Monday, March 31, 2025

Waited for death’: Ex-detainees recount horrors of Sudan’s RSF prisons

By AFP
March 30, 2025


Held for months by Sudanes paramilitaries, Egyptian merchant Emad Mouawad recalls abuse and harsh conditions - Copyright AFP Robin LEGRAND

Menna Farouk

For almost two years, Emad Mouawad had been repeatedly shuttled from one Sudanese paramilitary-run detention centre to another, terrified each day would be his last.

The 44-year-old Egyptian merchant spent years selling home appliances in neighbouring Sudan before fighters from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) stormed his Khartoum home in June 2023, taking him and six others into custody.

“They accused us of being Egyptian spies,” he told AFP, back home in Kafr Abu Shanab, a quiet village in Egypt’s Fayoum governorate southwest of Cairo.

The RSF has accused Egypt of involvement in the war, which Cairo has denied.

“We were just traders, but to them, every Egyptian was a suspect,” said Mouawad, recalling how his captors searched their phones and home.

They found nothing, but that did not spare the group, who were blindfolded, crammed into a truck and driven to one of the RSF’s many detention sites in Khartoum.

It was two months into the RSF’s war with the army, and hundreds of thousands of people had already fled to the Egyptian border, seeking safety.

“We couldn’t just go and leave our things to be looted,” said Mouawad.

“We had debts to pay, we had to guard our cargo at any cost.”



– ‘Nothing but skeletons’ –



In a university building-turned-prison in the Sudanese capital’s Riyadh district, Mouawad was confined with eight other Egyptians in a three-by-three-metre (10-by-10-feet) cell without any windows.

Other cells held anywhere between 20 and 50 detainees, he said, including children as young as six and elderly men, some of them in their 90s.

Food, when it came, “wasn’t food,” said Ahmed Aziz, another Egyptian trader detained with Mouawad.

“They would bring us hot water mixed with wheat flour. Just sticky, tasteless paste,” Aziz told AFP.

Water was either brackish and polluted from a well, or silt-filled from the Nile.

Disease spread unchecked, and many did not survive.

“If you were sick, you just waited for death,” Aziz said.

According to Mouawad, “people started losing their immunity, they became nothing but skeletons.”

“Five — sometimes more, sometimes fewer — died every day.”

Their bodies were often left to rot in the cells for days, their fellow detainees laying beside them.

And “they didn’t wash the bodies”, Mouawad said, an important Muslim custom before a dignified burial.

Instead, he heard that the paramilitaries just “dumped them in the desert”.



– Stripped of humanity –



Mouawad and Aziz were among tens of thousands vanished into prisons run by both the RSF and the rival Sudanese army, according to a UN report issued earlier this month.

Since the war began in April 2023, activists have documented the detention and torture of frontline aid workers, human rights defenders and random civilians.

The UN report said the RSF has turned residential buildings, police stations and schools into secret prisons.

Often snatched off the streets, detainees were beaten, flogged, electrocuted or forced into backbreaking labour.

The army has also been accused of torture, including severe beatings and electric shocks.

Neither the army nor the RSF responded to AFP requests for comment.

Soba, an infamous RSF prison in southern Khartoum, may have held more than 6,000 detainees by mid-2024, the UN said.

Aziz, who was held there for a month, described a living nightmare.

“There were no toilets, just buckets inside the cell that would sit there all day,” he said.

“You couldn’t go two weeks without falling sick,” Aziz added, with rampant fevers spreading fear of cholera and malaria.

At night, swarms of insects crawled over the prisoners.

“There was nothing that made you feel human,” said Aziz.

Mohamed Shaaban, another Egyptian trader, said RSF guards at Soba routinely insulted and beat them with hoses, sticks and whips.

“They stripped us naked as the day we were born,” Shabaan, 43, told AFP.

“Then they beat us, insulted and degraded us.”



– ‘Complete impunity’ –



Both the RSF and the army have been accused of war crimes, including torturing civilians.

Mohamed Osman, a Sudanese researcher at Human Rights Watch, said that while “the army at least has a legal framework in place”, the RSF “operates with complete impunity”.

The paramilitary force “runs secret facilities where people are taken and often never seen again”, Osman told AFP.

Despite their ordeals, Mouawad, Aziz and Shaaban were among the luckier ones, being released after 20 months in what they believe was a joint intelligence operation between Egypt and Sudan’s army-aligned authorities.

Finally back home in Egypt, they are struggling to recover, both physically and mentally, “but we have to try to turn the page and move on”, said Shaaban.

“We have to try and forget.”
Renault and Nissan shift gears on alliance

By AFP
March 31, 2025


Nissan Rogue: — © Nissan USA

Renault and Nissan said Monday they had revised their partnership to allow for a reduction in their cross-shareholdings and other measures that would help the financially troubled Japanese carmaker.

The new agreement will allow the carmakers to reduce their current 15 percent cross-shareholdings to 10 percent.

Renault will also acquire Nissan’s 51 percent stake in their joint factory in the Indian city of Chennai, which will produces Nissan vehicles.

Nissan will no longer be required to invest in Renault’s electric vehicle development unit, Ampere, although the French company will continue to develop and manufacture an electric version of its subcompact Twingo for Nissan to sell in Europe.

“Renault Group has a strong interest in seeing Nissan turnaround its performance as quickly as possible,” Renault Group chief executive Luca de Meo said in a statement.

The two carmakers have been partners since 1999 when Renault rescued Nissan from bankruptcy. But numerous tensions emerged, particularly over Renault’s greater holding in Nissan, and in 2023 the carmakers worked to rebalance their alliance.

But Nissan announced last year thousands of job cuts after reporting a 93 percent plunge in first-half net profit, and it expects to post a loss of over $500 million for 2024.

Its CEO Makoto Uchida stepped down earlier in March after merger talks with Honda fell apart.

“Nissan is committed to preserving the value and benefits of our strategic partnership within the Alliance while implementing turnaround measures to enhance efficiencies,” said incoming Nissan CEO Ivan Espinosa.

The amended alliance agreement will not impact the additional 18.66 percent stake in Nissan that Renault holds in a French trust. Those shares do not give Renault voting rights in Nissan under their alliance agreement, unlike the 15 percent holding.

Japan-Australia flagship hydrogen project stumbles

By AFP
March 30, 2025


A picture taken in October 2020 shows a tank containing liquid hydrogen at Kobe Port Island plant - Copyright AFP/File Frederic J. BROWN


Katie Forster and Kyoko Hasegawa

Japan wants to become a hydrogen fuel leader to meet its net-zero goals, but one blockbuster project is hanging in the balance over questions about its climate credentials.

The Hydrogen Energy Supply Chain (HESC) is billed as a billion-dollar attempt to ship liquid hydrogen from Australia to Japan.

However, cold feet about the project in Australia means HESC will source hydrogen from Japan to meet a 2030 deadline for its demonstration phase.

Hydrogen sounds promising on paper: while fossil fuels emit planet-warming greenhouse gases, burning hydrogen creates only water vapour.

But it has not yet lived up to its promise, with several much-hyped projects globally struggling to overcome high costs and engineering challenges.

Hydrogen’s climate credentials also depend on how it is produced.

“Green hydrogen” uses renewable energy, while “blue hydrogen” relies on fossil fuels such as coal and gas, with carbon-capture technology to reduce emissions.

“Brown hydrogen” is produced by fossil fuels without any carbon capture.

The HESC project aims to produce blue hydrogen in the Australian state of Victoria, harnessing abundant local supplies of lignite coal.

With the world’s first liquid hydrogen tanker and an imposing storage site near Kobe in Japan, HESC had been touted as a flagship experiment showcasing Japan’s ambitions for the fuel.

HESC says it aims to eventually produce enough hydrogen to “reduce about 1.8 million tonnes per annum of CO2 from being released into the atmosphere”.

Japan’s energy sector emitted 974 million tonnes of CO2 from fuel combustion in 2022, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).



– ‘Strong opposition’ –



Japan’s government pledged 220 billion yen (now $1.4 billion) to HESC’s current “commercial demonstration” phase, which has a completion deadline of 2030.

But to meet this deadline, the project will now source hydrogen in Japan.

That has been blamed on cold feet among Australian officials concerned about the project’s environmental payoff.

A spokesman for Japan’s Kawasaki Heavy Industries, one of the companies behind HESC, said the decision to shift production to Japan was taken “chiefly because of delay in procedures on the Australian side”.

The Victoria government did not respond to repeated requests for comment, though Australian officials have told local media that the move was a Japanese “commercial decision”.

Australia’s cooling interest in the project is due to “strong opposition” from environmental activists and energy experts opposed to carbon capture and storage, said Daisuke Akimoto of Tokyo University of Information Sciences.

“The main problem the project faces is the lack of approval of the blue hydrogen project by the Victorian government,” Akimoto said.

Kawasaki said it has not yet decided what type of hydrogen it will procure in Japan and downplayed the project’s challenges.

“We are very positive” about HESC and “there is no change” to the goal of building a new supply chain, the spokesman said, declining to be named.



– ‘Evidence gap’ –



However, sourcing the hydrogen locally leaves “a critical evidence gap at the middle of the project” — proving carbon capture and storage work — explained David Cebon, an engineering professor at the University of Cambridge.

That is “difficult and challenging and not being done successfully anywhere”, Cebon said.

Kawasaki has said it will continue “feasibility studies” for the HESC project, but Cebon believes it will “quietly die”, partly because of the cost of shipping hydrogen to Japan.

To be transported by sea as a liquid, hydrogen needs to be cooled to -253 degrees Celsius (-423.4 Fahrenheit) — an expensive, energy-intensive process.

“I think wiser heads in the government just realised how crazy it is,” said Mark Ogge from the Australia Institute think-tank.

Japanese energy company Kansai Electric has separately withdrawn from a different project to produce “green” hydrogen in Australia.

A company spokesman declined to comment on reports that the decision was due to ballooning costs.



– ‘It will take decades’ –



Resource-poor Japan is the world’s fifth largest single-country emitter of carbon dioxide.

It already produces some hydrogen domestically, mostly using natural gas and oil or nuclear power, although this is limited and expensive.

Some experts are sanguine about HESC’s challenges.

Noe van Hulst, a hydrogen advisor to the IEA, said it was important to take the long view.

“Pilot projects are undertaken to test innovations in practice: learning-by-doing,” he told AFP.

“Yes, it is hard to develop a low-carbon hydrogen market and it will take decades,” as with wind and solar energy, van Hulst said.

Solar in particular has seen costs plummet and uptake soar far beyond initial expectations and at greater speed.

And for now, “there isn’t really an alternative (to) decarbonise these hard-to-electrify sectors like steel, cement, ships and planes”, van Hulst added.
Venezuela says US revoked transnational oil, gas company licenses


By AFP
March 31, 2025


Venezuela says the United States has revoked several transnational oil and gas companies' licenses to operate in the country - Copyright AFP/File

 Pedro MATTEY

The United States has revoked several transnational oil and gas companies’ licenses to operate in Venezuela, Caracas said on Sunday, which had been granted despite Washington’s sanctions against the South American country.

US President Donald Trump is seeking to strangle Venezuela economically in order to cripple its leader Nicolas Maduro, and announced a week ago 25 percent tariffs on imports from countries buying Venezuelan oil and gas.

Venezuela did not specify which companies were affected but French oil firm Maurel & Prom (M&P) said on Monday that the special license it had been granted last May had been revoked.

M&P said the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) had given it until May 27 to wind down its activities in Venezuela.

“It is M&P’s understanding that this action is part of a broader initiative by OFAC affecting both US and international oil companies operating in Venezuela under similar authorisations, pending a possible agreement between the US and Venezuela as the situation continues to evolve,” it said in a statement.

US energy giant Chevron had its license revoked in February.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday that Washington had ordered Global Oil Terminals, owned by tycoon Harry Sargeant III, to cease operating in Venezuela.

Spanish oil giant Repsol, Italian gas producer Eni and India’s Reliance Industries are also expected to be hit by the US license revocations.

Chevron produces some 220,000 barrels per day (bpd), Repsol around 65,000 and M&P around 20,000, according to experts.

“I want to inform you that we have maintained fluid communication with the transnational oil and gas companies operating in the country, and that they have been notified in recent hours by the US government about the revocation of their licenses,” Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez said in a statement on Telegram on Sunday.

“We were prepared for this situation and we are ready to continue honoring contracts with these companies,” she said.

Companies that violate the US oil embargo and other directives could be sanctioned by the United States.

Chevron’s revoked license had been granted by former US president Joe Biden and allowed the company to operate despite sanctions. Other companies had received similar licenses.

Trump, who had initially given Chevron until April 3 to shut down its operations, extended it until May 27.

The United States and many other countries do not recognize last year’s claim of victory by Maduro in elections he is accused of having stolen.

Venezuela’s oil production, which exceeded three million bpd 25 years ago, is about one million bpd today, having fallen to less than 300,000 at its worst.


Hard-hitting drama ‘Adolescence’ to be shown in UK schools


By AFP
March 31, 2025


UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, centre, with Sarah Simpkin from the Children's Society and writer Jack Thorne of the Netflix drama 'Adolescence' - Copyright AFP STR

The Netflix drama “Adolescence”, which has sparked widespread debate about the toxic and misogynistic influences young boys are exposed to online, will be shown in UK secondary schools, the prime minister’s office and the streaming giant said Monday.

“We’re incredibly proud of the impact the show has made, and are delighted to be able to offer it to all schools across the UK,” said Anne Mensah, vice president of UK content at Netflix, adding that the four-part series had “helped articulate the pressures young people and parents face”.

The announcement came as Prime Minister Keir Starmer met the creators of the show alongside charities and young people at his Downing Street office to discuss the issues raised in the series.

Starmer said that he had watched the drama — in which a 13-year-old boy stabs a girl to death after being radicalised online — with his own teenage children and that it had “hit home hard”.

“It’s an important initiative to encourage as many pupils as possible to watch the show,” he said. Minors aged 11 to 18 will be able to see the series at their secondary schools.

“Openly talking about changes in how they communicate, the content they’re seeing, and exploring the conversations they’re having with their peers is vital if we are to properly support them in navigating contemporary challenges, and deal with malign influences,” Starmer added.

“Adolescence”, which was released on March 13, follows the aftermath of the schoolgirl’s fatal stabbing, revealing the dangerous influences boys are subjected to online.

The series had 24.3 million views in its first four days, making it Netflix’s top show for the week of March 10-16, according to the entertainment industry magazine Variety.

Maria Neophytou of the UK’s children’s charity NSPCC said the meeting had been a “critical milestone”.

“The online world is being polluted by harmful and misogynistic content which is having a direct impact on the development of young people’s thinking and behaviours. This cannot be allowed to continue,” she said.
Computer pioneer Microsoft turns 50 in the age of AI


By AFP
March 30, 2025


Bill Gates (C) and Paul Allen (L), pictured here at a Portland Trailblazers basketball game in May 2000, founded Microsoft in 1975 with a mission to put computers in every home and office - Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP CHIP SOMODEVILLA


Julie JAMMOT

Microsoft has been at the heart of computing for half a century, becoming a tech stalwart almost taken for granted as lifestyles embraced the internet.

As the company, founded with a vision of putting computers in every home and office, celebrates its 50th anniversary on Friday, it is looking to boost its fortunes by being a leader in the fast-developing field of artificial intelligence (AI).

“From a storytelling standpoint, they’ve been a boring company and a boring stock,” eMarketer analyst Jeremy Goldman said of the Richmond, Washington-based behemoth.

“It’s funny because they have a $2.9 trillion market cap, and that is huge,” he continued, referring to Microsoft’s value based on its share price.

The only company with a higher market cap is iPhone maker Apple.

Cloud computing is fueling Microsoft’s revenue with the help of its ubiquitous Office software, now hosted online and no longer released in boxes of floppy disks or CDs.

“It’s not a very sexy infrastructure, but it’s a very valuable one,” Goldman said of Microsoft’s data centers and software at the foundation of its cloud-computing platform.

Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google are Microsoft’s cloud-computing rivals.

– ‘Micro-Soft’ –

Clouds were the stuff of weather forecasts rather than computing when Bill Gates and childhood friend Paul Allen founded what was first called “Micro-Soft” in 1975.

They launched the MS-DOS operating system that became known as “Windows” and went on to run most of the world’s computers.

Microsoft Office programs including Word, Excel and PowerPoint became standard business tools, even fending off free Google Docs software.

“Microsoft had a lot of businesses that were weaker and challenged — the perfect example is Office,” Goldman said.

“That Office is still such a meaningful business for them says something about the way they were able to innovate.”

Current chief executive Satya Nadella championed a Microsoft shift to making its software available on just about any device as subscription services hosted in the cloud.



Image: © AFP JULIEN DE ROSA

The move likely saved Microsoft from seeing free services like Google Docs reduce their market share to zero, the analyst said.

– ‘Achilles heel’ –

Microsoft remains in the shadow of other US tech giants when it comes to offerings such as social networks, smartphones and the AI-infused digital assistants that have become woven into people’s lives, but it is not for lack of effort.

Microsoft introduced Xbox video game consoles in 2001, steadily building up its stable of studios, making the blockbuster buy of Activision Blizzard two years ago and adding an online subscription service for players.

And despite its launch of the Bing search engine in 2009, Google still dominates that market.

Microsoft in 2016 bought career-focused social network LinkedIn, which has seen steady growth. But it still lacks the reach of Meta’s Facebook or Instagram, or the influence of Elon Musk’s X (formerly Twitter).

Microsoft is among those in the running to buy TikTok, which faces a ban in the United States if not sold by China-based ByteDance.

While Apple and Google have excelled at making it easy or even fun for users to engage with products, that has been an “Achilles heel” for Microsoft, according to Goldman.

“It’s never been a strong suit of theirs,” the analyst said.

– Mobile miss –

Known for a focus on sales rather than innovation, Steve Ballmer, who followed Gates as chief of Microsoft from 2000 to 2013, has been faulted for missing the shift to smartphones and other mobile computing devices.

His successor, Nadella, took over with a vow to make Microsoft a “mobile-first, cloud-first” company and Microsoft has since invested heavily in AI, taking a stake in ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and building the technology into offerings including Bing, though to little avail.

– Behind in AI? –

Independent analyst Jack Gold believes that despite those investments and efforts, Microsoft lags in AI because it lacks its own chips or foundation model.

“They are not as advanced in that as AWS and Google, so they’re still playing a little bit of catchup in that space,” Gold said of Microsoft.

Google Cloud’s revenue growth is on pace to overtake Microsoft’s Azure for second place in the market in two years, the analyst said.


Four men loom large in Microsoft history

By AFP
March 30, 2025


Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. — © AFP Daniel ROLAND

Glenn CHAPMAN

Microsoft was shaped by Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Steve Ballmer and Satya Nadella over the course of the last half-century in the male-dominated tech world.

Friends since childhood in Seattle, Gates and Allen founded Microsoft in 1975 with a stated goal of putting a computer in every office and home.

– Gates –

Born William Henry Gates III in 1955 in Seattle, he began writing software programs while a 13-year-old schoolboy.

Gates dropped out of Harvard in his junior year to start Microsoft with Allen.

The childhood friends created MS-DOS operating system, since renamed Windows, which went on to dominate office work.

Gates built a reputation as a formidable and sometimes ruthless leader.

Critics argue he unfairly wielded Microsoft’s clout in the market, and the US pressed a winning antitrust case against the company in the late 1990s.

In 2000, Gates ceded the CEO job to Ballmer, whom he befriended while the two were students at Harvard.

Gates chose to devote himself to a charitable foundation he established with his then-wife, Melinda.

He resigned from Microsoft’s board of directors in 2020 — shortly after the firm acknowledged the existence of an “intimate” relationship with an employee in the past.

The following year, the couple divorced. Melinda Gates faulted him for his relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, who was found guilty of sexually exploiting under-age girls.

His support of Covid-19 vaccine campaigns and agriculture programs that focus on climate change and women made Gates a favorite target of conspiracy theorists.

Baseless accusations aimed at Gates include him putting tracking chips in vaccines.

– Allen –

Paul Allen, born in 1953 in Seattle, was a schoolmate of Gates.

Allen was 10 when he started a science club at home, and would later bond with young Gates over computers.

“Microsoft would never have happened without Paul,” Gates wrote in tribute to Allen, who died of cancer complications in 2018.

Gates told of Allen showing him a magazine featuring a computer running on a new chip, and warning that a tech revolution was happening without them.

Allen is credited with combining “microcomputer” and “software” to come up with “Micro-Soft”.

He left Microsoft in 1983, but remained a board member until 2000. He went on to accuse Gates and Ballmer of scheming to “rip him off” by getting hold of his shares while he battled cancer.

– Ballmer –

Ballmer was seen as a devoted salesman who ramped up Microsoft revenue while neglecting innovation.

A Michigan native with a talent for mathematics, he graduated from Harvard.

Ballmer joined Microsoft in 1980 and was best man at the 1994 wedding of Bill and Melinda Gates.

Ballmer, now 69, succeeded Gates as chief executive in 2000.

His enthusiastic gestures, awkward dance moves, and voice-straining shouts made him the stuff of internet memes and company lore.

Ballmer oversaw the launch of Xbox video game consoles, Surface tablets, and Bing online search engine. Microsoft bought Skype and Nokia’s mobile phone division on Ballmer’s watch.

During his tenure, Microsoft was seen as clinging to PCs while lifestyles raced toward mobile devices and cloud-based software.

His product failures include Zune digital music players, Kin mobile phones, and a Vista version of Windows.

– Nadella –

Nadella took over as chief executive in early 2014 and says he learned leadership skills playing cricket as a boy growing up in India.

Nadella, who will turn 58 in August, was hired in 1992 while studying at the University of Chicago.

Early in his academic career, a drive to build things led him to pursue computer science, a focus not available during his engineering studies at Mangalore University.

Nadella’s Microsoft bio shows stints in research, business, server and online services units.

For relaxation, he turns to poetry, which he likened to complex data compressed to express rich ideas in few words.

Nadella held firm that for Microsoft to succeed, it needed to adapt to a “cloud-first, mobile-first world”.

Soon after becoming chief, he ordered the biggest reorganization in Microsoft’s history.

He is credited with guiding Microsoft from a fading packaged software business to the booming market for cloud services.

Microsoft has been pumping billions of dollars into AI, investing in ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and infusing the technology across its products.

In a rare stumble, Nadella triggered an uproar his first year as chief by suggesting during an on-stage discussion that working women should trust “karma” when it comes to securing pay raises.

Microsoft’s acquisitions under Nadella include Sweden-based Mojang, maker of the popular video game Minecraft; social network LinkedIn, and the GitHub online platform catering to software developers.

In Turkey, new technologies reinforce repression

By AFP
March 30, 2025

After the arrest of Istanbul's mayor, authorities made social networks inaccessible in the city by reducing internet bandwidth 
- Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File JUSTIN SULLIVAN

Burcin GERCEK

With anti-government protests sweeping across Turkey, the authorities have used all technological means to try to curb them, from restricting internet access to using facial recognition to identify protesters, who have been forced to adapt.

Amid a ban on protests, nearly 2,000 people have been arrested in connection with the demonstrations that erupted on March 19 following the detention of Istanbul’s mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on graft charges.

As well as those apprehended in the streets, many others have been arrested in pre-dawn raids at their homes after being identified from footage or photos taken by the police during the demonstrations.

So far, 13 Turkish journalists have been detained for covering the protests, including AFP photographer Yasin Akgul, who was charged with “taking part in illegal rallies and marches” on the basis of images shot by the police.

For Orhan Sener, a digital technologies expert, the use of technology marks a major departure from 2013, when a small protest against plans to demolish Gezi Park in central Istanbul snowballed into a wave of national unrest over the rule of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was prime minister at the time.

“The security forces’ information technology capabilities have increased considerably since then,” Sener said.

“During the Gezi movement, the protesters dominated social networks and the police weren’t able to identify them,” he said.

“But today, when you join a demonstration in Turkey, your face is recognised by a camera and the system cross-references it with your profile on social networks.”

– Faces masked –

Faced with such a risk, many demonstrators are now covering their heads and faces with hats, masks and scarves.

In Istanbul, police have frequently surrounded protesters and ordered them to uncover their faces so they can be filmed, refusing to let them go if they do not, generating widespread distress for many young people, AFP correspondents said.

“Every means of pressure generates a countermeasure. We will soon see greater use of different clothing, glasses or make-up to thwart facial recognition technologies,” said Arif Kosar, who specialises in the impact of new technologies.

“But I don’t think facial recognition technology is the main source of pressure today. The use of disinformation to smear the protests, or neutralise and divide them, plays a more important role,” he said.

Erdogan has denounced the protests as “street terror”, accusing participants of “vandalising” a mosque and a cemetery, charges the opposition has denied.

“Authoritarian regimes now know how to use the internet to their advantage. They have found ways of censoring it,” Sener said.

“But above all, they use it for their own propaganda.”

– ‘Moving towards a surveillance state’ –

Immediately after Imamoglu’s arrest in a pre-dawn raid, which he recounted on X before being taken away, the authorities started reducing bandwidth for internet users in Istanbul, rendering access to social networks impossible for 42 hours.

They also asked the social media platform X to close more than 700 accounts belonging to journalists, news organisations, political figures and students among others, the platform said.

“There was no court decision behind the bandwidth reduction or the bid to block X accounts. These measures were put in place arbitrarily,” said Yaman Akdeniz, a law professor and head of Turkey’s Freedom of Expression Association (IFOD).

He said there was legislation being prepared that would require messaging services such as WhatsApp, Signal and Telegram to open offices in Turkey and disclose users’ identities to the authorities.

“We are moving towards a surveillance state,” Akdeniz said.

Since 2020, internet service providers have provided data on online activities and the identity of internet users to the Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK), the opposition news website Medyascope revealed in 2022.

“By law, the BTK can only keep the data collected for two years. However, we have seen data going back 10 years being provided to prosecutors during the investigation into the Istanbul mayor,” Akdeniz said.

“This data retention, despite the law, for purposes which are unknown, opens the way for arbitrary practices,” he said.

For Sener, activism in the real world and online “used to be two different worlds, but now they are intertwined”.

With facial recognition, “the government is trying to discourage people from joining demonstrations, while hindering their mobilisation through social networks,” he said.
Op-Ed: Boiling water a fix for microplastics in humans?


By Paul Wallis
March 29, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Many inhabitants of Khartoum are in desperate need of drinking water, with some reopening wells or using pots to draw water from the Nile river - Copyright AFP -

It turns out that microplastics aren’t unbeatable. Guangzhou Medical University and Jinan University have discovered an unexpectedly simple fix to reduce microplastic intake in humans.

Make a point of reading that link to Science Alert’s article, because it is fascinating.

The process couldn’t be simpler, and the best results remove 90% of microplastics. Boiling different types of hard and soft water showed that calcium carbonate, which forms limescale in kettles, also traps microplastics.

Yes, it’s the same stuff that you’re told to remove from kettles using vinegar.

This Science Alert video spells out how the process works.

Soft water can be made harder and easier to decontaminate with the addition of minerals and/or simply filtered with steel mesh.

At the macroenvironmental level, plastics are the result of a century of massive production and ignorance. A lot is being done to eliminate persistent exposure with new materials, but it’s a legacy problem for the immediate future.

The major issue is the prevalence and persistence of microplastics. In chemical warfare, a “persistent agent” is a toxic chemical that remains active for a long time.

It may be possible to use similar solutions, pun intended, to decontaminate microplastics in the urban and natural environments. We’re not exactly short of CO2 right now, and there are probably other ways of binding microplastics in these environments.

One thing that the Chinese experiments make very clear is that a cheap, simple fix is far more effective. For macro-scale cleanups, something that can be simply added to the environment and washed away will do.

One of the new methods for eliminating microplastics is to make them easily dissolvable in sea water. For a nice change, we might actually be doing something productive by flushing anything and everything into the sea.

That idea may also translate into good waste management on a global scale. Imagine destroying pollution instead of creating it every time you use the plumbing.

So heat up the kettle, and do your health a favor.

_________________________________________________

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed in this Op-Ed are those of the author. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of the Digital Journal or its members.
US opioid deaths hit record 79,355


By Dr. Tim Sandle
March 29, 2025
DIGITAL  JOURNAL


Pharmaceutical companies and distributors have agreed to pay $590 million to settle litigation related to opioid addiction in the Native American population 

— © AFP/File TIMOTHY A. CLARY

A new study reveals that 79,355 U.S. citizens died from opioid overdoses in 2023, marking a 12 percent increase from 2022, which is the highest recorded in U.S. history. Moreover, this translates to a mean of 217 deaths per day.

Despite a 51.7 percent drop in opioid prescriptions since 2012, the crisis has worsened due to the surge in fentanyl-related overdoses, proving that prescription limits alone are insufficient.

A recent review, conducted by White Law PLLC, provides a state-by-state analysis of this growing epidemic, using data from the CDC, NIDA, and the AMA’s Opioid Prescription Trends Report (2012-2023).

In terms of the 79,355 deaths, fentanyl is involved in 75 percent of the opioid deaths nationwide, hitting the hardest in Appalachia and the Midwest. The opioid epidemic is also costing the U.S. over $1.5 trillion annually, overloading hospitals, public health systems, and law enforcement.

West Virginia (#1) and Ohio (#2) have the highest opioid-related death rates, while California, Texas, and Florida are experiencing rising overdose fatalities despite policy efforts.

The top ten states with the worse death rates are:West Virginia
Ohio
Kentucky
Pennsylvania
Tennessee
Maryland
California
Florida
Texas
Michigan

The study analyzed opioid overdose deaths, prescription data, and fentanyl-related fatalities from the CDC, NIDA, and AMA Opioid Prescription Trends Report (2012–2023).

West Virginia (81.4 deaths per 100,000 people) leads the U.S. Ohio, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania report over 40 deaths per 100,000, while California and Texas see rising fatalities despite harm reduction policies.

Fentanyl is now the primary driver of opioid deaths, involved in 79 percent of cases in West Virginia, 72 percent in Ohio, and 86 percent in Maryland. The drug is increasingly mixed with heroin, cocaine, or counterfeit pills, making overdoses more frequent and deadlier.

Purdue Pharma’s OxyContin, one of the main prescription opioids that stoked the US addiction and overdose epidemic beginning in the early 2000s – Copyright US Drug Enforcement Administration/AFP Handout

In terms of what this costs municipal services, West Virginia ($10.2 billion) and Ohio ($9.5 billion) suffering the highest economic losses. Even states with lower overdose rates, like Texas ($5.1 billion) and Michigan ($4.9 billion), bear massive financial burdens, proving this crisis impacts every sector of society.

For many economists and healthcare professionals, the opioid epidemic is no longer just a drug crisis, it is a full-scale public health emergency. Overdose deaths continue to rise despite prescription cutbacks, proving that illicit fentanyl and polydrug use are the real drivers of the crisis.













South Dakota tops US cancer risk factor rankings

By Dr. Tim Sandle
March 28, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


The EU is aiming to reduce its smoking population from around 25 percent now to less than five percent of the total by 2040 - Copyright AFP/File MANDEL NGAN

Where in the U.S. are the highest cancer rates? The answer reveals regional disparities related to a range of factors. Smoking and obesity emerge as critical cancer risk factors.

South Dakota ranks as the highest-risk state for cancer, driven primarily by high rates of excessive alcohol consumption and elevated radon levels. West Virginia shows the highest smoking rate and obesity rates among all states.

A recent study by the company Masumi identified and ranked U.S. states with the highest combination of risk factors contributing to cancer. Data was collected on cancer new cases and deaths (2024), population (2024), and various cancer risk factors, including smoking rates, obesity rates, radon levels, stress levels, alcohol consumption, the population aged 65 and above, UV radiation index, air pollution, and water hardness. States were ranked in descending order, with higher scores representing greater overall cancer risk.

A summary of the research reveals:

StateAlcohol Excessive Consumption RateSmoking RateObesity RateRadon LevelStress Level IndexComposite score
South Dakota24.4%19.3%38.4%9.64999.9
West Virginia15.2%26.0%40.6%6.1698.4
Pennsylvania19.8%18.7%33.3%8.63386.0
Ohio20.7%21.1%37.7%7.81783.4
Kentucky18.2%24.6%40.3%7.4882.6
Maine22.5%17.3%31.9%5.92078.2
Iowa24.6%17.1%36.4%6.14676.9
Montana24.3%17.2%31.8%7.43076.4
Wisconsin25.2%16.0%33.9%5.73868.0
New Hampshire20.8%15.7%30.6%5.64767.9
As indicated above, South Dakota leads the ranking with a composite score of 99.9, presenting a strong concentration of cancer risk factors. The state records the highest radon level (9.6) among all analyzed states, creating significant indoor exposure risks. South Dakota’s excessive alcohol consumption rate of 24.4 percent contributes substantially to its overall cancer risk profile, while its obesity rate of 38.4 percent further enhances health concerns. The state also faces challenges with stress levels (49), ranking among the highest in the study.

West Virginia ranks 2nd with a score of 98.4, displaying the highest smoking rate (26 percent) among the top 10 states. West Virginia also leads with the highest obesity rate (40.6 percent) and has the largest elderly population (21.5 percent) among the top-ranked states, creating a particularly vulnerable demographic profile.

Pennsylvania ranks 3rd with a score of 86, balancing multiple risk factors across categories. The state shows concerning levels of radon (8.6) and relatively high stress levels (33). Pennsylvania’s high obesity rate (33.3 percent) and bad air pollution (6) further compound cancer risks.

Ohio ranks 4th with a score of 83.44, with the highest air pollution (8.9) among the top states. Its smoking rate (21.1 percent) and obesity rate (37.7 percent) are also among the highest, and stress levels (17) are noticeably elevated, compounding the state’s cancer risk.

Kentucky ranks fifth with a score of 82.61, showing the second-highest smoking rate (24.6 percent) and obesity rate (40.3 percent). Despite having a lower elderly population (17.8 percent), the state’s lifestyle risk factors put residents at significant cancer risk.

Such data suggests that to understand cancer risks a balanced understanding between lifestyle factors, genetics and environmental factors, each combining to influence health outcomes.

















Written By  Dr. Tim Sandle

Dr. Tim Sandle is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for science news. Tim specializes in science, technology, environmental, business, and health journalism. He is additionally a practising microbiologist; and an author. He is also interested in history, politics and current affairs.
How is AI is helping companies to empower tomorrow’s workforce?


By Dr. Tim Sandle
March 28, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Image: © DJC

Many companies are starting a push that impacts bottom-line significance designed to generate future value from generative AI. For example, many large companies are leading the way and consequently this is why economies are experiencing workplace reductions through layoffs.

As AI reshapes how organizations manage talent, it is also redefining what the workforce is. Such as: what skills are in demand, how work gets done, and who gets access to opportunity?

Seemingly we are entering a world where adaptability, continuous learning, and human-AI collaboration will be just as critical as traditional expertise.

Sara Gutierrez, Chief Science Officer at SHL, who leads many AI initiatives believes that companies using AI across the organization are set up for success. Gutierrez has provided this interpretation to Digital Journal.

With the changing workplace and job functions, Gutierrez finds: “Roles are becoming more fluid, teams more cross-functional, and career paths less linear. The organizations that embrace this shift will be the ones best positioned to attract, retain, and grow top talent.”

How is this transformation of technology and culture manifested? According to Gutierrez: “What’s making this transformation possible is a new generation of AI-powered talent intelligence tools—tools that give leaders real-time visibility into skills, potential, and readiness.”

Drawing on local experience, Gutierrez remarks: “At SHL, we see talent intelligence as a strategic driver of this workforce evolution. It enables companies to move beyond outdated job frameworks and instead think in terms of capabilities, agility, and fit for the future, not just the role.”

AI is helping firs to operate proactively

As to how this has altered in recent years, Gutierrez explains: “This is a dramatic shift from traditional talent management. Where we once operated reactively—filling roles, plugging gaps, and relying on intuition—AI is helping us operate proactively. It gives us the ability to forecast the skills that will matter most, understand who in our workforce is primed to grow into new roles, and personalize development in ways that truly matter. It’s not about automating decisions—it’s about augmenting them with insight we never had before.”

Furthermore, Gutierrez clarifies, insight is essential: “Because the workforce of tomorrow will not look like the workforce of today. Career paths are already starting to resemble skill trees instead of ladders. Internal mobility is no longer a perk—it’s a necessity. And the most inclusive organizations will be those that use AI not to reinforce old patterns, but to challenge them. With bias-mitigated, data-driven assessments at the core—like those used in SHL’s platform—organizations can uncover talent in places they may have previously overlooked, including among neurodiverse candidates or employees without traditional credentials.”

The shift also demands that we rethink how we view potential. Talent intelligence helps us understand not just what people have done, but what they’re capable of.

These companies are using AI to unify fragmented data across skills, performance, engagement, and learning systems to build a full picture of their workforce—what people can do today, and what they can grow into tomorrow.



Written By  Dr. Tim Sandle

Dr. Tim Sandle is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for science news. Tim specializes in science, technology, environmental, business, and health journalism. He is additionally a practising microbiologist; and an author. He is also interested in history, politics and current affairs.