Saturday, March 14, 2020

South Sudan's road to peace marred by 'unconscionable' violence

AFP/File / TONY KARUMBA
Hospital wards overflow with young men disfigured by machine gun fire

The cattle rustlers were asleep, resting ahead of a raid, when automatic gunfire tore through their camp. Ambushed by rival herdsmen, encircled and outgunned, they were cut down, one by one.

Koba Ngacho was lucky. Shot three times and left for dead, the young rustler was found alive in the carnage, the bullets having missed his vital organs, and airlifted to Juba for surgery.

"I'm grateful to be alive," the 20-year-old told AFP as he was wheeled to one of the few operating theatres in South Sudan equipped to deal with complicated gunshot injuries.

In February, after months of protracted negotiations, President Salva Kiir and his rival Riek Machar joined forces in government, drawing a line under a long-running conflict that left around 380,000 people dead.

South Sudan's civil war may have been declared over. But armed violence has anything but slowed in the troubled young country awash with guns, and riven by ethnic turmoil.

Hospital wards overflow with young men like Ngacho -- not soldiers, but farmers and herdsmen disfigured by machine gun fire in brutal fighting over land, cattle and revenge.

These clashes between communities have surged even as violence between Kiir and Machar's forces has eased.

Thousands of armed men from the Nuer and Murle communities have been fighting in Jonglei, an eastern state, since February, leaving towns in ashes and untold dead and injured.

UN special envoy to South Sudan, David Shearer, who toured the conflict-ravaged region this month, said bodies were lying in the open and women and children had been abducted by both sides.

- 'Unconscionable' -

"This is unconscionable," he told reporters in Juba on March 9 after visiting Pibor, where 8,000 civilians -- mainly women, children and the elderly -- have sought shelter at a UN base.
AFP/File / TONY KARUMBAThere are few operating theatres in South Sudan equipped to deal with complicated gunshot injuries


Large-scale battles between government and rebel forces ebbed considerably in the aftermath of a September 2018 ceasefire between Kiir and Machar, who is once again vice-president in a unity government with his old rival.

But in 2019, the International Committee of the Red Cross actually treated more patients for serious gunshot wounds than the previous year -- 769 compared to 658.

The fear is that 2020 could follow the same trajectory.

Since December, UN peacekeepers have been deployed to Jonglei, greater Tonj in the northwest, and Rumbek, in central South Sudan, where ethnic violence has left scores dead and wounded, and thousands more on the run.

Every bed is taken at the ICRC ward at Juba Military Hospital, where Ngacho, a Murle cattle raider from Jonglei, nervously awaits his turn.

"I don't know if these wounds will heal, or if I'll walk again," he says.

Many here endure multiple rounds of surgery to put their bullet-riddled bodies back together.

His Ethiopian surgeon, Dr Belayneh Assefa, assures he'll recover. Thirteen other patients have arrived in the past two days, all victims of a vicious cattle raid, and he is busy.

"During the dry season, we will have an influx of patients," Dr Assefa tells AFP, as a team of surgeons operate on a 26-year-old man with gaping gunshot wounds.

"He is lucky to have survived this."

- Lucky ones -

Especially so in South Sudan, where healthcare is non-existent in remote parts, and there are about 180 doctors for a population of 12 million.

Only the lucky few gunned down in remote bush conflicts get medevaced to Juba. The rest take their chances at local clinics or simply bleed out in the field.
 
AFP/File / TONY KARUMBASouth Sudan's civil war may have been declared over but armed violence has not slowed

"Natural triage has often worked, rather sadly, before patients can get to definitive care. Patients who would be described as red -- needing immediate surgery -- may well have already perished," said Dr Colin Berry, an ICRC anaesthetist.

Left unchecked, these local conflicts risk spiralling further out of control, prolonging misery in a country that has known little but war since its independence from Sudan in 2011.

The EU, among others, has urged Kiir and Machar's government to "redouble efforts" to calm tensions.

But the pair have been busy haggling over key positions in their administration. A new cabinet was announced late Thursday, but the seats of state governors remain unfilled.

"The absence of authority at the state level has caused a vacuum of power and decision-making... emboldening those involved in the recent violent intercommunal clashes," Shearer said.

A new army of their combined forces, meanwhile, is not ready to deploy and restore security to areas where lawlessness has allowed violence to flourish.

- Revenge -

The fighting in Jonglei followed bad floods in the region in late 2019 which wiped out livestock, and left cattle-rearing communities desperately short on assets.

Herders like Ngacho resorted to cattle raiding -- a generations-old phenomenon in South Sudan, but one that has turned increasingly deadly.

Spears and other traditional weapons have been replaced by easily-available automatic rifles, a poisonous legacy from decades of war.

Raids turn into wholesale massacres, spurring vicious cycles of retribution.
AFP /South Sudan


Margaret Malweyi, the Kenyan head nurse at the ICRC ward, said patients from rival clans flown to Juba were sometimes placed in separate wards so "they don't again start fighting".

Others, once recuperated, would "go back home and want revenge", she said.

"They get shot again, then they come back here (and) we treat them," Malweyi told AFP, surrounded by young men in wheelchairs and stretchers, nursing grisly wounds.

Those who pull through confront an uncertain future. Some have lost limbs, or will never walk again.

For others, the trauma leaves indelible scars.

"I don't want to go back," said Peter Majok, a softly-spoken 22-year-old, propped up in a wheelchair after being shot by cattle raiders.

"If I go home... they'll come and shoot me."
Madonna choreographer Damien Jalet lets headless dancers loose
AFP / JOEL SAGET

Franco-Belgian choreographer Damien Jalet is on a mission to reinvent perceptions of the body

The dancers gyrate and contort their bodies into sculptures made by the human body but which look distinctly other-worldly.

A choreographer favoured by superstars like Madonna, Radiohead singer Thom Yorke and Florence Welch of Florence and the Machine, Damien Jalet is on a mission to reinvent perceptions of the body and make viewers question their own human identity.

In the Franco-Belgian 43-year-old's celebrated 2013 show in the Louvre museum, "Les Meduses" (The Astonished), dancers moved around ancient sculptures in what he describes as "sculptural choreography".

But his new show "Vessel" -- a collaboration with the Japanese visual artist Kohei Nawa and nominated to the prestigious Olivier Awards for best dance production -- goes even further.

It looks to find the meeting point between solid and liquid in the human body.

The nearly nude dancers play on a stage flooded with water and a white gooey substance called katakuriko, a kind of Japanese potato flour used in cooking.

The gunk shape-shifts from liquid to solid, echoing the duality of materials in the body.

- 'Taking selfies all our lives' -

In "Vessel" -- shown this week at the Chaillot national dance theatre in Paris -- the dancers' heads are throughout tucked under their crossed arms and not visible to the spectator.

Seemingly headless bodies move eerily to the rhythm of hypnotic music, evoking anonymous creatures from another world.

The show went ahead as scheduled, but with a reduced number of spectators due to the government's guidelines on containing the coronavirus.

"Today the face is very important, we spend our lives taking selfies, defining ourselves. You can tell a lot about someone just from seeing their face," said Jalet.
AFP/File / JOEL SAGET
Damien Jalet draws inspiration from rituals and traditions around the world


"There's this idea that identity, the one that we normally read, disappears" when the dancer's face is obscured, he said.

"Other things emerge and the border between what is human, and what isn't, dissolves. I like asking the question of what it means that we define ourselves as human and at the same time there are so many things that aren't human in us," he added.

After collaborations with Florence and the Machine for the song "No Light, No Light", with filmmaker Luca Guadagnino for the horror-film "Suspiria", and with Radiohead's Thom Yorke and Paul Thomas Anderson for the Netflix short film "Anima", Jalet's cutting-edge work caught the eye of Madonna.

For the "Madame X" tour, the choreographer had the queen of pop sing her 1998 ballad "Frozen" behind a video screen of her eldest daughter Lourdes performing an interpretive dance.

"She's someone who has had enormous influence on the person I've become. 'Frozen' and the pas de deux with her daughter was a way of showing her as more vulnerable, from another angle," Jalet said.

- 'Dissolution of gender' -

Perception is everything for the man who was first a dancer before being an assistant to the legendary Belgian choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui.

"Without technology, without make-up, without costumes, only with the distortion of bodies and the way of choosing certain angles, we manage to create an elsewhere."

Gender boundaries are ripped apart in "Vessel", which Madonna herself saw in dress rehearsal on March 5.
A
FP / JOEL SAGETDamien Jalet had Madonna sing her 1998 ballad "Frozen" behind a video screen for the "Madame X" tour

Assigning a male or female identity to the dancers' folded bodies and bony rib cages is a near-on impossible task.

"The traditional pas de deux between men and women doesn't interest me at all. I like this idea of dissolution where gender is more associated with a state of mind," said Jalet.

For the artist, the journey is not only visual but also spiritual. He draws inspiration from rituals and traditions around the world.

Dancers defied gravity on an inclined platform in "Skid", performed in Paris at the Chaillot national theatre in 2017, mirroring a Japanese ritual "ombarisha" where men are attached to an inclined tree.

The artist will be back with Kohei Nawa at the Chaillot theatre in September with a new creation called "Planet".

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A man walks near the Mer de Glace glacier in Chamonix on June 18, 2019. Marco Bertorello / AFP

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AFP has an exceptional image archive, fed by AFP countless stories on the future of the planet. We are the first global news agency to have joined the "Covering Climate Now" alliance, which aims to strengthen coverage of the climate crisis in the media.
Canadian band plays world's deepest underground concert

Deepest underground concert?! The Shaft Bottom Boys have taken the title for the deepest concert underground after playing a concert at 1,893.8 m (6,213 ft 3.05 in) below sea level at Vale's Creighton Mine in the City of Greater Sudbury, Ontario. https://t.co/skeBmgDKbo pic.twitter.com/4WmO7v1aPl— GuinnessWorldRecords (@GWR) March 11, 2020

March 12 (UPI) -- A Canadian band set a Guinness World Record when they ventured 6,213 feet below sea level to play a 50-minute concert.

Guinness adjudicator Kaitlin Vesper was on hand March 7 deep inside Vale's Creighton Mine in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, to witness the concert played by the Shaft Bottom Boys.

"Working for Guinness World Records, I get to meet a lot of very interesting people and travel to some interesting places but can confirm I haven't been anywhere as interesting as Creighton Mine or been this far below sea level before," Vesper said while handing the group their official certificate.

The Shaft Bottom Boys were awarded the record for the world's deepest concert underground, with a depth of 6,213 feet and 3.05 inches below sea level.

The concert and record attempt were a joint fundraising effort between Vale and Science North. Organizers said the event raised funds for Science North summer camps and charity Miners for Cancer.
The real Charles Lindbergh behind 'The Plot Against America'

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS 
MARCH 13, 2020 



Aviator Charles Lindbergh, wearing a helmet and goggles, is pictured in the open cockpit of airplane at Lambert Field in St. Louis in the 1920s. He's perhaps best known for being the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic. File Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress

March 13 (UPI) -- Charles A. Lindbergh was a lot of things. He was an air age legend who became the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. He was a father, who publicly faced a parent's worst nightmare -- the kidnapping and death of a child -- in what came to be known as the trial of the century. He was an aviation consultant who assisted companies making military aircraft during World War II.

But he also had an interest in politics, campaigning for the United States to stay out of the war and supporting the anti-Semitic, pro-fascist America First Committee.

So what if Lindbergh had become president in 1941?

That's the question a new HBO series, The Plot Against America, asks.

The series, based on the 2004 Philip Roth novel of the same name, is set to premiere Monday. Starring Winona Ryder, Zoe Kazan, Morgan Spector, John Turturro, Anthony Boyle, Azhy Robertson and Caleb Malis, it imagines a world in which Lindbergh defeated President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1940 election.

Instead of FDR winning a third term in office and eventually leading the country into war after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the series lays out the story of a United States torn apart by anti-Semitism, fear and propaganda. It also glimpses a world coming more and more under the power of Nazi Germany.

To some it may be hard to reconcile the idea of Lindbergh working in coordination with the Nazis, as the series and book posit. Hailed by many Americans as a national hero, his record-setting Spirit of St. Louis airplane is on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.


But much of the fictionalized story is in fact inspired by the real events of Lindbergh's life.

Aviation legend

Lindbergh is perhaps best remembered for his numerous aviation records and milestones, capturing the world's imagination as he traversed the globe in his single-engine Ryan monoplane. He began his flying career as a U.S. Air Mail pilot in 1925 after receiving formal training in the U.S. Army Air Service, a precursor to the Air Force.

He made headlines for the first time in 1927 at age 25 when he became the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic. He won the $25,000 Orteig Prize for his efforts, beating out other famous aviators and explorers such as Richard E. Byrd and Clarence Chamberlin.

A team of more than 100 United Press correspondents were posted at news offices across the United States and on remote coasts along Lindbergh's route to quickly relay news of his progress and success. In theaters, United Press bulletins were read to audiences amid wild cheering.

Col. Charles A. Lindbergh rides in an open-air car up lower Broadway with New York Mayor James J. Walker in a photo taken in 1927. UPI File Photo

He received the Medal of Honor, normally only awarded for acts of heroism in military combat.

Lindbergh's achievement inspired an interest in aviation and he used his fame to promote transatlantic passenger service and an increase in air mail.

In The Plot Against America, Lindbergh's interest in aviation plays out in his unique campaigning technique in which he criss-crossed the United States in his own airplane, speaking to supporters on the grounds of small, local airfields.

Lindbergh baby

Tragedy struck the Lindbergh family in 1932, when his 20-month-old son, Charles Lindbergh Jr., was kidnapped from the family home in East Amwell, N.J. After searching the house, the family found a ransom note demanding $50,000 in exchange for the baby.

The Lindbergh family and authorities negotiated an exchange of the money, and though an intermediary handed over the money to a man named "John," the baby was not found at the location the kidnapper gave near Martha's Vineyard.

Charles' badly decomposed body was eventually found May 12, 1932, about 4 miles from the Lindbergh home. A coroner said he believed the baby had been dead for about two months and his cause of death was a blow to the head.

The crime might never have been solved had the U.S. government not dropped the gold standard two years later. The Lindberghs paid the ransom money in gold certificates and when the culprit turned them in, it put investigators on the trail of Bruno Hauptmann, a German immigrant carpenter.

Charles A. Lindbergh is shown on the witness stand in the courtroom at Flemington, N.J., as he told his dramatic story of the night of March 1, 1932, when his young son was kidnapped. File Photo courtesy of Library of Congress

This breakthrough began what would later come to be known as the trial of the century.

In 1935, a jury convicted Hauptmann of murder in the death of Charles, and he was executed less than two months later.

A fictionalized theory about what was behind the baby's kidnapping figures heavily in the conclusion of The Plot Against America.


Image result for smedley butler quotes

Lindbergh and politics

The Lindberghs and their surviving children moved to and traveled throughout Europe, seeking to escape from the public eye.

In the mid- to late-1930s, he worked at the request of the U.S. military representative in Berlin -- Col. Truman Smith -- to gather intelligence. He conducted four visits to Germany before the start of World War II to provide data on the Luftwaffe's planes and Adolf Hitler's aircraft manufacturing facilities, according to Smith.

Lindbergh came under scrutiny in 1938 for accepting a medal from Nazi Field Marshal Hermann Goering, but Smith later wrote that had the aviator refused, he would have offended the leader.

Despite helping the U.S. military gain intelligence on the Nazis, Lindbergh staunchly opposed the United States joining the fight. He was a spokesman for the America First Committee, a non-interventionist group that espoused building up the U.S. military to protect it from an outside attack.

Lindbergh discussed his thoughts about race and anti-Jewish efforts by Nazi Germany in his speeches and writings during this time. He wrote in 1939 in Readers Digest about building up the United States' defenses to protect against the "infiltration of inferior blood." In reaction to the 1938 Kristallnacht, in which Nazis killed some 100 Jewish people in a single night, he agreed Germany had a "Jewish problem," but described the massacre as unreasonable in his diary.

In The Plot Against America, Roth imagines a United States in which the majority of Americans agree with Lindbergh's views on non-interventionism and race and vote him into office. Gradually, anti-Semitic speech and attacks become commonplace in this alternative America.

The story is told from the perspective of a working-class Jewish family -- the Roths -- living in Newark, N.J. They witness Lindbergh's political success and the rise of populism and xenophobia in a country they once thought they understood and belonged in.

The adaptation is created by David Simon and Ed Burns, best known for their work on the HBO series The Wire.
  


'Plot Against America': HBO adapts Philip Roth novel in first trailer

Jan. 31 (UPI) -- HBO is giving a glimpse of its new series The Plot Against America.

The network shared a first trailer for the miniseries Thursday, featuring Winona Ryder, Zoe Kazan, Morgan Spector, John Turturro, Anthony Boyle, Azhy Robertson and Caleb Malis.

The series is based on the Philip Roth novel of the same name, which imagines an alternate American history where Charles Lindbergh defeats Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1940 presidential election.

The preview shows Jewish couple Herman (Spector) and Elizabeth (Kazan) face growing anti-Semitism as Lindbergh's power grows.

"There's a lot of hate out there. He knows how to tap into it," Herman says.

Meanwhile, Elizabeth's sister, Evelyn (Ryder), and her husband, Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf (Turturro), support Lindbergh, calling him a "hero" and "not an evil man."

The adaptation is created by David Simon and Ed Burns. The pair are best known for their work on the HBO series The Wire.

The Plot Against America premieres March 16.
HAIL THE TZAR
 Russian regions OK changes to allow Putin 2 more terms as president




March 13 (UPI) -- All 85 regional governments in Russia have approved a measure that will allow President Vladimir Putin to remain in office until 2036, parliamentary officials said Friday.

The regional bodies quickly approved a bill passed by this week by the Federation Assembly -- Russia's national parliament -- amending the country's "Basic Law," under which Putin's presidential clock will effectively be reset after his second term ends in 2024.

Prior to the changes, Russian presidents were allowed to serve only two six-year terms.



The amendments still need approval from Russia's Constitutional Court. If it's authorized, Putin would then devise wording for a ballot referendum to be put to voters on April 22 for final approval.

Two more terms would allow Putin to stay in office until 2036, when the 67-year-old Russian leader would be 83.

Supporters in the president's ruling United Russia Party said the changes are necessary to ensure stability, and insist they weren't designed to keep Putin in power.

Critics, however, say they don't buy it. Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny has denounced the changes.

"Putin has been in power for 20 years, and yet he is going to run for the first time," he tweeted earlier this week.




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Poll: Majority of Americans think U.N. is doing a poor job
GLASS HALF FULL OR GLASS HALF EMPTY...


Attendees sit and listen to speakers and performances at the United Nations headquarters in New York City on March 6. Though a majority of Americans think the United Nations is doing a poor job, most think it should play a major or leading role in the world. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

March 13 (UPI) -- A slight majority of Americans -- 54 percent -- believe the United Nations is doing a poor job of solving problems, though approval of the agency has largely improved over the past decade, a Gallup poll released Friday indicates.

The survey found that despite the negative assessment, 64 percent of Americans believe the United Nations should play a "significant" role in the world.


Of the U.S. adults surveyed, 43 percent said the United Nations does a good job, down slightly from 2019. The overall trend, though, has been on the incline since 2008, when the favorability rating hit a six-decade low of 26 percent.

Democrats are more likely than Republicans to think favorably of the United Nations, with 55 percent in approval. Thirty percent of Republicans approve of the agency.

Americans' opinions on the role the United Nations should play in the world has remained largely stagnant since 2008. Forty percent believe it should play a "major role," 33 percent believe it should play a "minor role" and 24 percent believe it should play a "leading role."

Democrats are more likely to believe the United Nations should play a leading or major role in the world (84 percent), compared to Republicans (45 percent).

Gallup surveyed 1,028 adults from Feb. 3-16 for the poll, which has a 4 percent margin of error at the 95 percent confidence level.


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Endangered coho salmon preservation an upstream battle in California



Removing a fish barrier on a small stream this summer in Marin County, Calif. may help rebuild wild coho salmon populations. Photo courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries


DENVER, March 13 (UPI) -- The endangered coho salmon of Tomales Bay, north of San Francisco, are getting assistance from a stream restoration effort that could help rescue them from near-extinction locally.

Through the project, fish ecologists hope they can restore habitat to rebuild decimated populations of the historic fish, which once was a staple of indigenous diets and later California commercial fishing.

Central California coast coho salmon formerly were plentiful on the West Coast, but the population has shrunk so low that the fish is listed as endangered in California, Oregon and Washington under the federal Endangered Species Act. It is now illegal to catch coho salmon in California. Cohos are not protected in Alaska.

The fishes' spawning grounds are becoming hard to find. Unlike Chinook salmon, which lay eggs in rushing rivers, coho prefer small streams.


RELATED Genetically engineered salmon OK'd for human consumption in U.S.

Where once the coho spawned in almost 600 natural small streams and rivers in California, that habitat has now mostly disappeared. Most small tributaries have been encroached by housing development or dammed for drinking-water reservoirs.

Still, the cohos are beloved in the region. In the Lagunitas Creek watershed, tourists come from San Francisco and beyond to watch the salmon run every winter along the stream beds. The fish swim 26 miles upstream from the ocean to spawn in December and January.

"They're big fish, 24 to 30 inches, in their red spawning colors," said Chuck Schultz, a member of the local Golden Gate Trout Unlimited chapter.

RELATED New fish farm near Miami aims to grow major portion of U.S. salmon supply

Leaping fish

During the yearly salmon run, the fish leap up a series of waterfalls called the Inkwells, "about 6 or 7 feet in the air," Schultz said. "Seeing a big fish like that in a small stream is really something."

Usually, about 400 to 500 leaping coho make the annual trip to the spawning grounds, but this year's numbers were dangerously small, with fewer than 90 fish making the trek -- among the lowest counts in 25 years, according to the Marin Municipal Water District.
RELATED Salmon parasite is world's first non-oxygen breathing animal

"We've seen the coho population bounce back after disappointing runs and we're hopeful that improving ocean conditions will mean higher returns in coming years," said Eric Ettlinger, aquatic ecologist for the water district.

This summer, earthmovers will remove the remnants of a man-made fish barrier, possibly making it significantly easier for cohos to return to their spawning grounds in west Marin County.

"Historically, there were thousands of these fish, and the numbers are now dismally low," said Todd Steiner, executive director of the Olema-based Salmon Protection and Watershed Network. More than 95 percent of their population has been lost, said Steiner, a wildlife biologist.

In June, the network and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife will create a new path for coho in the San Geronimo Creek, which runs through a shuttered golf course north of San Francisco.

A concrete and metal structure called Roy's Pools will be replaced by a $2 million project that will create a free-flowing channel for the salmon, as well as steelhead trout and other stream wildlife. Volunteers also will replace native plants, including redwood seedlings. A visitor bridge will allow fish viewing

Round-trip journey

The life of the wild coho is a round-trip journey between fresh and ocean waters.

The fish live for three years. As juveniles, they grow to about 3 inches long in freshwater streams, and then make the trek through the bay to the Pacific Ocean, where they grow to 2 feet long and with weights of 8 to 10 pounds

They make one trip back to their birthplace to spawn and die. Wild coho will not mingle or breed with fishery-raised coho salmon that are stocked in other local river habitats.

Still, the restoration project alone might not be enough to restore the coho population, the salmon group's Steiner said.

"We're taking down a tiny dam, not big at all, but it is one of the only streams left for coho to reach the headlands," Steiner said. "We may not be able to bring them back from brink of local extinction. The science of habitat restoration is new, and we learn every time we do a project. There are no guarantees in this line of work."


SEE https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2020/03/feds-reject-removal-of-4-us-northwest.html

India frees Kashmir politician Farooq Abdullah after 7 months



Farooq Abdullah (C) stands with his wife Molly (R) and daughter Safia at his home in Srinagar, India, on Friday. Photo by Farooq Khan/EPA-EFE

March 13 (UPI) -- Prominent Kashmir politician Farooq Abdullah was released from prison Friday after spending seven months in detention.

Abdullah and son Omar Abdullah were taken into custody last August when the Indian government imposed a communication shutdown in the formerly autonomous, India-controlled regions of Jammu and Kashmir. The crackdown cut all cellphone and Internet service and added extra security.

India used a strict public safety law to detain Abdullah, a former government minister in Kashmir, and could have held him for two years without trial.

Farooq was released Friday, but Omar was not.

"I am free today. Now, I will be able to go to Delhi and attend Parliament and speak for you all," Abdullah told reporters Friday from his home.

"This freedom will be complete when all leaders are released. I hope the government of India will take action to release everyone."

India has used the Public Safety Act in the past to arrest terrorists and separatists.

Read MoreIndia ends Internet blackout in Jammu and KashmirIndia PM Modi appeals for calm amid violence that's so far killed 22
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The End Of The Oil Era?

IAM Newswire Benzinga March 13, 2020


Russia and Saudi Arabia clashed over the oil price, both trying to keep or increase their share in the market. The coronavirus outbreak was at least the official beginning of the conflict. As millions of people are in quarantine, and traveling is reduced to a minimum, oil has faced a sharp decrease in demand. Tensions escalated when Russia decided not to extend the production cut of 1.8 million barrels a day, caused by the stated decrease in demand.

Saudi Arabia promptly reacted by announcing a production boost and offering price discounts. Both actions led to a sharp oil price decrease. Russia did not withdraw here but declared its oil industry can survive the price battle in order to keep the current market share.

What Is The Fight Really About?

The open price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia strongly hit the U.S. oil industry. WTI dropped to $31.13 per barrel, which is a decrease for $10.15 or 24.59%. International benchmark Brent crude had a similar fate. It settled at $34.36 per barrel, which is a decrease for $10.91 or 24.1%. Since there are not many options that the open price war could cause, analysts and experts are thinking that Russia is targeting the U.S. shale companies. And that is not all.

This might be an opportunity for Russia to fight back against the sanctions passed by the U.S. Among other segments, sanctions were aiming to stop Russia in completing its Nord Stream 2 pipeline. This pipeline is supposed to transport natural gas from Russia to Europe across the Baltic Sea. Many oil companies' stock was hit once the tensions escalated, like Exxon Mobile (NYSE: XOM), Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX), PetroChina Company, Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS-A), BP Oil (NYSE: BP), and others.

Exxon Mobil Corporation

Exxon Mobil had an Investor Day a week ago, where it announced some heavy spending in the following years. Its forecast is to spend $33 billion on capital spending this year, and an additional $35 billion in the following years. Having in mind the oil price collapse, it is a question of how this energy giant will be able to support such aggressive spending.

Chevron Corporation

Chevron Corporation, a $175 billion oil giant, which has one of the lowest dividends among the oil giant group, is the company with an impressive asset portfolio that can ensure good financial margins which can make substantial returns for its shareholders, a secure yield of more than 5.5%.

PetroChina

PetroChina issued the force majeure notice to at least one of its LNG suppliers and its suppliers of piped gas and suspended some liquefied natural gas (LNG) and natural gas imports. This was all characterized as a seasonal plunge in demand increased with the effect of the coronavirus outbreak.

Royal Dutch Shell

Royal Dutch Shell stock crashed around 18% on Monday. This was quite a hit for this well-known, blue-chip FTSE 100 company, all because of the oil price plunge caused by the Russian and Saudi Arabian open price war. On the other hand, this might be a nice buying opportunity.

BP Oil

As investors started ditching the energy stocks, after the oil continued to drop, BP has lost almost £20 billion of its value on Monday. BP Oil and Royal Dutch Shell pulled the FTSE 100 to one-day losses, which was not seen since the 2008 global financial crisis.

Conclusion

This open price could result in another 10% decline, or even lead to detrimental losses. This will be a big additional hit to the U.S. oil sector, as companies are already facing tough decisions like cutbacks, forced mergers, and even some bankruptcies. And let's not forget that we're talking about a non-renewable source so its future is anything but guaranteed.

This Publication is contributed by IAMNewswire.com

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