Saturday, May 11, 2024

Israeli whistleblowers allege abuse of Palestinians at Sde Teiman military base: CNN

Tara Suter
Fri, May 10, 2024 


Israeli whistleblowers alleged abuse of Palestinians at a military base in Sde Teiman that also serves as a detention center, according to a CNN report.

Three Israeli individuals who worked at the base, in which Palestinians are detained amid the war in Gaza, alleged that at the facility, doctors have occasionally amputated prisoners’ limbs and performed medical procedures they were not qualified to conduct.

Doctors amputated prisoners’ limbs due to injuries from consistent handcuffing, according to the whistleblowers.

The facility is made up of two parts — one has enclosures where about 70 Palestinian detainees are put into intense physical restraint. The other is a field hospital, where injured detainees are strapped to beds, wearing diapers, and are fed via straws, according to the report.

“They stripped them down of anything that resembles human beings,” one of the whistleblowers who worked in the field hospital said, according to CNN.

Another whistleblower said “(the beatings) were not done to gather intelligence.”

“They were done out of revenge,” the second whistleblower continued, per CNN. “It was punishment for what they (the Palestinians) did on October 7 and punishment for behavior in the camp.”

Hamas, a Palestinian militant group, carried out the October 7 attacks on Israel, which left more than 1,100 people dead.

In response to the CNN report, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) told the outlet that it “ensures proper conduct towards the detainees in custody.”

“Any allegation of misconduct by IDF soldiers is examined and dealt with accordingly,” the IDF said, according to CNN. “In appropriate cases, MPCID (Military Police Criminal Investigation’s Division) investigations are opened when there is suspicion of misconduct justifying such action.”

“Detainees are handcuffed based on their risk level and health status,” the IDF continued. “Incidents of unlawful handcuffing are not known to the authorities.”

The Hill has reached out to the IDF.

Strapped down, blindfolded, held in diapers: Israeli whistleblowers detail abuse of Palestinians in shadowy detention center

CNN's International Investigations and Visuals teams
Fri, May 10, 2024

At a military base that now doubles as a detention center in Israel’s Negev desert, an Israeli working at the facility snapped two photographs of a scene that he says continues to haunt him.

Rows of men in gray tracksuits are seen sitting on paper-thin mattresses, ringfenced by barbed wire. All appear blindfolded, their heads hanging heavy under the glare of floodlights.

A putrid stench filled the air and the room hummed with the men’s murmurs, the Israeli who was at the facility told CNN. Forbidden from speaking to each other, the detainees mumbled to themselves.

“We were told they were not allowed to move. They should sit upright. They’re not allowed to talk. Not allowed to peek under their blindfold.”

Guards were instructed “to scream uskot” – shut up in Arabic – and told to “pick people out that were problematic and punish them,” the source added.


A leaked photograph of the detention facility shows a blindfolded man with his arms above his head. - Obtained by CNN

CNN spoke to three Israeli whistleblowers who worked at the Sde Teiman desert camp, which holds Palestinians detained during Israel’s invasion of Gaza. All spoke out at risk of legal repercussions and reprisals from groups supportive of Israel’s hardline policies in Gaza.

They paint a picture of a facility where doctors sometimes amputated prisoners’ limbs due to injuries sustained from constant handcuffing; of medical procedures sometimes performed by underqualified medics earning it a reputation for being “a paradise for interns”; and where the air is filled with the smell of neglected wounds left to rot.

According to the accounts, the facility some 18 miles from the Gaza frontier is split into two parts: enclosures where around 70 Palestinian detainees from Gaza are placed under extreme physical restraint, and a field hospital where wounded detainees are strapped to their beds, wearing diapers and fed through straws.

“They stripped them down of anything that resembles human beings,” said one whistleblower, who worked as a medic at the facility’s field hospital.

“(The beatings) were not done to gather intelligence. They were done out of revenge,” said another whistleblower. “It was punishment for what they (the Palestinians) did on October 7 and punishment for behavior in the camp.”

Responding to CNN’s request for comment on all the allegations made in this report, the Israeli military, known as the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), said in a statement: “The IDF ensures proper conduct towards the detainees in custody. Any allegation of misconduct by IDF soldiers is examined and dealt with accordingly. In appropriate cases, MPCID (Military Police Criminal Investigation’s Division) investigations are opened when there is suspicion of misconduct justifying such action.”

“Detainees are handcuffed based on their risk level and health status. Incidents of unlawful handcuffing are not known to the authorities.”

The IDF did not directly deny accounts of people being stripped of their clothing or held in diapers. Instead, the Israeli military said that the detainees are given back their clothing once the IDF has determined that they pose no security risk.

Reports of abuse at Sde Teiman have already surfaced in Israeli and Arab media after an outcry from Israeli and Palestinian rights groups over conditions there. But this rare testimony from Israelis working at the facility sheds further light on Israel’s conduct as it wages war in Gaza, with fresh allegations of mistreatment. It also casts more doubt on the Israeli government’s repeated assertions that it acts in accordance with accepted international practices and law.

CNN has requested permission from the Israeli military to access the Sde Teiman base. Last month, a CNN team covered a small protest outside its main gate staged by Israeli activists demanding the closure of the facility. Israeli security forces questioned the team for around 30 minutes there, demanding to see the footage taken by CNN’s photojournalist. Israel often subjects reporters, even foreign journalists, to military censorship on security issues.
Detained in the desert

The Israeli military has acknowledged partially converting three different military facilities into detention camps for Palestinian detainees from Gaza since the Hamas-led October 7 attack on Israel, in which Israeli authorities say about 1,200 were killed and over 250 were abducted, and the subsequent Israeli offensive in Gaza, killing nearly 35,000 people according to the strip’s health ministry. These facilities are Sde Teiman in the Negev desert, as well as Anatot and Ofer military bases in the occupied West Bank.

The camps are part of the infrastructure of Israel’s Unlawful Combatants Law, an amended legislation passed by the Knesset last December that expanded the military’s authority to detain suspected militants.

Patrick Gallagher/CNN

The law permits the military to detain people for 45 days without an arrest warrant, after which they must be transferred to Israel’s formal prison system (IPS), where over 9,000 Palestinians are being held in conditions that rights groups say have drastically deteriorated since October 7. Two Palestinian prisoners associations said last week that 18 Palestinians – including leading Gaza surgeon Dr. Adnan al-Bursh – had died in Israeli custody over the course of the war.

The military detention camps – where the number of inmates is unknown – serve as a filtration point during the arrest period mandated by the Unlawful Combatants Law. After their detention in the camps, those with suspected Hamas links are transferred to the IPS, while those whose militant ties have been ruled out are released back to Gaza.

CNN interviewed over a dozen former Gazan detainees who appeared to have been released from those camps. They said they could not determine where they were held because they were blindfolded through most of their detention and cut off from the outside world. But the details of their accounts tally with those of the whistleblowers.

“We looked forward to the night so we could sleep. Then we looked forward to the morning in hopes that our situation might change,” said Dr. Mohammed al-Ran, recalling his detainment at a military facility where he said he endured desert temperatures, swinging from the heat of the day to the chill of night. CNN interviewed him outside Gaza last month.

Al-Ran, a Palestinian who holds Bosnian citizenship, headed the surgical unit at northern Gaza’s Indonesian hospital, one of the first to be shut down and raided as Israel carried out its aerial, ground and naval offensive.

He was arrested on December 18, he said, outside Gaza City’s Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital, where he had been working for three days after fleeing his hospital in the heavily bombarded north.

He was stripped down to his underwear, blindfolded and his wrists tied, then dumped in the back of a truck where, he said, the near-naked detainees were piled on top of one another as they were shuttled to a detention camp in the middle of the desert.

The details in his account are consistent with those of dozens of others collected by CNN recounting the conditions of arrest in Gaza. His account is also supported by numerous images depicting mass arrests published on social media profiles belonging to Israeli soldiers. Many of those images show captive Gazans, their wrists or ankles tied by cables, in their underwear and blindfolded.

Al-Ran was held in a military detention center for 44 days, he told CNN. “Our days were filled with prayer, tears, and supplication. This eased our agony,” said al-Ran.

“We cried and cried and cried. We cried for ourselves, cried for our nation, cried for our community, cried for our loved ones. We cried about everything that crossed our minds.”

Dr. Mohammed Al-Ran headed the surgical unit at Gaza’s Indonesian hospital, one of the first to be raided and shut down by Israel. - From Social Media

Al-Ran is pictured on the day of his release from a detention camp, in a visibly worse physical condition. - From Social Media

A week into his imprisonment, the detention camp’s authorities ordered him to act as an intermediary between the guards and the prisoners, a role known as Shawish, “supervisor,” in vernacular Arabic.

According to the Israeli whistleblowers, a Shawish is normally a prisoner who has been cleared of suspected links to Hamas after interrogation.

The Israeli military denied holding detainees unnecessarily, or using them for translation purposes. “If there is no reason for continued detention, the detainees are released back to Gaza,” they said in a statement.

However, whistleblower and detainee accounts – particularly pertaining to Shawish – cast doubt on the IDF’s depiction of its clearing process. Al-Ran says that he served as Shawish for several weeks after he was cleared of Hamas links. Whistleblowers also said that the absolved Shawish served as intermediaries for some time.

They are typically proficient in Hebrew, according to the eyewitnesses, enabling them to communicate the guards’ orders to the rest of the prisoners in Arabic.

For that, al-Ran said he was given a special privilege: his blindfold was removed. He said this was another kind of hell.

“Part of my torture was being able to see how people were being tortured,” he said. “At first you couldn’t see. You couldn’t see the torture, the vengeance, the oppression.

“When they removed my blindfold, I could see the extent of the humiliation and abasement … I could see the extent to which they saw us not as human beings but as animals.”

A leaked photograph of an enclosure where detainees in gray tracksuits are seen blindfolded and sitting on paper-thin mattresses. CNN was able to geolocate the hangar in the Sde Teiman facility. A portion of this image has been blurred by CNN to protect the identity of the source. - Obtained by CNN

Al-Ran’s account of the forms of punishment he saw were corroborated by the whistleblowers who spoke with CNN. A prisoner who committed an offense such as speaking to another would be ordered to raise his arms above his head for up to an hour. The prisoner’s hands would sometimes be zip-tied to a fence to ensure that he did not come out of the stress position.

For those who repeatedly breached the prohibition on speaking and moving, the punishment became more severe. Israeli guards would sometimes take a prisoner to an area outside the enclosure and beat him aggressively, according to two whistleblowers and al-Ran. A whistleblower who worked as a guard said he saw a man emerge from a beating with his teeth, and some bones, apparently broken.

That whistleblower and al-Ran also described a routine search when the guards would unleash large dogs on sleeping detainees, lobbing a sound grenade at the enclosure as troops barged in. Al-Ran called this “the nightly torture.”

“While we were cabled, they unleashed the dogs that would move between us, and trample over us,” said al-Ran. “You’d be lying on your belly, your face pressed against the ground. You can’t move, and they’re moving above you.”

The same whistleblower recounted the search in the same harrowing detail. “It was a special unit of the military police that did the so-called search,” said the source. “But really it was an excuse to hit them. It was a terrifying situation.”

“There was a lot of screaming and dogs barking.”

Strapped to beds in a field hospital

Whistleblower accounts portrayed a different kind of horror at the Sde Teiman field hospital.

“What I felt when I was dealing with those patients is an idea of total vulnerability,” said one medic who worked at Sde Teiman.

“If you imagine yourself being unable to move, being unable to see what’s going on, and being completely naked, that leaves you completely exposed,” the source said. “I think that’s something that borders on, if not crosses to, psychological torture.”

Another whistleblower said he was ordered to perform medical procedures on the Palestinian detainees for which he was not qualified.

“I was asked to learn how to do things on the patients, performing minor medical procedures that are totally outside my expertise,” he said, adding that this was frequently done without anesthesia.

“If they complained about pain, they would be given paracetamol,” he said, using another name for acetaminophen.

“Just being there felt like being complicit in abuse.”

The same whistleblower also said he witnessed an amputation performed on a man who had sustained injuries caused by the constant zip-tying of his wrists. The account tallied with details of a letter authored by a doctor working at Sde Teiman published by Ha’aretz in April.

“From the first days of the medical facility’s operation until today, I have faced serious ethical dilemmas,” said the letter addressed to Israel’s attorney general, and its health and defense ministries, according to Ha’aretz. “More than that, I am writing (this letter) to warn you that the facilities’ operations do not comply with a single section among those dealing with health in the Incarceration of Unlawful Combatants Law.”

An IDF spokesperson denied the allegations reported by Ha’aretz in a written statement to CNN at the time, saying that medical procedures were conducted with “extreme care” and in accordance with Israeli and international law.

The spokesperson added that the handcuffing of the detainees was done in “accordance with procedures, their health condition and the level of danger posed by them,” and that any allegation of violence would be examined.

Whistleblowers also said that medical team were told to refrain from signing medical documents, corroborating previous reporting by rights group Physicians for Human Rights in Israel (PHRI).

The PHRI report released in April warned of “a serious concern that anonymity is employed to prevent the possibility of investigations or complaints regarding breaches of medical ethics and professionalism.”

“You don’t sign anything, and there is no verification of authority,” said the same whistleblower who said he lacked the appropriate training for the treatment he was asked to administer. “It is a paradise for interns because it’s like you do whatever you want.”

CNN also requested comment from the Israeli health ministry on the allegations in this report. The ministry referred CNN back to the IDF.
Concealed from the outside world

Sde Teiman and other military detention camps have been shrouded in secrecy since their inception. Israel has repeatedly refused requests to disclose the number of detainees held at the facilities, or to reveal the whereabouts of Gazan prisoners.

Last Wednesday, the Israeli Supreme Court held a hearing in response to a petition brought forward by Israeli rights group, HaMoked, to reveal the location of a Palestinian X-Ray technician detained from Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza in February. It was the first court session of its kind since October 7.

Israel’s highest court had previously rejected writs of habeas corpus filed on behalf of dozens of Palestinians from Gaza held in unknown locations.

The disappearances “allows for the atrocities that we’ve been hearing about to happen,” said Tal Steiner, an Israeli human rights lawyer and executive director of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel.

“People completely disconnected from the outside world are the most vulnerable to torture and mistreatment,” Steiner said in an interview with CNN.

Satellite images provide further insight into activities at Sde Teiman, revealing that in the months since the start of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7, more than 100 new structures, including large tents and hangars, have been built at the desert camp. A comparison of aerial photographs from September 10, 2023 and March 1 this year also showed a significant increase in the number of vehicles at the facility, indicating an uptick in activity. Satellite imagery from two dates in early December showed construction work in progress.

CNN also geolocated the two leaked photographs showing the enclosure holding the group of blindfolded men in gray tracksuits. The pattern of panels seen on the roof matched those of a large hangar visible in satellite imagery. The structure, which resembles an animal pen, is located in the central area of the Sde Teiman compound. It is an older structure seen among new buildings which have appeared since the war began.

CNN reviewed satellite images from two other military detention camps – Ofer and Anatot bases in the occupied West Bank – and did not detect expansion in the grounds since October 7. Several rights groups and legal experts say they believe that Sde Teiman, which is the nearest to Gaza, likely hosts the largest number of detainees of the three military detention camps.

“I was there for 23 days. Twenty-three days that felt like 100 years,” said 27-year-old Ibrahim Yassine on the day of his release from a military detention camp.

He was lying in a crowded room with over a dozen newly freed men – they were still in the grey tracksuit prison uniforms. Some had deep flesh wounds from where the handcuffs had been removed.

“We were handcuffed and blindfolded,” said another man, 43-year-old Sufyan Abu Salah. “Today is the first day I can see.”

Several had a glassy look in their eyes and were seemingly emaciated. One elderly man breathed through an oxygen machine as he lay on a stretcher. Outside the hospital, two freed men from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society embraced their colleagues.

For Dr. Al-Ran, his reunion with his friends was anything but joyful. The experience, he said, rendered him mute for a month as he battled an “emotional deadness.”

“It was very painful. When I was released, people expected me to miss them, to embrace them. But there was a gap,” said al-Ran. “The people who were with me at the detention facility became my family. Those friendships were the only things that belonged to us.”

Just before his release, a fellow prisoner had called out to him, his voice barely rising above a whisper, al-Ran said. He asked the doctor to find his wife and kids in Gaza. “He asked me to tell them that it is better for them to be martyrs,” said al-Ran. “It is better for them to die than to be captured and held here.”

Credits
Executive producer: Barbara Arvanitidis
Senior investigations writer: Tamara Qiblawi
Chief global affairs correspondent: Matthew Chance
OSINT reporter: Allegra Goodwin
Photojournalist: Alex Platt
Reporters: Abeer Salman, Ami Kaufman, Kareem Khadder, Mohammad Al Sawalhi and Tareq Al Hilou
Visual and graphic editors: Carlotta Dotto, Lou Robinson and Mark Oliver
3D designer: Tom James
Photo editor: Sarah Tilotta
Video editors: Mark Baron, Julie Zink and Augusta Anthony
Motion designers: Patrick Gallagher and Yukari Schrickel
Digital editors: Laura Smith-Spark and Eliza Mackintosh
Executive editors: Dan Wright and Matt Wells

Editor’s note: Tamara Qiblawi wrote and reported from London. Matthew Chance, Barbara Arvanitidis and Alex Platt reported from Sde Teiman; Ami Kaufman and Allegra Goodwin reported from London; Abeer Salman and Kareem Khadder reported from Jerusalem; and journalists Mohammad Al Sawalhi and Tareq Al Hilou reported from Gaza.

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U$A

Encampments cleared from at least 3 university campuses early Friday as pro-Palestinian demonstrations continue
 
Isabel Rosales, Paradise Afshar and Ray Sanchez, CNN
Fri, May 10, 2024 


Pro-Palestinian encampments were cleared from at least three college campuses early Friday as schools across the country continued to call in law enforcement to quell demonstrations in recent weeks. Here are the latest developments:

Police broke up an encampment at the University of Pennsylvania Friday morning and arrested nearly three dozen people.

The student newspaper The Daily Pennsylvanian reported that protesters received a two-minute warning to disperse shortly before 6 a.m. The encampment had been up for 16 days.

“We could not allow further disruption of our academic mission. We could not allow students to be prevented from accessing study spaces and resources, attending final exams, or participating in Commencement ceremonies,” said J. Larry Jameson, interim president, John Jackson, provost, and Craig Carnaroli, senior executive vice president, in a joint statement.

Protesters were given multiple warnings and allowed to voluntarily leave, according to a university spokesperson. At least 33 people were arrested without incident and cited for defiant trespass.

“The arrested individuals were given code violation notices for defiant trespass and were released quickly throughout the morning,” according to a university spokesperson.

The spokesperson said nine of those arrested were UPenn students, up from the seven arrests the university previously reported. Twenty-four others arrested had no university affiliation, according to the school.

The affiliation of encampment protesters had been a point of contention from the outset. Days after tents went up, university officials tried to check IDs but demonstrators resisted. One night, CNN reported that several protesters admitted not being students.

In response to the demand for IDs, encampment organizers had said in a statement, “we are all members of the Philadelphia community whether or not Penn recognizes it with a plastic card.”

Ultimately, UPenn said, the resistance to producing identification was one reason the the encampment was disbanded.

No one was injured, Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker said in a statement. The university requested help from the city on May 1, and it was agreed police “would provide backup assistance if arrests were made, or if the situation became dangerous or violent.”

Police detain a protester on the University of Pennsylvania campus in Philadelphia on Friday. - Jessica Griffin/The Philadelphia Inquirer/AP

Police with riot gear and batons were seen moving in and dismantling tents as people were taken into custody, according to CNN affiliate WPVI.

After the encampment was cleared, the area closed for clean up.

Philadelphia police, which the university said assisted in the operation, referred questions to Penn police.

The police operation came less than 24 hours after Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro called for the encampment to be disbanded, saying the situation at UPenn “has gotten even more unstable and out of control.”

“Unfortunately, the situation at Penn reached an untenable point – and as the University stated publicly, the encampment was in violation of university policy, campus was being disrupted, and threatening, discriminatory speech and behavior were increasing,” Shapiro spokesperson Manuel Bonder said in a statement.

The Philadelphia and Pittsburgh chapters of the Council on American-Islamic Relations denounced the police action. Ahmet Tekelioglu, executive director of CAIR-Philadelphia, accused Shapiro of “anti-Palestinian bias.”
MIT encampment dismantled

Law enforcement cleared an encampment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Friday morning, days after the university announced a “set of disciplinary consequences” for students who remained following a deadline to leave.

Demonstrators chanted “Free Palestine” as police took apart the encampment on the Cambridge, Massachusetts, campus Friday, video from CNN affiliate WFXT showed.


Police in riot gear walk past officers dismantling a pro-Palestinian encampment at MIT before dawn Friday in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Josh Reynolds/AP - Josh Reynolds/AP

MIT President Sally Kornbluth said Friday the encampment on Kresge lawn has been cleared. Ten people, a mix of graduate and undergraduate students, were arrested without incident.

Kornbluth said the situation on campus escalated in recent days with “threats from individuals and groups from both sides.”

“It was not heading in a direction anyone could call peaceful,” she said in a statement.

The decision to break up the encampment, Kornbluth said, came after MIT “offered warnings” and “telegraphed clearly what was coming.”

The university tried this week to clear the encampment. On Monday it enacted a “set of disciplinary consequences” for students who remained after being ordered to peacefully clear the area.

On Thursday, fewer than 10 students were arrested on campus, according to the university.

Demonstrators had blocked the entry to a garage into the Stata Center – the biggest access point for deliveries to and from the university and where staff and administration park, said Francesca Riccio-Ackerman, the media liaison for MIT Scientists Against Genocide Encampment.
‘All clear’ at the University of Arizona

“Loud munitions” and “chemical munitions” were used as the school’s police department worked to clear an encampment from campus early Friday, the university said.

“A structure made from wooden pallets and other debris was erected on campus property,” a violation of school policy, officials said. The university is set to hold a commencement ceremony Friday evening, according to its website.

Law enforcement officers last week tore down an encampment on campus. An undergraduate, a graduate student, and two people unaffiliated with the university were arrested, CNN previously reported.

No injuries were reported.


Protest fallout continues at other schools

Harvard University has begun placing students connected to an ongoing pro-Palestine encampment on “involuntary” leaves of absence, the Harvard Crimson reported Friday, citing an Instagram post from the group Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine.

It is unclear how many students have been placed on leave.

The move comes after protesters rejected an offer from interim Harvard President Alan Garber overnight to avoid being placed on leave in exchange for taking down the encampment.

Harvard warned protesters on Monday that those in the encampment faced “involuntary leave” and may not be able to sit for exams, CNN previously reported.

Students on involuntary leave also may not reside in Harvard housing and “must cease to be present on campus until reinstated,” according to the interim president.

The Harvard Yard encampment went up nearly two weeks ago.

Garber had previously said Harvard would have a “very, very high bar” before asking police to intervene.

University of Wisconsin-Madison reaches resolution to end encampment: School officials said representatives of Students for Justice in Palestine will clear Library Mall on Friday and commit to “not disrupt this weekend’s graduation ceremonies or other campus functions.”

There was no immediate comment from the student group, which the university said also committed to not reestablishing an encampment and “to following UW–Madison rules in its future activities.”

“This has been a difficult period for our campus, our nation and the world,” said the university, adding it “supports peaceful student protest” and appreciates the encampment “was motivated by understandably passionate feelings about the devastation in Gaza, and was a source of community for many participants.”

But the encampment, the statement said, “made others in our community, especially portions of our Jewish community, feel uncomfortable and unseen.”

“We reiterate our strong condemnation of antisemitism, Islamophobia, and hate and bigotry in all its forms, and we recognize the costs of war and displacement on so many across the globe,” the university said.

Under the agreement with protest leaders, the university said it will facilitate “access for SJP to meet with decision makers to discuss disclosure and investment principles and enhanced engagement with and support for scholars and students impacted by war, violence and displacement.”

University police had earlier reminded protesters any disruption of campus events, including commencement ceremonies Friday and Saturday afternoon, is against state law and will not be tolerated.

Students who disrupt will face suspension and have their degree put on hold, according to CNN affiliate WMTV.

Students and non-students involved in disruptions also face arrest, citation and criminal charges.

University of Massachusetts Amherst commencement speaker withdraws: Author Colson Whitehead will no longer speak at the school’s May 18 commencement due to the “events of May 7 on campus,” the university said in a statement.

On Tuesday night into Wednesday, police cleared an encampment and arrested several protesters at the university, CNN previously reported.

“We respect Mr. Whitehead’s position and regret that he will not be addressing the Class of 2024,” UMass Amherst spokesperson Ed Blaguszewski said. The ceremony will now be held without a commencement speaker, the university said.

CNN has reached out to Whitehead for comment.

Xavier University cancels UN ambassador’s commencement speech: The HBCU in Louisiana is the second institution to reverse course on inviting US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield to speak, according to multiple reports. The decision was made in response to a student-led petition expressing anger at US policy supporting Israel in its war against Hamas and its vote against a ceasefire at the UN, university President Reynold Verret said.

The New School won’t pursue criminal charges against student protesters: More than 40 people were arrested during a pro-Palestinian demonstration at the New York City university on May 3, CNN has reported. But school officials have asked prosecutors to drop all charges, interim President Donna Shalala said in a message to the university community that also announced the Faculty Senate has asked to reactivate an Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility.

USC valedictorian shares heavily redacted canceled speech: Asna Tabassum, the University of Southern California valedictorian whose speech was canceled last month after the university cited safety concerns, shared a mostly redacted version of her speech Friday to CNN. The letter begins, “It is my honor to stand before you today as your Valedictorian. I am filled with gratitude to have the privilege of.” The rest is redacted until it ends with, “Congratulations, Class of 2024. Thank you.” Two USC student-run media outlets, the Daily Trojan and USC Annenberg Media, originally published the letter Friday.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

CNN’s Kelly McCleary, Amanda Musa, Andy Rose, Danny Freeman, Sam Simpson, Rob Frehse and Zenebou Sylla contributed to this report.

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The United Auto Workers faces a key test in the South with upcoming vote at Alabama Mercedes plant

Fri, May 10, 2024 



TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — After 20 years at the Mercedes-Benz factory in Alabama, Brett Garrard said he is “not falling for the lies anymore” and will vote for a union.

The company has repeatedly promised to improve pay and conditions, but Garrard said those promises have not materialized.

“Mercedes claims that we’re a family, one team, one fight. But over the years, I’ve learned one thing: This is not how I treat my family,” Garrard said.

A month after workers at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee overwhelmingly voted to unionize, the United Auto Workers is aiming for a key victory at Mercedes-Benz in Alabama. More than 5,000 workers at the facility in Vance and a nearby battery plant will vote next week on whether to join the union.

A win at Mercedes would be a major prize for the UAW, which is trying to crack union resistance in the Deep South, where states have lured foreign auto manufacturers with large tax breaks, lower labor costs and a nonunion workforce.

Garrard, 50, and other workers supporting the union told The Associated Press that their concerns include stagnating pay that has not kept up with inflation, insurance costs, irregular work shifts and a sense of being disposable in a plant where they assemble luxury vehicles that can cost more than $100,000.

“Yes, we’re Southern autoworkers, but we deserve autoworker pay,” Garrard said.

Mercedes currently advertises a starting hourly wage of $23.50 for full-time production members with pay topping out at about $34 in four years, according to a state worker training website. Several workers said they company recently increased pay only to try to stave off the union push.

Jacob Ryan, 34, has worked for Mercedes for 10 years, starting as a temporary worker around $17 per hour for “the same exact work” before being hired full time. Ryan, who says inflation is eating into employee paychecks, said he pays close to $1,200 each month for his son’s day care and his daughter’s after-school care.

“None of it goes to the employees. We’re stuck where we were, paying way more for everything,” Ryan said.

Ryan said the union push is getting more traction this time after the UAW won more generous pay for workers with Detroit’s three automakers.

After a bitter series of strikes against Ford, General Motors and Stellantis last fall, UAW members made big economic gains under new contracts. Top production workers at GM, for instance, now earn $36 an hour, or about $75,000 a year excluding overtime, benefits and profit sharing, which topped $10,000 this year. By the end of the contract in 2028, top-scale GM workers would make $42.95 per hour, about $89,000 per year.

Mercedes-Benz U.S. International Inc. said in a statement that the company looks forward to all workers having a chance to cast a secret ballot "as well as having access to the information necessary to make an informed choice” on unionization.

The company said its focus is to “provide a safe and supportive work environment” for workers.

"We believe open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success,” the statement said.

Worker Melissa Howell, 56, said that when she casts her ballot next week — voting begins Monday and will end Friday — she’ll vote against the union.

Howell, a quality team leader who has worked at the Mercedes plant for 19 years, is suspicious of the UAW after a bribery and embezzlement scandal that landed two former union presidents in prison. She grew up in Michigan and heard relatives employed by automakers speak poorly of the union.

Mercedes, she said, treated workers badly for a couple of years, aiding the union’s efforts to organize. But the company began improving conditions after the UAW started recruiting during the past few months, she said. The company did away with a lower tier of wages for new hires. The old plant CEO was replaced with a new one who walks the factory floor and listens to workers, she said.

“I feel like the improvements the company is making, it’s getting people to think long and hard,” Howell said.

Wearing a “Union YES” button at a rally outside a Tuscaloosa church, David Johnston, 26, said he thinks momentum is swinging in favor of the union.

“Everybody’s confident. Everybody knows we are going to win,” Johnston said.

Organizing workers at Mercedes will be tougher than it was at Volkswagen’s plant in Tennessee, largely because the UAW has not previously recruited enough workers to earn a vote at the Mercedes plant, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University.

But the overwhelming Volkswagen win on the third plantwide vote since 2014 gives the union huge momentum heading into next week’s election, Wheaton said. At Volkswagen, the union had experience recruiting at the plant and knew workers from previous organizing drives, which ended with narrow losses, he said. A UAW win at Mercedes would be a bigger victory than at Volkswagen because it would come on the first try.

Wheaton said he wouldn't be surprised if the UAW wins at Mercedes, “but it’s tougher if you don’t have that same infrastructure in place.”

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and five other Southern governors have urged workers to resist the union, saying it could threaten jobs and stymie growth of the automotive industry in the region.

Ivey said in a statement that Mercedes has “positively impacted” tens of thousands of Alabama families since the plant opened in 1993 but the union "interest here is ensuring money from hardworking Alabama families ends up in the UAW bank account."

The Alabama vote comes on the heels of two high-profile labor fights in the state — an effort to unionize an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer and the end of a nearly two-year strike at Warrior Met Coal, where miners said they took cuts in pay and benefits several years ago to keep the mines open but did not see those benefits restored with the company regained its footing.

Former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones, the last Democrat to hold statewide office in Alabama, said unions have a long history of helping build the middle class in the state.

“This vote can be a turning point for Alabama for organized labor who is already seeing a rise in membership," said Jones, the son of a steelworker and grandson of a coal miner.

Kim Chandler And Tom Krisher, The Associated Press

 

There's a hole in the ocean, and scientists

 have yet to find its bottom

A team of oceanographers from several Mexican institutions say the Taam Ja' Blue Hole (TJBH) is the deepest in the world.

It's located in Chetumal Bay on the southern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, and so far, researchers haven't found the bottom.

However, They do know that it is more than 100 metres deeper than the previous record holder, the Dragon Hole of the South China Sea, which ends at 301 metres below sea level.

The seemingly bottomless pit off the shores of Mexico is so deep that sound can't even bounce off its bottom. Experts say this is unusual because sound travels typically well in water.

It was discovered in 2021 and was initially believed to be about 275 meters deep. In December 2023, scientists dropped an anchored research vessel into the TJBH.

All 500 metres of cable rolled out, and the device still hadn't found the bottom. TJBHIt descends at a slight angle, meaning the vessel stopped at about 420 metres.

Changes in the water conditions were detected at the 400-metre mark, suggesting the hole could have a tunnel connecting to the Caribbean Sea.

The blue hole lies in an area full of water-filled sinkholes, hidden caves, and underwater rivers.

Researchers hope to go back and measure it again, but for the time being, its bottom is "yet to be reached," they write in a recently-published paper.

In an upcoming study, scientists write they hope to map the hole's "maximum depth," and look into the possibility of the hole "forming part of an underwater intricate and potentially interconnected system of caves and tunnels," which could be a treasure trove of information.

"Within the depths of TJBH could also lie a biodiversity to be explored," they write.

SAY NO TO

Deep sea mining could be disastrous for marine animals

Deep sea mining could be disastrous for marine animals
Cut through Geodia barretti. Left: Unexposed individual. Right: Individual from the 
experimental group exposed to crushed SMS deposits for 21 days, 12 h a day
. Accumulated SMS particles have colored the mesohyl black throughout the sponge.
 Credit: Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr.2024.104311

In a recent study published in Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, researchers of Wageningen University & Research and the University of Bergen have shown that release of deep-sea mining particles can have severe detrimental effects on deep-sea fauna.

Effects of mining plumes were simulated by exposing the common deep-sea sponge Geodia barretti and its associated brittle star species to a field-relevant concentration of suspended particles made from crushed seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) deposits. SMS deposits are large three-dimensional,  at the sea floor and a primary target for deep sea mining, because they contain large amounts of valuable metals.

The study revealed an alarming tenfold increase in tissue necrosis in the sponges following exposure to suspended SMS particles. All brittle stars in the experiment perished within ten days of exposure, probably because of the toxic metal exposure. Concentrations of iron and copper were found to be ten times higher in SMS-exposed sponges, demonstrating the accumulation of the suspended mining particles in the tissues of these filter-feeding animals.

According to research leader and marine biologist Erik Wurz, the study results are a first wake-up call. "They underscore the urgent need for comprehensive assessments of deep-sea mining impacts on ," he says. "The adverse effects observed on Geodia barretti and associated species signal potential disruptions in benthic-pelagic coupling processes, necessitating further research and to establish guidelines for protection of this deep-sea fauna."

This study matters, according to Wurz, because it indicates the potential ecological risks associated with deep-sea mining activities. It has recently been shown that large proportions of the deep ocean seafloor in the North Atlantic Ocean are very prolific, sponge-dominated ecosystems rather than barren deserts that is generally assumed. By showing the impact of mining particles on these sponge grounds, the study underscores the need for sustainable management practices to mitigate adverse effects of  on this marine biodiversity.

More information: Erik Wurz et al, Adverse effects of crushed seafloor massive sulphide deposits on the boreal deep-sea sponge Geodia barretti Bowerbank, 1858 and its associated fauna, Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr.2024.104311


Provided by Wageningen University Deep-sea mining and warming trigger stress in a midwater jellyfish: Study investigates effects of sediment plumes


Nippon Steel sticks to plan to close US Steel deal by year-end

Reuters | May 9, 2024 | 

Credit: U.S. Steel

Japan’s top steelmaker, Nippon Steel, is sticking to its plan to close a deal by year-end to buy US Steel, which it expects to boost output and profits, the company said on Thursday, despite resistance to the transaction in the US.


In December, Nippon Steel offered nearly $15 billion to take over iconic US Steel, drawing resistance from both President Joe Biden and Donald Trump, his likely challenger in the Nov. 5 election, as well as the United Steelworkers (USW) union.

“US Steel products will remain mined, melted and made in America and will continue supplying further sophisticated steel products to American industry,” Nippon Steel said.

It reiterated its latest guidance to close the deal by year-end, pending US approvals.

This month, Nippon Steel moved the deadline from end-September after the US Department of Justice sought more details and materials in an antitrust review. The European Commission has already approved the deal.

The takeover should bring Nippon Steel’s global crude steel capacity to 86 million tons per year, close to its goal of 100 million, and to boost underlying business profit to 1 trillion yen after March 2025 from 935 billion yen last year.

To win support from the USW, Nippon Steel has pledged to move its US headquarters to Pittsburgh, where US Steel is based, offering specific commitments on job security and additional investments if the deal goes through.

Senators raise concerns over Nippon Steel’s China ties amid US Steel takeover bid

Takahiro Mori, Nippon Steel’s vice chairman and key negotiator on the takeover, told a briefing that thanks to the deal, the US company will grow, adding jobs and profits.

“Nothing has changed in our strong determination to close the deal at the earliest possible,” Mori said, adding that ‘politics is apparently affecting’ delay in the USW’s approval.

US Steel is based in the swing state of Pennsylvania, key for both candidates. “It has already become a political issue and will not become a political issue any further,” Mori said.

As US Steel shareholders have already approved the deal, other contenders cannot buy the company, he added.

Last year, US Steel rejected a $7.3 billion offer from rival steelmaker Cleveland-Cliffs, whose chief executive Lourenco Goncalves continued to criticize the deal.
Profit down

Nippon Steel beat estimates on Thursday, but posted a decline of 20.8% in net profit of 549.4 billion yen ($3.53 billion) for the year ended in March, because of losses on inactive facilities at home.

Nippon Steel had been expected to post a net profit of 464.6 billion yen, an LSEG poll of analysts showed.

Excluding the US Steel deal, Nippon Steel forecasts a net profit of 300 billion yen for the year ending in March 2025, amid continuing losses on inactive facilities, while it expects domestic and overseas steel demand to stay low.

To redeem subordinated bonds issued in September 2019 and strengthen its financial position amid the proposed takeover, Nippon Steel plans to raise up to 250 billion yen via subordinated syndicated loans and public subordinated bonds.

($1=155.7000 yen)

(By Katya Golubkova and Yuka Obayashi; Editing by Gerry Doyle and Clarence Fernandez)
Panama president-elect rules out First Quantum talks until arbitration dropped

Reuters | May 9, 2024 |

Panama’s president-elect Jose Raul Mulino. (Via X.)

Panama’s president-elect has ruled out talks with Canadian miner First Quantum Minerals until it drops multiple arbitration proceedings it has launched seeking billions of dollars in compensation from the government over a mine shutdown order.


President-elect Jose Raul Mulino spoke about his plans for the major copper mine, once responsible for some 5% of Panama’s economic activity and some 40% of First Quantum’s revenue, in an interview with local news radio program Panama en Directo on Thursday.


“To consider talking about mining, those arbitrations need to be suspended,” Mulino said, stressing the government’s preeminent role in any mining project that operates in Panama’s territory.

“Don’t forget that the owner of that concession is the state,” he said.

The president-elect noted that any solution for the disputed mine will not involve a new concession contract, though he signaled some flexibility to possibly allow the project to temporarily reopen in an effort to reduce its ultimate closure costs.

First Quantum did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Mulino’s remarks, though the miner said earlier this week it is looking forward to talks with his administration to find a solution to the disputed open pit Cobre Panama mine.

The outgoing government of President Laurentino Cortizo had ordered the closure of Cobre Panama last year following a court ruling that voided the miner’s contract, amid widespread national protests for more environmental safeguards and transparency.

(By Valentine Hilaire; Editing by Sarah Morland and David Alire Garcia)

 CANADA

E3 Lithium's Laboratory to Expand to Include Production of Lithium Carbonate

Article content

Highlihts:

  • E3 Lithium is expanding its Calgary-based lab to manufacture battery products, including lithium carbonate
  • E3 Lithium plans to build scaled down equipment to validate lithium carbonate that will support the feasibility study and future operations
  • The carbonate produced from this work will allow the Company to refine its process for battery-grade lithium carbonate

Article content

CALGARY, Alberta — E3 LITHIUM LTD. (TSXV: ETL) (FSE: OW3) (OTCQX: EEMMF), “E3 Lithium” or the “Company,” a leader in Canadian lithium, is excited to announce it is expanding the Calgary-based lab to incorporate the equipment to complete the polishing and production of battery products, such as lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide.

E3 Lithium’s development facility, located at the University of Calgary, has been operational since early 2021. The facilities’ focus has been on the development and verification of Direct Lithium Extraction (DLE) processing technologies. The internal team of experts has been beneficial in ensuring that E3 Lithium successfully completed the necessary steps towards technology development and selection, including verification testing of third-party DLE processes to support the design and decision making for the commercial facility. E3 also has its own internal analytics team that enables the Company to efficiently and quickly produce consistent results from the various testing processes.

With the definition of the downstream processes utilizing chemical conversion to produce lithium carbonate and then lithium hydroxide, E3 will deploy the same validation, verification and optimization strategy to the conversion processes. This includes building scaled down process equipment that mimics the commercial systems to validate and optimize the production of lithium carbonate. The team will further investigate the necessity to complete the equipment to continue from carbonate to lithium hydroxide. This work will support E3 Lithium’s feasibility engineering study and future commercial operations.

“Developing this capability in-house offers significant advantages in terms of result accuracy, cost-effectiveness and flexibility” said Chris Doornbos, President and CEO of E3 Lithium. “By building and operating scaled down equipment that closely mimics commercial operations, our highly skilled lab team will verify and optimize the process. The results the lab will produce will support the design and operation of the Company’s commercial plant and will bring efficiency to our future commercial operations by offering prompt and accurate data and analysis.”

The Post-DLE to Lithium Carbonate Flowsheet

DLE technology extracts lithium ions from E3 Lithium’s brine efficiently and effectively producing a lithium rich concentrate stream. The process to convert the lithium rich solution (a liquid) to lithium carbonate (a solid) utilizes conventional chemical reactions and industry standard processes and is comprised of two main steps: purification with volume reduction and precipitation of lithium products.

  • Purification and Volume Reduction: This step removes the contaminants, mainly calcium, magnesium and boron, from the DLE lithium rich product stream, further concentrates the lithium stream and recovers water for reuse in the process. Example of process technology used in this step can include precipitation, nanofiltration, ion exchange, reverse osmosis (RO) and evaporation.
  • Precipitation: The final step involves a conversion process achieved by mixing soda ash with the purified, concentrated lithium solution to produce a solid lithium carbonate (Li2CO3) precipitate.
Miners seek exemption from Canadian tax hike to save equity deals

Bloomberg News | May 10, 2024 |

Canadian Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, along with Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Canada’s mining industry is pushing for an carveout to the federal government’s proposed increase to capital gains taxes, warning the hike will make it harder for junior miners to raise money to find new mineral deposits.


Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s new budget includes a measure to raise the capital gains tax inclusion rate to two-thirds from one-half. It applies to all gains made by corporations and trusts, and to individual taxpayers on gains over C$250,000 (about $183,000) in a year.

For many investors, the tax hike would “significantly reduce” the value of a measure called the Mineral Exploration Tax Credit, or METC, which is designed to help companies raise money to explore for critical minerals like copper, nickel and lithium, according to the Mining Association of Canada.

The exploration tax credit is part of a basket of incentives Canada has introduced to stimulate financing of higher-risk mining projects in the country. Junior miners can raise equity by issuing flow-through shares, which are structured to allow the company to pass on certain expense deductions to investors — allowing those people to immediately reduce their income-tax bills. When the shares are sold, the proceeds are taxed as a capital gain.

Increasing the capital gains rate “effectively negates the tax benefit associated with the METC,” Pierre Gratton, the mining association’s president, said in an interview.

“Our sense is that the Department of Finance didn’t connect the dots.”

Canada’s junior mining firms, which are responsible for many of the world’s mineral discoveries, typically struggle to attract capital due to the high rate of failure in exploration. Flow-through shares help: Miners raised C$2.6 billion using that vehicle over 2021 and 2022, according to the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada.

The mining association estimates that 90% of junior exploration in Canada is financed with flow-through shares, and that the new capital gains measures could affect 70% of it.

“It’s exploration that we need if we’re going to find the next Voisey’s Bay or Raglan Mine, to provide the nickel and cobalt that automakers like Honda and Volkswagen need,” said Gratton. Voisey’s and Raglan are large nickel projects in eastern Canada.

The mining association met with officials in Freeland’s department last week to make the case for an exemption from the capital-gains increase. “We think there are ways to make the credit work that does not in any way compromise their budget numbers,” Gratton said.

“We are investing in our exploration mining sector,” Katherine Cuplinskas, a spokesperson for the finance minister, said in an emailed statement that didn’t specifically address the mining association’s concerns. “This includes the 15% Mineral Exploration Tax Credit, which was recently extended and will provide $65 million to support mineral exploration investment, and the 30% Critical Mineral Exploration Tax Credit.”

(By Jacob Lorinc)
Rio Tinto has not ruled out bid for Anglo American — report

Cecilia Jamasmie | May 10, 2024 | 

Rio Tinto’s expertise in the diamond market, could assist in the management of Anglo’s diamond unit, De Beers.
 (Image of Rio’s closed Argyle diamond mine. Courtesy of David Gardiner |Flickr Commons. )

Rio Tinto (ASX, LON: RIO) reportedly considered a bid for Anglo American (LON: AAL) in recents months and the world’s second largest miner has not dismissed the possibility of acquiring a portion or the entirety of the company, now a target of BHP (ASX: BHP).


According to the Australian Financial Review, Rio Tinto’s management “has not ruled out making a play for part or all of the mining group and continues to study the day-to-day situation.”

While Rio Tinto has a smaller market capitalization than rival BHP — A$180 billion ($119bn) versus A$218 billion ($144bn) — the company is large enough to make an all-share offer for some or all of Anglo American.

Unlike BHP, Rio already has operations in South Africa, having bought Richards Bay Minerals from BHP itself in 2012.

It also has a presence in the diamond market, which could assist in the management of Anglo’s diamond unit, De Beers.

Another point in Rio’s favour is that, as Anglo American, it has a main listing in the UK, which could simplify any potential transaction.

In terms of copper, Rio Tinto is still working on the expansion of its Oyu Tolgoi copper mine in Mongolia. It also has a 30% stake in Escondida mine in Chile, the world’s largest copper operation, controlled by BHP.

Otherwise it has limited options to increase production of the coveted orange metal, demand for which is expected to boom during the energy transition.

Other than the Oyu Tolgoi factor, Rio’s planned copper output increase will driven by an ongoing expansion in Utah and global exploration efforts, including a partnership with Chile’s owned Codelco, the world’s largest copper producer.

A point of contention would be Anglo’s steelmaking coal assets, which Rio Tinto is highly unlikely to want after successfully exiting the coal business in 2018.
Dealmaker on the sidelines

Another player reportedly considering throwing its hat in the ring is Glencore (LON: GLEN), which is already a partner of Anglo American in Chile with a 44% stake each in the vast Collahuasi copper mine.

The Swiss miner and commodities trader is in the midst of acquiring 77% of Canadian miner Teck’s coal unit for $6.9 billion, which may deter it from further major investments. The company is known for not usually letting potential obstacles stand in the way of an opportunity to add volume and expand its trading business.

BHP’s proposal required Anglo to divest its stakes in Anglo Platinum (Amplats) and Kumba Iron Ore in South Africa as a precondition.

“Unlike BHP, Glencore could benefit from keeping Kumba and marketing iron ore, and Glencore may face less political pushback in South Africa, especially if it were to propose a straightforward all-share deal that does not include Kumba and Amplats demergers,” Jefferies analyst Christopher LaFemina said in a research note on April 29, where he assessed different takeover scenarios for Anglo American.

The Baar, Switzerland-based firm could also be interested in buying Anglo’s Australian steelmaking coal operations.

Both Rio Tinto and Glencore are most likely to keep monitoring whether BHP’s approach is successful in separating some of Anglo’s assets from the rest of its operations, allowing them to pick those up as opposed to the entire company.

“It will disappointing to lose another large miner from the London Stock Exchange if a deal goes through. [But] it is not unforeseeable that this draws out some competitive bids though,” Charles Bond, a natural resources partner at the law firm Gowling WLG told MINING.COM.

“There are so many moving parts to the deal and so many permutations with possible third parties – which makes predicting what is going to happen difficult,” Bond noted.

BHP has until May 22 to make a formal bid for Anglo American.