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)
Thursday, July 04, 2024
By AFP
July 1, 2024
Irrawaddy dolphins feature on the "Red List" of endangered wildlife by the International Union for Conservation of Nature - Copyright AFP TANG CHHIN Sothy
The number of Mekong dolphins has risen to more than 100 in Cambodia, the agriculture minister said Monday, raising a glimmer of hope for the endangered mammals.
Irrawaddy dolphins — small, shy creatures with domed foreheads and short beaks — once swam through much of the mighty Mekong, all the way to the delta in Vietnam.
But their population in the river has dwindled from 200, when the first census was taken in 1997, to just 89 in 2020, largely due to illegal fishing, habitat loss and plastic waste.
“Currently, we have some 105 dolphins,” Agriculture Minister Dith Tina said during a ceremony to mark National Fisheries Day.
In the first six months of this year, eight new dolphin calves were recorded, but there were also two deaths, the agricultural ministry said.
The boost to numbers follows the birth of eight dolphins last year, a ministry statement said, while 2023 also saw five deaths recorded.
“The ministry has strongly taken measures against fishing offences and the making and distributing of destructive fishing tools that seriously damage marine resources,” Dith Tina said.
Last year Cambodia’s then leader Hun Sen U-turned on a law to protect the species, saying “dolphins keep dying” while the fishing industry suffered from the conservation legislation.
Irrawaddy dolphins feature on the “Red List” of endangered wildlife by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Adding to concerns about their survival, around 70 percent of the population is now too old to breed.
The dolphins’ habitat has also been reduced by upstream dams in Laos and China and climate change, which have had a major impact on water levels in the river.
ByDr. Tim Sandle
July 1, 2024
Brain preserved in formaldehyde. — Gaetan Lee (CC BY 2.0)
New research has been examining brain connectivity and trauma. The timing pattern of electrical signalling plays a role in regulating the strength of synaptic connections after brain injury, particularly strengthening them with the same patterns that would otherwise weaken those connections in the normal brain.
Brain stimulation is increasingly being used in the clinic to treat a variety of neurological and psychiatric disorders such as depression, Parkinson’s disease, chronic pain, and Alzheimer’s disease but little attention, until now, has been paid to the patterns of the stimulation other than frequency.
Virginia Tech scientists with the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC have demonstrated that specifying the timing pattern of neurostimulation – impulses used to activate the brain’s own electrical signalling mechanisms – can rebalance the strength of synaptic connections between nerve cells, selectively up- or down-regulating those connections.
The research shows the importance of considering the use of more natural, noisier patterns of impulses of activity for neurostimulation as a means to effectively treat brain disorders like concussions and other mild traumatic brain injuries.
According to lead research Michael Friedlander: “Our results suggest that we may be able to use different patterns of brain stimulation to help treat mild traumatic brain injuries.”
He adds: “By adjusting things like the timing, frequency, and consistency of the stimulation, we might be able to strengthen specific connections in the brain, which could help improve brain function after injury. It has not escaped our attention that the electrical and synaptic signalling in the living brain is generally anything but regular.”
Elaborating on the process, Friedlander says: “We wanted to build on that natural noisiness that the brain uses to see if patterns that mimic those might have some intrinsic capacity to activate signalling pathways to re-adjust strengths between nodes in living neuronal networks that have otherwise been functionally compromised such as occurs after injury.”
“While our study in laboratory rats is directed specifically at mild traumatic brain injury, it may also provide useful information to be applied to treatments of other brain conditions in people,” Friedlander said.
The new research is the first to look at the effects of systematically and precisely controlling the timing patterns of neurostimulation.
Notably, the researchers found that irregular patterns at certain frequencies appear to affect injured brains differently than normal brains, strengthening their connections with other nerve cells, while in the normal brain, those same patterns weakened the connections.
This demonstrates how neurostimulation can be delivered in a way that is more irregular. While highly irregular patterns of stimulation in the normal brain led to a decrease in the strength of connections between neurons, yet in the injured brain, that same irregular pattern of stimulation, at the same frequency and continuity, resulted in a strengthening of those connections.
The research appears in the Journal of Neurotrama. It is titled “Synaptic plasticity in the injured brain depends on the temporal pattern of stimulation.”
A loader loads coal in the truck at an open cast coal field at Topa coal mine in the Ramgarh district in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand
Wed, Jul 3, 2024,
By Sarita Chaganti Singh
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India has asked power companies to order equipment worth $33 billion this year to fast track capacity additions of coal-fired power in the years ahead, as the South Asian nation struggles to meet booming electricity demand, two government officials said.
The unprecedented move by the government, which would result in record tendering in a year for the equipment by major power firms such as state-run NTPC and SJVN as well as by private companies Adani Power and Essar Power, will help add 31 gigawatts (GW) in the next 5-6 years, the sources said.
Normally, the government leaves the tendering timing to the companies themselves.
Expediting equipment orders for new coal-fired plants was discussed at a meeting held by Power Minister Manohar Lal, soon after the formation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's federal cabinet early last month, the sources said.
The targets are ambitious given the country has ordered equipment for about 2-3 GW capacity annually in prior years, barring last year's orders for 10 GW.
India is rushing to add fresh coal-fired plants as it is barely able to meet high power demand with the existing fleet in non-solar hours.
Post pandemic, the country's power demand scaled new records on the back of the fastest rate of economic growth among major economies and increased instances of heatwaves.
India saw its biggest power shortfall in 14 years in June, and had to race to avoid night time outages by deferring planned plant maintenance, and invoking an emergency clause to mandate companies to run plants based on imported coal and power.
State-run Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd (BHEL), which bagged all power equipment contracts in auctions in the last year, is likely to get most of the contracts for the new equipment, the sources said.
Larsen & Toubro, the only other power equipment producer in the market, had not participated in most of last year's bids, they said.
The Power Ministry, BHEL, Adani, NTPC, SJVN and L&T did not immediately respond to emails sent by Reuters. The sources did not want to be named because they were not authorised to talk to media.
"The last large orders for power equipment were placed for about 20 GW around 2009-10 when Chinese companies bagged a major pie," one of the sources said.
Policy flip-flops and lack of orders for coal-based plants over the past several years forced other equipment suppliers such as Thermax–Babcock, BGR–Hitachi and South Korea's Doosan to shut their manufacturing units in India.
The country, since 2020, discourages contracts with companies in countries sharing a land border such as China by mandating regulatory approvals.
Since late last year, India has fast tracked coal-fired power plants to meet its power needs, threatening to undermine progress made by the world's No.3 greenhouse gas emitter in weaning its economy off carbon.
In March Reuters reported private Indian firms have expressed interest in building at least 10 GW of coal-fired power capacity over a decade, ending a six-year drought in significant private involvement in the sector. ($1 = 83.5040 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Sarita Chaganti Singh in New Delhi; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
Associated Press
Tue, July 2, 2024
Pakistan Blasphemy
Members from Pakistan's minority community and civil society chant slogans during a demonstration against the conviction of a Christian man on charges of blasphemy and condemn the country's blasphemy laws, Tuesday, July 2, 2024. A court had awarded a death sentence to Ehsan Shan after finding him guilty of sharing "hateful content against Muslims on social media after one of the worst mob attacks on Christians in the eastern Punjab province last year.
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Dozens of members from Pakistan's civil society rallied on Tuesday in the southern port city of Karachi against the death sentence handed down to a Christian man on blasphemy charges, nearly a year after one of the worst mob attacks on Christians in the country.
Several Christians also joined the rally which comes a day after a court in Sahiwal in the Punjab province announced the death sentence to Ehsan Shan after finding him guilty of sharing “hateful content" against Muslims on social media.
Shan's lawyer Khurram Shahzad said on Monday he will appeal the verdict.
He was arrested in August 2023 after groups of Muslim men burned dozens of homes and churches in the city of Jaranwala in Punjab after some residents claimed they saw two Christian men desecrating pages from Islam’s holy book, the Quran. The two men were later arrested.
Though Shan was not party to the desecration, he was accused of reposting the defaced pages of the Quran on his TikTok account.
At Tuesday's rally in Karachi, a Christian leader Luke Victor, called for Shah's release.
He also demanded action against those who were involved in burning churches and homes of Christians in Jaranwala.
Blasphemy accusations are common in Pakistan. Under the country’s blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death. While authorities have yet to carry out a death sentence for blasphemy, often a mere accusation can cause riots and incite mobs to violence, lynching and killings.
Pakistani Christian man given death penalty for posting ‘hateful content’ against Muslims
Maroosha Muzaffar
Tue, July 2, 2024
Pakistani Christian man given death penalty for posting ‘hateful content’ against Muslims
A Pakistani court has sentenced a Christian man to death for posting defaced pages of the Quran on TikTok last year.
A mob attacked Christians in eastern Punjab province, burning their homes and churches, after two Christian men were accused of desecrating the Quran last year. The men were arrested for allegedly possessing pages of the Muslim scripture tainted with derogatory remarks scribbled in red.
Ehsan Shan wasn’t involved in the desecration but was accused of reposting the defaced pages on his TikTok account, his lawyer Khurram Shahzad told The Associated Press on Monday.
Shan is set to appeal the death sentence handed down on Saturday by a court in the city of Sahiwal in Punjab, the lawyer said.
Amir Farooq, the police officer who arrested Shan, said he shared “hateful content at a sensitive time when authorities were already struggling to contain the violence”.
Blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan.
Critics argue that the blasphemy laws are often misused to target religious minorities.
Although blasphemy convictions are common in Pakistan, no one has ever been executed.
Most convictions are thrown out on appeal by higher courts but mobs have in the past lynched suspects before they could be put on trial.
In the wake of last year’s attack on Christians in Punjab, the local government launched a probe while police arrested over 100 people. But none of the suspected attackers have been convicted so far even though local media at the time described it as one of the deadliest attacks on the minority community in the country.
The nearly 100 Christians who lost their homes in the attack were each promised 2m rupees (£5,680) in compensation but it was not known if they had been paid yet.
Additional reporting by agencies.
DPRK folk remedy is widely available in China despite wildlife trafficking concerns, but it may all just be a scam
North Korean tiger bone wine packaging | Image: Foreign Trade of DPR Korea, edited by NK News
Despite sanctions and pandemic restrictions, a shadowy trade continues to thrive on the Chinese web for an unusual North Korean product that could be contributing to wildlife smuggling — tiger bone wine.
This traditional alcoholic beverage, which purportedly uses tiger bones as a primary ingredient, has its roots in ancient Chinese medicine. It is believed to enhance strength and vitality, promote healthy blood circulation and act as an aphrodisiac.
The production and sale of the wine raise concerns about the possible exploitation of endangered big cats and Pyongyang’s participation in illegal wildlife trafficking.
But there’s a catch: North Korean tiger bone wine may be among the country’s best-performed scams, with producers tricking customers — mainly from China — into buying a potent brew of unknown ingredients.
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
It’s unclear when North Korea started selling tiger bone wine, but production appears to go back decades.
A 1995 article by The Independent named Pyongyang Zoo Pharmaceutical Factory as a brewer, and labels on bottles of North Korean tiger bone wine have also identified other major manufacturers, including Pyongyang Medical University, Tucheng Pharmaceutical Factory and Wannian Trading Company.
The wine is marketed as an alternative medicine, mainly to treat rheumatism and arthritis, rather than a spirit for casual drinking. Labels on the bottles suggest diluting 8-20 ml of the wine with an equal amount of water and taking it up to three times a day.
One bottle seen by NK News listed wood claw, omija berries, parsnip root, gastrodia elata and angelica root — all used in traditional Asian medicine — among its ingredients, in addition to tiger bone.
Nowadays, North Korean tiger bone wine is mainly sold on Chinese webshops — usually by private sellers — and by vendors in Southeast Asian countries, mainly in Laos.
The DPRK is also known to sell the alcoholic tonic out of its overseas restaurants, which it operates in violation of international sanctions that prohibit North Koreans from working abroad.
But tiger bone wine is illegal or heavily regulated in many countries due to its putative use of body parts from a highly endangered animal.
Beijing is a member of the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES), which precludes the import of tiger bone wine. While the DPRK is not a signatory, the use of actual tiger bones would fly in the face of North Korea’s professed commitment to wildlife conservation.
Two years ago, North Korea’s ambassador to Russia pledged that Pyongyang would help Moscow protect the few remaining Siberian tigers in Northeast Asia.
“Tigers have historically been the symbol of the Korean nation,” he said.
The two countries are also exploring another project to protect Amur leopards, another endangered big cat that once roamed the Korean Peninsula.
NO BONES ABOUT IT
It’s far from certain that any tiger bones are actually used in the production of the North Korean tonics, however.
North Korean tiger bone wine is widely sold on Chinese websites, with prices ranging from around $20 per bottle up to $200, suggesting that production is high while raising questions about how the DPRK could farm enough tiger bones to brew so much.
On the one hand, the fact that Pyongyang Zoo Pharmaceutical Factory is a major producer of the wine implies that it uses the bones of tigers kept at the country’s biggest animal park.
But Rowan Beard, a tour operator at Young Pioneer Tours, told NK News that there are only “a few tigers” at the Korea Central Zoo — most likely not enough to support wine production.
Beard said he has asked North Koreans about where the country gets tiger bones for the wine before and that he was told they come from “specially farmed tigers up in the northeast.”
“But I can’t possibly imagine a farm specifically for farming tigers in North Korea,” the tour operator said.
DPRK state media has not reported on tiger farms in the country, and none are known to exist.
One possibility is that the DPRK producers reuse tiger bones over and over, rather than adding new bones to each batch. Images of whole skeletons in vats of tiger bone wine in China appear to support the theory that bone could be reused somewhat like a whisky cask.
However, wildlife trafficking investigator Karl Ammann told NK News he had 10 samples of tiger bone wine — including one North Korean bottle — tested by the forensic lab at the University of Zurich as part of his research for a documentary on tiger trafficking, and the results “did not show any evidence of any tiger DNA” were present in the samples.
Amnesty International's latest report criticises Iraqi Kurdistan Region's authorities for their failure to adequately protect survivors of domestic violence.
Dana Taib Menmy
Iraq
04 July, 2024
Despite some legislative progress in combating domestic violence, the report highlights significant obstacles faced by survivors in accessing justice and protection. [Getty]
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq is failing to hold perpetrators of domestic violence accountable and is imposing arbitrary restrictions on survivors seeking protection in shelters, according to a new report by Amnesty International released today.
Despite some legislative progress in combating domestic violence, the report highlights significant obstacles faced by survivors in accessing justice and protection. It criticises the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) authorities for lacking the political will to prosecute offenders and for offering insufficient support to women and girls.
Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, Aya Majzoub, stated that survivors face daunting obstacles that leave them vulnerable and allow perpetrators to remain unpunished. Shelters for survivors are described as having prison-like conditions, often compelling women and girls to return to abusive environments.
"I do not say that everything in the report is correct, but it is realistic and includes key issues that we as women's organizations talk and work on constantly," Bahar Munzir, General Director of People's Development Organisation (PDO), a local organisation working on women's rights in the Kurdistan region, told The New Arab in an interview.
The report, based on interviews and field research, underscores the need for the Iraqi Kurdistan's authorities to enforce its progressive domestic violence laws, increase funding for support institutions, and improve shelter conditions. It also calls for eliminating mandatory reconciliation processes at the Directorates for Combating Violence Against Women and the Family (DCVAW) before criminal proceedings and removing court order requirements for shelter access.
"We are always supportive of the existence of the reconciliation committees because every case is different from another, and the committee's role is only advisory. The KRG should further support these committees," Munzir noted.
The findings reveal a justice system that perpetuates impunity, with survivors often required to file their own criminal complaints, facing lengthy court proceedings and biased judges. Amnesty International urges the Iraqi Kurdistan authorities to take concrete action against gender-based violence and improve protection mechanisms for women and girls.
Munzir also highlighted the role of reconciliation committees in advising on individual cases but stressed the need for clearer procedures and support for women filing criminal complaints. She pointed out concerning practices in the justice system, such as judges suggesting marriage between rape victims and offenders, urging reforms to better protect women and girls.
Although comprehensive statistics on gender-based violence are unavailable, government officials reported 30 women killed in 2023 and 44 in 2022. NGO workers informed Amnesty International that actual numbers are likely significantly higher. The Directorate for Combating Violence Against Women and the Family (DCVAW) received 15,896 domestic violence complaints in 2022, but figures for 2023 were not disclosed to Amnesty International.
But Karamba Diaby says racist threats ‘not main reason’ for his decision
Thursday 04 July 2024
open image in galleryKaramba Diaby (Getty)
The first African-born member of parliament in Germany has announced that he will not stand in the next federal election in 2025, just weeks after receiving a death threat.
Karamba Diaby, 62, said such racist threats were “not the main reason” for his decision. He simply wanted to spend more time with his family and make room for younger politicians.
“After months of consideration and weighing, I, in consultation with my family, have come to the decision not to run for the Bundestag again,” he wrote in a letter to his party colleagues, the German Press Agency reported.
“I look back on 11 enriching and successful years in federal politics. After three legislative periods, it’s time to make way for the next political generation and explore new paths.”
Mr Diaby, a member of the centre-left Social Democrats representing Halle since 2013, has endured many racist attacks and threats over the years, including several on his office.
“Of course, I will remain active and engaged in the SPD. We face big challenges and hard work,” he said.
“At the same time, I’m looking forward to having more time for my family and friends and our allotment.”
Mr Diaby was born in Senegal and is the only member of the German parliament with African heritage.
He was seven when he lost both his parents and was brought up by his older sister and her husband. He moved to Germany on a study grant in 1985.
In spite of the attacks and insults he has faced in Halle over the years, Mr Diaby told Der Spiegel last year: “I feel very comfortable in Halle.”
But the “unpleasant incidents”, he said, made him “sad and worried”.
open image in galleryKaramba Diaby speaks in the Bundestag on 28 May 2020 (Getty)
In several interviews, Mr Diaby has noted the increasingly hostile atmosphere he has had to contend with in the parliament and society, attributing it to the 2017 entry of the populist AfD party into the Bundestag.
“Since 2017, the tone in the German parliament has become harsher,” he told the Berlin Playbook podcast of Politico’. “We hear aggressive speeches from colleagues of the AfD. We hear derogatory and hurtful content in these contributions. That is truly a totally new situation compared to the period between 2013 and 2017. This aggressive style of talking is fertile breeding ground for the violence and aggression on the streets.”
More recently, after receiving a death threat, the MP wrote on Instagram: “For me the level of hatred and agitation has reached a new level. I now encounter it every day in the news and commentaries, but also in the German Bundestag.”
open image in galleryBullet holes in the window of Karamba Diaby’s constituency office in Halle (Getty)
“I won’t let myself be intimidated. I am fighting back. The hatred that the AfD sows every day with its misanthropic narratives is reflected in concrete psychological and physical violence! This jeopardises cohesion in our society.”
He said this latest threat against him “crossed a new red line”.
“My coworkers are also threatened and blackmailed,” he said.
Mr Diaby’s absence from the 2025 Bundestag election will leave a void as the parliamentarian has been an outspoken advocate for social justice and a key figure in combating racism within German politics, German newspaper Aussiedlerbote noted.
MAKING AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE IN CANADA: THE BATTLE OF THE PLAINS OF ABRAHAM
Forget Lexington. Forget Bunker Hill. The first battle of the American Revolution — the one that made revolution possible, although not inevitable — was James Wolfe’s posthumous triumph on the Plains of Abraham in 1759.
This engagement, frequently personalized as a duel between the opposing commanders, Wolfe and Louis-Joseph de Montcalm, is best known as a clash between French and British empires that resulted in the British conquest of Canada.
But it was much more than that. The Plains of Abraham was also an American battle, the culmination of a campaign in which thousands of American sailors and soldiers served in the Royal Navy and British Army and on American merchant ships. These Americans helped shape the future of the British empire and in so doing helped set the stage for colonial independence.
The Nine-Year Seven Years’ War (1754–1763)
In the North American component of the Seven Years’ War, France, Britain, and their Indigenous allies fought to control the territories occupied by French colonies and Indigenous homelands to the north, east, and west of British America. The British sought land for a growing colonial population by expelling the Acadians in the east and occupying the Ohio valley in the west. They also sought security for their colonies by invading Canada. The French, fearing the growing power of Britain’s expanding trans-Atlantic realm, sought to prevent British settlement beyond the Appalachians.
Dramatic victories by the French-Indigenous alliance dominated the early years of the war. But the British responded to each defeat by doubling down and sending more troops and more ships to North America. In 1759, Britain launched a massive land and sea offensive aimed at nothing less than the total elimination of French power from northeastern North America. The central element of this offensive was an amphibious assault on Quebec led by Wolfe and Vice Adm. Charles Saunders, an assault that relied heavily on the participation of American colonials. Occupying Quebec, Canada’s sole Atlantic port, would break the colony’s link with France. With supplies and reinforcements from France cut off, the French presence in Canada and the Ohio valley would collapse.
Bluejackets and Merchant Mariners
Britannia may have ruled the waves in the 18th century, but the British could not have gone to Quebec without the support of the American merchant marine. Seventy-four of the 139 transports that carried troops and supplies from Halifax to Quebec came from Boston, New York, and Philadelphia.
Once the British-American force reached Quebec, they were sustained by provisions from the Thirteen Colonies carried in American merchant vessels travelling in Royal Navy convoys. The contribution of these ships cannot be overestimated. While the French in Canada, cut off from the outside world, strove desperately to feed their army at Quebec, the British and Americans fought at the end of a logistics fire hose that delivered “frequent supplies of all kinds of refreshments” throughout the campaign. On a single day, Thursday July 12, the master of HMS Scarborough, escorting a nine-vessel convoy from Boston to Quebec, counted a total of 25 ships in sight.
The Royal Navy itself would have been far less effective during the Quebec campaign without American assistance. Severely short of naval personnel, the British secured the services of American mariners, known as the “New England Volunteers,” who filled the gaps in Saunders’ crews. Like Americans in provincial units serving alongside the British Army in the interior, the New England Volunteers joined the Royal Navy for a single campaign season, then returned home.
The most prominent of these temporary Jack Tars, at least as far as historians are concerned, was Ashley Bowen of Marblehead, Massachusetts, an acting midshipman aboard HMS Pembroke. A diarist, autobiographer, and watercolorist, Bowen provides an American account of the naval side of the assault on Quebec, illustrated by paintings that made him one of America’s first naval war artists and enlivened by vignettes of encounters with campaign celebrities.
As the fleet approached Quebec, Bowen joined the first of these celebrities, James Cook, the future Pacific explorer, in charting a dangerous stretch of river. “At 4 A.M.,: he wrote, on June 14th, “… I went with our Sailing Master [Cook] in our cutter a-sounding for the channel through the Traverse.” Bowen must have made a good impression on the famous navigator, for he further noted that “Mr. Cook would have me go with him wherever he went a-sounding or discovering … and he did not forget me on Banian Days [days when meat was not included in the ship’s rations] to dine with him.”
A month later, after landing artillery from HMS Pembroke’s pinnace (a small sailing boat) at the British encampment at Montmorency, Bowen ran into none other than Wolfe. Their conversation provides a rare glimpse of an American participant in the campaign describing who he was and why he had come to Quebec.
I advanced towards him and the General hailed me. “Who are you?”
I answered him “A friend!”
“What department are you of?”
I said of the Marine Department.
“What ship?”
I answered, “His Majesty’s Ship Pembroke.”
“What are you on board the Pembroke?”
My answer was “Acting Midshipman.”
“Where is your uniform?”
I said, “I have none. I come from New England with a company of volunteers to serve His Majesty in the reduction of Canada.”
Celebrity encounters aside, his time on HMS Pembroke gave Bowen a master class in naval support for army operations. The core purpose of ships of the line like HMS Pembroke at Quebec was to give Saunders the capacity to counter an attack by a French fleet. In the absence of French naval intervention, HMS Pembroke’s activities included, but were not limited to, transporting troops to from Halifax to Quebec, acting as a mobile base for the “flat bottomed boats” that ferried troops, artillery, supplies, and messages throughout the area of operations, landing regulars and rangers to secure French islands, sending the ship’s marines ashore to reinforce army units, conducting shore bombardment and counterbattery fire, fending off attacks on British vessels by flotillas of French rowboats, providing guard boats, charting the St. Lawrence River and buoying safe channels, rescuing grounded transports, and dodging French fireship attacks.
When Wolfe landed above Quebec and advanced to the Plains of Abraham, HMS Pembroke and Bowen played a key supporting role. On the night of Sept. 12–13, Bowen was in one of the ship’s boats from HMS Pembroke and other vessels that hovered off the coast below Quebec as if they were about to disembark a landing force. Their presence provoked considerable confusion among the French and drew French attention away from the real attack. Bowen’s account of this venture was concise and to the point. “At 6 P.M. Admiral [Saunders] made a signal for all boats manned and armed, and we went and made a feint at the River St. Charles, and at 11 I repaired on board our ship Pembroke.”
Rangers in Action
The highest profile Americans at the siege of Quebec were the 600 rangers who appear in pretty much every history of the campaign. The special forces of their day, the rangers provided Wolfe’s army with scouts and raiders, most notably in a major operation to burn farm buildings (but not churches) and watercraft along the south shore of the St. Lawrence River. Wolfe hoped that this destruction would either force Montcalm to abandon his fortified position and fight a battle in the open or, should the expedition fail, to reduce Canada’s value as a French base of operations. He had planned for this contingency while en route to Canada, proposing that, “If … we find, that Quebec is not likely to fall into our hands (persevering however to the last moment)” his army would “destroy the Harvest, Houses, & Cattle, both above & below [Quebec] … &… leave famine and desolation behind me.”
Ranger David Perry provides a vivid description of how this worked out in practice:
The main party marched up the river, burning and destroying everything before them: and our company followed on some distance in the rear, collecting the cattle, sheep and horses, and burning the scattering buildings, &c. In this way we continued our march at the rate of about twelve miles a day. Every six miles we found large stone churches, at one of which we generally halted to dinner, and at the next to supper, and so on. We lived well, but our duty was hard — climbing over hills and fences all day; always starting in the morning before break of day.
At the end of the campaign, the commander of this force, which included light infantry and sailors, reported that:
… we marched fifty two miles, and in that distance burnt nine hundred and ninety eight good buildings, two sloops, two schooners, ten shallops, and several batteaus and small craft, took fifteen prisoners (six of them women and five of them children), killed five of the enemy, had one regular wounded, two of the rangers killed and four more of them wounded.
American Redcoats
Yet for all the efforts of Wolfe and Saunders’ British and American sailors, soldiers, and merchant mariners, by the end of the August it looked like the campaign would end in ignominious retreat. Saunders’ fleet had brought the army to Quebec and carried soldiers wherever they needed to go along the St Lawrence River. Wolfe, for his part, had waged a brilliantly successful war against Canadian architecture, shelling much of Quebec’s urban landscape into rubble and destroying farmhouses and barns. But he hadn’t come even close to actually beating the French.
Then, on Sept. 9, Wolfe had an epiphany. His army would land at night at the Anse au Foulon, just above Quebec, seize a roadway (now the Côte Gilmour) leading up the cliffs, and deploy before the city, forcing Montcalm to come out and fight. The operation succeeded and on Sept. 13 Wolfe defeated Montcalm on the Plains of Abraham. This brings us to the final American element of the British forces, the regulars.
Just as the Royal Navy needed American sailors and American merchant ships, the British army needed American soldiers to fill the ranks of battalions that had landed in the colonies understrength or to replace the casualties of years of war. This meant that of the 9000 redcoats Wolfe brought to Quebec, 3000 had been recruited in the American colonies. (Note that this figure includes men who enlisted in Nova Scotia and many who were likely recent arrivals from Britain).
Six of Wolfe’s 10 battalions contained significant numbers of Americans. Three-quarters of the 47th and 48th, and half of the 35th and second and third battalions of the 60th, had enlisted in the colonies. So had almost all of the grenadiers of the 40th and 45th who formed two of the three companies of the Louisbourg Grenadiers, a composite battalion formed from the grenadiers of the Louisbourg Garrison. Three hundred more “provincial pioneers” provided labor for construction work.
When Wolfe reached the Anse au Foulon, his American redcoats landed alongside their British comrades. On the Plains of Abraham, the 47th occupied the center of Wolfe’s line and the Louisbourg Grenadiers stood with their general at its southern extremity. The 2/60th and 35th held Wolfe’s north and south flanks against continuous attacks by aggressive Canadian and Indigenous skirmishers, while the 48th formed a reserve line. West of the main body, the 3/60th guarded the Anse au Foulon and drove off an attack by a body of elite French troops from west of Quebec.
Just after 10:00 a.m., when Montcalm abandoned a strong position and launched a downhill charge against the British position, American redcoats took part in the eight-minute exchange of musket fire that shattered the French battalions. They followed Wolfe when he led a countercharge against the shaken remnants of Montcalm’s army. When Wolfe fell to the ground, mortally wounded, he did so amidst the American soldiers of the Louisbourg Grenadiers.
A Nation in Waiting
Americans at Quebec served and fought as proud British subjects. As Union Jacks rose above the city’s Upper and Lower Town, it could not have occurred to many American witnesses that in winning the Battle of the Plains of Abraham and capturing Quebec, they had unwittingly undermined the foundations of the British empire in North America.
For by the 1750s, Britain’s American colonies were powerful entities in their own right. Pehr Kalm, a Swedish botanist who visited the French and British colonies between 1748 and 1751, served as the pastor of a Swedish Lutheran church in New Jersey, and married an American, came to know the region and its people very well. ”I have been told by Englishmen,” he wrote, “and not only by such as were born in America but also by those who came from Europe, that the English colonies in North America, in the space of thirty or fifty years, would be able to form a state by themselves entirely independent of Old England.”
Economically and demographically robust, Britain’s American colonies were governed by elected assemblies, who used their control of finances to limit the influence of appointed governors and rule in the interests of colonial elites. At these assemblies, Kalm observed, “everything relating to the good of the province is … debated … the old laws are reviewed and amended, and new ones are made, and the regulation and circulation of the coinage together with all other affairs of that kind are determined.”
Long before the Seven Years’ War, the colonies had proved to be more than capable of converting their economic and demographic strength into military power and using this power to confront European adversaries from Quebec to St. Augustine. Their greatest triumph came in 1745 when an army of 3,000 New Englanders, carried by a colonial armada of 90 transports and 13 armed vessels and supported by a Royal Navy squadron, captured Louisbourg in Quebec after a 46-day siege.
Yet the French presence in North America posed a major obstacle to any attempt to convert the colonies from potential to actual independent powers. In 1732, when James Logan, chief justice of Pennsylvania, confidently asserted that Americans would never reject the British empire, he added pragmatically that “While [French-controlled] Canada is so near, they cannot rebel.” Kalm agreed, writing, “As the whole country which lies along the seashore is unguarded, and on the land side is harassed by the French, these dangerous neighbours in times of war are sufficient to prevent the connection of the colonies from their mother country from being broken off.”
Brigadier James Murray, the British commandant of Quebec, expressed the same opinion in conversation with a French officer after the capitulation of Canada in 1760.
“Do you think,” he asked, “that we will give Canada back to you?”
“I am not,” replied the French officer, “sufficiently familiar with high policy to see so far ahead.”
“If we are wise, we won’t keep it. New England needs a bridle to keep it under control, and we will give it one by not holding on to this country.
Winning the War, Losing the Peace
Murray, it turned out, possessed a keen grasp of North American realities. So did Logan and Kalm. In capturing Quebec, Bowen, Perry, and their British and American comrades upset the longstanding equilibrium between latent American power and apprehended danger from the French in Canada.
That hadn’t mattered at the time. The conquest and cession of Canada triggered explosions of joyful loyalty among Americans. But winning the Seven Years’ War placed the British government in a rather awkward situation. The triumphant peace left Britain on the hook for a massive war debt and responsible for governing French-speaking, Catholic British subjects in Canada and managing new alliances with Indigenous nations in the west, Canada, and Nova Scotia.
Given that the outcome of the Seven Years’ War had generated immense benefits for American colonials, British officials seem to have blithely assumed that said colonials wouldn’t mind making sacrifices to help out and more tightly integrate the empire. Obeying, cheerfully or grudgingly, laws passed by a parliament in which they were not represented would be a small price to pay for the elimination of the perceived French threat to the colonies.
Except… apparently it wasn’t. Buying stamps or paying a tax on molasses or tea to help cover the cost of the war proved to be more than many Americans would tolerate. A series of similar Acts of Parliament culminated in the tactfully named “Coercive Acts” that locked down the port of Boston, gave the imperial governor control over the governance of Massachusetts Bay, allowed this governor to move trials outside the colony, and permitted the billeting of troops in unoccupied American-owned buildings. These measures, together with the Quebec Act that granted religious freedom and limited civil rights to Canadian Catholics, drove a strong plurality of white, male, propertied colonials to support military measures, first to assert their “rights as Englishmen,” then to fight for independence.
This fight succeeded in part because Parliament in its infinite wisdom had chosen the worst possible time to alienate Americans. The conquest and cession of Canada not only ended colonial reliance on British protection, it also gave France a massive incentive to avenge defeat in the Seven Years’ War and reduce British power by embracing American rebels. Supported by French subsidies, equipped with French weapons, and reinforced by French troops and warships, Americans won their independence and formed the United States of America.
Let’s be clear, the Battle of the Plains of Abraham had not in itself produced the American Revolution. Making something potentially possible is not the same as making it happen. But in the event, contingencies aligned in such a way that the British-American victory at Quebec ignited a slow fuse leading to the geopolitical powder keg that exploded at Lexington in 1775.
D. Peter MacLeod is the former Pre-Confederation Historian and Director of Research at the Canadian War Museum. He is the author of The Canadian Iroquois and the Seven Years’ War, Northern Armageddon: The Battle of the Plains of Abraham and the Making of the American Revolution, and Backs to the Wall: The Battle of Sainte-Foy and the Conquest of Canada.
Image: Woodville via Wikimedia Commons
The Palestine Children’s Relief Fund thanked the actor for her fundraising efforts and for using her voice to inspire support for peace.
Images Staff
04 Jul, 2024
Irish actor Nicola Coughlan, best known for her role as Penelope Featherington in the hit Netflix series Bridgerton, has successfully raised $2 million for the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund (PCRF) through her social media efforts.
The PCRF expressed its gratitude to Coughlan on X, formerly known as Twitter: “Thank you to actress and ‘Bridgerton’ star Nicola Coughlan for your incredible support of PCRF and your fundraising efforts which totaled an astonishing $2M USD in support of our Urgent Gaza Relief and Recovery efforts. Thank you for using your voice to inspire support for peace and impacting the lives of thousands of displaced children and families in dire need, providing them with humanitarian aid and medical relief.”
The PCRF stats reveal that Coughlan’s fundraiser also received donations from the actor herself. The organisation says that through the support of people around the world, it provides food, water, clothing, medical care, and other essential aid to children in the Middle East.
Coughlan’s efforts have not only raised substantial funds but also increased awareness about the situation in Palestine, particularly during her promotional activities for Bridgerton.
She has consistently worn the Artists for Ceasefire pin during photoshoots and events, a symbol of her commitment to peace and justice.
In an earlier interview with USA Today, Coughlan explained her motivation: “I’m doing my dream job and I’m getting to travel the world, but then I’m hyper-aware of what’s happening in Rafah at the moment.”
Coughlan said her father was part of the UN’s Truce Supervision Organisation, a peacekeeping force in the Middle East. Her family also lived in Jerusalem in the late 70s, deepening her connection to the region.
Speaking to Teen Vogue in April, Coughlan expressed her sense of moral responsibility: “I think if I can hopefully raise funds for aid organisations, it would be a wonderful thing to do.”
Coughlan’s feat demonstrates the significant impact celebrities can have in advocating for global causes. Her dedication to supporting Palestinian children and families highlights the importance of using one’s platform for the greater good, inspiring others to contribute to humanitarian efforts around the world.
04 July 2024 -
A pro-Palestinian protest banner hangs in the forecourt of the Australian Parliament House, in Canberra, Australia, on July 4 2024.
Image: REUTERS/Tracey Nearmy
Pro-Palestine protesters climbed the roof of Australia's Parliament House in Canberra on Thursday and unfurled banners, one saying Palestine will be free, and accused Israel of war crimes, in a serious security breach condemned by legislators.
Four people dressed in dark clothes stood on the roof of the building for about an hour, unfurling black banners including one reading “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, a common refrain of pro-Palestine protesters.
One of the protesters gave a speech using a megaphone accusing the Israeli government of war crimes, an accusation it rejects.
“We will not forget, we will not forgive and we will continue to resist,” the protester said.
A handful of police and security advised people not to walk directly under the protest at the main entrance to the building, while more were seen on the roof attempting to remove the protesters, a Reuters witness said.
The protesters packed up their banners before being led away by waiting police at about 11.30am local time (0130 GMT).
“This is a serious breach of the parliament's security,” opposition home affairs spokesperson James Paterson said in a post on social media platform X
“The building was modified at great expense to prevent incursions like this. An investigation is required.”
The war in Gaza began when Hamas gunmen burst into southern Israel on October 7, killed 1,200 people and took about 250 hostages back into Gaza, Israel says.
The offensive launched by Israel in retaliation has killed nearly 38,000 people, according to the Gaza health ministry, and has left the heavily built-up coastal enclave in ruins.
Both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes in the early stages of the Gaza war, a UN inquiry found last month, saying that Israel's actions also constituted crimes against humanity because of the immense civilian losses.
Since the war began Australia has been the site of several pro-Palestine protests, including weekly demonstrations in major cities and a months-long occupation of university campuses.
The ruling Labor Party indefinitely suspended a senator, Fatima Payman, on Monday after she crossed the floor of the Senate to vote in favour of a motion backing Palestinian statehood.
Australia does not currently recognise Palestinian statehood, though foreign minister Penny Wong said in May it could do so before a formal peace process between Israel and Palestinian authorities is complete.
Reuters