark black sunglasses and black latex gloves theatrically cutting and spicing the $2,000 steaks, that he served Lam on a skewer. 

Bui Tuan Lam donned the ubiquitous black latex gloves and sunglasses and filmed himself imitating Salt Bae as he spiced his noodles, just days after the Minister’s expose. He posted the video on 11 November 2021, and after a police summons, took the video down from his TikTok account. But the video, which generated howls of laughter across the country, spread across FaceBook. 

Police arrested Lam, no relation to the minister, who called himself “Onion Leaf Bae”, in September 2022. He was charged under Article 117 of the Penal Code, for “creating, storing, and disseminating materials and items against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.” According to the state media, Lam had been actively posting seditious material online after the video incident. 

Without a doubt, the Minister of Public Security was taken to task within the corridors of power  not for eating a $2,000 steak in a country whose average per capita income in 2021 was a mere $3,694, but for being filmed doing so. 

Lam, who is serving on his second politburo and is eligible to succeed the current VCP General Secretary, may have taken himself out of contention with this lack of discretion. And after shining an unwelcome light on the entire senior party leadership, To Lam maintained a pretty low profile throughout much of 2022. 

While the government will point to Lam’s involvement in online discussions that “violated his democratic freedoms”, most people will conclude that the Minister of Public Security used all the coercive powers that he has at his disposal to target the noodle seller. While a private rebuke from the General Secretary was inevitable, what was intolerable was public mockery.

League of Legends gamer Nguyen Thi Thanh Loan, also known as Milona, is seen in this screenshot from Facebook Video.


The Gamer

The ridicule doesn’t have to be well planned; authorities fear spontaneous acts of derision as well. In September 2022, a popular 22-year-old gamer, Nguyen Thi Thanh Loan, who goes by her handle Milon, made casual remarks during a live session on the FaceBook gaming platform, League of Legends.

“But I'm sure the Presidents don't do anything all day at home, they watch 18+ movies, so they're all bald,” she said in a clear reference to President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who’s known for his comb-over. Perhaps catching herself, “The head still has hair, the head still has a few strands of hair, right??” But she continued: “Why don't you do anything, just stay at home all day watching 18+ movies.”

Her offhand remark went viral on Facebook.  And while police did not arrest her, Loan was fined and put on notice. So was everyone else who had a laugh at Phuc’s expense. 

Breaking the Barrier of Fear

The Vietnam People’s Army employs the 10,000-man Force-47, which is charged with both amplifying pro-government and party sites and postings, and trolling dissenters and critics. It is both an influencer and a cyber watchdog. Their most recent task has been to deal with a spate of public ridicule.

And it makes sense because humor works. Criticizing government policies will only get you so far; eyes glaze over legal or historical analyses, but humor goes viral. Vietnam’s netizens already have a rich satirical meme culture. If people can’t stop the corruption, they can laugh at it.

As former Serbian protestors, Srdja Popovic and Mladen Joksik, wrote in Foreign Policy back in 2013: “Today's protestors understand that humor offers a low-cost point of entry for ordinary citizens who don't consider themselves particularly political, but are sick and tired of dictatorship. Make a protest fun, and people don't want to miss out on the action.”

Authoritarian regimes routinely use a range of coercive measures to deter dissent and sew fear amongst the public. Once the public loses that fear and starts to mock their leaders, it could be over faster than Salt Bae cuts up a gold-covered steak.

Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or RFA.

REBIRTH
In Mexico, endangered monarch butterflies inspire hopes of a comeback



Monarch butterflies at Mexico's Sierra Chincua butterfly sanctuary









Sun, December 4, 2022 
By Brendan O'Boyle and Alberto Fajardo

SIERRA CHINCUA, Mexico (Reuters) - From a distance, they appear like autumn foliage: millions of endangered monarch butterflies blanketing trees in a kaleidoscope of brown, orange and black.

As the crisp mountain air warms, they flutter above dazzled visitors who have come to see an annual tradition that persists despite the environmental and human pressures threatening it.

Every year, migratory monarchs travel up to 2,000 miles (3,000 km) from the eastern United States and Canada to spend the winter among the forests of central and western Mexico.

Winter weekends bring hundreds of visitors to Sierra Chincua, an idyllic monarch sanctuary in the western state of Michoacan, about three hours drive from Mexico City.

Sierra Chincua in 1986 was brought into the protected Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, which is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site spanning some 138,000 acres (56,000 hectares).

"Tourism helps conserve the forest, it's how we sustain our families," said Juan Vidal, one of three dozen park rangers who patrol the forest and work as guides.

Today, the 54-year-old Vidal says there are fewer monarchs than when he first came as a child.

The migratory monarch population has fallen between 22% and 72% over the past decade, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, which declared the species endangered in July.

Scientists blame climate change, pesticides and illegal logging for the population decline.

The monarchs' presence in the states where they spend the winter, Michoacan and neighboring Mexico state, extended across 45 acres (18 hectares) in the mid-1990s. But by last winter the area had fallen to just 7 acres (3 hectares).

Last year's migration, however, offered a glimmer of hope for the monarch's future. Their presence in Mexico was actually up by more than a third compared to 2020.

Luis Martinez, one of the rangers at Sierra Chincua, expects this year to show further improvement. "We have more butterflies this year, more got here because the colony is bigger," he said.

As the monarchs begin to arrive around Mexico's Day of the Dead holiday in early November, some locals see the butterflies as the returning souls of ancestors.

Visitor Lizbeth Cerrato said the "unique experience" was like "watching souls flying above."

"It's so many feelings woven together."

(Reporting by Brendan O'Boyle and Alberto Fajardo; Writing by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing by William Mallard)

THE GERMAN VIEW

SOCCER

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

USMNT's golden generation focus on "progress"

Max Merrill
DW

The US Men’s National Team failed to reach the quarterfinals of the 2022 World Cup. But there's a belief that this young team has taken an important step in their development ahead of hosting the tournament in 2026.

While this wasn't the US Men's National Team's deepest run at a World Cup, this is the most accomplished they have looked on the global stage.

This golden generation nevertheless fell short against the Netherlands in the last-16 as they suffered a 3-1 loss. "You can sit here and point out so many areas of our game that need improvement to be a top, top team," 23-year-old captain Tyler Adams told DW after the match.

"But from three years ago until now the progress we've made is unbelievable. Three years ago if we'd play against Holland you'd say, 5-0. Today we come out and compete and made it difficult for them."  


Berhalter has indeed turned the side that missed out on the 2018 World Cup into a different animal. After an accomplished group stage, the US showed promise in the last-16. Inside five minutes, Christian Pulisic broke in behind with the travelling fans roaring on their charges at the near sold-out Khalifa International stadium.

But the nation’s star player, dubbed "Captain America", spurned a golden opportunity that could have written a different destiny for the game. However, their progress in Qatar has laid an important foundation as they begin gearing up to host the World Cup in 2026. 

Problem area

While they boast plenty of youthful quality in midfield and wide attacking positions, the US still lack a potent number nine. Coach Berhalter's decision to leave Union Berlin's free-scoring Jordan Pefok out of the squad entirely raised eyebrows on another night they lacked box presence and missed chances.


Leeds' midfielder Tyler Adams was the youngest captain at the World Cup, 

aged just 23.Image: Martin Meissner/AP Photo/picture alliance

The same goes for handing FC Dallas's Jesus Ferreira his World Cup debut to lead the line in such a crucial match against the Netherlands. Berhalter quickly saw the error of his ways, subbing him off at half time for Dortmund’s Gio Reyna, another player bafflingly overlooked by the 49-year-old no matter his recent injury record.

Adams though, hasn't lost faith. "You can see the progress the team has made in the past three years under coach Berhalter. His ideas and his philosophy have worked really well and you can see how we adapted in games, how we pressure opponents. I don't think going into this tournament teams knew much about us. Now you can see that teams don't want to play against us because we make it physical, we make it difficult.

"We still have ways to go. We can be happy with our performance but we didn't come to make it to the round of 16. We want to be a team that comes into this and we're no longer underdogs, where people say the US has a real chance to win this thing."

Changing the narrative

The underdog tag is one which this team is desperate to shed with goalkeeper Matt Turner saying that the team's "mission is to change the way people view footballers from America" and remove the "stigma about American players".


The USMNT will look to ride a self-generated wave of hype when the host the 
World Cup in 2026Image: Tom Weller/dpa/picture alliance

Nowadays, the men’s national team is far less often the butt of a bad joke. Their starting eleven boasts players plying their trade for European giants like Juventus, Chelsea, Milan, and Dortmund. 

In four years time, most of these starting players will still form key parts of the squad when the United States co-hosts the 2026 World Cup along with Canada and Mexico. 35-year-old center-back Tim Ream will surely no longer be there, but his partner in the heart of defence Walker Zimmermann could be one of the few over the age of 27 currently that retains his place. 

"It’s a great experience and a great building block but it’s hard when the World Cup is only every four years," he said after the Netherlands' defeat. "We thought we could go toe-to-toe with anyone at this tournament. This is a group of selfless individuals who put the team first. That's what has made this tournament so fun for us."

But fun won't cut it on home soil in 2026, as expectations grow and the players themselves point to the next step in their team’s development. "The way we played surprised a lot of people but it didn't surprise us," says Matt Turner. "This is the way we expect to play, we expect to compete with the elite teams in international football."

The USMNT leave Qatar a more respected and unwanted opponent. But while the grit, energy and structure displayed by Berhalter's side is impressive, he will now be tasked with turning them into a footballing force to be reckoned with and one capable of sweeping up a nation in 2026.

Edited by James Thorogood

EU chief says bloc must act over US climate plan ‘distortions’

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU must 'take action to rebalance the playing field where the IRA (Inflation Reduction Act) or other measures create distortions'. — Reuters pic

Sunday, 04 Dec 2022 1

BRUSSELS, Dec 4 — EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said today the bloc must act to address "distortions" created by Washington's US$430-billion (RM1.9 trillion) plan to spur climate-friendly technologies in the United States.

The European Union must "take action to rebalance the playing field where the IRA (Inflation Reduction Act) or other measures create distortions", von der Leyen said in a speech at the College of Europe in the Belgian city of Bruges.

 — AFP

THE PICTURE IS LARGER THAN THE TEXT


Two dead as Syrian regime forces open fire on anti-government protests

Syrian regime forces opened fire on anti-government protesters in the southern Syrian city of Suweida on Sunday.


The city of Suweida has escaped much of the horror of Syria’s ongoing civil war [AFP via Getty/file photo]


The New Arab Staff
04 December, 2022

Syrian regime forces opened fire on anti-government protests on Sunday in southwest Syria, according to reports.

Authorities targeted dozens of demonstrators who stormed the governorate building in the city of Suweida and chanted slogans including "the people want the fall of the regime", Syrian activists and journalists said.

The two killed in the violence were a police officer and a protester, the Associated Press reported, while seven others were injured.

As a Druze-majority city, Suweida has mostly been able to avoid the horrors of Syria’s ongoing civil war, which began in 2011 and has seen over 500,000 people die - largely at the hands of President Bashar al-Assad's forces and ally Russia.

However, it has seen periodic unrest, including anti-corruption protests, in recent years.

In Sunday's protests, the flag of the regime was lowered, pictures of Assad smashed, and a military vehicle seized.

Protesters also set tires on fire and blocked the Damascus–Suweida highway, local journalist Fared Al-Mahlool reported local sources as saying.

The Syrian Interior Minister in a statement said that the people who raided the building were armed, and destroyed furniture, smashed windows, and looted files.

A police officer was killed after protesters attacked a police station, the statement said.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad lost huge swathes of Syria following an armed uprising after his government's brutal repression of peaceful protesters in 2011. However, following the Russian intervention in 2015, the regime regained control over much of the country.

According to UN figures, the war has caused the greatest refugee crisis in the world, with at least 5.5 million people fleeing the country and more than 6 million more displaced inside Syria.



Protesters in southern Syria call for overthrow of President Assad

Several people were injured amid heavy gunfire during protests over worsening economic conditions, witnesses said.

Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus on Nov. 9, 2019.
SANA via AP file


Dec. 4, 2022, / Source: Reuters

Dozens of demonstrators angry over worsening economic conditions in Syria stormed the governor’s office in the southern city of Sweida on Sunday and set fire to parts of the building amid a heavy exchange of gunfire, the authorities and witnesses said.

Earlier, more than 200 people had gathered around the building in the center of the Druze-majority city, chanting slogans calling for the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar Assad, they said, amid spiraling prices and economic hardship.

Syrian state media said tens of “outlaws” stormed the governor’s office and burned files and official papers.

Three witnesses told Reuters the governor was not in the building which was vacated before protesters stormed the offices.

“The governor’s office was burnt completely from the inside,” said Rayan Maarouf, a civic activist and editor of Suwayda 24, a local website that covers the southern region, who said several people were wounded in the exchange of gunshots.

“There was heavy gunfire,” Maarouf told Reuters, saying it was not clear from where the shooting came in the heavily policed area.

A source in the city hospital said one civilian who was being treated had died from gunshot wounds while another was still in hospital after being shot.

Sweida province has been spared the violence seen in other parts of Syria since the start of the over-decade long conflict that began after pro-democracy protests erupted against Assad’s family ruler were violently crushed by security forces.

01:50
NOV. 22, 2022


The minority Druze sect, whose faith draws its roots from Islam, have long resisted being drawn into the Syrian conflict that pits mainly Sunni rebels against Assad’s rule.


Many community leaders and top Druze religious leaders have refused to sanction enlistment in the army.

Syria is in the throes of a deep economic crisis where a majority of people after a devastating conflict that killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions struggle to afford food and basic goods.

Witnesses in Sweida told Reuters that once inside the building, demonstrators brought down pictures of Assad.


Syria: Protesters storm governor's office in southern city of Sweida

  • PublishedShare

A protester and a policeman have reportedly been killed during rare demonstrations in the southern Syrian city of Sweida.

Crowds angry because of the worsening economic conditions in Syria stormed the governor's office.

Eyewitnesses say the protesters set fire to the building amid exchanges of gunfire in the Druze-majority city.

Earlier about 200 demonstrators were reportedly calling for President Bashar al-Assad's overthrow.

Syria is in the grip of a severe economic downturn.

This has led to spiralling prices and increasing anger towards President Assad's regime in Sweida, which has avoided the worst violence of the Syrian war.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported that a police officer was killed when protesters tried to storm the police station.

A protester was shot dead when security forces opened fire after demonstrators entered the government building, SOHR chief Rami Abdel Rahman told the AFP news agency.

"The governor's office was burnt completely from the inside," said Rayan Maarouf, a civic activist and editor of Suwayda 24, a local website that covers the region.

Several people were wounded in the exchange of gunshots, he told Reuters, adding it was unclear where the shooting came from.

Syrian state media said "outlaws" had stormed the governor's office and burned files and official papers.

The Turkey-based opposition Syria TV channel meanwhile reported that "hundreds" of protesters turned out to demonstrate against deteriorating living conditions, tearing up posters of the president inside and near the building, while calling for the "downfall of the regime".

SOHR reported that "dozens" of demonstrators gathered in Sweida town centre "to protest against the deteriorating living conditions and the failure of the regime in providing basic services".

It cited frequent power outages, water cuts, high fuel and food prices, and a breakdown in public security as reasons for the demonstration.

Syria has been at war since President Assad's forces cracked down on pro-democracy protests in 2011. Hundreds of thousands have died and millions have been displaced.

But Sweida province has been spared the violence seen in other parts of the country due to the Druze sect making efforts to avoid being drawn into the war, that pits mainly Sunni rebels against Assad's rule.


CULTURAL GENOCIDE
'Colonial' China accused of depriving Tibetans of their own language, education

Jan van der Made
Sun, December 4, 2022 

REUTERS/Joseph Campbell

Much of Western criticism of China focuses on the vast collection of "re-education" centers in Xinjiang. Predominantly focused on Muslim minorities, these centres have resulted in the incarceration of thousands of Uyghurs who are forced to study Chinese language and culture. The system, however, was first tested in Tibet.

"There is no hope for our new generations. They are shifting to Chinese-only education," Dr Gyal Lo, a sociologist and specialist in education policy in Tibet, told RFI. "It will have a long-term effect."

Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping prioritised Mandarin language education for China's "official minorities" – Tibetans, Uyghurs, Mongols, Manchus – first at the 2014 Central Ethnic Work Conference.

As part of this policy, Beijing aggressively altered language education in minority areas like Xinjiang and Tibet.

In practice, this meant that education for Tibetan children was controlled by the directives of the central government.

"The society is systematically being controlled," says Gyal Lo, who in a recent publication in the Tibet Review describes China's handling of Tibet as "colonial."
'Colonial' rule

In his article, Gyal Lo describes the "seven stages of colonialism," a theory first applied to the colonisation of indigenous people in Canada.

Gyal Lo adds that the idea that China should be considered a colonial power "has not yet been fully recognised by the international community".
SUNDAY SECT
Arizona polygamous leader Samuel Bateman had 20 wives, most under age 15

PATRIARCHICAL POLYGAMY IS NOT COMMUNIST POLYAMORY


By Isabel Keane
December 4, 2022 

An Arizona polygamist cult leader has been accused of marrying 20 women, most of whom are under the age of 15, as well as his daughter.

Samuel Rappylee Bateman, 46, has been accused of marrying up to 20 women and girls as young as 9-years-old, according to an FBI affidavit filed Friday in Washington.

The affidavit, obtained by the Salt Lake Tribune, outlines horrifying accusations of incest, group sex acts involving adults and children and child sex trafficking against Bateman.

Bateman leads an offshoot group of the Mormon Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), but has been held in an Arizona jail since the FBI raided his two Colorado City homes in September.

Agents looked for evidence of underage marriages or sexual relationships between adults and children, according to the Tribune.Bateman has been accused of marrying up to 20 women and girls as young as 9-years-old.The Salt Lake Tribune via AP

While Bateman has not been charged with sexual abuse, the affidavit claims the FBI has probable cause to believe he and others transported minors between Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Nebraska to engage in illicit sexual conduct between May 2020 and November 2021
.
Samuel Bateman faces accusations of incest, group sex acts involving adults and children and child sex trafficking. Coconino County Sheriffs Office

Bateman “began to proclaim he was a prophet” in 2019, and gained about 50 followers and over 20 wives, most of whom are minors under the age of 15, according to the affidavit filed by FBI Special Agent Dawn A. Martin.

The majority of his wives are daughters, sisters and mothers from two extended polygamous families, according to the affidavit.

Bateman had once been among the trusted followers of FLDS leader Warren Jeffs (pictured), but Jeffs recently denounced Bateman from prison.
REUTERS

Martin was provided audio recordings of a November 2021 conversation in which Bateman said “Heavenly Father” had instruction him to “give the most precious thing he has, his girls’ virtue,” to three of his adult male followers.

Bateman then allegedly watched the three adult men have sex with his daughters, one of whom was only 12-years-old, according to the affidavit.

He allegedly went on to say his daughters had “sacrificed their virtue for the Lord” and that “God will fix their bodies and put the membrane back in their body. I’ve never had more confidence in doing his will. It’s all out of love,” Martin quoted Bateman as saying.
The majority of Bateman’s wives are daughters, sisters and mothers from two extended polygamous families.The Salt Lake Tribune via AP

The affidavit was filed Friday in a federal court in Spokane, Washington, where eight girls were removed from Batemans home by the Arizona Department of Child Safety on Thursday.

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The girls had been placed in group homes in the suburbs of Phoenix, but disappeared on Sunday.

Bateman had once been among the trusted followers of FLDS leader Warren Jeffs, but Jeffs recently denounced Bateman in a written revelation sent to his followers from prison, according to the Daily Mail.

Bateman’s attorney, Adam Zickerman, cautioned in September against inferring the case was about religious persecution, but stopped short of specifying Bateman’s faith or whether he practices polygamy.

Both the US Attorney’s Office in Arizona and Zickerman declined to comment following a September court hearing.

US Magistrate Judge Camille Bibles ordered that Bateman remain behind bars while the case winds through the courts
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Samuel Batman allegedly watched three of his adult male followers have sex with his daughters, one of whom was only 12-years-old.Coconino County Superior Court

Bibles said Bateman had the connections to receive help if needed and that she was concerned about the young girls in vulnerable positions, noting: “Courts have a tremendous interest in protecting people who can’t protect themselves.”

Iran reviewing mandatory headscarf law amid ongoing protests

Struggling to quell more than two months of protests linked to the dress code, Iran’s attorney general says the parliament and judiciary looking at the issue


Iranian authorities have said they will review the law that requires women to wear a headscarf, after over two months of protests. 
Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP


Agence France-Presse
Sun 4 Dec 2022

Iranian authorities said they would review a decades-old law that requires women to cover their heads, as the country struggles to quell more than two months of protests linked to the dress code.

“Both parliament and the judiciary are working [on the issue],” of whether the law needs any changes, Iran’s attorney general Mohammad Jafar Montazeri said on Saturday.


‘We walked in front of the police with no veil’ – voices from Iran’s women-led uprising


Quoted by an Iranian news agency, he did not specify what could be modified in the law by the two bodies, which are both largely in the hands of conservatives.

The review team met on Wednesday with parliament’s cultural commission “and will see the results in a week or two”, the attorney general said.

President Ebrahim Raisi on Saturday said Iran’s republican and Islamic foundations were constitutionally entrenched.

“But there are methods of implementing the constitution that can be flexible,” he said in televised comments.

Protests began on 16 September after the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian of Kurdish origin arrested by the morality police for allegedly flouting the sharia-based law.

Over the following weeks demonstrators burned their head coverings and shouted anti-government slogans. After Amini’s death, a growing number of women have not been wearing headscarves, particularly in Tehran’s fashionable north.

The hijab headscarf became obligatory for all women in Iran in April 1983, four years after the Islamic Revolution that overthrew the US-backed monarchy.

It remains a highly sensitive issue in a country where conservatives insist it should be compulsory, while reformists want to leave it up to individual choice.

In July this year Raisi, an ultra-conservative, called for mobilisation of “all state institutions to enforce the headscarf law”.

In September, Iran’s main reformist party called for the mandatory hijab law to be rescinded.

The Union of Islamic Iran People Party, formed by relatives of former reformist president Mohammad Khatami, on Saturday demanded that authorities “prepare the legal elements paving the way for the cancellation of the mandatory hijab law”.

The opposition group also called for the Islamic republic to “officially announce the end of the activities of the morality police” and “allow peaceful demonstrations”, it said in a statement.

Iran accuses its sworn enemy the United States and its allies, including Britain, Israel, and Kurdish groups based outside the country, of fomenting the street protests which the government calls “riots”.

Oslo-based non-governmental organisation Iran Human Rights on Tuesday said at least 448 people had been “killed by security forces in the ongoing nationwide protests”.

UN rights chief Volker Turk said last week that 14,000 people, including children, had been arrested in the protest crackdown.

The campaign of arrests has snared sportspeople, celebrities and journalists.

Among the latest figures to be arrested were film star Mitra Hajjar, who was detained at her home on Saturday, according to the reformist newspaper Shargh.