Tuesday, August 06, 2024

Meta apologises for removing Malaysia PM posts on Haniyeh's assassination

While the PM's office condemned the initial removal as a suppression of free expression, the tech giant attributed it to an operational error.



Others

Anwar's office had described Meta's removal of the posts as "a blatant suppression of free expression". / Photo: Others

Tech giant Meta has apologised for removing social media posts by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim about the assassination of Hamas politburo leader Ismail Haniyeh.

The apology came on Tuesday, a day after Anwar's office summoned Meta representatives to seek an explanation on why the leader's Facebook and Instagram posts about Haniyeh's death had been removed.

Meta is the parent firm of the two popular social media platforms.

"We apologise for an operational error where content from the Prime Minister's Facebook and Instagram Pages were removed," Meta said in a statement.

"The content has since been restored with the correct newsworthy label."

'Suppression of free expression'

The political leader of Palestinian resistance group Hamas was killed in the Iranian capital Tehran on Wednesday in an attack attributed to Israel.

Anwar's posts included a video showing the premier on a phone call with a Hamas official, offering his condolences.

On Instagram, there was a note by Meta, shared by Anwar, that the posts were taken down because of association with "dangerous individuals and organisations."

Anwar's office had described Meta's removal of the posts as "a blatant suppression of free expression" and demanded an apology from the tech behemoth.

Anwar last week accused the tech giant of "cowardice" for removing his posts.

Anwar, who met Haniyeh in Qatar in May, has defended Malaysia's ties with Hamas.
Several countries issue UK travel advisory amid far-right violence

Malaysia was the first nation to issue a travel warning on the UK, as far-right mobs target asylum seekers and ethnic minority communities across the country.




Reuters

A storm of anti-Muslim disinformation on social media has fuelled far-right violence in the aftermath of the fatal stabbing attack in the northern English seaside town of Southport on July 29. / Photo: Reuters


Malaysia, Australia and Nigeria have issued travel advisory to their citizens amid riots in the UK.


“Malaysians residing in or travelling to the United Kingdom are urged to stay away from protest areas, remain vigilant and follow the latest updates and guidance provided by local authorities, ” the Malaysian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on late Sunday.


Malaysia is the first nation to issue a travel warning on the UK, since the latter saw the worst wave of riots in 13 years, with far-right demonstrators targeting asylum seekers and ethnic minority communities across the country.


In Canberra, the government urged Australian citizens to avoid areas where protests are occurring "due to the potential for disruption and violence."


"Monitor the media for information and updates. Follow the instructions of local authorities," the Foreign Minister said in a n advisory to Australian nationals.


Kuala Lumpur said it was “closely monitoring the series of protests currently taking place in several areas" of the UK.

Later on Monday, Nigeria also issued a travel warning to citizens planning to visit Britain to be extra vigilant and take measures, according to a Foreign Ministry statement.

"Avoid political processions and protest, rallies or marches. Avoid crowded areas large gatherings and be vigilant and self-aware all times," the advisory warned.




Far-right violence

A storm of anti-Muslim disinformation on social media has fuelled far-right violence in the aftermath of the fatal stabbing attack in the northern English seaside town of Southport on July 29.


False reports spread by extremist far-right social media accounts claimed the suspect was a Muslim and a migrant, which were echoed in the mob’s Islamophobic vitriolic chants.


Police have so far said the suspect is a 17-year-old man who was born in Cardiff, the capital of Wales, and lived in a village near Southport.


The Malaysian Foreign Ministry urged its citizens to register their presence with the Southeast Asian nation’s diplomatic mission in London



'Islamophobia driving far-right riots in UK': Muslim Council leader

Anxiety and fear are palpable among British Muslims, says the head of the Muslim Council of Britain.


Reuters
Police officers operate outside a hotel during an anti-immigration protest in Rotherham, August 4, 2024. / Photo: Reuters

Britain reeled under the worst riots in 13 years as far-right vandals clashed with police, targeted mosques and looted stores following last week’s fatal stabbing of three children in Southport.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has blamed “far-right thuggery” by a “tiny mindless minority” for the unrest that has gripped Liverpool, Lancaster, Leeds, Birmingham, Hull and Belfast, among other cities.

In order to quell rumours on social media that sparked the protests—that the attacker was a Muslim immigrant—a judge ordered that the suspect’s identity be revealed. “Continuing to prevent full reporting at this stage has the disadvantage of allowing others who are up to mischief to continue to spread misinformation in a vacuum,” said Liverpool judge Andrew Menary.

The suspect Axel Rudakubana—a teenager born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents—turned out to be neither Muslim nor a migrant to the UK.



Speaking to TRT World, Secretary-General of the Muslim Council of Britain Zara Mohammed says the situation is tense for Muslims in the UK.

“The anxiety and fear is palpable. Muslims had nothing to do with the murders in Southport, but they’re still attacking mosques. How does that make sense? I think it’s the hierarchy of racism where Muslims are not seen as important, and I think that’s the challenge,” she says.

Yet the misinformation campaigns linking the attacks to Muslims continued, and conservative talk show guests complained about the ‘Islamification of Britain,’ even after the suspect’s identity was revealed.

Some of the posts shared by these far-right groups and individuals on social media included slogans like: “We need our country back”, and “Enough is enough.”

“It’s both Islamophobic and anti-migrant rhetoric because they’re linked,” says Mohammed.

“They’re saying [Muslims] are not British. That we’re not part of this community, we’re coming from the outside to take over, creating criminality and threats. I think what's missing in some of the reporting on the riots is calling these attacks ‘Islamophobic’...Many Muslims feel that just because they're Muslim, nobody cares.”

UK leader Keir Starmer warns far-right groups they will "regret" participating in England's worst rioting in 13 years

On August 1, the MCB hosted a webinar on mosque security, with an appearance by Imam Ibrahim Hussein from Southport Mosque, who was inside the mosque when it was attacked on July 30.

“The mosque management has been very concerned about security measures regarding these far-right thugs breaking in and smashing windows and doors,” says Mohammed.

“But they’re also afraid of attacks on local community centres, shops, elderly programs, summer school classes. It’s quite terrifying, but we’ve told everyone to remain calm, work with the police and keep their congregations informed.”

Next month, the MCB will host a Visit My Mosque programme, inviting non-Muslims to visit places of worship to help clear misconceptions.

“It’s important to see it as a broad coalition of work that we all have to do. We have to keep challenging harmful narratives. We have to use mainstream media to channel our message, talk to our interfaith allies, and work with community groups,” says Mohammed.

She also believes there needs to be greater accountability regarding misinformation on social media.

“Politicians like Nigel Farage need to be taken to task and be made accountable for spreading fake news. I think what’s different this time around is that they’re using WhatsApp, Telegram, Facebook, and Twitter—and what’s so crazy and scary is how fast they’re able to gather. We’ve seen the rise of the far-right and Tommy Robinson-kind-of-figures, and while they’ve done these kinds of protests before, we’ve never seen anything as aggressive as it is now.”

The Role of Ancient DNA in Modern Traits


 
 August 6, 2024
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Image Source: geralt – CC0

Ancient human retrovirus DNA could be one of the markers of susceptibility to mental illness—specifically schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder, a new study suggests.

An international team of researchers examined 732 post-mortem brain samples and identified variations in DNA associated with different psychiatric conditions, which they cross-referenced with data from large genetic studies. The research appears in Nature Communications, May 22, 2024.

In a summary of their work for a nonspecialist audience, three of the study authors report that their research is the first to show that ancient viral DNA is one of the avenues through which genetic susceptibility to psychiatric disorders may occur. They are careful not to attribute causality here, but to note that their findings “suggest” a link that deserves further exploration.

Human Endogenous Retroviruses

The ancient viral DNA is called human endogenous retroviruses, or HERVs, and makes up about 8 percent of the human genome. HERVs are DNA sequences that originated as viral infections millions of years ago and evolved in mammals through genetic mutations and deletions over time. Retroviruses are those that infect cells by inserting a copy of their own genes into the cell DNA.

First identified in the 1980s, HERVs have been characterized as “viral fossils”that continue to be passed on to modern generations. At first, HERVs were considered to be “junk DNA,” with no known functions. As genomic technology advanced, scientists identified some specific roles for HERVs, such as producing RNA (ribonucleic acid) molecules that lead to proteins, and possibly regulating neighboring genes.

Most HERVs are thought to be inert, but some are known to play an active role in human physiology. For example, two known beneficial HERVs are those involved in the formation of the placenta and in embryogenesis, helping to make pregnancy possible. Other HERVs have been detected in some types of cancer, and research is beginning to look at how to target and possibly control these HERVs to treat the cancer.

HERV Variations and Mental Illness

The new findings reported in Nature Communications looked at how variations in HERVs are involved in regulating neighboring neurological genes in specific, finely mapped locations in the genome known to be associated with psychiatric conditions. Their approach identified HERVs in the adult brains of Africans and Europeans who had a psychiatric diagnosis at the time of their death.

“It is not clear yet how the expression of the high confidence risk HERVs may play a role in psychiatric disorders,” the authors write. However, they found that some of the 1,238 HERVs identified in the brain were associated with “risk for complex psychiatric traits.”

The new research is important for advancing our understanding of mental illness and possibly finding new ways to treat it. Older studies dating back to the 1960s identified a link between genetics and mental illness, but no specific mechanism for heritability. Much of the research came from adoption and twin studies carried out in Denmark over a decade by a joint U.S. and Danish research team.

Led by psychiatrist Seymour S. Kety at Harvard Medical School, the Danish studies spanned 1968 to 1994. Although the studies are generally accepted in the field as supporting a genetic basis for schizophrenia, there are some who challenge this, questioning the methodology and subjective interpretation of the data. Criticisms of the Danish twin studies point to the fact that control group adoptees were placed in more favorable environments than the study subjects, that the study did not include environmental variables, and that the definition of schizophrenia and its spectrum was not rigorous.

More recently, scientists have used genome-wide association studies to analyze genetic links to psychiatric disorders. A 2023 review of these studiesstressed that “…there is no single ‘disease-gene’ for psychiatric disorders, but thousands of genetic variants that act together and collectively influence the risk of illness. Given that most of these genetic variants are commonly occurring, every human being has a genetic risk to each psychiatric disorder, from low to high.”

Another factor to consider is the possibility of infection from viruses or bacteria that triggers neurological, immune system, and psychological changes, in association with schizophrenia in particular.

Implications for Human History

We know the effects of severe mental illnesses and how society has dealt with those persons severely affected, often in inhumane ways. But are there any possible benefits to individuals who may have smaller numbers of genetic variants linked to a particular mental disorder?

Stanford biologist Robert Sapolsky has a provocative answer to this question, in his analysis of how individuals with a moderate number of genetic links to schizophrenia might have provided the ancient basis for modern religions.

Sapolsky begins a Stanford University class on the biological underpinnings of religiosity by outlining the positive adaptive value for people who have some genes linked to certain genetic disorders, but not enough to cause full-blown illness. Sickle-cell anemia, for example, conveys protection from malaria to those with some of its marker genes. Similarly, cystic fibrosis, crippling when full-blown, is associated with protection from cholera and dehydration in those who have some of its marker genes. In that lecture, Sapolsky makes the point that it’s about too much allocation/expression of the genes. Just the right amount, and you have protection. Too much, and you have a chronic health issue.

In the same way, Sapolsky says, individuals who are on the spectrum of schizophrenia may have used their particular qualities of schizophrenia—seeing visions, hearing voices, obsessive-compulsive ritualistic behavior, intrusive thoughts, anxieties, and superstitions—positively in ancient societies.

Sapolsky bases his analysis on the data from the adoption studies in Denmark by Harvard psychiatry professor Seymour S. Kety and his U.S. and Danish research team, noted above. The Danish adoption studies found that schizophrenics often had family members who were a little “off,” not severely ill, but not quite “normal”—people whom they termed schizotypical.

Religion, Good Works, and Metamagical Thinking

In the appropriate context, Sapolsky says, a schizotypical individual could play a unifying role in an ancient society. Think of the shaman or medicine man in more recent native cultures, or the founding stories and rituals of today’s Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Eastern religions, which all have similar elements.

Sapolsky reviews in detail the similarity in the outline of the ritual, numerology, and anxiety-calming behavior of religions. For all religious beliefs, the description of religious behavior—its “structural steel” and “building blocks” as Sapolsky terms it—is on the mark. How the beginnings of theology mesh with the particular qualities of schizotypicals, from the metamagical to ritualist, is eerily recognizable.

The positives for society also ring true: Good works are motivated, and ritual behaviors (think holiday celebrations) are unifying and calming. Religious believers today, Sapolsky notes, live longer and are healthier than nonbelievers.

As Sapolsky emphasizes, a schizotypical person has to get it “just right” in order to succeed, and a society has room for just one such person at a time. Failed schizotypical leaders often branch off into cults, and have bad endings, like the Manson or Waco cults.

Sapolsky also reminds us that today’s society still harbors metamagical thinking. A Gallup poll he quotes, for example, found that 25 percent of Americans believe in ghosts and 50 percent believe in the influence of the devil.

A New Frontier?

Sapolsky’s presentation on the biological underpinnings of religiosity is mesmerizing. If you have an interest in human behavior on any level, the ideas provoke more serious thinking, which is always a good thing.

This area of research and discussion is a sensitive one, with considerable history associated with some of humanity’s darkest chapters; genetic determinism in the form of eugenics and racism was an ugly feature of the World War II era.

How ancient HERVs (and modern microbial infection) influence the genetics of schizophrenia and other mental illnesses is an important subject for research and a necessary one if we are to find better treatments.

This article was produced by Human Bridges.

Marjorie Hecht is a longtime magazine editor and writer with a specialty in science topics. She is a freelance writer and community activist living on Cape Cod.

Pakistan's message to US: Focus on Gaza, Kashmir over election probe

Pakistan's Parliament says it "will not accept any interference" after US congressional demand for probe into alleged rigging in February 2024 elections, urging Washington to instead pay attention to Gaza, Kashmir conflicts.



Reuters Archive

"An independent and sovereign country like Pakistan will not accept any interference in its internal affairs, and the subject resolution is an attempt to undermine the state," Pakistani Parliament says. / Photo: Reuters Archive

The Pakistani Parliament has rejected a US congressional resolution for an investigation into alleged rigging in the February 2024 elections and said the move was interference in Islamabad's internal affairs.

A resolution by a ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz MP in the National Assembly passed with a majority of lawmakers voting in favour, while the main opposition rejected and opposed the move.

"The House further regrets that the Resolution does not acknowledge the free and enthusiastic exercise of the right to vote by millions of Pakistanis in the General Elections held on 8 February 2024," according to the resolution on Friday.

"An independent and sovereign country like Pakistan will not accept any interference in its internal affairs, and the subject resolution is an attempt to undermine the state."

Lawmakers drew the attention of the US Congress to Israel's genocidal war in besieged Gaza, gross human rights violations in India-administered Kashmir and state-sanctioned atrocities against minorities, especially Muslims in India under PM Narendra Modi's rule.

"The House calls upon the US and the world community to take immediate steps to alleviate the sufferings of the innocent people of Gaza and Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir," it said.

The National Assembly deeply regretted and said the subject of the American request reflects an incomplete and wrong understanding of the political and electoral processes of Pakistan.

On Friday, Islamabad said it has decided to appoint a new ambassador to the US to replace Masood Khan.

At a news conference, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baluch said Khan would be replaced by diplomat Rizwan Saeed Sheikh. However, she said the new appointment had already been considered.



US seeks probe into elections

In an overwhelming majority, the American Congress voted on Tuesday to demand a "full and independent investigation of claims of interference or irregularities" in elections in Pakistan.

The US House of Representatives resolution was passed in a 368 - 7 vote.

It also condemned "attempts to suppress the people of Pakistan's participation in their democracy, including through harassment, intimidation, violence, arbitrary detention, restrictions on access to the internet and telecommunications or any violation of their human, civil, or political rights."

Pakistan held general elections on February 8, with independent candidates backed by former prime minister Imran Khan winning most seats.

Khan, who has been in jail since last August, allegedly rigged the elections.

However, the caretaker administration, which conducted the polls, rejected the allegations.

The administration blocked the internet on Election Day while there was a delay in results, triggering widespread allegations of rigging.