Monday, September 02, 2024

Land grab

‘We’re not afraid’: French-Palestinian family fights for West Bank land seized by Israeli settlers


A French-Palestinian family in the Makhrour valley in the West Bank has been campaigning for years against the expropriation of their land. Israeli settlers seized the land by force at the end of July amid a drastic acceleration of settlements in the Palestinian territory since the start of the war in Gaza.

Alice Kisiya (R), whose family land was taken over by armed Israeli settlers, confronts a settler in the Makhrour area near Beit Jala in the occupied West Bank on August 22, 2024. © Hazem Bader, AFP

By: Louis CHAHUNEAU
Issued on: 02/09/2024 - 

It was a restaurant appreciated for its cuisine and friendliness in the West Bank town of Beit Jala. “The place is beautiful, the food succulent and the owners are adorable [...]. If you're passing through Beit Jala, a stop at Al Makhrour is a must,” a comment from 2015 reads on its Facebook page.

In this Catholic valley west of Bethlehem, which in 2014 became a UNESCO World Heritage Site due to its its olive groves and vineyards, the Kisiya family's restaurant is nothing more than a pile of ruins topped by fences.
An image of the restaurant Al Makhrour while it was standing. © Facebook screengrab

Israeli settlers backed by the army seized the 5,000 square-metre plot on July 31 and evicted the French-Palestinian family on the grounds they did not own it. “We are being targeted because we reject the government’s Zionist policy,” said Michelle Kisiya, a 54-year-old French-Israeli woman, in a phone call with FRANCE 24.

Kisiya’s Palestinian husband, Ramzi, had inherited the land. In 2001 he opened a restaurant there with his wife and their four children. At first there was no electricity, but then solar panels solved the problem. For years, hundreds of tourists passing through Bethlehem stopped there for a salad before continuing their hike in the green valleys. The establishment was so successful that the family decided to add on a house in 2012, which was also used as a chapel for religious festivals.

Since Israel’s occupation of the West Bank began in 1967, almost 500,000 Israelis have settled amid the 3 million Palestinians living in the territory. For a long time, the Makhrour valley was untouched by uncontrolled settlements, but the trouble began in 2012 when an Israeli outpost – a settlement not authorised by the government – was built there. The Kisiya family did not have a valid building permit for their house, and their restaurant was destroyed for the first time.

A spokesman for the regional council of Gush Etzion, a cluster of Jewish settlements south of Bethlehem, told FRANCE 24 that the disputed land has belonged to a subsidiary of the Jewish National Fund since 1969. “Twenty years ago, the Kasiya [sic] family invaded it illegally,” he said.
The advancement of Israeli settlement southwest of Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank. © France 24

The Kisiya family, who insist otherwise, rebuilt their restaurant before it was demolished again in 2013 and then again in 2015. In 2019 the family decided to take the case to court to have their rights heard. But in 2023, a civil court in Jerusalem validated the expropriation.

The family is far from alone: for historical reasons, most private land in the West Bank is not officially registered, which makes it easier for Israel to seize. Israel in June seized more than 1,200 hectares of land in the territory, a three-decade high.

In a bid to prevent the family’s restaurant from being rebuilt again, the Israeli army declared the site to be a “closed military zone”, which prevented anyone from entering it until Sunday. The settlers, who are supported by the army, are not worried. They know the Israeli government will soon consider the outposts built in the vicinity as legal, even though international law does not recognise them.

Far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who monitors illegal construction in the occupied West Bank, in late June announced the approval of five illegal settlements – some 1,270 hectares of land – in response to Norway, Ireland, Spain, Estonia and Armenia’s decisions to recognise a Palestinian state.


Israeli soldiers guard the Kisiya family’s land after it was taken over by settlers on August 22, 2024. © Hazem Bader, AFP

These settlements include the new town of Nahal Heletz in Gush Etzion, close to the Kisiya family plot.

Israel hopes to connect Jerusalem to the Gush Etzion settlements, which are home to almost 100,000 Israelis.

“First of all, it's a settlement that will block the expansion of the Palestinian village of Battir towards Jerusalem. Above all, it provides a faster link between Gush Etzion and Jerusalem,” said Yonatan Mizrachi, co-director of the Israeli NGO Peace Now, which campaigns for a two-state solution.

Read more
Palestinians fear further isolation as Israeli minister announces vast West Bank settlement plans

For the past month, Michelle Kisiya and her daughter Alice, 30, have been organising a non-violent citizens’ movement to protest against the seizure of their land. Israeli police arrested them on August 25 before releasing them a few hours later. “If I leave my land, I have nothing left in this country. If I don’t fight, the whole valley will be invaded by settlers. We're not afraid. We're not criminals,” said Michelle Kisiya, who has set up a tent a stone’s throw from the family’s land to welcome activists, journalists and supporters of her cause.

Michelle Kisiya stands next to a tent, set up in support of her family, in the Makhrour area near Beit Jala on August 26, 2024. © Mosab Shawer, AFP

The French consul in Jerusalem, Nicolas Kassianides, did not want to answer FRANCE 24's questions but he has travelled to Makhrour in recent weeks to offer his support to the Kisiya family.

“This is a French family and it is the consulate’s job to support its nationals, so I wanted to show our solidarity and our support for the steps being taken to assert their rights [...]. The Kasiya [sic] family has sent us documents proving their right to the property,” he told an AFP team on site.

Although the family’s case has reached the highest echelons of the state of Israel, it is by no means an anomaly. Expulsions of Palestinians from their land in West Bank have increased, particularly since Israel’s far-right government came to power in 2022. The situation has sharply deteriorated since Israel's invasion of Gaza in the wake of the October 7 attacks.

“They are taking advantage of the fact that the world's attention is focused on Gaza to step up their activity,” said Michelle Kisiya.

Peace Now’s Mizrachi agreed. “Since October 7, settlement activity has accelerated: new outposts are being built, thousands of Palestinians have been denied access to their land for security reasons, and there have been more declarations of state ownership of land in the West Bank this year than ever before. Settler violence has also increased significantly.”

The Israeli NGO warned in January of the record number of unauthorised settlements that had sprung up since the Gaza war began. For its part, the UN has recorded some 1,270 settler attacks and more than 620 Palestinians killed in the West Bank by either the Israeli army or settlers since October 7.

“Many Palestinians are subjected to physical violence, but the most common form of violence is damaging property or burning crops,” said Mizrachi. “All these practices existed even before October 7, but they have now become widespread.”

This article has been translated from the original in French.
Does Macron seek to exploit 'divides' within NFP to 'impose his politics on National Assembly'?


Issued on: 02/09/2024 - 

President Emmanuel Macron on Monday intensified efforts to find a new prime minister after almost two months of deadlock following inconclusive legislative elections, hosting two former presidents and two potential candidates. France has been without a permanent government since the July 7 polls, in which the left formed the largest faction in a hung parliament with Macron's centrists and the far right comprising the other major groups. Two possible candidates for prime minister -- former premier Bernard Cazeneuve from the centre left and right-wing ex-minister Xavier Bertrand -- held separate meetings with Macron. It is traditional for the French president to consult predecessors during moments of national importance, and Macron also met Monday at the Elysee presidential palace with the two surviving former presidents -- right-winger Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist Francois Hollande. FRANCE 24's François Picard welcomes Dr. Andrew Smith, Historian of modern France and Lecturer in Liberal Arts at Queen Mary University of London, as Dr. Smith brings to life France's dive into uncharted political waters and illustrates the "extraordinary political coverage as these convoys arrive at the Elysee Palace." He describes the surreal scene as political theater from another era: "It seems that you've got these suitors to the king suddenly talking about "who will be given the reins of power". And one thing is ultimately clear during France's unprecedented exercise in Constitutional Democracy, remarks Dr. Smith: "Macron is trying to remind people that there is no government without the president in France."


11:34  Video by:François PICARD

Challis, the Paralympic champion first inspired by a dolphin

Paris (AFP) – Ellie Challis was first inspired to get into swimming after watching a video about a dolphin, and now the Briton is a Paralympic champion after winning the gold medal in the women's 50m backstroke S3 on Monday.



Issued on: 03/09/2024 - 
Ellie Challis won the women's 50m backstroke S3 final at the Paris Paralympics
 © François-Xavier MARIT / AFP

The 20-year-old stormed to victory in Paris' La Defense Arena, clocking a time of 53.56sec on her way to her first Paralympics gold.

She came in 4.80sec ahead of neutral athlete Zoia Shchurova in the silver medal position, with Spaniard Marta Fernandez Infante completing the podium in bronze.

"Joy, relief, happiness, a bit of everything really," said Challis after the race.

"Obviously, this is what we all dream of and this is the goal for everyone getting into elite sport.

"To accomplish that at 20, I couldn't put it into words really."

On her Paralympic debut in 2021 at the Covid-impacted Tokyo Games, Challis took silver in the same event.

Now three years on, the swimmer was roared to the gold by her family and coach, who were in the packed crowd.

"I'm just so thankful for my dad, my sisters and my coach for everything," she said.

"They've helped me to get here. It's an unbelievable day, an unbelievable moment and I can't wait to share this all with them in the crowd."

Challis has now added a Paralympic gold to the world championship titles she claimed last year in Manchester, England.

But she only really developed her love for swimming when, as a child, she came across a video about a dolphin named Winter, whose tail was amputated after she got caught in a crab trap.

"I had meningitis at 16 months old and I lost all four limbs so swimming didn't just come easy," said Challis.

"It took my dad a lot of work and a lot of taking me to swimming lessons and trying to teach me himself to get me swimming.

"Then we watched this film one day and I was like, 'oh, this dolphin's like me'.

"It's a really cool story but you don't believe it's true. Then at the end it tells you it's true and it's just such an unbelievable moment.

"This animal is doing what I want to do."

Challis shared that she has even gone to the aquarium where Winter lived and met her inspiration.

"I was really lucky to be able to go over there and to visit her and to have a connection with the aquarium," she said.

"I still go back now even though she passed away.

"But with the film she still inspires me day in and day out.

"It's made a huge difference in my swimming and really inspired me to learn to swim."

© 2024 AFP
TASTY
Family keeps up Beirut dessert tradition

Beirut (Lebanon) (AFP) – At a shop nestled in a busy, crowded Beirut district, Hasan El-Makary is weighing out containers of warm, fragrant mufataka, a traditional sweet in the Lebanese capital that is rarely found in stores.


Issued on: 03/09/2024 - 
Traditional Beiruti dessert mufataka is packed into a plastic container 
© ANWAR AMRO / AFP

"I've been in this shop for 50 years, but we started specialising in mufataka 30 years ago," Makary said from the humble shop with its ageing decor and low ceiling.

A kind of rice pudding made with turmeric, tahini sesame paste, sugar and pine nuts, mufataka is traditional in Beirut but less known even outside the city.

Makary, 73, said he used to sell other sweets but as demand grew for mufataka, he abandoned the rest and now just makes the yellow pudding, together with his cousin, who is also his business partner.

"At the beginning you add turmeric, that's the main thing, then tahini, sugar and rice... we cook it slowly on fire," he said.

The rice must be soaked overnight, and Makary said he comes to the shop at 5:00 am to make the dish, which takes around four hours and requires regular stirring.
Mufataka is a rice pudding made with turmeric, tahini sesame paste, sugar and pine nuts
© ANWAR AMRO / AFP

He said his father started making mufataka despite initially believing people would not pay money for a dish that is normally prepared at home.

Plastic containers of the pudding, which is eaten with a spoon, dotted trays and tables across the shop, waiting for customers who peered through a window to place their order from the busy street outside.

Customer Iman Chehab, 55, was picking up mufataka for her mother, who used to make it herself.

"She is elderly now and she can't stir... it takes a lot of work," said Chehab, who works in human resources management.

The dish is "something traditional for us who are from Beirut", she told AFP.

Places like Makary's shop "are the old face of Beirut that we love and always want to remember", she added.

'Heritage'

A few bustling neighbourhoods away, Samir Makari, 35, is carrying on the family tradition.

At a gleaming shop also selling Arabic sweets like baklava, Makari attends to a huge copper pot of mufataka behind the counter, stirring it with a long, wooden-handled implement.
Samir Makari's family is keeping up the dessert tradition
 © ANWAR AMRO / AFP

He weighs out and mixes the sugar, tahini paste and pine nuts in a second pot, later combining it all.

Mufataka used to be made just once a year on the last Wednesday in April, with families gathering by the sea at Beirut's public beach, father and son said.

The occasion was "Job's Wednesday", a reference to the biblical figure also mentioned in the Koran and who is renowned for his patience, the younger Makari said, noting the virtue is also required for making mufataka.

On the wall of his shop, which he runs with his brother, were photos of his father and his grandfather at work.

He said he sometimes makes mufataka twice a day depending on demand, with some customers taking it outside Beirut to introduce it to those who do not know the dish.

At the original store, the elder Makary said he was happy his children had kept up the tradition.

Mufataka is part of "my heritage", he said, and the family has "taken it from generation to generation".

© 2024 AFP
India's 'Mollywood' cinema rocked by #MeToo abuse claims

New Delhi (AFP) – Terrified for her safety, Indian actress Sreelekha Mitra remembers pushing chairs and a sofa against her hotel door after she said an award-winning veteran director sexually harassed her.


Issued on: 03/09/2024 -
Indian actress Sreelekha Mitra's allegations of sexual assault against a veteran director have triggered a MeToo reckoning in the Mollywood industry 
© Arun CHANDRABOSE / AFP


Mitra waited 15 years to speak out about the incident, one of several cases exposing the dark underbelly of India's Malayalam-language "Mollywood" film industry that has won awards at Cannes.

Her revelation was spurred by an explosive government report documenting widespread sexual harassment in an industry dominated by powerful and wealthy men who believe that an actress willing to kiss on screen would do the same in real life.

"That entire night I stayed awake," Mitra, 51, told AFP.

Mitra was invited to a gathering at the director's house, where she said he lured her into his room for a phone call with a cinematographer.

"He started playing with my hair and neck... I knew if I did not say anything then, his hand would roam around other parts of my body," she said, describing events from 2009, when she was 36.

She left and returned to her hotel.

"The intentions behind his moves were pretty clear to me... I was petrified."

Her case and close to a dozen others have triggered a MeToo reckoning in the industry, with at least 10 prominent figures accused, according to Indian media.

Kerala-based Mollywood is known for critically acclaimed movies with strong and progressive themes, a change from the big dance and song numbers of India's giant Hindi-language Bollywood in Mumbai.

The industry is prolific, producing up to 200 films a year, loved not only by southern India's 37 million Malayalam speakers, but also dubbed and streamed across the rest of India -- and abroad.

Internationally, its films have won awards, including the 1999 satire Marana Simhasanam ("Throne of Death"), winner of the Camera d'Or at Cannes.

This year's "Manjummel Boys", a survival thriller, took $29 million at the box office, the highest-grossing Malayalam movie ever and the fifth-most successful in India this year.
'Worst evil'

The industry report, released August 19, said women actors faced the widespread "worst evil" of sexual harassment.

Kerala-based Mollywood is known for critically acclaimed movies with strong and progressive themes 
© Arun CHANDRABOSE / AFP

The report was released by the Hema Committee, headed by a former high court judge, set up after a leading Malayalam actress reported she was sexually assaulted in 2017.

Gopalakrishnan Padmanabhan, a prominent Malayalam actor better known by his stage name Dileep, was arrested for allegedly orchestrating the assault.

He was imprisoned for three months before being released on bail. The case continues.

But the release of the report has opened discussion on the far wider issue of chronic violence against women, encouraging people like Mitra to speak out in public for the first time.

It said that women who considered speaking out about sexual assault were silenced by threats to their life, and to their families.

Award-winning actress Parvathy Thiruvothu, 36, called the investigation a "game changer" and a "historic moment".

"There was this idea that women working in the industry should feel grateful for having been given an opportunity by the men who were hiring them," said Thiruvothu, a member of the campaign group Women in Cinema Collective.
'Shaking everything'

Allegations of abuse in Indian cinema are not new.

It witnessed a wave in 2018, shortly after the 2017 MeToo movement erupted in Hollywood against disgraced US movie producer Harvey Weinstein.

But Thiruvothu called the latest allegations more than "MeToo Part Two."

"It's shaking everything," she told AFP.

"It isn't an individual-to-individual complaint anymore. It's about a systemic structure that has continued to fail women."

Since the report, several top actors have been accused.

The Association of Malayalam Movie Artists was dissolved following the resignation of its chief on "moral grounds" with some members among the accused.

Ranjith Balakrishnan, 59, chairman of the state's film academy, has also quit.

Balakrishnan, who denies any wrongdoing, was the man Mitra accused of sexual harassment.

Police have filed a case against him for outraging a woman's modesty, a non-bailable offence.

Mitra, who until the release of the report had only mentioned the incident to an industry colleague, told AFP that Balakrishnan had misused "his power".

Thiruvothu offered a message to all women in the film industry who have survived sexual assault.

"You are a skilled artist... do not listen to anyone who tells you to find another job if it is so difficult for you," she said.

"This is your industry, as much as it is anybody else's. Speak up, so that we are taking the space that is rightfully ours."

© 2024 AFP
KRIMINAL KAPITALI$M

Ex-Volkswagen CEO faces trial over 'dieselgate'

Braunschweig (Germany) (AFP) – Former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn is set to go on trial Tuesday for his role in the "dieselgate" scandal, nine years after the saga first plunged the German auto titan into crisis.



DW
Issued on: 03/09/2024 - 
Nine years after the 'dieselgate' scandal engulfed Volkswagen, former CEO Martin Winterkorn will finally go on trial for his role in what prosecutors consider a fraud conspiracy 
© Ronny Hartmann / AFP/File

VW admitted in 2015 that it had installed software to rig emissions levels in millions of vehicles worldwide, setting off one of Germany's biggest post-war industrial scandals.

Winterkorn faces charges including fraud over the use of the so-called defeat devices, which made cars appear less polluting in lab tests than they were on the road, and could be jailed for 10 years if convicted.

He resigned as head of the VW group -- whose brands range from Porsche and Audi to Skoda and Seat -- shortly after the crisis began but attempts to bring him to trial had so far failed.

Now 77, he was supposed to stand trial in 2021 alongside four other VW executives but proceedings against him were split off and postponed due to his poor health.

However a regional court in the city of Braunschweig, close to VW's historic headquarters in Wolfsburg, announced earlier this year that proceedings against him would finally get underway this month.

Since then there have been renewed concerns about his health, with reports saying he had to undergo an operation in mid-June, and there are now fresh questions about whether he will be able to endure the long-running trial.
Buyers were 'deceived'

Winterkorn faces several charges.


He has been accused of conspiracy to commit fraud, with the allegation based on the claim that buyers of some of the group's vehicles were "deceived about their characteristics" due to the use of defeat devices, according to the court.

Volkswagen marketed its technology as 'Clean Diesel' but special devices made them appear cleaner during testing than during road use © SAUL LOEB / AFP/File

The alleged fraud relates to about nine million vehicles sold in Europe and United States, with the buyers facing financial losses running into hundreds of millions of euros, it said.

However Winterkorn has not been accused of involvement in the offence for its entire period, which was from 2006 to 2015. He was VW chief executive from 2007 until 2015.

He has also been accused of giving false testimony to a German parliamentary committee in 2017 when it was investigating the scandal.

He said that he knew of the existence of the defeat devices only in September 2015 but prosecutors claim it was earlier.

Winterkorn further faces a charge of market manipulation.

He is alleged to have "deliberately failed to inform the capital market in good time" after finding out about the emissions-rigging software, in violation of German stock market regulations.

Some 89 hearings have been scheduled through September 2025.

Winterkorn had already agreed a settlement with Volkswagen in 2021, under which he would pay the company 11 million euros ($12 million) in relation to the controversy.

Ahead of the trial, Volkswagen noted it was not party to the proceedings although it said that it would be monitoring them.
US consumer advocates have been among the most successful in getting compensation for VW owners © Mandel NGAN / AFP/File

The highest-ranking former executive to have been convicted so far in the scandal is ex-Audi CEO Rupert Stadler.

In June last year, he received a suspended sentence and a fine as part of a deal in exchange for admitting to fraud by negligence.

The fraud has already cost VW around 30 billion euros in fines, legal costs and compensation to car owners, mainly in the United States.

© 2024 AFP
Folded solution: Advancing brain-computer interfaces


ByDr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
September 2, 2024

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a neurosurgical procedure involving the placement of a medical device called a neurostimulator. — Image by Hellerhoff, via Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0)

‘Origami-inspired’ folding electrodes could reduce surgery needed to treat brain conditions, according to a new study. This is based on data collated by a research team led by the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge.

The researchers have created new ‘origami-inspired’ brain electrodes that can fold up to a fraction of their full size. This advance could significantly reduce the amount of surgery needed to treat conditions such as epilepsy, or to install brain-computer interfaces.

Measuring brain electrical activity is essential to accurately diagnose and treat conditions such as epilepsy. However, this often requires surgeons to cut out a large window in the skull (a craniotomy) to place electrodes directly onto the brain surface.

This highly invasive procedure typically entails a prolonged recovery period and poses severe infection risks.

The new study, published in Nature Communications, demonstrated that using a folding design for brain electrodes could reduce the incision area needed by about five times, without affecting functionality.

Senior author Associate Professor Christopher Proctor (Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford) explains: “This study presents a new approach to directly interfacing with large areas of the brain through a key-hole like surgery. The potential significance of this work is two-fold.”

With these benefits, Proctor states: “First, there is the promise of a less invasive diagnostic tool for epilepsy patients. Second, we envision the minimally invasive nature will enable new applications in brain machine interfaces.”

When fully expanded, the device resembles a flat, rectangular silicone wafer with 32 embedded electrodes, attached to a cable. The wafer – around 70 microns thick (about the width of a human hair)- is then folded up, accordion-like, enabling it to fit through a slit just 6mm across.

Once in position on the brain surface, a pressurised fluid-filled chamber in the wafer inflates and unfolds the device to cover an area five times larger, up to 600 square millimetres.

In comparison, applying a non-folding device of the same size would typically require cutting out an area of at least 600 square millimetres from the skull.

The researchers confirmed the device’s functionality by testing it on anaesthetised pigs, using facilities at the Universities of Cambridge and Bologna. This demonstrated that the unfolded electrodes were able to accurately detect and record brain activity.

According to the team, the device could potentially start to be used to treat human patients within a few years. Around 50 million people worldwide have epilepsy, which carries a risk of premature death up to three times higher than for the general population (according to the World Health Organization).

According to the researchers, the fold-up design could also reduce the amount of surgery needed to install brain-computer interfaces, which could benefit people with disabilities as well as optimise human-computer interactions.
WAR IS ECOCIDE

Rescue mission underway for oil ship off Yemen: CENTCOM

By AFP
September 2, 2024

A picture released by Yemen's Huthi Ansarullah Media Centre after the rebels said they had detonated explosives on the Sounion -
 Copyright ANSARULLAH MEDIA CENTRE/AFP/File -

A rescue mission was underway Monday for an oil tanker still ablaze after being attacked by Houthi rebels off the coast of Yemen last month, according to US Central Command.

The Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion was hit by the Huthis off the coast of Hodeida on August 21 while carrying 150,000 metric tons of crude oil.

In a post on X, CENTCOM said “salvage efforts are underway” in the southern Red Sea for the disabled vessel, “which is still on fire and threatens the possibility of a major environmental disaster.”

The Iran-backed rebels said they had booby-trapped and detonated charges on the ship.

CENTCOM condemned such Huthi attacks as “reckless” and promised to “continue to work with international partners and allies” to protect trade and mitigate environmental impacts in the region.

The European Union’s Red Sea naval mission, Aspides, said earlier in the day that it would “provide protection to the tug boats, that will deal with the salvage operation and facilitate their efforts to prevent an environmental disaster,” according to a post on X.

“Several fires continue to burn on the vessel’s main deck,” the mission added, noting that there were “no visible signs of an oil spill.”

The Sounion’s crew, made up of 23 Filipinos and two Russians, was rescued the day after the attack by a French frigate serving with Aspides.


The EU naval force was formed in February to protect merchant vessels in the Red Sea from attacks by the Huthi rebels, who have waged a campaign against international shipping that they say is intended to show solidarity with Palestinian group Hamas in its war with Israel in the Gaza Strip.

According to the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) agency, two other ships were struck in attacks off the coast of Yemen on Monday.

CENTCOM reported the two ships were both crude oil tankers, one flagged by Panama and the other flagged by Saudi Arabia, with the latter vessel carrying approximately two million barrels of crude oil.


Suspected Attacks by Yemen's Houthis Target 2 Ships in the Red Sea


A Houthi soldier stands alert in front of the Israeli Galaxy ship which was seized by the Houthis, in the port of Saleef, near Hodeidah, Yemen, Sunday, May 12, 2024. 
(AP Photo/Osamah Abdulrahman)

Asharq Al Awsat
2  September 2024
AD ـ 28 Safar 1446 AH

Suspected attacks by Yemen's Houthi militants targeted two ships in the Red Sea on Monday, authorities said, near where crews hope to salvage a tanker loaded with oil and still ablaze after another assault by the group.

The attacks are believed to be the latest in the Iranian-backed group’s campaign that has disrupted the $1 trillion in goods that pass through the Red Sea each year over the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip as well as halted some aid shipments to conflict-ravaged Sudan and Yemen.

Meanwhile, the efforts to salvage the still-burning Sounion seek to head off the potential ecological disaster posed by its cargo of 1 million barrels of crude oil.

In Monday's first assault, two projectiles hit the vessel, and a third explosion occurred near the ship, the British military's United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center said.
“Damage control is underway,” the UKMTO said. “There are no casualties onboard and the vessel is proceeding to its next port of call.”

The timing of the attack and coordinates offered by the UKMTO corresponded to the reported path of the Panama-flagged oil tanker Blue Lagoon I, now traveling south through the Red Sea to an unlisted destination. The Blue Lagoon I was coming from Russia's port of Ust-Luga on the Baltic Sea and had been broadcasting that it had Russian-origin cargo on board.

In recent months, the Blue Lagoon I traveled to India, which gets more than 40% of its oil imports from Russia despite Moscow's ongoing war on Ukraine and the international sanctions it faces over it.

The Greek-based firm operating the ship could not be immediately reached.
Later Monday morning, the UKMTO reported a second attack off the Houthi-controlled port city of Hodeida. The private security firm Ambrey said an aerial drone hit a merchant ship, though no damage or injuries were reported. The attack happened only a few kilometers (miles) from where the Blue Lagoon I attack occurred, Ambrey said.
The Houthis did not immediately claim responsibility for the attacks. However, it can take the group hours or even days to acknowledge their assaults.


1




Jail terms reinstated over Brazil nightclub fire that killed 242


WITH NO DEATH PENALTY!



By AFP
September 2, 2024

The 2013 fire at the nightclub in the southern town of Santa Maria started when members of a band playing that night lit flares that set fire to the ceiling - Copyright AFP Tiziana FABI

A Brazilian supreme court judge ordered Monday the immediate imprisonment of four people convicted for their role in a nightclub fire that killed 242 people more than a decade ago.

The ruling overturned decisions by two lower courts in 2022 and 2023 that annulled the jail sentences, which ranged from 18 to 22 years, over apparent irregularities in the trial.


The four defendants will have one further chance to appeal at Brazil’s supreme court, which could ratify or deny judge Jose Antonio Dias Toffoli’s decision, a judiciary representative told AFP.

The 2013 fire at the nightclub in the southern town of Santa Maria started when members of a band playing that night lit flares that set fire to the ceiling.

A police investigation concluded the fire started when sparks from a flare ignited insulating material, releasing lethal fumes.

While some burned to death, many of the mostly young victims died from asphyxiation.

A probe found the venue had no functioning fire extinguishers, only two doors for evacuating people from an overcrowded dance floor, and poor emergency signage.

Two owners of the Kiss nightclub and two members of the Gurizada Fandangueira band were found guilty in December 2021 of murder and attempted murder of the victims, mostly young university students.


NGO reports ‘human rights disaster’ at Uganda oil project


By AFP
September 2, 2024


The Kingfisher oil project is operated by China's CNOOC - Copyright AFP -

A massive oil project in Uganda co-owned by French group TotalEnergies and China’s CNOOC is mired in reports of sexual violence, forced evictions and environmental damage, climate activists said Monday.

The $10 billion investment includes drilling for oil in the Lake Albert area in northwestern Uganda and building a 1,443-kilometre (900-mile) heated pipeline to ship the crude to Tanzania’s Indian Ocean port of Tanga.

Climate Rights International (CRI), a non-profit organisation, interviewed dozens of local residents for a report that listed a “Catalogue of Abuses” at the Kingfisher project.

“It is appalling that a project that is touted as bringing prosperity to the people of Uganda is instead leaving them the victims of violence, intimidation,and poverty,” CRI executive director Brad Adams said in a statement.

“The Kingfisher project, which is operated and co-owned by CNOOC and majority owned by TotalEnergies, is not only a dangerous carbon bomb but also a human rights disaster,” Adams said.

The report said residents of villages in the Kingfisher area described “being forcibly evicted, often with little or no notice”, by the army, the Uganda Peoples’ Defence Forces (UPDF).

“Interviewees described being ordered to leave and fleeing with what little they could carry,” the report said, adding that homes had been emptied and, in some cases, demolished.

“Many residents told Climate Rights International that they faced threats, coercion, and intimidation when they questioned or opposed the acquisition of their land by CNOOC,” it said.

Families also described “pressure and intimidation” by officials from TotalEnergies’s Ugandan subsidiary and its subcontractors “to agree to low levels of compensation that was inadequate to buy replacement land”.

Since CNOOC and the military’s arrival, fishing boats, the primary economic activity in the region, that do not comply with new regulations banning smaller vessels are regularly seized or burned by the army, the report said.

CRI said “numerous women” reported sexual violence resulting from “threats, intimidation, or coercion by soldiers in the Kingfisher project area”.

“Many reported that soldiers threatened them with arrest or confiscation of their fish merchandise unless they agreed to have sex with them,” it said.

The non-profit added that it also received reports of sexual violence by “managers and superiors within oil companies operating at Kingfisher, including one involving a CNOOC employee”.

As for environmental damage, two people who worked for China Oilfields Services Limited, a drilling service contractor, told CRI that their former supervisor, a Chinese national, instructed them to empty contaminated water basins from the drilling rig directly into the lake or vacant land.

TotalEnergies has said in the past that those displaced by the oil project have been fairly compensated and measures have been taken to protect the environment.

Uganda’s first oil is expected to flow in 2025 and the project has been hailed by President Yoweri Museveni as an economic boon for the landlocked country where many live in poverty.