It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Wednesday, July 12, 2023
Johannesburg gets first snowfall in more than a decade
Johannesburg, South Africa, was treated to a rare dusting of snow this week — the city’s first in more than 10 years.
The unexpected winter wonderland was part of a patch of snow that covered various provinces through the weekend into Monday, South Africa’s Times newspaper reported.
Photos from around the city show delighted residents gallivanting among the snowflakes, which last coated the area in August 2012.
“Eleven years down the line, it’s exciting that we have snow,” local Jennifer Banda said.
Others on social media referred to the weather as “pure magic,” the Guardian reported.
The snow was caused by an uptick in humidity, low temperatures and wind, experts said — while cautioning that it was unlikely to last very long.
John Henning (left) and Christina Steyn enjoy the rare sight of snow falling in Johannesburg.KIM LUDBROOK/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Children play in the snow at Laerskool Orion, a school outside Johannesburg.REUTERS
“It happens once every 10 years or so. We’re not an area that has a lot of snowfall and that’s partly because in winter we have dry conditions,” University of Witwatersrand professor of physical geography Jennifer Fitchett told the Times.
“We’ve got a strong high pressure cell which is why we don’t have any or very little rain in winter months. And so don’t have much moisture in the air.”
Other parts of the Southern Hemisphere nation get irregular snow from June through August.
But snow falls on Johannesburg only about once every five years, on average, University of the Witwatersrand climatology professor Francois Engelbrecht told the Daily Maverick.
A man leads a horse as snow falls in Delta Park, Johannesburg, on Monday.AFP via Getty Images
For many children, it was their first time seeing snow in the city.REUTERS
Another expert, South African Weather Service meteorologist Wayne Venter, reassured the outlet that the sudden dusting was likely not due to climate change.
For most of the city’s children, Monday was their first time seeing and playing in snow.
Other residents, however, were frustrated by the change in weather.
The snow is expected to stop before too long.REUTERS
Monde Sussman (left) takes a picture of Gabriel Sussman as snow falls in Zoo Lake park in Johannesburg.AFP via Getty Images
“I’m trying to warm the engine so that it can start … otherwise I will kick the bike all day,” delivery driver Chenjerai Murape complained of his motorbike. 8 What do you think? Post a comment.
The local weather service had also issued cold snap warnings in Gauteng province, which includes Johannesburg and the capital, Pretoria.
India: How climate change is causing an environmental crisis
Murali Krishnan in New Delhi
Torrential rains have caused flash floods and landslides in parts of India, causing death and destruction. The heavy rain comes after an unbearable heat wave.
Intense monsoon rains have lashed parts of northern India over the past few days, leaving a trail of death and destruction, as well as rendering many areas inaccessible.
The state of Himachal Pradesh has been the hardest hit.
Television footage showed landslides and flash floods, washing away vehicles, destroying buildings and ripping down bridges.
India's meteorological department (IMD) said that torrential rains across the South Asian country in the first week of July have already produced about 2% more rainfall than normal.
The agency has forecast more rain across large parts of northern India in the coming days.
"The region, which is usually one of the driest, has received disproportionately high rains," an IMD official told DW. Climate change and environmental catastrophes
The summer, or southwest, monsoon brings India around 70% of its annual rainfall.
It is crucial for the nation's agriculture, which accounts for just 11% of India's total economic output, but employs over 40% of its labor force.
The rains also often cause widespread devastation and death due to flooding and landslides.
Scientists say the rainfall is hard to forecast and varies considerably, but climate change is making the monsoon stronger and more erratic, increasing the frequency and ferocity of the floods.
"Human-induced climate change is already intensifying hydrological extremes in India, and the recent floods in parts of northern India are yet another example of how extreme events can be more disastrous in hilly regions than in plains," Akshay Deoras, a research scientist at the UK's National Centre for Atmospheric Science and the Department of Meteorology, told DW.
"This does not necessarily mean that high-impact events would occur every year, but whenever they occur, there would be a greater chance of them being more impactful than previous such events," he added. How many extreme weather events last year?
Last year, the Center for Science and Environment (CSE), a New Delhi-based public interest research and advocacy organization, tracked extreme weather events in India.
It found out that the country, on the whole, experienced extreme weather events on 314 out of the 365 days, meaning that at least one extreme weather event was reported in some part of India on each of these days.
The report concluded that these events caused over 3,000 deaths in 2022, affected some 2 million hectares of crop area, killed more than 69,000 livestock and destroyed around 420,000 houses.
The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) also released a report last year painting a bleak picture for India.
It warned that the country could face multiple climate change-induced disasters in the next two decades.
Unless greenhouse gas emissions are drastically reduced by 2030, it will become impossible for Indian authorities to reverse an imminent climate catastrophe, it said.
"Climate change is accelerating at a fast pace, throwing off extreme weather events one after the other. This is faster than what we thought earlier," said Roxy Mathew Koll, a climate scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology in Pune.
"South Asia has become the poster child of climate change. The entire region, not just India, is witnessing a clear trend in rising heatwaves, floods, landslides, droughts, and cyclones. This is already affecting the food, water, and energy security of the region," Koll told DW.
The heavy rains come after a blistering heat wave that caused temperatures to soar to as high as 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in large parts of the country, taking a toll on people's lives.
Even though the main summer months — from April to June — are always hot in India, temperatures have become more intense in the past decad
India swelters under deadly heat wave
Temperatures of up to 46 degrees Celsius (114.8 degrees Fahrenheit) are being measured in northern India. While people are trying their best to beat the heat, authorities say that at least 170 have died.Image: Hindustan Times/IMAGO
Boiling hot Kolkata
Scorching heat in summer is not uncommon in northern India, but the current temperatures of up to 46 degrees Celsius are breaking all records. In Kolkata, a man is seen here trying to cool off in the shade at the side of the road. Further northwest, the states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh have reported 170 deaths, and hospitals are complaining about overcrowding and a lack of care
.Image: Sudipta Das/NurPhoto/picture alliance
Elderly people in distress
The sweltering heat is especially hard on older people. Lack of fluids and heat accumulation lead to serious health problems. "We have already issued heat warnings several times," said Atul Kumar Singh of the country's Meteorological Department. But government officials only followed up with heat warnings of their own on Sunday, when the number of heat-related deaths was already rising.
Chaos in hospitals
In Ballia district, about 250 kilometres (155 miles) east of New Delhi, the largest hospital reported that it can no longer treat any more patients. Nevertheless, many people waited in the heat to be registered. But the problems are manifold: Staff are exhausted, air conditioners are failing along with the electricity, nurses have to fan the overheated patients with books to cool them down
Mourning relatives
Capacities of the crematoria in Ballia district were overwhelmed with the rapidly increasing number of deaths. The situation had worsened drastically in the past week, with the number of dead being brought to some crematoria even doubling. No respite in sight
The heat also causes stress for animals and has a negative impact on their health and milk production in cows. Climate experts expect the weather extremes to continue in India. "Plans to deal with heat waves are important to minimise their impact," said Aditya Valiathan Pillai of the Indian Centre for Policy Research.
Thirsting to cool down
Flora and fauna are also suffering from the enormous heat. A thirsty monkey in New Delhi is seen here licking up life-saving liquid in a puddle of buttermilk on the Noida road. The cooling rains of the monsoon do not reach northern India until July, and high temperatures are expected to continue until then.Image: Hindustan Times/IMAGO
Extreme temperatures across Asia
The current heat wave is not only affecting India, but large parts of Asia. Korean weather authorities issued warnings for Seoul and the eastern province of Gyeonggi at the weekend. Extreme temperatures have also been reported in Bangladesh and China
And around 80% of the population also live in regions highly vulnerable to extreme disasters like heat waves or severe flooding.
What needs to be done?
As part of India's efforts to tackle global climate change, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration has vowed to cut the nation's greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2070.
But against the backdrop of increasing extreme weather events, experts say the government needs to also focus on adaptation measures.
"More needs to be done for climate adaptation to prevent economic losses and food insecurity," CSE director Sunita Narain said.
"We need to relearn land and water management strategies. India has much to learn, from not building habitations in flood-vulnerable areas to channeling river water instead of taming rivers within embankments that invariably break or just do not work," she told DW.
"The moot question is, how fast can we learn in a climate variable world? The answers will determine our future. The window of opportunity to deal with the crisis is closing."
Edited by: Srinivas Mazumdaru
Climate change: World sees more & more devastating flooding events
FRANCE 24 English
Jul 11, 2023
Although destructive flooding in India, Japan, China and Turkey and the United States might seem like distant events, atmospheric scientists say they have this in common: Storms are forming in a warmer atmosphere, making extreme rainfall a reality right now.
Caste, hard-line religious identity: The persecution of Pakistani Christians and lessons for India
Even today, most Pakistani Christians living in major cities are consigned to poorly paid jobs in theDEADLY sanitation sector.
Two Christian Pakistani teenagers, one 18 and another 14, were arrested in their homes in Lahore in May 2023 on charges of blasphemy after a policeman claimed he heard them being disrespectful of the Prophet Muhammad.
As if navigating blasphemy laws weren’t hardship enough, Christians who live in major cities like Lahore are often relegated to poorly paid and hazardous jobs like sanitation work. The nation of Pakistan was created 76 years ago but during this time the lives of its Christian citizens have grown ever more difficult.
Many Christians in Pakistan trace their religious affiliation to the activities of missionary societies during the 19th and early 20th centuries in the Punjab region of what was then British-ruled India.
Early evangelisation efforts by both the British and Americans in Hindu-majority India focused on upper-caste Hindus. The evangelisers assumed that these elites would use their influence to convert members of the lower castes. However, this approach led to few converts.
The caste system is a tiered socioeconomic system that consigns people to a particular group, or caste. In Hinduism, this system is part of its religious worldview. People are born into a particular caste.
There are some 3,000 castes in India, each associated with a range of occupations. People from the lowest castes are often expected to do work that is considered “polluting”, such as skinning animals, removing the bodies of the unclaimed dead and cleaning toilets. Because castes are rigid categories, their members are blocked from upward mobility.
In the late 19th century, American missionaries in India decided to focus directly on the least advantaged and began to baptise Hindus of low or no caste. The missionaries’ new approach proved successful, in part because conversion to Christianity offered hope of escape from Hinduism’s caste system. By the 1930s, for example, many members of the largest menial caste in India’s Punjab region had converted to Protestant Christianity.
In 1947, the country of Pakistan was carved out of Indian territory to establish a homeland for Muslims, who were a minority in India. The section of the Punjab where most Christians lived became part of Pakistan.
The majority of those Christians chose to remain in the newly created Pakistan. They believed that they would fare better there because, in principle, Islam rejects social divisions like castes on theological grounds.
Low socioeconomic status
In practice, after the creation of Pakistan, not much changed economically or socially for the Christians who stayed: The caste system continued to exist in the new country.
Newspaper ads for sanitation workers, including by government agencies, explicitly call for non-Muslims. One of Asia’s Catholic news agencies, UCANews, reported that in May 2017, the Hyderabad Municipal Corporation issued a call for 450 sanitation workers, offering contracts that required employees to be non-Muslim and to take this oath: “I swear by my faith that I will only work in the position of a sanitary worker and not refuse any work.”
In Pakistan’s northwest city of Peshawar, as many as 80% of Christians are sanitation workers. According to the 2022 census, 3.27% of urban Pakistanis living in Punjab province are Christian. However, in Lahore, Punjab’s capital city, Christians account for 76% of sanitation workers.
Subject to widespread discrimination, Christians are often refused other work. Confined to low-wage jobs, Christians experience widespread poverty, even in the relatively prosperous Punjab. A 2012 survey in Lahore found that, for Christian families of five, the average monthly income was US$138 — a per capita daily income of 92 cents - which is well below the poverty line defined by the World Bank. In contrast, during the same year, the average monthly income for all Pakistanis was US$255.
Blasphemy law targets minorities
The condition of Christians only worsened when General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s dictatorial president from 1978 to 1988, started the Islamisation of the country.
Originally, for example, Pakistan’s blasphemy laws were general in nature. They punished offenders who wounded the religious sensibilities of other people. Only a handful of charges were filed until Zia added several Islam-specific clauses to this nonsectarian code. These changes included making blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammad punishable by a minimum sentence of life in prison, and possibly death. Since Zia’s rule, hundreds of blasphemy cases have been filed.
Anthropologist Linda Walbridge, writing about Pakistani Christians, notes that by the 1990s these “Christians certainly believed they were the targets of systematic oppression.” That oppression, she observed, came largely “in the form of laws that have increasingly been used against them”.
Indeed, laws intended to protect Islam have sometimes been used against Christians and other minorities to settle personal scores or business disputes. In one incident, a Christian couple refused to pay back their Muslim employer who had lent them money. A mob burned them alive after he accused them of blasphemy.
The father of one of the arrested teenagers told the The Christian Post, “Our Muslim neighbors have known us for years, and they know we would never indulge in anything that could hurt their religious sentiments.” Prosecuting authorities reviewing the teenagers’ case may lean in their favor, but if the past is any indication, the authorities themselves will face intimidation, threats and accusations.
Water crisis in United Kingdom reopens privatisation debate
By Euronews with AFP
"The sad reality is that, in a world increasingly dominated by individual greed ... the water sector has become the biggest fraud story in the UK," one analyst told AFP.
Fears Britain's largest water company is teetering on the brink of collapse, repeated strikes on ailing railways, households hammered by sky-high electricity and gas bills: the UK's vital sectors are in crisis, decades after controversial privatisations.
Under the Conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major, state-owned companies were broken up and sold off to the private sector in the 1980s and 1990s.
The move brought new investment but also huge executive bonuses, shareholder dividends and massive debts.
Debt-ridden Thames Water, the company managing the water supply of the London area, announced on Monday it had raised €880 million from its shareholders.
But the company, whose financial stability worries even the British government, has a debt of nearly €16 billion.
The Conservative government said in June it was ready for any scenario, amid concerns the largest water company in the UK may go under.
Serving 15 million customers in and around the British capital, Thames Water - along with other water suppliers - has also repeatedly hit the headlines in recent months for dumping raw sewage in the country's waterways.
According to the press, officials are working on an emergency plan that could allow - if necessary - the state to regain control of Thames Water.
Such renationalisation would carry a high cost, yet the idea is popular with the electorate. A 2022 YouGov Poll found that most Britons believe that trains, water and energy should sit within the public sector.
Delays and cancellations
The right-wing Conservatives have long favoured privatisation.
However, the opposition Labour Party have jettisoned plans to renationalise water, energy and the Royal Mail postal service, though they still plan to bring the railways back under state control.
"It's easier for the rail sector because it's already largely nationalised," Hugh Willmott, professor at the Bayes Business School in London, told AFP.
Britain's railways have in fact not been fully privatised, with private operators given state funds to run and upgrade their services.
Some claim that the large bonuses these companies pay to their shareholders amounts to a transfer of taxpayer's money to private individuals.
Authorities have also implemented temporary renationalisations of certain poorly managed operators. In May, they took control of the TransPennine Express, operating in northern England and parts of Scotland, amid multiplying delays and cancellations.
The impact of privatisation on public companies has been denounced by several unions, while rail workers, medics and postal workers have walked out in recent months over pay and conditions.
One vital sector remains under state control: the UK's National Health Service (NHS), which has just celebrated its 75th anniversary, but is facing a deep crisis too.
Speaking to Euronews in January, experts said staff shortages - compounded by Brexit - and chronic underfunding have helped bring the service to its knees.
"When it was privatised in 1989... the water sector was hailed as a success of the privatisation programme under Thatcher," independent analyst Howard Wheeldon told AFP.
"The sad reality is that, in a world increasingly dominated by individual greed, ... the water sector has become the biggest fraud story in the UK," he continues.
"In 34 years of privatisation, water bills have skyrocketed."
Meanwhile, water companies racked up more than €70 billion in debt over the period.
Water companies are also under fire for dumping large quantities of sewage into rivers and the sea, amid a lack of investment in the country's water system that dates back to the 19th-century Victorian era.
While water companies are privatised in England, the situation differs in other parts of the UK, where they are not-for-profit.
Some have argued that privatisation helps reduces money for investment by channelling profits to shareholders.
“Would nationalisation, itself a long and expensive process, be an improvement over better regulation of the private sector?” asks Professor Len Shackleton of the pro-free trade think tank The Institute of Economic Affairs.
"Certainly, the costs would be reduced if no dividends were paid. But public borrowing always has a cost. (...) Do not believe that nationalisation is the panacea", he warned.
15 Kurdish journalists finally appear in court after 13-month pretrial detention
Turkey is ranked 165th in the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) 2023 World Press Freedom Index, among 180 countries
Eighteen Kurdish journalists, 15 of whom have been in pretrial detention since June 2022 on terrorism-related charges, appeared in court for the first hearing of their trial on Tuesday, the Artı Gerçek news website reported.
A total of 21 people, including 18 journalists, were detained in southeastern Diyarbakır province in June 2022. They were indicted on terrorism charges 10 months after their detention.
Fifteen of the 21 detainees, including Serdar Altan, co-chair of the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG), Mezopotamya news agency (MA) Editor-in-Chief Aziz Oruç and JinNews News Director Safiye Alagaş, were arrested after they had been held in custody for eight days, in a move that sparked outrage among opposition politicians, members of the press and rights activists.
Tuesday’s hearing attracted widespread attention from local and international press organizations and rights activists. The journalists charged with membership in a terrorist organization, a charge frequently faced by Kurdish journalists in Turkey due to their reports about Kurds’ problems and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey and much of the international community.
A prison sentence of up to 15 years is sought for the journalists, who are standing trial at the Diyarbakır 4th High Criminal Court.
The hearing was followed by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Turkey representative Erol Önderoğlu, Turkish Journalists Union (TGS) President Gökhan Durmuş and PEN Norway representative Caroline Stockford in addition opposition lawmakers, union representatives and lawyers.
DFG Co-chair Altan, who was the first to present a defense, delivered his statement in Kurdish. He said just as Kurds and their identity are not recognized in Turkey, their media is not recognized, either.
“The Kurdish press has always been the subject of censorship and pressure. Our arrest is a sign of this,” he said, lamenting that the jailed journalists’ cameras and computers are shown as criminal evidence by the pro-government media.
Altan said although prosecutors drafted a 728-page indictment against them, there is actually not any concrete evidence of crime in the text.
He said although the indictment accuses him of membership in a terrorist organization, there is no evidence supporting the charge.
“How can a person be a terrorist organization member only by speaking,” he asked.
One of the jailed journalists, Ömer Çelik, said producing a TV program in Kurdish and speaking in Kurdish are seen as criminal activity, according to the indictment. Çelik said everyone is aware that if the government had not ordered the prosecution of the journalists, there would not by any such trial today.
According to the journalists, they are being punished due to their journalistic activities and their coverage of issues related to Kurds and the country’s Kurdish issue.
The Kurdish issue, a term prevalent in Turkey’s public discourse, refers to the demand for equal rights by the country’s Kurdish population and their struggle for recognition.
A statement released by RSF Turkey representative ÖnderoÄŸlu on the RSF website accused Turkey of wrongly considering that the professional activities of certain journalists are signs of legitimization of the PKK, saying that the authorities include in the accusations the collaboration with local Kurdish production companies (Pel, Ari and Piya), the sharing of posts on social networks on the Kurdish issue and their use of the term “war” for conflicts in northern Syria and northern Iraq.
“The recurring use of abusive detention had made Turkey in 2016, 2017 and 2018 one of the biggest prisons for journalists in the world. Despite a dozen releases over the past two months, the situation for media professionals remains just as alarming. Justice must once and for all stop using these political detentions and release the 15 journalists imprisoned in an abusive manner,” said ÖnderoÄŸlu.
Rights groups routinely accuse Turkey of undermining media freedom by arresting journalists and shutting down critical media outlets, especially since President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan survived a failed coup in July 2016.
Turkey is ranked 165th in the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) 2023 World Press Freedom Index, among 180 countries, not far from North Korea, which occupies the bottom of the list.
‘There can be no democracy unless the Kurdish press is free’
Representatives of journalist unions, organizations and political parties expressed their solidarity with the 15 Kurdish journalists standing trial in Diyarbakır today after 13 months in pre-trial detention.
ANF AMED Tuesday, 11 Jul 2023,
As part of an investigation carried out by the Diyarbakır Chief Public Prosecutor's Office, 22 people, 20 of them journalists, were detained in raids on houses and media outlets in many Amed-centered cities on 8 June 2022. Among those detained, were JinNews Director Safiye Alagaş, Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DGF) Co-chair Serdar Altan, Mesopotamia Agency (MA) editor Aziz Oruç, Xwebûn Editor-in-Chief Mehmet Ali Ertaş, journalists Zeynel Abidin Bulut, Ömer Çelik, Mazlum Doğan Güler, İbrahim Koyuncu, Neşe Toprak, Elif Üngür, Abdurrahman Öncü, Suat Doğuhan, Remziye Temel, Ramazan Geciken, Lezgin Akdeniz and Mehmet Şahin were arrested 8 days later by the court they were brought to.
After 10 months, an indictment was prepared against 18 journalists, 3 of them not in prison, demanding 7 years, 6 months to 15 years in prison for "membership in a terrorist organization".The imprisoned journalists have appeared in court today after 13 months in custody. Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG), Mesopotamia Women Journalists Platform (MKGP), Journalists Union of Turkey (TGS), Contemporary Journalists Association (ÇGD), DİSK Basın-İş, MLSA, Journalists Protection Committee (CPJ) and representatives of many professional organizations are attending the hearing. In addition, lawyers who are members of Amsterdam Law Offices, legal organizations such as Amed Bar Association, Lawyers Association for Freedom (ÖHD), representatives of MED-DER and IHD, as well as deputies from the Green Left Party, HDP and CHP are following the hearing.
A press statement was made by the DFG and Mesopotamia Women Journalists’ Platform in front of the courthouse with the participation of several journalists, organizations, NGOs and deputies.
Journalist Hüseyin Aykol pointed out that, for the past 34 years, the reports prepared by the Kurdish press have disturbed the governments which, he said, have taken all kinds of measures to prevent Kurdish journalism.
“Our colleagues have been imprisoned, killed or forced into exile, while our newspapers were shut down, and offices bombed. Still, we have continued to do our work. Repression against us has increased lately and many of our colleagues have been put in prison because they did not want us to be on the ground to cover the elections, which was considered a turning point both for the government and the opposition. Our colleagues jailed in Ankara were released following the first hearing and we also expect our colleagues here to be released today. Regardless of the repression, we will continue doing journalism,” Aykol said.
The Journalists Union of Turkey (TGS) President Gökhan DurmuÅŸ defined today’s hearing as one of the most important trials of the press in Turkey’s recent history. “Having awaited the indictment for months, they appeared in court 13 months after their arrests. Had they stood trial earlier, they could have been released already. Journalists are taken into custody but there is no crime in question. Our colleagues will eventually be released but they would not have spent such a long time in prison if a fair legal system existed. We will stand in solidarity with our imprisoned colleagues and prove that journalism is a public service. We will do journalism and convey our news to our people.”
The Committee of Journalists Vice President Yusuf Kanlı said: “The press is going through challenging times and conditions, as was the case in the past and is today. Our colleagues have been deprived of their liberty for 13 months only because they wrote news. Journalism is no crime. We expect our colleagues to be acquitted today and we hope that just heavy prices will not be paid anymore.”
MLSA Co-Director Veysel Ok said: “Our colleagues are imprisoned mainly because they exposed the state violence in relation with the Kurdish issue lately and reported about violations of rights. We will do whatever we can for their release.”
Green Left Party MP for Diyarbakır, Cengiz Çandar, defined the hearing as “one of the disgraceful events in Turkey’s legal history” and “a milestone in the struggle for press freedom in Turkey”.
“President ErdoÄŸan is having talks at the NATO Summit at the moment. Turkey’s path to the European Union passes through Diyarbakır. And the path from Diyarbakır to the European Union passes through the recognition of Kurds’ rights and the freedom of the press. Without these conditions, all the paths to democracy would remain blocked. This case against 15 journalists, who have been held in pre-trial detention for 13 months, also shows that the Kurdish media is not alone as the media representatives of Turkey also speak out here today. We will claim the freedom of the Kurdish people and the press. The release of journalists will mark a step towards the Kurdish people’s freedom of information.” CHP MP Sezgin Tanrıkulu pointed out that the indictment against journalists was full of arguments that do not accord with the law. “There is no justifiable evidence even, but only fabricated accounts of confessors and secret witnesses. This case and hearing show how important journalism is.”
'There is a single newspaper in Kurdish at the moment and it is standing trial'
The imprisoned Kurdish journalists appeared in court today after 13 months in the case where 18 journalists are standing trial. Journalism unions and organizations, as well as opposition MPs were present in the hearing to support them.
The first hearing of the case in which 18 journalists are standing trial, 15 of whom are imprisoned, started to be heard at the Diyarbakır 4th Heavy Penal Court.
Imprisoned journalists Ömer Çelik, Mehmet Ali Ertaş, Serdar Altan, Mehmet Şahin, and Zeynel Abidin Bulut took the floor in the hearing today, all of them in Kurdish and asserted that it was the Kurdish press, Kurdish journalism, or the media where the Kurdish problem is discussed that is being charged in this case.
As the first thing, the lawyer of the journalists, Resul Temur, told that the prosecutor who prepared the indictment for the case file, and a member of the panel of judges were married, and demanded recusation. The chief judge refused the demand.
The chief judge stated that no use of computers or cell phones will be allowed in the courtroom, and the journalists who are present at the hearing were heard to object.
Serdar Altan: "We were the voice of the oppressed"
After the summary of the indictment was read out, Serdar Altan, one of the imprisoned journalists and the co-chairperson of the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association, defended himself in the court in Kurdish.
Taking the floor for one hour and 45 minutes, Altan told about the pressure against the press from the Ottoman period until today. Reminding Hasan Fehmi, killed on April 6, 1909, he said that journalists were always under threat in this region.
"Those who did not approve of the Kurds and the Kurdish press in those days, do not accept it today either," he said.
"This is no ordinary operation"
Altan underlined that they were detained on June 8, 2022, and later remanded in custody. He went on to say that he and his friends were unjustly detained while making preparations for commemorating their journalist friend Hafız Akdemir, killed by Hizbullah on June 8, 1992.
"The fact that we have been taken into custody on the day our friend was killed shows that this operation is a special one. This is not an ordinary operation. They have assigned a special prosecutor. Our detention period was extended to 8 days. A confidentiality order was imposed on the case file. The police came to and did not leave the institutions where we work for one month. Journalism tools and materials that all journalists use were regarded as elements of crime," Altan explained.
"The indictment is not worth responding to"
Altan also stated that no one told them about the charges against them. This is a major problem and a punishment by itself, he argued.
Now that the indictment was finally prepared after so long, he said it was not even worth responding to.
"They are making fun of us. They are trying to create confusion. What is in the indictment? There is no crime, there is no evidence. They kept us here for 10 months and searched for evidence so that they can blame us. They could not find it during our detention, then they found an anonymous witness," Altan said.
He told the hearing that they requested the anonymous witness to be brought to the court, which was rejected. Personally, I am charged with being a member of an organization, but there is no evidence," he said.
"We came to the court not to give an account, but to call you to account. Why have you kept us away from our beloved, from the streets, from our occupation for 13 months?" Altan said.
There was a break in the hearing after Altan completed his defense. Journalism organizations and Green Left Party (YSP) and Republican People's Party (CHP) MPs gave statements to the press in front of the courthouse during the break.
Çelik: Is broadcasting a program a crime?
Imprisoned journalist Ömer Çelik took the floor after the break and defended himself in Kurdish.
He stated that they do not accept the accusations. "I want to talk about what the indictment includes. Is broadcasting a program a crime? The prosecutor has pointed to the term "ethnic." All the six programs mentioned in the indictment are related to discussions on the Kurdish problem."
"Broadcasting in our native tongue is a crime according to the prosecutor. However, this is a global right. Asking a question about a sentence that [Recep Tayyip] Erdoğan has used for Abdullah Öcalan, to Ömer Öcalan, an MP of the People's Democratic Party (HDP) is shown as a crime. This MP is still serving in the parliament, how can this question be a crime? I have made many programs but six of them have been included in the accusations. Many of them cover the issues discussed throughout Turkey. It is a program that many politicians in Turkey have attended. How can it be criminal?"
"The prosecutor is claiming that I was instructed to ask these questions, but without any concrete evidence. The prosecutor is making claims but cannot prove them. There is no single evidence that we are being instructed."
"The government does not want the Kurdish problem to be discussed"
"As a journalist, I prepare my programs myself. Both the content and the presentation. The prosecutor is disturbed that I talk about the issues related to the problems of the Kurdish people with my guests in my program. The government does not want the Kurdish problem to be discussed."
After Çelik, Zeynel Abidin Bulut took the floor and defended himself again in Kurdish.
Bulut underlined that if it was not for this journalism activity, for the Kurdish journalists, none of the massacres such as that of Ceylan Önkol, Uğur Kaymaz, or Roboski would be known. These were all proven by the Kurdish journalists Bulut told the court and said that this was what was disturbing the government and the state.
The only newspaper in Kurdish standing trial
Next, Mehmet Ali ErtaÅŸ also defended himself in Kurdish.
"We are here today because of our programs in Kurdish. There is a single printed newspaper in Kurdish and it is standing trial here today. This means that it is the values of the Kurdish people that are standing trial here. We are being told that we cannot defend the values of our people," ErtaÅŸ said.
The last one to address the hearing today was journalist Mehmet Åžahin. In his defense made in Kurdish, he said, "Today I am here with my mother's language."
Telling that his profession as a teacher that he carried out for 26 years, was taken away from him after the attempted coup of July 15 in 2016, and it was after this that he became a journalist. "Kurdish journalists are suffering oppression as usual. The prosecution has taken on the task of eliminating Kurdish journalism," Åžahin said.
The chief judge closed the hearing after listening to Åžahin, in order to continue it tomorrow (on July 12).
Organizations of journalists were present in the hearing
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Turkey representative Erol Önderoğlu, Turkey Journalists Union (TGS) Chairperson Gökhan Durmuş, DİSK Basın-İş Union Ankara Representative Turgut Dedeoğlu, Media and Law Studies Co-Director lawyer Veysel Ok, Engin Deniz İpek from IPI, Caroline Stockford from PEN Norway Turkey desk, Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG), Mezopotamia Women Journalists Platform (MKGP), Progressive Journalists Association (ÇGD), Committee for Protection of Journalists (CPJ), lawyer members of Amsterdam Law Clinics, Diyarbakır Bar, Free Lawyers Association (ÖHD), Human Rights Association (İHD) were present in the hearing. Green Left Party Diyarbakır MPs Cengiz Çandar, Adalet Kaya and Republican People's Party (CHP) Diyarbakır MP Sezgin Tanrıkulu and Utku Çakırözer were also among those who participated in order to observe the hearing.
(EMK/RT/PE)
Tuesday, July 11, 2023
Venezuela expresses firm commitment to joint reforestation of the Amazon region
The Venezuelan government, led by President Nicolás Maduro, has expressed its commitment to working with the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) to preserve the Amazon rainforest.
President Maduro emphasized the need for institutions from the eight ACTO member countries to unite and cooperate in protecting the region’s vegetation.
President Maduro called for comprehensive reforestation efforts across the entire Amazon rainforest, which faces significant challenges due to human activities.
He voiced concerns about certain Western powers trying to impose their guidelines on the Amazon, referring to it as “new Amazon colonialism.”
The meeting focused on addressing Amazon-related issues and collaborative rescue efforts among the seven countries that form the Amazon biome.
Venezuela advocated for revitalizing ACTO and reaffirmed its commitment to cooperation in science, technology, public policies, and joint actions, guided by regional experts and universities.
Minister Lorca highlighted that ACTO, in its 45-year history, has only convened its member countries’ presidents three times.
However, plans are underway for a summit of presidents in August, which would be the fourth gathering.
He emphasized that all participating nations within ACTO are fully prepared to cooperate and share expertise to protect the Amazon, often referred to as the world’s “vegetable lung.”
They prioritize respecting national sovereignty and ensuring the preservation of this vital ecosystem.
ACTO consists of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela.
Together, these nations aim to collaborate in promoting sustainable practices and safeguarding the Amazon’s rich biodiversity.
Venezuela begins to collect evidence with a view to an international trial against the U.S.
The Venezuelan National Assembly has established a commission to review statements by former U.S. President Donald Trump and his administration officials.
The commission aims to document instances of perceived U.S. aggression towards Venezuela, potentially leading to international legal action against the U.S.
The commission was initially formed in response to Trump’s publicized intent to seize Venezuelan oil and has since expanded its scope to investigate alleged U.S. plans to commit crimes against humanity targeting Venezuelans.
The commission will consider previous statements by high-ranking U.S. officials, including former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Security Advisor John Bolton, and Senator Marco Rubio, who publicly acknowledged considering military intervention in Venezuela
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The Venezuelan National Assembly. (Photo Internet reproduction)
The commission will function for a period of 30 days, extendable if necessary. At the end of its mandate, the commission will present a detailed report to the assembly members.
The ultimate goal is to compile a comprehensive account of perceived U.S. international law and conventions violations, potentially leading to a case before the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The actions under scrutiny include potential territorial threats and the impact of unilateral sanctions imposed by the U.S., which have resulted in significant economic losses for Venezuela.
According to some estimates, these measures led to a loss of US$240 billion for the Venezuelan oil sector between 2013 and 2020 and overall economic losses nearing US$620 billion.
The commission believes these sanctions have had severe consequences for both supporters and opponents of the current Venezuelan government.
Some Venezuelans, initially sympathetic to the opposition, have reportedly shifted their stance, acknowledging the negative effects of the sanctions on all citizens.