Wednesday, September 27, 2023



China Puts Evergrande’s Billionaire Founder Under Police Control

Bloomberg News
Tue, September 26, 2023 

(Bloomberg) -- Hui Ka Yan, the billionaire chairman of beleaguered property developer China Evergrande Group, has been placed under police control, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Hui was taken away by Chinese police earlier this month and is being monitored at a designated location, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

It’s not clear why Hui is under so-called residential surveillance, a type of police action that falls short of formal detention or arrest and doesn’t mean Hui will be charged with a crime. Still, the measure means he is unable to leave the location, meet or communicate with others without approval, based on China’s Criminal Procedure Law. Passports and identification cards must be handed to police but the process shouldn’t exceed six months, according to the law.

The move is the latest sign that the saga at the world’s most indebted developer has entered a new phase involving the criminal justice system, after authorities earlier this month detained some staff at its wealth management unit and two former executives were also reportedly held. It adds to questions over the fate of Evergrande after setbacks to its restructuring plan in recent days roiled financial markets and raised the risk of a liquidation.

For Hui, who controlled one of the world’s biggest fortunes when Evergrande’s shares peaked in 2017, the development is another blow in a remarkable fall from grace. Once considered among the most politically connected businessmen in China with ambitions ranging from electric cars to soccer, the tycoon has now become the most high-profile casualty of President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on excessive leverage and speculation in the real estate sector.

Guangdong police and Evergrande didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Evergrande sits at the center of a years-long property crisis that has hurt the Chinese economy and hammered confidence in the housing market. On Friday, the developer said it scrapped key creditor meetings and has to revisit its plan to restructure its offshore debt. Since then, it has disclosed it was unable to meet regulatory qualifications to issue new bonds — a key component of the debt overhaul — while its mainland unit failed to repay an onshore bond.

A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of Chinese developer stocks fell to the lowest since November on Wednesday morning. Homebuyer sentiment remains fragile ahead of a key holiday sales period that will test the effectiveness of stimulus measures rolled out in recent weeks.

The son of a wood cutter who grew up in poverty, Hui built Evergrande into China’s largest developer by using leverage to buy massive tracts of land and scoop up rivals, before branching out into industries ranging from bottled water to professional soccer and electric vehicles.

He was once Asia’s second-richest person, only to see his net worth slump as his property empire crumbled. Hui is now worth about $1.8 billion from $42 billion in 2017, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Evergrande has 2.39 trillion yuan ($327 billion) in liabilities.

The 64-year-old has been a Communist Party member for more than three decades. In 2008, he was elected to join the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, an elite group comprising government officials and the biggest names in business. He later secured two other five-year terms.

Things took a turn for the worse in 2021, when Evergrande officially became a defaulter and authorities from its home province of Guangdong led what is poised to be one of the nation’s biggest debt restructurings.

Hui had been part of the CPPCC’s elite 300-member standing committee since 2013, but he was told not to attend the annual convention in March last year as his property group became the biggest casualty of the nation’s credit crunch.

China’s central bank has blamed Evergrande’s demise on its “own poor management” and “reckless expansion,” and the government has urged Hui to use his fortune to help repay investors.

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.


China Evergrande has 'no bullets' left as crisis lights up mainland social media about end-game for fallen billionaire Hui Ka-yan

South China Morning Post
Tue, September 26, 2023 

The debacle at China Evergrande Group is heating up some of the nation's social media platforms with discussions about its fate. Some argued the penny stock is worth a punt before another bid to beat the drop. Others said bankruptcy may be inevitable.

The drama took another turn for the worse when the developer's major onshore unit, Hengda Real Estate Group, failed to repay a 4 billion yuan (US$547 million) note on Monday, an obligation among US$327 billion of liabilities choking the homebuilder. It is talking to bondholders about a solution on a "non-evasion of debt" basis.

The unit is already being investigated by regulators for market breaches, a transgression that cripples Evergande's ability to sell and list new bonds in offshore markets under China's capital market rules. Several former executives have been detained over missing funds, local media outlet Caixin Global reported on Monday.

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"Not able to issue new notes means no more financing possibilities, just like no bullets to fight a war," Zhou Si, a user with 810,000 followers on Weibo, said in a post on the short-message platform on Tuesday.

"If it fails to restructure its debt, the only ending for [founder] Hui Ka-yan is bankruptcy," Xiaoma, another commenter, added.

Evergrande did not immediately reply to an email on Tuesday seeking comment. A call to its corporate headquarters in Shenzhen went unanswered.

Its shares fell 8.1 per cent to HK$0.395 on Tuesday, adding to a 22 per cent slump on Monday. The stock has crashed by more than HK$335 billion (US$42.8 billion) since hitting HK$25.80 in July of 2020, a month before Beijing unleashed its industry-crippling "three red lines" policy.

Some social media commenters see a chance to dabble in the stock, albeit with a dose of caution. "Please be cautious when you want to buy in," Xiaoheiyezhijing, a Weibo user with 629,000 followers, said on Monday. "It's okay to buy a little bit. It would be a disaster if you buy a lot."


'Plenty of time on the clock,' says Brock Silvers, managing director at Kaiyuan Capital in Hong Kong. Photo: Handout alt='Plenty of time on the clock,' says Brock Silvers, managing director at Kaiyuan Capital in Hong Kong.
 

Brock Silvers, the managing director at Kaiyuan Capital in Hong Kong, is sanguine about the situation. Restriction of new notes would seriously complicate things, but the market does not have the full details behind it while the winding-up petition on October 30 is still a month away.

"Large restructurings are often roller-coaster rides, and all parties, including regulators, want a deal here," he said. "An agreement before the [court] deadline should not be ruled out. Plenty of time on the clock."

What chairman and founder Hui does in the next few days or weeks will determine if the group's US$20 billion debt restructuring proposal with friendly offshore creditors will survive in its current form and terms. Other, hostile, ones are seeking a court order in Hong Kong next month to liquidate the developer.

The restructuring proposal was cobbled together over two years of negotiations with friendly creditors, who stand to lose more than 96 per cent of their money in the worst-case outcome. Several creditor meetings have been scrapped, likely delaying its timeline, while the latest curbs on offshore bond sales, vital in replacing defaulted debt, could be the killer blow.

"Evergrande's difficulties in debt restructuring would be prolonged," said Tan Haojun, a financial columnist and commentator, said in a Weibo post on Tuesday. "Any violation could cause serious problems for a company with such a debt scale. It's more difficult and risky to bring Evergrande back to life."

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2023 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Evergrande stocks have tanked 27% this week, suggesting the worst is far from over for China's property sector

Huileng Tan
Tue, September 26, 2023 

China's property market is mired in a crisis.
Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images

Chinese property giant Evergrande's shares have tanked 27% so far this week.

They slumped following a series of bad news over the last few days.

A former Chinese central bank official told Bloomberg that China's property market could take a year to recover.

Recent developments at Chinese property giant Evergrande aren't quite inspiring confidence in China's real estate market.

The company's troubles have been deepening recently, which have torpedoed its share prices.

On Tuesday, Evergrande's shares tanked 7% by midday, extending a slump that took the stock down as much as 25% on Monday. This means Evergrande's share price has plummeted 27% this week.

Evergrande is worth about 5.3 billion Hong Kong dollars, or $678 million, now – a massive fall from grace from the company's heydays in 2017 when it was worth nearly 420 billion Hong Kong dollars.

Evergrande's stock has been hit by a series of bad news in the last few days. They include the cancellation of key creditor meetings this week that were announced on Friday and another notice on Monday that it would be unable to issue new debt.

Late on Monday, Caixin, a Chinese financial news outlet, reported that Chinese authorities detained Pan Darong, a former chief financial official at Evergrande. Authorities also imposed restrictions on Xia Haijun, a former CEO at the property giant.

Evergrande's main domestic unit, Hengda Real Estate Group, also announced late on Monday it failed to make payments on the principal and interest for a 4 billion Chinese yuan, or $547 million, bond due on the same day.

The developments weighed on Evergrande shares, which have been massively volatile since the stock resumed trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange last month following a 17-month suspension since March 2022.

The massive slump in Evergrande shares also suggests that the worst is far from over for China's property sector, wrote Junrong Yep, a market strategist at online trading platform IG, in a Tuesday note seen by Insider.

Investment in property in China fell about 19% in August from a year ago — marking its 18th straight month of decline, according to Reuters calculations based on official data released on September 15.

In fact, the property sales could take as long as a year to recover, Li Daokui, a former People's Bank of China adviser told Bloomberg on Tuesday.

"The property market will come back as an important driver for the economy, however the magnitude of the impact of property as a growth engine will be much smaller," Li told Bloomberg.
A real estate crisis has loomed over China since 2021

Evergrande — once China's second-largest developer — faced a liquidity crisis in 2021 that triggered broader concerns about the country's real-estate sector. The sector, along with related industries, contributes as much as 30% to the country's GDP.

Evergrande had over $300 billion worth of liabilities by the end of 2022. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in the US on August 17.

China is trying to revive its property sector by stimulating consumer demand, but consumers are unlikely to be clamoring for new apartments amid record-high youth unemployment rate and slower economic growth, experts told Insider.

In fact, there are way too many empty homes in China. A former top China official said there could be enough vacant homes in China to house up to 3 billion people — which is nearly 10 times the population of the US.

China Evergrande shares on the Hong Kong Exchange were 7% lower 40 Hong Kong cents at midday on Tuesday.

Evergrande and former People's Bank of China adviser Li did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider.


Evergrande was just the beginning. China's property sector is in trouble.

Joel Mathis
Tue, September 26, 2023

Unfinished buildings at China Evergrande Group's Health Valley development on the outskirts of Nanjing, China.

China’s long-running property sector crisis is somehow getting worse. CNN reported that Evergrande, the giant developer whose 2021 default set off the crisis, is unable to complete its debt restructuring plan thanks to an investigation into one of its subsidiaries. The result of that announcement? On Monday, Evergrande’s stock plunged 21% in Hong Kong stock trading — “dragging down the stocks of other Chinese property developers” and deepening an economic mess that has shaken China’s already fragile economy.

Evergrande and companies like it were “once a booming industry and a key driver of the country's economic growth,” Reuters reported. But Evergrande isn’t the only Chinese developer struggling with a huge debt load: Country Garden Holdings, which has 108.7 billion yuan (more than $14 billion in U.S. dollars) in bond repayments due over the next year, has also signaled that it is at risk of default. The compounding crises could “delay the prospect of a recovery of both the property market and the broader Chinese economy.”

Indeed, Bloomberg argued, the latest headlines from China’s property sector have “undercut Xi Jinping’s push” to end the economic malaise overtaking his country. Xi’s government has taken “measures to prop up housing demand” — including loosening of mortgage restrictions — in the hopes of keeping the industry afloat, but “China’s aging population and an oversupply of housing” may mean there’s only so much officials can do.

'Companies have pulled back'

The problems of big developers are hurting the little guys in China, The New York Times reported. “Small businesses and workers are owed hundreds of billions of dollars” for completed work, and new development projects are no longer in the pipeline. That has rippled through the rest of the economy. “Companies have pulled back on hiring. Fewer and fewer people are buying homes.”

Will China’s problems spread to the West? Maybe not. “The reality is that the world is now a little less exposed to China than it used to be even a few years ago,” Cornell University’s Eswar Prasad said in an interview with The New Yorker. A Chinese stock market crash might not have a “huge negative effect” on American stocks. It’s true that “commodity-exporting countries, oil-exporting countries” might be hurt by the faltering Chinese economy, but “U.S. exports to China are limited” which means that Americans should mostly avoid “the dampening effect” of the property crisis.

The effects aren’t just economic. Business Insider pointed out that President Biden believes the property crisis reduces the possibility of a China-U.S. conflict over Taiwan. "He has his hands full right now," Biden said of Xi earlier this month. Xi’s efforts to spur his country’s economy are faltering, and some observers fear that means China might ratchet up its designs on Taiwan. Biden disagrees. "I don't think it's going to cause China to invade Taiwan,” Biden said. “Matter of fact the opposite, [the country] probably doesn't have the same capacity as it had before.”

'A decade's work in front of us'


The struggle continues.

South China Morning Post reported that Moody’s Investors Service has downgraded its analysis of the country’s property sector from “stable” to “negative.” That news “only increases the likelihood of more forceful and broad-based policy support” from Xi’s government in the coming months. But that stimulus will probably only stabilize the sector, not revive it. “A major stimulus-fueled rebound in China’s housing market is highly unlikely.”

So how long will it take to pull out of the crisis? Possibly a long time. “Fixing the property sector may be a multi-year or even a decade’s work in front of us,” economist Hao Hong told CNBC. One of the obstacles: The Chinese housing market is already vastly overbuilt — there are more homes and apartments available than people to fill them. “There is now an oversupply of real estate ... 1.4 billion people may not be able to live in them,” a former official said recently. Even with loosened mortgage rules, Chinese homebuyers probably won’t be able to save their country’s economy.

China Evergrande shares tumble for second day after unit misses bond payment

Reuters
Mon, September 25, 2023 

FILE PHOTO: Headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen

HONG KONG (Reuters) - China Evergrande Group shares slid for a second consecutive session on Tuesday, dropping as much as 8% after a unit of the embattled property developer missed an onshore bond repayment.

Evergrande's main domestic unit, Hengda Real Estate Group, said in a Shenzhen stock exchange filing late on Monday it had failed to pay the principal and interest for a 4 billion yuan ($547 million) bond that was due by Sept. 25.

The news comes after Evergrande said on the weekend that it was unable to issue new debt due to an ongoing investigation into Hengda, sending Evergrande's share price plunging 22% on Monday.

Hengda said it will actively negotiate with bondholders in a bid to reach a solution as soon as possible while working to resolve the debt risks and to safeguard creditors' rights and interests.

The missed payment is the latest setback to hit Evergrande, which has lurched from one crisis to another since its financial woes became public in 2021 and it defaulted on its offshore debt obligations later that year.

Evergrande has been seeking creditors' approval for its proposals to restructure offshore debt worth $31.7 billion that includes bonds, collateral, and repurchase obligations.

Under the plan unveiled in March this year, Evergrande proposed various options to offshore creditors, including swapping some of their debt holdings into new notes with maturities of 10 to 12 years.

($1 = 7.3102 yuan)

(Reporting by Donny Kwok; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Edwina Gibbs)

Major Evergrande creditor group to seek liquidation if no new debt plan soon -sources

Scott Murdoch
Updated Tue, September 26, 2023

 Buildings developed by China Evergrande Group on the man-made Ocean Flower Island in Danzhou

SYDNEY (Reuters) - A major group of offshore creditors of China Evergrande Group is planning to join a court petition to liquidate the cash-strapped developer if it doesn't submit a new debt revamp plan by next month, two sources familiar with the matter said.

The creditor group holds a large portion of Evergrande offshore bonds and, if it decides to join, would add more weight to the petition filed against the developer by an investor in a Hong Kong court.

Evergrande's offshore debt restructuring plan, unveiled in March, has been thrown into uncertainty after the developer said on Sunday it was unable to issue new debt due to an ongoing regulatory investigation into its main unit in China.

Deepening turmoil in China's debt-laden property sector is threatening to undermine Beijing's efforts to get the sputtering economy back on more solid footing, and raising fears among investors of a spillover into the country's banking system.

Evergrande has been in the process of seeking creditors' approval for its proposals to restructure offshore debt worth $31.7 billion, which includes bonds, collateral, and repurchase obligations.

Under the plan, Evergrande, the poster child of China's property sector crisis, had proposed various options to offshore creditors, including swapping some of their debt holdings into new bonds with maturities of 10 to 12 years.

A group of Evergrande bondholders were surprised by the firm's weekend announcement which said it was unable to issue new notes, and have been seeking meetings with the developer to seek more information, said the two sources.

If Evergrande fails to submit a new debt restructuring plan by Oct. 30, that bondholders' group will support a winding-up petition -- or petition to liquidate -- already filed against the developer, said the sources, declining to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.

The group has been in favour of finding a restructuring resolution for Evergrande's debt, but the developer's weekend announcement has reduced hopes that would eventually happen, the sources added.

Top Shine Global, an investor in Evergrande unit Fangchebao, in June 2022 filed a petition to liquidate in Hong Kong because it said the developer had not honoured an agreement to repurchase shares the investor bought in the unit.

In July, the hearing for that winding-up petition against Evergrande was adjourned to Oct. 30, in order to wait for the result from the developer's meeting with creditors to vote on its debt restructuring plan.

Evergrande needs approval from more than 75% of the holders of each debt class to approve the plan.

That meeting is scheduled for mid-October. However, the latest disclosure by Evergrande puts the meeting, as well as its outcome, in doubt and it's not clear if the meeting with offshore creditors will go ahead as planned.

Evergrande did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment.

MISSED PAYMENT


The liquidation petition against Evergrande is one of the many such proceedings launched against Chinese developers as the firms failed to meet debt payment obligations after an unprecedented liquidity crunch hit the sector in 2021.

Evergrande cited an analysis commissioned from consultancy Deloitte during a Hong Kong court hearing in July to say the recovery rate from its proposed debt restructuring plan would be around 22.5%, compared with 3.4% if the developer is liquidated.

"At this stage, the offshore creditors are getting desperate, knowing none or little would be left for them," said KT Capital Group senior researcher Fern Wang, who publishes on Smartkarma.

The liquidity crunch was triggered in part by government efforts to clamp down on high debt levels in the property sector and rein in speculation.

Many of the defaulted developers have been scrambling to get their offshore creditors' approval for debt restructuring plans to avoid collapse or being forced into liquidation proceedings.

Shares in Evergrande ended down 8.1% on Tuesday at their lowest level since Sept. 6, extending losses for the second consecutive day, after its main domestic unit said it missed an onshore bond repayment.

The unit, Hengda Real Estate Group, said in a Shenzhen stock exchange filing late on Monday that it had failed to pay the principal and interest for a 4 billion yuan ($547 million) bond due by Sept. 25.

Evergrande's stock plunged 22% on Monday, after its Sunday announcement about its inability to issue new notes.

The latest developments further darken the outlook for Evergrande, which has lurched from one crisis to another since its financial woes became public in 2021 and it defaulted on its offshore debt obligations later that year.

These setbacks also come as the Chinese authorities have been trying to revive homebuyers' sentiment with a raft of measures, including a reduction in existing mortgage rates.

(Reporting by Scott Murdoch; aditional reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee, Kim Coghill and Mark Potter)


China's property stocks fall by the most in nine months as Evergrande says it's unable to issue new debt

Joseph Wilkins
Mon, September 25, 2023 

Qi Yang/Getty Images; mikroman6/Getty Images

China's embattled property stocks have tanked by the most in nine months, according to Bloomberg data.

The Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of Chinese developer shares fell almost 7% after Monday's trading.

Major developer Evergrande fell by 25% after announcing it was unable to issue new debt.


China's property stocks have tanked by the most in nine months as the embattled industry struggles to cope with a slew of headwinds.


The Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of developer shares fell almost 7% after Monday's trading – having now shed over $55 billion from its value this year, per the outlet.

Among the biggest losers was embattled developer Evergrande – which is reeling from its abrupt cancellation of key creditor meetings and its announcement that it would be unable to issue any new debt.

Shares in the struggling developer – once China's second-largest — tanked 25% on Monday, continuing its wild price swings since the stock resumed trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange last month.

After facing a liquidity crisis in 2021, the firm's woes are symptomatic of the broader issues facing the sector.

Evergrande had around $300 billion worth of liabilities when troubles first began and this figure ballooned to about $340 billion by the end of 2022.

The real-estate crisis in the Asian nation shows little sign of easing, with policymakers in Beijing holding back from extending large-scale policy support for the industry. As many as 53 Chinese developers have collapsed in recent years as the once-booming market faces slowing demand and enormous debt burden repayments.

China is trying to revive the ailing industry by boosting consumer demand in other parts of the economy, but appetites for apartments is likely to remain subdued amid record-high youth unemployment rate and slower economic growth, experts told Insider.

Evergrande shares slide again after missed payment

Reuters Videos
Tue, September 26, 2023 


STORY: Evergrande shares tumbled for a second day on Tuesday (September 26).

They fell as much as 8% in Hong Kong trade, following news of more debt troubles.

Its main domestic unit - Hengda Real Estate - said it had failed to make payments due the day before.

That came after Evergrande said over the weekend that it was unable to issue new debt.

The firm says that’s due to an ongoing investigation into Hengda by regulators.

Evergrande shares lost more than a fifth of their value on Monday (September 25) following that news.

Now the company says it will negotiate with bondholders to find a solution to the missed payment.

But it’s all just the latest setback for Evergrande, which has lurched from one crisis to another since its financial woes became public in 2021.

The firm has been seeking creditors’ approval to restructure offshore debts totalling almost $32 billion.

It needs approval from 75% of the holders of each type of debt to approve the plan.

The turmoil in the property sector has investors at home and abroad feeling nervous, with real estate accounting for around a quarter of China’s economy.
Sacred cow: Ball makers break taboos for India's favourite sport

Sean GLEESON
Tue, September 26, 2023 a

In this photograph taken on September 14, 2023, a worker polishes cricket balls at a workshop in Meerut in India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh (Money SHARMA)


Stitching together cricket balls is a wearisome task for leatherworker Bunty Sagar, whose labours are frowned upon by many fellow Indians even if he makes their favourite pastime possible.

In a nation where the majority Hindu faith views cows as sacred, Sagar's trade lies in the hands of those willing to handle their hides for long hours and little pay.

The work is tedious and repetitive, and its profitability has been threatened by the cow protection campaigns of Hindu activists seeking to end cattle slaughter.

Sagar had hoped study would lead him along a path to a different career but is resigned to his work after the early death of his father -- also a lifelong leatherworker -- left him the sole breadwinner.

"I don't feel anything negative about the job I do," the 32-year-old Hindu told AFP, sweating in a small and stifling production room alongside half a dozen others, moulding leather to the ball's solid cork centre.

"If I were to feel bad about my job, what would we eat?"

Though counting himself among India's millions of cricket obsessives, his factory's colossal order book has left him unable to share their excitement for next month's World Cup on home soil.

"I like watching cricket, but I can't because we're so busy," he said.

"I'm working eight hours a day, seven days a week," he added. "My job is what keeps our household running."

Nearly all of India's cricket balls are painstakingly made by hand in Sagar's hometown of Meerut, a short drive from the capital New Delhi.

Sanspareils Greenlands, the top manufacturer, makes all the balls for India's home Tests, while others meet the bottomless demand from domestic cricket associations.

The industry is a bedrock of the city's economy, with nearly 350 separate businesses involved in production, according to government figures.

Its success rests on abundant and cheap labour that has reduced the incentive for more mechanised processes used in other countries.

"It is the workforce that brings the ball-making process to a beautiful conclusion," factory owner Bhupender Singh told AFP.

- 'Like a god' -

That labour has traditionally been the realm of those who belong to the Jatav community, which sits at the bottom of the millennia-old caste hierarchy that divides Hindus by function and social standing.

Jatavs are a sizeable number of India's 200-million-strong Dalit castes once subject to the discriminatory practice of "untouchability".

The custom was outlawed in 1950 by the author of India's constitution, B.R. Ambedkar, a lawyer who championed the rights of fellow Dalits.

Pictures of the bespectacled Ambedkar adorn the otherwise bare walls of Meerut's cricket factories, in reverence for a man Sagar says he treats "like a god".

Caste remains a crucial determinant of one's station in life at birth: less than six percent of Indians married outside their caste, according to the country's most recent census in 2011.

But policies to guarantee places for Dalits in government jobs and higher education have brought some social mobility.

With more opportunities, few cricket ball-makers want their children to follow them into the trade.

Meerut's high unemployment rate has meanwhile forced others from higher castes to stomach any objections to what they would have once considered "unclean" labour.

"People are in need of income and are willing to work, especially since job opportunities are limited in this area", Singh said.

- Red lines -

Meerut has been the principal hub for Indian sports goods since soon after independence from British colonial rule in 1947.

Back then, skilled leatherworkers fled the city of Sialkot in modern-day Pakistan during the deadly partition of the subcontinent along religious lines.

Singh's business was established by his grandfather and he had hoped to expand its operations, but India's political climate has made life tough for the industry.

Since the election of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government in 2014, Hindu activists have sought to disrupt and outlaw cattle slaughter, a business dominated by India's Muslim minority.

Their campaigns have occasionally seen deadly consequences, with Muslims suspected of involvement in the trade lynched by frenzied mobs, including in Meerut.

It has also led to supply issues that saw Singh's costs for tanned leather jump 50 percent last year, and prompted others to seek a greater share of alternative sourcing from buffalo and bull hides.

Ashish Matta, the owner of a wholesaler of a sports goods materials business in Meerut, was at pains to insist to AFP that the leather he dealt in did not come from cows.

But he also said the widespread use of leather made a mockery of taboos around its production.

"Leather is used to make various products -- shoes, belts, bags, purses, and even cricket balls," he said. "So I don't think there is any issue."

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LA REVUE GAUCHE - Left Comment: Search results for HINDUISM IS FASCISM 


Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur offered Jews opportunity for renewal and restoration

Shamai Grossman
Tue, September 26, 2023 

Wouldn’t it be fantastic if we could take all our regrets in life and throw them out with the trash? Better yet, what if we could reassign them, so that they are no longer ours? Why not indulge tonight without suffering the consequences tomorrow?

The Jewish world recently observed Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and a week later, Jews observed Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.

One of the most accepted practices on Rosh Hashanah, and sometimes on the days following Rosh Hashanah leading to Yom Kippur, is the custom of Tashlich. The etymology of the word, which literally means “cast off,” is based on a verse in the book of Micah, “You will cast off (tashlich) your sins to the depths of the sea.”

So, this year, on the afternoon of the second day of Rosh Hashanah, which fell on September 17, after a long morning in the synagogue followed by an elaborate festive meal, many Jews strolled to the closest lake, pond or body of water. When they arrived, they recited the words from Micah. Many symbolically shaking out the contents of their pockets over the water.
The history of ‘shaking off’ one’s sins is hundreds of years old

In Judaism, a 600-year old custom such as Tashlich is considered new. It was first sourced by Maharil (Rabbi Yaakov Moeling) in 15th century Germany. Why was this relatively late practice largely accepted across the spectrum of Judaism, spreading from Ashkenazi communities via the Lurianic Kabbalists to Sephardic communities the world over?


Tashlich’s acceptance is easy to understand. Here is an opportunity to strip away our iniquities simply by shaking out our indulgences directly into the sea. Rather than blaming ourselves or even someone else, the depths of the waters will wash our sins away, or, as we say repeatedly in the High Holiday liturgy, “whiten them as the snow.”

Rabbi Elijah of Vilna, the famous Vilna Gaon, was among the few who refrained from accepting the Tashlich practice. Yet, he never explained his reticence. We can only conjecture that his concern lay in questioning whether people’s morality could be restored by simply uttering a few words and symbolically shaking out their clothing.

A moral code requires moral behavior.

Visceral reminders help people to reflect on the importance of the holidays

In truth, the custom of Tashlich, like Rosh Hashanah itself, is an opportunity to enable a new beginning. However, this new beginning is two-pronged. First, we have to throw away our old behaviors, and then we have to make a commitment to embark on kinder and more meaningful behaviors, in short, better behaviors. Shaking away our sins on Rosh Hashanah afternoon is meaningless if it is simply a prelude to the beginning of a new cycle of inappropriate behavior.

My late father Rabbi Rafael Grossman, senior rabbi of the Baron Hirsch Congregation in Memphis, knew that people needed visceral reminders, both of the sins lining their pockets and of the opportunities to mend those pockets. Every year he would end Tashlich with song and dance, moving not just his body, but his heart and soul into a joyous new frame of mind. He knew that to start anew would require a new frame of mind.

I wish for all of us to follow my father’s example of leaving the old and joyously embracing the new, thereby committing to a restored, virtuous tomorrow. We then can make Tashlich and Rosh Hashanah, along with the entire coming year, meaningful.


Rabbi Dr. Shamai Grossman grew up in Memphis and is now associate professor of medicine and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School, and vice chair for health care quality, Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur: An opportunity for renewal, restoration



On Sukkot, the Jewish ‘Festival of booths,’ each sukkah is as unique as the person who builds it

Samira Mehta, Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies & Jewish Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
Tue, September 26, 2023

Natural materials like palm fronds, tree branches or reeds typically create the top of the sukkah.
Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Sukkot is a Jewish festival that follows right on the heels of Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, Judaism’s High Holy Days. The harvest holiday, which begins on Sept. 29, 2023, lasts for seven days when celebrated in Israel and eight days when celebrated elsewhere.

Like many Jewish rituals and traditions, from lighting Friday night candles to hosting Passover seders, Sukkot is primarily celebrated in the home – or rather, in the yard. Translated as the “Festival of Booths,” Sukkot is celebrated in an outdoor structure called a sukkah, which is carefully built and rebuilt each year.

As a Jewish Studies scholar, much of my work looks at how diverse Jewish American identities are today. From intermarried families, to Jews of color, to Jewish communities from all over the world, there have always been a myriad of ways to be Jewish – and home-based holidays like Sukkot help people honor all these parts of their identities.

Michal Sumdon, left, of Poland, and Taul Juin, of France, build a sukkah in the heart of a historic Jewish neighborhood in Warsaw. AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski

Harvest holiday

Held during the autumn harvest, Sukkot likely has origins in huts that ancient farmers erected so they could sleep in the fields. Yet tradition also says that these booths represent the tents that the Israelites lived in while they wandered the desert for 40 years following the Exodus, their escape from slavery in Egypt.

Some aspects of Sukkot happen in the synagogue, including special prayers and readings from the Bible. Yet the main action takes place at home, in the backyard sukkah – the singular form of the word “sukkot” in Hebrew. For Jews who observe the holiday, tradition says to start building the sukkah as soon as possible after Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement; some people even start building the structure are soon as they have broken their 25-hour fast.

The makeshift walls, of which there must be at least three, can be made out of anything one wants, from pre-made walls printed with blessings said during the holiday to tablecloths or rugs. People often decorate to say something about who they are: photos of Jerusalem, quilts made by relatives. I have always imagined that, if I had a sukkah, I would use Indian tablecloths for walls, merging that piece of my heritage with my religion.


People in Jerusalem pick out palm branches for the roofs of their sukkot. 

The roof, however, is supposed to be made out of natural materials like palms or branches; one friend of mine likes to use cornstalks. The roof should provide shade but must allow gaps to see the stars. Those of us who do not have yards can get creative with our balconies or, like me, drop hints that they would welcome invitations to other people’s sukkot. One New Yorker friend turns her living room into a faux sukkah – you cannot see the stars, but it is filled with nature and decorations.

In the United States, many families decorate their sukkot with classic elements of the American harvest season: corn husks, colorful dried ears of corn, harvest gourds and even the occasional bale of hay. In New Mexico, you sometimes see “ristras,” the decorative red strings of chiles that hang from porches.

The traditional plants of Sukkot, however, are four distinct species: a citrus fruit called an etrog, and fronds of palm, myrtle and willow, which are bound together and referred to as the “lulav.” The lulav and etrog are blessed and shaken together on a daily basis throughout the festival.


Shaking the lulav after a blessing for a snack.


Our yard, our holiday

Beyond this, Jews are supposed to live in the sukkah for the festival, which technically means eating and sleeping there. But as with all religious holidays, individuals celebrate Sukkot in a wide variety of ways.

Many Jews do not construct sukkot at all, let alone sleep in them for a week. Of those who do, some sleep every night in the sukkah; some have one night of family “camping”; others do not sleep in it at all. Many people entertain guests there: I have been to many a meal – and one graduate seminar – in sukkot all over the country.

It is the fact that so much of Sukkot is held at home that accounts for the holiday’s immense flexibility. Like at Passover, most Jews who celebrate Sukkot encounter it in spaces where people can honor their values, cultures or histories.

What this looks like is as diverse as the world of American Jews.

For instance, for the years that I taught outside of Philadelphia, I attended a multinight open house, called “Whiskey in the Sukkot,” hosted by an interfaith couple. The Jewish wife explains that when she and her husband – a whiskey aficionado from Appalachia – got married, his thought process went: “harvest festival, grain, whiskey.”

Each year, he curates a selection to share with his guests, with new offerings for each night. Accompanied by pungent cheeses and other nibbles, this festival of whiskey offered him a way to make the holiday his own. In the process, the couple created an event that welcomes their Jewish – and non-Jewish – communities.


Ruth Sohn decorates her family’s sukkah with Egyptian designs in Los Angeles.
Stephen Osman/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

On his Afroculinaria blog, the chef, culinary historian and author Michael Twitty created a Southern harvest soup for Sukkot, which he notes uses “traditional Southern ingredients and flavors.” His soup is vegetarian, but he also offers a “trayf alternative,” meaning a version that is not kosher – a recipe that swaps out olive oil for bacon grease. Even in the most liberal Jewish settings, one cannot usually serve pork in a synagogue setting, but this is your Sukkot table. If you, like most American Jews, do not keep kosher, why not go full-on Southern in your flavors?

Not everyone sees their full identity reflected on Sukkot. Emily Bowen Cowen, a cartoonist who is Jewish and Muscogee (Creek), has written a comic called “My Sioux-kot,” imagining what Sukkot could look like if, like many contemporary Passover celebrations, it emphasized social justice. Cohen muses on the parallels she saw between Sukkot celebrations and 2016 protests to block an oil pipeline at the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota. At the time, both were events where people talked about valuing nature as sacred. Yet no one mentioned the protests in the sukkot she visited that week.

Indeed, some Jews are finding ways to realize the social justice potential in the holiday. Fiber artist Heather Stoltz used a sukkah as the basis for an art exhibition called “Temporary Shelter,” decorating its walls with stories of unhoused New Yorkers and with art made by children staying in the city’s shelters.

Perhaps the time will come when Sukkot, too, becomes infused with possibilities for a more just future.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. 
"Trumpism imperils all Jewish Americans": Experts warn of "America's rising tide of antisemitism"


Chauncey DeVega
SALON
Mon, September 25, 2023 




Last Sunday was the Jewish New Year and High Holy Day of Rosh Hashanah. As a public figure, in his role as ex-president and now Republican 2024 frontrunner, Donald Trump could have chosen many ways to honor Rosh Hashanah. He could have issued an obligatory statement acknowledging Rosh Hashanah and its significance for the Jewish people. Of course, Trump could have simply decided to be quiet instead of being a gum beater. Instead, Trump celebrated Rosh Hashanah by threatening Jewish Americans who do not support him in a post he shared via his Truth Social disinformation platform last Sunday night:

"Just a quick reminder for liberal Jews who voted to destroy America & Israel because you believed in false narratives! Let's hope you learned from your mistake & make better choices moving forward! Happy New Year!"

Trump's threats and the distinction he makes between "good Jews" and "bad Jews", the supporters of him and his neofascist MAGA movement and those who dare to oppose him and it, are centuries-old antisemitic tropes.

Trump's threats against Jewish people on Rosh Hashanah are but one example of many where throughout his decades of public life – and especially during his time as president and after – where the ex-president has proven himself to be a white supremacist and an antisemite.

MSNBC offers these examples:

During his 2016 campaign, for example, Trump spoke to the Republican Jewish Coalition and said, "You're not gonna support me because I don't want your money. You want to control your politicians." He added, "I'm a negotiator — like you folks."

Several months later, in the runup to Election Day, the Republican promoted antisemitic imagery through social media. In the closing days of the 2016 campaign, Trump again faced accusations of antisemitism, claiming Hillary Clinton met "in secret with international banks to plot the destruction of U.S. sovereignty in order to enrich these global financial powers."

While in office, the then-president used some highly provocative rhetoric about Jews and what he expected about their "loyalties." Soon after, Trump spoke at the Israeli American Council's national summit, where he suggested Jewish people are primarily focused on wealth, which is why he expected them to support his re-election campaign.


NBC News adds:

In an interview in 2021, Trump also said, "The Jewish people in the United States either don't like Israel or don't care about Israel."

"I'll tell you, the evangelical Christians love Israel more than the Jews in this country," said Trump, who won strong support from white evangelical voters in 2016 and 2020, according to the Pew Research Center.

Trump also came under fire for his remarks in response to the 2017 violence in Charlottesville, Virginia. At the Unite the Right rally in August 2017, white nationalists and neo-Nazis carried tiki torches and chanted "Jews will not replace us," among other slogans.

CNN offers this additional context:

Trump has a long history of criticizing Jewish American voters who do not support him and of playing into antisemitic tropes.

More recently, ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, he criticized American Jews for what he argued was their insufficient praise of his policies toward Israel, including moving the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

In 2021, Trump claimed Jewish Americans "either don't like Israel or don't care about Israel," while also suggesting that evangelical Christians "love Israel more than the Jews in this country." In 2019, he accused Democrats of being part of an "anti-Israel" and "anti-Jewish party." And during his first campaign for president, Trump delivered a speech to the Republican Jewish Coalition in which he repeatedly referred to the audience of Jewish donors as "negotiators." He is scheduled to address the group's annual leadership summit next month in Las Vegas.

America's democracy crisis and ascendant neofascism are a state of malignant normality where antisocial and other antihuman and antidemocratic behavior becomes increasingly common as elites and the general public grow numb to it.

To that point, Trump's latest example of antisemitic behavior and the evil it represents should have been the focus of much media coverage, condemnation by the country's political leaders, and public outrage. Instead, with few exceptions, Trump's vile behavior was largely ignored, except as the latest controversy of the day in a political environment driven by the 24/7 news cycle, hyper politics, and the culture of distraction. Such is how democracy dies.

Via email, I asked antiracism activist and author Tim Wise for his thoughts about Trump's threats against Jewish people on Rosh Hashanah and how it fits into a larger context of racial authoritarianism:

This is just more of the same: "othering" distinct numerical minorities for the problems of the country. Whether brown-skinned immigrants, Black folks in cities, trans persons in schools, or Jews at the ballot box, Trumpism and MAGA ideology is all about scapegoating those deemed as somehow deviant from the white, Christian, straight norm. And by dividing Jews between the "good" conservative ones and the "bad" liberal ones, Trump is engaging a trope that has always been utilized by anti-Semites. From the "good" Jews who were willing to convert, or at least hide their Jewishness during the Inquisition to the "good" Jews who served as Kapos to the Nazis, anti-Jewish bigots have always found examples of Jews they like. But only as a cudgel to use against the rest. If this kind of signaling isn't confronted, immediately, and forcefully by all Jews, and the Christians who constantly tell us how much they love us, anti-Jewish bigotry will likely grow even stronger. And with it, all the other bigotries that are part of Trumpism.

I also asked philosopher and Holocaust scholar John Roth for his thoughts about Trump's threats against Jewish people who he is targeting because of their "disloyalty." Roth connects Trump's antisemitic threats to the ex-president's recent interview on NBC's "Meet the Press":

His reflection deficient, his repentance nonexistent, Donald Trump demonstrated how little he knows and appreciates about Judaism and Jews when his insulting New Year's jibe to Jewish Americans desecrated Rosh Hashanah and the Days of Awe by thoughtlessly accusing "liberal Jews" of voting to "destroy America & Israel."

Earlier that same day, September 17, Kristen Welker's inaugural "Meet the Press" program featured her fraught interview with the indicted former president. She questioned Trump about his often-repeated vow to take retribution against his political enemies. "When you launched your campaign in March," she said to him, " you told the crowd, quote, 'I am your retribution.' What does that mean? What does that look like?" With more candor than usual, Trump replied that "I have to protect people," making clear that he meant his staunch, anti-democratic, and often violence-prone allies. "When I talk about retribution," he insisted, "I'm talking about fairness."

That comment was cunning and deceitful at once. Trump divides the world into those who support him and those who don't. In his calculations, fairness for his supporters means—it requires—payback and revenge against his opposition. That's how his protection scheme works. In his words and calculations, in his retribution racket, Trump's transactional antisemitism is writ large.

In an email to Salon, Ethan Katz, who is Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies at UC-Berkeley, and co-founder of the Antisemitism Education Initiative at Berkeley, historicized Trump's most recent antisemitic screed in the following way:

The idea that many Jews are "unpatriotic" and working against the interests of the nation, unless they pass a certain purity test, goes back to longstanding antisemitic notions about Jewish dual loyalty, Jewish conspiracy, and Jewish power and control behind the scenes. Speaking here of "liberal Jews" sounds to many like it is code for the likes of George Soros, which for the extreme right is very clearly code for Jewish bankers, for Jews who allegedly control the world financial system, have enormous power, and exploit the masses. And the notion is present here also that Jews should be grateful for all that the government is doing for them — as if they are a monolith separate from everyone else, defined solely by their ethnicity or religion in how they vote, and see the world, and identify.

In reality, of course, for most American Jews, Israel is only one of a number of important issues shaping their voting behavior, and views of Israel for a majority of American Jews are far more nuanced than the views President Trump represents here. Moreover, deciding to target Jews on one of their holiest days in this way also comes uncomfortably close to medieval images of Jews as religiously impure due to their alleged opposition to Christianity, and the persistent (if clearly false and discredited claim) that they had murdered Jesus Christ.

Trump's antisemitic and white supremacist threats are both contributing to and reflect a larger societal environment where hate crimes and right-wing terrorism have been escalating during his time in office and now almost 3 years since he was defeated by President Biden.

Law enforcement and other experts are continuing to warn that white supremacists and other right-wing extremists and malign actors represent the greatest threat to the country's domestic safety and security. Neo-Nazis and other white supremacists and neofascists have engaged in mass shootings and other such lethal violence targeting Jewish people, Muslims, African-Americans, the LGBTQI community, and other marginalized groups and "enemies" throughout the Trumpocene.

Hate crimes against Jewish people in America are at historic levels. This includes bomb threats against synagogues on Rosh Hashanah.

In Florida, neo-Nazis have become increasingly emboldened by Gov. Ron DeSantis, a man who they correctly see as their leader. Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, and other leading Republican fascists and their forces are enacting an Orwellian Thought Crime regime in Florida and other parts of the country, where "un-American" and "un-patriotic" books and other materials deemed too "woke" or otherwise contaminated with the "Critical Race Theory Mind Virus", i.e. they are not right-wing indoctrination and propaganda mind killers, are being banned. These banned books (and courses) include those that focus on the Holocaust.

"Disloyal" and "dangerous" teachers and other educators are also being threatened with violence, harassed, and even fired from their jobs.19th-century German poet Heinrich Heine's warning that "those who burn books will in the end burn people" most certainly applies to the Age of Trump.

In his email to Salon, Katz also emphasized how America's rising tide of antisemitism, white supremacy, neofascism, and other attacks on multiracial pluralistic democracy and society in the Age of Trump and beyond are part of a much larger revolutionary project by the global right:

In some respects, Trump's relationship to Jews echoes that of a leader like Viktor Orban in Hungary, who is openly autocratic, and has embraced Far Right conspiracy theories about George Soros that seem unmistakably antisemitic, but also has built alliances with more conservative elements in the Hungarian Jewish community. Like the supporters of Orban and a growing number of autocrats in Europe and beyond, many in the MAGA movement appear skeptical of the importance of democratic institutions, and a significant number of these voters are openly hostile to the achievements of the Civil Rights movement and ongoing efforts to make America a more fulsome multiracial democracy. Here I'm speaking of those who really embrace white nationalism, which fixates obsessively on Jews in well-documented and terribly dangerous ways. The American Jewish community, as I mentioned, is diverse in its politics, even as more than 70% of Jewish voters supported Joe Biden, as they have every Democratic nominee for president for decades. But the role that conspiratorial thinking about Jews plays for many of Trump's most right-wing supporters is very worrisome. And Trump's willingness to single out Jews for critique about their voting behavior, on one of their holiest days, will surely be read by many of those voters as a symbol of a shared preoccupation with Jews and alleged Jewish power and influence. Whatever your politics, this should be a cause of grave concern.

Trump's antisemitic threats are not part of a separate and distinct "culture war" by the right-wing as too many among the mainstream news media and political class (especially "centrists" and "liberals" and "progressives") have reflexively and lazily suggested in their attempts to create some false distinction between "real politics" such as voting, elections, and "the economy" vs. "silly" and "dumb" and "distracting" "culture war" issues.

There is no "culture war": in reality, the so-called culture war is a fascist war where the neofascists, white right, and other illiberal and antidemocracy forces know that culture and "real politics" are closely linked as spaces where power (and the future) are contested and won (or lost).

Ultimately, those people who mock and dismiss Trump and the Republican fascist's antisemitism and larger "culture war" behavior are speaking from a lofty perch of imagined security and false safety.

For those who are being targeted, this is all very deadly serious business.

I conclude this essay with a warning from John Roth:

Attacks on some Jews don't stop there. The contagion spreads. Trumpism imperils all Jewish Americans, especially to the extent that they defend the highest traditions of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, which resist the corruption and venality that characterize the American fascism of Trump and his MAGA stalwarts. Trump's hatred of Jewish opposition to him is rooted in his disrespect—and perhaps in some fear—of commitments to justice and truth embedded in the Days of Awe and resolved to hold him accountable.

You have been warned again. We, who are the miner's canary, keep telling you to wake up. Unfortunately, too many people in America insist on not listening.

Jewish leaders rip X, accuse Musk of antisemitism

A group of Jewish leaders published a letter warning of the rise in antisemitic rhetoric on X, formerly Twitter, and placed responsibility largely on owner Elon Musk — whom they claimed has “facilitated and enabled” its growth.

Sarah Fortinsky
Tue, September 26, 2023

“X has become a breeding ground for antisemitism and represents one of the largest dangers to Jews in years,” the leaders warned in their letter. “If something does not change, we know what will happen: hate speech and radicalization are always the precursor to violence.”

The group consists of rabbis, academics, leaders of Jewish organizations and artists with “diverse ideologies and beliefs,” they wrote, adding “we have come together to address the danger Elon Musk and X represent to Jews and others.”

The organizer of the letter, Elad Nehorai, described the goal as twofold in a statement to The Hill: “To call out the fact that the story has been watered down and we insist it be told more accurately, as well as to push for advertisers and app stores to pull their support.”

The Jewish leaders specifically called on large advertisers like Disney, Apple and Amazon to stop paying for ads on the platform. They also called on Apple and Google to remove X from the application store.

The letter follows Musk’srecent targetingof the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) — a watchdog group fighting against hate speech and antisemitism — which Musk claimed was trying to “kill this platform by falsely accusing it & me of being anti-Semitic.”

The tech billionaire threatened to file a lawsuit against the ADL for allegedly “destroying half the value of this company,” which he valued at $22 billion. He said the ADL “seems to be responsible for most of our revenue loss.”

His threats followed an ADL report that documented a rise in what they called “virulent antisemitism” on X after Musk rolled back some content moderation policies on the platform.

The Jewish leaders said they were “alarmed” by Musk’s targeting of the ADL, “not because of our views of the organization,” they wrote as the group holds a wide range of views, “but because of the way he has used the organization as a very clear stand in for an antisemitic representation of Jewish power.”

They pointed to several examples of what they described as antisemitic acts by Musk that they viewed as “egregious.”

First, they pointed to his participation in the hashtag #BanTheADL, which the letter noted was started by neo-Nazi figures. They criticized his engagement with and alleged promotion of antisemitic accounts, as well as his decision to reinstate “some of the most vicious antisemites in America and beyond.”

They also accused Musk of “spreading overt antisemitism, such as the false idea that ‘65% of Jewish college students support censorship,’” and of “engaging in antisemitic conspiracy theories, such as linking George Soros with the Rothschilds as well as the Great Replacement conspiracy theory.”

“Elon Musk has shown a refusal to back down from the danger he poses to Jews and other minorities and vulnerable communities. Appealing to him directly, as the ADL and others have, has been an abject failure,” the letter reads. “Outside pressure that hits him where it hurts is the only effective measure.

“Not doing so will mean the further spread of extremism and antisemitism,” the group continued. “Those don’t just threaten Jews: they threaten a free society and all those affected by the conspiracy theories tied to antisemitism.”

The Hill reached out to X for comment but received an automatic reply saying, “Busy now, please check back later.”


Climate change and the shift to cleaner energy push Southeast Asia to finally start sharing power

ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL and VICTORIA MILKO
Tue, September 26, 2023 


 A worker cleans solar panels that provide partial electrical power to Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, Indonesia, Wednesday, March 29, 2023. The urgency for Southeast Asian nations to switch to clean energy to combat climate change is reinvigorating a 20-year-old plan for the region to share power. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana, File)


Hanoi, VIETNAM (AP) — The urgency for Southeast Asian nations to switch to clean energy to combat climate change is reinvigorating a 20-year-old plan for the region to share power.

Malaysia and Indonesia inked a deal in Bali, Indonesia last month to study 18 potential locations where cross-border transmission lines can be set up.

Those links could eventually generate power roughly equivalent to what 33 nuclear power plants would produce in a year. They are economically and technically feasible, and now are supported by regional governments, said Beni Suryadi a power expert at the ASEAN Centre for Energy in Jakarta, Indonesia.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations or ASEAN is a political and economic gathering of 10 countries across a vast region, from tiny Brunei and Singapore to military-controlled Myanmar and fast-rising economic power Vietnam.

Experts describe imports by Singapore of hydroelectric-generated power from Laos via transmissions through Thailand and Malaysia as a “pathfinder” project, marking the first time that four countries in the region have agreed to trade electricity.

Cross-border power purchases accounted for just 2.7% of the region's capacity in 2017, according to the Global Interconnection Journal. But those were between two countries, such as Thailand and Laos. Now, more countries are looking at power sharing as a way to wean their economies off coal and other fossil fuels. Vietnam would like a regional grid so it could sell clean energy, such as from offshore wind, to its neighbors while the Malaysian province of Sarawak is looking to sell its hydropower to neighboring Indonesia.

The plan for a regional grid between the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations was conceived two decades ago, but progress has been stalled by various problems including technical barriers and political mistrust.

The region now recognizes it must move faster. Climate change could reduce the region’s economic potential by more than a third by the middle of the century, according to a report presented at the 2021 U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland. Demand for electricity is rising, and governments have realized the transition away from fossil fuels requires an interconnected grid, Suryad said.

“It has become a crucial need for every country,” he said.

In the past, countries in the region were focused more on energy security, relying heavily on fossil fuels and often building more capacity than they needed. But renewable energy costs are falling, making hydroelectric, solar and wind power more affordable. And all ASEAN countries apart from the Philippines have pledged to stop adding carbon to the atmosphere by 2050.

So, arguments in favor of an interconnected grid appear to be prevailing.

Tiny, landlocked Laos, with a population of only 7 million, has built more than 50 dams in the past 15 years, relying on its status as the “battery of Southeast Asia” to profit from sales of power to Thailand, Vietnam, and China.

It still has surplus power it needs to sell to others in the region.

Singapore — a small city-state of 6 million with nearly no natural resources — must import clean energy to meet its renewable energy goals.

Regional grids can help bridge gaps between where power is needed and where it can be generated, helping countries adjust to outside shocks like big jumps in oil prices. They also can help cut costs: In 2021, for instance, Europe saved $36 billion by trading power, European regulators have estimated.

Interconnected grids can also deliver reliable electricity to communities in remote regions like West Kalimantan, on the island of Borneo. A life punctuated by rolling blackouts that forced shops to shutter and people to use diesel generators was the norm until a 170-kilometer (105-mile) long cross-border power line coming from neighboring Malaysia’s Sarawak province changed that in 2016.

“This is a no-brainer way to do it ... because it’s been done elsewhere and the benefits are obvious,” said Rena Kuwahata, an energy analyst at the Paris-based International Energy Agency.

But issues remain.

One of ASEAN's core policies is non-interference, which means members tend to shy away from joint projects. Domestic energy priorities are sometimes at odds with the potential benefits of an interconnected grid. Nadhilah Shani, another expert at the ASEAN Center for Energy said that this creates a “dilemma” for countries: they could sell clean energy to neighbors for the region to wean itself off fossil fuels, or they could use those resources towards meeting their own climate targets.

Malaysia gets only 1% of its electricity annually from clean sources. It banned the export of renewables in 2021 to try and develop a domestic clean energy industry. That ban was lifted this year but an Indonesian ban on clean energy exports imposed last year remains in effect.

The region's lack of a regulatory framework for such things as installing submarine power cables is another stumbling block.

Not all the technical problems have been ironed out. Voltages used by each country can vary, as do the capacities of their grids. Even countries whose grids span borders, like Thailand, need to upgrade them, Harald Link, owner of B.Grimm Power and president of Thailand’s Association of Private Power Producers, said in an interview.

Projections of where power will be needed must be factored in, for example, plans for power-hungry data centers.

“You need a huge amount of electricity— and they want it green. And where do you get it from? For some countries, it is more difficult to make it green,” Link said.

Costs are high: at a minimum some $280 billion in power sector investments are required, according to the ASEAN Center for Energy.

China's involvement in building much of the region's energy infrastructure via its Belt and Road Initiative could also be a concern. In 2021, Laos, under pressure from its mounting debts, granted a 25-year concession to operate its power grid to a majority Chinese-owned company.

But despite intermittent tensions between China and some of its neighbors over territorial disputes and other issues, generally Beijing and ASEAN are working on the basis of “mutual interests and benefits,” said Nadhilah Shani, another expert at the ASEAN Center for Energy.

Given how expensive it is to build power grids, the private financing needed to build it can influence how and where projects are built, said Shani. Still, she said, national priorities play a bigger role than Chinese investments in how electricity is transmitted.

“We are in good place in ASEAN to have this kind of collaboration in terms of trading and we have reached a common understanding,” she said.

___

Milko reported from Nusa Dua, Indonesia. Jintamas Saksornchai in Bangkok, Thailand, and Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, contributed to this report.

___

Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receive support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

NASA reveals latest weapon to 'search the heavens' for UFOs, aliens

Chris Eberhart
FOX NEWS
Mon, September 25, 2023 

Artificial intelligence and machine learning will be "essential" to finding and proving the existence of extraterrestrial life and UFOs, NASA said.

The space agency recently released its highly anticipated 36-page UFO report that said NASA doesn't have enough high-quality data to make a "definitive, scientific conclusion" about the origin of UFOs.

Moving forward, AI will be vital to pinpointing anomalies while combing through large datasets, according to the report compiled by NASA's independent research team on UAPs (unidentified anomalous phenomena), a fancy word for UFO.

"We will use AI and machine learning to search the skies for anomalies… and will continue to search the heavens for habitable reality," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said during a Sept. 14 briefing. "AI is just coming on the scene to be explored in all areas, so why should we limit any technological tool in analyzing, using data that we have?"

NASA CAN'T EXPLAIN ‘HANDFUL’ OF UFO SIGHTINGS AS IT SEARCHS FOR ‘SIGNS OF LIFE’


The members of NASA's UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) study.

Dr. Nicola Fox, NASA's associate administrator, elaborated on Nelson's point, saying AI "is an amazing tool" to find "signatures that are sort of buried in data."

That's how NASA, and scientists around the world, are going to be able to find the metaphorical needle in a haystack, Fox said.

"So a lot of our data are just sort of wiggly line plots. We get excited about wiggly line plots, by the way, but sometimes, you see the wiggles, but you miss a signal," she said.

"By using artificial intelligence, we can often find signatures. So one example we've had is to be able to find signatures of superstorms using very old data that, you know, really is before sort of like routine scientific satellite data."




A Fox News Digital-created UFO hotspot map based off information from the Department of Defense.


UAP reporting trends presented during April 19, 2023, Senate hearing.

Using AI was a key component of the 16-member, independent UAP research team's report.

"The panel finds that sophisticated data analysis techniques, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, must be used in a comprehensive UAP detection campaign when coupled with systematic data gathering and robust curation," the report says.

UFO ‘HOTSPOTS’ MAP REVEALS CLUSTER OF SIGHTINGS LINKED TO ATOM BOMBS, WAR ZONES

The use of AI has been a controversial topic that governments around the world, including the U.S., are grappling with.

Advocates have lauded the potential capabilities of generative AI and the possibility it could catapult society to the next evolution of humankind. On the flip side, it can also create a dystopian future if guardrails aren't put in place, or if it's in the hands of ill-intended users, experts have warned.



Earlier this month, over 100 members of Congress met with big tech tycoons such as Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg about AI, and some senators expressed concern about unregulated AI.

The NASA panel was asked if regulating AI would impact the space agency's ability to use the budding technology to potentially find extraterrestrial life.

RUSSIAN UFO ENGAGEMENTS, SECRET ‘TIC TAC’ REPORT AND 3 KEY FIGURES SLIP UNDER RADAR AT CONGRESSIONAL HEARING

Nelson brushed off concerns that regulations would hamper NASA's mission.

"No, don't think that any attempts to that the Congress has underway to try to write a law that would appropriately put guardrails around AI for other reasons is anyway going to inhibit us from utilizing the tools of AI to help us in our quest on this specific issue," Nelson said in response to the question.


NASA's study of UAPs is separate from the Pentagon's investigation through the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), although the two investigations are running on parallel tracks that include corroborative efforts.

Much like a team of peer reviewers, NASA commissions independent study teams as a formal part of NASA’s scientific process, and such teams provide the agency external counsel and an increased network of perspectives from scientific experts.

They were assigned to pinpoint the data available around UAP and produce a report that outlines a roadmap for how NASA can use its tools of science to obtain usable data to evaluate and provide suggestions moving forward.

U.S. new vehicles sales to rise in September - report
 Y THE BIG 3 AIN'T WORRIED

Reuters
Tue, September 26, 2023

New vehicles are seen at a parking lot in the Port of Richmond, California

(Reuters) - U.S. new-vehicle sales are set to rise in September from a year ago, helped by sustained demand, according to Cox Automotive.

Sales volumes in the current month are set to touch nearly 1.3 million units, up more than 13% from a year ago, according to the auto research firm.

Despite rising interest rates on new vehicle loans and a strike by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union against major U.S. automakers, industry-wide inventory levels are up more than 63%, the report said.

The ongoing labor strike between the UAW and automakers Ford, General Motors and Chrysler parent Stellantis, targeting some U.S. facilities at each company, has threatened the supply of newer models.

"Pent-up demand has been fueling the vehicle market this year. Consumers, and even more so large fleets, have become buyers as inventory improves," said Charlie Chesbrough, Cox Automotive senior economist.

The auto research firm also raised full-year new-vehicle sales forecast to between 15.3 million and 15.4 million units, from 15 million units.

(Reporting by Aishwarya Jain; Editing by Maju Samuel)
UAW VP says Stellantis proposals mean job losses; top executive says they won't

Eric D. Lawrence, Detroit Free Press
Updated Tue, September 26, 2023 




For Rich Boyer, a UAW vice president and the head of the union’s Stellantis department, one issue is paramount in this round of contract bargaining, and it’s not wages, which have been a big focus of the outside attention.

“The issue is job security and putting product into these plants in this country. That’s the real issue,” Boyer said. “Because what good is it? You can give me a 50% raise, but if I have no job security, no place for these people to go, what does that matter? It matters nothing.”

Ford Motor Co., General Motors and Stellantis, which owns Jeep, Ram, Chrysler, Dodge and Fiat, have all proposed wage hikes around 20% over the life of the contract; the union initially proposed 40%.

Boyer was standing outside the Stellantis Mopar facility in Center Line, Michigan, on Friday, after the union announced it was expanding its so-called Stand Up Strike against the Detroit Three to include GM and Stellantis parts distribution centers, and he was fired up.

Changes the company has proposed to the footprint of Mopar and impacts in other areas, including to the workers who had been at the idled Belvidere Assembly Plant in Illinois, won’t come without job losses as the company insists, he said.

More: UAW members hold practice picket at Stellantis headquarters: 'No justice, no Jeeps'

Boyer expressed skepticism, too, about proposals for Belvidere, including the years it would be before a battery plant might open there, if one were to go there. And even hundreds of jobs created by a battery plant and a big Mopar center wouldn’t make up for the losses, he said, counting the laid-off or transferred workers at Belvidere, where 1,200 worked before the plant was idled this year. A statement earlier this month from UAW President Shawn Fain called Belvidere "a profitable plant that just a few years ago supported around 5,000 workers and their families."

More: What UAW's Shawn Fain hasn't talked about could provide focus for a deal

The number of affected jobs overall at Stellantis, Boyer said, would be roughly 5,400.

“They’ll argue that point. They’ll say that it’s not true,” Boyer said. But “the only jobs they really want to guarantee are the people who stand on the lines.”

When asked about Boyer’s statement that 5,400 jobs would be affected by the company proposals, Stellantis spokeswoman Jodi Tinson referred a reporter to comments Mark Stewart, chief operating officer for Stellantis North America, made earlier this month.

More: UAW members rally for future of Trenton Engine under shadow of talks with Stellantis

The United Auto Workers union has said the company proposed the right to close or sell 18 facilities, but Stewart has called that misleading, saying there would be no job losses associated with any of the changes. The company operates many older parts distribution centers, some in rented facilities, and wants to modernize them, he told reporters.

As for Belvidere, Stewart said the company had proposed a “very compelling commitment” around jobs and a solution related to Belvidere, although he had said, when he made those comments Sept. 16, that the offer was contingent on reaching a deal before the expiration of the contract between the company and the union on Sept. 14. It’s not clear whether the same proposal was offered in the latest contract proposal from the company, which Boyer said the union planned to counter.

More: Stellantis says UAW strike to cause almost 370 layoffs in Ohio, Indiana

On Friday, Stellantis pushed back against union positions, saying: "We presented a very competitive offer and yet never received a response. We continue to approach these negotiations responsibly and bargain in good faith."

On the subject of job security proposals, Stellantis, in an email from Tinson, said the company "has emphasized product allocation and plant performance are the triggers which enable job security. To this end, the company is proposing several vehicle allocations and billions of dollars in investments over the duration of the contract."

In addition, the company said it "offered workforce stability with a relevant level of production" in the United States during the duration of the contract as well as a "sustainable solution" for Belvidere with "comparable employment opportunities."

For Center Line and other nearby facilities, Boyer said the company wants to shift them to what he described as a super hub in Trenton, which is in the Detroit region’s Downriver area.

“This is a money grab. If they sell off all these places, it’s nothing more than a money grab,” Boyer said.

Contact Eric D. Lawrence: elawrence@freepress.com

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: UAW VP calls possible sale of Stellantis sites 'money grab'