Sunday, April 16, 2023

TURKISH PRESS ADMITS TURKEY ATTACK

US personnel targeted in Iraq drone strike were on mission to defeat Daesh: Pentagon

Spokesperson Patrick Ryder says US personnel in YPG/PKK ringleader's convoy are in northern Iraq as part of 'defeat Daesh mission'

00:41 . 14/04/2023 Friday
AA


US personnel in Iraq's Kurdistan region were there as part of the mission to defeat Daesh/ISIS when the convoy they were traveling in was targeted last week, Pentagon spokesman Patrick Ryder said Thursday.

The convoy of YPG/PKK ringleader Ferhat Abdi Sahin, codenamed Mazloum Abdi, was targeted on April 7 by a drone strike near Sulaymaniyah International Airport. Three US personnel were in the convoy. The United States Central Command (CENTCOM) reported no injuries.

"On April 7, a convoy, including US personnel, was fired upon while in transit within the Iraqi Kurdistan region in the area near Sulaymaniyah," Ryder confirmed, adding that US forces are in Iraq and Syria in support of the "defeat ISIS mission."

"It struck more than 100 meters from the convoy and CENTCOM is currently investigating the incident," he added.

When asked what was the mission of the US personnel, he responded: "We're supporting the Iraqi security forces as part of the defeat ISIS mission. As you know, we have forces in Iraq. They're not conducting combat operations. They're advising and assisting the Iraqis. And then we have forces in Syria that are supporting the SDF."

He was referring to the Syrian Democratic Forces, the US's partner in Syria in the fight against Daesh/ISIS. The YPG/PKK terrorist group rebranded itself as the SDF to have a voice in talks on Syria.

In response to a question about the SDF's relation with the PKK, he said: "We have partnered with the SDF since 2014 as part of the defeat Daesh mission. We have a longstanding relationship with them. They are not the PKK."

The US policy on Syria has been one of the most challenging issues between the two NATO allies as Türkiye has never accepted the US’s backing of the YPG because of its ties to the PKK, which has been recognized as a terrorist organization by both Türkiye and the US.

The US on the other hand sees the YPG, which was renamed as the SDF, as a partner in the fight against Daesh in Syria and does not recognize it as a terrorist group, although it does acknowledge the PKK as such.


The PKK has waged an armed campaign against Türkiye for more than 35 years and has been responsible for the deaths of more than 40,000 people.
AND NO KID ROCK!
Lady Gaga, George Clooney to join Biden's arts committee along with others

White House announces 24 appointees for president’s committee

14/04/2023 Friday
AA


US President Joe Biden named Grammy Award winning singer Lady Gaga as the co-chair of his committee on the arts and humanities Thursday.
The White House announced 24 appointees for the president’s committee in a statement.

The committee advises the president and the heads of US cultural agencies on policy, philanthropic and private sector engagement and other efforts to enhance federal support for the arts, humanities and museum and library services.

Award-winning producer Bruce Cohen will serve as the other co-chair on the committee.

Some others named to join the committee include actors George Clooney, Jennifer Garner and Kerry Washington and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Joe Walsh.

#Lady Gaga
TANZANIA
Samia moves to salvage legacy from corruption under her tenure

Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan who continues to face pressure to do much more towards curbing graft within her administration. 
PHOTO | PHILL MAGAKOE | AFP

Summary

Samia sacked John Nzulule, director-general of the Tanzania Government Flight Agency, which was charged with handling Air Tanzania’s plane purchases.

The President also dissolved the Tanzania Railways Corporation board.

The rot in the two corporations is just an example of a web of corruption in the Tanzanian government.

By BOB KARASHANI
More by this Author
SUNDAY APRIL 16 2023

In November 2021 at the Dubai Airshow, Tanzania placed an order for a Boeing 767-300 freighter, besides a 787-8 Dreamliner and two 737 MAXs. The freighter would be used to capitalise on Africa’s burgeoning cargo demand, Boeing and the Air Tanzania Company said.

“The 767 freighter will give Air Tanzania exceptional capability and flexibility to meet passenger and cargo demand within Africa and beyond,” said Air Tanzania chief executive Ladislaus Matindi.

And now, as national carrier prepares to receive Africa’s first B767-300F, a mix of excitement and anxiety is palpable in Dar es Salaam. Last month, plane spotters saw the aircraft conducting test flights at the Boeing Factory at Paine Field, Seattle. It was expected at the Julius Nyerere International Airport on March 31, but the delivery was delayed by “supplier issues”.
Immediate sacking

Boeing said “quality issues” forced it to rework the 767Fs and the delivery is expected this month.

But in Dar, President Samia Suluhu Hassan has been fuming over the purchase of this plane, which was billed to turn Dar into a cargo hub in the region. The newest report of the Controller and Auditor-General (CAG) has uncovered massive overpricing, after an $86 million invoice was submitted to the government as the final instalment.

Related

This is well over double the $37 million figure in the original purchase contract agreed with the plane manufacturer in Washington D.C.

Irked by the revelations amid a growing public outcry, on April 9, President Samia sacked John Nzulule, director-general of the Tanzania Government Flight Agency, which was charged with handling Air Tanzania’s plane purchases under the John Magufuli-initiated revival strategy.

Dissolved railways board


The President also dissolved the Tanzania Railways Corporation board, after the CAG findings showed that the public agency twice rejected tenders to purchase locomotives and passenger coaches for the new standard gauge railway (SGR) at the lowest bid price of $263.4 million, in favour of a $478 million offer, costing the government about $215 million more.

The rot in the two corporations is just an example of a web of corruption in the Tanzanian government and quasi-government institutions flagged by the CAG Charles Kichere.

The revelations in Mr Kichere’s audit for the 2021/2022 fiscal year, which was made public on April 7, put the spotlight on the President, who has been endeavouring to clean up the public sector and the country’s image as an investment destination in Africa, devoid of red tape and graft.

Campaign for re-election


They also potentially dent her campaign for re-election in the next cycle of polls.

Mr Kichere’s report unveils serious misuse and embezzlement of funds in flagship government projects dating from the era of Samia’s predecessor John Magufuli, but this time also implicating her own administration in no small measure.

Firebrand opposition leader Tundu Lissu of the Chadema party has put the estimated loss of public funds due to graft, mismanagement and negligence at Tsh2 trillion ($862 million).

Major projects such as the standard gauge railway, the Nyerere Hydropower Dam and the Air Tanzania revival programme have been flagged for serious impropriety while virtually all the key public utilities are under scrutiny for irregular expenditure.

The usual suspects

Backed by President Samia’s call for more transparency in government spending, the annual CAG audit for the first time included projects that were previously exempt from audit by the Magufuli administration. One is the Air Tanzania’s plane purchases.

Although CAG Kichere issued unqualified opinions indicating satisfactory financial reporting and record-keeping by 96 percent of the 1,045 government agencies audited in 2021/2022, his report details endemic financial irregularities and loss-making trends in most of them.

The spotlighted entities included the Tanzania Telecommunications Corporation, Tanzania Electric Supply Company, Medical Stores Department, Muhimbili National Hospital, Tanzania National Parks Authority, Rural Energy Agency and the National Health Insurance Fund.

Pension funds National Social Security Fund (NSSF) and Public Service Social Security Fund were found to be struggling with fast declining occupancy rates in their Dar es Salaam real estate investments, partly due to a steady exodus of big business clients to the administrative capital Dodoma.

Poor business decisions

A total of 45 public entities were cited for making losses for two consecutive years, 14 of them being commercial firms that are supposed to be reporting profits instead of losing money.

Top on the new list of shame is the national carrier, Air Tanzania, despite cutting its losses minimally from Tsh36.18 billion ($15.6 million) to Tsh35.2 billion ($15.17 million).

Tanzania Railways Corporation posted a much higher deficit — Tsh31.29 billion ($13.5 million) in 2022 — against Tsh22.8 billion ($9.83 million) in 2021.

The National Development Corporation cut its losses by over half, from Tsh26.3 billion ($11.33 million) in 2021 to Tsh11.9 billion ($5.13 million), but remained on the critical list.

State-owned TIB Development Bank recorded a Tsh838 million ($361,200) loss in 2022, against Tsh292.3 million ($125,990) in 2021, which was blamed on an increase in non-performing loans to 20.3 percent, well above the central bank’s 5 percent threshold. It is instructive to state that most of the bank’s clients are government institutions.

Among non-commercial firms, the NHIF led in the loss-making zone, with its losses shooting up almost twofold from Tsh109.7 billion ($47.28 million) to Tsh204.6 billion ($88.2 million) in just two years.

According to Mr Kichere, most of the listed non-commercial public entities suffered as a consequence of “having no access to government subsidies or alternative sources of income,” while those in the commercial category were guilty of “poor business decisions, poor supervision of investments, and poor financial management.”

The collusion

The report says that many government institutions have failed to meet their own performance targets in line with strategic plans, undermining their ability and capacity to compete with private sector rivals. Weaknesses were also detected in revenue collection and recording in 180 local government authorities, with more than Tsh91 billion ($39.22 million) going down the drain.

The audit also brought to light that government officials were colluding with some international private companies to perpetrate the graft and rot within government, as in the invoice matter involving aircraft maker Boeing.

Standard Chartered Bank has also been criticised over the conditions that it set for a $1.46 billion loan to facilitate the SGR project, which ultimately raised the cost by several million dollars.

Single-sourcing trap


According to the report, the bank named Turkish firm Yapi Merkezi as the only acceptable contractor for at least two phases of the project. The company was eventually awarded the construction job via a single-source tender arrangement, in spite of Tanzania’s procurement rules that stipulate competitive bidding for such contracts.

Under the Yapi Merkezi contract, the Tanzanian government is obliged to pay between $5.2 million and $5.5 million for each rail kilometre built over a 790-kilometre stretch, while other phases of the planned 1,800-km line, which were subjected to a competitive bidding process, are costing from $3.9 million to $4.6 million per kilometre.

In its 2022 report on operations in Tanzania, Standard Chartered Bank described its SGR loan as the “largest syndicated transaction in sub-Saharan Africa outside the oil and gas sector to date (which has) positively changed the accepted norms on how such deals are structured and how risks are managed effectively.”

Hydropower project


The Nyerere hydropower project in southern Tanzania was also flagged for delayed payment of Tsh327.9 billion ($141.33 million) in assorted levies to hasten its completion.

President Samia has instructed Chief Secretary Moses Kailua to supervise “legal action” against public officials implicated in the widespread financial accounting flaws spelt out in the audit.

Public expectations are that the President’s move marks the beginning of a bigger crackdown on government corruption under her government and more heads will roll.

Uncontrollable factors

But the president continues to face pressure to do much more towards curbing graft within her administration, with main opposition parties Chadema and ACT Wazalendo predictably using the CAG report’s findings as fresh fuel to further drum up public apathy towards Samia’s ruling CCM party.

ACT Wazalendo leader Zitto Kabwe described the report’s findings as “the same old story” of poor governance under CCM, quoting the report’s observation that only 36 percent of the 6,947 recommendations contained in the 2020/2021 audit were implemented.

Chadema secretary-general John Mnyika said the public outcry triggered by the report’s revelations was not likely to cool down as quickly as in previous years because of a soaring cost of living caused in part by some uncontrollable factors such as the Ukraine war, drought and the impact of Covid.

According to Mr Mnyika, ensuring financial discipline in governance should be “a top priority at this time of economic difficulties for everyone.”

“Adding up all the dirt mentioned by the Controller and Auditor-General this year, more than Tsh2 trillion have been lost,” Mr Lissu is quoted by the Citizen newspaper as saying. “This is happening in a country whose people are facing many problems.”
END FORCED CIRCUMCISION
Four month old baby dies in botched circumcision procedure

The baby died one hour after being circumcised

By Yahudu Kitunzi

Reporter
Daily Monitor
UGANDA
Sunday, April 16, 2023

What you need to know:

After he was discharged at around 1pm the deceased got a convulsion and was taken back to theatre where he was put on oxygen. His situation worsened as he bled until he passed on at around 6pm on Saturday.

Police in Pallisa District in eastern Uganda are investigating circumstances under which a baby died one hour after being circumcised.

The incident happened at Pallisa General hospital on Saturday. It’s reported that Eriasa Clement Edwin, a four months old baby, started bleeding immediately after circumcision.

The Bukedi North Regional Police Spokesperson, ASP Immaculate Alaso, confirmed the unfortunate incident saying the doctor who performed carried out the circumcision is on the run but efforts are underway to apprehend him.

She said Ms Betty Apolot and Mr Richard Opio handed their child to the suspect to be circumcised when he was normal, according to police's preliminary investigations.
“On April 15, 2023 the mother of the deceased at around 10am reached to Pallisa General hospital for safe male circumcision which was done between 11am to midday. After he was discharged at around 1pm the deceased got a convulsion and was taken back to theatre where he was put on oxygen. His situation worsened as he bled until he passed on at around 6pm on Saturday,” ASP Alaso said on Sunday.

ICYMI: Rush for male circumcision in rural areas

“Police visited the scene and obtained statements from the parents of the deceased and other eyewitnesses. However, police are on ground to establish whether the suspect is a trained surgeon qualified to perform such a procedure,” Ms Alaso said.
Our efforts to get a comment from the hospital’s medical superintendent were futile as unknown contact was unavailable by press time.

Monitor. Empower Uganda.
Libya arrests second US citizen for 'evangelism'

The arrest came a day after another US citizen, who was also teaching at the same private language school in the capital Tripoli, was detained for "inciting our children to renounce Islam and convert to Christianity".


By AFP
Friday, April 14, 2023

The arrest came a day after another US citizen, who was also teaching at the same private language school in the capital Tripoli, was detained for "inciting our children to renounce Islam and convert to Christianity".

Libyan security forces said Thursday they had arrested a second US citizen for alleged Christian proselytising in the North African Muslim nation.

The arrest came a day after another US citizen, who was also teaching at the same private language school in the capital Tripoli, was detained for "inciting our children to renounce Islam and convert to Christianity".

On Thursday, the Internal Security Agency said it had arrested the centre's assistant director in Tripoli, identifying him by the initials "SBO".

It accused him of operating "in the company of his wife as a missionary on behalf of the organisation 'Assemblies of God' in order to seduce the sons of our Muslim people".

Assemblies of God is a missionary organisation based in southern US state of Arkansas.

While the security forces have not named the man arrested on Wednesday, Libyan media identified him as Jeff Wilson, the founder of the consulting firm Libya Business.

Libyan security forces said Thursday it had also arrested two Libyans, including a 22-year-old woman who had allegedly converted to Christianity when she was 15.

In a video, she describes how she in turn became a "missionary" and tried to persuade other Libyans to switch faiths.

It is the latest of a handful of video "confessions" of "apostasy" in Libya.

Islam is considered the state religion in Libya, and while Christians have the freedom to worship there, the majority are foreigners living in the country.

Control of Libya is divided between two rival governments, the latest configuration in years of turmoil since the 2011 NATO-
Kim Petras: How the trans artist made history


Stefan Dege | Louisa Schaefer
03/31/2023

German-born Kim Petras endured long rites of passage before becoming the first openly transgender singer to win a Grammy award. For International Transgender Day of Visibility, here's her story.


When Kim Petras teamed up with English singer Sam Smith on "Unholy," a song about male infidelity and betrayal of the ideal of marriage, she may not have expected to make history.

But now, the German pop singer Petras is the first transgender woman to win a coveted Grammy in the Best Pop Duo/Group Performance category.

At the Grammy Awards on February 5, 2023, Petras thanked "transgender legends before me who kicked these doors open for me so that I could be here tonight." She nodded to pop star Madonna for her fight for LGBTQ rights: "I don't think I could be here without Madonna."

She also expressed gratitude to her mother. "My mother — I grew up next to a highway in nowhere, Germany, and my mother believed me that I was a girl, and I wouldn't be here without her and her support," Petras said.

Kim Petras is top of the pops but the trans artist continues to do things on her own terms
Image: Getty Images

Already made history before


Back in October 2022, the duo Petras and Smith had already become the first publicly transgender and nonbinary solo artists, respectively, to have reached the top of the Billboard Hot 100 charts with their single.

While Smith's 2014 single "Stay With Me" was a number 2 hit — and the singer has topped the charts in the UK eight times — this was new terrain for Cologne-born Petras.

Having written songs for the US rapper Fergie and R&B singer Rihanna, earned comparisons to Lady Gaga, and landed a Spotify viral hit with 2017's "I Don't Want It At All" (the clip features a Paris Hilton cameo), the LGBTQ star was yet to reach pop's summit.

Now, her collaboration with Sam Smith singing about a "dirty, dirty boy" has catapulted the trans musician to the next level.

It was, however, a long journey to get there. For International Transgender Day of Visibility, marked on March 31 every year, here's more on Kim Petras's story.

Sam Smith and Kim Petras made history with 'Unholy
'Image: Michael Bailey Gates/Universal Music Group


A story of self-empowerment

Born in Cologne in 1992 and raised in the nearby town of Hennef, Kim Petras was already coming to terms with her identity by the age of two.

"I have always felt like a girl. I hated my body when I was five," she told the newspaper Die Zeit. "I couldn't identify with gender, wanted it gone." She ran through her room with a pair of scissors, wanting to "cut it off," she said.

The child suffered from being stuck in the wrong body. "I was lucky to have parents who really understood me," she said. But others showed much less understanding.

"There were strange doctors," she remembers, "who told me: You're crazy."
Bullying in the playground

Some classmates also bullied her in the playground. At the age of 10 she started to see psychologists.

Two years later, she changed her first name to Kim. She sometimes went to school in latex clothes. "At least I wanted to be well dressed if someone threw their school lunch at me," she recalled.


After experts confirmed to Petras' parents that their child was transgender, they understood her panic as puberty approached.

"That's when we recognized her distress, her fears of growing a beard and her voice changing," father Lutz said in an interview in 2007 about his child who was then undergoing hormone treatment.

As a 16-year-old, Petras went public with the news she was having gender-affirming surgery. She made headlines for being one of the youngest transgender persons in the world who had transitioned.

By then, Petras had already began to publish her own pop songs on the internet.

At the age of 19, the aspiring pop star moved to Los Angeles. The first months were tough.

"I flew to LA, where I knew one or maybe two people from the internet," she told DW in 2018. "I slept on couches in studios, had little money and just a few contacts."

'I wasn't discovered. I discovered myself'


Petras built a following through posting tracks online and club shows. She has remained an independent artist because major labels "only wanted to talk about my gender," she told Glamour Magazine. "People were like hide it or use it, and I didn't want to do either."

She has released two solo albums and collaborated with musicians such as Dr Luke, Charli XCX, Kygo, Paris Hilton, and of course Sam Smith.

And Kim Petras has continued to make it on her own. "I wasn't discovered. I discovered myself," she told Interview Magazine last year.

The huge success of "Unholy" may have come as a surprise to an artist who had never made the top 40, but it fulfilled a long-cherished dream to see a trans person top the US charts, and garner a Grammy — even if she never thought it possible.

Does it matter to her songs that she is transgender? "No," she told Die Zeit. "It's more about human things: love, grief, how I imagine my life."

But she will always be part of the LGBTQ community and advocate for it. "Sure, my transsexuality makes me special," she says, "But I want to be known for being a good artist."


Pride parades take over the streets of major cities around the world in late June, as people celebrate LGBTQ communities and colorfully demonstrate for more equality, acceptance and respect.Image: Lincon Zarbietti/dpa/picture alliance
Love under the rainbow
June is Pride Month. With parades in major cities around the world, LGTBQ people celebrate their communities and call for more acceptance and respect. Here, a young couple kisses at the Pride parade in Kolkata, India. Gay relationships were banned in India until 2018; same-sex marriages still aren't recognized.Image: Avishek Das/ZUMA Wore/IMAGO
Coming out
It can often be difficult for young people to accept their own sexuality. Studies by German and French researchers from 2015 and 2016, respectively, found that many still fear rejection from their own family members when they come out. Acceptance by family and friends can be a great help during that time.
Sukhomoy Sen/Eyepix Group/picture alliance

This article was originally written in German, and was updated on February 6, 2023 to reflect the Grammy win and republished for International Transgender Day of Visibility on March 31
German politicians split as last nuclear plants close



DW
April 15,2023

The remaining three nuclear power stations went offline on Saturday. Some politicians have welcomed the shutdown while others warned that the intermittent nature of renewable energy will require more fossil fuels.

https://p.dw.com/p/4Q85i

Germany's last three nuclear power plants — Isar 2 in Bavaria, Emsland in Lower Saxony, and Neckarwestheim 2 in Baden-Württemberg — went offline Saturday after six decades of operation, according to energy companies operating the reactors.

Hours before the shutdown of Germany's three remaining nuclear power stations, several leftist and center-left lawmakers and environmental activists applauded the move, while pro-business and conservative politicians warned that the risk to the country's energy security remained.

The closure of the nuclear plants was delayed for several months by the energy crisis sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February last year.

What do German politicians think?

Ricarda Lang, head of the climate-friendly Greens' parliamentary group, wrote on Twitter that the end of nuclear power "marks a definitive entry into the age of renewable energies" that would allow the current generations to "ultimately leave to our children with a clear conscience."

Her party tweeted that Germany already generates around half of its electricity from renewable sources and "we want to break 80% by 2030."

The Greens said affordable renewable energies "would secure the energy supply, protect the climate, make Germany independent of autocrats and lay the foundation for a strong economy and good jobs."

The parliamentary group of the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) of Chancellor Olaf Scholz tweeted: "Goodbye nuclear power! Goodbye insecure, unclean, uneconomical energy policy!"

A separate tweet showed an image of a collapsing nuclear power plant cooling tower.


On the other hand, the business-focused Free Democratic Party (FDP) parliamentary group, which is in coalition with the SPD and Greens, made clear on Twitter that is it not happy with the exit.

Party leader Christian Lindner, who is Germany's finance minister, wrote on Twitter that while the future is renewable energy, "in the meantime, we have to secure our supply until we have sufficient capacity."

Lindner said if it was up to him, Germany would retain the last three power plants in reserve.

Rightwing parties describe a 'black day' for Germany

Opposition conservative politicians were also disappointed, including Markus Söder, premier of the southern state of Bavaria, who told the Focus Online website on Thursday that he wanted the plants to stay online and three more to be kept "in reserve."

Söder accused the coalition government's decision of being "purely ideological," adding that it was a "serious mistake to exit nuclear energy at this point in time."

His party, the Christian Social Union (CSU) tweeted of a "black day for citizens, industry and climate protection in Germany" as a result of the shutdown

Christian Democratic Union (CDU) chief Friedrich Merz on Friday insisted that the last three nuclear plants "are the safest in the world."

"No other country is reacting to the Ukraine war and the aggravated energy supply situation like Germany," Merz told public broadcaster NDR.

Business leaders, including Peter Adrian, president of the Association of German Chambers of Commerce and Industry (DIHK), called on the government to "expand the supply of energy and not restrict it any further" in light of potential shortages and high prices.

​​​
Greenpeace has organized celebrations in Berlin and Munich for the nuclear switchoff
 Nadja Wohlleben/REUTERS

Greenpeace seeks answers on nuclear waste disposal

Ahead of the shutdown, Martin Kaiser, managing director of Greenpeace Germany, urged ministers to ensure the safe disposal of the accumulated nuclear waste, which he said would still be radioactive for millions of years.

Greenpeace has organized celebratory fetes at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and in the southern city of Munich to mark the nuclear switch-off.



How has Germany's nuclear exit unfolded?

The shutdown of Germany's nuclear reactors was agreed to more than a decade ago by then-Chancellor Angela Merkel, stoked by the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan and the 1986 Chernobyl accident in Ukraine.
 Heiko Becker/REUTERS

But the planned closure of the three remaining plants in December 2022 was temporarily halted due to last winter's energy crisis as the price of gas and electricity in Europe skyrocketed after Russia invaded Ukraine.

The deadline to shut down the plants was moved back to April 15.


The decision goes against plans by many other countries, such as the United States, China, France and Britain, who are counting on nuclear energy to replace planet-warming fossil fuels. Even Japan has walked back plans to phase out nuclear power.

Defenders of nuclear energy argue that it produces far fewer greenhouse gas emissions and be used to help Germany meet its goal of being carbon neutral by 2045.

"By phasing out nuclear power, Germany is committing itself to coal and gas because there is not always enough wind blowing or sun shining," said Rainer Klute, head of pro-nuclear non-profit association Nuklearia.

The German government has acknowledged that in the short term, the country will have to rely more heavily on polluting coal and gas to meet its energy needs, even as it continues to invest in renewables.

But Economy Minister Robert Habeck insisted that the energy supply would remain secure even after the last nuclear plant is wound down.

Meanwhile, two-thirds of Germans favor extending the lifespan of nuclear reactors or connecting old plants back to the grid, with only 28% backing the phase-out, a survey by the Forsa Institute showed earlier this week.

"I think this is certainly fed to a large extent by the fear that the supply situation is simply not secure," Forsa analyst Peter Matuschek told Reuters news agency.

DW
(AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

Bavaria mulls reopening nuclear plant under state control


Hours after Germany closed its last three nuclear power plants, one state premier has sought powers to partially reverse the decision. A law change would allow Bavaria to operate the Isar 2 power station, he said.

Bavarian Premier Markus Söder on Sunday proposed that his southern German state could assume control of the Isar 2 nuclear power plant, which was permanently taken off the grid, along with two other remaining power stations shortly before midnight.

Söder, who has been a staunch critic of Germany's decision to transition away from nuclear energy, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper that the move would require an amendment to the Atomic Energy Act to hand control of nuclear power from the federal to the state level.

"Bavaria is, therefore, demanding that the federal government give states the responsibility for the continued operation of nuclear power. Until the [energy] crisis ends and while the transition to renewables has not succeeded, we must use every form of energy until the end of the decade. Bavaria is ready to face up to this responsibility," the chair of the center-right Christian Social Union (CSU) told the newspaper.

"We are a pioneer in nuclear fusion research and are examining the construction of our own research reactor, in cooperation with other countries," Söder added. "It can't be that a country of engineers like Germany gives up any claim to shaping the future and international competitiveness."

The Bavarian state premier said the country's nuclear plants are not "museums" but an "indispensable part of an affordable energy supply."

Isar 2 is the second, more powerful reactor at the Isar nuclear power plant, which lies some 80 kilometers (49 miles) northeast of Munich. The first reactor was shut down in March 2011.


Greens accused of 'endangering' Germany's prosperity

During the interview, Söder renewed his criticism of Germany's nuclear phaseout, noting that "all of Europe relies on climate-friendly nuclear power."

He took aim at the climate change-focused Green Party — one of three in Chancellor Olaf Scholz's governing coalition — accusing them of "harming climate protection, our economy and endangering our prosperity."

Söder said the coalition was acting "extremely naively and negligently" by hoping that next winter will be as mild as the last.

He noted that the Federal Network Agency, the country's energy regulator, has warned of an energy supply crunch next winter, despite Germany securing fresh supplies of liquified natural gas (LNG) to offset the lack of Russian natural gas.

U-turn on nuclear phaseout unlikely

Söder's call is unlikely to be heeded. Germany's three-party governing coalition committed to ending the country's reliance on nuclear power when it took office in December 2021.

The country's nuclear phase-out has been on track for more than a decade. The decision to end nuclear power in Germany was sealed following the 2011 disaster in Fukushima by then-Chancellor Angela Merkel of the Christian Democrats, the larger sister party to Söder's CSU, and her then coalition partners the business-focused Free Democrats, a member of the current governing coalition that has been critical of the move away from nuclear power.

Germany took its remaining three nuclear power plants — Isar 2 in Bavaria, Emsland in Lower Saxony, and Neckarwestheim 2 in Baden-Württemberg — off the grid on Saturday night, in a move celebrated by environmental activists but criticized by pro-business and conservative politicians.

In Berlin, environmentalists gathered at the Brandenburg Gate to celebrate the shutdown of the reactors at midnight, while supporters of nuclear power also gathered there.

The closure was delayed from December 2022 to this month as a precaution, due to the energy crisis sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Despite the shutdown, Isar 2 roughly 450 employees will continue to receive fixed employment contracts until 2029 as the site still needs to be monitored and controlled.

Bavaria will go to the polls to pick a new state parliament on October 8.

DW
 (AFP, dpa, EPD, Reuters)


Germany to turn off nuclear power, but others not ready yet



Srinivas Mazumdaru
04/14/2023

Germany is shutting down its last three atomic power plants this weekend after previously delaying the nuclear phaseout due to the war in Ukraine.

The energy crisis sparked by the war in Ukraine forced Germany last year to extend the life of the last three nuclear power plants in the country by a few months beyond the scheduled phaseout at the end of 2022.

The reactors will finally go offline on Saturday, April 15.

Despite calls for a delay in shutting down the plants, the German government said there's no turning back and the phaseout "is a done deal."

There are, however, some countries that continue to put their faith in nuclear energy, or at least view it as a source of carbon-free energy to combat climate change.

There are currently 412 nuclear reactors in operation in 41 countries worldwide, according to the World Nuclear Industry Status Report (WNISR).

Nuclear power accounted for about 9.8% of global electricity generation in 2021, down from the peak of 17.5% in 1996.

The share of nuclear in the world's energy mix is now below renewable energy generation. A report released this week by energy think tank Ember stated that wind and solar energy made up a record high 12% of global electricity production last year.

Most nuclear reactors were built between 1968 and 1986, mainly in Europe, the United States, the former Soviet Union, and Japan.

The global average age of these reactors is 31 years.



China: Nuclear ambitions at home and abroad

China is a major player when it comes to the construction and operation of nuclear power plants. The country now operates 57 reactors and 21 more reactors are under construction.

China has by far the youngest large nuclear fleet in the world, with as many as 41 reactors — almost every four in five — having connected to the grid within the past 10 years.

The share of nuclear power in the country's electricity mix was almost 5% in 2022.

Beijing also has nuclear ambitions abroad, but it has so far only exported reactors to Pakistan. All six units currently being operated in the South Asian country are of Chinese design.

China's other international projects, including in the UK and Romania, have so far not proceeded to the stage of construction.

China does not have a repository for highly radioactive waste, but it is exploring one in the Gobi Desert. Its nuclear waste is currently stored at various domestic reactor sites.
India: Slow progress despite support

India currently has 19 nuclear reactors, with a total net generating capacity of 6.3 GW. Eight more reactors, with a combined capacity of 6.0 GW, are under construction. The average age of reactors is around 20 years.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), nuclear power contributed 39.8 terawatt hours (TWh) of electricity in 2021, marginally less than 40.4 TWh in 2020. This represents a share of 3.2% of total power generation, compared to 3.3% in 2020.

Nuclear power projects in the country have suffered from significant time and cost overruns, despite ample financial and political support from parties across the spectrum.

The sector has also been plagued by controversies and protests over issues related to land ownership as well as the safety and security of power plants in the event of natural or man-made disasters.

Furthermore, India does not have a final storage facility for highly radioactive nuclear waste.

Japan: Energy crisis prompts a rethink

The war in Ukraine and the ensuing global energy crisis have prompted the Japanese government to reverse the nuclear phase-out policy that was adopted following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear plant disaster.

All of Japan's nuclear reactors were taken offline after the disaster and the majority remain out of action today.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's administration is now pushing a plan to maximize the use of nuclear energy, calling for seven reactors approved by Japan's nuclear safety watchdog to resume operations.

Kishida has also urged the nation to consider building "next-generation" reactors with new safety mechanisms.

Amid the energy crisis, polls show that public views on nuclear power are softening, although mistrust still runs deep among sections of society.

Recycling atomic waste?  05:52


Finland: Support for nuclear on the rise

Finland currently operates four nuclear reactors, which supply a third of the nation's electricity. A fifth reactor is in the implementation phase, according to the Finnish Ministry of Economic Affairs.

In recent years, support for nuclear has grown in Finland, spurred by rising concern over climate change.

A poll conducted last year by the Finnish Energy trade association showed 60% of Finns supported nuclear power, a record high.

The Finnish group Fennovoima had worked together with Russia's Rosatom on a nuclear project but terminated the collaboration in May 2022, citing risks linked to the war in Ukraine.

Compared to many other countries in the world, Finland is a step ahead in nuclear waste management. It is currently constructing a nuclear waste repository deep underground, which is scheduled to be operational by 2025.

France: Pressing ahead despite challenges

France relies on nuclear energy like no other country in the world. It currently operates 56 power plants, which supply about two-thirds of the nation's electricity demand.

The power plants have an average age of almost 37 years, and the last reactor went online in 1999.

Last year, French authorities had to close several of the nation's reactors after detecting corrosion problems, sending nuclear power production to a 30-year low.

Notwithstanding the problems, President Emmanuel Macron's government wants nuclear power production to rise again to between 350 and 380 terawatt hours per year in the coming years. It aims to press ahead with a €52-billion ($57 billion) plan to build six new next-generation EPR2 reactors.

There is no final repository for highly radioactive waste in France.

Can nuclear fusion solve the energy crisis?

03:20  Poland: New plans for nuclear power

Poland has been planning to go nuclear since 1980 and started building two reactors, but stopped construction after the Chernobyl reactor disaster of 1986.

After that, there were repeated and ultimately unsuccessful attempts to restart construction. In 2014, the government adopted a plan to build six new reactors, with the first unit scheduled to come online in 2024.

Again in early 2021, the Polish government greenlit plans to construct six reactors in two locations, with the first reactor to begin operation in 2033.

Poland hopes nuclear energy will help the country phase out coal-fired power plants, which currently meet about 70% of Polish electricity needs.


United States: Source of clean energy?

The US currently has the largest nuclear fleet in the world — with 92 commercial reactors.

In 2022, they accounted for about 18.2% of the country's electricity production, according to the US Energy Information Administration. The share of nuclear in the energy mix has been slipping over the past decade — from about 20% to just over 18% now. After hitting a peak of about 102,000 MW in 2012, US nuclear power generation dropped to 95,492 MW at the end of 2021.

The US also has the oldest reactors in the world, with an average age of 41.6 years. Most reactors went into operation by 1985. Only two new ones are currently under construction.

President Joe Biden, however, has championed nuclear as a source of carbon-free power to combat climate change. His administration last year launched a $6 billion (€5.4 billion) effort to rescue nuclear power plants at risk of closing.

Edited by: Rob Mudge


Germany and nuclear power — a love-hate relationship
2/11 PHOTOS

Nuclear power has been celebrated, condemned, and banned in Germany. As energy imports from Russia come to an end, many are calling for it to make a comeback. Here's a look at the history of a love-hate relationship.Image: Julian Stratenschulte/dpa/picture alliance


It all began with an 'egg'

Germany's first nuclear reactor went online in October 1957 in Garching near Munich. Given its shape, it was nicknamed the "atomic egg" and belonged to Munich's Technical University. It was a landmark in nuclear research and a symbol of a new beginning after WWII. In 1961, Germany began to produce energy for civilian use. Atomic energy was seen as safe and secure.Image: Heinz-Jürgen Göttert/dpa/picture-alliance






INDIA 



Why are undocumented Gujaratis migrating to the US?

Murali Krishnan in New Delhi
DW
April 7, 2023

Families from Gujarat state are risking their lives to make the perilous journey through the Mexican desert or Canada's dense forests in freezing temperatures in search of the so-called American dream.

Authorities announced last week that the four bodies recovered from the St. Lawrence River in Akwesasne, a Mohawk reserve wedged between the Canada-US border, were of people who came from a village in the Mehsana district of Gujarat, in western India.

The family of four, Praveen Chaudhary, 50, his wife Diksha, 45, and their children, Vidhi, 23, and Mitkumar, 20, attempted to enter the US from Canada by boat across the St. Lawrence River, police said. They are believed to have reached Canada on a tourist visa in February.

Eight bodies in total were recovered last Thursday and Friday in Tsi Snaihne in Akwesasne. The other group of four deceased migrants was identified as a family from Romania.

Investigators said they now suspect a young couple and their child from Mansa in Gandhinagar, Gujarat, were also with the Chaudharys on the boat.

"Many fall prey to illegal immigration rackets. These trafficking syndicates lure them with promises and charge hefty sums. We had busted quite a few but new ones keep cropping up," Gujarat's former director of police, Ashish Bhatia, told DW.

The Gujarat government is mulling whether to introduce legislation to go against smugglers who pose as travel agents to lure vulnerable people. However, officials say this would take time.


"Can you imagine the number of people who have managed to cross over? What we know are instances of people who die or are detained by foreign immigration and border police. It is the most lucrative trade and people are willing to chance it," a senior intelligence official, who requested anonymity, told DW.
Human smuggling networks deliver false promises

The latest tragedy echoes the case of the Patel family from the Kalol district of Gandhinagar. The family of four froze to death in southern Manitoba in January last year, while allegedly attempting to illegally cross over to the US.

They were reportedly separated in a blizzard from a larger group of Indian nationals who managed to cross over in sub-zero temperatures.

"We arrested two travel agents in connection with the Patel incident. The agents had sent 11 persons, including the Patel family, to illegally enter the USA. They were responsible for arranging the Indian side of the travel and informing the group of whom they would meet up with in the USA once they crossed the border," Deputy Commissioner of Police (Crime) Chaitanya Mandalik told DW.

In December last year, another Gujarat resident, Brijkumar Yadav, died while scaling the Mexico-US border wall with his wife and three-year-old son along with a larger group of migrants attempting to cross the border point between San Diego and Tijuana, Mexico.

Tijuana Police said that Yadav and his son fell from scaling the wall onto the Mexican side, while his wife landed on US territory.

The incidents have put a spotlight on human smuggling operations involving Indian migrants, especially from Gujarat, using Canada and Mexico as transit points.

Human smugglers make false promises about easy escapes, without providing warnings about the risks involved.

Gujarat police probing human smuggling cases said smugglers receive help from Punjabi counterparts to facilitate illegal entry into the US.

"From the initial interrogation of agents we have arrested, they charge $70,000-$75,000 (€64,000- €69,000) for each individual. The agents usually map the road to the US via Canada or through the Turkey-Mexico route," said Mandalik.

The US Census Bureau data estimates that around 587,000 undocumented Indian immigrants currently live in the US.

What's driving Gujaratis to migrate?

Thousands from Gujarat's Patidar or Patel community have tried to undertake precarious journeys through dense forests, deserts and risky water channels to reach the US in search of better lives and the "American dream."

"The rush to escape is strong. People here are willing to spend any amount of money to somehow reach the US where the large and powerful network of the Patel community takes care of them," sociologist Gaurang Jani, who teaches at the Gujarat University in Ahmedabad, told DW.

"Once they have reached their destination, there is a huge support structure from the community. They do not mind taking on menial jobs but the goal is to reach the US," added Jani.



In March 2022, six youths from Gujarat were not so lucky when US border authorities arrested the group after their boat sank in the Saint Regis River, close to the border with Canada. They were trying to enter the US illegally, authorities claimed.

Police are still on the lookout for Charanjit Singh, one of the alleged architects behind the human smuggling network between India and countries including the US and Canada. He is said to have fled to the US from India in January last year, is a US citizen and possesses two passports.

Singh mostly operated out of Delhi, and is reported to have left India after the authorities started probing human smugglers operating in Gujarat and beyond.

Singh's former associate, Bharat "Bobby" Patel, was taken into police custody last year. He was found in possession of 55 fake passports of different individuals.

"We have notified authorities in the US. Charanjit also runs motels in the US and has contacts who help him traffic people in Nigeria, Turkey, Mexico and Canada," said Gujarat's former director of police Bhatia.

Edited by: Sou-Jie van Brunnersum
Experts fear future AI could cause 'nuclear-level catastrophe'

Kenny Stancil, Common Dreams
April 15, 2023

Photo by Frédéric Paulussen on Unsplash

While nearly three-quarters of researchers believe artificial intelligence "could soon lead to revolutionary social change," 36% worry that AI decisions "could cause nuclear-level catastrophe."

Those survey findings are included in the 2023 AI Index Report, an annual assessment of the fast-growing industry assembled by the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence and published earlier this month.

"These systems demonstrate capabilities in question answering, and the generation of text, image, and code unimagined a decade ago, and they outperform the state of the art on many benchmarks, old and new," says the report. "However, they are prone to hallucination, routinely biased, and can be tricked into serving nefarious aims, highlighting the complicated ethical challenges associated with their deployment."

As Al Jazeera reported Friday, the analysis "comes amid growing calls for regulation of AI following controversies ranging from a chatbot-linked suicide to deepfake videos of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appearing to surrender to invading Russian forces."
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Notably, the survey measured the opinions of 327 experts in natural language processing—a branch of computer science essential to the development of chatbots—last May and June, months before the November release of OpenAI's ChatGPT "took the tech world by storm," the news outlet reported.

"A misaligned superintelligent AGI could cause grievous harm to the world."

Just three weeks ago, Geoffrey Hinton, considered the "godfather of artificial intelligence," told CBS News' Brook Silva-Braga that the rapidly advancing technology's potential impacts are comparable to "the Industrial Revolution, or electricity, or maybe the wheel."

Asked about the chances of the technology "wiping out humanity," Hinton warned that "it's not inconceivable."

That alarming potential doesn't necessarily lie with currently existing AI tools such as ChatGPT, but rather with what is called "artificial general intelligence" (AGI), which would encompass computers developing and acting on their own ideas.

"Until quite recently, I thought it was going to be like 20 to 50 years before we have general-purpose AI," Hinton told CBS News. "Now I think it may be 20 years or less."

Pressed by Silva-Braga if it could happen sooner, Hinton conceded that he wouldn't rule out the possibility of AGI arriving within five years, a significant change from a few years ago when he "would have said, 'No way.'"

"We have to think hard about how to control that," said Hinton. Asked if that's possible, Hinton said, "We don't know, we haven't been there yet, but we can try."

The AI pioneer is far from alone. According to the survey of computer scientists conducted last year, 57% said that "recent progress is moving us toward AGI," and 58% agreed that "AGI is an important concern."

In February, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wrote in a company blog post: "The risks could be extraordinary. A misaligned superintelligent AGI could cause grievous harm to the world."

More than 25,000 people have signed an open letter published two weeks ago that calls for a six-month moratorium on training AI systems beyond the level of OpenAI's latest chatbot, GPT-4, although Altman is not among them.

"Powerful AI systems should be developed only once we are confident that their effects will be positive and their risks will be manageable," says the letter.

The Financial Times reported Friday that Tesla and Twitter CEO Elon Musk, who signed the letter calling for a pause, is "developing plans to launch a new artificial intelligence start-up to compete with" OpenAI.

"It's very reasonable for people to be worrying about those issues now."

Regarding AGI, Hinton said: "It's very reasonable for people to be worrying about those issues now, even though it's not going to happen in the next year or two. People should be thinking about those issues."

While AGI may still be a few years away, fears are already mounting that existing AI tools—including chatbots spouting lies, face-swapping apps generating fake videos, and cloned voices committing fraud—are poised to turbocharge the spread of misinformation.

According to a 2022 IPSOS poll of the general public included in the new Stanford report, people in the U.S. are particularly wary of AI, with just 35% agreeing that "products and services using AI had more benefits than drawbacks," compared with 78% of people in China, 76% in Saudi Arabia, and 71% in India.

Amid "growing regulatory interest" in an AI "accountability mechanism," the Biden administration announced this week that it is seeking public input on measures that could be implemented to ensure that "AI systems are legal, effective, ethical, safe, and otherwise trustworthy."

Axios reported Thursday that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) is "taking early steps toward legislation to regulate artificial intelligence technology."

 

 

EU: ChatGPT spurs debate about AI regulation



Bernd Riegert
04/15/2023
DW

As various EU member states deliberate on whether to ban certain chatbots, legislators argue that the bloc must have clear regulation of artificial intelligence applications — but not frighten away developers.

Garante, the Italian data protection authority, apparently jumped the gun at the end of March when it imposed a temporary ban on ChatGPT, a chatbot that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to generate texts that seem as if they were created by humans, and computer games. The watchdog was less concerned by the use of AI — the simulation of human intelligence by computer systems — than by breaches of data protection legislation.

Garante then told the Microsoft Corp-backed company behind ChatGPT, OpenAI, that it would have to be more transparent with its users about how their data were processed. It also said that the US company had to obtain permission from users if their data were to be used to further develop the software — that is, to help it learn — and that access to minors had to be filtered. In a press release, the Italian authority said that the ban would be lifted if OpenAI met these conditions by April 30.

An OpenAI spokesperson told the Reuters news agency that it was "happy" that Garante was "reconsidering" the original ban and that it looked forward "to working with them to make ChatGPT available to our customers in Italy again soon."

Humanoids could soon be employed in senior care homes
Christof Stache/AFP/Getty Images

EU-wide regulation of AI


Spain and France have also raised similar concerns about ChatGPT. For the moment, there is no EU-wide regulation of the use of AI in products such as self-driving cars, medical technology, or surveillance systems. The European Parliament is still debating legislation proposed by the European Commission two years ago. When it is approved, the EU member states themselves will have to agree, and so it will probably be early 2025 before it comes into force.

However, German MEP Axel Voss, one of the main drafters of the EU's Artificial Intelligence Act, pointed out that AI was not so advanced two years ago and was likely to develop further over the next two years, "so fast" that much of it would no longer be appropriate when the law actually took effect.

Axel Voss co-drafted the EU's AI legislation
picture-alliance/dpa/J.-F. Badias

It is not clear whether ChatGPT or a similar product would even be covered by the EU regulation, which defines levels of risk in AI that run from "unacceptable" to "minimal or no risk." As the legislation stands, only programs assigned scores of "high risk" or "limited risk" will be subject to special rules regarding the documentation of algorithms, transparency and the disclosure of data use. Applications that document and evaluate people's social behavior to predict certain actions will be banned, as will social scoring by governments and certain facial recognition technologies.

Legislators are still discussing to what extent AI should be allowed to record or simulate emotions, as well as how to assign categories of risk.

Voss said that "for competitive reasons and because we are already behind, we actually need more optimism to deal with AI more intensively. But what is happening in the European Parliament is that most people are being guided by fear and concerns and trying to rule out everything." He added that the EU members' data protection commissioners wanted AI to be monitored by an independent body and that it would make sense to amend the existing data protection legislation.

Striking a balance between consumer protection and economy

The European Commission and Parliament are trying to strike a balance between consumer protection, regulation and the free development of the economy and research. After all, as the EU Commissioner for the Internal Market Thierry Breton has pointed out, AI offers "immense potential" in a digital society and economy. Two years ago, when the bloc's AI legislation was presented, he said that the EU did not want to drive the developers of AI away but promote them and persuade them to settle in Europe. He added that the EU should not be dependent on foreign providers and that the data for AI should be stored and processed in the EU.
The Chinese tech giant Baidu has released a chatbot called Ernie
CFOTO/picture alliance

Mark Brakel from the US-based nonprofit Future of Life Institute told DW that companies also had to be held accountable by regulators. He said that it did not suffice to apply risk levels to AI applications. He suggested that developers themselves should have to monitor the risks of each individual application and that measures should be taken to ensure that "companies are mandated to do this risk management and publish" the results. He added that sometimes companies could not predict today what their AI products might be able to do tomorrow and were sometimes surprised by the results.

"If we are too complicated here, then companies will go elsewhere and develop their algorithms and systems there," warned MEP Voss. "Then they will come back and use us only as a consumer country, so to speak."

What is striking about ChatGPT, which is causing a stir in Europe, is that it was developed in the US for global use. OpenAI could soon face stiff competition from other US companies such as Google and Elon Musk's Twitter. Chinese tech giants are also in the race, with Baidu already having created a chatbot called Ernie.

So far there do not seem to be any European chatbots on the horizon.

This article was translated from German.