Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Amnesty accuses Serbia of spying on journalists and activists

Amnesty accuses Serbia of spying on journalists and activists
The phone of Serbian independent investigative journalist Slaviša Milanov infected with spyware, according to Amnesty International's report. / Amnesty International
By bne IntelliNews December 16, 2024

Amnesty International has accused Serbian authorities of conducting covert surveillance on journalists, activists and civil society members through advanced spyware and digital forensic tools, according to a report released on December 16.

The report, titled “A Digital Prison: Surveillance and the Suppression of Civil Society in Serbia”, alleges that Serbian police and the Security Information Agency (BIA) used a bespoke Android spyware system known as NoviSpy to infect the phones of dozens of targets. Amnesty claims that the spyware was covertly installed during police detentions and interviews, often using tools developed by Israeli company Cellebrite to bypass device security.

Amnesty presented digital forensic evidence linking Cellebrite’s UFED technology to the infection of activists’ and journalists’ devices with NoviSpy. The Cellebrite UFED suite, used by law enforcement worldwide, can extract data from mobile devices, including the latest Android and iPhone models, even without access to passcodes.

In one case, investigative journalist Slavisa Milanov was arrested in February 2024 under the pretext of a drunk-driving test. While in detention, Milanov’s phone was confiscated. Forensic analysis by Amnesty revealed that Cellebrite’s tools had been used to unlock his phone, enabling the installation of NoviSpy.

Another case involved environmental activist Nikola Ristic, whose phone was similarly compromised. Amnesty also documented spyware installation during an interview between BIA officials and an activist from the Krokodil organisation, which promotes reconciliation in the Western Balkans.

The NoviSpy spyware captured extensive personal data, including screenshots of email accounts, encrypted messaging apps like Signal and WhatsApp and social media activity. Amnesty disclosed its findings to Google and Android security researchers, prompting measures to remove the spyware from affected devices and alert potential targets with warnings.

Amnesty International’s deputy regional director for Europe, Dinushika Dissanayake, condemned the actions as tools of repression.

“Our investigation reveals how Serbian authorities have deployed surveillance technology and digital repression tactics as instruments of wider state control and repression directed against civil society,” she said.

The BIA has dismissed Amnesty’s claims, stating that the report contained “nonsensical statements” and asserting that its operations comply with local law.

Despite the denial, Amnesty’s findings reveal the extent of state surveillance in Serbia, and raise broader questions about freedom of speech and the press in Serbia. Activists have expressed fear and trauma from the surveillance, leading them to self-censor.

Amnesty said it had shared the report with the Serbian government before publication but received no response.

Cellebrite, the Israeli company whose tools were allegedly used in the operations, stated that it is committed to respecting human rights and reviews credible allegations of misuse. The company did not confirm whether Serbian authorities are among its customers.

The revelations are likely to intensify scrutiny of Serbia’s human rights record, particularly as arrests and interrogations of political activists continue amid widespread anti-government protests.

 

China’s leftover “gutter” cooking oil becomes bio-sustainable aviation fuel wonder

China’s leftover “gutter” cooking oil becomes bio-sustainable aviation fuel wonder
China's used cooking oil used to be poured into the gutter and was an environmental hazard clogging up sewers. But after it was discovered that it could be processed into a bio-aviation fuel that produces 85% less emissions than traditional fuel, its fate was transformed. / bne IntelliNews
By bne IntelliNews December 16, 2024

China’s notorious “gutter oil” was once a source of food safety scandals, but has undergone a green revolution that has made it worth more than kerosene.

The waste cooking oil that was used in every household to make food used to be poured into the sewers, where it caused pollution and was the subject of complaints. The oil would accumulate in sewers and was also used illicitly in food production. Now it is one of China’s most sought-after commodities, as it can easily be turned into sustainable bio-aviation fuel.

The price of recycled gutter oil has surged as a result, and where there was a surplus there is now a deficit. The price of bio-aviation fuel has surpassed that of new palm oil and soybean oil, thanks to its status as a key ingredient in sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).

Aviation biofuel has sparked the newfound demand. Produced from used cooking oil, SAF can reduce carbon emissions by up to 85% compared to traditional jet fuel multiplying its appeal for airlines desperate to go green. Price of gutter oil has soared to over CNY8,000 ($1,100) per tonne – making it more valuable than many premium store-bought extra virgin olive oil ​.

China has become a leading player in the global SAF supply chain, exporting approximately 1.82mn tonnes per year (tpy) of used cooking oil. The US alone imported over 1.36mn tonnes from China last year, as SAF adoption accelerates in the aviation industry​​.

International interest is so intense that Chinese industry players are advocating for export restrictions to ensure sufficient domestic supplies. Domestic demand for SAF now far exceeds production capacity, forcing a reassessment of export priorities. Some exchanges are even exploring futures contracts for used cooking oil, highlighting its growing importance as a commodity​.

Ironically, the shift in value has flipped concerns about product integrity. “Producers are now accused of ‘contaminating’ gutter oil with cheaper pure palm oil to improve margins,” China-watcher Arnaud Bertrand joked in a social media post, contrasting this with the past, when the gutter oil was seen as rubbish and something to get rid of.

This transformation of gutter oil from a problem into a solution is a successful case of sustainable problem-solving – putting waste to service for the betterment of the environment. Once a health hazard, it is now a strategic resource supporting global decarbonisation efforts.

China’s transition from managing gutter oil as a public health risk to exporting it as a high-value feedstock for aviation biofuel demonstrates how aligning economic incentives with sustainability goals and innovation can drive transformative change. As demand continues to grow, the humble gutter oil could play an even larger role in reducing aviation’s carbon footprint, provided the Chinese can be persuaded to eat more fried food.

 

TikTok seeks Supreme Court intervention to block US ban
TikTok seeks Supreme Court intervention to block US ban
TikTok filed an emergency petition to the US Supreme Court on Monday seeking to block a federal law that could force the shutdown of its platform next month.

The petition challenges the constitutionality of legislation signed in April requiring TikTok to sever ties with its Chinese parent company ByteDance or cease US operations by January 19. The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law in April 2024 as part of a broader appropriations package, prohibits ByteDance and TikTok Inc. from operating TikTok in the United States unless they execute a “qualified divestiture” that separates the platform from foreign adversary control. The law requires TikTok to break ties with its Chinese parent company ByteDance by January 19, 2025, with a possible 90-day extension, or face a nationwide ban enforced through restrictions on app stores and internet hosting services.

TikTok’s Supreme Court appeal follows last week’s unanimous ruling by the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upholding the law.

In their filing, TikTok and ByteDance argue the ban would violate First Amendment protections and cause irreparable harm to their business. The companies contend Congress failed to consider less restrictive alternatives and lacks evidence of actual national security threats.

If it moves forward as planned, the ban would take effect one day before the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump, who unsuccessfully attempted to ban TikTok during his first term, but who has recently indicated opposition to restrictions on the platform.

TikTok requested a ruling by January 6 to allow time for implementation if the petition is denied.

The Supreme Court’s response could determine whether one of America’s most popular social media platforms — which boasts some 170 million US users — continues operating in its current form.

UK lawmakers continue calling for immediate halt of arms exports to Israel

On Sept. 2, British government announced that it was suspending 30 out of 350 arms export licenses to Israel


Burak Bir |17.12.2024 - TRT/AA


LONDON

A group of British MPs on Monday reiterated their call for an immediate stop to arms exports licenses to Israel amid the crippling situation in the Gaza Strip.

Cross-party MPs gathered outside the parliament behind a banner saying: "Stop Arming Israel."

The display came ahead of today's debate on a petition with over 100,000 signatures calling for an immediate revocation of all arms export licenses to Israel.

As of Monday evening, 107,316 people have signed the petition.

On Sept. 2, the British government announced that it was suspending 30 out of 350 arms export licenses to Israel after a review, warning there is a clear risk that certain UK arms exports to Israel might be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law.

The 30 licenses cover components for military aircraft, helicopters, drones, and items that facilitate ground targeting, excluding UK components for the F-35 fighter jet program.

The issue has gained ground as activists move to target the countries whose weapons and support make possible Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, which has killed over 45,000 people, most of them women and children.

Israel has continued a genocidal war on the Gaza Strip since a Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, despite a UN Security Council resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire.

The second year of genocide in Gaza has drawn growing international condemnation, with officials and institutions denouncing the attacks and blocking of aid deliveries as a deliberate attempt to destroy a population.

Last month, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its deadly war on Gaza.

Geothermal energy poised for major global expansion, says IEA chief Fatih Birol

FRACKING BY ANY OTHER NAME

Geothermal energy poised for major global expansion, says IEA chief Fatih Birol
New technology means geothermal could potentially produce 800 GW of power a year – enough to power the US – according to a groundbreaking report from the IEA. / bne IntelliNews
By Ben Aris in Berlin December 15, 2024

"Geothermal energy could see transformative global growth thanks to advancements in technology and expertise from the oil and gas sector," the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in a report groundbreaking report entitled “the Future of Geothermal Energy” released in December. The IEA has decupled its estimate of the potential power generation capacity of geothermal to 800 GW – almost enough to power the entire EU or US economies.

According to Fatih Birol, Executive Director of the IEA, there is huge untapped potential in geothermal energy to provide clean and secure energy worldwide that also solves the most basic of the problems associated with renewable energy: providing a base load power supply when the sun is not shining or the wind is now blowing. Geothermal's greatest advantage is that the supply of power is constant and neither dependent on the weather nor the diurnal cycle.

With electricity consumption expected to surge due to the rising use of air conditioning, electric vehicles and data centres, geothermal energy offers a reliable alternative. “With electricity use set to grow strongly to run air conditioners, EVs and data centres, geothermal offers clean power round-the-clock,” Birol said.

800 GW potential

The potential of geothermal energy is massive. The IEA has upgraded its assessment of the total power available from the earth ten-fold to 800 GW – a bit less than the circa 1,000 GW the US or Europe generated last year – up from the 16.3 GW produced globally in 2023.

Geothermal will never replace solar and wind from amongst the renewables, which will remain cheaper to produce and easier to install, but the IEA says that it will make up 15% of the growth of new generating capacity to 2050 and nearly all that new capacity will be from investment into renewables. Geothermal’s anticipated rapid growth will be driven by the major advantages it enjoys over the other renewables.

First, it is entirely emission free, as it simply draws heat from the earth’s core that is caused by the residual heat from the planet’s formation, gravitational compression and radioactive decay of isotopes inside the core. By the same token, this energy is limitless.

Secondly, the energy produced is continuous and neither dependent on the weather nor the diurnal cycle. That makes geothermal the missing piece in the renewables puzzle; it can be the source of the baseload power supply that is missing from solar at night and wind when the weather is calm.

But to realise the IEA’s projected 800 GW of geothermal power governments and private investors will have to invest some $1 trillion over the next decade. Birol forecasted that “market opportunities for next-generation geothermal energy could attract investment totalling $1 trillion by 2035 and create over a million new jobs,” adding that geothermal could not only meet growing electricity demands but also provide industrial and building heating solutions across the globe.

Birol says that this is not as big a number as it first appears and is the same that has already been invested into wind power in the last seven year and solar power in only the last three years.

“This scale-up of geothermal can easily be done and it can then play a significant role in meeting the rising electricity demand we are expecting from things like the mushrooming AI data centres and improving lives of emerging middle classes around the world,” says Birol.

However, Birol admitted that it is not clear whether geothermal will take off. “Government needs to act with funding and with slashing the bureaucracy of permitting to make it easier to start projects and bring down costs,” says Birol.

Drilling deep

The IEA’s research shows that if geothermal wells drilled to 2,000 metres there are few sites in the world that produce much heat, but the situation changes dramatically if wells are drilled to 5,000 metres, when most of the countries in the world would produce enough heat to be a viable source of energy. And at 7,000 metres virtually the whole world becomes a viable source of geothermal power and heat.

“And 5,000m deep wells are routine for oil companies,” says Birol. “There is a direct cross-over from the oil and gas business to geothermal.”

Industry professionals are more sceptical, as more technological development needs to be done.

“5,000m deep is the cutting edge of the geothermal business,” one industry participant said who wished to remain anonymous, as they are in ongoing government negotiations. “I don’t know of anyone who has dug a well that deep in Europe. Most wells are between 2,000m and 4,000m.”

The expert also pointed out that 7,000m is an extreme, as the temperatures at that depth rise to between 250C and 400C, which would melt steel pipes.

“There are alternatives like making pipes out of carbon fibre, but this is all still in the future,” the expert said.

Currently, most geothermal projects simply drill deep into the earth, pipe down water to extract the heat and bring it to the surface to use either as raw heat or run an electric generation turbine.

However, advances in oil extraction, such as horizontal drilling, offer new opportunities of more sophisticated methods. One option is a “closed loop” geothermal well, where a pipe is sunk and a series of horizonal pipes are drilled to second pipe that can lift superheated water back to the surface – similar to an upside-down radiator.

“Advances in technology are opening new horizons for geothermal, promising to make it an attractive option for countries and companies all around the world. These techniques include horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing honed through oil and gas developments in North America. If geothermal can follow in the footsteps of innovation success stories such as solar PV, wind, EVs and batteries, it can become a cornerstone of tomorrow’s electricity and heat systems as a dispatchable and clean source of energy,” the report says.

However, experts say this idea remains on the drawing board and no one has yet attempted to build a closed loop system, although a lot of money is being invested into the research.

The IEA report proposes 7,000m deep wells, but industry professionals bne IntelliNews talked to said much shallower wells are as attractive, which lift heated water at between 100C and 130C. Half of the gas burnt in the Netherlands goes to heating houses and heat brought to the surface can be used for simple tasks like heating greenhouses in the winter, cutting the demand for other fuels like gas.

Lower temperatures can be used to power turbines if the water is replaced by alcohol with lower boiling temperatures that can also drive turbines. But of course superheated water from the deeper wells will produce far more energy if the goal is to provide the baseload power for the national grid.

Falling costs

“The EU is the home of geothermal technology and the first commercial geothermal project in the world,” Brent Wanner, head of the IEA’s power sector unit, said during the press conference. “Now we can drill deeper it is possible to increase the output and meet rising demand many times over. There is a huge and open opportunity in Europe.”

The world’s first commercial geothermal power plant was developed in Larderello, Tuscany, Italy, in 1904, by scientist Prince Piero Ginori Conti. Natural steam from a hot spring was used to power a small generator that eventually powered local industries. Today the Larderello geothermal field is a major contributor to Italy’s energy mix, producing 800 MW of power a year, enough to light 1mn homes.

The EU also been a global leader in promoting decarbonisation with its Green Deal that is supposed to see carbon-zero by 2050, and it is technologically advanced.

Currently, thanks to the drilling costs, producing geothermal power is expensive: just under $250 per kilowatt hour. But Birol says that geothermal power should follow the same path as solar power, where the costs have fallen dramatically in the last years as countries around the world have scaled up their solar power generation; solar power has become the cheapest source of power at $50 per kWh, leading to an acceleration in the roll out of new capacity, led by China, the global green energy champion. The IEA forecasts that geothermal costs will also fall to $50 per kWh by 2035 if governments and investors around the world throw themselves into the business – a fall of 80%.

“We are expecting to see costs of producing geothermal to fall by three quarters in the coming years thanks to the spillover effects from the oil technology,” says Birol.

But there are still many hurdles to overcome. Birol began his presentation by calling on governments to expediate issuing permits, which currently can take over a decade to obtain. One industry professional told bne IntelliNews that the Netherlands has recently tried to simplify the permitting process, but all that happened was each part of a project now requires a separate permit so they have to submit applications for two, whereas before both parts of the project were covered by a single permit, and this change has introduced delays of eight months to the process.

“It means you have to take a portfolio approach; the uncertainties this sort of thing introduces means that a project can be derailed or delayed and that causes problems with funding. So you need multiple projects in case one goes wrong,” the expert said.

 

World Bank must wake up to Rogun mega dam “nightmare” in Tajikistan, say activists ahead of financing vote

By bne IntelliNews December 16, 2024

The World Bank has to realise that the Rogun mega project “dream of the biggest dam [in the world] will turn into a nightmare for the people and nature in Tajikistan and beyond” and that it “still has an opportunity to pause the proposed investments and demand a new impact assessment, including for alternative proposals”.

So argue environmental activists Eugene Simonov and Manana Kochladze in an article published by Al Jazeera prior to a December 17 World Bank vote on financing the completion of the dam investment on the Vakhsh River, a major tributary to the Amu Darya River which flows onwards to Afghanistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

“Now it is the time for the bank to reflect on past mistakes, listen to civil society, and shift investments to smaller-scale projects where possible harms can be adequately mitigated,” the activists write.

They add: “The Tajik regime’s argument that this is a ‘life and death’ situation does not stand. There are alternatives to the current project that can provide the needed electricity and that would not have the same environmental and human impacts.

“Decreasing the height of the dam could massively reduce the number of [more than 60,000] people that risk being displaced, and the funds saved by downscaling the project could be used to build more efficient solar farms, thus diversifying the Tajik energy sector and avoiding overreliance on hydropower in a region prone to droughts worsened by climate change. A smaller project could also prevent some of the worst environmental impacts.

“In the 1990s, the World Bank itself spearheaded the establishment of the World Commission on Dams. In 2000, the commission released a damning report clearly demonstrating how mega dams can severely harm people and the environment, and why alternatives to any large dam proposal should be seriously considered from the start.

“Yet, with the recent push for a fossil fuel phaseout, large dams have managed to get renewed support. Despite the fact that some of them emit more greenhouse gases than fossil fuel power plants, dams are being promoted as climate-friendly projects and development banks are again heavily investing in them.”

The Rogun project, expected to cost at least $6.5bn, has been in development since the mid-1970s. It would solve Tajikistan’s perennial difficulties with power outages and provide substantial volumes of electricity for regional export.

Simonov, a coordinator of the Rivers without Boundaries International Coalition (RwB), and Kochladze, who works on democratisation and human rights at the CEE Bankwatch Network—an NGO that monitors the impacts of international financial institutions (IFIs) in Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia—observe how a recent report, “Financing Repression”, co-published by the Coalition for Human Rights in Development, the Early Warning System and International Accountability Project, emphasises how concerns of the affected communities in Tajikistan risk remaining unheard because people fear protesting against the repressive regime.

Within Tajikistan, they add, the Rogun dam would impact critically endangered endemic sturgeons and unique floodplain ecosystems downstream, including the Tugay Forests of the Tigrovaya Balka, a World Heritage Site in the Vakhsh River floodplain. It would also adversely affect nature reserves downstream, in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, they say.

“The operation of the Rogun hydropower dam will further affect seasonal patterns of water inflow and its volume supporting the related ecosystems, their biodiversity, and the livelihoods of the already struggling riparian communities of Lower Amu Darya and its delta. Water redistribution shortages may fuel protests and transboundary tensions in a region already prone to conflicts,” Simonov and Kochladze contend.

Sarcophagus of St. Nicholas — inspiration for 'Santa Claus' — may have been found: report

Sarah K. Burris
December 16, 2024 
RAW STORY

Santa Claus (Shutterstock)


The coffin of St. Nicholas — considered the primary inspiration for Santa Claus due to his generosity — may have been discovered at an archeological dig site.

A sarcophagus was discovered in a two-story annex of the Church of St. Nicholas in Turkey, Fox News reported. Experts have long believed it is the famous bishop's original burial site, where the church initially stood. About 200 years after the bishop's death, another church was built on the ruins of his original church.

The church has a tomb on display that is considered the burial location for St. Nicholas, but there has long been debate about whether it matches the history following the theft of the bones. That account is that those who stole the bones broke into it from the top. But the tomb on display in Turkey was destroyed from the side.

ALSO READ: Buddha, Abraham, Jesus and Muhammed: Larger-than-life historic figures or largely legends?

So, archeologists have continued to search for other possible tombs of the patron saint of children and charities.

"While drilling inside the structure, we encountered a surprise sarcophagus," associate Professor Ebru Fatma Findik said. The excavation has been ongoing through Findik's Department of Art History at Hatay Mustafa Kemal University.

"We are working inside the 20-meter-long, two-story structure that borders the church courtyard from the south. This work, among the undecorated sarcophagus group, is made of local stone and has a slightly high barrel roof," Findik said.

"After Myra fell to the Seljuk Turks in 1071, Adriatic rivals Bari and Venice were in competition to bring the relics of Saint Nicholas to their cities. The Bari expedition, with three ships, sixty-two sailors and two priests, beat out the Venetians and the relics arrived in Bari on May 9, 1087," said the St. Nicholas Center.

In 1099, during the Middle Ages, crusaders were said to have raided the church, breaking into the floor, stealing the remains of St. Nichols, and taking them to Italy. At the end of the First Crusade, there was a debate about whether to house the relics in Bari or Venice, as a monastery dedicated to St. Nicholas already existed in Venice.

The remains in Bari were studied and photographed in 1953 and 1957 and compared to the bones that remained, the St. Nicholas Center said on its website. In 1992, an anatomy professor was invited to look at the bones in Venice at the monastery.

The two sets of bones were discovered to have one complementary skeleton.

A pelvis fragment is also at the Shrine of All Saints in Morton Grove, Illinois. It's the only scientifically tested bone fragment, and the University of Oxford radiocarbon dated it in 2017. The results confirmed that it was from the time of St. Nicholas.

Findik said the sarcophagus has a lid and handle, approximately 2 meters long and 1.5-2 meters high.

Monday, December 16, 2024

WAR IS RAPE

Sudanese paramilitaries accused of widespread sexual violence



sudanese paramilitaries accused of widespread sexual violence


Tue, 17 Dec 2024 

Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Monday accused the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and allied militias, at war with the army, of committing widespread sexual violence against women in southern Sudan.

It is the latest such report by international monitors alleging sexual violence during Sudan’s 20-month war which has led to what the United States called the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Conquering the clouds on a journey to Ta Xua with the team - Road Trip Vietnam Team - Nếm TV

In its new report, HRW said it had documented dozens of cases since September 2023 involving women and girls aged between seven and 50 who were subjected to sexual violence, including gang rape and sexual slavery, in South Kordofan state.


The latest details follow a separate report last week from the New York-based watchdog which more broadly accused the RSF and allied Arab militias of carrying out numerous abuses, mainly against ethnic Nuba civilians, in South Kordofan state from December 2023 to March 2024.

These attacks, it said, “had not been widely reported” and constituted “war crimes”.

In October, the United Nations Independent International Fact-Finding Mission for the Sudan said both sides have committed abuses including torture and sexual violence.

But it accused the paramilitaries, in particular, of “sexual violence on a large scale”, including “gang rapes and abducting and detaining victims in conditions that amount to sexual slavery”.

“The sheer scale of sexual violence we have documented in Sudan is staggering,” said Mohamed Chande Othman, chair of the fact-finding mission.

The RSF dismissed the UN findings as “social media propaganda”.

Speaking to reporters in Nairobi last month, RSF member Mohamad Mokhtar said the paramilitaries documented only one rape in areas under their control, adding that they had carried out “medical checks” on women to verify rape allegations.

The conflict, which erupted in mid-April 2023, has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people, internally displaced more than eight million, according to the UN, and forced more than three million others to seek safety in neighbouring countries.


Human Rights Watch accuses Sudan’s RSF of rape, sexual slavery

December 16, 2024 
By Mohammed Yusuf
VOA
 Sudanese soldiers from the Rapid Support Forces unit, led by Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, the deputy head of the military council, secure the area in the East Nile province, Sudan

Nairobi, Kenya —

Human Rights Watch has accused Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and allied militias of rape and other acts of sexual violence against women and girls in South Kordofan state. The rights group says the sexual violence constitutes war crimes, and that it underscores the urgent need for international action to protect Sudanese civilians and deliver justice to the victims.

Human Rights Watch says representatives met with raped or sexually abused women in Sudan’s South Kordofan state during their visit this past October.

The women, from the Nuba minority ethnic group, said they were violated and exploited by members of Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and allied militias.

The RSF was not available to respond to the allegations against its fighters.

Belkis Wille is an associate director in the Crisis, Conflict and Arms Division at Human Rights Watch.

"In this new report of Human Rights Watch, we have included details that we gathered into the cases of 79 women and girls who were raped by the RSF, including girls as young as seven years old. And indeed we also documented the case of a group of 51 women and girls who were taken by the RSF and held on a military base and used as sex slaves for months," she said.

The survivors and witnesses told investigators that they had been gang-raped since December 2023, and some of the victims were still missing.


Sudan's RSF, allies sexually abused victims from 8-75 years, UN mission says


Local and international rights groups have documented many alleged human rights violations by both the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces since the sides went to war in April 2023, battling for power and control of the country.

Hala al-Karib is the regional director of the Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa. She said RSF is known to use sexual violence against communities to drive them out of their homes.

"Most of the communities and families who are forced to leave their homes in Sudan, in Khartoum, in Al Gezira and other territories under the control of the RSF. People left because of sexual violence, so it’s used as a land grabbing tool, it’s used to break communities’ capacity to resist and its used also to control communities and to spread fear," she said.

Hanan Idriss, a 22-year-old mother of two, speaks in the border town of Adre, Chad, Nov. 14, 2023. Idriss said RSF and Arab militiamen attacked her house in Ardamata, West Darfur, and tried to sexually assault her and her sister.

The International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant in 2009 against former President Omar al-Bashir and some commanders of militia groups on allegations of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity in the Darfur region.

Experts say the failure to hand over Bashir, who was ousted in 2019 and is now being held at a military hospital on the outskirts of Khartoum, is one factor that is fueling the conflict in Sudan.

Al-Karib said despite victims of past abuses not receiving justice, people will refuse to accept any solution that does not address the abuse and violations against them.

"Demands for justice should never be silenced. This time, it should be an integral part of any political process because the grievances and the pain communities are having is way too much, and I don't think they are going to accept a political process that will conclude without justice arrangements," she said.

Wille of HRW said survivors and victims of sexual violence need justice and protection.

"It's really important, first and foremost, for the RSF to take action against these abuses. That means investigating their own forces for carrying out incidents of rape. It means immediately releasing any women and girls who are still being held and ensuring that this kind of act doesn't continue. But we do need to see leadership from other actors as well. The U.N. Security Council and the African Union could do far more, for example, creating this mission with a mandate to protect civilians that could be sent into Sudan," she said.

As the violence and suffering of Sudanese civilians continued, in September, Sudan's military-led government rejected a U.N. plan to deploy a mission to protect civilians.
'Gisele Pelicot has put the spotlight on what rape victims go through in a trial'


Issued on: 16/12/2024 - 
Video by: Jean-Emile Jammine

The French man who has admitted to enlisting dozens of strangers to rape his heavily-sedated wife asked forgiveness from his family on Monday and hailed the courage of his now ex-spouse during his trial. FRANCE 24's Jean-Emile Jammine speaks to Sarah McGrath, CEO of Women for Women France. She says that Gisele Pelicot is the 'perfect victim, with the perfect evidence'; despite that, defense lawyers tried to chip away at her credibility 'going almost as far as accusing her of lying'.

12:34




... Against. Our Will. Men, Women and Rape. SUSAN BROWNMILLER. Fawcett Columbine • New York. Page 5. Sale of this book without a front cover may be unauthorized. If ...



Two by Twos: Inside the secretive Christian sect at the centre of a global sex abuse scandal

The sect, also known as ‘The Way’ or ‘The Truth,’ was founded in Ireland by William Irvine who railed against churches

Rebecca Boone
Monday 16 December 2024 
Independent Premium

open image in galleryPhotographs from annual ‘Two by Twos’ sect conventions sit on a table at a library (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Nearly every detail about the religious group Lisa Webb’s family belonged to was hidden from the outside world. Its followers met in homes rather than churches. Its leadership structure was hard to discern, its finances opaque. It didn’t even have an official name.

But for decades, no secret was as closely guarded as the identities of the sexual predators inside the group known as the “Two by Twos.”

Now a growing number of public allegations from around the world have prompted a broad investigation by the FBI and placed an uncomfortable spotlight on the long-quiet Christian sect. Survivors say the group's leaders protected child-abusing ministers by pressuring victims to forgive, ignoring legal reporting requirements and by transferring abusers to new locations to live with unsuspecting families.

Ministry leaders have publicly condemned the abuse but several declined to answer questions from The Associated Press.

For Webb, who was sexually abused by one of the group's ministers as a child, the attention has brought an unexpected sense of “strength in numbers.”


open image in galleryPam Walton flips through an album containing photographs of ‘Two by Twos’ members and ministers (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

“There are so many who are frustrated and disheartened," said Webb. "But there's also camaraderie in that, and support.”

A website, a hotline and social media pages established by victims have documented allegations against more than 900 abusers, with survivors in more than 30 countries and cases continuing to emerge. In the past year, news stories and a Hulu documentary have focused on the sect’s predator preachers and the leaders who enabled them.

While perpetrators have been sentenced to prison in isolated cases, the sect has largely avoided legal repercussions, protected by its decentralized structure, hidden finances and state laws that limit the timeline for criminal charges.


open image in galleryLisa Webb poses for a photo, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024, in Woodstock (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The sect, also known to its members as “The Way” or “The Truth,” was founded in Ireland in 1897 by William Irvine, who railed against the existence of churches. The only way to spread Christianity, he argued, was to do as Jesus instructed in the Book of Matthew: to send apostles out to live among those they sought to convert.


The sect grew as volunteer preachers — known as workers — went “two by two” to live in the family homes of followers for days or weeks at a time. Sect historians say there were up to a few million members just a few decades ago, but current estimates put the figure at 75,000 to 85,000 worldwide.


open image in galleryPam Walton, a former ‘Two by Twos’ sect member who helps track movements of allegedly predatory members through photographs and documents, holds a photograph of a deceased spiritual leader of the sect at a library Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, in Wailea, Hawaii (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Unlike the Boy Scouts or the Catholic Church, which have paid out billions to sex abuse victims, the sect’s aversion to property leaves it without apparent assets that might be used to pay settlements, legal experts say.

Workers are supposed to shun worldly possessions, relying on followers for food, shelter and transportation. But that also ensures abusive workers have access to potential victims.

Webb was abused by a preacher who stayed with her family in Michigan when she was 11. The man, Peter Mousseau, was convicted much later — after he expressed an interest in visiting her in 2008 and she decided to pursue charges. A regional overseer to whom she previously reported the abuse was later convicted for failing to report abuse allegations against another local worker.

“You have this mindset that they are angels in your home. They can do no wrong, so you don’t have any kind of wall up,” she said. “It was just the perfect storm created, the perfect recipe for this kind of behavior.”


open image in gallerySheri Autrey poses for a photo at her home in Cumby, Texa (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Sheri Autrey had just turned 14 when a 28-year-old worker moved into her family's home in Visalia, California, for two months.

He began abusing her immediately, sneaking to her room at night and taking her for daytime drives. He turned up the radio whenever the Hall & Oates song “Maneater” came on, singing: “Watch out boy, she’ll chew you up.”

When Autrey revealed the abuse to her mother a few years later, her mom reported it to the sect's regional overseer, who was in charge of all the workers in the area.

The overseer refused to warn other families. Instead, he sent the worker back to Autrey’s home to apologize.

Autrey, raised to be meek, erupted. Her family took her to the district attorney’s office but declined to put her through a prosecution.

“I would have to explain, explicitly, what happened,” Autrey said. "And I was in no way prepared for that.”

Decades later, Autrey was at a baseball game when “Maneater” came on. She had to walk around the stadium to calm herself down, and she resolved to send a letter about the abuse to hundreds of sect members.

“I wanted anyone else who was a victim to know she is not the only one,” Autrey said. “She needs to know there is help.”


open image in galleryPam Walton holds a photograph of ‘Two by Twos’ ministers, also referred to as ‘workers’ (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

One worker from Peru, Americo Quispe, was sent to Garland, Texas, in the early 2000s after facing allegations of inappropriate behavior in his home country. He soon found new victims, some of whose families went to police. He returned to Peru before he could be arrested.

Quispe was later convicted of molestation in Peru and sentenced to 30 years. He has never faced the charges in Texas.

Another worker, Ruben Mata, abused dozens of boys, among them 10-year-old Douglas Patterson, who was lured away from his family during a sect convention in the early 1990s. Patterson said he kept quiet about it because he feared his family would leave the sect — and thus be barred from eternal salvation — if he told.

Mata was eventually convicted in 2006 in a separate sex abuse case. He died in a California prison.


yPam Walton, a former ‘Two by Twos’ sect member who helps track movements of allegedly predatory spiritual leaders (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

A few months before Mata’s trial, the Saskatchewan, Canada, overseer, Dale Shultz, sent two letters to colleagues.

One was to be shown to any concerned members. It acknowledged Mata was a pedophile and that workers had been alerted to his abuse at least three times. The sect only notified authorities after Mata resigned, according to the letter.

The second was for staff. It said no copies should be made of the first letter.

“The purpose of the letter is to help those who have concerns, not to advertise a kingdom problem to those who either do not know about it or are not having a problem with it,” Shultz wrote.


In another case, a regional overseer for Arizona, Ed Alexander, wrote a letter to a child-molesting elder in 2005 observing that “we love our people very much and don’t want to report their misdeeds.”

The letter suggested the sect could fulfill its mandatory abuse-reporting obligations by recommending offenders get professional counseling, because then the counselors — rather than sect leaders — would be obligated to make the reports to police.

“They believe that child sexual assault is just a sin. Like, you’re a sinner, they are a sinner, it’s all just sin,” said Eileen Dickey, one of the man's victims. She reported the abuse to sect leaders because she was worried other children would be targeted.

“I was told never to talk about it," she said.

Alexander would not speak with The Associated Press: “Unfortunately, the media coverage has been so negative and one-sided that I am going to have to decline an interview,” he texted.


open image in galleryPam Walton leaves a library with her container (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Jared Snyder spent more than two decades as an itinerant minister before becoming disillusioned and quitting. No one told him directly about abuse, Snyder said, but he occasionally heard rumors.

The sect's culture — which makes gossip taboo and places tremendous pressure on members to be merciful — meant that misdeeds big or small were downplayed, he said.

“One overseer just explicitly told me, ‘The less you know, the better off you are,’” he said.

As a worker, Snyder received no paychecks, retirement benefits or health insurance benefits, and he was discouraged from using banks. But he was never without spending money: Followers regularly offer cash to the workers, and Snyder said he frequently had thousands of dollars in his pockets.

Most of that money would get spent on building materials, food or other supplies at regional conventions, Snyder said.

In June 2022, a regional overseer named Dean Bruer died in an Oregon motel room. Bruer, 67, had served in at least 22 states and territories and seven countries since 1976, according to a timeline compiled by Pam Walton, a former member who has used historical records and photographs to track the movements of predatory preachers.

Nine months after Bruer died, Doyle Smith, the overseer for Idaho and Oregon, wrote a letter to members. Evidence left on Bruer’s phone and laptop showed he had raped and abused multiple underage victims, Smith wrote.

“Dean was a sexual predator,” Smith wrote. “We never respect or defend such totally inappropriate behavior among us. There is a very united consensus among us that the only thing to do is to be transparent with all of you for obvious reasons, though this is very difficult.”

That transparency did not extend to dealings with local police. It was only after Autrey, another abuse survivor, and private investigator Cynthia Liles — all former sect members — pressured Smith that he turned Bruer’s laptop over to detectives, Autrey told the AP.

By then, the computer had been tampered with, according to records from the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office in Oregon. The web browser search history was cleared. Bruer’s Apple ID had been changed and files transferred out of his DropBox account. Bruer’s phone was never provided to police, and the “Find My iPhone” feature had been disabled.

“What web browsing history was present on the laptop that someone didn’t want anyone else knowing about?” Detective Jeffrey Burlew wrote in a police report. Unable to find any evidence of a crime within its jurisdiction, the office closed the investigation.

Smith did not respond to phone messages from the AP.


open image in galleryPam Walton shows lists of the ‘Two by Twos’ workers who attended some of the sect’s annual meetings from 1992 to 2003 (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Though Autrey and others had long sought reforms in the sect, Bruer's death proved to be a catalyst. Autrey, Liles and another survivor launched a hotline, website and Facebook pages for survivors.

In February, the FBI's field office in Omaha, Nebraska, announced an investigation.

The outcry prompted some sect leaders to condemn the abuse and to ask consultants for advice on how to better protect members. But at least some regional overseers have ultimately declined to adopt recommended child abuse prevention policies — saying the only true code of conduct is the New Testament.

And some leaders still warn members against criticizing the sect.

At an August convention in Duncan, British Columbia, a worker helping to lead the event did not mention the abuse scandal directly but told members to lay aside “evil speakings.”

“It’s more easy to be critical than to be correct,” preached Robert Doecke, a worker from Australia. “If you feed on problems, it will only make more problems. But if you focus on the Lord, it will lead to solutions."