Friday, August 19, 2022

Knowledge under attack

Book:
Burning the Books: A History of Knowledge Under Attack
Richard Ovenden
London, John Murray, 2020, ISBN: 9781529378757; 308pp.; Price: £20.00
The Lost Library: The Legacy of Vilna’s Strashun Library in the Aftermath of the Holocaust
Dan Rabinowitz
Waltham, MA, Brandeis University Press, 2019, ISBN: 9781512603095; 284pp.; Price: £23.15
Reviewer:
Dr John R. Hodgson
University of Manchester
Citation:
Dr John R. Hodgson, review of Knowledge under attack, (review no. 2436)
DOI: 10.14296/RiH/2014/2436
Date accessed: 20 August, 2022

Feminisms: A Global History

Book:
Feminisms: A Global History
Lucy Delap
London, Pelican (imprint of Penguin), 2020, ISBN: 9780241398142; 416pp.; Price: £20.00
Reviewer:
Dr Anne Cova
University of Lisbon
Citation:
Dr Anne Cova, review of Feminisms: A Global History, (review no. 2445)
DOI: 10.14296/RiH/2014/2445
Date accessed: 20 August, 2022

Finnish PM Sanna Marin takes drugs test but hits back at critics

World's youngest national leader denies wrongdoing after video surfaces showing her partying with friends

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Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin said on Friday she had taken a drugs test after video footage published earlier this week showed her partying with friends, but vowed she had never used illegal substances.

“I have today taken a drugs test and the results will come within a week,” she told a news conference. “Never in my life have I used drugs.”

Ms Marin added that her ability to perform her duties remained unimpaired during the night in question and that she would have left the party had she been required to work.

Video clips showing Ms Marin partying with well-known Finnish influencers and artists began circulating on social media this week and they were soon published by several media outlets in Finland and abroad.

When the footage surfaced, Ms Marin, who at 36 is the world’s youngest national leader, admitted she had been exuberant but insisted she had not used drugs.

“I danced, sang and partied — perfectly legal things,” she said. “And I've never been in a situation where I've seen or known of others using drugs.

“I have a family life, I have a work life and I have free time to spend with my friends. Pretty much the same as many people my age.”

She said she had known she was being filmed and was upset that it had been made public.

Ms Marin had faced calls to do a drug test from politicians in her government coalition as well as from the opposition after the videos surfaced.

However she received support on Friday from her Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki, who said Ms Marin had good reason to go out and celebrate because her country is joining Nato.

“So if on this occasion the prime minister of Finland drank a little more Finlandia [vodka] and because of this danced, there is nothing terrible in that,” said Mr Morawiecki.

Updated: August 19, 2022, 
 




Ethiopian airlines flight misses landing as pilots fall asleep mid air

An Ethiopian airlines plane missed the landing after both pilots fell asleep. The aircraft, on autopilot, continued to cruise at 37,000 feet before overflying the runway



India Today Web Desk 
New Delhi
August 19, 2022



When the plane flew over the runway the autopilot was disconnected.

(Photo: Wikimedia Commons/File)

HIGHLIGHTS

Ethiopian airlines flight missed landing as both pilots fell asleep

The flight was still at cruising altitude of 37,000ft by the time it reached destination Addis Ababa

An alarm woke up the pilots who then landed the plane 25 minutes later

An Ethiopian airlines plane flying from Sudan to Ethiopia missed landing on August 15 after both pilots fell asleep. An alert was issued when flight ET343 approached the Addis Ababa airport but did not start to descend, raising concerns.

After the plane missed the landing, the Air Traffic Control tried to contact the plane’s crew while the aircraft’s autopilot system kept it cruising at 37,000ft, the Independent reported.

When the plane flew over the runway, the autopilot was disconnected, an alarm was triggered which reportedly woke up the crew. The pilots then landed the plane 25 minutes later.

READ | Flight delayed by six hours over mobile chat between couple in Mangaluru

According to air traffic control data, the aircraft continued to cruise at 37,000 feet before overflying the runway.

"Deeply concerning incident at Africa’s largest airline — Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 ET343 was still at cruising altitude of 37,000ft by the time it reached destination Addis Ababa," said aviation analyst Alex Macheras confirming the incident

"Why hadn’t it started to descend for landing? Both pilots were asleep," Macheras said in a Tweet.

 Ethiopian Airlines Removes Crew Who Allegedly Fell Asleep On Air, Pending Further Investigation

Addis Abeba — Ethiopian Airlines said it has "removed from operation pending further investigation," its crew who were operating the flight number ET343 en route from Khartoum to Addis Abeba on 15 August, and that "appropriate corrective action will be taken based on the outcome of the investigation".

According to a report on The Aviation Herald, "an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737-800, registration ET-AOB performing flight ET-343 from Khartoum (Sudan) to Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), was enroute at FL370 when the pilots fell asleep. The aircraft continued past the top of descent maintaining FL370 and continued along the FMC route set up for an approach to runway 25L without descending however. ATC tried to contact the crew numerous times without success. After overflying runway 25L at FL370 the autopilot disconnected, the disconnect wailer woke the crew up who then maneuvered the aircraft for a safe landing on runway 25L about 25 minutes after overflying the runway at FL370."

In response, Ethiopian Airlines released the following statement:

"We have received a report which indicates Ethiopian flight number ET343 en route from Khartoum to Addis Ababa temporarily lost communication with Addis Ababa Air Traffic Control on 15 August 2022. The flight later landed safely after communication was restored. The concerned Crew have been removed from operation pending further investigation. Appropriate corrective action will be taken based on the outcome of the investigation. Safety has always been and will continue to be our first priority." AS

Museum in Scotland holds ceremony to repatriate Indian artefacts

Six of the objects were removed from temples and shrines across northern India during the 19th century



Museum conservator Stephanie De Roemer holds the Indo-Persian sword during the transfer of ownership ceremony at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow. Getty Images

Simon Rushton

Glasgow held a ceremony on Friday to officially repatriate seven Indian cultural artefacts looted during British colonial rule, calling it a first for a UK museum service.

The artefacts taken from India in the 19th century will be returned home after an agreement was reached with a museum in Scotland.

The items include a ceremonial Indo-Persian tulwar, a sword believed to date back to the 14th century, and an 11th-century carved stone door jamb taken from a Hindu temple in Kanpur.

The agreement comes as Egypt launches a new push for the return of the Rosetta Stone from the British Museum in London.

READ MORE
What is the Rosetta Stone?

There has been a change of thinking in the museum world that has led more and more countries' treasured cultural items, often taken in times of conflict or colonisation, to be returned. But this is still far from the norm.

The British Museum, for example, currently possesses the Parthenon Marbles, which Greece has for decades demanded be returned. German and French museums have already sent back some items to Greece.

Glasgow Life, the organisation that manages the Scottish city’s museum collections, welcomed dignitaries from the High Commission of India for a ceremony at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum where they transferred ownership of the artefacts.

Guests look at the ceremonial Indo-Persian sword.
AFP

“The transfer of ownership of the Indian antiquities symbolises a significant step for Glasgow, with the city continuing its positive repatriation history by ensuring these cultural artefacts are placed back in the hands of their legitimate owners,” said Duncan Dornan, head of museums and collections at Glasgow Life.

Glasgow Life said it was the first museum service in the UK to repatriate artefacts to India.

Six of the objects were removed from temples and shrines in different states in northern India during the 19th century, while the seventh was purchased after it was stolen from the owner.

All seven artefacts were given as gifts to Glasgow’s collections.

Sujit Ghosh, acting Indian high commissioner, welcomed the return of the items.

“These artefacts are an integral part of our civilisational heritage and will now be sent back home,” he said.

“We express our appreciation to all the stakeholders who made this possible, especially Glasgow Life and Glasgow City Council.”

Glasgow Life said it has been working on the repatriation of the artefacts, alongside the High Commission of India in London, since January 2021.

“The agreement reached with the government of India is another example of Glasgow’s commitment to addressing past wrongs and remaining transparent when explaining how objects arrived in the city’s museum collections,” said group chairwoman Bailie Annette Christie.

The city is also set to return a number of other items to countries around the world, including 19 bronze pieces to Nigeria.

This process began when it was established that the artefacts bound for Nigeria — acquired as gifts and bequests as well as from auction houses — were taken from sacred sites and ceremonial buildings during the punitive Benin Expedition of 1897.

About 25 Lakota and Oceti Sakowin ancestral and cultural items — sold and donated to Glasgow’s museums by George Crager, an interpreter for the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show who visited the city in 1892 — will also be handed back to the Cheyenne River Sioux and Oglala Sioux tribes of South Dakota in the US.

Some of these objects were taken from the Wounded Knee Massacre site in December 1890, while others were personal items belonging to named ancestors or are ceremonial artefacts.

Updated: August 19, 2022

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/155/155-h/155-h.htm






Bilkis Bano: activists to petition India's top court to revoke decision to free rapists

The Muslim woman was sexually assaulted and 14 of her family members were killed by a Hindu group in March 2002


An activist holds a placard during a protest in New Delhi against the release of the men. AFP


Taniya Dutta
New Delhi
Aug 19, 2022

More than 6,000 Indians, including eminent writers, rights activists and former bureaucrats, signed a petition on Thursday urging the top court to revoke the release of 11 men convicted of gang raping a Muslim woman and murdering her family during sectarian riots in 2002.

Bilkis Bano, one of the three survivors of the mass rape and murder, was sexually assaulted and 14 of her family members were hacked to death by a group of Hindu men in March 2002 in the western state of Gujarat.

The men were convicted by a special court in 2008 and their sentences were upheld by the top court in a case that made international headlines for two decades.

“The remission of sentences for the 11 convicted of gang-rape and mass murder will have a chilling effect on every rape victim who is told to ‘trust the system’, ‘seek justice’, ‘have faith’,” a joint statement by the petitioners said.

The formal petition has yet to be filed before the top court.

READ MORE
Anger in India as 11 jailed for rape and murder of Muslim family are released

In a surprise move on Monday, the Gujarat government, administered by prime minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist party, ordered their release to coincide with the celebrations of India’s 75th Independence Day.

Ms Bano said the move left her “numb”.

Viral images and videos of the convicts being feted with sweets and garlands outside the jail have led to widespread condemnation and street protests amid demands that the courts intervene to end the “grave miscarriage of justice”.

“That such a remission was even considered, and then permitted, reveals the hollowness of the public posturing about Nari Shakti, (women's empowerment) Beti Bachao (a government campaign for girls' rights) and women’s rights and justice for victims,” the statement said.

On Wednesday, Ms Bano issued a statement saying her attackers’ release has “taken from me my peace and shaken my faith in justice”.

“I was bereft of words. I am still numb … I was learning slowly to live with my trauma,” she said.

Violence had broken out in Godhra city in Gujarat after 59 Hindu pilgrims were killed by a group of Muslims after they attacked a train coach they were travelling in on February 27, 2002.

The attack led to widespread largely anti-Muslim violence across the state and more than 1,000 people, the majority of them from the minority community, were killed in days of rioting in the state governed by the Bharatiya Janata Party.


Ms Bano was 21 and five-months pregnant when she was raped as 14 members of her family were killed by her Hindu neighbours in March 2002. Seven bodies were never found.

The dead included her mother, a day-old niece and her toddler daughter Saleha, whose head was smashed with a rock.










Women protest against the government of Gujarat state, in India's capital New Delhi. EPA
Life sentence

A court in Mumbai sentenced the attackers to life imprisonment after the trial was moved from Gujarat, where police and courts had initially dismissed her allegations.

Ms Bano had alleged intimidation and threats by the attackers during the trial and spent years in safe houses.

The convictions were later upheld by the higher courts, which also awarded her 5 million rupees ($62,700) compensation in 2019.

One of the convicts, Radheshyam Shah, approached the Supreme Court in May for remission, pleading that he had served more than 15 years in prison.

The state government authorised their release on the basis of their “age, nature of the crime, behaviour in prison”.


Several opposition political parties, including Congress, have denounced their release, saying it clearly showed the ruling party’s bias towards the Muslim community.

Dozens of women protested in the capital New Delhi on Thursday, demanding the government reverse its decision, while thousands of social media users lashed out at the government.