Wednesday, September 09, 2020

100+ Organizations Urge Biden to Adopt Good Neighbor Policy

Members of the progressive activist group Code Pink protest outside of the Quicken Loans Arena before the start of the 2016 Republican National Convention. Cleveland, Ohio, USA. July 21, 2016. | Photo: EFE/Jim Lo Scalzo

Published 8 September 2020 TELESUR

Spearheaded by the peace group CODEPINK, the letter includes endorsements from over 100 hundred organizations that work on issues related to U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Among the organizations calling for the next presidential administration to adopt a new "Good Neighbor Policy" and reject Trump's "Monroe Doctrine 2.0" are Alianza Americas, Center for International Policy, Global Exchange, Latin America Working Group, Oxfam America, Witness for Peace Solidarity Collective, and dozens more.

With regards to setting a new policy agenda, the letter warns that "the U.S. president will face a hemisphere that will not only still be reeling from the coronavirus but will also be experiencing a deep economic recession, and that the best to help is not by seeking to impose its will, but rather by adopting a broad set of reforms to reframe relations with our neighbors to the south."


RELATED:
Biden Vs. Trump: Same Goal, Different Means on Cuba, Venezuela

The first of the reforms spelled out in the letter is the lifting of economic sanctions against Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, which are causing widespread economic suffering, especially during the pandemic.

The next of the measures for the next U.S. president to adopt is to halt the hundreds of millions of dollars of police and military equipment and training that the U.S. provides to Latin American and the Caribbean annually, as well as the removal of U.S. military and police personnel from the region.

Repeat after me: Latin America is NOT America's to exploit.

That's why CODEPINK & over 100 other orgs are calling on the next administration to end US imperialism & adopt a new Good Neighbor Policy towards Latin America. @medeabenjamin @LeonardoEFAhttps://t.co/87VJdJcMj3— CODEPINK (@codepink) September 8, 2020

The letter also urges the next administration to stop flagrantly interfering in neighbors' elections, such as in Venezuela, denouncing such blatant and contradictory interference while calling for respect of other nations' sovereignty. Similarly, the letter condemns the United States' outsized role in multilateral financial institutions like the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, among others, demanding the U.S. cease implementation of neoliberal austerity models and instead support funding public health during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lastly, the letter calls for a de-instrumentalization of human rights for political gain and protection for land and human rights defenders at home and abroad, while also proposing a swift transformation of the U.S. immigration system, including a moratorium on all deportations, the re-establishment of the asylum process at the U.S.-Mexico border, and an end to private immigration detention, among other calls.


Women March Against Gender-Based Violence in Costa Rica

Demonstration against femicides in San Jose, September 6, 2020. 
| Photo: Twitter/ @h24news_cr

Published 8 September 2020 TELESUR


"I was born to be free, not to be murdered" was the message stressed by citizens ​​​​​​​demanding justice.

On Sunday, thousands of women across Costa Rica marched to demand justice for the young Allison Bonilla’s femicide and all women who suffer gender-based violence.

Under the slogan “No more impunity” women took to the streets to demand strict law enforcement against those aggressors who beat, rape, and kill women.

In cities such as San Jose, Cartago, and Puntarenas, citizens also shared the message, “I was born to be free, not to be murdered.”

“We want to make femicide visible in a country where aggressors go unpunished thanks to the authorities' negligence,” the organization Brujas Feministas stated.

En San José, Costa Rica así se vivió la marcha de las mujeres este #8M2020 en el #DíaDeLaMujer pic.twitter.com/p2sAknzxmj— William Serrano Baby (@W_Serrano_Baby) March 8, 2020
"This is how the International Women's Day was lived in San Jose, Costa Rica, on March 8, 2020."

The families of femicide victims “are not alone, neither are those women suffering from domestic violence in times of pandemic,” Brujas Feministas added.

The citizens paid tribute to 18-years-old Allison Bonilla who disappeared when she was returning home on March 4, 2019. Earlier this month, a man was arrested after he confessed to her murder.

“We are here to ask for justice and raise our voice on behalf of our sisters who are not here with us today,” the demonstrators assured.

Costa Rica's women march also remembered Maria Cedeño and Luanny Salazar, both of whom were killed in July. Two men are under arrest for their connection to their femicides.

Costa Rica's vice president-elect Epsy Campbell Barr will be the first black woman in Latin America to hold the position. pic.twitter.com/JdeOdNwgCc— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) April 2, 2018

by teleSUR/ age-JF
Cuba Ratifies Commitment To the Struggle for Global Literacy

In 1961, Cuba became the first country in Latin America and the Caribbean to uproot illiteracy in its territory. | Photo: Twitter/@CubaMINREX

Published 8 September 2020 

The Cuban National Commission for UNESCO remembered this World Literacy Day the contributions of the island nation to this global struggle.

The Cuban National Commission for UNESCO reminded this September 8 of the commitment by the people and the government of Cuba to the global efforts to achieve literacy for all, on the occasion of commemorating World Literacy Day.

The renewed commitment comes amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which has motivated the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to emphasize "the teaching and learning of literacy during the COVID-19 crisis, including the role played by teachers and the evolution of pedagogies."



RELATED:
10 Things to Know About Revolutionary Cuba's Literacy Program

The announcement from the non-governmental entity noted that Cuba joins the commemoration with concrete results, "not only for having eradicated illiteracy in 1961 through the Literacy Campaign...but instead, and more than anything, due to its impressive continued education throughout the country with internationally recognized values, including universal, free and quality access.

Furthermore, Cuba "has shown significant results in its commitment to the global efforts to eliminate illiteracy through international cooperation," the announcement states, exemplifying the application of the teaching method developed by Cuban pedagogues "Yo Si Puedo" ("Yes I Can"), which won the UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize for its "contribution to the teaching of reading and writing.


#Cuba spread its successful experience of the Literacy Campaign through its solidarity-based contribution to other countries using the Yes, I can method. #SomosCuba #SomosContinuidad https://t.co/USAvJT0HrR— Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez (@DiazCanelB) September 8, 2020

The "Yes I Can" methodology has been employed in some thirty countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, Oceania, and Europe; among them are Spain, Australia, Angola, Mozambique, Haiti, El Salvador, and Mexico.

As a result, some 10,604,827 people of all ages have become literate through Havana's advisory, a reason for which the Commission's text today reminded that "it's a shame that throughout the world $1.9 trillion in military expenditure is wasted while 773 million adults, two-thirds of them women, still lack the basic ability to read and write."

Cuba is a territory free of illiteracy since December 1961 when, after two years of an intense campaign, it was able to reduce the illiteracy rate to under 3%, achieved after four and a half centuries of absolutely no schooling for the vast majority of the population




WORLD LITERACY DAY

UNESCO: 773 Million People Non-Literate Amid COVID-19 Pandemi
c




Students attending a class on the second day of school amid measures taken by the Moroccan authorities in an attempt to stop the spread of Covid-19, in Rabat, Morocco, 08 September 2020. | Photo: EFE/EPA/ Jalal Morchiodi

Published 8 September 2020

According to the organization, 60 percent of governments worldwide allocate less than four percent of their budgets to adult learning and education

The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) warned on Tuesday that the learning losses and disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic had affected 1.4 billion people worldwide, mainly children, adolescents, and adults.


RELATED:

UNICEF: Global Education Emergency Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic

As September 8 marks International Literacy Day, the UNESCO urged governments to provide learning opportunities and infrastructure to the 773 million adults and young people who lack essential reading and writing skills, as published in a new report.

According to the organization, 60 percent of governments worldwide allocates less than four percent of their budgets to adult learning and education. In August, the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) called the attention about a global education emergency unleashed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The latest data by UNESCO shows that two-thirds of the 773 million non-literate young and adults are women.

On the other hand, globally, 63 million and primary and secondary teachers were affected by the closure of schools as a result of containment measures. UNESCO highlights that to tackle the crisis effectively, frontline educators have to be prioritized.


63 million primary & secondary teachers worldwide were affected by #COVID19 related school closures.

How do we move forward?

Our new background paper looks at how this crisis impacts #literacy learning & what it teaches us: https://t.co/T5QjSgw7a6 #LiteracyDay pic.twitter.com/8jKmGJDGay— UNESCO (@UNESCO) September 8, 2020

"The first challenge is, therefore, to ensure that educators everywhere in the world can carry out their work under good conditions: by increasing their numbers to meet needs, by paying them fairly and by providing them with job stability," UNESCO's Director-General Audrey Azoulay said.

At a regional level, Africa has the lowest literacy rate, with 66 percent as it accounts for one-third of the world's non-literate adult population.

On the other hand, Latin America had "an educationally advanced" landscape by the end of 2019 since the literacy rate marked 94.3 percent. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has worsened the social and economic disparities. Hence, the organization warns that this situation will heavily impact several education systems in the region.

The report explains that in Latin America, "many literacy programs have been suspended throughout most of this region's countries, while some online options have been maintained or expanded."
Fox News host Brian Kilmeade compares 'antifa individuals' to 'Al-Qaeda' in calling for cops to 'interrogate them'

FOX FASCIST CALLS FOR BARR'S BULLIES  TO WATERBOARD CITIZENS PRACTICING THEIR FIRST AND FOURTH AMENDMENT RITES


Jake Lahut
Fox News host Brian Kilmeade Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

















Fox News host Brian Kilmeade argued cops should get to use harsh tactics when dealing with unrest and violence at protests, comparing antifa to the terror group behind 9/11 in a Fox Business Network appearance.
"Sit there, lock them up and interrogate them, almost like you would Al Qaeda," Kilmeade said.
"Because they are undermining our country the same way these Islamic extremists were doing it."
There is little evidence showing antifa is as organized as some commentators depict it, with more organized chapters in cities like Portland compared to elsewhere.
A Fox News spokesperson told Insider Kilmeade was focusing on antifa, and not referring to peaceful protesters in general.


In an appearance on the Fox Business Network, Brian Kilmeade said police should be emboldened to use more intense tactics when dealing with unrest and violence at protests for racial justice.

Kilmeade, who is a co-host of the Fox News morning program "Fox & Friends" as well as his own radio show, lamented local officials for not doing enough to quash escalations at the demonstrations.
—John Whitehouse (@existentialfish) September 8, 2020

"When we start convincing law enforcement officials to not let the antifa individuals go," Kilmeade said when asked how the unrest will end by a Fox Business host on how the unrest will end.

"Sit there, lock them up and interrogate them, almost like you would Al Qaeda," Kilmeade said. "Because they are undermining our country the same way these Islamic extremists were doing it."

"We were dead serious about that, we're not dead serious about this."

As Insider's Sonam Sheth reported earlier in the summer, there is little evidence antifa is as organized as some claim, and the notion they are infiltrating protests has all the hallmarks of a domestic disinformation campaign.

A suspect in the killing of a pro-Trump activist in Portland, Michael Reinoehl, was a self-described follower of antifa, according to the BBC. Police fatally shot Reinoehl while attempting to arrest him.

Kilmeade also decried "outlandish out of towners" co-opting the protests, though there has been significant debate by experts over whether the longstanding notion of "outside agitators" is held up by evidence in most cases.


A Fox News spokesperson told Insider Kilmeade was focusing on antifa, and not referring to peaceful protesters in general.
Hobby Lobby is facing new boycott threats over a photo of a store display urging customers to 'Vote Trump'

Bethany Biron
Sep 7, 2020
Shoppers are calling for a renewed boycott against Hobby Lobby.
AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki

Hobby Lobby is once again in hot water, this time in response to a now-viral photo — said to have been taken at one of its stores — showing a display of decorative letters that spell out "USA Vote Trump."

Several boycott efforts have been made against the company in the past decade in response to its controversial stances in areas such as reproductive rights and, more recently, coronavirus safety policies.

"I'm not a fan of Hobby Lobby. I would never shop there," Kari Brekke, the author of a viral tweet sharing the photo, told Business Insider. "I'm a Democrat. I hate the company."

Some Twitter users pointed out that a customer may have arranged the letters rather than a store employee.

Hobby Lobby did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.


Shoppers are once again calling for a boycott of Hobby Lobby, the arts-and-crafts company that's no stranger to controversy.

The growing #BoycottHobbyLobby effort began picking up steam on social media on Sunday in response to a now-viral tweet shared by a user named Kari Brekke. In the tweet — which has more than 33,000 likes and more than 10,000 retweets — Brekke shared an image with the caption "In a Hobby Lobby" showing a display of decorative letters arranged to read "USA Vote Trump."
—Kari B (@KariBrekke) September 6, 2020

Brekke told Business Insider she did not take the photo but rather pulled it from a public post shared in a national Facebook group for the Lincoln Project, an organization started by former Republicans in 2019 dedicated to preventing President Donald Trump's reelection.

Brekke said she did not have any additional information regarding who may have arranged the display nor where the photo was taken. Some other Twitter users pointed out that the letters would be free for customers to move around — in other words, a customer rather than an employee may be behind the display.

—Hank Green: A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor is Out! (@hankgreen) September 7, 2020

Hobby Lobby did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

"I'm not a fan of Hobby Lobby. I would never shop there," Brekke told Business Insider. "I'm a Democrat. I hate the company."

Calls to boycott the craft store were swift on Twitter, as users shared the image with captions like "I've never stepped foot in a Hobby Lobby and never will" along with the hashtag #BoycottHobbyLobby.
—Madison McFarland (@MADELWELL) September 6, 2020
—Frank Giugliano (@nyccookies) September 7, 2020

The blowback is just the latest in a smattering of outcries against the company in the past decade.


In 2012, the company faced widespread scrutiny for its efforts to deny access to contraceptives for employees. A high-profile Supreme Court case subsequently ruled in favor of Hobby Lobby's right to withhold reproductive benefits, determining that private companies were allowed to be exempt from the law on the basis of religious preferences.

Hobby Lobby has also been the subject of boycotts in response to anti-Semitic and homophobic comments made by its conservative Christian CEO and founder, David Green. In 2013, Green told a shopper the company did not carry products for Jewish holidays because it "doesn't cater to your people," a comment he later publicly apologized for in a formal statement to the Anti-Defamation League.

Green has also been reported to be a massive donor to the National Christian Foundation, an organization that promotes anti-LGBTQ efforts.

Hobby Lobby drew additional ire this year when it illegally reopened stores in states with stay-at-home mandates calling for the closure of nonessential businesses to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.


By April, Hobby Lobby moved to temporarily close all stores and furlough employees after several spoke out that they feared for their lives by being forced to continue working.


Too many countries have neglected public health services, the WHO says, as it warns that the world must prepare for the next pandemic

#AUSTERITYKILLS
World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attends a news conference in Geneva. Reuters

Too many countries have neglected public health services, and should invest in them to protect against future pandemics, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.
"Public health is the foundation of social, economic and political stability," Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a press conference on Monday.
Nearly 27 million COVID-19 cases and 900,000 deaths had been reported worldwide, according to statistics from the WHO.

The head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said Monday that too many countries have neglected their basic health services in the past, as he urged governments across the world to invest in public health to protect against future pandemics.

Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, warned on Monday that "this will not be the last pandemic," and that countries must pump money into their public health services to prevent, detect, and respond to diseases.

"Public health is the foundation of social, economic and political stability," he said at the press conference. While countries have made huge advances in medicine in recent years, "too many have neglected their basic public health systems which are the foundations for responding to infectious diseases and outbreaks."

A 2019 WHO report showed that state health spending grew over the past 20 years, but that the rate of growth fell during the 2010s. Public spending on health grew 4.9% a year between 2000 and 2010, but only 3.4% between 2010 and 2017, on average.


Public spending represents about 60% of global spending on health and grew at 4.3% a year
between 2000 and 2017. This growth has been decelerating in recent years, from 4.9% a year
growth in 2000–2010 to 3.4% in 2010–2017.

Latest statistics from the WHO released Monday show nearly 27 million COVID-19 cases and 900,000 deaths have been reported worldwide. More than 18.1 million people have recovered from the virus, according to the John Hopkins University.

Southeast Asia reported 600,000 new coronavirus cases in the past week, becoming the region with the highest number of total cases, according to the WHO. India's health ministry reported 90,802 cases on Monday, taking its total to 4.2 million. It now has the second-highest number of cases in the world, behind the US and ahead of Brazil.

Cases in the Americas increased by 1% and deaths fell 4% over the past week, the WHO reported, but it added that the region still accounted for almost half of all new cases.
The coronavirus pandemic

Young Living Essential Oils CEO Mary Young downplays the pandemic after her own employee died from COVID-19, 2 employees say.

Texas Tech University is investigating a video of a woman claiming to be infected with COVID-19 while at a house party.

Top drugmakers made a rare joint pledge not to cut corners on the coronavirus vaccine amid fears shots are being rushed before the presidential election.
Russian chemist who helped create Putin's favorite poison describes how it works and how dangerous it can be
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny at a meeting in Moscow, December 24, 2017. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Russian chemist Vil Mirzayanov was part of the Soviet team that developed the Novichok nerve agent in the early 1970s.
Forms of Novichok have been used to attack people seen as rivals to Russian President Vladimir Putin, most recently opposition politician Aleksei Navalny.
In an interview, Mirzayanov described how the poison is used, what its affects are, and what it feels like to see what he helped create used as "a weapon of mass murder."
Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.


Medical specialists in Germany have determined that Russian opposition politician Aleksei Navalny, who is being treated in a hospital in Berlin after falling ill on August 20 on a flight from Tomsk to Moscow, was poisoned with a form of the Soviet-developed nerve agent Novichok.

The toxin found in Navalny is from the same group of poisons as the one used in the March 2018 poisoning of former Soviet intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in the English city of Salisbury. Both Skripals survived the attack and were released after spending weeks in the hospital.

RFE/RL Russian Service correspondent Mark Krutov spoke with Soviet and Russian chemist Vil Mirzayanov about the two incidents.

Mirzayanov worked from 1965 until 1992 at the State Research Institute of Organic Chemistry and Technology, which was run by the military and the KGB. He was part of the team that developed the Novichok nerve agent in the early 1970s. When he left the institute in 1992, he was the first person to speak publicly of the Novichok group of toxins.
A Soviet chemical weapons officer with a variety of chemical weapons stored at the top-secret Shikhany chemical weapons base during a visit by foreign observers, October 4, 1987. John Thor Dahlburg/AP

RFE/RL: The Novichok that was used in Great Britain caused considerable environmental harm. We all remember seeing emergency workers in hazardous-materials gear working at the places where Sergei and Yulia Skripal had been. One resident of Salisbury died after coming into contact with a perfume bottle containing traces of Novichok. There was talk that whole buildings might have to be evacuated and destroyed. Why did nothing like this happen in Aleksei Navalny's case?


Vil Mirzayanov: The key was the method used. Sergei and Yulia Skripal were poisoned by coming into contact with Novichok through the skin … In Navalny's case, most likely, the Novichok entered his system through the digestive tract. I believe that in this case, a different version of Novichok was used, one with the code name A-261.

Instead of a substance from the amidine group, they attached [crystalline] guanidine to the Novichok molecule. This was done by the creator of Novichok, Pyotr Kirpichev. For one thing, this enabled them to increase the toxicity of the agent by about 10 times compared to that of the substance used in Salisbury. Also, it is a solid substance. It can be mixed with sugar or added into a packet with tea. You only need a few milligrams to kill someone.
A English police officer at a cordon around a public litter bin in Salisbury after a man and woman were exposed to the Novichok nerve agent, July 5, 2018. Jack Taylor/Getty Images

RFE/RL: Why didn't Navalny die?

Mirzayanov: It is always a question when the target doesn't die. Maybe he was given a nonlethal dose. Maybe the goal was not to kill him but to put him out of commission and leave him disabled.


RFE/RL: The doctors in Germany say the indications are that Navalny is slowly recovering. As we all know, the Skripals survived their poisoning. But you seem to think that the effects for Navalny could be permanent.

Mirzayanov: That is because I have not heard of any cases of complete recovery following poisoning by an organophosphate chemical-warfare agent. The people who came into contact with such substances during the Soviet period never returned to their previous work. The doctors say that Navalny will recover. But I have my doubts. The [neurotransmitter] acetylcholine is responsible for the transmission of signals in the brain that control many functions — vision, the muscles, metabolism. As a result of this poisoning, these connections can be irreversibly harmed or destroyed.
Military personnel in protective suits investigate the poisoning of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, England, March 11, 2018. Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty

RFE/RL: If we are indeed talking about a different form of Novichok, is it one that is less dangerous for bystanders?

Mirzayanov: Yes. If it is a solid substance, it has a virtually harmless level of vaporization. I would even say no vaporization. It could not even pass through a sheet of paper. It would also be harmless for the "operator," as the terrorist is usually called. He can carry it about and place it into someone's tea even with his bare hands. Kirpichev devised the solid form of Novichok and tested it at the Shikhany laboratory. It proved to be 10 times more lethal than the previously developed forms, A-230 and A-232.

I have never seen A-261, but apparently it can be produced in many forms. In this case, most likely it was a powder.

RFE/RL: When Navalny was still in the hospital in Omsk, people were saying that they were not letting him be transferred to Germany in order to allow time for the poison to be processed through the body. Does this make sense, or can Novichok be detected even after a period of weeks?

Mirzayanov: Of course, the human body tries to get rid of poison. From this point of view, the actions of the Russian authorities make sense. The longer they held him, the more of the poison would be processed.

But we know from the example of the Skripals that once Novichok has entered the body, it does not quickly disappear. It can be detected even after a month.
Salisbury Novichok poisoning suspects Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov on CCTV on Fisherton Road, Salisbury, March 4, 2018. Metropolitan Police via Getty Images

RFE/RL: How do you think the German doctors were able to detect the Novichok in Navalny

Mirzayanov: At the hospital in Omsk, they were most likely not able to do the necessary analysis. Most likely, they simply do not have the equipment and the qualified personnel necessary. It is very expensive equipment — a mass spectrometer alone costs hundreds of thousands of dollars. And the computers must have known versions of Novichok in their databases. I described these versions in my book, which was originally published in 2007. I imagine that, after it was published, all advanced countries synthesized small quantities and submitted them to mass spectrometry.

RFE/RL: The doctors in Omsk said Navalny's analyses were sent to Moscow and that the laboratory there found no evidence of poison. Could it be that Moscow did not have the necessary equipment?

Mirzayanov: Of course, Moscow has such equipment, which is required by its participation in the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). Within the CWC framework, inspections are carried out and analyses are performed. Of course, it is another matter whether they would want to announce the results of their analyses if they were even carried out. The security services would not allow that.
Navalny is detained by police outside a courthouse in Moscow, February 24, 2014. REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva

RFE/RL: There were reports that Germany asked England for assistance. And also Bulgaria, where it is believed that arms dealer Emilian Gebrev was poisoned by Novichok in 2015. What do you make of this?


Mirzayanov: Well, the more information you have, the better. But I doubt that the Bulgarians would be able to help the Germans much in identifying the poison. The Germans and the English have very good equipment. Most likely, with the Bulgarians they were exchanging information on treatments.

RFE/RL: How did you feel personally when you found out that, just two years after the poisoning of the Skripals, Aleksei Navalny had also been poisoned by Novichok?

Mirzayanov: As someone who participated in the creation of Novichok, I always feel as if I have a certain amount of guilt in such cases. It always affects me quite negatively … I never thought that the things that we developed and spent so much of our time and abilities on would someday become a weapon of terror. We always thought that it was necessary for the defense of the country.

But later I understood that it is simply a weapon of mass murder that affects defenseless people. Not combatants, but civilians. Soldiers can always wear protective gear, and nothing would happen to them even if they were exposed to Novichok. But even after I understood this, I never thought things would reach such a shameful point.Read the original article on Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Copyright 2020.

Reprinted with the permission of RFE/RL, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.Follow Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty on Twitter.
Wrocław clinic uses ‘super viruses’ to battle rebellious bacteria
JOANNA JASIŃSKA MARCH 22, 2020
The therapy being pioneered in Wrocław could help end the threat posed by super-bugs.Kalbar /TFN

A pioneering institute in Wrocław is working on experimental therapy to combat antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections.

For 15 years, the Polish Academy of Sciences Phage Therapy Unit at the Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy’s Medical Centre has been looking for a cure for patients who have lost all hope that their ailments could be treated.

Doctor Ryszard Międzybrodzki with Anna Kabała, one of the Medical Unit's patients. Kalbar/TFN

TFN travelled to Wrocław to discover how a revolutionary therapy the clinic is working on could be the answer to an ever-mutating threats to our health.

In short, phage therapy utilises bacteriophages – bacterial viruses which attack only bacterial cells. A patient is treated with individually matched viruses, which are able to destroy different bacteria including those which are resistant to antibiotics and which cause life-threatening infections.

The Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy’s Medical Centre has been looking for a cure for patients who have lost all hope that their ailments could disappear.Kalbar/TFN

Professor Andrzej Górski, the institute’s director, told TFN: “Our centre treats antibiotic-resistant infections. The great problem in medicine today is that we are becoming defenceless against the bacteria that cause them.

“Although the market is big, as it is estimated that about $30 to 40 billion are spent on antibiotics annually, antibiotic resistance crisis is growing,” he continued.

With both bacteria becoming harder to kill and pharmaceutical companies finding providing newer and newer drugs unprofitable, a change in approach will be necessary.


“Our centre treats antibiotic-resistant infections. The great problem in medicine today is that we are becoming defenceless against the bacteria that cause them,” says Professor Andrzej Górski.Kalbar/TFN

“Poland has a long tradition in this sphere, because, in fact, the first attempts to use phage therapy were made soon after regaining independence,” explained the professor. Phages were first observed in 1896 in the River Ganges by Ernest Hanbury Hankin, who noticed their antibacterial properties.

The first tries at phage therapy were attempted before World War II, but the medical documentation from that time isn’t credible according to today’s requirements. After the war, research on phages in Wrocław resumed in the 1960s.

The Institute’s Medical Unit is supported by the Bacteriophage Laboratory, which stores over 600 different phages, carries out phage typing procedures, prepares the phage formulations for patients and performs some other necessary tests.

The Institute is supported by the Bacteriophage Laboratory, which stores over 600 different phages.Kalbar/TFN

Doctor Beata Weber-Dąbrowska, the principal specialist at the institute’s laboratory, said: “Phages naturally occur everywhere where bacteria are found, so even in the most extreme conditions such as hot springs, Arctic waters or the sands of the Sahara.”

To expand their collection of phages and be able to combat a wider variety of bacteria, the researchers are constantly working on obtaining new strains.

Phages, just like other viruses, are selective when it comes to which bacteria they’re effective against. The virus will attach itself to a bacteria and inject it with its own genome. The genome replaces the bacterial one and halts the infection, making the bacteria unable to reproduce.

Phages can spring up anywhere: from Artic waters to desert sands.Kalbar/TFN

The main advantage of using phage therapy is its precision. By choosing the right type of phages doctors can be sure it will attack only the bacteria they want to counter. Doctor Weber-Dąbrowska said: “It doesn't have any effect on the body (...). We all carry phages, as I said they are everywhere, so, for example, we have a very large amount of phages isolated from samples taken from patients.

“The best environment for phages is the gastrointestinal tract because there are lots of bacteria,” she added. “Therefore, phages breed wonderfully there, but mainly for those gut bacteria.”

The Institute’s Medical Unit is not a clinic. As a research centre first and foremost, they accept only a handful of cases – patients who often have been struggling with recurring infections for years and were unable to find help elsewhere.

“This is an experimental therapy. We don’t have indisputable scientific proof that it will work,” says Doctor Ryszard Międzybrodzki.Kalbar/TFN

Since the therapy is experimental and not yet officially approved by European law for common use, the requirements are very strict. So far, they have only admitted 700 patients.

Doctor Ryszard Międzybrodzki is one of the physicians working with patients from all over the world who come to the Institute. The doctor stressed: “This is an experimental therapy. We don’t have indisputable scientific proof that it will work.

“Our group of patients are in a difficult situation because they aren’t people who are suffering from the infection for the first time and decide to use phages instead of antibiotics.”

The future of the clinic remains uncertain.Kalbar/TFN

According to Polish and European law, as well as medical ethics, to attempt the therapy, doctors have to be convinced the therapy has a chance to work. During the qualification process, they carry out an extensive examination of the strains of viruses and bacteria the patient is carrying, to know what they are dealing with.

“After qualifying, the most important factors are to grow the patient’s bacteria, check if the laboratory has the corresponding bacteriophages, and prepare the phage compound. And after that we can start the therapy,” explained Doctor Międzybrodzki.

The patients suffer from a variety of infections – respiratory, urinary, genital, infected wounds – so the compound is always directly applied where it’s needed and sometimes it can be swallowed. After a while the patients' microbiology is examined once again, to find out which strains were eliminated and which reproduced.

Doctor Beata Weber-Dąbrowska, the principal specialist at the institute’s laboratory.Kalbar/TFN

As such, the treatment is always individually prepared for each case. To reinforce the cure, it is sometimes combined with antibiotics.

Anna Kabała from Wrocław is one of the institute’s patients. Ten years ago, when pregnant, she contracted the E.coli bacteria. “During these 10 years, I've exhausted all possibilities of regular treatment. I was sent from doctor to doctor, at first unaware of how serious the infection was. After years of intensive antibiotic therapy, the options for administering antibiotics in hospitals and elsewhere ended.”

For 10 years Anna had to deal with the pain in the urinary tract and even kidney infection. The long-term illness had a severe impact on her daily life. She even had strange reactions from the people around her, who would be afraid to shake her hand, even though they couldn't contract the infection from her.

We carry phages in our bodies says Doctor Beata Weber-Dąbrowska.Kalbar/TFN

Now, after year and a half of therapy, Anna is feeling much better, and most importantly, the painful symptoms of her illness are gone.

“I regret I didn’t come here earlier,” Anna said. “There are great professionals here, specialists in very difficult cases. Thanks to them, I got my life back.”

More and more patients have been healed thanks to the phage therapy and two branches of the unit opened in Kraków and Czestochowa, but its future remains uncertain. Without a proper clinical trial, it remains a therapeutic experiment and cannot be used as a fully-fledged alternative to antibiotics.

“Everything is very promising, but it's not proof in the sense of science, according to legal and scientific standards,” states Professor Górski.Kalbar/TFN

The institute’s resources, both in terms of finances and personnel, are meagre in comparison to the potential uses of their research, which could be far more than just therapy against bacteria.

“It's just a matter of a lack of resources. The clinical trial would allow the registration of the experimental therapy for general use,” stated Professor Górski.

“The bottom line is that it has great potential. We don't know yet if the phages will break through as a therapy for drug-resistant bacterial infections. It's not clear right now. Everything is very promising, but it's not proof in the sense of science, according to legal and scientific standards.”

 
Black Left Views on American Elections Matter

By: Arnold August
Published 24 July 2020 TELESUR.COM

"The only way for the Black working class in the U.S. to realize justice through presidential elections is by waging a relentless struggle to build a formidable alternative party to both capitalist, imperialist, Republican and Democratic parties.”


Netfa Freeman is an organizer for Pan-African Community Action and the Coordinating Committee of the Black Alliance for Peace. He is also a radio talk-show host of the popular D.C.-based Voices with Vision and an active supporter of the Cuban and Bolivarian revolutions. In an exclusive online interview for teleSur from Washington D.C., Freeman asserted that the principal message he has for readers is: “The Black left perspective is that our struggle is for power.” In response to a question regarding illusions about the Democratic Party as an alternative to the Trump/Republicans, he stated:

"The only way for the Black working class in the U.S. to realize justice through presidential elections is by waging a relentless struggle to build a formidable alternative party to both capitalist, imperialist, Republican and Democratic parties.”

He is of course referring to a party that includes all races.

Everything Against the Two-Party System. Everything…

The “lesser evil” narrative is overbearingly and pervasively poisonous in U.S. politics. It inevitably leads to a vicious and continuous ideological war, not restricted to presidential election cycles. Freeman continues:

“Black people in the U.S. must once and for all reject the false notion of a lesser evil between the candidates of those two parties. Both of them embrace and sustain genocidal policies against people of African descent domestically and internationally. Unlike Trump, the record of anti-Black policies that Joe Biden [as a Senator in Congress since 1972] has supported goes back to 1975: as a racist supporter of segregation and in 1994 co-authoring a ‘crime’ bill’ that helped to proliferate the mass incarceration of Black and Brown people. While Biden was Vice President under Obama, the value of military equipment transferred to domestic police departments increased by 2,400%,and has been used primarily against Black and Brown communities.”

The “Lesser of Two Evils”? Some straight Talk…

When asked to elaborate further on the “lesser of two evils” pressure, his response consisted of a stinging indictment of the U.S. political system:

“I always say that an unspoken prerequisite for being president of the U.S. is being able to bomb babies in another country and pretend that there are no political prisoners in the U.S., while several have been languishing in prison since the 70s.”

Does his reference to “bombing babies” include the war Obama initiated in 2015 against Yemen? Or was it only the tip of the iceberg that was revealed when a U.S.-manufactured bomb killed 40 Yemeni infants? Who can forget the horrific scenes of the bipartisan American war against Vietnam when the world witnessed women and babies lying in ditches after being massacred in Mai Lai by Marines? Freeman may use shock tactics sometimes, but is it not valid to use such methods to shake up the smug acceptance of the two-party system and its corollary, “the lesser of two evils”?

Mainstream media and both corporate parties never mention the more than 50 political prisoners in the U.S. The majority of them are Black and Indigenous, some were involved in the Black Panther Party, Native movements and other revolutionary movements in the 1960s and 70s, and more recently as a result of the demonstrations after the police murder of the Black youth Mike Brown in Ferguson, Missouri (2014) and the stand off in Standing Rock (2016) by Indigenous and their allies. In fact, they are the survivors of the state’s assassination program carried out against their leaders. If there is one people in the world who can fully appreciate the refusal of the American left to overlook these political prisoners, who are festering and still resisting in the cruel and violent jungle of the U.S. prison system, it is the Cuban people. The entire Cuban nation, with the full support of countries such as Venezuela, refused to accept as inevitable that the Cuban Five be abandoned.

Since the modern-day lynching of George Floyd in May, one of the most important visions arising out of the current rebellion is the following: the struggle in the U.S. against the racist state cannot be separated from its imperialist wars abroad, as Freeman graphically mentioned above. The most persecuted and oppressed population in the U.S., African Americans, are currently in the very forefront of selflessly insisting that there can be no peace in the U.S. unless there is peace for other peoples in the world that are victims of U.S. aggression.

Malcolm X on the 2020 Presidential Elections

Was it not Martín Luther King Jr., in speeches given just before his assassination, who linked the domestic situation with the U.S. war against Vietnam? War, militarism, racism and MLK’s concerns about generalized across-the-board poverty are carefully censured from the current debate being fostered by the ongoing revolt. The U.S. elite cynically retains only MLK’s “I have a dream” speech, thus conveniently white-washing his legacy and soothing the conscience of liberals by providing them with a buzz word for cooptation.

Similarly, Malcolm X is cited by liberals very vaguely as if his thinking and action were some romantic notion of days gone by. However, his legacy carries on the in the minds and hearts of millions of Americans of all races. Malcolm X spelled it out long ago:

"The white conservatives aren't friends of the Negro, but they at least don't try to hide it. They are like wolves; they show their teeth in a snarl that keeps the Negro always aware of where he stands with them. But the white liberals are foxes, who also show their teeth to the Negro but pretend that they are smiling. The white liberals are more dangerous than the conservatives; they lure the Negro, and as the Negro runs from the growling wolf, he flees into the open jaws of the ‘smiling’ fox. One is the wolf, the other is a fox. No matter what, they’ll both eat you.”

Fidel Castro knew who to meet during his visit to New York in 1960: he met with Malcolm X.

However, let us leave the last word to a “neutral” expert on American politics: the non-black but well-known Australian journalist Caitlin Johnstone.

“If these protests end it won’t be because tyrants in the Republican Party like Donald Trump succeed in making the case for beating them into silence with the U.S. military. It will be because liberal manipulators succeeded in co-opting and stagnating its momentum.”

True?