Sunday, January 23, 2022

Former Police chief claims Spanish intelligence knew of impending Barcelona terror attack

A former senior Spanish police officer has claimed that Spanish intelligence services knew about the plans of the terror cell responsible for the 2017 Barcelona attacks but failed to act in a bid to destabilise Catalonia before a crucial independence vote.

The government of Catalonia is demanding an investigation after a controversial former police officer claimed that the CNI, Spanish intelligence services, knew about the activities of a terrorist cell ahead of a deadly attack it carried out. which left sixteen people dead and more than a hundred injured.

Fourteen people died on August 17th, 2017, when a van driven by Younes Abouyaaquob deliberately ploughed into pedestrians in central Barcelona. Abouyaaquob stabbed and killed another person soon afterwards and five other members of his jihadist cell ran over and killed a woman in the town of Cambrils, also in Catalonia. All six terrorists were eventually shot dead by police.

The former police officer, José Manuel Villarejo, who is currently on trial for bribery and extortion, appeared to suggest that the CNI intelligence service knew not only about the terrorist cell but also about its plans. He told the high court that the then head of the CNI, Félix Sanz Roldán, made “a serious mistake” with regard to the terrorist cell because “he miscalculated the consequences of causing a bit of a scare in Catalonia”.

The 2017 attack took place just a few weeks before the Catalan government oversaw a referendum on independence, in defiance of the Spanish courts. Some pro-independence Catalans have maintained ever since that the attack was somehow linked to the Spanish state’s efforts to thwart the independence movement. The referendum held the following month posed the question "Do you want Catalonia to become an independent state in the form of a republic?". The "Yes" side won, with 2,044,038 (90.18%) voting for independence and 177,547 (7.83%) voting against, on a turnout of 43.03%. The Catalan government estimated that up to 770,000 votes were not cast due to polling stations being closed off during the police crackdown.

It later emerged that the alleged mastermind of the attacks Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam in the city of Ripoli, was a CNI informant. 

The former commissioner made the remarks whilst in court during a case involving police spying allegations. He stated his claims could be authenticated and called for archives to be released.

“All the evidence is in my archives. I authorise their release...We must think that the citizenry is not a minor and the law of secrets cannot be used to hide everything. It is an obsolete Francoist law from 1968.” Villarejo said.

Catalan President Peres Aragones said on Twitter: “17-A was a barbarity that has marked us forever. And if Villarejo’s words are true, explanations are needed now.

“We know very well how the state sewers work, so we demand that they be investigated in order to clarify the truth."

“I have also asked the legal services of the Generalitat [government] to study these statements and the relevant legal actions that can be taken. For the truth. For the victims, for the Catalans and for all those who are on the side of peace and democracy.”

 

 

In 2019, the Catalan city of Barcelona called for an investigation into the genocide of Tamils by Sri Lanka, and to recognise the rights of the Tamil people to an independent homeland, Tamil Eelam.

In a resolution voted by the city’s municipal council on January 25, representatives denounced systematic violations against the rights of Tamils, urged the recognition of Tamil sovereignty and called for an end to the Sri Lankan military’s occupation of the Tamil homeland.

Read more here: Barcelona calls for investigation into genocide of Tamils and recognition of Tamil Eelam 

Suspected Sri Lankan war criminal dies in Colombo

A senior Sri Lankan military commander who once led a unit accused of war crimes has died from complications of a COVID-19 infection, having never been investigated or faced any accountability mechanism.

Panduka Perera, who last held the post of commander of the 563 Brigade which is currently occupying the Vanni, died on December 31. His funeral was held earlier this month, with military honours.

The commander first joined the Sri Lankan army in November 1990 and took part in several military offensives in the North-East. In the years that followed, as the Sri Lankan armed forces battled its way across the Tamil homeland, scores of human rights violations occurred.

But it is in the military’s final assault in which Perera took a leading role. On November 5, Perera took over command of the 6th Sinha Regiment, as part of a promotion to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

The battalion took part in military offensives in the Vanni as it pushed into Puthukudiruppu, a town in Mullaitivu that came under intense Sri Lankan bombardment.

6 Sinha Regiment troops in Puthukudiruppu in early 2009.

Subsequently, under Perera’s command, the 6 Sinha Regiment advanced with the army’s 53 Division further into Mullaitivu towards Mullivaikkal, where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were massacred.

The man who oversaw the 53 Division at the time was Kamal Gunaratne, Sri Lanka’s current defence secretary and another credibly accused war criminal.

The events of that period have been subject to several United Nations reports and closely examined. Hospitals were bombed, surrendering Tamils executed or forcibly disappeared and widespread sexual violence was deployed.

To date, no one has been held accountable for any of the crimes that took place.

Tamils will not sell their birthright – C V Wigneswaran

 In an address to parliament, C.V. Wigneswaran, stressed that Sri Lanka current economic woes are driven by the government’s failure to meet the demands of the Tamil nation.

Chastising the attempt by Sri Lanka’s President to sweep over the underlying issues for Tamils, Wigneswaran states:

“The President wants us to leave our kith and kin, leave those who voted for us, leave those who are awaiting their freedom from Sinhala hegemony in the North and East, leave those who have lost their lands to Government Departments and the Armed Forces and join him to take bread to our people!”

“Man does not live by bread alone” he adds.

He further lambasts President Rajapaksa stating:

He thinks “if the Tamils are forced to live within an occupied territory, if they are deprived of even the existing feeble political rights, if they are sufficiently terrorized, if they are stifled and starved, the Tamils would sell their birthright to a pot of porridge”.

He also criticises the inflated military budget nothing that, “nearly a fifth of the Country’s wealth is utilized even today for so-called security and to pamper the Military”.

Wigneswaran also describes the genocide of Mullivaikkal as a continuing process noting the ongoing expropriation of land by the Sri Lankan military and deprivation of Tamil fishermen. In the northern province, the state holds over 65,000 acres to house a massive military in the area despite it contravening both the UN’s International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

Wigneswaran concludes his statement calling on the government to:

  1. Immediately halt all actions and activities that are being systematically undertaken by the Archaeological department, Forest department and Wildlife department and some other departments with the sole objective of destroying the ethnic and cultural character and demographic composition of the Northern and Eastern provinces and thereby prevaricate and re–write history.
  2. Abrogate the much-abused Prevention of Terrorism Act.
  3. Free all Tamil speaking political prisoners presently behind bars under the provisions of the draconian PTA.

He further stressed that these are prerequisites towards a new federal constitution.

Read the full letter here


SEE https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=LEMURIA


 The Wall Street Journal: The Once & Future Drug War


The following is the direct text of an article that was written by journalists James Marson, Julie Wernau, and David Luhnow for the newspaper The Wall Street Journal and released on January 21, 2022. 


During the 50 years the U.S. has battled the narcotics trade, illegal drugs have become more available and potent. But that’s no reason to give up. Governments must adapt and find answers beyond law enforcement. 


America’s longest war isn’t the 20-year fight in Afghanistan. That struggle is dwarfed by the War on Drugs, started by President Richard Nixon more than 50 years ago and still raging.


President Nixon after signing a drug bill in Washington, Oct. 27, 1970. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS

The drug war—which has relied on both law enforcement and the military, at a cost of untold lives and hundreds of billions of dollars—has fared little better than the Afghan campaign. Since Nixon’s declaration of war in 1971, drug use has soared in the U.S. and globally, the range and potency of available drugs has expanded and the power of criminal narcotics gangs has exploded.


At the current rate, accidental drug overdoses are killing some 100,000 Americans annually, and those deaths have roughly doubled every decade since 1979. Law enforcement is now focused not only on the deadly opioid fentanyl but on a surge of new, stronger methamphetamines, capable of giving users mental disorders in just a few days. In Europe, cocaine seizures have hit record volumes, and Europe may now be a bigger market for cocaine than the U.S., according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.


As one popular saying has it: We declared war on drugs—and drugs won.


Many drug policy experts and veterans disagree. They say that the failures of the past half century don’t mean it’s simply time to give up. The rising potency of synthetic drugs makes it even more urgent to keep them off the streets, and growing encampments of drug users in cities like San Francisco and Seattle show that tolerance is no panacea. As drug gangs adapt and globalize, countries need to adopt new approaches to attack supply, curb demand and treat the problem not only as a policing issue but also as a public health crisis. The COVID pandemic may subside, but the drug epidemic endures and is getting worse.


“The drug war failed not because we treated it as a law-enforcement problem but because we only treated it as a law enforcement problem,” says Sam Quinones, a journalist and author of two books on the U.S. drug crisis. Mr. Quinones is wary of “silver bullet” solutions like outright legalization. He advocates a community approach that blends law enforcement, public health and prevention: Call it compassionate prohibition.


Today, drug-trafficking revenues in places like Mexico fund increasingly sophisticated and dangerous gangs that rival the government in firepower, collect their own taxes through widespread extortion, and even run welfare programs to win social support. Organized crime is rising across Europe, leading to gangland hits in once-peaceful countries such as the Netherlands and Belgium. Abundant narco-cash is even flooding into cities never before known as drug havens, from Antwerp to Dubai.


The global spread of synthetic drugs like methamphetamine, fentanyl and synthetic opioids is complicating interdiction—the core of America’s strategy for 50 years.


A Mexican soldier stands guard in a poppy field before it is destroyed in a military operation, Coyuca de Catalan, Mexico April 18, 2017. PHOTO: HENRY ROMERO/REUTERS


Narcotics once originated in a handful of regions where their source plants could grow: marijuana in Mexico, coca in Colombia, opium poppies for heroin in Afghanistan. They required large-scale agriculture, which governments could target for eradication. The drugs, often bulky, then moved along known trade routes.


That model is changing. The new synthetics can be manufactured almost anywhere, using easily obtainable chemicals. Tiny amounts are enormously powerful and profitable. Those innovations simplify trafficking and undermine policing. All the fentanyl entering the U.S. annually could fit into 15 or 20 cars, says Daniel Ciccarone, a professor of family medicine at the University of California at San Francisco who has researched street-based drug use for two decades. An estimated 200,000 vehicles cross the U.S.-Mexico border daily.


“Trying to stop drugs coming into the U.S. was always a bit like looking for a needle in a haystack. But now the needle is so much smaller,” says Victor Manjarrez, a former high-ranking Border Patrol officer. Mr. Ciccarone goes a step further: “It’s the angel on the head of the pin in the proverbial haystack.”


Not that crop-based drugs are disappearing. Even as cocaine use in the U.S. falls, Colombia produced a record amount of cocaine in 2020, according to the U.N., as traffickers targeted newer markets from Europe to Australia, where cocaine fetches a far higher price than in the U.S.


Globalized commerce using ubiquitous shipping containers also means that drugs can piggyback on legitimate cargo. Cash-rich traffickers are even testing new technologies like drones and building ocean-crossing narco-submarines.


A paradox of the war is that while drugs have claimed far more lives than terrorists, Western societies have changed far less in response to narcotics. Bombings or shootings linked to the drug trade elicit little reaction because people believe drug gangs exist in a vacuum, Belgian Federal Prosecutor Frédéric Van Leeuw recently told France’s Le Monde. “If the person shouted, ‘Allahu akbar!’ it would not be the same.”


A U.S. Customs and Border Protection canine team checks cars for contraband at the border, San Ysidro, Calif., Oct. 2, 2019. PHOTO: SANDY HUFFAKER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The War on Terror changed how we fly, submit to government monitoring and report our finances. The War on Drugs, by contrast, hasn’t even prompted notable changes at cargo ports, where tighter screening would have far less impact on the daily lives of voters and taxpayers than the intrusive security measures introduced since 9/11 at airports, train stations and office buildings.


Meanwhile, many countries that the U.S. relies on in the drug war have grown tired of the mounting body count and pervasive corruption. Since 2006, Mexico’s efforts to tackle cartels by arresting or killing cartel leaders has backfired: New leaders have simply emerged, and power struggles led to an estimated 250,000 dead in drug-fueled violence. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador seems to have largely given up, calling his strategy of not chasing kingpins “hugs, not bullets.”


So what can be done, since every potential solution has major downsides? A first step, say veterans of the cause, is to see it as an ongoing fight to limit damage, not as a war to be won once and for all.


U.S. policy for 50 years has focused on law enforcement. The result: Supply has grown while the American prison population has exploded.


Increasingly, governments are trying to reduce harm from drug use rather than to eradicate it. Advocates for policies and programs that treat substance use more as a chronic disease than a crime say the growing toxicity of drugs is one of the greatest current public health threats. The primary goal, they say, must be saving lives.


Guns, drugs and money seized in Boston, Mass, June 20, 2019. PHOTO: NANCY LANE/THE BOSTON HERALD/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Fentanyl has now killed far more Americans than all U.S. conflicts since World War II combined. In the past decade, it has claimed more than a half million lives, a toll that is growing swiftly. The nation was reporting fewer than 50,000 fatal overdoses as recently as 2014. Nearly half of drugs tested by the DEA contain a potentially fatal dose of the synthetic opioid.


Fentanyl is up to 50 times more powerful than heroin but is far cheaper to manufacture, which makes it lucrative for cartels, boosting their profit margins. They use it as a substitute for heroin powder or press it into black-market oxycodone pills. Fentanyl is now also finding its way into cocaine and party drugs like ecstasy and is even sprayed on marijuana. But what’s good for cartels is often lethal to users.



A man prepares an injection at the OnPoint NYC safe use site in Harlem. Dec. 2021. PHOTO: SCOTT HEINS

In November, New York City opened the nation’s first overdose prevention centers, where people can consume illegal drugs under supervision. Drug users can have their supply tested for fentanyl and in the event of an overdose, staff can administer the antidote naloxone. The sites can also help with housing, medical care and treatment.


Rhode Island, Massachusetts and San Francisco plan similar centers. The Trump administration challenged them under federal law, but the Biden administration hasn’t said if it will do the same. Absent a federal challenge, more centers are expected.


The Biden administration is the first to name “harm reduction” a priority. The White House Office on National Drug Control Policy, which was often run in the past by former generals and law-enforcement officials, is now led, for the first time, by a physician, Dr. Rahul Gupta.


Some cities are also rethinking how they operate 911 emergency systems. Many drug users, particularly in minority communities, won’t call to report a drug emergency over fears of criminal consequences or police violence. Several cities are testing new formats that involve sending trained mental-health and harm-reduction professionals to such calls alongside police or instead of them.


Europe is also pursuing harm reduction. The U.K., the Netherlands, Austria and others have offered drug testing, often at music events, to reduce the risk of overdosing or poisoning. Switzerland, the U.K., Germany and the Netherlands prescribe heroin to dependent users to cut fatal overdoses and needle sharing.


Portugal has gone further. It decriminalized all drugs in 2001 amid a surge in heroin use and drug-dependent prisoners. Anyone caught with less than a 10-day supply of any drug is sent to a local commission that includes a doctor, lawyer and social worker for treatment. Overdose deaths have fallen from about 360 a year to 63 in 2019.


Health experts can bring fresh approaches. Decades of research have found that programs encouraging users to quit cold-turkey often have worse outcomes than doing nothing. Most U.S. prisons—where some 65% of inmates have a substance-abuse disorder—still use this treatment, which vastly increases chances of a prisoner’s overdose death following release.


Only medication-assisted-therapy—such as treatment with opioid agonists—has been shown to yield better outcomes for drug users, but it is still difficult for many addicts to get access to those medications. Vermont last year decriminalized buprenorphine, a drug that has been found to reduce cravings for addicts but is less potent than methadone or heroin. Funding for such treatments, however, remains a fraction of the broader fight.


Experts also say there is a frustrating lack of data on drug use that could provide answers to basic questions like why dealers or users mix fentanyl with other drugs. In 2013, the U.S. stopped funding a program that surveyed inmates on drug use and helped to identify emerging hot spots as well as new drugs, according to Beau Kilmer, director of the Drug Policy Research Center at Rand Corp.


“Our data infrastructure to monitor this problem is extremely weak,” he says. “With so many people dying, federal agencies and foundations should make this a priority.”


A health-based approach has limits, however, according to Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University and an addiction expert. He advocates keeping drugs illegal, noting that legal alcohol and tobacco still kill many more people than illegal drugs. “Do you want tobacco companies to sell fentanyl?” he asks.



A homeless encampment in Venice, Calif., June 30, 2021. PHOTO: FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Prof. Humphreys believes that tolerance has helped to feed a growing population of tent encampments often populated by drug users in cities on the West Coast, including Venice Beach, Calif., which some locals jokingly call “Methlehem.”


Removing social or legal disapproval of drug use doesn’t seem to boost recovery, he says. In Oregon, drug users receive a $100 fine that they can get waived by agreeing to a 20-minute call with social services to encourage them to enter a treatment program. Fewer than 1% have sought treatment, he says.


Even in Portugal, lauded as a decriminalization model, drug users face pressure to enter treatment, and there is strong social disapproval of drugs in the socially conservative, largely Catholic country. But that is not the case in freewheeling American port cities like San Francisco, with its long acceptance of drug use.


“The idea of decriminalization arose in the era when drugs were far more forgiving, but that’s no longer the case,” says Mr. Quinones. Many users should be forced to get help, he says, even by putting them in jail—but only if we rethink jails to include treatment pods and 12-step programs. This is being tried in some states hit hard by the drug epidemic, particularly Kentucky.


Policing can also be aimed at harm reduction. Since 2004, the city of High Point, North Carolina, has targeted low-level drug dealers and users by offering them help with housing and employment. The catch: Anyone caught peddling again gets locked up. The vast majority of sellers and users accept help. Other police forces are focusing just on drug users who commit crimes.


Growing social and legal tolerance of drugs dismays people like Mike Vigil, who had a 31-year career in the DEA, including chief of international operations. He acknowledges that interdiction and law enforcement have not solved the problem. But he says that the U.S. has failed to develop a comprehensive strategy, including investing in down-and-out communities where drug use flourishes and trying to reduce future demand through massive, sustained education programs.


Such efforts, experts say, need to go far beyond having a cop occasionally turn up to lecture bored kids on the dangers of drugs and should be woven into the curriculum, including teaching the neuroscience behind addiction. Messages also must be tailored to social media.


“We aren’t going to be able to arrest our way out of this,” says Mr. Vigil. His frustration is widely shared. “The U.S. has never taken the demand side of things seriously,” says former Mexican President Felipe Calderón.


Law enforcement also needs to adapt, tapping intelligence and targeting money flows. Over the last three years, European police hackers infiltrated two encryption services popular among criminals, obtaining hundreds of millions of messages that triggered hundreds of arrests. Artificial intelligence and other technical advances can help. British police identified one trafficker by analyzing fingerprints visible in a photo he sent via an encrypted app of his hand holding a block of Stilton cheese.


But a great deal of work remains, particularly in seizing illegal drug money. A 2017 study by Europol, the European Union’s police agency, estimated that fewer than 10% of suspicious money transactions were being investigated and less than 1% of illegal drug money seized. Now governments are trying to get help from banks, with prosecutors telling the financial institutions where to look for suspicious money, says former Europol director Rob Wainwright.


On the U.S.-Mexico border, American law enforcement officers are working to stop not just drugs going north but also money and weapons going south to fund and arm cartels. “Placing as much focus southbound as we do northbound could help,” says Ray Provencio, acting director at the El Paso port of entry for U.S. Customs and Border Protection.


The U.S. can also shift interdiction strategies, focusing more on helping China to stop exports of precursor chemicals and Mexico to better police the Pacific ports where the chemicals enter. Targeting precursor chemicals is difficult, however, because some are legal and used in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries. Gangs also respond to the banning of certain chemicals by quickly coming up with new formulations that are not yet outlawed.


In some ways, U.S. drug policy needs to return to the era of Nixon, says Prof. Humphreys at Stanford. Although Nixon coined the phrase “war on drugs,” his administration’s strategy was roughly two-thirds prevention and treatment and one third enforcement. “Nixon was much more moderate than is remembered by drug historians,” he says.



Source: James Marson, Julie Wernau, & David Luhnow for The Wall Street Journal

NO $$$$ FOR FEMICIDE
Afghanistan: Taliban's crackdown against women exposed - but some are rebelling

Most women - apart from health workers and some government employees - have been barred from work. But some are rebelling.



By Correspondent Alex Crawford, cameraman Jake Britton, and producers Chris Cunningham and Mark Grant


Sunday 23 January 2022 19:09, UK
mag:It is just a small glimpse into how life has changed for these women

The drive through snowy streets in the Afghan capital takes us through winding, narrow alleyways. It's necessary to avoid the attention of the Taliban soldiers who man multiple checkpoints in Kabul.

In the car's back seat is the leader of one of the most unlikely and bravest of rebel groups. Her diminutive size hides a giant of a personality. She's already been warned a number of times by the Taliban who don't agree with her activities.

But she's unrepentant and more importantly, determined to continue - despite the dangers of risking the Taliban's wrath.

Most women have been barred from work and education

"This is our life," she tells us.

"It is our passion. We have to carry on."

She's already moved location after the Taliban told her if she didn't stop, they'd shut her down. Now she leads us up a metal stairway to a small, hidden backroom where her fellow rebels are now gathering daily.

Inside, heads bowed, concentrating hard and wrapped in thick winter coats because there's zero heating in mid-winter, is a small group of girls. These are some of the rebels taking on the Taliban - and all because they want to continue their art classes.

Drawings in art classes 'a sin'


Many of them are drawing portraits of females - and that appears to be one of the points upsetting the Taliban, who have visited the art teacher and told her she needs to stop these classes.

The art classes now take place underground

"It's because we're drawing women whose faces aren't covered, who aren't wearing proper hijabs," the teacher - who we're keeping anonymous for her own safety - explains.

"And the Taliban believe that's a big sin in Islam."

She's showing us a range of beautiful paintings and drawings of young women and girls. Among them is a portrait of the singer Billie Eilish.

She explains the Taliban don't like depictions of Western celebrities because they don't think they are suitable role models or people who should be celebrated.

This is just a small glimpse into how dramatically life has changed for women and girls in Afghanistan since the Taliban swept to power nearly six months ago.

Western celebrities are not seen as suitable role models

Barred from work and education halted

Most women - apart from health workers and some government employees - have been barred from work. Millions have had their education halted and a series of restrictive measures have been brought in, ranging from instructing women to wear the hijab to insisting they can only travel long distances with a male relative escort.

A UN report by a group of human rights experts found the measures "taken together, constitute a collective punishment of women and girls, grounded on gender-based bias and harmful practices".

There's growing evidence the Taliban are going further - cracking down on the small protests being sporadically but persistently organised by women, demanding the restoration of their rights. The most recent demonstration in Kabul last Sunday showed a worrying escalation in Taliban tactics. It was broken up by soldiers using pepper spray and then followed up a few days ago by raids on the homes of the organisers.

Women are being erased from society - in this wedding hall, female faces have been painted over

A video was posted online by a young woman called Tamana Paryani as the Taliban are heard banging on her door. She films herself screaming: "Help me, help me! The Taliban are here".

The video has been denounced as fake by the Taliban leadership who told international outlets it was a ruse to try to secure refugee status abroad.

Women taken away by Taliban or in hiding

But the Sky News team followed up the raids, talking to multiple witnesses outside Tamana's home in Kabul who'd watched events unfold that night. They told us there were numerous armed Taliban wearing Special Forces uniforms who turned up outside Tamana's home.

The raid lasted about twenty minutes, several witnesses told us, and a number of people heard Tamana and her three sisters screaming for help. The girls were spotted being taken away by armed men in military uniform and haven't been seen since.

The art teacher has been told to stop the classes

We tracked down several of the women who'd been at the demonstration including the family of one who is videoed, arm raised and leading the chants for improved female rights. She's seen in other videos, talking into the camera and holding a photo collage of world leaders including the British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. The politicians have tape over their mouths to signify what the protestors feel is their silence over events in Afghanistan. The woman - who we are not identifying for her own safety - is now on the run and in hiding in fear of her life.

Her mother was at home with her grandchildren when she says about 20-30 armed Taliban soldiers turned up trying to find her daughter. They burst into the home, forcing their way past the door. She shows us bruises on her arm where she tried to hold the door shut.

"I was shocked when I saw lots of Taliban with guns and even carrying rockets inside my home," she tells us. "They pointed their guns at all of us even the children... I was so scared."

She tells us the Taliban confiscated her telephone when they found foreign numbers in her contacts. She's been in communication with Afghan women who fled into exile when the previous government collapsed.


"I've been to the Ministry of Interior Investigations Unit and complained and asked them why they took my phone," she says. "I told them I've done nothing wrong and asked them why did they do that?"

She says she got no answers.

Taliban: 'We do not threaten women'

We were given a rare interview with one of the Taliban's most senior spokesman. Abdul Qahar Balkhi is the spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He is part of the Taliban delegation in Norway right now - meeting representatives from several Western countries - to discuss how to avert the impending humanitarian disaster unfolding in Afghanistan. We asked him about this week's raids on female demonstrators' homes.

Day labourers wait for work on the streets of Kabul

"Our security do not approach women specifically," he reassured us. "Because this is an Afghan society... we have a lot of respect for women, we do not threaten women... ever."

When we showed him the video of Tamana pleading for help, he admitted the video was alarming.

"It is, of course distressing," he said. "But the Ministry of Interior absolutely rejected it and called the video fake."

"How is that fake?" I asked him. "If it's fake, where is the young woman?"

"Maybe you can approach the Ministry of Interior and ask them how they came to that conclusion?" he replied.

There is an impending humanitarian disaster unfolding in Afghanistan

But despite repeated calls to the Ministry of Interior and the Kabul Police Commander, we got no replies.

Abdul Qahar Balkhi went on: "As for what you rightly pointed out... of terrifying women and children, rousing them from their sleep in the dead of night, it happened for twenty years in Afghanistan... foreign forces would barge into homes, kill women and children, torture them and detain them, take them to Guantanamo and Bagram."

The country's not only hurting economically but is deeply psychologically scarred too from 20 years of what the Taliban and many others call "occupation by foreign forces".

And history is hard to forget, especially when you're in the teeth of an unfolding disaster, which many Afghans believe has been caused and stoked by the international community's actions.

International community refuse to recognise Taliban


The collapse of the previous administration and the chaotic withdrawal of foreign troops after two decades prompted an immediate halting of the bulk of international aid. It led to the freezing of billions of dollars of overseas assets as well as a range of sanctions. It plunged an already fragile economy into virtual meltdown, exacerbating an already critical humanitarian crisis.

And the Taliban say nearly six months on no country has yet officially recognised their government as legitimate and argue they are part of the problem.

We are led up a metal stairway to a small, hidden backroom

"The international community cannot condemn the Afghan people to collective punishment and starvation because they failed in their mission in Afghanistan," the Taliban spokesman said.

"That has been our message and from our part if we hadn't taken the measures that we have taken and mitigated the effects of this humanitarian catastrophe that is taking place here in Afghanistan, we would be in a far, far worse place at this moment."

He went on to stress, in a wide-ranging interview: "It is the moral obligation of the international community to recognise the government that exists which is a reality. It is not going anywhere anytime soon and this government has shown that it is a responsible actor. The politicising of recognition is only endangering the lives of the common people."

Norway talks controversial

The Norway talks have been controversial, with many in Afghanistan believing the international community should not bargain with the fighters who seized power. But the humanitarian crisis is critical and only getting worse.

The former prime minister Gordon Brown is one advocating for immediate assistance to the people of Afghanistan. He said on Sky's Trevor Phillips on Sunday programme: "If we can't get aid to people, they will die in front of our eyes. This is a humanitarian catastrophe.


Afghans are struggling for food and heat in a bitter winter

"I don't forget the sacrifices of our troops and part of the reason we were there was to protect the Afghan people and now we face a nightmare and it's really a moral failure. When children are starving and no health provision, we have a duty to act."

But others like the first Afghan woman to lead a political party - who spoke to us from exile in Britain - insisted any aid must be contingent on womens' rights.

Fawzia Koofi said: "This is the best time for the world to think about how can they to pressurise the Taliban.


"Instead of giving them money, they need to pressurise them to listen to a political dialogue... the government needs to be diverse enough."

Special correspondent Alex Crawford, cameraman Jake Britton, and producers Chris Cunningham and Mark Grant report from Kabul
TURKEY
Opposition leaders, actors back pop icon Aksu in row with Erdoğan


http://ahval.co/en-135306

Jan 23 2022 

The leaders of Turkey’s opposition party as well as actors and actresses in the country over the weekend expressed support for pop icon Sezen Aksu over a row with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan over “insulting sacred values.”

The 67-year-old has received a wave of backlash from pro-government circles over a 2017 song, which contains lyrics referencing Adam and Eve. 

Aksu is accused of insulting the pair, considered holy according to Islamic (JEWISH AND CHRISTIAN) teachings, by referring to them as “ignorant.’’

Erdoğan on Friday upped the ante in the chorus of criticism levelled at the musician, saying that it was a “duty to rip out the tongue” of anyone insulting Adam, the first Prophet according to Islamic teachings. The Turkish leader said that words belittling Eve were off limits, too, noting that those who failed to show respect to the figures must “put in their place.”


The leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu called Erdoğan “helpless’’ for seeking to create a political agenda by attacking Aksu.

The Turkish president’s remarks on ‘’ripping an artist's tongue out,’’ is a desperate attempt to reclaim the agenda, from which he has been absent for some time,’’ the CHP leader said on Twitter.

Over the past few week, Aksu has been subject to a criminal complaint, protests in front of her Istanbul home and a barrage of insults on social media, including from top government officials.

The leader of the centre-right opposition Good Party (İYİP) Meral Akşener on Sunday said Erdoğan was using Aksu to intimidate and silence his opponents.

The government is seeking to “intimidate everyone. This is the mindset of having understood that you are going to lose… Their aim is to create fear in citizens, opponents and voters through Sezen Aksu….’’ Akşener told Halk TV.

Aksu on Saturday hit back at Erdoğan with the lyric of a new song. “You cannot kill me. I have a voice, a saz (instrument) and words,’’ the pop icon said in a Facebook post.

“...I am everyone (in Turkey). I have been writing for 47 years after all. And I will continue to write,’’ she added.

Popular actress Beren Saat on Sunday threw her support behind Aksu, saying that she did not want to believe that an Erdoğan, who once read poetry which landed him in prison, could target the pop star over song lyrics.

“We love you, Sezen," Saat wrote on Instagram. “Silencing our beloved Sezen will not prevent us for passing on her hundreds of songs, which we know by heart, to later generations.’’

Nobel laureate novelist Orhan Pamuk also chimed in on the Erdoğan-Aksu row, saying the pop icon was a “great artist that the Turkish nation was proud of.’’

“Millions are with Sezen Aksu today. We will not be a state and nation that crushes its artists,’’ Pamuk told T24 news site.

Veteran theatre actor Genco Erkal said that Aksu’s response had effectively "eliminated the presidential palace.’’

"The power of art has always been the greatest fear of governments,’’ Erkal said in a Twitter post.