Sunday, August 18, 2024

‘It’s not about Raygun’: Breakdancers speak out on Olympics row


Legendary breakers Kwikstep and Rokafella give their take on the now infamous ‘kangaroo hop’.

The winners of the men's Olympics breaking competition: Gold medallist B-Boy Phil Wizard of Team Canada (C), Silver medallist B-Boy Dany Dann of Team France (L) and Bronze medallist B-Boy Victor of Team United States. Many in the breaking community believe their triumphs were overshadowed by the 'kangaroo hop' controversy caused by an Australian dancer who received zero points 
[Elsa/Getty Images]

Published On 18 Aug 2024

LONG READ

The worst thing about the uproar that erupted when an Australian breakdancer received zero points for her performance at the Olympics was not the slightly bizarre “kangaroo hop” she performed, say the renowned, New York-based breakdance champions Gabriel “Kwikstep” Dionisio and Ana “Rokafella” Garcia.

The particularly devastating angle to the whole mess – “frustrating, insulting, offensive” is how Rokafella puts it; “burning the scene” is how Kwikstep sees it – was that it completely overshadowed the other performers, some of whom did win medals and “made an incredible impression on that dance floor”.

It’s a huge shame, they say, because dancers such as Ami Yuasa (B-Girl Ami) from Japan who won the gold medal in the women’s (“b-girls”) breaking competition and Philip Kim (B-Boy Phil Wizard) from Canada who won a gold medal for the men’s (“b-boys”) competition, should have come away from the games covered in glory.

Many in the breaking community had hoped the art form would grow in popularity and attract a wider audience after the International Olympic Committee announced that it would become an official sport at the Paris 2024 games.

Instead, the art was roundly derided and mocked as the performance by university professor-turned-b-girl Rachael Gunn – known as Raygun in breakdancing circles – went viral on social media. The criticism even extended to a parody on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in the United States.

There were also accusations of cultural appropriation as Raygun – a white Australian – was seen as mocking breaking, which has roots in American Black and Latino culture. Malik Dixon, who is from New York but currently lives in Australia, told the Australian Broadcast Corporation (ABC): “It just looked like somebody who was toying with the culture and didn’t know how culturally significant it was being the first time in the Olympics and just how important it was to people who really cherish hip-hop and one of the elements of hip-hop, which is breakdancing.”

Paris Olympics 2024 was the first time breakdancing – called “breaking” – was classed as an Olympic sport. Breaking is derived from the word “break”, which refers to the instrumental sections of songs, particularly in funk, soul and hip-hop music. It was during these breaks that dancers would showcase their moves to the beat, hence the term “breaking”.

At the Paris Olympics, the breaking competitions – known as “battles” – took place at the city’s iconic Place de la Concorde, its largest public square and the designated “cool corner” for “urban” sports such as skateboarding, BMX biking and breaking.

Kwikstep and Rokafella, a married b-boy and b-girl couple who have been famous on the New York breakdancing scene since the 1980s when the dance style was still in its infancy, watched intently from afar.

Kwikstep has judged breakdance contests such as Battle of the Year in Germany, the Notorious IBE in the Netherlands and R-16 Korea and served as a judge for the Red Bull BC One competition, one of the biggest international breakdance events, this year in Rio de Janeiro.

Rokafella is a professional hip-hop dancer and choreographer who has also judged many competitions and co-founded with Kwikstep the nonprofit Full Circle Productions, dedicated to teaching young people about the political roots and future of breakdancing. Neither was involved with the breaking competition at the Paris Olympics this year, however.

Al Jazeera talked to them about their impressions of this year’s event, the fallout when Raygun hit the headlines, and the fight for civil rights which lies at the root of their art.

B-Girl Ami – Ami Yuasa of Japan, who won the women’s (b-girl) Gold medal at the Paris Olympics 2024, competes in the B-Girl Robin Battles during the WDSF World Breaking Championship 2023 on September 24, 2023 in Leuven, Belgium [Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images]

Al Jazeera: What was your impression of the breakdancing at the Paris Olympics?

Rokafella: Now, with all this little firestorm backlash that’s happening, I’m frustrated.

Emotionally, this was an intense chapter in my breakdance life, my breaking life as a b-girl.

We had a watch party for the b-girl day, and so we were bringing the gathering, the New Yorkers and the community, to go through this moment together.

I tried my best to be as impartial and as open-minded as I could be, and I’m still being open-minded with it.

I do wish that the world would focus more on the amazing and excellent display that all the Olympians had. You know, I feel like the medallists in each of the categories should be the ones that are being pumped up and they’re not.

And so that part is definitely frustrating, insulting, offensive, and the people who are outside of the community who are weighing in, you don’t need to weigh in.

Kwikstep: We were excited that breaking was going to be on a world stage.

I’m an athlete myself. I’m a tumbler. An all-around gymnast. I play baseball, basketball, I surf. Martial arts, all of that. And the best breakers I know have an athletic component to them outside of breaking. So I can see the attraction, it being on that stage, but there wasn’t a community component to it on the way there.

[But now] there’s a lot of speculation about what went down. [That breaking] is not being included in the 2028 Olympics because of what happened here. That’s not true. The LA committee already made the decision about it not being included. Doesn’t make sense because it was born here in America.

[In the Paris Olympics] I think a lot of compromises were made on the way, and it’s why we have the fallout that we’re having.

I like what I saw, but it was very clean cut. They wanted culture. Now, if you want culture, it’s cute. You had a boombox. I like that you had the vinyl in the middle. We would have had graffiti artists do up that boombox. I would have had breakers come out of the tape deck, coming down into a ramp out of the radio. I would have had LL Cool J KRS-One as part of the ceremony.

I would have had Big Daddy Kane, everyone who had the courage to represent breaking before any of this happened. I would have had a contingency of multi-generational representation there from the 1970s all the way to now.

There’s attention on somebody [Rachael Gunn] who, you know, took the breaking skills and didn’t present it at the highest level.

And that right now is getting a lot of fuel, and it’s burning the scene. But what I say to people is, don’t let it burn you, use it as fuel to engage you, to figure out what you’re going to do with what you have.

So this field runs out with a young lady by the name of Raygun. What will be left over are the champions that took home medals, the ones who made an incredible impression on that dance floor.

B-Girl Raygun of Team Australia competes during the B-Girls Round Robin – Group B on day 14 of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Place de la Concorde, on August 09, 2024 [Ezra Shaw/Getty Images]

Al Jazeera: What do you think of Raygun’s performance?

Rokafella: We watched the battle [breakdancing competition] live, but we’ve watched many battles, sometimes in person, sometimes with one of our dancers, our b-girls, competing.

The kangaroo hop, that was a surprise.

However, what I’m trying to get at is that in b-girl battles occasionally, but more often than not, you will get dancers who are not at a high skill level. In general, we all have to work hard and we have to train. In general, we’re doing the same steps, but mentally, physically, there’s a lot of differences here.

And so when people want to criticise her performance, we trust that the judges will see what we’re seeing. And no, she does not get to move to the next bracket, so we trust that.

Kwikstep: My initial reaction when I saw Raygun was, how does she make it into this, to begin with? What were the checks and balances? In every event, there’s people in last place, but nobody’s focusing on that for days and days, making it into memes. And they’re on talk shows and all of that kind of stuff.

Let me give you an example. So I have a young man who called me, and he was almost in, I can say, in tears. His voice was shaking because he owns a school teaching breaking in a rural area.

And parents came in and said, “Teach my kids the kangaroo.” And he said, “Please don’t come in here and say that to me. It’s very disrespectful.” They didn’t listen. Now they’ve been asking him to teach their kids the kangaroo and sending him memes. He called me, said, “I don’t know what to do because I think I’m going to lose all my students and their parents because this is all they want.”


To take this culture and beat somebody up with it, is not the right thing to do.
by Kwikstep

And I told them, if you lose all of them, it’s time for you to do something else. Because they weren’t loyal to you to begin with. If they had empathy, they would understand you and say, you know what? You’re right, I’m wrong. And remind people that this dance is about soldiers in the trenches.

If you look at the headlines at that time, it said, “New York can drop dead.” They left us for dead, literally. And post-civil rights, where I watched leaders get assassinated, I’m listening to rhymes that say “I am a somebody” and I’m cognisant that that comes from what? Civil rights marches. I am somebody.

And so when you have all of this happening in my mind and in my soul now, here I come to watch the Olympics, and I’m watching people at the top of their game. Some things are missing, but I’m like, it’s cool. The movement is what I’m watching. This is not just about moves. It’s about the movement of the people.

But then they chose to focus on her instead of, you know, Logistx or Sunny or Nicka, for that matter, who’s killing the game. They were incredible. And so you take away all the momentum to focus on this one person who doesn’t have the skillset. But it’s almost like a knee-jerk instinct to make a parody of a Black and Brown dance, because that’s what you were taught how to do. That’s not cool.

And I really feel bad for Raygun and what she has to deal with, because mental health is a real thing. And as a community, we come from a place where we’re mentally up against the wall, and this dance and music healed us. And so to turn around and take this very same culture and beat somebody up with it is not the right thing to do.

B-Girl Logistx, 21, of Team United States and who has also competed as a part of the youth hip-hop group The Lab, competes during the B-Girls Round Robin – Group B on day 14 of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 [Elsa/Getty Images]

Al Jazeera: Tell us a bit about how breaking evolved.

Kwikstep: So breaking, in its first incarnation, started in the early 1970s … We were fortunate enough to be exposed to Lindy Hop [on TV] – it’s a dance that comes from the African-American contingent that was being done to swing music.

Rokafella: In the 1930s.

Kwikstep: And you had jazz, swing, bebop music. And you listen to the word bebop, it sounds a lot like hip-hop. And when people say, let’s go to the hop, that’s like saying, let’s go to the jam.

So Lindy Hop swing, there’s a clip called hell is a popping.




When you look at this footage, see the video? That energy is like breaking energy, but it’s not breaking.

When you look at it like that – you know – shuffling in the sand and being quiet and the chains come off. Now you’re tapping sort of works and hear, “I’m here.” The Nicholas Brothers, the Barry Brothers.

It’s like watching your aunt move her hips while she’s cooking. There’s a sense of ancestry and knowledge being passed down to you.

When you look at hip-hop, it’s like rock and roll. You’re rocking and you’re rolling to that rhythm. Rhythm and blues, we’re doing these rhythms because of the blues.

When I look at the African-American dynamics and Afro-Caribbean dynamics, and when we saw one another. When hip-hop was being born, before it was called hip-hop, there was a social exchange happening.

You’re watching Lindy Hop, you’re watching swing music, you’re watching the big bands, you’re watching tap, and you go down with these moves in your head, and now you’re rocking to this music that’s jazz. And you’re actually reliving through your ancestry in the moment, doing similar moves.

Rokafella: The phase of the civil rights movement which also bled into Puerto Ricans standing and marching right there with the Black Panthers in New York City. So we were coming out of this and we were trying to find respect from our city officials and the government and at large.

And our leaders were assassinated. So we both marched together, and we both had to cope and endure the aftermath of that. And there were these music genres that were coming in quickly right after that. You had punk, which was also protest music. You had salsa, which really became very politically heavy with messages about South America, about the Caribbean, about America being a coloniser. You’ve got disco.

The movement is what I'm watching. This is not just about moves. It's about the movement of the people.
by Rokafella

You’ve got the Black is Beautiful movement. You’ve got Puerto Ricans bringing their congas to different party basement parties. It’s like a wave of pride that comes up at that moment which stems from the civil rights movement in the 1960s.

We got the city, which isn’t funded, so fire stations are closing. Arts programming is being cut. We’re not accommodating or catering to you, but we have to feel like we’re still here. We’re surviving the fires. Right after fires, you have crack, right after that, you’ve got AIDS, you’ve got the three strike laws, you could easily get stopped and frisked and locked up for just holding a joint.

And then you’ve got the DJs, you’ve got the dancers, you’ve got different cultures coming together. There’s this whole vibe that’s happening in New York City that really does catapult the artist to rise.

It was like the Latin, the Capoeira, the Bruce Lee, our lineages from African-American or Afro-diasporic traditions.

G
abriel ‘Kwikstep’ Dionisio teaches at KBL studios in New York in August 2019. Many in the breaking community hoped the art form would expand its audience after the International Olympic Committee announced that it would become an official sport at the Paris 2024 games [Frank Franklin II/AP]

Al Jazeera: Which films and other source material would you recommend for those who want to learn about breaking?

Rokafella: I think that we can name a couple of films: Style Wars, Wild Style, Beat Street, Freshest Kids, Rubble Kings, A Decade of Fire. The book Can’t Stop Won’t Stop by Jeff Chiang. Imani Kai Johnson just put out a wonderful book [Dark Matter in Breaking Cyphers: The Life of Africanist Aesthetics in Global Hip Hop].

There’s definitely a lot in terms of crews from back then that don’t get the notoriety. Incredible Breakers, Fresh Kids, Furious Rockers, Scrambling Feet. You got Rocksteady Breakers and Dynamic. We got the people who were definitely a force on the underground to reckon with.

And they didn’t get the cameras on them. They didn’t get the movies or the tours, but they were definitely people who could take you out in a circle.

So in the end, when you really ask yourself, how come there’s so little Black and Latin and Puerto Rican representation at the Olympics. The whole entire landscape. It’s because there’s no support, there’s no investment.

I have mouths to feed. We got bills to pay. We have to live. There’s a whole health aspect that comes in with breaking, with dancing. I got to get the chiropractor. I gotta get acupuncture. And so all that to say that if people really, really have eyes, the issue is bigger. It’s much bigger.

Whatever lane you want to take breaking to, who’s funding that? We have to evolve and bring breaking into other realms and open up all the other chambers and chakras that we have as we walk in, as we walk with breaking.
Source: Al Jazeera

Kenya Airports Authority seeks to avert strike by the aviation union



Copyright © africanewsBrian Inganga/Copyright 2022 
The AP. All rights reserved.
By Rédaction Africanews 
Last updated: 16/08/ 24

Kenya

The Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) announced on Friday that it has contingency plans to prevent disruptions to airport operations due to a possible strike by the country's main aviation union, set to start on August 19.

The Kenya Aviation Workers Union, which represents staff at airports and Kenya Airways, has threatened to go on strike starting Monday.

This protest is in response to a proposed deal with India's Adani Airports Holdings to develop Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi, Kenya's largest airport.


The union is concerned that this deal could result in job losses and the hiring of non-Kenyan workers, referring to it in their strike notice as the "intended sale" of the airport.

The Kenyan government has clarified that the airport is not for sale and that no final decision has been made on the proposed public-private partnership to upgrade the airport.

The KAA emphasized that discussions are ongoing between the Ministry of Roads and Transport, the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection, KAA Management, and the Kenya Aviation Workers Union to reach a mutually agreeable solution.
Many Indian spices unsafe, fail to meet quality standards

The two brands under scrutiny MDH and Everest are among the most popular in India and are exported in Europe, Asia and North America.



Reuters Archive

India is the world's biggest exporter, producer and consumer of spices. / Photo: Reuters Archive

Nearly 12 percent of tested spice samples failed to meet quality and safety standards, according to data obtained by Reuters of tests by Indian authorities after several countries took steps over contamination risks in two popular brands.

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India conducted inspections, sampling and testing of mixed spice blends after Hong Kong suspended sales of some blends of the MDH and Everest brands in April over high levels of a pesticide.

Britain then tightened controls on all spice imports from India, while New Zealand, the United States and Australia have said they were looking into issues related to the brands.

MDH and Everest have said their products are safe for consumption.

Their spices are among the most popular in India - the world's biggest exporter, producer and consumer of spices. They are sold in Europe, Asia and North America.

The data, obtained by Reuters under India's Right to Information Act, shows 474 of 4,054 samples tested between May and early July did not meet quality and safety parameters.



Under scrutiny

The safety agency told Reuters in a statement it did not have breakdowns by brands of the spices it tested but was taking necessary action against companies involved.

"Action on non-conforming samples has been taken as stipulated," it said, referring to penalty provisions under Indian law, without elaborating.

Reuters open records request sought reports on all the samples that failed the tests, but the agency said such reports were unavailable.

India's domestic spice market was valued at $10.44 billion in 2022, according to Zion Market Research.

Its exports of spices and spice products were a record $4.46 billion in the fiscal year that ended in March.
NAKBA II

IOF arrested over 10,000 Palestinians in West Bank
Since Oct. 7

Published on August 18, 2024 | 

The number of Palestinians arrested by the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) in the West Bank since the beginning of the genocide on the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7 has risen to 10,100 detainees, after the arrest of 25 Palestinians during the past two days, including a female student and children, in addition to freed captives.

The Commission of Prisoners' Affairs and the Prisoners' Club reported that recent arrests across the West Bank were accompanied by assaults on detainees and their families, as well as widespread vandalism and property damage.

The arrests of Palestinians in the West Bank have increased in frequency, coinciding with the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza, during which the Israeli occupation has slaughtered more than 40,000 Palestinian civilians and wounded nearly 100,000 others for 317 consecutive days.
UK
Legal bid to stop 25% cut in affordable childcare


Maya Sall
Local Democracy Reporting Service
Adriana Elgueta
BBC News
Save Hackney's Children's Centres

The campaign to save the centres has been underway since 2021

Hackney Council is facing a High Court challenge by campaigners battling to save two children’s centres from closure.

Parents and campaigners claim that during the initial consultation to close Fernbank and Sebright children’s centres in Stoke Newington and Haggerston, alternative options were not offered and a lack of clarity regarding its funding, rendered it "unlawful" and "unfair".

The proposal is to cut 129 of the borough's 600 subsided childcare places.

Hackney Council has said the cuts are necessary to reduce its funding gap.

Save Hackney's Children's Centres


A protest was staged in February to save the two centres

Oldhill children’s centre in Clapton and Hillside in Stamford Hill are also facing a proposed reduction to term-time-only childcare services as part of the plans.

The first consultation in 2021 was met with a overwhelming negative response. As such, the council paused plans to "listen to resident concerns".

Since then, a new consultation in January invited alternative care providers to take over the two nurseries. The consultation also said if no providers are found by autumn both the nurseries will close in August next year.

Having gathered a new list of recommendations, this will be put before a decisive cabinet meeting on 16 September.

Natalie Aguilera, one of the campaign leaders said: "We do not want Hackney Council to be spending funds on court cases, but ultimately, we are firm in our belief that the consultation was unfair and unlawful, so we had no other choice than to pursue legal action."

She said that one of their key arguments in court will be that the council argues that the cuts are "necessary" but the funding for the nurseries is coming from a non-essential funding pot.

It is roughly costing the council £600,000 to fund the nurseries.

"We have been clear that we would fight tooth and nail to try to keep these valuable services – particularly the subsidised childcare – available to disadvantaged families, for which they are a lifeline," she added.


'No choice but legal action'


The council has previously said that there is a surplus of affordable childcare places in the borough.

In a formal response to the campaigners’ letter before claim, which was submitted in April and warned the council to expect a legal challenge, the Town Hall said it "does consider it necessary to achieve savings in the children’s service in order to reduce its overall funding gap".

It added: "Identifying a need to deliver savings does not suggest that such savings are inevitable and unavoidable. Nor does it necessarily imply that no alternative is available."

Hackney Council aims to find savings amid a £1m budget deficit, which they say is a result of a drop in nursery fees and higher operational costs.

It is trying to save £4m across its early years' service within the next three years.

Hackney Council was contacted again for new comment, but said it cannot comment on live legal proceedings.

The judicial review will take place on 6 and 7 November at the Royal Courts of Justice.
PRO-LIFE SUNDAY SERMON
Death penalty brings no justice, poison for society-pope

In preface to 'A Christian on Death Row'


ROME, 18 August 2024
ANSA English Desk


The death penalty is "in no way a solution to the violence that can strike innocent people", Pope Francis wrote in the preface released Sunday to 'A Christian on Death Row: My Commitment to Those Condemned', a new book by Dale Recinella, set for publication by the Vatican Publishing House (LEV) on Tuesday, August 27.

"Capital executions, far from bringing justice, fuel a sense of revenge that becomes a dangerous poison for the body of our civil societies", the pontiff wrote in the preface.
"States should focus on allowing prisoners the opportunity to truly change their lives, rather than investing money and resources in their execution, as if they were human beings no longer worthy of living and to be disposed of", said the pope.

In the book out next Tuesday, Recinella, 72, formerly a successful lawyer on Wall Street, talks about his work since 1998 as a lay chaplain aiding inmates on death row in Florida, an experience he has shared with wife Susan.

"Jesus is capable of revolutionizing our plans, our aspirations, and our perspectives", the pontiff also wrote in the preface.

"The story of Dale Recinella, whom I met during an audience, and have come to know better through the articles he has written over the years for L'Osservatore Romano and now through this deeply moving book, confirms what I have said: only in this way can we understand how a man, who had other goals in mind for his future, became the chaplain—as a lay Christian, husband, and father—to those condemned to death.

"His is an extremely difficult, risky, and arduous task, because it touches evil in all its dimensions: the evil committed against the victims, which cannot be undone; the evil the condemned person is living through, knowing they are destined for certain death; the evil that, through the practice of the death penalty, is instilled in society.

According to the pontiff, "the Jubilee should commit all believers to collectively call for the abolition of the death penalty, a practice that, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person!" (n.2267).

In order to support such a thesis, Pope Francis quotes The Idiot in which Fyodor Dostoevsky "succinctly encapsulates the logical and moral unsustainability of the death penalty, speaking of a man condemned to death: "It is a violation of the human soul, nothing more! "It is written: 'Thou shalt not kill,' and yet, because he has killed, others kill him.

"No, it is something that should not exist".

The pontiff talks about Recinella's work as lay chaplain as "a great gift" for the Church and US society, where Dale works and lives.

"His commitment as a lay chaplain, particularly in such an inhumane place as death row, is a living and passionate testimony to the infinite mercy of God", he wrote.

The pope concluded offering "a sincere and heartfelt thank you to Dale Racinella: because his work as a chaplain on death row is a tenacious and passionate adherence to the deepest reality of the Gospel of Jesus".
Turin female detainees urge Mattarella for help

Announce hunger strike against prison overcrowding


ROME, 
18 August 2024, 
ANSA English Desk



The female detainees of Turin's prison have written a letter to the penitentiary administration in which they appealed to President Sergio Mattarella to "shake" decision-makers from their "indifference".

"There is no more time to lose", they said in the letter which was published by Turin daily La Stampa on Sunday.

The inmates said they refused food on the August 15 Ferragosto national holiday and that they will start a hunger strike once Parliament resumes its activity after the summer break to urge policy makers to approve alternative measures to detention to "reduce overcrowding and to bring back to life the penitentiary community".
The detainees said in their appeal to the president that the government's prison decree is "useless" - "the system should be completely reformed", they said.

At the moment there are around 61,000 inmates in Italy's jails, while the official capacity is around 51,000, with an overcrowding rate of 119%.
ITALY
Rescue ship Geo Barents reaches Livorno with 57 migrants

Including minors and women


ROME, 18 August 2024, 
ANSA English Desk


Migrant-rescue ship Geo Barents on Sunday reached the Tuscan port of Livorno with 57 people on board.
The majority of passengers on the boat, which is operated by medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) were adult, with a few women and minors on board, rescuers said.
Landing operations and medical checkups have been organized by the local prefecture, maritime authorities, police forces and a civil protection unit.

Iraqis overwhelmingly oppose plan to allow children as young as nine to marry




A public-opinion poll which surveyed more than 61,000 Iraqis across the country has shown a significant opposition to the controversial proposed amendments to the country’s Personal Status Law, which allows reliance on religious interpretations instead of current laws.

The changes supported by Islamist parties inside the Parliament would allow girls as young as nine to be married and strip women of many of their divorce and inheritance rights.

The results of the poll, announced on Sunday, was conducted by Iraq Polling Team NGO and ran from August 13 to August 15. It indicated that 73.2 per cent of Iraqis expressed “strong opposition” to the amendments to the Personal Status Law that has been in place since 1959.

In contrast, only 23.8 per cent of those surveyed expressed strong support for the changes, while 3.1 per cent remained indifferent to the matter.

On August 4, the parliament completed the first reading of the bill and will have two more readings and a debate before deciding whether to vote it into law.

The proposed amendments have led to widespread demonstrations and debate in Iraq between pro-civil rights Iraqis and the religious institutions which have gained more power over the past two decades.

A key highlight of the survey is the strong preference for a civil approach to personal status legislation.

An overwhelming 81.6 per cent of respondents expressed their desire for the law to remain civil in nature, rejecting any shift towards a religious, sectarian framework, which was supported by only 18.4 per cent of respondents.

The age group most represented in the poll was those between 46 and 60 years old, making up 29.2 per cent of participants. The youngest voters, aged 18 to 25, accounted for just 8.3 per cent of the total. 72.8 per cent of the total surveyed were married, while 12.7 per cent were single.

The poll highlighted a well-educated respondent base, with 47.6 per cent holding a bachelor's degree, 12.2 per cent holding a master's degree, and 10.5 per cent having earned a doctoral degree.

The findings suggest that any move to alter the law would face substantial public resistance which has been on the rise since the start of the month, posing a formidable challenge to any efforts to alter the law.

There were efforts by Islamist parties to introduce similar amendments in 2014 and 2017, but both of which failed to pass.

'Disastrous effects'

On Friday, the Human Rights Watch voiced concerns over the move, and warned that it will have “disastrous effects on women’s and girls’ rights”.

“The Iraqi parliament’s passage of this bill would be a devastating step backward for Iraqi women and girls and the rights they have fought hard to enshrine in law,” Sarah Sanbar, Iraq researcher at Human Rights Watch, said.

“Formally legalising child marriage would rob countless girls of their futures and well-being. Girls belong in school and on the playground, not in a wedding dress.”

The amendments allow the couples to choose whether the provisions of the Personal Status Law or the provisions of specific Islamic schools of jurisprudence would apply. If couples are from different sects, the school followed by the husband’s sect would apply.

This arrangement would effectively establish separate legal regimes with different rights accorded to different sects “further enshrining sectarianism in Iraq and undermining the right to legal equality for all Iraqis”, the New York-based organisation said.

Malians suffer economic hardship after four years of military rule

August 18, 2024 
By Reuters
 Former guide Kola Bah, who has been unemployed since Mali's conflict started and now sells from his small herd of cattle when he needs to make ends meet, poses for a photograph in Djenne, Mali, May 9, 2024.

Four years after the military ousted Mali’s then-president and came to power, many residents say economic troubles are worsening and constant power cuts are hurting businesses.

The August 2020 coup in the troubled West African nation was set off by public anger with corrupt rulers backed by former colonial power France, a spreading jihadist insurgency and economic hardship. Many are still waiting for life to improve.

"The way they've handled the electricity situation is a problem. Many Malians are experiencing huge losses," Oumar Diarra, a furniture maker, told Reuters. "The government has to make an effort because we are suffering enormously."

The 2020 coup in Mali helped set off a wave of coups in the Sahel region south of the Sahara desert, including in neighbors Burkina Faso and Niger, which are fighting the same jihadist groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State.

The current military rulers in Mali, who seized power in a second coup in 2021, have reneged on a promise to hold elections in February, postponing the vote indefinitely for technical reasons.

Allasana Ag Agaly, a silversmith, said power cuts were affecting all households in Mali. “If the head of the family goes out in the morning and comes back at night without being able to work to bring something to his family, it will affect the children, the women and everyday life,” he said.

The World Bank says economic growth in Mali is expected to slow to 3.1% this year from 3.5% last year, with extreme poverty levels rising. About 90% of Mali's population lives in poverty.

Mali’s military leaders, along with those in Niger and Burkina Faso, also kicked out French and U.N. troops that had been involved in fighting Islamist insurgents for a decade, and turned to Russia for help instead.

Some residents say they remain hopeful, and view the current hardship as the price for greater independence from France.

“Political independence without economic independence is meaningless,” said Alkady Haidara, a resident in the capital Bamako. “I just want Malians to be patient, because it's part of life. You have to go through a difficult time to have a brighter moment.”