Thursday, April 13, 2023

Eggs off some menus in Japan as country hit by bird flu and egg shortage
28 restaurant giants have decided to suspend egg dishes including chawanmushi, pancakes and Chinese food.
 PHOTO: REUTERS

Amanda Lee
Correspondent
UPDATED
APR 13, 2023, 1:58 P.M. SGT

Looking for chawanmushi and tamagoyaki when in Japan? You may be disappointed.

Diners at some restaurants in Japan may not be able to order their favourite dishes that contain eggs due to an egg shortage, as the country battles with its worst outbreak of avian influenza.

About 30 per cent of 100 listed companies in Japan’s restaurant industry have suspended parts of their menu that use eggs from 2023, according to a survey by credit research firm Teikoku Databank on April 6.

Quoting the survey, Mainichi Shimbun daily reported that as at April 5, 28 restaurant giants have decided to suspend egg dishes including chawanmushi (a savoury steamed egg custard), pancakes and Chinese food.

The number of restaurant giants which have suspended eggs from their menus has increased by 10 from March, said the report.

Without stating specific restaurants, the report said that the main reasons for suspending the use of eggs were due to “soaring prices” and a “severe egg shortage”.

In the first three months of 2023, some big names in the food industry have taken steps to combat the egg shortage situation in Japan.

Avian influenza, also known as bird flu, is an infectious disease that affects wild birds and poultry that has been around for a century.

The avian influenza outbreak has resulted in Japan culling more than 17 million, or about 9 per cent, of egg-laying hens since the bird flu season began in the country in October 2022.

In January, Seven & i Holdings’ 7-Eleven chain, one of the many chain convenience stores across Japan, suspended the sale of some egg products. Other measures included using vegetables instead of eggs in its tuna sandwiches.

Then in February, Japanese casual restaurant chain operator Skylark Holdings began suspending sales of some menu items that use eggs, including the fried egg topping at its steak restaurants and fried rice at its Chinese food restaurant chain.

In March, McDonald’s Japan said it may have to suspend the sale of its popular Teritama burgers – comprising teriyaki patty and egg – during peak periods.

Although McDonald’s has managed to diversify its egg sources to not impact its regular offerings, the fast food chain spokesman Jonathan Kushner told the BBC that it was “watching the situation carefully”.

Hold the mayo as Japan egg shortage hits McDonald’s, 7-Eleven

The issue is simply that supply in the country is unstable, said the report.

“It is hard to predict what the situation will be like in the summer and the fall (autumn),” Mr Kushner said.

Others like seafood giant Nissui Corporation makes a tamagoyaki – a Japanese rolled omelette – from Alaskan pollack, reported the BBC.

The product, which has been on its shelves since the second half of 2022, is developed to meet the needs of consumers with egg allergies.

Mr Tetsuya Lida, the company’s spokesman, told the BBC that the product had never been a “big-selling product”.

However, the company has seen a fivefold increase in supermarket shipments in 2023.

The bird flu crisis and egg shortage situation have also sent egg prices soaring.

The BBC reported on Thursday that wholesale egg prices in Japan have spiked more than 70 per cent in the past year according to data from one local egg seller.

Wave of bird flu in Asia, Europe has greater risk of spreading to humans: Official

For example, a kilogram of medium-size eggs now costs about 350 yen (S$3.50), said JA. Z-Tamago, a unit of the National Federation of Agricultural Cooperative Associations, in the BBC report.

Japanese condiment-maker Kewpie, which uses eggs as a key ingredient in its products, is raising prices by up to 21 per cent from April.

Japan is not the only country grappling with the bird flu crisis and it is also hitting countries such as the United States and Europe.


Compulsive chastity in Iran: the citizen is a policeman and the authority incites the prohibition of vice


Karim Shafik - Egyptian journalist
11.04.2023
 Daraj 

The return of societal, parliamentary and political debates about the hijab, and the insistence of fundamentalist forces and the strong conservatism of its imposition, led the regime to promote a double and opportunistic discourse.

In conjunction with the Iranian regime's frantic moves to confront the rebellion against forced hijab, after an evasive period of calm following the growing protests that followed the killing of the Iranian Kurdish girl, Mahsa Amini, by the "morality police" patrol, repeated incidents of assault on girls, and violent crackdowns on shops and places that do not impose strict religious restrictions on women.

The growing incidents of assault were carried out by citizens without authority or powers, the latest of which was the brutal attack on a girl and her mother inside a market for not adhering to the compulsory hijab. This can be attributed to hostile religious propaganda promoted by clerics, societal mobilization against girls and women, and incitement to oppression, turning the citizen into a potential policeman to impose coercive chastity.

The return of societal, parliamentary and political debates about the hijab, and the insistence of fundamentalist forces and the strong conservatism of its imposition, led the regime to promote a double and opportunistic discourse.

The hijab is once seen as a legal issue that must be adhered to to achieve controls within any "legitimate society," in the words of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, in a deliberate confusion between "legitimacy" in its legal and constitutional sense, and "Sharia" in its religious sense, in disregard of the human rights disparity between them. Other times as a religious obligation, this radical discourse is promoted by the religious elite while softening any political pragmatism.

Fundamentalists in parliament pass the legislative structure that helps empower them politically, while representatives of the Wali al-Faqih in Iran's provinces and cities work to "whitewash" radical concepts and values through their societal incubators, through religious policies initiated by the head of the Planning Council for Friday Imams, Mohammad Javad Haj Ali Akbari.

Ali Akbari recently sent a "secret, detailed, and critical message" to the Iranian president, in which Friday imams demanded that the hijab be controlled, and launched an attack on the "enemy" who aims to transform the hijab from a cultural issue to societal polarization, and then a political challenge, to dismantle and collapse what he described as the "revolutionary front."

The latest incident will not be the end of the end as Iranian women renounce the forced hijab law, but events pave the way for a worse scenario, likely to be "the confrontation has just begun."

The citizen is free from vice


There are solid blocs among the conservative forces in Iran, lined up in the face of those who are out of obedience to the "guardian of the jurist", especially since the feminist movement managed to squander the capital of the symbolic regime, demanding a break with its guardianship policies, and out of the circle of submission in an effort to end authoritarian control.

The failure of the Iranian authority to achieve practical results using traditional repressive policies is accompanied by a new approach that seeks to mobilize societal forces to clash with opponents of the mullahs' policies. This was evident in the hidden support that provides protection to these "new Mutawa'a", the Interior Ministry's statement said after the recent incident, which affirmed "the support of (the ministry) for all those who command virtue and those who forbid vice."

"The judiciary, officers (police) and other relevant agencies will confront the few violators of sanctities and will not allow attacks on the sacred identity of Iranian Muslim women," the interior ministry statement said, adding that videos documented cases of violence in which these "citizens who command virtue and forbid vice" targeted unveiled women.

Hossein Shariatmadari, editor-in-chief of Iran's Kayhan newspaper, which is close to the office of the Iranian Supreme Leader, criticized the Interior Ministry's statement as "late" and "ambiguous." He also hinted at collusion or hypocrisy, the circumstances and dimensions of which he did not disclose, by the Ministry of Interior towards this case, describingthe ministry's position as "two-faced."

"As several months pass since the brazen phenomenon of taking off the hijab, the question is whether this delay (the issuance of the Interior Ministry statement) has acceptable reasons," Shariatmadari said.

"The issue of the hijab has turned in recent years into one of the axes of the enemy's cognitive war against the people," the Interior Ministry statement said, pointing out that anti-hijab campaigns, including "White Wednesday", "Girls of Enghelab Street" or "No to the compulsory hijab", "failed and have never been able to undermine the will and determination of Iranian women and girls to preserve their Islamic identity".

It seems that the supervisory mechanisms and strict legal provisions in Iran to legitimize violence against girls rebelling against the hijab, by the parliament and the government, do not seem sufficient in the face of the growing protests since September 2022, in addition to the spread of the phenomenon of girls going out without the hijab, in practice, which surprised the government during the recent holidays, specifically Nowruz. Thus, the regime seeks societal mobilization to create a soft ground around the protests and weaken their continuation.

The brutal attack on a girl and her mother in the city of "Mashhad", which was carried out by a man who entered into a violent contact with them, ended with throwing their heads with a milk can, and then an arrest warrant was issued against the three parties, which is not the first of its kind, but coincides with direct and continuous incitement by state institutions and agencies. Especially the Iranian judiciary, which stressed the need to prosecute women who oppose the obligation to wear headscarves and prosecute them "without mercy."




The beginning of the confrontation


Iranian journalist Daoud Heshmati writes that the latest incident will not be the end of the day as Iranian women renounce the compulsory hijab law, but rather that events pave the way for a worse scenario, likely to be "the confrontation has just begun."

The head of the judiciary, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ajei, threatened to prosecute non-veiled women "without mercy or compassion for them," and considered this behavior as "hostility to our values" in the "Islamic Republic," and continued: "If the violations are arrested, the judiciary will decide on the matter, and will prosecute everyone who has a role in these cases, from a causative to a collaborator and accomplice." "Taking off the hijab contradicts public chastity and the principles of Sharia and law," he said, adding that "the enemy supports taking off the hijab" in Iran.

The opinion of the Iranian president is hardly different from what the head of the judiciary said, as Raisi stressed that the hijab is "a religious necessity and a divine and Quranic command," noting that "it is a legal obligation and following the law is agreed upon by all," stressing that "everyone must abide by the hijab and chastity." "Our daughters and women, once again, by adhering to the hijab will show their commitment to the law and religious necessities."

The deputy head of the cultural body in the conservative Iranian parliament, Bijan Nobawah, stressed the need to deal with the issue of the hijab with "firmness", "comprehensive approach" and "decisive", taking into account that there are about 32 parties responsible for the issue of "chastity and hijab", all of whom have failed to achieve positive results.

"The person who commits this mistake is necessary and knows that the entire system is watching him and will punish him," the MP said, pointing out that if "the removal of the hijab and the adoption of emotional behavior are not comprehensively and resolutely confronted, the violators of sanctity will exceed this limit, and then we will witness more nudity and violation of sanctities."

The Iranian leader accused the "enemies", as he described it, of being behind the spread of the phenomenon of non-hijab, and said that "the enemy is working according to a plan and we have to confront this in a calculated and programmed manner. Taking off the hijab is forbidden legally and politically."

He continued: "Many of those who take off the hijab if they knew what is the policy behind this act of what they did," considering that the protests erupted after the killing of Mahsa Amini "conspiracies by enemies," accusing them of "exploiting the issue of women to provoke chaos and affliction. Some at home were deceived, obeying the external enemy and traitors living abroad and raising the slogan of women's freedom."
Warning with the tongue is everyone's responsibility

As a result, the regime's new and radical turn towards the imposition of the hijab investigates many means of coercion, legal, or mobilization, by managing violence by mobilizing members of society as "lone wolves" and cells working for the regime, which operates with the mentality of far-right organizations.

In addition to the Iranian regime's efforts, other pressures it exerts on the people include the rejection of citizenship rights, which occurred in the announcement of the ban on providing services to non-veiled women, and publications with the same content also spread in schools, universities, hospitals and means of transportation. According to the Tehran metro operator, a warning plan was launched under the title: "Warning with the tongue is everyone's responsibility," as well as the formation of "chastity and hijab" headquarters in the metro.

A statement issued by Iran's Ministry of Education earlier this month stipulated that educational services be provided only to female students who wear the hijab. The ministry will refuse to "provide educational services to a limited number of female students who do not abide by the rules and regulations of dress codes in schools." With the start of the new Iranian year, the president of the Free Islamic University of Iran, Mohammad Mehdi Tehranji, in an official statement, asked to confront what he considered "violating behaviors, including taking off the hijab" inside the university, and said that "this is the demand of the majority of students."
Iran: Is There Life after “Woman, Life, Freedom”?

Maya El Ammar
Lebanese Journalist
13.04.2023
العربية
DARAJ

Iran has a long history of feminist struggle. From Tahereh Qurrat al-Ayn, who took off her veil in public in 1848 to the 2006 One Million Signatures campaign and 2009 Green Movement. Mahsa Amini’s death triggered the 2022 protests under the slogan “Woman, Life, Freedom.” Today, Iran’s streets are quiet, but no doubt the next wave is coming. “Democracy will enter Iran through the gate of women’s rights.”

“We were shocked to see what happened.” It is a phrase repeated over and over again by the Iranian feminists we spoke to in order to delve deeper into the new reality created by the 2022 uprising, in which both men and women participated. Yet, the phrase did not come as a shock for people who had witnessed the protests and the way they were handled by the Iranian regime.

As with most uprisings and revolutions, it is impossible to determine the last drop that triggered last year’s wave of protests in Iran. How could a feminist cause give rise to a movement, while living conditions and restrictions on liberty sparked most other uprisings in the region?

There is no single answer to this question. But the fact is that a feminist cause, in the direct sense of the term, revived a popular uprising in a country with which we share many concerns. A popular uprising that is being suppressed by the state with all possible means, either violently or through propaganda and smear campaigns.

“The Iranian people are ready to pay any price,” wrote Iranian lawyer Shirin Ebadi, winner of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize, in a recent article. “For every dead person there are thousands of demonstrators.”

Ebadi, who has been living in exile in London since 2009, described the killing of Mahsa Amini on September 16, 2022, at the hands of Iran’s morality police, as a “rebirth.”

“The burial of her body turned the suppressed cry of the Iranian women into the slogan “Woman, Life, Freedom,” according to Ebadi. Amini ensured that Iranian men today know that “the victory of women is a prelude to their victory, and that democracy will enter Iran through the gate of women’s rights.”

The Feminist View


The quietness that currently rules most Iranian streets was not motivated by a desire for calm, but survival. However, the opposition headed by Iranian emigrants and exiles has not quieted down, as dependence on them has only increased.

Everyone acknowledges there are vast differences between the many parties that make up Iran’s opposition. Some are waiting for the opportunity to call for the return of the monarchy, while others lack popularity both today and in the past.

“The demand for the return of the monarchy, which we hear at times, has nothing to do with the slogan ‘Woman, Life, Freedom,’ as it is in essence patriarchal,” said Iranian feminist Niloofar Golkar, a doctoral candidate at York University’s Department of Politics, who is doing a Ph.D on conflict and solidarity movements.

Golkar is part of the political current that formed on the margins of the Iranian opposition, the roots of which were planted by the 2006 feminist campaign One Million Signatures for the Repeal of Discriminatory Laws.

As the name indicates, the campaign launched by Iranian women’s rights activists aimed to collect one million signatures to pressure the Iranian parliament to reform the country’s gender-discriminatory laws, including equal rights for women in marriage, divorce and inheritance, and an end to polgamy and temporary marriage.

The oppression of women in Iran has always gone hand in hand with the oppression of ethnic minorities. And the two coincided on September 16, 2022, with the killing of the 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was Kurdish. Known as Gina Amini in Kurdish, she became the face of the 2022 uprising.

“This was the convergence we had been waiting for,” said Berlin-based researcher Nisreen (a pseudonym). “It happened automatically as a result of Mahsa’s murder.”

With colleagues from over thirty countries, including Niloofar Golkar, Nisreen is the co-founder of Feminists For Gina, a network of female human rights activists who were once part of the One Million Signatures campaign and the Iranian Green Movement,

The latter was a political movement that arose after the 2009 presidential elections. The Green Movement demanded the removal of the winner, hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, from office. Many followers of both women’s movements were forced to flee Iran due to political oppression.

“If Mahsa had been killed in a different city, it would not have gained such momentum and attention,” said Nisreen

The 2022 Uprising:

The Next Chapter in the One Million Signatures Campaign

Few people could have foreseen the repercussions of Mahsa Amini’s death in detention. And yet the protests did not entirely come as a surprise. Iran has a long history of women activists and feminist struggle, as well as a long history of oppression extending over decades. When hardliner Ebrahim Raisi became president on August 3, 2021, he expanded the role of the morality police, which saw injustice and oppression only grow worse.

Iran’s legacy of women challenging power and authority dates back further than the 1979 Iranian Revolution. Take for example Zainab Pasha al-Tabrizia, an icon of both the labor and women’s struggle, who during the 1890 Tobacco Protest led a group of women during an uprising in Tabriz.

Before her, there was the poet and women’s rights activist Tahereh Qurrat al-Ayn, who took off her hijab during a in 1848 political meeting and called for equality. She was executed in 1852 for belonging to the Babi faith.

The aftermath of the 1979 revolution saw a process of islamization, in which the hijab (veil) was imposed on women, many of whom had initially supported Ayatollah Ruholla Khomenei’s rise to power. The mandatory hijab (veil) paved the way for the current gender segregation system.

The first demonstrations for women’s rights took place in the early 1980s and led to widespread arrests of protesters who dared to object to the strict laws imposed by the men of first the Islamic Revolutionary Committee” and then the parliament.

Yet, with the 8-year Iran-Iraq War the glow of those movements quickly faded. In fact, after a protracted absence of feminist movements since the 1980s, the One Million Signatures campaign was the first large-scale attempt to fight for equality.

40-year-old researcher and human rights activist Leila (a pseudonym) left Iran in 2012. She used to live in Tehran and was active in the One Million Signatures campaign between 2005 and 2008, as well as the Islamic Green Movement in 2009.

According to Leila, the activists who planned the One Million Signatures campaign to oppose Iran’s discriminatory laws and coordinated local meetings somehow sowed today’s seeds of change. They laid down the groundwork, before the hardline conservatives seized power with the election of Ahmadinejad in 2005.

They organized meetings and street debates over their demand to free Iran’s personal status laws from discrimination and masculine religious interpretations. In addition to a petition, the campaign culminated in a major conference called “The Impact of Laws on Women’s Lives,” in which many prominent feminists participated.

This happened at a time when the Iranian people still believed that reform from within was possible.

Not From Within

“There is currently no hope for justice or reform coming from within the regime,” said Niloofar Golkar. “For instance, former reformers [within the government] had the chance to change the compulsory Hijab law. But they didn’t change anything.”

Following the One Million Signatures campaign, the Green Movement manifested itself, rejecting the election results that handed Ahmadinejad a second presidential term and ended all hope for reform.

Most female activists moved from blogs and websites, where their names and identities were fairly obvious, to social media, where anonymity was possible, even though the authorities spared no effort in controlling the digital space by limiting access. Such restrictive practices still exist today.

Both the One Million Signatures campaign and the Green Movement were suppressed, as happens with every protest movement in Iran, whether it concerns inflation, water scarcity, the marginalization of minorities, or the 2020 downing of a Ukrainian passenger jet.

Many participants in the two movements were detained, including Golkar. She was arrested in 2006 for taking part in a demonstration demanding the release of five feminist activists who had participated in the One Million Signatures campaign and organized peaceful demonstrations.

As a result of the increased repression and imprisonment, there was a surge in emigration, which is why so many members of the Iranian feminist movement are today based in such countries as Sweden, Germany, Canada, the United States and others.

These foreign chapters associated with the One Million Signatures campaign and Green Movement were added to earlier ones linked to women who had fled the country following the 1979 revolution or during the Iran-Iraq War.

Current intellectual, political, and generational differences are a reflection of these surges of emigration, which created a rich mosaic of Iranian opposition movements. One of the main fault lines within the opposition concerns women rights activists who do not rule out cooperating with extreme rightwing forces in the West to support Iranian women’s rights.

Then there are some leftist who have a tendency to condemn any form of cooperation with the West, which they label as imperialist. As a result, this part of the left continues to be a left on the sidelines, silent and powerless when it comes to the Iranian issue, just as it was regarding the Syrian issue.

Nothing goes to waste

Although lessons were difficult to transmit in 2006, there is no question, according to Leila, that the activists of that time nurtured the consciousness of many (young) women today.

“Securing continuity within Iran’s feminist organizations and preserving our heritage for future generations was a crucial task for us,” said Leila. “It was almost impossible to leave a trace or memoir under a regime like the Iranian one. We had no workplaces, no offices, so we were constantly relocating,”

Since Mahsa Amini was killed, activists have continued to operate. Through “Feminists for Gina” and other networks, they highlight new intersections between feminism and ethnicity, the characteristics of which have become more distinct as a result of what the domestic movements have produced.

“Feminist thought, which is founded on the central notion of marginalized men, women, and minorities, as well as the central notion of solidarity,” Golkar explained, “As a result, we were able to connect with, for example, the Iranian interior, the Kurdish resistance movements, the women of the Hazara minority in Afghanistan, and many others.”

The Deep “Gender Segregation” System


However, activists fear that the fight of Iranian women will be reduced to the issue of imposing the hijab (veil). The latter is not just a piece of clothing symbolizing the attempt to control women’s bodies and dress code, it is also a cornerstone of Iran’s “mullah rule,” representing a deep gender segregation embodied in each and every one of the country’s institutions.

The veil has become closely associated with the security threat that follows Iranian women whenever they are out in public, forcing them to constantly devise plans on how to behave, how and when to wear and remove it, in accordance with the police and the presence of the paramilitary Basij.

The veil is like a ticking time bomb that women carry wherever they go.

In addition to social policies that are unfair to them in terms of work, marriage, divorce, and self-determination, Iranian women pay a hefty price for the regime of international sanctions that has been put in place. For instance, many of them are forced to walk long distances to get water and work long hours for low wages in the informal sector to support their families.

The morality police only makes things worse. They persecute women not only for wearing the headscarf or not, but also for the way it is worn. According to Leila, they flood women’s phones with text messages to summon them to a police station for not adhering to the best possible dress code. Through the ensuing financial penalties, the Iranian state earns a sizable income, while most citizens live in extreme poverty.

Iran ranked 143rd out of 146 countries in the World Economic Forum’s 2022 Global Gender Gap Report. A year prior to that, Iran decided to further aggravate discrimination against women by passing the Youthful Population and Protection of the Family Law.

With this law, the Iranian state brought its religious patriarchal tyranny to a close. The law deprives women free access to information about reproductive health and easy access to contraceptives. Abortion is banned except for very specific circumstances, such as preserving a woman’s life or fetal anomalies.

Having an abortion in extreme cases is dependent on the decision of a special panel, which consists of a judge, a medical doctor and a forensic doctor who will study a woman’s case and profile.

Since the government started enforcing the new policy, the number of infants born with thalassemia, a blood disorder, has increased, according to Fatima Hashemi Rafsanjani, daughter of the former president.

Will Female Prisoners be Executed?

The preliminary answer is no. At least, not for the time being. Yet, this does not change the harsh reality, as numerous testimonies and reports have made clear, that the execution of women is a common practice in Iran of which the regime is not at all ashamed.

Between 2000 and 2022, the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center registered the execution of 233 women in Iran, 106 of whom were executed for the murder of a violent husband or a rapist. This was for example the case of 26-year-old Rehana Jabari, who was executed in 2014 for merely defending herself.

As a result, human rights advocates are greatly concerned about the fate of Iranian women in detention, especially female activists and journalists who reject the gender segregation system.

Meanwhile, we must ensure not to fall for the propaganda of the Iranian government, which began by organizing the Conference of Influential Women in January 2023 and continued in February 2023 when Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei announced a partial amnesty for thousands of protesters as a “gift” on the occasion of the anniversary of the 1979 revolution.

Women journalists at the forefront

When discussing the struggle of Iranian women, it is important to consider the significant role female journalists have played, especially in covering the uprising and the event that sparked it: the killing of Mahsa Amini.

For example, Niloofar Hamidi and Elahi Mohammadi were the first journalists to report the incident and track its consequences. Both are now facing criminal charges, some of which are punishable by execution.

Nazila Mrovian, who grew up in Saqqez like Mahsa, was given a two-year prison term for publishing an interview with Mahsa’s father. She did not have a proper judicial hearing nor a defense attorney.

Given the fact that an estimated 20,000 people were detained for taking part in the demonstrations, some activists doubt imprisoned protesters or journalists will be executed.

Leila argued that the regime knows to what extent it has lost domestic legitimacy, particularly when it comes to women’s rights. “A move such as executing female detainees will not be accepted by Iranians, including conservatives,” she said.

“I am very worried about the high number of arrests, but I believe the likelihood of local journalists being executed remains remote,” said Yeghani Salehi Rezaian, an Iranian journalist and senior researcher at the Committee to Protect Journalists.

“However, many of the journalists who are currently being tried face severe punishments, including 10-year jail sentences, internal exile, or lengthy travel bans in addition to being barred from practicing journalism,” she said.

In 2014, Rezaian was arrested for a period of 72 days, of which she spent 69 days in solitary confinement. Her husband Jason Rezaian, who was The Washington Post bureau chief in Iran at the time, was imprisoned for 1.5 years on espionage charges.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, by the end of January 2023, 94 journalists were in detention or on trial in Iran, nearly half of them female.

What is Next?

All women we spoke to were worried about what would happen next to the Iranians at home. They were fully aware that the regime is determined to isolate Iranians from the outside world and to dissuade anyone from protesting, especially the Kurds.

“To be honest, I don’t have much hope,” said Leila when asked about the future. “It’s not in the interest of the regime to destroy itself internally now. And I don’t like any of the alternatives. I don’t want external intervention or occupation, nor new ethnic tensions that could encourage calls for secession and lead to a civil war.”

Niloofar Golkar was somewhat more positive, as she saw hope in the convergence of minority movements with women’s movements, the two groups that have experienced marginalization in various forms. She also believed new narratives had started to emerge and it would be difficult for the regime to erase them.

Leila recalled a scenario that she had not witnessed during any of the protests she had taken part in prior to leaving Tehran.

“In 2009, people were scared of the police when we were protesting,” she said. “Today, however, it is different. Young men bravely face the police or even beat them. Something like this has never happened before.”

“For a long time, the women of Iran were cut off from the world,” Nisreen in Berlin noted. “But now images are spreading, bridges are being built, dialogues are being exchanged. This is promising.”

Indeed, ending the isolation from which Iranian women have long suffered is what many exiled Iranian women emphasize. Despite the current inactivity on the street, they hope solidarity will grow, especially with feminist movements in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.

There is a continuous communication between women activists abroad and those within Iran, despite the many barriers installed by the regime. The ones abroad bet on the great awareness of women inside Iran, which will undoubtedly generate another movement.

Note that the main battling cry in Iran is no longer one for reform, but: “Death to the dictator.”

Note This article is part of the dossier “Feminist Work and Its Renewable Questions” in which six Arab media organizations (Daraj, Al-Hodoud, Sawt, Megaphone, Mada Masr and Al-Jumhuriya) participated at the invitation of Febrayer Network of Independent Arab Media Organizations in Berlin.
How Silva McLeod became Tonga's first female pilot after her husband's hospital bed suggestion

Maddison Leach
 Apr 13 2023


Silva McLeod, Tonga's first female pilot.

Growing up in a small village in Tonga, Silva McLeod often stared up at the clouds as planes passed overhead but never dared to dream she would end up flying one.

Born on the island of Vava'u, McLeod's future was pretty much set in stone; she believed she'd grow up, marry and churn out babies like the rest of the women on the island.

"When you're an island kid, flying is a fantasy. I would be the laughing stock of the village if I ever mentioned that I wanted to fly," she told 9Honey.

"But when aeroplanes flew over our village, I always raced outside to chase and I would stand there and watch until it disappeared into the horizon."

Being a pilot wasn't an option for a Tongan girl like her – or so McLeod thought until she fell in love unexpectedly with an Australian who was helping build a hospital on the island. Ken was an electrician and despite their different backgrounds, he and McLeod were drawn to one another and began courting, though McLeod's family disapproved at first .

Falling in love with a white man wasn't part of her plan, but she was smitten and when she confessed her fantasy about one day flying an aeroplane, Ken was supportive.

"He said, 'Well, that can be done. There's nothing stopping you'," she recalls.


Silva and her husband Ken in Australia with one of their daughters.

Maybe it was his belief in her that inspired McLeod to take a leap of faith and marry Ken in 1980, then leave her island life behind and relocate to Melbourne to start a family. They welcomed two daughters and for years, she focused on raising her girls, paying the mortgage, getting her kids through school and putting food on the table. She worked as a supermarket "checkout chick" and got on with life; her dreams of flying weren't a priority.

"To even fantasise of doing something like that, it's almost irresponsible as a mum," she says. Silva didn't think about it again until tragedy struck.

In 1990, Ken was diagnosed with a rare cancer of the plasma in bone marrow. Doctors said his life expectancy was about five years, but Ken was determined to fight it. As he went into hospital for a long stint of treatment, McLeod kissed him goodbye and he asked, "Do you still want to fly?"

"There was a little butterfly in my belly when he said that, but I quickly squashed it," Silva says.

"I really thought that he was delusional with all the drugs, the chemo."

But Ken was serious, and after making it through six months of treatment with her support, he surprised her with a voucher for an introductory flight on her birthday. McLeod loved every second of it and by the time she touched down she was totally hooked.

"I came out with textbooks, headset, everything. Ken looked at me and he said, 'What have I done? I've created a monster'," she laughs, but her husband was so supportive. McLeod knew becoming a pilot wouldn't be easy; she was a woman entering a male-dominated field, as well as being a mother and a woman of colour.

For years, she endured sexism, rude comments and discrimination to make her dream a reality while juggling motherhood, her day job, home life and training.

"When you want something so bad, you never see the challenges until afterwards. Looking back at it, I don't know how I did it," she admits.

It took six years and tens of thousands of dollars, but McLeod eventually earned her Air Transport Pilot Licence and became the first Tongan woman ever to qualify as a pilot. Then, in 1998 she got the call she'd been waiting for.


Silva McLeod has written a memoir about her experience, called Island Girl to Airline Pilot.

"This is Royal Tongan Airlines… we've got a position here for you," she heard down the line.

Sitting on the flight deck of a Royal Tongan Airlines aircraft not long after, McLeod made the captain's announcement in her native Tongan tongue in a moment she'll never forget.

"It was a hard long search for that job," she says, but there was a cost. The job would require her to spend long stretches of time away from her husband and children back in Melbourne.

"I was already a mum, employers didn't look favourably on my situation because the kids will always come first… which is so unfair because if I was a man, no one would bat an eye if I left my family behind, because you expect the man to be the breadwinner."

Fortunately, Ken supported her dreams and stayed home with their girls while McLeod went from one achievement to another, later flying for the Royal Flying Doctor Service and as first officer on international flights for Virgin. The "island girl" made her dreams come true and spent 30 years flying, but Ken's health began to deteriorate after his cancer returned.

He died peacefully at home on June 18, 2020, the same year McLeod lost her job flying due to the Covid-19 pandemic. She channelled her grief into writing.

"When I first put pen to paper, it was after Ken's funeral service and it was my go-to to let my grief out to pay tribute to him," she says. "I wanted the whole world to know that he was the 'Wind Beneath My Wings'. He was happy to walk behind me and let me shine and be the hero in front."

Before he passed, Ken encouraged his wife to one day share her story in the form of a memoir and after his death she spent 12 months writing for up to 12 hours a day. It took another 12 months to edit her story, pull it together and pitch it to publishers, and eventually Island Girl To Airline Pilot was picked up by Exsile Publishing.

The memoir helped her process her grief and she knows Ken "would be very, very proud and happy" she finally put their story to paper, as are their daughters.

Though she hasn't returned to flying since the pandemic, it fills McLeod with "gratitude" to know her book could inspire other young women to take to the skies like she did.

"If my story lands on a young girl out there, or a boy, or an Indigenous kid or someone from that kind of background, if sharing my little story could inspire them, I couldn't be happier," she says.

"Without Ken, I wouldn't have a story to tell. It was a huge help to me to grieve over my laptop and relieve our journey together," she says.

-9Honey Travel
Workers at anti-poverty World Bank struggle to pay bills

By FATIMA HUSSEIN

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Workers who are contracted to feed World Bank employees through a firm called the Compass Group, protest for higher wages and affordable healthcare benefits, Wednesday, April 12, 2023, outside of the World Bank in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Andre Blount has been serving food to dignitaries at World Bank headquarters for nearly 10 years and says he has gotten exactly one raise -- for 50 cents.

This week, as leaders from around the world are in D.C for the spring meeting of the poverty-fighting organization, Blount and his coworkers are trying to bring attention to what they see as a galling situation:

The workers who put food on the table for an organization whose mission is to fight poverty are themselves struggling to get by. Union leaders say a quarter of the World Bank food workers employed as a contract laborers through Compass Group North America receive public benefits, like SNAP, or food stamps, just to make ends meet.

“It’s sickening,” Blount, 33, said as he joined red-shirted union members this week on a picket line outside the development bank on a hot afternoon. “They go around the world looking for how to help people, but you have hundreds of employees in D.C. who are struggling.”

Inside, meanwhile, suited-up professionals were striding through a lobby where “End Poverty” T-shirts and tote bags are for sale.


The building’s expansive cafeteria overlooks an indoor pond and caters to even the most particular palates. There’s a soup station called “Ladle and Crust,” a “Mediterranean Table” station serving hummus and tabouli, and a sushi chef offering made-to-order rolls and sashimi.

A nearby fine dining room for diplomats and special guests of the bank was hosting lunch for delegations from India, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Sri Lanka.

Many of the food service workers, it turns out, come from countries to which the development bank sends missions.

Blount, after a decade on the job, says he’s paid $18 an hour, above D.C.’s minimum wage of $16.10. He says feeding some of the world’s most important people in a variety of service and catering roles should pay more than the legal minimum.

Blount, a member of the Unite Here Local 23 chapter, is one of roughly 150 Compass workers employed at the World Bank. They are in the midst of contract negotiations, seeking higher wages and better health care benefits.

World Bank spokesperson David Theis said that while the bank is not a party to talks between the union and Compass Group, the bank’s staff has “deep admiration and respect” for their food service colleagues. He said the bank ensured the workers were paid throughout the pandemic.

While $18 per hour may seem like a lot in some areas, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s “ living wage ” index lists $22.15 per hour for D.C.

Beginning July 1, the minimum wage in D.C. will increase to $17 per hour for all workers, one of the highest minimums in the country. The increase comes as persistent high inflation eats at workers’ paychecks and the median rent in Washington is $2,571, according to Zillow.

“The World Bank says its mission is to promote shared prosperity by increasing the incomes of the poorest 40% of people in every country,” Unite Here President D. Taylor said on a call with reporters.

“We think that first starts in the United States, by compensating food service workers here. They work hard every day yet struggle to pay their bills.”

Compass Group spokesperson Lisa Claybon said the firm was bargaining in good faith and eager to reach a fair agreement. She added that the company has “long history” of working to “do what’s best for our employees and clients.”

The current negotiations also cover Compass workers who serve food at the Smithsonian, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the National Institutes of Health.

Alex Campbell, director of the International Trade Union Confederation’s D.C. office, said workers around the globe “are suffering from a cost-of-living crisis that they didn’t cause.”

“To end poverty and promote shared prosperity in this turbulent moment, workers everywhere need decent living standards, basic rights on the job, and collective bargaining,” Campbell said. “That’s true from Compass employees here in D.C. to workers on projects funded by the World Bank Group anywhere in the world.”

Blount said he simply believes that his job should pay him what he’s worth. He added, “If I were to get a raise from Compass Group, it will help with saving up emergency funds, paying my bills on time instead of being late.”
China eyes building base on the moon using lunar soil



Julia Mueller
Wed, April 12, 2023 

China is looking to start work on building a base on the moon using lunar soil within the next five years, according to state media.

Beijing “aims to establish a basic model for a lunar research station base by 2028 and expand it into an international one,” state outlet CGTN reports.

The state-run China Daily said Beijing also plans to launch a probe to retrieve the world’s first soil sample from the far side of the moon around 2025.

The U.S., China and Russia have long been jostling for power in space, and some officials have stressed the security importance of the U.S. keeping up with space and cyber advances. NASA aims to once again put astronauts back on the lunar surface by around 2025.

China’s ambitious plan to set up a lunar station comes after a meeting of over a hundred Chinese scientists and researchers to discuss potential lunar infrastructure, as reported by the South China Morning Post.

Reuters reports that a robot capable of making bricks out of lunar soil will be part of China’s China’s Chang’e-8 mission around 2028.

Sportswashing at Its Worst: Saudi Arabia’s LIV Golf League


 
 APRIL 13, 2023
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Saudi Arabia — in the news for cutting oil production and pushing up the price of gas — is also making headlines for perhaps a more unusual reason: golf.

After a rollout last year hobbled by controversy, LIV — the Saudi Arabia-based golf league — is making a stronger debut this year. With 14 tournaments scheduled and half of those in the United States, the new league is poised to compete with the PGA.

LIV is only the kingdom’s latest foray into professional sports.

The Saudi national soccer team upset Argentina at the World Cup last year. The third Saudi Arabia Grand Prix, a Formula One race, was held in Jeddah. And more recently, the country’s Al-Nassr soccer team signed international superstar Christiano Ronaldo for a contract worth $500 million.

Boosters might welcome Saudi participation — and oil money — in global sporting events. But critics call it “sportswashing” — an effort to use splashy sporting events to distract from human rights violations.

Meanwhile, the country is making interesting moves diplomatically. The Saudi government recently signed a Chinese-brokered deal re-establishing diplomatic relations with Iran. Details are thin, but many hope it might pave the way for an end to Saudi Arabia’s devastating war in Yemen, whose ruling faction is aligned with Iran.

It’s no coincidence that all this is happening at the same time.

Saudi Arabia — a longtime powerbroker in the world economy because of its vast oil reserves — has emerged in the past decade with new political power under Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, or MBS.

Saudi Arabia opened this new phase with bombastic and belligerent acts. The kingdom hosted then-President Donald Trump in 2017, culminating in a bizarre photo of Trump, King Salman and Egyptian dictator Abdel Fattah el-Sisi holding their hands over a glowing orb.

The invasion of Yemen was carried out by a coalition of Arab states led by Saudi Arabia. The coalition has notoriously bombed bridges, civilian infrastructure, a school bus filled with Yemeni children, and even hospitals. According to the United Nations, Yemen remains the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

And there’s been repression of dissident citizens of the kingdom, including the torture of women’s rights advocate Loujain al-Hathloul and the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The abuses have been atrocious. They also have not achieved the kingdom’s objectives.

The Saudi war not only brought death and misery to Yemen — it also failed to supplant the ruling Houthis. Meanwhile, the murder of Khashoggi and the abuse of other critics marred MBS’s attempted branding as a young, progressive reformer. So the kingdom is rebranding. MBS is undertaking a huge effort to diversify the Saudi economy — making it less dependent on the world oil market — and improving its tourism and entertainment sectors in a strategic plan called Saudi Vision 2030.

That’s where sportswashing comes in.

Unfortunately, establishing itself as a player in sports hasn’t ended the rights abuses. The Saudi government killed 81 people in a mass executionjust two weeks before its second Grand Prix last year. LIV’s inaugural season was held the same year.

If any good comes of the LIV tournaments, perhaps it’s the growing attention to Saudi Arabia’s human rights record. Family members of 9/11 victims protested a New Jersey LIV tournament last year. Activists against the war in Yemen protested another in Massachusetts. And there will likely be more demonstrations this year.

Why should Americans concern themselves with Saudi Arabia’s rights record? Because our own government is enabling the worst abuses.

After all, the kingdom has carried out the war in Yemen with U.S. weapons, diplomatic support and intelligence. The assassins who killed Khashoggi were trained by a company in Arkansas. And Riyadh has become a preferred destination for retired American generals and admirals, who make massive salaries consulting for the rising military power.

An end to these transactions is long overdue.

Professional golf may be an unlikely setting for interrogating Saudi practices and U.S. foreign policy. But it’s crucial for the abusive governments of the world to know that challenging their abuses is always fair game.


The Right, NATO and the Cold War


 
APRIL 13, 2023
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Having lived in the US for eight years, I became accustomed to hearing right wingers trashing NATO allies for not doing their best to defend themselves without American assistance. As a Canadian whose late father was a major in the Royal Canadian Air Force, this type of criticism was often directed at my country, and to an extent I agree with it. The Canadian GOVERNMENT certainly does not spend enough on national defense, and this has been the case for decades. But that is not to say that the Canadian military doesn’t have a strong warrior ethos. I served as a soldier in the West Nova Scotia Regiment, a reserve infantry regiment, and I can personally vouch for the professionalism of Canadian service members, regular and reserve in all branches.

The reason I bring this up is because I just read a 2020 book by a retired USAF F-16 pilot named Colonel P.K. White who served in Europe during the Cold War and said: “… I participated in TAC-EVALs for Torrejon Air Base, conducted at Incirlik in Turkey, Leeuwarden Air Base in the Netherlands, and Bierset Air Base in Belgium. It was a good experience, as it provided a first-hand view of how different wings from different nations conducted their combat operations. As we all suspected, the non-US NATO wings were definitely held to a different standard (lower) than the US wings. To be fair, U.S. fighter wings like Torrejon, Hahn, and a few other US bases had nuclear commitments, so obviously, the standards had to be extremely high; however, one got the distinct impression that the non-US NATO bases just didn’t take their combat roles quite as seriously as the US bases.” (p. 230)

I can assure the good colonel that when Canada had air bases in Europe they were very highly regarded and considered among the very best in NATO, and garnered praise from USAF senior officers. And up until the early 1970s, the Canadians had a nuclear strike role in NATO, just like the USAF. The RAF is also highly professional, as I have mentioned in previous articles for CounterPunch.  The Canadians and British took the Cold War just as seriously as the Americans, and probably more so when the US had conscription. Tom Clancy was flat out wrong when he claimed the RAF cannot “can’t begin to match” the “professionalism of today’s USAF”. (p. 194)

It took a tremendous effort from ALL NATO nations, not just the USA, to bring the Soviet Union to its knees and end the Cold War. That obviously includes The Netherlands, a country that Colonel White criticized when he saw a couple of very young Dutch airmen goofing off during an exercise, as if this never happened in the USAF. I would remind him, will great respect, that goofing off, even desertion, drug use, and people joining up only to avoid getting drafted into the Army certainly did happen in the USAF, especially during the Vietnam era and the 1970s.

Finally, I would politely ask Colonel White and others who hold his views to read a wonderful book by an RAF fighter pilot who served on exchange in the Royal Netherlands Air Force (RNLAF) and LOVED it. The book is called Flying Freestyle: An RAF Fast Jet Pilot’s Story and the author is Squadron Leader Jerry Pook, MBE DFC. He said: “One of the excellent things about RNLAF bases was the way that base operations worked. They actually controlled flying operations, instead of just monitoring (and sometimes hindering) them as in the RAF.” (p.330) The Dutch air force compared favorably to the RAF in other ways as well. As Pook tells it: “The Dutch took instrument flying much more seriously than the RAF. For them it was the vital component of AWX, or all-weather operations. The squadrons at Volkel had a wartime IMC (instrument meteorological conditions) capability, (i.e. we could carry out our missions in cloud) – in war we were expected to launch regardless of the weather at base or en route to the target. This demanded a lot of peacetime training at low-level instrument flying, both day and night.” (Ibid.)

There you have it: praise for the Royal Netherlands Air Force. That’s something that won’t be found in many books published by American conservatives. NATO was and still is a team, and trashing allies doesn’t promote unity, which is really needed now.

NOTES

PK White. INSIDE THE TURN CIRCLE: Earning My Wings in the F-16 1979-1988. UNKNOWN. Kindle Edition.

Tom Clancy; Gresham, John. Fighter Wing (Tom Clancy’s Military Reference). Penguin Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

Jerry Pook. Flying Freestyle: An RAF Fast Jet Pilot’s Story. Pen & Sword Books. Kindle Edition.

Roger Thompson is a research fellow at Dalhousie University’s Centre for the Study of Security and Development, the author of Lessons Not Learned: The US Navy’s Status Quo Culture, and a former researcher at Canada’s National Defence Headquarters.

Are the High Seas the Primary Cyberwarfare Theatre?









APRIL 12, 2023 by DANIEL PEREIRA

This research caught our eye based on our recent analysis of the Weaponized IT Supply Chain, the Leviathan’s Attacks and Kinetic Naval Intervention in the South China Sea. The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) and the Cyber-SHIP Lab at the University of Plymouth collaborated on simulations and scenarios of cyberattacks at the high seas which transcend the usual narrative of the types of cyberattacks directed at the systems on most maritime vessels and offshore rigs.

Background: Cyberattacks on the High Seas

“We are seeing spoofing and jamming more often now…”

As reported by Alexander Martin at The Record:

“Since the turn of this century, cyberattacks on industrial systems — from nuclear enrichment facilities in Iran to multiple parts of the power grid in Ukraine — have proven that digital interference can have a direct physical impact.

To date, there have been no publicly acknowledged cyberattacks that have similarly impacted a ship, although cyberattacks on other systems connected to shipping are known throughout the industry and maritime academia. The researchers warn that this lack of public acknowledgement does not mean the risks aren’t there.

“We are seeing spoofing and jamming more often now, with foreign governments trying to do different things to confuse the Western world and to create disputes about whether ships entered national territorial waters,” said Marie Haugli-Sandvik, a Ph.D. Candidate at NTNU.

“researchers…successfully hacked a rudder on a ship…during a simulation…”

Reports have suggested that Chinese actors have spoofed AIS (automated identification system) broadcasts required of ships under international law to signal their location to other vessels nearby while potentially unloading oil covered by U.S. embargoes to terminals on China’s eastern coast.

There have also been suggestions that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps has deployed GPS jamming to trick merchant vessels into entering Iranian waters around the strait of Hormuz.

Haugli-Sandvik said the researchers had collaborated with the team at the Cyber-SHIP Lab at the University of Plymouth in England who “successfully hacked a rudder on a ship” during a simulation, and “made the ship run aground in such a timeframe that the deck officers wouldn’t be able to stop it.”

“Sailors have handled cyber issues on the same basis as any other technical issue…”

Although this was a simulation, Haugli-Sandvik and Erlend Erstad, a Ph.D. candidate at NTNU — both of whom have previously worked as deck officers aboard merchant vessels servicing Norway’s oil rigs — said the risks of an attack directly affecting a ship are real and demand greater awareness and training among seafarers.

While a deck officer, Haugli-Sandvik said she didn’t think of a cyberattack on the ship as a possible threat. Erstad agreed: “Just like most people do today, they think that this won’t happen to me, so I don’t need to consider it.”

Erstad told Recorded Future News that he did not know of “any reported safety accidents at this moment,” but he cautioned that there have been “unexplainable” incidents that haven’t yet been attributed to a cyberattack or a technical error. “We know there are unreported events in the industry, as the ship owners and charterers haven’t had any official reporting schemes until recently. Sailors have handled cyber issues on the same basis as any other technical issue,” said Erstad.


Challenges Identified by the Norwegian National Security Authority’s Risk Report 2022In its 2022 Risk Report, the Norwegian National Security Authority (NSM) points to a threefold increase in the number of serious incidents and cyber operations from 2019 to 2021. The corresponding report for 2023 addresses the issue that there are many vulnerabilities in unclear supply chains, and that with more unpredictability the industry needs to be better prepared.

The maritime industry has worked with digitalization in both traditional information technology systems (IT systems) and in operational technology in systems for automation, propulsion, management and other control systems. The greater the use of remote connection, integration and digitization in operational technologies, the more vulnerable the operation can be.

At the same time, the lifetime of larger ships is generally between 25 and 35 years, and digital upgrades in the entire international fleet usually happen gradually and over time. There is great variation in computer equipment on board both for administrative functions and control systems.

The situation is much the same as for ports, where more and more operations are being automated. When it comes to port traffic alone, incidents have been uncovered that have result from cyber-attacks IT and administrative systems. These lead to business interruptions, information theft and manipulation linked to smuggling. (1)

What Next? The Cyber-SHIP Lab research has assisted the maritime industry in assessing cyber risk and scenario narratives in a much different manner.

During a training course which was an element of the research project, researchers examined the effects of a compromised ballast water treatment system. They found that an attacker could make “;the ship move uncontrollably to one side’. This wasn’t based on a known vulnerability of the system. The point was to train sailors how to respond if something does go wrong. ‘The learning outcome and the intention of the scenario was not to tip the ship over to make a disaster of some kind, because if you do that you don’t get any learning points for the student,’ explained Erlend Erstad, a Ph.D. candidate at NTNU.

“We know about a lot of vulnerabilities in vessels’ systems and how they can be exploited. So, we know what’s possible. But there is a difference between what’s possible and what’s most likely,” said Marie Haugli-Sandvik, a Ph.D. Candidate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

Taking control over an entire ship was “very, very, very unlikely,” said Erstad but compromising a single system and using that to imperil the whole vessel “might be doable.”

“We see that OT [operational technology] and IT [information technology] are connected in very uncontrolled manners on ships today, and that also makes it possible for IT ransomware to be translated over to OT networks onboard the ships,” warned Haugli-Sandvik.

“People often don’t understand the risks. … If you work on a vessel, you work on a floating computer, and there are some threat actors out there that can harm you, or your vessel, or could be interested in the information you have, if you are working within, for example, energy or oil and gas, and so forth,” she added.

“We would like to raise awareness amongst seafarers,” added Haugli-Sandvik. “If we say ransomware is something you need to worry about because your company can go bankrupt, that’s obviously something management would worry about, but if you have to worry about ransomware on your vessel because you can run aground, it’s a different scenario [which seafarers themselves would pay attention to as well].”

Human behavior “can decrease cyber risk a lot,” she said. “That’s where we put our pressure because we are not technical IT experts, we are former deck officers, so our main focus is on the crew, and how they can behave in the best way possible to protect both themselves to decrease the possibility of a cyberattack happening and know what to do in the first hours and days if you are hit by a cyberattack.”

Last October, Norway’s prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre warned that Russia poses “a real and serious threat” to the country’s oil and gas industry amid criticisms that the Scandinavian country has acted too slowly to protect its petroleum sector — including the vital role that the merchant fleet plays — from cyberattacks. (2)

Featured Image Source: NTNU