Zara owner Inditex workers protest after record profits
By AFP
March 22, 2024
Copyright AFP Patrick T. Fallon
Workers at Inditex’s Zara and other big name stores protested outside the company shops across Spain on Friday to demand better benefits after the world’s biggest fashion retailer reported record profits and raised shareholder payouts.
Blowing whistles and waving union flags, around 100 people demonstrated outside the flagship Bershka store on Madrid’s main avenue, the Gran Via, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.
“It seems very unfair to us because Inditex has had a huge profit. So we want it to redistribute that,” said Juan Becerra, a 44-year-old worker at an Oysho store in the Spanish capital.
Similar protests were held outside Inditex stores in seven other cities, including Barcelona, Seville and Valencia.
The protests were organised by Spain’s two largest unions, UGT and CCOO, which want a bonus for Inditex workers with more than four years service and other benefits.
The unions say just over half of Inditex’s 27,000 employees in Spain have signed a petition demanding that “the group’s profits be returned in a fair and equitable manner to those who make them possible: all the group’s workers”.
Monica Donoro, a CCOO representative, said negotiations with Inditex managers had stalled.
“We are not making any progress. They are not listening to us,” she said.
Inditex, which has seen a strong performance on Spain’s stock market over the past year, posted net profits of 5.4 billion euros ($5.9 billion) in 2023, up 30 percent from 4.1 billion euros, the previous record, in 2022.
The company, whose eight brands include Pull and Bear and upmarket label Massimo Dutti, said it would pay shareholders a dividend of 1.54 euros, a 28 percent increase from 2022, and the highest in the group’s history.
“We, the staff, have the impression that we are not taken into account, that our work is not recognised even though we contribute to generating the profits, which are so high, through our work,” Beatriz Aliaga, a 44-year-old Zara employee, told AFP at the Madrid demonstration.
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)
Sunday, March 24, 2024
French news editor suspended over Macron-related headline
ByAFP
March 22, 2024
La Provence belongs to a billionaire businessman
ByAFP
March 22, 2024
La Provence belongs to a billionaire businessman
- Copyright AFP Patrick T. Fallon
The news editor of a regional French daily has been suspended after a front-page headline critical of President Emmanuel Macron, management said Friday, causing outrage across the newsroom.
Macron on Tuesday launched a major operation against drug trafficking in the southern port city of Marseille and elsewhere.
Following Macron’s Marseille visit, La Provence daily published a front page Thursday showing two people, watching a police patrol. The accompanying headline said “He’s gone, but we’re still here”.
On the basis of the front page, La Provence’s news editor Aurelien Viers was suspended for a week, for failing to follow its “values and editorial line”, said the paper’s managing editor Gabriel d’Harcourt.
The front-page quote and picture “could lead people to believe that we agree to give drug dealers a voice so they can mock the public authority”, wrote d’Harcourt in a “To Our Readers” article published Friday.
In an article inside Thursday’s La Provence, the front-page quote was actually attributed to a resident of a poor Marseille neighbourhood, named only as Brahim.
He said that the city had “found the means necessary to protect the president during his visit. He’s gone, but we’re still here, in the same hell”.
– ‘Editorial interference’: union –
D’Harcourt told AFP that his paper’s coverage of the visit had been “very good” except for the front page, “where you get the impression that we’re spokespeople for the dealers”.
The front page was “contrary to our roles and the role we want to play in Marseille and the surrounding region”, he said.
The SNJ, the main journalists’ union at La Provence, told AFP that the paper’s journalists were “scandalised” by Viers’s suspension, and called d’Harcourt’s justification for the suspension “surreal”.
A general staff assembly Friday voted in favour of a strike in protest.
“This is an inadmissable act of editorial interference,” SNJ representative Audrey Letellier told AFP.
La Provence, published in Marseille, has a daily circulation of around 62,000. It is owned by CMA CGM Medias, which belongs to Franco-Lebanese billionaire businessman Rodolphe Saade.
Saade, who has other high-profile media interests, this month announced that he would also buy Altice Media, which owns broadcasters BFMTV and RMC.
Asked during an Altice staff meeting whether he would seek to censor unfavourable news about his media interests, Saade replied: “I wouldn’t like it, and I would let that be known”.
But, added the media mogul, “I wouldn’t interfere”.
The news editor of a regional French daily has been suspended after a front-page headline critical of President Emmanuel Macron, management said Friday, causing outrage across the newsroom.
Macron on Tuesday launched a major operation against drug trafficking in the southern port city of Marseille and elsewhere.
Following Macron’s Marseille visit, La Provence daily published a front page Thursday showing two people, watching a police patrol. The accompanying headline said “He’s gone, but we’re still here”.
On the basis of the front page, La Provence’s news editor Aurelien Viers was suspended for a week, for failing to follow its “values and editorial line”, said the paper’s managing editor Gabriel d’Harcourt.
The front-page quote and picture “could lead people to believe that we agree to give drug dealers a voice so they can mock the public authority”, wrote d’Harcourt in a “To Our Readers” article published Friday.
In an article inside Thursday’s La Provence, the front-page quote was actually attributed to a resident of a poor Marseille neighbourhood, named only as Brahim.
He said that the city had “found the means necessary to protect the president during his visit. He’s gone, but we’re still here, in the same hell”.
– ‘Editorial interference’: union –
D’Harcourt told AFP that his paper’s coverage of the visit had been “very good” except for the front page, “where you get the impression that we’re spokespeople for the dealers”.
The front page was “contrary to our roles and the role we want to play in Marseille and the surrounding region”, he said.
The SNJ, the main journalists’ union at La Provence, told AFP that the paper’s journalists were “scandalised” by Viers’s suspension, and called d’Harcourt’s justification for the suspension “surreal”.
A general staff assembly Friday voted in favour of a strike in protest.
“This is an inadmissable act of editorial interference,” SNJ representative Audrey Letellier told AFP.
La Provence, published in Marseille, has a daily circulation of around 62,000. It is owned by CMA CGM Medias, which belongs to Franco-Lebanese billionaire businessman Rodolphe Saade.
Saade, who has other high-profile media interests, this month announced that he would also buy Altice Media, which owns broadcasters BFMTV and RMC.
Asked during an Altice staff meeting whether he would seek to censor unfavourable news about his media interests, Saade replied: “I wouldn’t like it, and I would let that be known”.
But, added the media mogul, “I wouldn’t interfere”.
Rights court condemns Peru over one of world’s most polluted towns
By AFP
March 22, 2024
The Andean city of La Oroya, situated in a high-altitude valley at 3,750 meters (12,300 feet), is home to a heavy metal smelter that has poisoned residents and the environment for almost a century -
Alberto PEÑA
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights said Friday that Peru had violated residents’ “right to live in a healthy environment” in an Andean mining town considered one of the most polluted places on earth.
The city of La Oroya, situated in a high-altitude valley at 3,750 meters (12,300 feet), is home to a heavy metal smelter that has poisoned residents and the environment for almost a century.
A group of La Oroya residents filed suit against the Peruvian government, demanding it take action against the pollution.
The town has often featured on lists of the most polluted places on the planet, rubbing shoulders with sites like Ukraine’s nuclear-sullied Chernobyl and Russia’s Dzerzhinsk, the site of Cold War-era factories which produced chemical weapons.
In its ruling, which is binding, the Costa Rica-based court blamed the Peruvian State “for the violation of the rights to a healthy environment, health, personal integrity, a dignified life… to the detriment of the 80 victims” who filed the lawsuit.
The court ordered that Peru carry out an analysis of the contamination of the air, water and soil in La Oroya, provide free medical care to the victims, and adapt the allowed standards for lead, sulfur dioxide, arsenic, mercury and particulate matter.
“We have waited for this for more than 20 years,” said Yolanda Zurita, one of the plaintiffs, who now lives in the town of Matahuasi about 60 kilometers (37 miles) from La Oroya.
The 65-year-old said pollution in her former home did not “allow her to be a mother,” without giving further details. She also suffers from seizures and problems with her lungs and pancreas.
“We have achieved our justice, the ruling is in favor of the people who were contaminated,” plaintiff Manuel Enrique Apolinario, a 68-year-old retired teacher, told AFP by telephone from La Oroya.
“Now the Peruvian State has to fully comply with the sentence.”
– ‘Significant risk to health’ –
Since 1922, the gigantic smelter that was long the economic heartbeat of La Oroya has processed copper, zinc, lead, gold, selenium, and other minerals from nearby mines.
The court said the complex “has had a significant impact on the environment, contaminating the air, water and soil.”
The ruling also said that “exposure to lead, cadmium, arsenic and sulfur dioxide constituted a significant risk to the health of the victims, and they did not receive adequate medical care from the State.”
In 2013, the International Federation for Human Rights said that 97 percent of La Oroya children aged between six months and six years, and 98 percent aged between seven and 12, had elevated levels of lead in their blood.
The smelting complex went bankrupt in 2009 — crippling the town’s economy — but re-opened last year under the management of a company made up of almost 1,300 shareholders — many of whom are former foundry workers.
The new administration has promised not to further pollute the town, where small houses cluster around towering black chimneys, surrounded by ashen mountain slopes corroded by heavy metals and long devoid of vegetation.
By AFP
March 22, 2024
The Andean city of La Oroya, situated in a high-altitude valley at 3,750 meters (12,300 feet), is home to a heavy metal smelter that has poisoned residents and the environment for almost a century -
Copyright AFP/File Ernesto BENAVIDES
Alberto PEÑA
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights said Friday that Peru had violated residents’ “right to live in a healthy environment” in an Andean mining town considered one of the most polluted places on earth.
The city of La Oroya, situated in a high-altitude valley at 3,750 meters (12,300 feet), is home to a heavy metal smelter that has poisoned residents and the environment for almost a century.
A group of La Oroya residents filed suit against the Peruvian government, demanding it take action against the pollution.
The town has often featured on lists of the most polluted places on the planet, rubbing shoulders with sites like Ukraine’s nuclear-sullied Chernobyl and Russia’s Dzerzhinsk, the site of Cold War-era factories which produced chemical weapons.
In its ruling, which is binding, the Costa Rica-based court blamed the Peruvian State “for the violation of the rights to a healthy environment, health, personal integrity, a dignified life… to the detriment of the 80 victims” who filed the lawsuit.
The court ordered that Peru carry out an analysis of the contamination of the air, water and soil in La Oroya, provide free medical care to the victims, and adapt the allowed standards for lead, sulfur dioxide, arsenic, mercury and particulate matter.
“We have waited for this for more than 20 years,” said Yolanda Zurita, one of the plaintiffs, who now lives in the town of Matahuasi about 60 kilometers (37 miles) from La Oroya.
The 65-year-old said pollution in her former home did not “allow her to be a mother,” without giving further details. She also suffers from seizures and problems with her lungs and pancreas.
“We have achieved our justice, the ruling is in favor of the people who were contaminated,” plaintiff Manuel Enrique Apolinario, a 68-year-old retired teacher, told AFP by telephone from La Oroya.
“Now the Peruvian State has to fully comply with the sentence.”
– ‘Significant risk to health’ –
Since 1922, the gigantic smelter that was long the economic heartbeat of La Oroya has processed copper, zinc, lead, gold, selenium, and other minerals from nearby mines.
The court said the complex “has had a significant impact on the environment, contaminating the air, water and soil.”
The ruling also said that “exposure to lead, cadmium, arsenic and sulfur dioxide constituted a significant risk to the health of the victims, and they did not receive adequate medical care from the State.”
In 2013, the International Federation for Human Rights said that 97 percent of La Oroya children aged between six months and six years, and 98 percent aged between seven and 12, had elevated levels of lead in their blood.
The smelting complex went bankrupt in 2009 — crippling the town’s economy — but re-opened last year under the management of a company made up of almost 1,300 shareholders — many of whom are former foundry workers.
The new administration has promised not to further pollute the town, where small houses cluster around towering black chimneys, surrounded by ashen mountain slopes corroded by heavy metals and long devoid of vegetation.
Venezuela MPs approve creation of state in disputed Essequibo
The region is home to 125,000 of Guyana’s 800,000 citizens, but Caracas has long claimed the region should be under its control.
ByAFP
March 22, 2024
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro (L) shakes hands with Guyana's President Irfaan Ali during a meeting this month
The region is home to 125,000 of Guyana’s 800,000 citizens, but Caracas has long claimed the region should be under its control.
ByAFP
March 22, 2024
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro (L) shakes hands with Guyana's President Irfaan Ali during a meeting this month
- Copyright Venezuelan Presidency/AFP Zurimar CAMPOS
Venezuela’s parliament has approved a law creating a federal state in the disputed oil-rich area of Essequibo across the border in Guyana, which on Friday slammed a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty.
Caracas has long laid claim to Essequibo, which makes up about two-thirds of Guyana’s territory, but started taking active steps to retrieve the land after massive offshore oil deposits were discovered there in 2015.
Lawmakers unanimously approved a law on Thursday that was drawn up after a December referendum in which 95 percent of voters, according to officials, supported declaring Venezuela the rightful owner of Essequibo.
“This National Assembly vindicates the right of the Venezuelan people to defend their territory,” said MP Diosdado Cabello after the vote to make Essequibo the 24th state in the country.
The law that was passed has been submitted to the Supreme Court to validate its constitutionality.
Guyana’s foreign ministry said in a statement the government was “gravely concerned over the adoption of a law by the Venezuelan National Assembly declaring the Essequibo region … to be a constituent part of Venezuela.”
“This is a flagrant violation of Guyana’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” said the statement, which called on the international community to “uphold the rule of law by rejecting Venezuela’s illegal expansionism.”
Essequibo has been administered by Guyana for more than a century and is the subject of border litigation before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague. Venezuela rejects the court’s jurisdiction in the matter.
The region is home to 125,000 of Guyana’s 800,000 citizens, but Caracas has long claimed the region should be under its control.
The row was revived in 2015 as US energy giant ExxonMobil discovered huge crude reserves in Essequibo and reached fever pitch last year after Georgetown started auctioning off oil blocks in the region.
The December referendum sparked international concern over a potential military conflict in largely peaceful South America.
Tensions were further inflamed when Britain sent a warship to the area, prompting Maduro to mobilize 5,600 troops in military exercises near the border.
However, friction abated after a meeting between the countries’ foreign ministers in Brazil in January, following earlier face-to-face talks between Maduro and Guyana President Irfaan Ali, who agreed not to resort to force.
The two leaders also exchanged gifts in a relaxed encounter at a summit in the Caribbean in March, during which Maduro said he hoped for a “healthy, peaceful and diplomatic solution” to the dispute.
Venezuela’s parliament has approved a law creating a federal state in the disputed oil-rich area of Essequibo across the border in Guyana, which on Friday slammed a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty.
Caracas has long laid claim to Essequibo, which makes up about two-thirds of Guyana’s territory, but started taking active steps to retrieve the land after massive offshore oil deposits were discovered there in 2015.
Lawmakers unanimously approved a law on Thursday that was drawn up after a December referendum in which 95 percent of voters, according to officials, supported declaring Venezuela the rightful owner of Essequibo.
“This National Assembly vindicates the right of the Venezuelan people to defend their territory,” said MP Diosdado Cabello after the vote to make Essequibo the 24th state in the country.
The law that was passed has been submitted to the Supreme Court to validate its constitutionality.
Guyana’s foreign ministry said in a statement the government was “gravely concerned over the adoption of a law by the Venezuelan National Assembly declaring the Essequibo region … to be a constituent part of Venezuela.”
“This is a flagrant violation of Guyana’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” said the statement, which called on the international community to “uphold the rule of law by rejecting Venezuela’s illegal expansionism.”
Essequibo has been administered by Guyana for more than a century and is the subject of border litigation before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague. Venezuela rejects the court’s jurisdiction in the matter.
The region is home to 125,000 of Guyana’s 800,000 citizens, but Caracas has long claimed the region should be under its control.
The row was revived in 2015 as US energy giant ExxonMobil discovered huge crude reserves in Essequibo and reached fever pitch last year after Georgetown started auctioning off oil blocks in the region.
The December referendum sparked international concern over a potential military conflict in largely peaceful South America.
Tensions were further inflamed when Britain sent a warship to the area, prompting Maduro to mobilize 5,600 troops in military exercises near the border.
However, friction abated after a meeting between the countries’ foreign ministers in Brazil in January, following earlier face-to-face talks between Maduro and Guyana President Irfaan Ali, who agreed not to resort to force.
The two leaders also exchanged gifts in a relaxed encounter at a summit in the Caribbean in March, during which Maduro said he hoped for a “healthy, peaceful and diplomatic solution” to the dispute.
RED TORIES
UK Labour party turns to Thatcher in courtship of right
By AFP
March 23, 2024
Labour leader Keir Starmer, likely the UK's next prime minister, with his finance spokeswoman Rachel Reeves - Copyright AFP Paul ELLIS
Peter HUTCHISON
Margaret Thatcher remains despised by many on the left of British politics, but the main Labour opposition seems comfortable citing her as it woos the right before this year’s election.
Labour leader Keir Starmer and senior colleagues have recently referenced the Conservative icon, highlighting the party’s shift to the centre since Starmer succeeded left-winger Jeremy Corbyn.
In December, Starmer described Thatcher as effecting “meaningful change” in the UK during her controversial 1979-1990 premiership while foreign affairs spokesman David Lammy this week called her “a visionary leader”.
Such comments would have been unthinkable under Corbyn.
He also cited Thatcher in the 2019 general election but said her government “waged a war against working class communities in the 1980s” and warned that “Boris Johnson’s Tories are more of the same.”
Corbyn lost by a landslide to Johnson and then quit as Labour leader.
Citing Thatcher is “a good way to signal that you are a completely changed party,” Sophie Stowers, a British politics researcher at the UK in a Changing Europe think-tank, told AFP.
The approach is also reminiscent of former prime minister Tony Blair’s “New Labour” party of the 1990s and 2000s which embraced some Thatcherite policies.
His successor Gordon Brown even welcomed her to Downing Street.
“It shows a Labour party that is a lot more pragmatic than ideological,” noted Stowers.
Labour enjoys double-digit leads over the Conservatives in opinion polls as the UK waits for current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to announce the date of the election, likely in the second half of the year.
The centre-left outfit is pitching itself as friendly towards business and as responsible stewards of the economy — historically not always seen by voters as the party’s strengths.
It is also drawing parallels between today’s Britain and the one Thatcher — who died in 2013 — took over when she became the UK’s first woman prime minister in May 1979.
– ‘Iron Lady’ –
Then, Britain had just endured the “Winter of Discontent” when widespread industrial action calling for pay rises amid steep inflation resulted in rubbish piled high on streets and bodies left unburied in graveyards.
Today, Britons are feeling the pinch of a cost-of-living crisis sparked by high energy prices and inflation, stifling economic growth and triggering widespread strikes.
Harsher critics say the effect of Tory austerity policies going back to 2010 are still being felt.
Labour’s finance spokeswoman Rachel Reeves said this week that the UK stood “at an inflection point” like it did “at the end of the 1970s,” which paved the way for Thatcher’s radical free-market economic reforms.
Starmer, 61, wrote in the right-wing Sunday Telegraph last year that Thatcher had “sought to drag Britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurialism”.
The “Iron Lady” remains beloved by the right for privatising state-owned companies, reducing the influence of trade unions and deregulating Britain’s financial markets.
She is disliked in equal measure by the left for her perceived callous disregard for working-class communities as she closed down swathes of heavy industry, particularly mines.
Experts consider Labour’s recent remarks about her to be nuanced, given the strength of feeling she still provokes.
Reeves did not mention Thatcher specifically while Starmer’s article cited her alongside Blair and Clement Atlee, Labour prime minister from 1945-51.
– ‘Rewriting’ history –
Starmer later clarified that he was only stressing Thatcher’s “sense of purpose” and did not agree with her.
Lammy caveated his remarks to Politico by adding that “you can take issue with Mrs Thatcher’s prescription”.
“You will struggle to find something that looks like an endorsement or big praise for Margaret Thatcher’s legacy. They are very careful with their language”, Karl Pike, politics expert at Queen Mary University of London, told AFP.
Nevertheless, left-wingers were angered. Campaign group Momentum, which backed Corbyn, said the current Labour leadership was “out of touch with the Labour movement and Labour values”.
“We want to overturn Thatcher’s disastrous settlement, not recreate it,” it said of Reeves’s speech.
Richard Leonard, the former leader of Scottish Labour, added: “No rewriting of history. Thatcher didn’t renew the economy, she broke it.”
The comments have also given the pro-independence Scottish National Party an attack line as it tries to remain the largest party in Scotland, where Thatcher remains deeply unpopular.
The SNP leader in the UK parliament, Stephen Flynn, mocked the Labour frontbench as “born-again Thatcherites” this week.
Stowers said Labour’s approach risks alienating some voters but it is one the polls suggest they can afford to take.
“They’ve got quite a lot of leg room,” she added.
By AFP
March 23, 2024
Labour leader Keir Starmer, likely the UK's next prime minister, with his finance spokeswoman Rachel Reeves - Copyright AFP Paul ELLIS
Peter HUTCHISON
Margaret Thatcher remains despised by many on the left of British politics, but the main Labour opposition seems comfortable citing her as it woos the right before this year’s election.
Labour leader Keir Starmer and senior colleagues have recently referenced the Conservative icon, highlighting the party’s shift to the centre since Starmer succeeded left-winger Jeremy Corbyn.
In December, Starmer described Thatcher as effecting “meaningful change” in the UK during her controversial 1979-1990 premiership while foreign affairs spokesman David Lammy this week called her “a visionary leader”.
Such comments would have been unthinkable under Corbyn.
He also cited Thatcher in the 2019 general election but said her government “waged a war against working class communities in the 1980s” and warned that “Boris Johnson’s Tories are more of the same.”
Corbyn lost by a landslide to Johnson and then quit as Labour leader.
Citing Thatcher is “a good way to signal that you are a completely changed party,” Sophie Stowers, a British politics researcher at the UK in a Changing Europe think-tank, told AFP.
The approach is also reminiscent of former prime minister Tony Blair’s “New Labour” party of the 1990s and 2000s which embraced some Thatcherite policies.
His successor Gordon Brown even welcomed her to Downing Street.
“It shows a Labour party that is a lot more pragmatic than ideological,” noted Stowers.
Labour enjoys double-digit leads over the Conservatives in opinion polls as the UK waits for current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to announce the date of the election, likely in the second half of the year.
The centre-left outfit is pitching itself as friendly towards business and as responsible stewards of the economy — historically not always seen by voters as the party’s strengths.
It is also drawing parallels between today’s Britain and the one Thatcher — who died in 2013 — took over when she became the UK’s first woman prime minister in May 1979.
– ‘Iron Lady’ –
Then, Britain had just endured the “Winter of Discontent” when widespread industrial action calling for pay rises amid steep inflation resulted in rubbish piled high on streets and bodies left unburied in graveyards.
Today, Britons are feeling the pinch of a cost-of-living crisis sparked by high energy prices and inflation, stifling economic growth and triggering widespread strikes.
Harsher critics say the effect of Tory austerity policies going back to 2010 are still being felt.
Labour’s finance spokeswoman Rachel Reeves said this week that the UK stood “at an inflection point” like it did “at the end of the 1970s,” which paved the way for Thatcher’s radical free-market economic reforms.
Starmer, 61, wrote in the right-wing Sunday Telegraph last year that Thatcher had “sought to drag Britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurialism”.
The “Iron Lady” remains beloved by the right for privatising state-owned companies, reducing the influence of trade unions and deregulating Britain’s financial markets.
She is disliked in equal measure by the left for her perceived callous disregard for working-class communities as she closed down swathes of heavy industry, particularly mines.
Experts consider Labour’s recent remarks about her to be nuanced, given the strength of feeling she still provokes.
Reeves did not mention Thatcher specifically while Starmer’s article cited her alongside Blair and Clement Atlee, Labour prime minister from 1945-51.
– ‘Rewriting’ history –
Starmer later clarified that he was only stressing Thatcher’s “sense of purpose” and did not agree with her.
Lammy caveated his remarks to Politico by adding that “you can take issue with Mrs Thatcher’s prescription”.
“You will struggle to find something that looks like an endorsement or big praise for Margaret Thatcher’s legacy. They are very careful with their language”, Karl Pike, politics expert at Queen Mary University of London, told AFP.
Nevertheless, left-wingers were angered. Campaign group Momentum, which backed Corbyn, said the current Labour leadership was “out of touch with the Labour movement and Labour values”.
“We want to overturn Thatcher’s disastrous settlement, not recreate it,” it said of Reeves’s speech.
Richard Leonard, the former leader of Scottish Labour, added: “No rewriting of history. Thatcher didn’t renew the economy, she broke it.”
The comments have also given the pro-independence Scottish National Party an attack line as it tries to remain the largest party in Scotland, where Thatcher remains deeply unpopular.
The SNP leader in the UK parliament, Stephen Flynn, mocked the Labour frontbench as “born-again Thatcherites” this week.
Stowers said Labour’s approach risks alienating some voters but it is one the polls suggest they can afford to take.
“They’ve got quite a lot of leg room,” she added.
Hit by worker shortage, German city gets students to drive trams
By AFP
Pauline CURTET
Seated before the tram’s control panel, Benedikt Hanne, 24, deftly steered the red and white wagons, hours before heading to Nuremberg university to study for a social work degree.
As an apprentice, Hanne was watched closely by a trainer, and the tram he drove had no passengers.
But if all goes well, he will soon become a fully-fledged tram driver moving people across Nuremberg in the evenings or at weekends, when he does not have classes to attend.
Squeezed by a serious manpower shortage, public transport operators like Nuremberg’s city service VAG have had to find new sources to expand their pool of workers.
The VAG needs to recruit 160 new drivers annually to run its metro, trams and buses.
For Harald Ruben, who heads the company’s recruitment and training team, it was clear that “we won’t reach this target unless we explore all possible possibilities”.
The transport company put out an advert targeted at university students, offering a part-time job to drive trams outside school hours.
To qualify, they need a regular driver’s licence, be above 21 years of age, and be “reliable and suitable for driving and shift work”.
Many sectors in Germany, like other European countries, are suffering from a serious manpower shortage which is expected to worsen unless urgent measures are taken.
Public transport operators have warned they may have to reduce the number of buses, trams or metros as tens of thousands of jobs are expected to remain vacant in the coming years.
The worker gap has led public transport employees across the country to go on strike in the last weeks to underline their plight, with union Verdi warning of deteriorating conditions.
Many operators are reporting up to 20 to 30 percent unfilled posts, with shortages contributing to a vicious circle of overworked employees who are then falling ill, exacerbating the situation.
Other German cities like Mannheim and Munich have also begun tapping students as potential part-timers to fill public transport gaps.
– ‘Really cool’ –
Hanne never thought he would be driving a tram, until a few weeks back, when he spotted the VAG ad.
He applied immediately, he said, and became one of five recruited. In all, the VAG received 36 applicants.
Dressed in the red and blue uniform of the company, the apprentice drivers are put through an accelerated four-week course that is held during school holidays.
After several hours of theory lessons, the trainees practise on a tram simulator, before moving on to a real tram.
They are also expected to take on extra homework to make up for the accelerated pace of the course, which is half the length of regular training.
After passing a driving test and several days accompanied by a trainer, Hanne will be driving a tram alone for 20 hours a week.
Hanne, whose previous part-time jobs included working at a gas station, said he is unfazed about juggling university courses and work.
“If I can choose, I’d prefer to drive the tram before going to university, so that the day ends with classes,” he said, adding however that he wants “to also work at other times of the day to see different people and situations”.
“It’s just a great feeling, to have all these wagons behind you,” said Hanne.
“My classmates find it really cool, my family too. They’ll catch my tram some day, that’s for sure.”
By AFP
March 23, 2024
Benedikt Hanne is one of five student recruits of the Nuremberg public transport service - Copyright afp/AFP Daniel Karmann
Benedikt Hanne is one of five student recruits of the Nuremberg public transport service - Copyright afp/AFP Daniel Karmann
Pauline CURTET
Seated before the tram’s control panel, Benedikt Hanne, 24, deftly steered the red and white wagons, hours before heading to Nuremberg university to study for a social work degree.
As an apprentice, Hanne was watched closely by a trainer, and the tram he drove had no passengers.
But if all goes well, he will soon become a fully-fledged tram driver moving people across Nuremberg in the evenings or at weekends, when he does not have classes to attend.
Squeezed by a serious manpower shortage, public transport operators like Nuremberg’s city service VAG have had to find new sources to expand their pool of workers.
The VAG needs to recruit 160 new drivers annually to run its metro, trams and buses.
For Harald Ruben, who heads the company’s recruitment and training team, it was clear that “we won’t reach this target unless we explore all possible possibilities”.
The transport company put out an advert targeted at university students, offering a part-time job to drive trams outside school hours.
To qualify, they need a regular driver’s licence, be above 21 years of age, and be “reliable and suitable for driving and shift work”.
Many sectors in Germany, like other European countries, are suffering from a serious manpower shortage which is expected to worsen unless urgent measures are taken.
Public transport operators have warned they may have to reduce the number of buses, trams or metros as tens of thousands of jobs are expected to remain vacant in the coming years.
The worker gap has led public transport employees across the country to go on strike in the last weeks to underline their plight, with union Verdi warning of deteriorating conditions.
Many operators are reporting up to 20 to 30 percent unfilled posts, with shortages contributing to a vicious circle of overworked employees who are then falling ill, exacerbating the situation.
Other German cities like Mannheim and Munich have also begun tapping students as potential part-timers to fill public transport gaps.
– ‘Really cool’ –
Hanne never thought he would be driving a tram, until a few weeks back, when he spotted the VAG ad.
He applied immediately, he said, and became one of five recruited. In all, the VAG received 36 applicants.
Dressed in the red and blue uniform of the company, the apprentice drivers are put through an accelerated four-week course that is held during school holidays.
After several hours of theory lessons, the trainees practise on a tram simulator, before moving on to a real tram.
They are also expected to take on extra homework to make up for the accelerated pace of the course, which is half the length of regular training.
After passing a driving test and several days accompanied by a trainer, Hanne will be driving a tram alone for 20 hours a week.
Hanne, whose previous part-time jobs included working at a gas station, said he is unfazed about juggling university courses and work.
“If I can choose, I’d prefer to drive the tram before going to university, so that the day ends with classes,” he said, adding however that he wants “to also work at other times of the day to see different people and situations”.
“It’s just a great feeling, to have all these wagons behind you,” said Hanne.
“My classmates find it really cool, my family too. They’ll catch my tram some day, that’s for sure.”
Scotland’s tech-driven recycling project rescues old smartphones
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 23, 2024
According to research, 11 percent of smartphones sold worldwide are reconditioned models
According to research, 11 percent of smartphones sold worldwide are reconditioned models
- Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP MARIO TAMA
The World Health Organization reports that electronic waste is rapidly increasing. Of this, smartphones are a significant component, making them one of the largest contributors to e-waste.
The demand for new smartphones means that millions of old devices end up discarded, contributing to a mounting pile of electronic waste. A report revealed that 5.3 billion phones in 2022 may have ended up in landfills.
To partly counter a portion of this e-waste, group of researchers in Scotland are working on a new project to recycle e-waste. If successful, this could be a game-changing solution.
The University of Aberdeen has received a grant of £140,000 from the AXA Research Fund. The research is based around green solvents and the method in the development involves a flow electrochemical cell, engineered for optimal element extraction.
If successful, this technology could reduce some of the problems of e-waste. Experts predict that, by 2030, our world may witness an alarming surge in electronic waste, approximately 75 million metric tons annually.
Beyond this environmental concern, there is also the potential to extract rare elements necessary for the manufacturing industry and other sectors (like cobalt, tungsten, and nickel). The aim is to separate these elements from those electricals efficiently, safely, and environmentally friendly.
By fostering such recycling techniques, products like smartphones are broken down, and their valuable materials are recovered and reintegrated to solve a more critical problem.
Philipp Pratt, a recognized Innovation Expert at Geonode, tells Digital Journal: “This is a revolution towards sustainable practices. As an expert, I can see an incredible potential in recycling and repurposing old smartphones and other electrical waste into an innovative solution.”
Pratt adds: “As we epitomise the potential of this game-changing project, let us be hopeful that soon, your retired smartphone might breathe new life. It’s not only as e-waste but as a harbinger of a greener, more equitable future. It’s a win-win situation: we reduce the environmental damage caused by new extraction and lessen our reliance on finite natural resources while contributing to the supply of essential materials for homes and manufacturing.
The World Health Organization reports that electronic waste is rapidly increasing. Of this, smartphones are a significant component, making them one of the largest contributors to e-waste.
The demand for new smartphones means that millions of old devices end up discarded, contributing to a mounting pile of electronic waste. A report revealed that 5.3 billion phones in 2022 may have ended up in landfills.
To partly counter a portion of this e-waste, group of researchers in Scotland are working on a new project to recycle e-waste. If successful, this could be a game-changing solution.
The University of Aberdeen has received a grant of £140,000 from the AXA Research Fund. The research is based around green solvents and the method in the development involves a flow electrochemical cell, engineered for optimal element extraction.
If successful, this technology could reduce some of the problems of e-waste. Experts predict that, by 2030, our world may witness an alarming surge in electronic waste, approximately 75 million metric tons annually.
Beyond this environmental concern, there is also the potential to extract rare elements necessary for the manufacturing industry and other sectors (like cobalt, tungsten, and nickel). The aim is to separate these elements from those electricals efficiently, safely, and environmentally friendly.
By fostering such recycling techniques, products like smartphones are broken down, and their valuable materials are recovered and reintegrated to solve a more critical problem.
Philipp Pratt, a recognized Innovation Expert at Geonode, tells Digital Journal: “This is a revolution towards sustainable practices. As an expert, I can see an incredible potential in recycling and repurposing old smartphones and other electrical waste into an innovative solution.”
Pratt adds: “As we epitomise the potential of this game-changing project, let us be hopeful that soon, your retired smartphone might breathe new life. It’s not only as e-waste but as a harbinger of a greener, more equitable future. It’s a win-win situation: we reduce the environmental damage caused by new extraction and lessen our reliance on finite natural resources while contributing to the supply of essential materials for homes and manufacturing.
AI and the spread of fake news sites: How can we counteract them?
ByDr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
ByDr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 22, 2024
This online disinformation campaign blamed on Russia involves not just the spreading of anti-Ukrainian fake news but also challenges Western media outlets to verify it - Copyright AFP Federico Parra
Around the world concerns are growing about types of misinformation spread through the use of artificial intelligence. In particular, malicious sites are becoming more sophisticated and distinguishing genuine news sites from fake ones can be challenging.
According to the BBC: “There are hundreds of fake news websites out there, from those which deliberately imitate real life newspapers, to government propaganda sites, and even those which tread the line between satire and plain misinformation.”
The advance of AI programs, especially Large Language Models (LLMs), which train to write fluent-reading text using vast data sets, have made the task of differentiating between sites more difficult. For example, the instant video generator Sora, which produces highly detailed, Hollywood-quality clips, further raises concerns about the easy spread of fake footage.
Virginia Tech researchers have outlined two different facets of the AI-fuelled spread of fake news sites. Then researchers have provided updates to Digital Journal.
The first area comes from Cayce Myers on what legal measures can and cannot achieve. Myers says, about the current concerns: “Regulating disinformation in political campaigns presents a multitude of practical and legal issues. Despite these challenges, there is a global recognition that something needs to be done. This is vitally important given that the U.S., U.K., India, and the E.U. all have important elections in 2024, which will likely see a host of disinformation posted throughout social media.”
Myers highlights deepfakes, which are easy to create and disseminate, as posing logistical problems. He states: “Technological developments such as Sora show why so many people are concerned about the connection between AI and disinformation.”
The second point comes from Julia Feerrar, concerning how to guard against disinformation. Feerrar notes: “AI-generated and other false or misleading online content can look very much like quality content. As AI continues to evolve and improve, we need strategies to detect fake articles, videos, and images that don’t just rely on how they look.”
Feerrar recommends assessing whether news comes from a reputable, professional news organization or from a website or account that looks suspicious.
Feerrar recommends the following approaches when evaluating the veracity of digital news articles:Fake news content is often designed to appeal to our emotions — it’s important to take a pause when something online sparks a big emotional reaction.
Verify headlines and image content by adding fact-check to your Google search.
Very generic website titles can be a red flag for AI-generated news.
Some generated articles have contained error text that says things along the lines of being ‘unable to fulfill this request’ because creating the article violated the AI tool’s usage policy. Some sites with little human oversight may miss deleting these messages.
Current red flags for AI-generated images include a hyper-real, strange appearance overall, and unreal-looking hands and feet.
Pixelated traces: Is your digital footprint putting you at risk of a scam?
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL; JOURNAL
March 23, 2024
The new law will safeguard journalists' sources and their content published online - Copyright AFP/File Roslan RAHMAN
During Spring many people tidy up and deep clean their houses. Yet it’s not only the physical world where you need to tidy up; the virtual realm is full of cybercriminals and would-be scammers waiting to steal data and money, and a messy digital footprint could be all the opening they need.
When we go online, we inevitably leave a data trail behind us. This includes information about the websites we have visited, the emails we’ve sent, and our social media activity. This trail of information can reveal our individual preferences, professional networks, habits, and even where you live – none of which you want to fall into a scammer’s hands.
Some useful advice has been sent to Digital Journal via the firmIncreditools.
Cookies
If a box pops up on a new website asking you to accept cookies, do not click ‘accept’ without thinking. If you do, you will be freely giving away your data, which may then be sold on. Your personal information is invaluable to businesses for targeted advertising.
To protect yourself, click ‘reject all’ or ‘manage’, and refuse as many cookies as you can.
Data theft
Cybercriminals want you to reveal sensitive information so they can steal your identity and obtain credit in your name, or log into your bank account and steal your money. Some also try to get you to download malware so they can control your computer and ransom money from you to get control back.
Update
To start to digitally spring clean, begin by reviewing and updating online accounts, deleting or deactivating any that you no longer use. Update your privacy and security settings on Google, making them as secure as possible, and then do the same across the social media platforms you use, making sure your personal information will only be shared with those you trust.
The importance of regularly changing your passwords and using a random password generator to make sure your password is uncrackable. Storing all your passwords in a password manager will let you have super-secure accounts without having to remember hundreds of strings of random letters and numbers.
Exercise an extreme amount of caution with any email or message that requests personal information or urges immediate action.
Furthermore, you should also update your software and applications regularly with the newest patches, as many of these updates are designed to defend you against malware and hacking attempts. Always choose to activate two-factor authentication if you can, and research reputable cybersecurity tools, such as antivirus software and secure browsers
This online disinformation campaign blamed on Russia involves not just the spreading of anti-Ukrainian fake news but also challenges Western media outlets to verify it - Copyright AFP Federico Parra
Around the world concerns are growing about types of misinformation spread through the use of artificial intelligence. In particular, malicious sites are becoming more sophisticated and distinguishing genuine news sites from fake ones can be challenging.
According to the BBC: “There are hundreds of fake news websites out there, from those which deliberately imitate real life newspapers, to government propaganda sites, and even those which tread the line between satire and plain misinformation.”
The advance of AI programs, especially Large Language Models (LLMs), which train to write fluent-reading text using vast data sets, have made the task of differentiating between sites more difficult. For example, the instant video generator Sora, which produces highly detailed, Hollywood-quality clips, further raises concerns about the easy spread of fake footage.
Virginia Tech researchers have outlined two different facets of the AI-fuelled spread of fake news sites. Then researchers have provided updates to Digital Journal.
The first area comes from Cayce Myers on what legal measures can and cannot achieve. Myers says, about the current concerns: “Regulating disinformation in political campaigns presents a multitude of practical and legal issues. Despite these challenges, there is a global recognition that something needs to be done. This is vitally important given that the U.S., U.K., India, and the E.U. all have important elections in 2024, which will likely see a host of disinformation posted throughout social media.”
Myers highlights deepfakes, which are easy to create and disseminate, as posing logistical problems. He states: “Technological developments such as Sora show why so many people are concerned about the connection between AI and disinformation.”
The second point comes from Julia Feerrar, concerning how to guard against disinformation. Feerrar notes: “AI-generated and other false or misleading online content can look very much like quality content. As AI continues to evolve and improve, we need strategies to detect fake articles, videos, and images that don’t just rely on how they look.”
Feerrar recommends assessing whether news comes from a reputable, professional news organization or from a website or account that looks suspicious.
Feerrar recommends the following approaches when evaluating the veracity of digital news articles:Fake news content is often designed to appeal to our emotions — it’s important to take a pause when something online sparks a big emotional reaction.
Verify headlines and image content by adding fact-check to your Google search.
Very generic website titles can be a red flag for AI-generated news.
Some generated articles have contained error text that says things along the lines of being ‘unable to fulfill this request’ because creating the article violated the AI tool’s usage policy. Some sites with little human oversight may miss deleting these messages.
Current red flags for AI-generated images include a hyper-real, strange appearance overall, and unreal-looking hands and feet.
Pixelated traces: Is your digital footprint putting you at risk of a scam?
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL; JOURNAL
March 23, 2024
The new law will safeguard journalists' sources and their content published online - Copyright AFP/File Roslan RAHMAN
During Spring many people tidy up and deep clean their houses. Yet it’s not only the physical world where you need to tidy up; the virtual realm is full of cybercriminals and would-be scammers waiting to steal data and money, and a messy digital footprint could be all the opening they need.
When we go online, we inevitably leave a data trail behind us. This includes information about the websites we have visited, the emails we’ve sent, and our social media activity. This trail of information can reveal our individual preferences, professional networks, habits, and even where you live – none of which you want to fall into a scammer’s hands.
Some useful advice has been sent to Digital Journal via the firmIncreditools.
Cookies
If a box pops up on a new website asking you to accept cookies, do not click ‘accept’ without thinking. If you do, you will be freely giving away your data, which may then be sold on. Your personal information is invaluable to businesses for targeted advertising.
To protect yourself, click ‘reject all’ or ‘manage’, and refuse as many cookies as you can.
Data theft
Cybercriminals want you to reveal sensitive information so they can steal your identity and obtain credit in your name, or log into your bank account and steal your money. Some also try to get you to download malware so they can control your computer and ransom money from you to get control back.
Update
To start to digitally spring clean, begin by reviewing and updating online accounts, deleting or deactivating any that you no longer use. Update your privacy and security settings on Google, making them as secure as possible, and then do the same across the social media platforms you use, making sure your personal information will only be shared with those you trust.
The importance of regularly changing your passwords and using a random password generator to make sure your password is uncrackable. Storing all your passwords in a password manager will let you have super-secure accounts without having to remember hundreds of strings of random letters and numbers.
Exercise an extreme amount of caution with any email or message that requests personal information or urges immediate action.
Furthermore, you should also update your software and applications regularly with the newest patches, as many of these updates are designed to defend you against malware and hacking attempts. Always choose to activate two-factor authentication if you can, and research reputable cybersecurity tools, such as antivirus software and secure browsers
Son of slain Mexican presidential candidate forges own political path
ByAFP
March 23, 2024
Mexican presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta at a political rally before his murder in 1994
ByAFP
March 23, 2024
Mexican presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta at a political rally before his murder in 1994
- Copyright AFP/File FILES
Daniel Rook and Samir Tounsi
Three decades after his father was assassinated while running for president, Luis Donaldo Colosio Riojas is himself a rising Mexican political star — and he wants a pardon for the convicted killer.
The budding politician was just eight when his father, Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta, was shot in the head during a chaotic electoral rally in Tijuana, near the US border, in an attack that stunned the nation.
Once touted as a possible presidential candidate like his father, the 38-year-old ruled himself out of that race — at least this time — and is instead running for Senate in June elections.
Colosio Murrieta’s murder on March 23, 1994 is seen as a pivotal moment in Mexican political history.
Little more than a fortnight earlier, he had delivered a speech that was interpreted as criticism of the corrupt old guard of his then-hegemonic Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
“The origin of many of our evils lies in an excessive concentration of power… I see a Mexico that is hungry and thirsty for justice,” he said.
As with the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy, Colosio Murrieta’s murder unleashed a storm of conspiracy theories about who was behind it.
The attack was the focus of the 2019 Netflix television series “Crime Diaries: The Candidate.”
Mario Aburto, now 53, is the only person imprisoned for the killing of Colosio Murrieta, who was seen as a shoo-in for president.
According to investigators, Aburto admitted to the crime and said that he acted alone.
A working class resident of Tijuana who was not known as a political activist, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison, where he remains today.
In a double tragedy, Colosio Riojas’s mother died of pancreatic cancer months after the assassination.
He and his sister were adopted by their maternal aunt, who this month also lost a battle with cancer.
In a video posted on Instagram, Colosio Riojas paid an emotional tribute to the woman he called his “second mother” and who “in the worst moment of my life, saved my life.”
Along with an uprising by Zapatista rebels that year, the murder shook international confidence in Mexico’s stability, coming months after a landmark free trade agreement with the United States and Canada took effect.
The PRI scrambled to choose another candidate, Ernesto Zedillo, who won the presidency in 1994.
But the following election six years later brought a stunning end to seven decades of rule by a party once described by Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa as a “perfect dictatorship.”
– ‘Name recognition’ –
Colosio Riojas has enjoyed a rising political profile since 2021 when he was elected mayor of the industrial city of Monterrey, capital of the northeastern state of Nuevo Leon.
He is now seeking a seat in the Senate — not as a representative of the PRI but for the Citizens’ Movement, a center-left minority party created by former PRI members.
“Because of Colosio Jr.’s name recognition and the party’s standing in Nuevo Leon, he is likely to be elected to the Senate and remain a visible figure in local and national politics,” political risk advisory firm EMPRA wrote in a research note.
Colosio Riojas made headlines in January when he asked for a pardon for Aburto from President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who rejected the idea.
Addressing the issue again this month, Colosio Riojas said: “I forgive that person, may God bless him, may he be free and leave Mexico, and may he allow us to heal as a nation.”
Colosio Murrieta’s assassination has long been considered one of Mexico’s greatest mysteries.
The original lead investigator, Judge Miguel Montes, initially said that it was the result of a conspiracy.
He then reversed himself, finding that Aburto acted alone.
Decades later, the plot continues to take twists and turns.
In January, a judge threw out evidence presented by the attorney general’s office against an alleged second gunman suspected of having acted with the complicity of a now-defunct government intelligence service.
These days, attacks on politicians — particularly at the local level — are common in Mexico due to violence linked to corruption and the multibillion-dollar narcotics trade.
Explaining his decision not to run for president, Colosio Jr. said that “the most selfish reason of all but perhaps the most important” was his children.
“They are my whole world, and they need a dad.”
In 2030, when Mexico will hold another presidential election, Colosio Riojas will be 44 years old — the same age as his father when he was killed.
Daniel Rook and Samir Tounsi
Three decades after his father was assassinated while running for president, Luis Donaldo Colosio Riojas is himself a rising Mexican political star — and he wants a pardon for the convicted killer.
The budding politician was just eight when his father, Luis Donaldo Colosio Murrieta, was shot in the head during a chaotic electoral rally in Tijuana, near the US border, in an attack that stunned the nation.
Once touted as a possible presidential candidate like his father, the 38-year-old ruled himself out of that race — at least this time — and is instead running for Senate in June elections.
Colosio Murrieta’s murder on March 23, 1994 is seen as a pivotal moment in Mexican political history.
Little more than a fortnight earlier, he had delivered a speech that was interpreted as criticism of the corrupt old guard of his then-hegemonic Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
“The origin of many of our evils lies in an excessive concentration of power… I see a Mexico that is hungry and thirsty for justice,” he said.
As with the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy, Colosio Murrieta’s murder unleashed a storm of conspiracy theories about who was behind it.
The attack was the focus of the 2019 Netflix television series “Crime Diaries: The Candidate.”
Mario Aburto, now 53, is the only person imprisoned for the killing of Colosio Murrieta, who was seen as a shoo-in for president.
According to investigators, Aburto admitted to the crime and said that he acted alone.
A working class resident of Tijuana who was not known as a political activist, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison, where he remains today.
In a double tragedy, Colosio Riojas’s mother died of pancreatic cancer months after the assassination.
He and his sister were adopted by their maternal aunt, who this month also lost a battle with cancer.
In a video posted on Instagram, Colosio Riojas paid an emotional tribute to the woman he called his “second mother” and who “in the worst moment of my life, saved my life.”
Along with an uprising by Zapatista rebels that year, the murder shook international confidence in Mexico’s stability, coming months after a landmark free trade agreement with the United States and Canada took effect.
The PRI scrambled to choose another candidate, Ernesto Zedillo, who won the presidency in 1994.
But the following election six years later brought a stunning end to seven decades of rule by a party once described by Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa as a “perfect dictatorship.”
– ‘Name recognition’ –
Colosio Riojas has enjoyed a rising political profile since 2021 when he was elected mayor of the industrial city of Monterrey, capital of the northeastern state of Nuevo Leon.
He is now seeking a seat in the Senate — not as a representative of the PRI but for the Citizens’ Movement, a center-left minority party created by former PRI members.
“Because of Colosio Jr.’s name recognition and the party’s standing in Nuevo Leon, he is likely to be elected to the Senate and remain a visible figure in local and national politics,” political risk advisory firm EMPRA wrote in a research note.
Colosio Riojas made headlines in January when he asked for a pardon for Aburto from President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who rejected the idea.
Addressing the issue again this month, Colosio Riojas said: “I forgive that person, may God bless him, may he be free and leave Mexico, and may he allow us to heal as a nation.”
Colosio Murrieta’s assassination has long been considered one of Mexico’s greatest mysteries.
The original lead investigator, Judge Miguel Montes, initially said that it was the result of a conspiracy.
He then reversed himself, finding that Aburto acted alone.
Decades later, the plot continues to take twists and turns.
In January, a judge threw out evidence presented by the attorney general’s office against an alleged second gunman suspected of having acted with the complicity of a now-defunct government intelligence service.
These days, attacks on politicians — particularly at the local level — are common in Mexico due to violence linked to corruption and the multibillion-dollar narcotics trade.
Explaining his decision not to run for president, Colosio Jr. said that “the most selfish reason of all but perhaps the most important” was his children.
“They are my whole world, and they need a dad.”
In 2030, when Mexico will hold another presidential election, Colosio Riojas will be 44 years old — the same age as his father when he was killed.
Saturday, March 23, 2024
Filmstrip, Hungary's old-school projectors children love
Budapest (AFP) – Tablets and mobile phones may have to be prised from the fingers of children elsewhere, but in Hungary storytime can be all about a 100-year-old piece of tech -- filmstrip.
Issued on: 24/03/2024 -
Generations of kids there have been enthralled with stories told with the help of a projector.
Alexandra Csosz-Horvath turns off the lights and reads "Sleeping Beauty" from a series of still captioned images projected onto the bedroom wall -- her three- and seven-year-old clearly under her spell.
"We're together, it's cozier than the cinema yet it's better than a book," said the 44-year-old lawyer.
Filmstrip -- a century-old storytelling medium that was killed off in the West by the video cassette in the 1980s -- is not just hanging on in Hungary, it is thriving with a new wave of enthusiasts charmed by its slower-paced entertainment.
Printed on rolls of film, the still images were never meant to move.
Long tradition
"Between the 1940s and the 1980s filmstrips were used worldwide as a cost-effective visualisation tool in education and other fields," Levente Borsos, of Seoul's Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, told AFP.
But while it was surpassed by more advanced technologies in the West, it became a popular form of home entertainment in the Soviet bloc where TVs and videos were harder to come by.
Budapest (AFP) – Tablets and mobile phones may have to be prised from the fingers of children elsewhere, but in Hungary storytime can be all about a 100-year-old piece of tech -- filmstrip.
Issued on: 24/03/2024 -
The Csosz-Horvath children (and their cuddly toys) get ready for bed with a filmstrip story
Generations of kids there have been enthralled with stories told with the help of a projector.
Alexandra Csosz-Horvath turns off the lights and reads "Sleeping Beauty" from a series of still captioned images projected onto the bedroom wall -- her three- and seven-year-old clearly under her spell.
"We're together, it's cozier than the cinema yet it's better than a book," said the 44-year-old lawyer.
Filmstrip -- a century-old storytelling medium that was killed off in the West by the video cassette in the 1980s -- is not just hanging on in Hungary, it is thriving with a new wave of enthusiasts charmed by its slower-paced entertainment.
Printed on rolls of film, the still images were never meant to move.
Long tradition
"Between the 1940s and the 1980s filmstrips were used worldwide as a cost-effective visualisation tool in education and other fields," Levente Borsos, of Seoul's Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, told AFP.
But while it was surpassed by more advanced technologies in the West, it became a popular form of home entertainment in the Soviet bloc where TVs and videos were harder to come by.
Hungarian mother Alexandra Csosz-Horvath prepares to show a filmstrip story
© ATTILA KISBENEDEK / AFP
When communism collapsed, filmstrip began to disappear -- except in Hungary, where the since privatised Diafilmgyarto company survives as the country's sole producer.
"Continuous filmstrip publishing and slide shows at home can be considered a Hungarian peculiarity, a special part of the country's cultural heritage," Borsos said.
Revival
Producer Diafilmgyarto has seen sales rebound from 60,000 in the 1990s to 230,000 rolls last year.
Each film -- produced solely for the domestic market -- costs around five euros ($5.50), less than a cinema ticket. Most are adaptations of classic fairy tales or children's books.
One bestseller, Hungarian classic "The Old Lady and the Fawn" about a woman taking care of a young deer, has been in the top 10 since its release in 1957, according to Diafilmgyarto's managing director Gabriella Lendvai.
The company also commissions artists, including some famous Hungarians, to create exclusive content for its filmstrips.
It's "an irreplaceable tradition in Hungarian culture", said Beata Hajdu-Toth, who attended a recent filmstrip screening in a Budapest cinema along with her son to celebrate Diafilmgyarto's 70th anniversary.
"I am very happy it's part of our life and hopefully I will be able to narrate to my grandchildren as well," the 37-year-old added.
At her home in the Budapest suburbs, Csosz-Horvath also hails the tradition, preferring it to fast-paced cartoons, which she said drive the children "wild".
When communism collapsed, filmstrip began to disappear -- except in Hungary, where the since privatised Diafilmgyarto company survives as the country's sole producer.
"Continuous filmstrip publishing and slide shows at home can be considered a Hungarian peculiarity, a special part of the country's cultural heritage," Borsos said.
Revival
Producer Diafilmgyarto has seen sales rebound from 60,000 in the 1990s to 230,000 rolls last year.
Each film -- produced solely for the domestic market -- costs around five euros ($5.50), less than a cinema ticket. Most are adaptations of classic fairy tales or children's books.
One bestseller, Hungarian classic "The Old Lady and the Fawn" about a woman taking care of a young deer, has been in the top 10 since its release in 1957, according to Diafilmgyarto's managing director Gabriella Lendvai.
The company also commissions artists, including some famous Hungarians, to create exclusive content for its filmstrips.
It's "an irreplaceable tradition in Hungarian culture", said Beata Hajdu-Toth, who attended a recent filmstrip screening in a Budapest cinema along with her son to celebrate Diafilmgyarto's 70th anniversary.
"I am very happy it's part of our life and hopefully I will be able to narrate to my grandchildren as well," the 37-year-old added.
At her home in the Budapest suburbs, Csosz-Horvath also hails the tradition, preferring it to fast-paced cartoons, which she said drive the children "wild".
Three generations of the Hungarian Csosz-Horvath family gather to watch the filmstrip show
© ATTILA KISBENEDEK / AFP
"They just can't understand that what happens in three seconds on the screen happens in three hours in real life," she said.
With filmstrips "they don't believe that everything happens in the blink of an eye."
© 2024 AFP
"They just can't understand that what happens in three seconds on the screen happens in three hours in real life," she said.
With filmstrips "they don't believe that everything happens in the blink of an eye."
© 2024 AFP
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