Monday, June 12, 2023

New life breathed into Tunisia’s bagpipes


By AFP
June 11, 2023

Tunisian musician Montassar Jebali, 32, says the mizwad is 'gaining ground' and will have its international breakthrough -
 Copyright AFP FETHI BELAID

Aymen JAMLI

At his workshop in Tunisia’s capital, Khaled ben Khemis pieces together a type of bagpipe once banned from airwaves but now embraced by artists infusing its sound into new musical styles.

Known as a “mizwad”, it “must be made from natural elements”, the 50-year-old craftsman said, taking two cow horns and connecting them to pieces of river reed and a goatskin bag for producing the musical notes.

He has made the instrument for 30 years.

Most musical historians agree the mizwad first appeared in Tunisia at the beginning of the 20th century and was confined to working-class suburbs for decades before growing in stature to now be incorporated into other genres, including hip-hop and jazz.

The increased popularity has seen commercial manufacturers turning out mizwads.

But modern variations that replace natural materials with plastic “do not have the soul of those made with reeds”, ben Khemis said of the new models, which cost up to 1,000 dinars ($320).

He acknowledged the instrument has, however, evolved.

“Before we played out of tune, and we made it in a hurry,” he said.

– Bad image –

The mizwad spawned its own musical style that was frowned upon by authorities for associations with alcohol, drugs and prison — where many songs were composed.

“It was a musical genre whose reputation was bad just like those who played it,” said Noureddine Kahlaoui, a self-described mizwad “activist” aged in his seventies.

“Criminals and those on the run were always found by authorities at mizwad concerts,” said the popular artist who has played the instrument for 40 years.

The songs address “daring subjects criticising society, politics, migration and racism”, said Rachid Cherif, a musicology researcher.

Mizwad concerts are traditionally held in poor and marginalised neighbourhoods, particularly for weddings.

Song lyrics can be abrasive and considered rude, drawing resentment from families and sometimes triggering brawls at parties.

These elements combined to see Tunisia’s authorities ban the mizwad on public television channels until the 1990s — leading folk artists to undertake a restoration of the instrument’s image.

In July 1991, a “Nouba” concert that mixed folk, popular and Sufi music was staged in Carthage’s ancient Roman amphitheatre and broadcast on television, marking a fundamental step in the mizwad’s rehabilitation.

But some snobbery toward the instrument remains.

In 2022, officials from Tunis’s municipal theatre refused to allow a mizwad show, deeming the institution too prestigious to host such a concert.

– Jazz and rap –


“Despite the criticism, we have worked so that this original heritage can progress,” said Kahlaoui, who describes the mizwad’s evolution as “dazzling”.

For the researcher Cherif, “the mizwad occupies a prominent place in the history of Tunisian popular music” due to its fundamental identity. It “consolidates the idea of belonging to a nation, an ethnic group and a culture”, he said.

In recent years, a new generation of musicians has taken up the instrument, mixing it with contemporary genres offering more room for creativity such as rap and world music.

“Thanks to what I learnt during my studies, I understood what could be done with this instrument,” said Montassar Jebali, 32, who plays mizwad in several jazz and hip-hop ensembles.

Jebali studied Arabic music at the Higher Institute of Music of Tunisia, where the mizwad is not taught.

“I used my academic knowledge to find out which instrument it went well with,” he said.

Jebali’s concerts and those of other contemporary mizwad players have been popular with young Tunisians.

“The mizwad is gaining ground” and will have its international breakthrough, he said. “Perhaps not tomorrow, but after tomorrow.”

Experts warn of ‘one of the most dangerous periods in human history’ amid nuclear arsenal development 

BY LAUREN SFORZA - 06/12/23 
THE HILL
Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP
This photo made from video provided by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Wednesday, March 29, 2023, shows a Yars missile launcher of the Russian armed forces being driven from a shelter in an undisclosed location in Russia. The Russian military on Wednesday launched drills of its strategic missile forces, deploying Yars mobile launchers…


A group of experts warns that that the development of nuclear arsenals is leading to a perilous period in history.

“We are drifting into one of the most dangerous periods in human history,” Dan Smith, director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, said in a statement. “It is imperative that the world’s governments find ways to cooperate in order to calm geopolitical tensions, slow arms races and deal with the worsening consequences of environmental breakdown and rising world hunger.”

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s new report shows that the rising number of nuclear warheads in military stockpiles threatened global security and stability. The global inventory of warheads in military stockpiles increased by 86 in 2023, according to the report.

The report noted that the United States and Russia have nearly 90 percent of all nuclear weapons across the globe. China has increased its arsenal from 350 warheads to 410 warheads in 2023, a move that the report said could signal that China may have as many intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) as either Russia or the United States by 2030.

“China has started a significant expansion of its nuclear arsenal,” said Hans Kristensen, a fellow at the organization’s weapons of mass destruction program. “It is increasingly difficult to square this trend with China’s declared aim of having only the minimum nuclear forces needed to maintain its national security.”

The report said that India and Pakistan were both expanding their arsenals, as well as North Korea. The report added that it estimated North Korea may have assembled about 30 warheads and has enough material for between 50 and 70 warheads.

The report also added that the Russia-Ukraine war has set back nuclear arms control and disarmament diplomacy, saying that countries were being less transparent about nuclear forces in the wake of the conflict.

“In this period of high geopolitical tension and mistrust, with communication channels between nuclear-armed rivals closed or barely functioning, the risks of miscalculation, misunderstanding or accident are unacceptably high,” Smith said. “There is an urgent need to restore nuclear diplomacy and strengthen international controls on nuclear arms.”

China expands nuclear arsenal as global tensions grow: study


By AFP
June 12, 2023

China's DF-41 nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missiles are shown off during a military parade in Beijing to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China
- Copyright AFP/File GREG BAKER

The nuclear arsenals of several countries, especially China, grew last year and other atomic powers continued to modernise theirs as geopolitical tensions rise, researchers said Monday.

“We are approaching, or maybe have already reached, the end of a long period of the number of nuclear weapons worldwide declining,” Dan Smith, director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), told AFP.

The total amount of nuclear warheads among the nine nuclear powers — Britain, China, France, India, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia and the United States — was down to 12,512 at the outset of 2023, from 12,710 at the start of 2022, according to SIPRI.

Of those, 9,576 were in “military stockpiles for potential use”, 86 more than a year earlier.

SIPRI distinguishes between countries’ stockpiles available for use and their total inventory — which includes older ones scheduled to be dismantled.

“The stockpile is the usable nuclear warheads, and those numbers are beginning to tick up,” Smith said, while noting that numbers are still far from the over 70,000 seen during the 1980s.

The bulk of the increase was from China, which increased its stockpile from 350 to 410 warheads.

India, Pakistan and North Korea also upped their stockpiles and Russia’s grew to a smaller extent, from 4,477 to 4,489, while the remaining nuclear powers maintained the size of their arsenal.

Russia and the United States together still have almost 90 percent of all nuclear weapons.

“The big picture is we’ve had over 30 years of the number of nuclear warheads coming down, and we see that process coming to an end now,” Smith said.

– China ‘stepping up’ –


Researchers at SIPRI also noted that diplomatic efforts on nuclear arms control and disarmament had suffered setbacks following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

For instance, the United States suspended its “bilateral strategic stability dialogue” with Russia in the wake of the invasion.

In February, Moscow announced it was it was suspending participation in the 2010 Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms (New START).

SIPRI noted in a statement that it “was the last remaining nuclear arms control treaty limiting Russian and US strategic nuclear forces”.

At the same time, Smith said the increase in stockpiles could not be explained by the war in Ukraine as it takes a longer time to develop new warheads and that the bulk of the increase was among countries not directly affected.

China has also invested heavily in all parts of its military as its economy and influence have grown.

“What we’re seeing is China stepping up as a world power, that is the reality of our time,” Smith said.

LA REVUE GAUCHE - Left Comment: Search results for PERMANENT ARMS ECONOMY 
WAR IS ECOCIDE
Riverside Ukraine city left with mud and memories

ByAFP
June 12, 2023

Upstream of the destroyed Kakhovka dam, the banks of Dnipro have become stinking mudflats -
 Copyright JIJI PRESS/AFP/File STR

Dave CLARK

Zaporizhzhia residents braved grey skies and driving rain to visit the banks of the Dnipro, not to relax in riverside bars and resorts, but to contemplate a sea of mud.

When the Kakhovka dam was breached last week — in what Kyiv and its allies believe was an act of Russian sabotage — the river level upstream dropped dramatically.

In the city of Zaporizhzhia, a sandy beach now gives way to a stinking mudflat, and sightseers have been left to survey the damage 15 months of war has dealt to their environment.

Despite the devastation, the riverside is still a place of contemplation for some, like 32-year-old Andrii Vlasenko, who was walking alone sweeping the mud with his metal detector.

Andrii and his wife and child fled a Russian-occupied area to the south of the city a year ago and he has so far been unable to find work.

Five months ago, his 63-year-old father was killed by shellfire in his home village.

For him, the newly exposed riverbed is an opportunity to forget his pain and indulge his peaceful hobby as a metal detectorist.

“I came maybe to find something. At least, while searching my soul retreats. That’s why,” he said.

His morning’s haul was meagre — no gold or silver, but one Ukrainian coin and one Soviet-era kopek.

Before the war, citizens of Zaporizhzhia had access to beach holiday resorts on the Azov Sea coast, now occupied by Russian forces and completely beyond reach.

Now, with the retreat of the Dnipro, even the small family resorts in the forests south of the city no longer open onto sandy riverbanks but onto slimy silt.

– Knee-deep in silt –

Yuriy Kara, a 39-year-old IT specialist, sheltered from the rain under the hatchback of his car, sipping a coffee and bitterly reflecting on the scene.

“I was here in the first day when water started dropping. On June 9, the water was closer. It drops every day,” he said, as a seabird splashed into the shallows to search for food.

“I was just discussing it with my friend, that soon there will be no Dnipro river for us.”

Opinions differ about how far the river has fallen but retired steel worker Gennadiy, stripped to his underpants and knee-deep in water under a tall jetty, had the answer.

Pointing at the tide marks on the stone pile towering above him, he made his estimate.

“So the water level was… How can I show you? It was up there. Look, see that brick? It was up to the higher one, three metres,” he told AFP reporters.

The changes to the Dnipro have also served as a reminder to the city that, even though Ukraine is counter-attacking Russian troops nearby, the war can still reach them in unsettling ways.

Cellphone company employee Anna Lashuna, 28, and her sisters fled Russian-occupied territory in June last year and are fearful for an elderly grandmother they left behind.

“No-one even thought that they could do something like this,” she said of the shrunken river.

“We do not know what to expect next from them. It could get worse. I hope it will end as soon as possible.”


KNOW THE 1%; GNOME OF ZURICH
Sergio Ermotti: George Clooney of Swiss banking tasked with mega-merger


By AFP
June 12, 2023

UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti, 62, is nicknamed the "George Clooney of Paradeplatz" - 
Copyright AFP/File ARND WIEGMANN

Nathalie OLOF-ORS

Sergio Ermotti returned as chief executive of UBS to mastermind the merger with Credit Suisse — an onerous task which begins in earnest on Monday after the takeover was finalised.

“Today we welcome our new colleagues from Credit Suisse to UBS,” he said, vowing: “We’ll create a bank that our clients, employees, investors and Switzerland can be proud of.”

Ermotti has to smooth out the controversial shotgun marriage of two of the world’s most important banks.

Nicknamed the “George Clooney of Paradeplatz”, after the Hollywood star and the Zurich square at the heart of Switzerland’s banking industry, the silver-haired 63-year-old is known for always being immaculately dressed.

The Swiss banker has a reputation that lives up to such star billing, having turned around the fortunes of UBS after the 2008 global financial crisis as he ran Switzerland’s biggest bank from 2011 to 2020.

His rise has also been like a Hollywood tale having gone from local apprentice to the two-time boss of a top global bank.

Having steadied the ship once before at UBS, can Ermotti do it again?

– Bumpy flight –

Ermotti has warned the coming months will be “bumpy” for the new megabank, whose sheer size has raised concerns in Switzerland in the event that it runs into trouble one day.

At the Swiss Economic Forum conference in Interlaken on Friday, he was asked if he saw himself as a kind of Superman figure, a clean-up man responsible for restoring order, or the new coach of a football team.

He chose the latter option, saying the task was to “make something good out of a not ideal situation”.

Ermotti will have to merge two institutions which were both among the 30 banks around the world deemed of global importance to the banking system — in short, too big to fail.

Following the collapse of three banks in the United States, Credit Suisse’s share price plummeted on March 15 as investor confidence evaporated.

On March 19, the Swiss government, the central bank and the financial regulators strongarmed UBS into buying Credit Suisse for $3.25 billion to prevent it from collapsing — and potentially triggering a global banking meltdown.

UBS chairman Colm Kelleher turned once more to Ermotti, thinking him the “better pilot” to navigate the bank’s completely altered flight path than its Dutch CEO Ralph Hamers.

Hamers swiftly vacated the hotseat and Ermotti returned to the helm on April 5.

– Path to the top –

As a child, Ermotti dreamed of a career in football but made his mark instead as one of the most talented bankers of his generation.

At 15, he quit school to become an apprentice at the Corner private bank in Lugano, his home town in the Italian-speaking south of Switzerland.

From there, he started out on a dazzling journey seen as a shining example of the Swiss apprenticeship system.

After a stint at the US bank Citigroup, he rose through the ranks of the US investment bank Merrill Lynch between 1987 and 2004, completing his training along the way via the advanced management programme at Britain’s prestigious Oxford University.

In 2005, he joined the Italian bank UniCredit for five years, where he notably headed the markets and investment banking division.

He was then entrusted with the CEO role at UBS, running Switzerland’s biggest bank from 2011 to 2020.

UBS came in for fierce criticism after its bailout by the state during the 2008 financial crisis.

But the losses in 2011 of a rogue trader who blew $2.3 billion in shady transactions was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

Heads rolled and UBS turned to Ermotti, who was little-known within Switzerland, having made his career mainly in London, New York and Milan.

But he returned home after being overlooked for the CEO role at UniCredit.

He made cuts in the investment bank, refocused UBS on wealth management and settled the disputes accumulated by the bank, including the Libor and exchange rate manipulation scandals.

In 2021, he became the chairman of the reinsurance giant Swiss Re.

But when Kelleher sounded him out about returning to UBS to integrate Credit Suisse, Ermotti said he felt the “call of duty” to return.

China’s installed non-fossil fuel electricity capacity


By Karen Graham
AFP
June 12, 2023

Enviro Friendly cited data compiled by environmental think tank Ember to look at countries whose solar electricity capacity has grown the most over the past 15 years. - Canva

China’s non-fossil fuel energy sources now exceed 50% of its total installed electricity generation capacity.

According to Yale 360, China set a goal in 2021 for renewable capacity, including wind, solar, hydro, and nuclear power to exceed fossil fuel capacity by 2025, a target that it has hit two years ahead of schedule.

By the end of 2022, China’s installed power generation capacity was 2,564.05 GW, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

And while China has devoted extensive resources to the construction of renewable energy capacity in recent years, the Chinese industry accounts for around 60 percent of all electricity demand, according to Bloomberg’s estimates, reports Oil Price.com.

Residential demand for electricity was just 17 percent in 2020. This inconsistent utilization of resources means that China’s energy consumption mix remains weighted toward fossil fuels, principally coal, Reuters reported in March 2023.

It is important to remember that power capacity refers to the maximum amount of electricity a power plant can produce under ideal conditions. It’s a measure of how much electricity a solar farm can generate at noon on a cloudless day, or how much a coal plant can produce when operating at full blast.

Because fossil fuel plants operate closer to their capacity than solar and wind plants do, the newly released figures may obscure how much electricity China is actually drawing from renewables.

PEDOPHELIA PAYMENT
JPMorgan Chase agrees to settle with Jeffrey Epstein victims
MAJORITY OF PEDOPHILES ARE STR8

By AFP
June 12, 2023

JPMorgan Chase agreed to settle with victims of Jeffrey Epstein as Wall Street reckons with its role in the scandal - 

JPMorgan Chase reached an agreement in principle to settle a class action lawsuit brought by victims of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking scheme, the two sides said Monday.

“The parties believe this settlement is in the best interests of all parties, especially the survivors who were the victims of Epstein’s terrible abuse,” said a joint statement.

It gave no financial details of the agreement, and said the settlement is “subject to court approval.”

The agreement comes on the heels of a parallel Deutsche Bank settlement announced in May, as the litigation forces Wall Street banks to reckon with their role in the scandal involving the disgraced Epstein, who died in prison in 2019.

News of the agreement came on the same day that US District Judge Jed Rakoff granted class-action certification to the claims, which were brought by plaintiff Jane Doe 1 “individually and on behalf of others similarly situated.”

In a 30-page ruling Monday, Rakoff concluded that Jane Doe 1’s fellow victims were numerous enough to qualify as a class and that the case otherwise met the requirements.

“The core of this case — plaintiffs allegation that JPMorgan supported Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking venture while it knew or should have known that venture was in operation — involves a common set of law and fact,” Rakoff wrote.

– ‘We regret it’ –

The lawfirm Boies Schiller and Flexner, which represented plaintiffs in both the Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan cases, hailed the agreement as a step towards justice.

“Taken together or individually, the historic recoveries from the banks who provided financial services to Jeffrey Epstein, speak for themselves,” said David Boies.

“It has taken a long time, too long, but today is a great day for Jeffrey Epstein survivors, and a great day for justice.”

JPMorgan Chase reiterated that it regretted its association with Epstein.

“We all now understand that Epstein’s behavior was monstrous,” said a bank spokeswoman.

“Any association with him was a mistake and we regret it. We would never have continued to do business with him if we believed he was using our bank in any way to help commit heinous crimes.”

In May in a parallel case, Deutsche Bank agreed to pay $75 million to settle litigation brought by the victim.

JPMorgan began its banking services with Epstein as early as 1998, but did not cut him off until 2013.

Plaintiffs had alleged that JPMorgan either knew or should have known from 2006 that it was supporting a sexual predator, but that the bank kept Epstein as a client well beyond that period.

The case has included a deposition from JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon, with questions focusing on when top officials became aware of Epstein’s conduct and why he wasn’t cut off earlier.

JPMorgan has blamed former executive Jes Staley for maintaining the relationship with Epstein. Litigation between the bank and Staley is ongoing, along with cases between JPMorgan and the US Virgin Islands, according to Monday’s joint statement.

On Friday, attorneys for the victims asked the court to order a second round of testimony from Dimon, alleging that the bank had “strategically withheld” documents prior to Dimon’s May 26, 2023 deposition that impeded their questioning.

Epstein was convicted in Florida in 2008 of paying young girls for massages, but served just 13 months in jail under a secret plea deal.

Later awaiting trial on charges of trafficking underage girls for sex, he killed himself in a New York jail cell in August 2019 at age 66.

Late Pleistocene, Upper Palaeolithic Sleds from eastern North America, L'Anthropologie 127(2), April-June 2023
2023, L'Anthropologie
Here are described two sleds, presumed to date to the time of the Clovis (Llano) archaeological culture or approximately 13,500-12,500 years ago, that were discovered at saline springs in New York state and Kentucky state. For what purpose these sleds may have been intended and why they were abandoned are addressed by referring to eastern Eurasian ethnography. The proboscidean components used in their construction may have restricted use of these sleds to ritual activities. 

Résumé Dans cet article, sont décrits deux traîneaux, dont on présume qu'ils datent de l'époque de la culture Clovis (Llano), aux environs de 13500 à 12500 ans. Ces traîneaux ont été découverts au niveau de sources d'eaux salées dans les états de New York et du Kentucky. À quoi ces traîneaux ont pu être destinés et pourquoi ont-ils été abandonnés ? Ce sont les questions abordées ici, en se référant à l'ethnographie eurasienne de l'Est. Les composants proboscidiens utilisés dans leurs constructions pourraient avoir restreint l'utilisation de ces traîneaux aux activités rituelles.
Spain begins exhuming civil war victims from Franco basilica
By AFP
June 12, 2023

The vast hillside mausoleum was built after the civil war by Franco's regime -- in part by the forced labour of 20,000 political prisoners - 
Copyright POOL/AFP Ian Vogler

Diego URDANETA

Experts on Monday began exhuming Spanish civil war victims from a huge basilica near Madrid, where the body of former dictator Francisco Franco once lay.

The move comes as Spain gears up for an early general election on July 23 in which Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez faces an uphill battle.

The team will seek to exhume the remains of 128 victims of the 1936-39 civil war from the complex at the Valley of Cuelgamuros, formerly known as the Valley of the Fallen, the democratic memory ministry said.

The aim is to “recover those bodies and deliver them to their families to give them a dignified burial,” the ministry said in a statement sent to AFP.

“This is not about politics, it is simply a matter of pure humanity.”

A laboratory has been set up in the basilica carved into a mountainside to allow the archeologists, forensic experts and scientific police to do their work.

The remains of some 33,000 people from both sides of the civil war are buried anonymously at the complex, which is topped by a 150-metre (500-foot) stone cross.

Many of the remains were moved to the site 50 kilometres (30 miles) northwest of Madrid from cemeteries and mass graves across the country without their families being informed.

While the site is ostensibly dedicated to the memory of all those killed on both sides of the war, only two graves at the basilica were ever marked: those of Franco and of Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, founder of Spain’s fascist Falange party.

The government relocated Franco’s remains to a civilian cemetery in 2019, and did the same with those of Primo de Rivera in April.

– ‘Long overdue’ –


Many relatives of those buried there have long campaigned to be able to lay their loved ones to rest near their families under their own names.

“Finally, and perhaps too long overdue, Spanish democracy is providing an answer to these victims,’ government spokeswoman Isabel Rodriguez told public television.

Honouring those who died or suffered violence or repression during the civil war and the Franco dictatorship that followed has been a top priority for Sanchez, who came to power in 2018.

A so-called democratic memory law which came into effect in October 2022 aims to turn the Valley of Cuelgamuros into a place of memory for the dark years of the dictatorship.

It also promotes the search for victims who are buried in mass graves across Spain and annuls the criminal convictions of opponents of the Franco regime.

But the law has been politically divisive, with right-wing parties saying it needlessly dredges up the past.

– Long Franco dictatorship –

Opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo, head of the right-wing Popular Party (PP), has vowed to repeal the law if he comes to power in next month’s election.

Surveys suggest the PP will win the snap polls but will need the support of far-right party Vox to govern.

A prominent NGO that represents victims of the Franco regime, the Association for the Reparation of Historic Memory, welcomed the exhumations.

But it deplored that families concerned “learned of the exhumation from the press and are not there.”

“The Franco family was able to carry the dictator’s body from the Valley of the Fallen on their shoulders,” it added in a tweet.

Franco ruled Spain with an iron fist since the end of the civil war intil his death in 1975, one of Europe’s longest dictatorships.

His regime was notorious for imprisoning, torturing and killing people who spoke out against his rule.
Initial Heathrow strikes suspended after new pay offer

Unions had announced 31 days of strike action over the summer months - 


By AFP
June 12, 2023

Copyright AFP Adrian DENNIS

Planned strike action by security staff at London’s Heathrow airport later this month has been called off after unions recommended they accept a pay deal, both sides said on Monday.

The two-day walkout scheduled for June 24 and 25 risked causing misery for travellers at one of the busiest times of the year.

But the Unite and PCS unions have now urged their members to accept an offer after eight months of talks.

“We are pleased to have agreed a pay deal which unions are recommending their members to accept,” an airport spokesperson said in a statement.

“While a ballot takes place, the first weekend of strikes has been cancelled.”

The ballot to accept or reject the deal runs from Tuesday until June 23.

The deal — if approved — includes a 10-percent pay increase, backdated to January 1, and effective from July.

It will rise to 11.5 percent from October with a guarantee of an inflation-linked pay increase for 2024.

Unite confirmed that the strikes had been called off “as a gesture of goodwill” while its more than 2,000 members voted on the proposals.

But it warned that they could still walk out for 29 days over the busy summer months to August 27 if the offer is rejected.

Britain has been hit for the past year by a wave of public and private sector strikes over pay as it grapples with stubbornly high inflation and a cost-of-living crisis.

Some 1,400 security staff went on strike over 10 days as talks broke down, coinciding with the busy Easter holidays getaway in April.

Heathrow said it had “robust contingency plans” in case the unions rejected the deal, and did not anticipate flight cancellations in the event of future strikes.

46, half children, killed in ‘vile attack’ in east DR Congo

By AFP
June 12, 2023

Commanders of the CODECO militia, which is accused of numerous ethnic killings in eastern DRC, pictured in Ituri in February, 2022 - Copyright AFP Birol BEBEK

At least 46 people, half of them children, were killed in a militia attack on a camp for displaced people in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where civilians are suffering increasing violence.

A militia group involved in numerous brutal ethnic killings in the area attacked the camp in northeastern Ituri province overnight Sunday to Monday, Richard Dheda, an official of the local administration for Bahema Badjere in Djugu territory, told AFP.

The Kivu Security Tracker (KST), a network of observers based in DR Congo’s restive east, counted “at least 46” dead in the Lala camp.

Community leader Desire Malodra gave the same death toll of 46, adding that 23 of them were children.

He added that the toll was still provisional as “the search continues” for victims.

A statement from the UN mission MONUSCO condemned the “vile attack”, and reported “more than 45 dead and a dozen injured.”

– ‘People were burned to death’ –


The CODECO militia, or Cooperative for the Development of the Congo, claims to protect the Lendu community from another ethnic group, the Hema, as well as the DR Congo army.

“They began to fire shots, many people were burned to death in their homes, others were killed by machete,” Malodra said.

The Lala camp for displaced people is five kilometres (three miles) from Bule, the site of a UN peacekeeper base.

Ituri province is one of eastern DR Congo’s violence hotspots, where attacks claiming dozens of lives are common.

CODECO militiamen attacked an army position in the Djukoth area of Ituri province’s Mahagi territory late on Saturday, killing seven civilians.

The group is accused of the massacre of more than 60 people in a grisly machete attack in another displacement camp in Ituri.

After a decade of calm, the conflict between the Hema and Lendu communities rekindled in 2017, resulting in thousands of deaths and forcing more than 1.5 million people from their homes.

Much of eastern DR Congo is plagued by dozens of armed groups, a legacy of regional wars that flared in the 1990s and 2000s.

– UN protection –

Hundreds of thousands of displaced people in eastern DR Congo receive protection “almost exclusively” from UN troops, in one of the organisation’s largest and costliest operations in the world.

The force has a current strength of about 16,000 uniformed personnel, mainly deployed in Congo’s east — a mineral-rich region that militias have plagued for three decades.

But the UN comes in for sharp criticism in DR Congo, where many people perceive the peacekeepers as failing to prevent violence. Dozens of people were killed during anti-UN protests last year.

UN Under-Secretary-General for peacekeeping operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix, who visited a camp in Ituri recently, said that peacekeepers should withdraw from the conflict-torn central African country “as quickly as possible” yet responsibly.

Meanwhile, in the neighbouring province of North-Kivu, an attack by suspected Islamic State group-affiliated ADF rebels left eight dead on Sunday, according to local sources.