It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Monday, November 16, 2020
Qatar FM: Normalisation with Israel undermines Palestinian statehood efforts
DUBAI (Reuters) - Qatar's foreign minister said on Monday Arab states that establish ties with Israel undermine efforts for Palestinian statehood, but it was in their own sovereign right to do so.© Reuters/IBRAHEEM AL OMARI Doha hosts intra-Afghan talks
Three Arab countries - the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan - set aside hostilities with Israel in recent months to agree to formal relations in deals brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.
Palestinian leaders have accused them of betrayal, while U.S. and Israeli officials have said more Arab states could soon follow.
"I think it's better to have a united (Arab) front to put the interests of the Palestinians (first) to end the (Israeli) occupation," Qatar Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani told the online Global Security Forum.
He said division was not in the interest of concerted Arab efforts to get the Israelis to negotiate with the Palestinians and resolve the decades-long conflict between the sides.
However, for the states who established ties, "it is up to them at the end of the day to decide what is best for their countries", he said.
The UAE, Bahrain and Sudan broke with decades of Arab policy that had demanded Israel first cede land to the Palestinians to form their own state before establishing relations.
UAE officials have said the Gulf state remains committed to Palestinian statehood, and that its deal with Israel had stopped further annexation of lands Palestinians seek for a state.
Until this year, Israel had only current formal relations with just two Arab states - its neighbours Egypt and Jordan - established under peace deals reached decades ago.
Qatar has been tipped by Israeli officials as among Arab and other Muslim-majority countries that could establish formal ties with Israel.
Sheikh Mohammed said Doha maintains some relations with Israel, though only on matters concerning the Palestinians such as humanitarian needs or development projects.
Qatar, which also has relations with two of Israel's bitter enemies, Iran and Palestinian militant group Hamas, supports a two-state solution with East Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state, a stance the foreign minister reiterated.
(Writing by Alexander Cornwell; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
Canada's Immigration Minister Mendicino dodges questions on Hong Kong evacuation, restricting Chinese students
Amanda Connolly
Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino repeatedly dodged questions on whether Ottawa is willing to restrict Chinese international students or urge Canadians in Hong Kong to leave as the Chinese regime continues to violate the binding international treaty on the governance of the former British colony
Amanda Connolly
Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino repeatedly dodged questions on whether Ottawa is willing to restrict Chinese international students or urge Canadians in Hong Kong to leave as the Chinese regime continues to violate the binding international treaty on the governance of the former British colony
.
© REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
A police officer raises his pepper spray handgun as he detains a man during a march against the national security law at the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China from Britain in Hong Kong, China July 1, 2020.
The federal government last week announced three new avenues for young, educated Hong Kongers to immigrate to Canada amid what Mendicino called "grave concerns" about the Chinese imposition of a draconian security law that criminalizes virtually all forms of dissent.
But the government and other allied nations have so far done little to punish Chinese Communist Party officials for the regime's crackdown, ignoring calls from activists and senators to look at measures such as Magnitsky sanctions or barring the children of regime leaders from studying abroad.
Read more: Amid Chinese crackdown, Ottawa widens door for young Hong Kong immigrants
In an interview with The West Block's Mercedes Stephenson, Mendicino would not say whether any other measures were being considered, including the evacuation of Canadians in Hong Kong.
"Minister, have you considered more aggressive measures towards China — for example, restricting or eliminating students, international students, coming from China?" Stephenson asked.
Mendicino said the government has taken a "very strong and principled stand" against China and pointed to the suspension of an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, as well as restricting military exports to the region, in response to Beijing's security law and detention of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor.
Both have been arbitrarily detained by Beijing in what Chinese officials have repeatedly hinted is retaliation for the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in December 2018.
"Yesterday's announcement does come against that backdrop, and we will continue to take those strong and principled stands as is necessary," Mendicino said.
"It doesn't really answer the question I asked you, but I want to move on to asking you about whether you are prepared to evacuate the 300,000 Canadians who live in Hong Kong, if necessary," Stephenson said.
"The 300,000 Canadian citizens who are currently living in Hong Kong enjoy a right of return and subject to following the COVID health protocols, which are in place to protect all of us, they can come back whenever they choose," he said.
Read more: Canadian businesses must weigh risks of work, travel to Hong Kong, consul general warns
Jeff Nankivell, consul general to Hong Kong, said last month that diplomatic staff have the resources available for an emergency evacuation if needed.
“We have resources identified to cover a range of situations, including where the urgent departure of a large number of Canadians would be necessary,” Nankivell said in testimony before the special committee on Canada-China relations.
“The likelihood of that kind of extreme scenario seems right now to be very low but it’s our job to plan for the most extreme situations.”
Mendicino was asked by Global News during his press conference announcing the immigration changes on Thursday whether Canadians living and working in Hong Kong were any less safe than they were prior to the announcement of the new measures.
China's ambassador threatened Canadians living in Hong Kong last month, saying Canada should not grant asylum to Hong Kong political activists, who he deemed "violent criminals."
Mendicino did not answer the question, saying only that the government continues to be "gravely concerned" about the situation on the ground in Hong Kong.
The federal government last week announced three new avenues for young, educated Hong Kongers to immigrate to Canada amid what Mendicino called "grave concerns" about the Chinese imposition of a draconian security law that criminalizes virtually all forms of dissent.
But the government and other allied nations have so far done little to punish Chinese Communist Party officials for the regime's crackdown, ignoring calls from activists and senators to look at measures such as Magnitsky sanctions or barring the children of regime leaders from studying abroad.
Read more: Amid Chinese crackdown, Ottawa widens door for young Hong Kong immigrants
In an interview with The West Block's Mercedes Stephenson, Mendicino would not say whether any other measures were being considered, including the evacuation of Canadians in Hong Kong.
"Minister, have you considered more aggressive measures towards China — for example, restricting or eliminating students, international students, coming from China?" Stephenson asked.
Mendicino said the government has taken a "very strong and principled stand" against China and pointed to the suspension of an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, as well as restricting military exports to the region, in response to Beijing's security law and detention of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor.
Both have been arbitrarily detained by Beijing in what Chinese officials have repeatedly hinted is retaliation for the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in December 2018.
"Yesterday's announcement does come against that backdrop, and we will continue to take those strong and principled stands as is necessary," Mendicino said.
"It doesn't really answer the question I asked you, but I want to move on to asking you about whether you are prepared to evacuate the 300,000 Canadians who live in Hong Kong, if necessary," Stephenson said.
"The 300,000 Canadian citizens who are currently living in Hong Kong enjoy a right of return and subject to following the COVID health protocols, which are in place to protect all of us, they can come back whenever they choose," he said.
Read more: Canadian businesses must weigh risks of work, travel to Hong Kong, consul general warns
Jeff Nankivell, consul general to Hong Kong, said last month that diplomatic staff have the resources available for an emergency evacuation if needed.
“We have resources identified to cover a range of situations, including where the urgent departure of a large number of Canadians would be necessary,” Nankivell said in testimony before the special committee on Canada-China relations.
“The likelihood of that kind of extreme scenario seems right now to be very low but it’s our job to plan for the most extreme situations.”
Mendicino was asked by Global News during his press conference announcing the immigration changes on Thursday whether Canadians living and working in Hong Kong were any less safe than they were prior to the announcement of the new measures.
China's ambassador threatened Canadians living in Hong Kong last month, saying Canada should not grant asylum to Hong Kong political activists, who he deemed "violent criminals."
Mendicino did not answer the question, saying only that the government continues to be "gravely concerned" about the situation on the ground in Hong Kong.
'A whole other Colombia': Wade Davis finds healing and hope along the great Magdalena
Wade Davis wants you to know that his new book is about his travels through Colombia, but it’s not a travel book.
“If anything, it’s more of a biography of the country,” he says. “There’s nothing more boring than travel books focused on the self. It’s similar to false heroics in the realm of exploration. As a writer you’re just a conduit for the voices of the people.”
To tell the tale of an enormous river described as the soul of Colombia, the country’s mirror of America’s Mississippi, Davis had one obvious path to take. But he says he was never tempted to hop in a kayak and splash through the artery’s softer passages, describing in hackneyed terms what he saw from the pilot’s seat.
Instead, for Magdalena: River of Dreams , the author, ethnographer and University of British Columbia professor of anthropology preferred a process he calls “sociology inspired by serendipity.”
This, he tells the National Post from his home in Vancouver, is the magic captured when a writer is introduced to one local person, then another, then another, before linking these experiences like a chain, getting a much more nuanced picture of a nation.
Crediting the Colombian journalist Juan Gonzalo Betancur with the phrase, Davis said his plan was simple as he set out to describe the waterway, all 1,500 kilometres of it, that allowed Colombia’s hugely challenging topography to be conquered centuries ago, spitting out a nation.
“He would just get to the town,” Davis says of Betancur, “and wait until he found someone who had something to say that he thought the world needed to hear. Which, as Ernest Hemingway wrote, is the essence of good storytelling.”
Calling your book “a biography of the country” is bold, but Davis, an honorary Colombian citizen for his Amazon work on Indigenous cultures and plant species, is one of few “outsiders” who can get away with it. Long a friend to the Arhuaco mamos , the spiritual priests of Colombia’s Sierra Nevada mountain range, his 20 books already include one Amazon-themed title treasured by many.
Garcia Marquez loved the Magdalena with a passion, but he himself famously said that it could be written off as dead. Davis, though, is certain the Magdalena is not beyond redemption. If any river can be saved, it’s one that rolls through cloud forests, volcanoes and “shimmering wetlands … the size of the sky,” alive with the rhythms of cumbia music, Colombia’s “singular gift to the world,” which began when the natives, whom the Spanish had scattered but not wiped out, mingled with slaves sent from Africa. If any river is worth saving, he says, it’s one of caimans, jaguars and spectacled bears, and first mapped by the great German explorer, Alexander von Humboldt, who teased it out using the sketches of Colombian naturalist Francisco José de Caldas.
Davis describes one part of the Magdalena, near where it meets its tributary, the Rio Cauca, as “a land so limitless that Colombians could hide England and the English would never find it.” But the Magdalena’s chokepoint, he says, is in the streets of Girardot, a city below Bogotá. The Rio Bogotá is born above the capital in purity, but reaches the Magdalena at Girardot as “less a river than a slurry of waste.”
From there, the Magdalena continues to the sea a changed waterway.
“If you could do something about the Rio Bogotá, you’d go a long way to cleaning up the Rio Magdalena,” Davis says
Wade Davis wants you to know that his new book is about his travels through Colombia, but it’s not a travel book.
© Provided by National Post The end of the day on the Magdalena.
Brian Fitzpatrick NATIONAL POST
Brian Fitzpatrick NATIONAL POST
“If anything, it’s more of a biography of the country,” he says. “There’s nothing more boring than travel books focused on the self. It’s similar to false heroics in the realm of exploration. As a writer you’re just a conduit for the voices of the people.”
To tell the tale of an enormous river described as the soul of Colombia, the country’s mirror of America’s Mississippi, Davis had one obvious path to take. But he says he was never tempted to hop in a kayak and splash through the artery’s softer passages, describing in hackneyed terms what he saw from the pilot’s seat.
Instead, for Magdalena: River of Dreams , the author, ethnographer and University of British Columbia professor of anthropology preferred a process he calls “sociology inspired by serendipity.”
This, he tells the National Post from his home in Vancouver, is the magic captured when a writer is introduced to one local person, then another, then another, before linking these experiences like a chain, getting a much more nuanced picture of a nation.
Crediting the Colombian journalist Juan Gonzalo Betancur with the phrase, Davis said his plan was simple as he set out to describe the waterway, all 1,500 kilometres of it, that allowed Colombia’s hugely challenging topography to be conquered centuries ago, spitting out a nation.
“He would just get to the town,” Davis says of Betancur, “and wait until he found someone who had something to say that he thought the world needed to hear. Which, as Ernest Hemingway wrote, is the essence of good storytelling.”
Calling your book “a biography of the country” is bold, but Davis, an honorary Colombian citizen for his Amazon work on Indigenous cultures and plant species, is one of few “outsiders” who can get away with it. Long a friend to the Arhuaco mamos , the spiritual priests of Colombia’s Sierra Nevada mountain range, his 20 books already include one Amazon-themed title treasured by many.
© Wade Davis/Supplied
The Arhuaco make offerings to the Magdalena at Bocas de Ceniza.
As Colombia grappled with striking peace with leftist rebels after 50 years of war, Davis followed the Magdalena over five trips, from its origins in the high páramos of the southern Putumayo department to its silt-choked outflow at the port city of Barranquilla. He wanted to hear, he says, from those who for decades had been forced, by terror, to go around with “heads down, gaze averted, hoping only not to be noticed.”
To see what lessons the Magdalena’s troubled past could offer for the country’s post-peace future, Davis journeyed by skiff, sure, but also detoured across riverbanks, volcanic mountains and bottomless valleys, with one eye on the water, another on the next encounter. In one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, he found a rich mix of voices.
“I wanted to tell the story of the people I met,” he says. And anyway, “Who cares about Wade Davis being on a kayak on the f—ing Magdalena?’ ”
***
In 1968, a school trip delivered Davis to Colombia at the urging of his mother, who had it in mind that her 14-year-old son should learn Spanish. But while the other lads on the trip were stuck in the boiling western city of Cali, Davis was set up with a family in the nearby hills.
“For eight weeks,” he writes in Magdalena ’s early pages, “I encountered the warmth and decency of a people charged with a strange intensity.… Several of the older Canadian students longed for home. I felt as if I had finally found it.”
In 1974, drawn back as if by force, he ambled through Colombian regions where left-wing rebels roamed, arming himself only with Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass and a book on vascular plants. At the urging of his biologist mentor Richard Evans Schultes, under whom he worked at Harvard, Davis would spend years exploring the wider Amazon and Andes, living with Indigenous groups across eight countries and examining the positive uses of native plants like the coca leaf, from which cocaine comes. In 1997, he penned a biography of Schultes, naming it One River: Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon Rain Forest .
As Colombia grappled with striking peace with leftist rebels after 50 years of war, Davis followed the Magdalena over five trips, from its origins in the high páramos of the southern Putumayo department to its silt-choked outflow at the port city of Barranquilla. He wanted to hear, he says, from those who for decades had been forced, by terror, to go around with “heads down, gaze averted, hoping only not to be noticed.”
To see what lessons the Magdalena’s troubled past could offer for the country’s post-peace future, Davis journeyed by skiff, sure, but also detoured across riverbanks, volcanic mountains and bottomless valleys, with one eye on the water, another on the next encounter. In one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, he found a rich mix of voices.
“I wanted to tell the story of the people I met,” he says. And anyway, “Who cares about Wade Davis being on a kayak on the f—ing Magdalena?’ ”
***
In 1968, a school trip delivered Davis to Colombia at the urging of his mother, who had it in mind that her 14-year-old son should learn Spanish. But while the other lads on the trip were stuck in the boiling western city of Cali, Davis was set up with a family in the nearby hills.
“For eight weeks,” he writes in Magdalena ’s early pages, “I encountered the warmth and decency of a people charged with a strange intensity.… Several of the older Canadian students longed for home. I felt as if I had finally found it.”
In 1974, drawn back as if by force, he ambled through Colombian regions where left-wing rebels roamed, arming himself only with Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass and a book on vascular plants. At the urging of his biologist mentor Richard Evans Schultes, under whom he worked at Harvard, Davis would spend years exploring the wider Amazon and Andes, living with Indigenous groups across eight countries and examining the positive uses of native plants like the coca leaf, from which cocaine comes. In 1997, he penned a biography of Schultes, naming it One River: Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon Rain Forest .
© Wade Davis/Supplied A young Wade Davis in the Amazon.
By the time the book’s Spanish translation, El Rio , took off in 2002 after a small Bogotá publisher ran off 500 copies, Davis says he couldn’t even remember if he still owned its rights. But when he returned to Colombia in 2008, he found El Rio was frequently jumping out at him from coffee tables. Marta Ochoa, the sister of Medellín Cartel boss Fabio Ochoa, even called, asking Davis if he would kindly go and talk to her brother at a U.S. prison.
But even if Fabio was a fan, these so-called narcos , as lionized by the Netflix series of the same name, are everything that saddens Davis about Colombia. As he set out to write Magdalena , he would use the river’s history to explode some hoary notions about the country’s place in the world.
“The book by no means shies away from the reality of the violence and the scale of it, the agony of it,” he says. “But it explains it in historical terms and with empathy. And, above all, it shows that this is not the totality of Colombia as the clichés maintain.”
As Davis points out, very few of Colombia’s 50 million people have even seen cocaine, let alone used it, yet a conflict fuelled for decades by the drug has made innocent Colombians its primary victims. Since 1964, more than 220,000 have died, 100,000 remain missing, and seven million have been internally displaced. The cocaine trade, facilitated by everyone who has ever bought from their local dealer, has bankrolled the left-wing guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and other mafias. As for the failed $1 trillion war on drugs, Davis says, it “has resulted, 50 years on, in more people in more places using worse drugs than ever before.”
Yet as he began to think of writing Magdalena in 2014, an almost unimaginable peace deal was in the works between the FARC and the government of then-president Juan Manuel Santos. The idea began as a half-joke he made to some journalist friends in Bogotá, but what resulted is a beautiful, 350-page opus full of Colombians equally in love with the newfound peace as they are with their river.
By the time the book’s Spanish translation, El Rio , took off in 2002 after a small Bogotá publisher ran off 500 copies, Davis says he couldn’t even remember if he still owned its rights. But when he returned to Colombia in 2008, he found El Rio was frequently jumping out at him from coffee tables. Marta Ochoa, the sister of Medellín Cartel boss Fabio Ochoa, even called, asking Davis if he would kindly go and talk to her brother at a U.S. prison.
But even if Fabio was a fan, these so-called narcos , as lionized by the Netflix series of the same name, are everything that saddens Davis about Colombia. As he set out to write Magdalena , he would use the river’s history to explode some hoary notions about the country’s place in the world.
“The book by no means shies away from the reality of the violence and the scale of it, the agony of it,” he says. “But it explains it in historical terms and with empathy. And, above all, it shows that this is not the totality of Colombia as the clichés maintain.”
As Davis points out, very few of Colombia’s 50 million people have even seen cocaine, let alone used it, yet a conflict fuelled for decades by the drug has made innocent Colombians its primary victims. Since 1964, more than 220,000 have died, 100,000 remain missing, and seven million have been internally displaced. The cocaine trade, facilitated by everyone who has ever bought from their local dealer, has bankrolled the left-wing guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and other mafias. As for the failed $1 trillion war on drugs, Davis says, it “has resulted, 50 years on, in more people in more places using worse drugs than ever before.”
Yet as he began to think of writing Magdalena in 2014, an almost unimaginable peace deal was in the works between the FARC and the government of then-president Juan Manuel Santos. The idea began as a half-joke he made to some journalist friends in Bogotá, but what resulted is a beautiful, 350-page opus full of Colombians equally in love with the newfound peace as they are with their river.
© Wade Davis/Supplied
The Magdalena has been described as the soul of Colombia, the river that made the nation possible.
From the passionate Germán Ferro, overseer of a museum dedicated to the Magdalena in the colonial town of Honda, to Héctor Botero, the cheesemaker who lost everything twice — robbed of house and home by the FARC and later by right-wing death squads — Davis says “the characters had to fight to get into this book.”
Ferro says in moving passages that his life’s work is to “reconnect Colombia to the river that gave it birth,” and notes that the Magdalena is highly unusual among tropical rivers, in that it flows south to north. “In Colombia,” he tells Davis, “south is up and north is down.” His words could apply not just to the Magdalena, but to the land as a whole, a place where things often aren’t as they seem, no matter how hard one looks.
“There’s a whole other Colombia,” Davis says. “I think by holding a mirror to its face and revealing all that’s great about the country, it’s a book that could, conceivably, in some small way contribute to the peace process.”
***
The source of the Magdalena in the Andean páramos is a crystalline fountain of life, but as Davis shows, it once helped to guide the path of the Spanish conquistadors, who brought with them a world of death.
By 1536, Sebastián de Belalcázar had waded into Colombia after establishing Quito, Ecuador. Belalcázar had heard of a golden king in Cundinamarca, “the heights where the condors dwell,” and soon set off in search of El Dorado, a mythical lost city of gold. As he did so, he followed the Magdalena north from the peaks of the Macizo Colombiano all the way to what is now Bogotá, laying waste to Indigenous peoples as he went.
At around the same time, Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada was trying the same from the opposite direction, battling the river south from Santa Marta on the Caribbean. As 200 of his men took ships, most of which sank, up the Magdalena, Quesada hacked, with another 900, through the jungle banks. The fierce Chimila people, and deadly wildlife, left most of Quesada’s men dead or demented, but on Aug. 6, 1538, he claimed Bogotá just before Belalcázar and the German adventurer Nicolás Féderman, who had led a separate Spanish expedition across Colombia’s eastern plains. Quesada’s men went on to wipe out peoples such as the gold-worshipping Muisca, whose palaces they likened to those of Troy.
From the passionate Germán Ferro, overseer of a museum dedicated to the Magdalena in the colonial town of Honda, to Héctor Botero, the cheesemaker who lost everything twice — robbed of house and home by the FARC and later by right-wing death squads — Davis says “the characters had to fight to get into this book.”
Ferro says in moving passages that his life’s work is to “reconnect Colombia to the river that gave it birth,” and notes that the Magdalena is highly unusual among tropical rivers, in that it flows south to north. “In Colombia,” he tells Davis, “south is up and north is down.” His words could apply not just to the Magdalena, but to the land as a whole, a place where things often aren’t as they seem, no matter how hard one looks.
“There’s a whole other Colombia,” Davis says. “I think by holding a mirror to its face and revealing all that’s great about the country, it’s a book that could, conceivably, in some small way contribute to the peace process.”
***
The source of the Magdalena in the Andean páramos is a crystalline fountain of life, but as Davis shows, it once helped to guide the path of the Spanish conquistadors, who brought with them a world of death.
By 1536, Sebastián de Belalcázar had waded into Colombia after establishing Quito, Ecuador. Belalcázar had heard of a golden king in Cundinamarca, “the heights where the condors dwell,” and soon set off in search of El Dorado, a mythical lost city of gold. As he did so, he followed the Magdalena north from the peaks of the Macizo Colombiano all the way to what is now Bogotá, laying waste to Indigenous peoples as he went.
At around the same time, Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada was trying the same from the opposite direction, battling the river south from Santa Marta on the Caribbean. As 200 of his men took ships, most of which sank, up the Magdalena, Quesada hacked, with another 900, through the jungle banks. The fierce Chimila people, and deadly wildlife, left most of Quesada’s men dead or demented, but on Aug. 6, 1538, he claimed Bogotá just before Belalcázar and the German adventurer Nicolás Féderman, who had led a separate Spanish expedition across Colombia’s eastern plains. Quesada’s men went on to wipe out peoples such as the gold-worshipping Muisca, whose palaces they likened to those of Troy.
© Wade Davis/Supplied Crossing the Macizo Colombiano.
Venezuelan liberator Simón Bolívar wrested the region from Spain in 1819, and in 1821, Bogotá became the capital of what would become Gran Colombia, spanning modern Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela. Bolívar set about commercializing the lower river, knowing that “whoever dominates the Magdalena controls the fate of men.” The great steamships he would import, called vapores , were cousins of the Mississippi steamers, and they began the slow realization of the river’s potential. But, as Davis writes, the vapores would also start the river’s demise; the lumber needed to fuel them saw riverbanks torn asunder so that the boats could steam from Barranquilla to the rapids at Honda, hundreds of kilometres upriver.
A Liberal-Conservative divide, revolutionaries against landed gentry, as Davis puts it, plagued Colombia after Spanish rule. The 1899-1903 War of a Thousand Days, a bloodbath started over coffee, left the state, which eventually withered from Gran Colombia down to Colombia, in ashes. Later, La Violencia , another Liberal-Conservative war, spanned 10 years, a madness sparked by the 1948 Bogotá killing of Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, a Liberal politician. The embers of that war would help spark the one launched by the FARC in 1964, which lasted until 2016. This communist uprising over land rights would morph into a three-sided conflict; FARC fought the Colombian army, which hit back using the paramilitaries of the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) as its bloodthirsty proxy.
As this carnage exploded around it, the Magdalena suffered devastation via damming for hydropower, oil extraction and industrial poisoning. Its drainage has been scalped of four-fifths of its forest cover. Davis points out that fish stocks are down by half over the past 30 years, and at least 19 fish species face annihilation. The river, into which 32 million Colombians flush their waste, has suffocated.
If this wasn’t enough, the Magdalena’s association with dead people has scarred it for decades. First it was Liberals and Conservatives mutilating each other during La Violencia , rolling corpses into the currents; decades later, the narcos , the paramilitaries and the FARC all started to do the same. Revered Colombian author Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote in Love in the Time of Cholera about a trip up the Magdalena taken by his character Florentino Ariza, who sees “three bloated, green, human corpses float past, with buzzards sitting on them.”
“That’s why the fisherman at certain places don’t eat the fish that come out of the river, because of the dead,” Davis says. The Magdalena’s reputation as “the graveyard of the nation” endures.
Venezuelan liberator Simón Bolívar wrested the region from Spain in 1819, and in 1821, Bogotá became the capital of what would become Gran Colombia, spanning modern Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela. Bolívar set about commercializing the lower river, knowing that “whoever dominates the Magdalena controls the fate of men.” The great steamships he would import, called vapores , were cousins of the Mississippi steamers, and they began the slow realization of the river’s potential. But, as Davis writes, the vapores would also start the river’s demise; the lumber needed to fuel them saw riverbanks torn asunder so that the boats could steam from Barranquilla to the rapids at Honda, hundreds of kilometres upriver.
A Liberal-Conservative divide, revolutionaries against landed gentry, as Davis puts it, plagued Colombia after Spanish rule. The 1899-1903 War of a Thousand Days, a bloodbath started over coffee, left the state, which eventually withered from Gran Colombia down to Colombia, in ashes. Later, La Violencia , another Liberal-Conservative war, spanned 10 years, a madness sparked by the 1948 Bogotá killing of Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, a Liberal politician. The embers of that war would help spark the one launched by the FARC in 1964, which lasted until 2016. This communist uprising over land rights would morph into a three-sided conflict; FARC fought the Colombian army, which hit back using the paramilitaries of the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) as its bloodthirsty proxy.
As this carnage exploded around it, the Magdalena suffered devastation via damming for hydropower, oil extraction and industrial poisoning. Its drainage has been scalped of four-fifths of its forest cover. Davis points out that fish stocks are down by half over the past 30 years, and at least 19 fish species face annihilation. The river, into which 32 million Colombians flush their waste, has suffocated.
If this wasn’t enough, the Magdalena’s association with dead people has scarred it for decades. First it was Liberals and Conservatives mutilating each other during La Violencia , rolling corpses into the currents; decades later, the narcos , the paramilitaries and the FARC all started to do the same. Revered Colombian author Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote in Love in the Time of Cholera about a trip up the Magdalena taken by his character Florentino Ariza, who sees “three bloated, green, human corpses float past, with buzzards sitting on them.”
“That’s why the fisherman at certain places don’t eat the fish that come out of the river, because of the dead,” Davis says. The Magdalena’s reputation as “the graveyard of the nation” endures.
© Wade Davis/Supplied The floating fishing village of Nueva Venecia.
At Nueva Venecia, a floating town on the Ciénaga Grande wetlands not far from where the Magdalena meets the sea at Barranquila, Davis talks with Ahmed Gutiérrez, who recalls a night when “even the dogs howled in fear.” In November 2000, 60 paramilitaries came by boat, murdering 39 locals simply because guerrillas of the National Liberation Army (ELN), Colombia’s smaller rebel group, had earlier passed through the area.
Long before the paramilitaries came, the villagers had already watched much of their fishing habitat destroyed by government highways and river diversions. Yet still they kept faith in the river.
“The Magdalena for us means life,” Gutiérrez says. “The river was the most beautiful in Colombia.… And then for years we treated it like a sewer. Just like we treated each other. But it’s possible to renew the river. We endured a massacre, but now we are living in peace.”
Davis makes similar linkages between the Magdalena’s would-be rebirth and the country’s.
“The symbolism of what happened,” he says, “the paramilitaries putting the dead into the river to ‘kill them twice.’ This is where I got the idea of cleaning up the river as a symbol of peace. To send a message to the world that while the world was falling apart, Colombia was falling together.
“One message that came spontaneously, everywhere, was that ‘if we don’t clean the river we cannot clean our souls.’”
At Nueva Venecia, a floating town on the Ciénaga Grande wetlands not far from where the Magdalena meets the sea at Barranquila, Davis talks with Ahmed Gutiérrez, who recalls a night when “even the dogs howled in fear.” In November 2000, 60 paramilitaries came by boat, murdering 39 locals simply because guerrillas of the National Liberation Army (ELN), Colombia’s smaller rebel group, had earlier passed through the area.
Long before the paramilitaries came, the villagers had already watched much of their fishing habitat destroyed by government highways and river diversions. Yet still they kept faith in the river.
“The Magdalena for us means life,” Gutiérrez says. “The river was the most beautiful in Colombia.… And then for years we treated it like a sewer. Just like we treated each other. But it’s possible to renew the river. We endured a massacre, but now we are living in peace.”
Davis makes similar linkages between the Magdalena’s would-be rebirth and the country’s.
“The symbolism of what happened,” he says, “the paramilitaries putting the dead into the river to ‘kill them twice.’ This is where I got the idea of cleaning up the river as a symbol of peace. To send a message to the world that while the world was falling apart, Colombia was falling together.
“One message that came spontaneously, everywhere, was that ‘if we don’t clean the river we cannot clean our souls.’”
© Wade Davis/Supplied
A fisherman on the Ciénaga de Tabacurú, one of hundreds of wetlands on the lower Magdalena.
Garcia Marquez loved the Magdalena with a passion, but he himself famously said that it could be written off as dead. Davis, though, is certain the Magdalena is not beyond redemption. If any river can be saved, it’s one that rolls through cloud forests, volcanoes and “shimmering wetlands … the size of the sky,” alive with the rhythms of cumbia music, Colombia’s “singular gift to the world,” which began when the natives, whom the Spanish had scattered but not wiped out, mingled with slaves sent from Africa. If any river is worth saving, he says, it’s one of caimans, jaguars and spectacled bears, and first mapped by the great German explorer, Alexander von Humboldt, who teased it out using the sketches of Colombian naturalist Francisco José de Caldas.
Davis describes one part of the Magdalena, near where it meets its tributary, the Rio Cauca, as “a land so limitless that Colombians could hide England and the English would never find it.” But the Magdalena’s chokepoint, he says, is in the streets of Girardot, a city below Bogotá. The Rio Bogotá is born above the capital in purity, but reaches the Magdalena at Girardot as “less a river than a slurry of waste.”
From there, the Magdalena continues to the sea a changed waterway.
“If you could do something about the Rio Bogotá, you’d go a long way to cleaning up the Rio Magdalena,” Davis says
.
© Gigi Suhanic/National Post
The Magdalena flows south to north, from the department of Putumayo all the way to the ocean at Barranquilla.
“They used to say of the Hudson that you could tell what kind of car that GM was making in Tarrytown by the colour of the river,” he says, laughing. But other than the fact that its fish won’t be found on Manhattan’s menus, “the Hudson has come back. You can see humpback whales going to the Hudson. The resilience of nature is amazing, COVID taught us that.”
And, in a twisted sense, Davis says the war might have saved Colombia’s landscape. Compared to industrial development decisions made in eastern Ecuador in the 1970s, FARC’s presence put enormous chunks of Colombia off-limits for oil and mineral prospectors. Its Amazon, though threatened by deforestation, is still as big as France.
“So Colombia now has this incredible opportunity to rethink its destiny, informed by 50 years of scientific research as to the importance of bio and cultural diversity, that didn’t exist when Ecuador made those decisions 50 years ago,” Davis says.
“They used to say of the Hudson that you could tell what kind of car that GM was making in Tarrytown by the colour of the river,” he says, laughing. But other than the fact that its fish won’t be found on Manhattan’s menus, “the Hudson has come back. You can see humpback whales going to the Hudson. The resilience of nature is amazing, COVID taught us that.”
And, in a twisted sense, Davis says the war might have saved Colombia’s landscape. Compared to industrial development decisions made in eastern Ecuador in the 1970s, FARC’s presence put enormous chunks of Colombia off-limits for oil and mineral prospectors. Its Amazon, though threatened by deforestation, is still as big as France.
“So Colombia now has this incredible opportunity to rethink its destiny, informed by 50 years of scientific research as to the importance of bio and cultural diversity, that didn’t exist when Ecuador made those decisions 50 years ago,” Davis says.
© Wade Davis/Supplied
Mamo Camilo pictured at Katanzama, an Arhuaco settlement east of Santa Marta.
Continuing the theme, he goes back, as he often does, to his friends the Arhuaco of the Sierra Nevada, and recalls a ceremony that involved former president Santos, just before he left office. Davis wasn’t meant to be there that day at the settlement of Nabusímake, but when Mamo Camillo of the Arhuaco told him, by chance, that Santos was about to visit, he ended up flying to Nabusímake the only way possible — by presidential plane and helicopter from Bogotá, after wrangling a seat via U.S. connections.
Mamo Camillo had told Davis: “The peace won’t matter a damn if it’s just an excuse for the three sides to maintain a war against nature. What we need is to make peace with the natural world.” And when the president’s aides, during the flight, asked for suggestions on what the Arhuaco thought of Santos’ peace pact, Davis passed on Mamo Camillo’s words. In a well-received speech, Santos would use them almost verbatim.
Call it sociology inspired by serendipity.
***
Neither the conquistadors Belalcázar and Quesada, or the German adventurer Féderman, fared well after they left Bogotá. Belalcázar did a long stint in a Spanish jail, Quesada died suffering from leprosy, and Féderman drowned at sea.
“As warriors, they had destroyed so much, but as men they created little,” Davis writes, and 500 years later, the same could be said of the FARC. After four years of talks in Havana, Cuba, in 2016 the rebels agreed to lay down their arms, in return for acceptance into politics and conditional amnesty for the terrible crimes they committed
Continuing the theme, he goes back, as he often does, to his friends the Arhuaco of the Sierra Nevada, and recalls a ceremony that involved former president Santos, just before he left office. Davis wasn’t meant to be there that day at the settlement of Nabusímake, but when Mamo Camillo of the Arhuaco told him, by chance, that Santos was about to visit, he ended up flying to Nabusímake the only way possible — by presidential plane and helicopter from Bogotá, after wrangling a seat via U.S. connections.
Mamo Camillo had told Davis: “The peace won’t matter a damn if it’s just an excuse for the three sides to maintain a war against nature. What we need is to make peace with the natural world.” And when the president’s aides, during the flight, asked for suggestions on what the Arhuaco thought of Santos’ peace pact, Davis passed on Mamo Camillo’s words. In a well-received speech, Santos would use them almost verbatim.
Call it sociology inspired by serendipity.
***
Neither the conquistadors Belalcázar and Quesada, or the German adventurer Féderman, fared well after they left Bogotá. Belalcázar did a long stint in a Spanish jail, Quesada died suffering from leprosy, and Féderman drowned at sea.
“As warriors, they had destroyed so much, but as men they created little,” Davis writes, and 500 years later, the same could be said of the FARC. After four years of talks in Havana, Cuba, in 2016 the rebels agreed to lay down their arms, in return for acceptance into politics and conditional amnesty for the terrible crimes they committed
.
© LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images
Then-Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos (L) and the head of the FARC guerrilla Timoleon Jimenez, aka Timochenko (R), shake hands as Cuban President Raul Castro (C) holds their hands during a meeting in Havana on September 23, 2015.
Like a fork in a river, two former presidents, Santos and his predecessor Álvaro Uribe, went their separate ways on the peace deal.
Uribe, who has denied repeated allegations of ties to Colombia’s paramilitaries, had almost wiped out the FARC, helped by U.S. military funding between 2002 and 2010. He wanted the onslaught to continue, and saw the pact as a betrayal by Santos, who had served as his defence minister. Santos steered the deal the long way through Congress, after its concessions to FARC dismayed many Colombians, who rejected it in a plebiscite. For his efforts, he won the Nobel Peace Prize.
But now Uribe’s political protégé, Iván Duque, is president, and the deal’s implementation, on everything from land restitution to coca crop substitution, has slowed to a trickle. Many FARC have rearmed, other armed groups have entered the communities where FARC once reigned, and community leaders who sign on for peace are being murdered at alarming rates.
Davis, though, thinks the internationally guaranteed peace deal, independent of whatever Colombian government is in power, can survive as an organic, standalone project. Much like the Magdalena, he feels it is the people who will decide the future of Santos’ pact.
“I think the book shows that the people of Colombia won’t tolerate a return to war,” he says. “It’s amazing how in every little hamlet (there are) efforts for reconciliation. Everybody wants peace.
“It’s a little bit like Ireland, or any country that’s racked by civil strife and becomes bloody and violent. Peace actually appears to have been negotiated at the table, but it always comes when the people themselves in the streets say ‘ bastante ! We’re f—ing fed up.’”
bfitzpatrick@postmedia.com
Twitter.com/BrianFitz_
Like a fork in a river, two former presidents, Santos and his predecessor Álvaro Uribe, went their separate ways on the peace deal.
Uribe, who has denied repeated allegations of ties to Colombia’s paramilitaries, had almost wiped out the FARC, helped by U.S. military funding between 2002 and 2010. He wanted the onslaught to continue, and saw the pact as a betrayal by Santos, who had served as his defence minister. Santos steered the deal the long way through Congress, after its concessions to FARC dismayed many Colombians, who rejected it in a plebiscite. For his efforts, he won the Nobel Peace Prize.
But now Uribe’s political protégé, Iván Duque, is president, and the deal’s implementation, on everything from land restitution to coca crop substitution, has slowed to a trickle. Many FARC have rearmed, other armed groups have entered the communities where FARC once reigned, and community leaders who sign on for peace are being murdered at alarming rates.
Davis, though, thinks the internationally guaranteed peace deal, independent of whatever Colombian government is in power, can survive as an organic, standalone project. Much like the Magdalena, he feels it is the people who will decide the future of Santos’ pact.
“I think the book shows that the people of Colombia won’t tolerate a return to war,” he says. “It’s amazing how in every little hamlet (there are) efforts for reconciliation. Everybody wants peace.
“It’s a little bit like Ireland, or any country that’s racked by civil strife and becomes bloody and violent. Peace actually appears to have been negotiated at the table, but it always comes when the people themselves in the streets say ‘ bastante ! We’re f—ing fed up.’”
bfitzpatrick@postmedia.com
Twitter.com/BrianFitz_
The 'Dark River' flows 1,000 km under Greenland and drains into a fjord, scientists think
Devika Desai
There may be a massive underground river running below Greenland, researchers say, fed by melting ice on the surface.
Devika Desai
There may be a massive underground river running below Greenland, researchers say, fed by melting ice on the surface.
© Provided by National Post
This file photo taken on October 13, 2015 and obtained on November 24, 2015 by NASA shows the Heimdal Glacier in southern Greenland, captured from NASA Langley Research Center's Falcon 20 aircraft flying 33,000 feet above mean sea level during NASAs Operation IceBridge, an airborne survey of polar ice.
Scientists aren’t yet sure whether the river — nicknamed the ‘Dark River’ — actually exists. But evidence of a giant subglacial valley beneath the ice-covered country has led some to posit the theory of a giant river flowing 1,000 km from the deep interior of Greenland to Petermann Fjord in the country’s northwest.
“The results are consistent with a long subglacial river,” ice sheet modeller Christopher Chambers said in a press release by Hokkaido University in Japan, “but considerable uncertainty remains.”
Over the past 20 years, several studies have noted clues in the country’s topography that hint at the existence of trenches, valleys, even mega-canyons beneath the surface.
In 1998, researchers found two, roughly 75 km long, ‘elongated depressions in the surface of the ice connected by a “more than 1,000 km long, gently curving trench.’
By 2013, a ‘paleo-fluvial’ mega-canyon was identified — a remnant of a once-active water channel — extending from central Greenland to Petermann Fjord in north-west Greenland. Researchers, however, suggested that the valley could still have water flowing through certain sections, although observations are yet to be recorded.
While the studies present a glimpse of what could be a giant subglacial network beneath the surface, the major gaps in radar data obtained from satellite surveys conducted by NASA have left scientists uncertain as to how the valleys are connected and how water, in turn, would behave within them.
Scientists aren’t yet sure whether the river — nicknamed the ‘Dark River’ — actually exists. But evidence of a giant subglacial valley beneath the ice-covered country has led some to posit the theory of a giant river flowing 1,000 km from the deep interior of Greenland to Petermann Fjord in the country’s northwest.
“The results are consistent with a long subglacial river,” ice sheet modeller Christopher Chambers said in a press release by Hokkaido University in Japan, “but considerable uncertainty remains.”
Over the past 20 years, several studies have noted clues in the country’s topography that hint at the existence of trenches, valleys, even mega-canyons beneath the surface.
In 1998, researchers found two, roughly 75 km long, ‘elongated depressions in the surface of the ice connected by a “more than 1,000 km long, gently curving trench.’
By 2013, a ‘paleo-fluvial’ mega-canyon was identified — a remnant of a once-active water channel — extending from central Greenland to Petermann Fjord in north-west Greenland. Researchers, however, suggested that the valley could still have water flowing through certain sections, although observations are yet to be recorded.
While the studies present a glimpse of what could be a giant subglacial network beneath the surface, the major gaps in radar data obtained from satellite surveys conducted by NASA have left scientists uncertain as to how the valleys are connected and how water, in turn, would behave within them.
© Christopher Chambers The map shows the potential valley and possible river flowing from the interior of Greenland to Petermann Fjord.
We don’t know how much water, if any, is available to flow along the valley and whether it does indeed exit at Petermann Fjord, or is refrozen, or escapes the valley, along the way,” Chambers says .
Chambers and his team designed a ‘thought experiment’ in which they investigated the hypothesis that the valleys aren’t broken up but instead flow as a giant river, by simulating the state of Greenland via the SICOPOLIS method (SImulation COde for POLythermal Ice Sheets).
The simulations, they said, do support a waterway running from Greenland’s core to the sea. “The model results indicate that the valley follows a path down a gentle ice surface slope (Fig. 8 ) which would imply that the ice overburden pressure lowers as the valley progresses towards Petermann Fjord,” they wrote in their paper.
The simulation is plausible, they added, as the segmentation — rises in the subglacial valleys — seen in initial modelling might just be an illusion, due to misleading modelling in regions where little data has been recorded.
“The rises occur where data are interpolated to fill in gaps between where radar has obtained reliable data,” the authors wrote. “This suggests that the valley rises may not be real.”
Subsequently, if water is flowing, the model suggests it could cross the whole length of the valley as the region would be relatively flat, similar to a riverbed, with no physical barriers hindering the flow of the river, they added.
The findings are hypothetical for now, they conclude, but aerial surveys of the ice sheet topography may one day confirm the simulation results.
We don’t know how much water, if any, is available to flow along the valley and whether it does indeed exit at Petermann Fjord, or is refrozen, or escapes the valley, along the way,” Chambers says .
Chambers and his team designed a ‘thought experiment’ in which they investigated the hypothesis that the valleys aren’t broken up but instead flow as a giant river, by simulating the state of Greenland via the SICOPOLIS method (SImulation COde for POLythermal Ice Sheets).
The simulations, they said, do support a waterway running from Greenland’s core to the sea. “The model results indicate that the valley follows a path down a gentle ice surface slope (Fig. 8 ) which would imply that the ice overburden pressure lowers as the valley progresses towards Petermann Fjord,” they wrote in their paper.
The simulation is plausible, they added, as the segmentation — rises in the subglacial valleys — seen in initial modelling might just be an illusion, due to misleading modelling in regions where little data has been recorded.
“The rises occur where data are interpolated to fill in gaps between where radar has obtained reliable data,” the authors wrote. “This suggests that the valley rises may not be real.”
Subsequently, if water is flowing, the model suggests it could cross the whole length of the valley as the region would be relatively flat, similar to a riverbed, with no physical barriers hindering the flow of the river, they added.
The findings are hypothetical for now, they conclude, but aerial surveys of the ice sheet topography may one day confirm the simulation results.
Barack Obama Says Issues, Policies, Facts Don't Matter to American Voters Anymore
Scott McDonald
Scott McDonald
© Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Former President Barack Obama speaks in support of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden during a drive-in rally at the Florida International University on November 02, 2020 in Miami, Florida.
Former U.S. president Barack Obama spent Sunday night on prime time TV to help peddle his new book, and the the 44th president gently sidestepped questions where he could have blamed current President Donald Trump for disruptions in America. Those range from political unrests in America's streets to political division inside the Washington, D.C., loop.
Obama conducted an interview with Scott Pelley of CBS' '60 Minutes.' Pelley asked Obama about the 2020 presidential election, in which Trump won more than 73 million popular votes—way more than he won in 2016.
"It tells us that we're very divided," Obama said Sunday night. "As I said. It's not just the politicians, the voters are divided."
Obama went on to blame media and tech companies for letting a division drive a huge wedge between voters in America. He said democracy doesn't work without an "informed citizenry" or stronger elected local officials throughout the country.
The former president said the country has become so divided that it's not facts, policies and issues that matter to voters, but rather their hatred to the other candidate that drives their votes.
"It has now become a contest where issues, facts, policies—per say—don't matter as much as identity and wanting to beat the other guy. That's taken priority," Obama said.
Obama said the "current medium environment" immensely adds to that, saying that citizens need to be adequately informed.
"This democracy doesn't work if we don't have an informed citizenry. This democracy doesn't work if we don't have responsible elected officials at other levels who are willing to call the president when he's not doing something right," Obama said.
Obama won the presidency in the 2008 election, beating former Arizona Senator John McCain to fill the Oval Office after George W. Bush's two terms. Obama won re-election in 2012 with a win over Mitt Romney. Obama dealt with his share of detractors from the Republican side. He even dealt with those in his party who opposed certain issues just so they could get re-elected, Obama added during the '60 Minutes' interview.
Pelley and Obama were positioned next to a painted portrait of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president who presided over secession and the civil war. Pelley pointed at the painting asked if America's hatred and division was similar to Lincoln's.
"[Lincoln] is a good example of somebody who I think understood deeply the need to be able to see another person's point of view," Obama said.
"There's no American figure I admire any more than Abraham Lincoln. But, he did end up with a civil war on his hands. I would like to avoid that. I do think that a new president can set a new tone. That's not going to solve all the gridlock in Washington. I think we're going to have to work with the media and with the tech companies to find ways to inform the public better about the issues and to bolster the standards that ensure we can separate truth from fiction.
Former U.S. president Barack Obama spent Sunday night on prime time TV to help peddle his new book, and the the 44th president gently sidestepped questions where he could have blamed current President Donald Trump for disruptions in America. Those range from political unrests in America's streets to political division inside the Washington, D.C., loop.
Obama conducted an interview with Scott Pelley of CBS' '60 Minutes.' Pelley asked Obama about the 2020 presidential election, in which Trump won more than 73 million popular votes—way more than he won in 2016.
"It tells us that we're very divided," Obama said Sunday night. "As I said. It's not just the politicians, the voters are divided."
Obama went on to blame media and tech companies for letting a division drive a huge wedge between voters in America. He said democracy doesn't work without an "informed citizenry" or stronger elected local officials throughout the country.
The former president said the country has become so divided that it's not facts, policies and issues that matter to voters, but rather their hatred to the other candidate that drives their votes.
"It has now become a contest where issues, facts, policies—per say—don't matter as much as identity and wanting to beat the other guy. That's taken priority," Obama said.
Obama said the "current medium environment" immensely adds to that, saying that citizens need to be adequately informed.
"This democracy doesn't work if we don't have an informed citizenry. This democracy doesn't work if we don't have responsible elected officials at other levels who are willing to call the president when he's not doing something right," Obama said.
Obama won the presidency in the 2008 election, beating former Arizona Senator John McCain to fill the Oval Office after George W. Bush's two terms. Obama won re-election in 2012 with a win over Mitt Romney. Obama dealt with his share of detractors from the Republican side. He even dealt with those in his party who opposed certain issues just so they could get re-elected, Obama added during the '60 Minutes' interview.
Pelley and Obama were positioned next to a painted portrait of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president who presided over secession and the civil war. Pelley pointed at the painting asked if America's hatred and division was similar to Lincoln's.
"[Lincoln] is a good example of somebody who I think understood deeply the need to be able to see another person's point of view," Obama said.
"There's no American figure I admire any more than Abraham Lincoln. But, he did end up with a civil war on his hands. I would like to avoid that. I do think that a new president can set a new tone. That's not going to solve all the gridlock in Washington. I think we're going to have to work with the media and with the tech companies to find ways to inform the public better about the issues and to bolster the standards that ensure we can separate truth from fiction.
Waste not, want not: Dutch students build electric car from recycled material
.
© Reuters/EVA PLEVIER
Students of Eindhoven University of Technology have created a car named Luca from recycled waste in Eindhoven
The bright yellow, sporty two-seater which the students named 'Luca', can reach a top speed of 90 kilometres (56 miles) per hour and has a reach of 220 kilometres when fully charged, the Technical University of Eindhoven said.
"This car is really special, because it's made all out of waste", project manager Lisa van Etten told Reuters.
"Our chassis is made out of flax and recycled PET bottles. For the interior we also used unsorted household waste."
Hard plastics normally found in televisions, toys and kitchen appliances were used for the car's body, while the seat cushions consist of coconut and horse hairs.
The car was designed and built by a group of 22 students in around 18 months, Van Etten said, as an effort to prove the potential of waste.
"We really hope that car companies will start using waste materials", production team member Matthijs van Wijk said.
"It's possible in many applications. More and more companies use waste or biobased materials in the interior, we want to show that it's also possible to build a chassis out of it."
(Reporting by Bart Biesemans and Bart Meijer; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
The bright yellow, sporty two-seater which the students named 'Luca', can reach a top speed of 90 kilometres (56 miles) per hour and has a reach of 220 kilometres when fully charged, the Technical University of Eindhoven said.
"This car is really special, because it's made all out of waste", project manager Lisa van Etten told Reuters.
"Our chassis is made out of flax and recycled PET bottles. For the interior we also used unsorted household waste."
Hard plastics normally found in televisions, toys and kitchen appliances were used for the car's body, while the seat cushions consist of coconut and horse hairs.
The car was designed and built by a group of 22 students in around 18 months, Van Etten said, as an effort to prove the potential of waste.
"We really hope that car companies will start using waste materials", production team member Matthijs van Wijk said.
"It's possible in many applications. More and more companies use waste or biobased materials in the interior, we want to show that it's also possible to build a chassis out of it."
(Reporting by Bart Biesemans and Bart Meijer; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
Residential-school survivors call on Ottawa and provinces for monuments
OTTAWA — The director of that National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation says Ottawa and provincial and territorial governments must build monuments in capital cities across Canada to honour residential-school survivors and their families.
OTTAWA — The director of that National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation says Ottawa and provincial and territorial governments must build monuments in capital cities across Canada to honour residential-school survivors and their families.
© Provided by The Canadian Press
Speaking to the House of Commons heritage committee, Stephanie Scott says symbols are powerful medicine to bring comfort to survivors and to keep their experiences in front of the nation.
Scott says creating a national day to mark truth and reconciliation is also important, to acknowledge survivors and the human-rights violations they endured.
Sept. 30 is currently Orange Shirt Day, after the experience of Phyllis Webster, whose gift of clothing from her grandmother was taken away on her first day at a residential school.
The heritage committee is examining a government bill to turn the day into a national occasion for a broader observance of the history of the schools.
Stephen Kakfwi, a residential-school survivor and former premier of the Northwest Territories, says this national day should not be seen as a holiday but as a day of honouring and remembering, like Remembrance Day.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 16, 2020.
Speaking to the House of Commons heritage committee, Stephanie Scott says symbols are powerful medicine to bring comfort to survivors and to keep their experiences in front of the nation.
Scott says creating a national day to mark truth and reconciliation is also important, to acknowledge survivors and the human-rights violations they endured.
Sept. 30 is currently Orange Shirt Day, after the experience of Phyllis Webster, whose gift of clothing from her grandmother was taken away on her first day at a residential school.
The heritage committee is examining a government bill to turn the day into a national occasion for a broader observance of the history of the schools.
Stephen Kakfwi, a residential-school survivor and former premier of the Northwest Territories, says this national day should not be seen as a holiday but as a day of honouring and remembering, like Remembrance Day.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 16, 2020.
Marvel picks Edmonton comic book illustrator for Indigenous issue
Jordan Omstead NOV 15, 2020
Kyle Charles thought it was a prank.
It was an email from Marvel, the entertainment behemoth, asking the Whitefish Lake First Nation artist to illustrate a special Indigenous comic book issue.
He read it again and again, looking for signs of a hoax or forgery — anything to discredit the email's authenticity. Instead, the Edmonton-based illustrator recognized the name of the Marvel editor at the bottom of the letter.
"I was like, 'oh my God, this is actually real'," Charles said in an interview Saturday.
"So after that I immediately called my parents and my brother and let them know, 'Marvel just offered me a job — I can't believe this.'"
Marvel will release an issue Wednesday spotlighting some of its famed Indigenous super heroes. While those characters have often been crafted by non-Indigenous creators, this issue is commanded by a slate of Indigenous writers and illustrators.
It's an important step from one of the comic industry's leading brands, Charles says.
"I don't want to sit on the sidelines while someone scores touchdowns using our stories and our culture," he said.
"If anyone should be benefitting from those, it should be the people who actually grew up in the culture and have distinct voices inside that culture and understand that culture better than anyone on the outside."
For the "Marvel's Voice: Indigenous Voices" issue, Charles was tasked with illustrating the story of Dani Moonstar, a Cheyenne heroine from the New Mutants series who can conjure dreams and telepathically connect with other lifeforms.
Jordan Omstead NOV 15, 2020
Kyle Charles thought it was a prank.
It was an email from Marvel, the entertainment behemoth, asking the Whitefish Lake First Nation artist to illustrate a special Indigenous comic book issue.
He read it again and again, looking for signs of a hoax or forgery — anything to discredit the email's authenticity. Instead, the Edmonton-based illustrator recognized the name of the Marvel editor at the bottom of the letter.
"I was like, 'oh my God, this is actually real'," Charles said in an interview Saturday.
"So after that I immediately called my parents and my brother and let them know, 'Marvel just offered me a job — I can't believe this.'"
Marvel will release an issue Wednesday spotlighting some of its famed Indigenous super heroes. While those characters have often been crafted by non-Indigenous creators, this issue is commanded by a slate of Indigenous writers and illustrators.
It's an important step from one of the comic industry's leading brands, Charles says.
"I don't want to sit on the sidelines while someone scores touchdowns using our stories and our culture," he said.
"If anyone should be benefitting from those, it should be the people who actually grew up in the culture and have distinct voices inside that culture and understand that culture better than anyone on the outside."
For the "Marvel's Voice: Indigenous Voices" issue, Charles was tasked with illustrating the story of Dani Moonstar, a Cheyenne heroine from the New Mutants series who can conjure dreams and telepathically connect with other lifeforms.
© Scott Neufeld/ CBC Kyle Charles is a comic book illustrator in Edmonton.
Charles says he wanted to lend her character a "devil may care" attitude reminiscent of the Indigenous women and matriarchs closest to him — embodied by a cheerful, humorous disposition even in the face of adversity. It's a joy and humour he also associates with childhood trips to the Whitefish Lake First Nation reserve, about 200 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.
"Going back home and just getting to laugh with people and see all my people laughing, and you just don't get to see that here, you see a lot of the struggle and strife that we experience as a community," he said.
"I just try to bring all the influence of the Indigenous women into this project and do right by them," Charles said.
He worked for two months on the project beginning in August, often pulling 18 hour days in the lead up to the deadline hunched over his drafting table in his north Edmonton home studio. It's all worth it, he says, to know a young Indigenous comic book lover will be able to pick up the issue and see themselves reflected back in the pages.
"It's everything," he said. "It is the driving force. It is the absolute reason I want to take all this time and hard work and put it into that
Throughout comic book history, Indigenous people have been regularly portrayed as sidekicks or outright villains, built on racist stereotypes, says Niigaan Sinclair, an Anishinaabe writer and associate professor at the University of Manitoba.
Sinclair helped organize the Mazinbiige Indigenous Graphic Novels collection at the university, a wide-ranging catalogue reflecting on Indigenous representation and production of graphic novels.
According to Sinclair, the collection can be divided in two parts: books about and books by Indigenous people. He says about three quarters of the collection are Indigenous stories written by non-Indigenous writers. But that trend is beginning to change, with smaller publishing companies leading the way.
"Now what you're seeing is Indigenous stories are best told, most interestingly told, most creatively told by Indigenous creators," said Sinclair, who contributed to the Indigenous graphic novel anthology "This Place: 150 Years Retold".
Charles, for his part, left an illustration job two years ago to focus on freelance work and devising his own comic imprint, Unregistered Studios, to platform Indigenous creators.
Now he has one of the largest platforms in the industry with Marvel.
"I've been drawing since I was three years old. I've never wanted to do anything else in my entire life," he said.
"It's wonderful to see an industry leader take giant steps forward … I'm proud that I grew up loving Marvel."
Charles says he wanted to lend her character a "devil may care" attitude reminiscent of the Indigenous women and matriarchs closest to him — embodied by a cheerful, humorous disposition even in the face of adversity. It's a joy and humour he also associates with childhood trips to the Whitefish Lake First Nation reserve, about 200 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.
"Going back home and just getting to laugh with people and see all my people laughing, and you just don't get to see that here, you see a lot of the struggle and strife that we experience as a community," he said.
"I just try to bring all the influence of the Indigenous women into this project and do right by them," Charles said.
He worked for two months on the project beginning in August, often pulling 18 hour days in the lead up to the deadline hunched over his drafting table in his north Edmonton home studio. It's all worth it, he says, to know a young Indigenous comic book lover will be able to pick up the issue and see themselves reflected back in the pages.
"It's everything," he said. "It is the driving force. It is the absolute reason I want to take all this time and hard work and put it into that
Throughout comic book history, Indigenous people have been regularly portrayed as sidekicks or outright villains, built on racist stereotypes, says Niigaan Sinclair, an Anishinaabe writer and associate professor at the University of Manitoba.
Sinclair helped organize the Mazinbiige Indigenous Graphic Novels collection at the university, a wide-ranging catalogue reflecting on Indigenous representation and production of graphic novels.
According to Sinclair, the collection can be divided in two parts: books about and books by Indigenous people. He says about three quarters of the collection are Indigenous stories written by non-Indigenous writers. But that trend is beginning to change, with smaller publishing companies leading the way.
"Now what you're seeing is Indigenous stories are best told, most interestingly told, most creatively told by Indigenous creators," said Sinclair, who contributed to the Indigenous graphic novel anthology "This Place: 150 Years Retold".
Charles, for his part, left an illustration job two years ago to focus on freelance work and devising his own comic imprint, Unregistered Studios, to platform Indigenous creators.
Now he has one of the largest platforms in the industry with Marvel.
"I've been drawing since I was three years old. I've never wanted to do anything else in my entire life," he said.
"It's wonderful to see an industry leader take giant steps forward … I'm proud that I grew up loving Marvel."
Alberta ICU admissions could double in 2 weeks, leaked AHS email says
© Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
Alberta hit about 75 per cent of its current ICU capacity for COVID-19 patients this week. A leaked AHS email shows the Edmonton zone is preparing for admissions to double in the next two weeks.
An Edmonton hospital is readying new surge measures as it braces for Alberta's COVID-19 intensive care admissions to potentially double in the next two weeks, according to an email obtained by CBC News.
Donalda Dyjur, an executive director at the Royal Alexandra Hospital, sent the email to staff Saturday afternoon, the same day Alberta hit a single-day record of 1,026 new cases.
The hospital is one of 10 in the province grappling with a COVID-19 outbreak.
"Based on this current trend, it is projected that Covid cases will double within the next two weeks if the curve does not flatten," said Dyjur, addressing hospital ICU admissions.
"We need to be prepared."
The email contains a graph that lays out three potential ICU scenarios over the next two weeks. At the current rate, the province could see admissions hit 120 by early December, 50 more than Alberta's current capacity.
If that trend starts to level out, the projection drops to around 78 occupied beds. The most optimistic of the three scenarios projects 45 COVID-19 patients will be in intensive care by early next month.
"I know that these are times of uncertainty and that many are having feelings of worry and stress," said Dyjur, the hospital's executive director of medicine and adult critical care.
"The coming weeks will be our time to demonstrate just how much skill, grit and resiliency we have and we will work together to get the job done."
An Edmonton hospital is readying new surge measures as it braces for Alberta's COVID-19 intensive care admissions to potentially double in the next two weeks, according to an email obtained by CBC News.
Donalda Dyjur, an executive director at the Royal Alexandra Hospital, sent the email to staff Saturday afternoon, the same day Alberta hit a single-day record of 1,026 new cases.
The hospital is one of 10 in the province grappling with a COVID-19 outbreak.
"Based on this current trend, it is projected that Covid cases will double within the next two weeks if the curve does not flatten," said Dyjur, addressing hospital ICU admissions.
"We need to be prepared."
The email contains a graph that lays out three potential ICU scenarios over the next two weeks. At the current rate, the province could see admissions hit 120 by early December, 50 more than Alberta's current capacity.
If that trend starts to level out, the projection drops to around 78 occupied beds. The most optimistic of the three scenarios projects 45 COVID-19 patients will be in intensive care by early next month.
"I know that these are times of uncertainty and that many are having feelings of worry and stress," said Dyjur, the hospital's executive director of medicine and adult critical care.
"The coming weeks will be our time to demonstrate just how much skill, grit and resiliency we have and we will work together to get the job done."
New surge measures as COVID-19 ICU nears its limit
The province hit nearly 82 per cent of its COVID-19 intensive care capacity Sunday with 58 of 70 beds filled across Alberta, according to numbers posted to the provincial website.
Alberta Health Services confirmed there are 11 patients admitted to the Royal Alex. The hospital has total 25 beds in their ICU.
According to the email, new surge measures will increase Edmonton's critical care capacity in three stages, adding 10 beds with each step for an eventual total of 30. The Royal Alexandra will host three beds in the first stage, and 11 beds by the third stage, Dyjur wrote.
With new intensive care beds comes a rise in demand for additional ICU healthcare workers.
According to AHS, the actions outlined in the email are "proactive planning for a potential surge of patients in Edmonton zone."
AHS says their initial response to a surge is often maximizing existing capacity and limiting admissions by temporarily rescheduling complex surgeries. In Edmonton, AHS confirmed that surge capacity measures are in place with up to 30 per cent of non-urgent surgeries postponed.
As cases rise, the next phase would be to use existing space that is equipped but not in use. If the number of patients keeps increasing, hospitals will then use non-traditional ICU spaces, and have staff normally not involved in care of patients — such as anesthesiologists — to staff the space.
In the email, employees in the Royal Alex ICU are being asked to pick up shifts to staff up to 28 beds as soon as possible. People with ICU experience along with surgical staff are being redeployed to intensive care.
The hospital's ICU is already running full out with about half of the patients being treated for COVID-19, says Dr. Darren Markland, an intensive care physician at the Royal Alex. Without new beds, doctors will be looking to treat intensive care patients in areas such as recovery rooms, operating theatres or cardiac units, he said.
"We know that we're following this growth rate and we know that this is where we're heading," he said in an interview Saturday.
'Tired, frustrated and scared'
The plan to add ICU beds comes after Alberta Health Services said late last month it was postponing up to a third of non-emergency surgeries at Edmonton-area hospitals, which are routinely running at 120 per cent capacity.
Hospitals are operating with fewer beds due to COVID-19 isolation demands, while continuing care beds across Edmonton are closed due to site outbreaks. Keeping units well-staffed as workers fall ill or quarantine is an increasing challenge, AHS said this week.
Six hospitals in the Edmonton zone have at least one unit on outbreak protocol, according to an update posted to Alberta Health's website Friday.
A Covenant Health spokesperson said on Sunday that four units at Grey Nuns hospital are on outbreak protocol — up from three on Thursday — involving 12 active cases among patients. The Misericordia hospital is also responding to outbreaks on two units with three active COVID-19 cases among patients, said spokesperson Leah Janzen.
Thirteen staff at Misericordia had also tested positive, but have since recovered and are back at work, Janzen said. Covenant Health said it could not confirm Sunday how many of the 21 staff connected to the Grey Nuns outbreak currently have COVID-19.
Grey Nuns' emergency department began accepting ambulances again on Friday morning, ending a temporary directive rerouting EMS to other hospitals due to capacity strain.
Premier Jason Kenney introduced some additional mandatory public health measures Thursday, including a suspension of fitness classes and a reduction in operating hours for bars and pubs. The measures fell short of a sharp two-week emergency lockdown called for by dozens of physicians this week.
"I think that everybody is tired and frustrated and scared and nobody wants to go to a lockdown. If this was two weeks ago, we could've done things that would've prevented it. But we haven't," Markland said.
"As a result, everyday that we stall, things will get worse and inevitably I think we have to head down to a complete lockdown. My hope is that when it happens and we do this circuit breaker, people now realize the seriousness of it and start to follow the rules again."
First Nation calls for equitable health-care access following death of Joyce Echaquan
MONTREAL — Sipi Flamand says it's long overdue that Quebec guarantees equal access to health care for Indigenous peoples in the province.
© Provided by The Canadian Press
Flamand, vice-chief of Manawan, an Atikamekw community about 250 kilometres north of Montreal, helped craft a list of recommendations submitted Monday to the Quebec and Canadian governments on how to tackle systemic racism in health and social services.
The call to action, known as Joyce’s Principle, aims to ensure that Indigenous people have equal access to "the highest standard" of government-run health services. First Nations have for years complained about discrimination in hospitals and other institutions.
"We're reaching out to all the authorities, institutions and organizations to change their mentality toward Indigenous people," Flamand said in an interview Sunday. "I think that will benefit everyone."
Joyce's Principle is named after Joyce Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw woman who died in hospital in September in Joliette, Que., after she filmed staff making derogatory comments against her. The video was shared around the world.
The many recommendations in Joyce's Principle include that the federal government revise its financing model for health and social services in collaboration with Indigenous groups. It also recommends the Quebec government set up an ombudsperson's office for Indigenous health and finance awareness campaigns to educate the public about Indigenous issues.
The Atikamekw of Manawan Council and the Council of the Atikamekw Nation are calling on schools, professional orders and health and social services agencies to offer training programs in line with Joyce's Principle.
Echaquan's death and the mistreatment she received in hospital shook Quebec, where an inquiry last year concluded systemic discrimination existed in public services, including health care. Quebec has been under pressure to recognize the existence of systemic racism against Indigenous people in the province.
In a written message in the opening pages of Joyce's Principle, Echaquan's husband, Carol Dube, urged Ottawa and Quebec City to adopt the recommendations. "Joyce's death was a terrible tragedy for my children and me," Dube wrote.
"I hope the governments of Quebec and Canada will adopt Joyce's Principle so that this terrible event did not happen in vain, that her voice signals the start of real changes for all Indigenous people so that no one ever again falls victim to systemic racism."
On Nov. 6, Quebec announced $15-million to pay for liaison officers and other workers to accompany Indigenous people through the health-care system. Quebec's Indigenous affairs minister, Ian Lafreniere, said in a statement at the time that the government was "committed to change things and begin a new chapter in our relationship with First Nations and Inuit."
The Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador welcomed the government's investment, but also urged it to adopt Joyce’s Principle.
Nakuset, executive director of the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal, welcomed Joyce's Principle on Monday and said she hoped governments would provide the resources to implement it. "Right now if I have to send someone to the hospital ... they don't feel safe going," she said in an interview.
Asked about Joyce's Principle during a news conference on Monday, Quebec Premier Francois Legault said a government committee that includes Lafreniere would table recommendations for how to tackle racism in the province in the coming weeks.
The federal government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Flamand said he hopes both governments will adopt Joyce’s Principle to ensure Indigenous rights are respected and to prevent similar tragedies such as Echaquan's death from happening again.
“We often talk about reconciliation and Joyce's Principle is also a way to (address that)," he said, "but never forgetting Joyce's story and that of her family, still waiting for justice."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 16, 2020.
Jillian Kestler-D'Amours, The Canadian Press
Flamand, vice-chief of Manawan, an Atikamekw community about 250 kilometres north of Montreal, helped craft a list of recommendations submitted Monday to the Quebec and Canadian governments on how to tackle systemic racism in health and social services.
The call to action, known as Joyce’s Principle, aims to ensure that Indigenous people have equal access to "the highest standard" of government-run health services. First Nations have for years complained about discrimination in hospitals and other institutions.
"We're reaching out to all the authorities, institutions and organizations to change their mentality toward Indigenous people," Flamand said in an interview Sunday. "I think that will benefit everyone."
Joyce's Principle is named after Joyce Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw woman who died in hospital in September in Joliette, Que., after she filmed staff making derogatory comments against her. The video was shared around the world.
The many recommendations in Joyce's Principle include that the federal government revise its financing model for health and social services in collaboration with Indigenous groups. It also recommends the Quebec government set up an ombudsperson's office for Indigenous health and finance awareness campaigns to educate the public about Indigenous issues.
The Atikamekw of Manawan Council and the Council of the Atikamekw Nation are calling on schools, professional orders and health and social services agencies to offer training programs in line with Joyce's Principle.
Echaquan's death and the mistreatment she received in hospital shook Quebec, where an inquiry last year concluded systemic discrimination existed in public services, including health care. Quebec has been under pressure to recognize the existence of systemic racism against Indigenous people in the province.
In a written message in the opening pages of Joyce's Principle, Echaquan's husband, Carol Dube, urged Ottawa and Quebec City to adopt the recommendations. "Joyce's death was a terrible tragedy for my children and me," Dube wrote.
"I hope the governments of Quebec and Canada will adopt Joyce's Principle so that this terrible event did not happen in vain, that her voice signals the start of real changes for all Indigenous people so that no one ever again falls victim to systemic racism."
On Nov. 6, Quebec announced $15-million to pay for liaison officers and other workers to accompany Indigenous people through the health-care system. Quebec's Indigenous affairs minister, Ian Lafreniere, said in a statement at the time that the government was "committed to change things and begin a new chapter in our relationship with First Nations and Inuit."
The Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador welcomed the government's investment, but also urged it to adopt Joyce’s Principle.
Nakuset, executive director of the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal, welcomed Joyce's Principle on Monday and said she hoped governments would provide the resources to implement it. "Right now if I have to send someone to the hospital ... they don't feel safe going," she said in an interview.
Asked about Joyce's Principle during a news conference on Monday, Quebec Premier Francois Legault said a government committee that includes Lafreniere would table recommendations for how to tackle racism in the province in the coming weeks.
The federal government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Flamand said he hopes both governments will adopt Joyce’s Principle to ensure Indigenous rights are respected and to prevent similar tragedies such as Echaquan's death from happening again.
“We often talk about reconciliation and Joyce's Principle is also a way to (address that)," he said, "but never forgetting Joyce's story and that of her family, still waiting for justice."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 16, 2020.
Jillian Kestler-D'Amours, The Canadian Press
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