Saturday, October 01, 2022

Students in Uganda stay away from schools following an outbreak of Ebola

Ebola virus spreads in Uganda -

Copyright © africanewsBADRU KATUMBA/AFP 
By Philip Andrew Churm


The Madudu Church of Uganda Primary School is eerily quiet following an outbreak of Ebola which is keeping children away.

The subcounty in Mubende District iis the epicentre of a recently announced outbreak of the disease.

There have already been several deaths and parents are keeping their children at home rather than take any risks.

Robert Kasirye is the deputy headteacher at Mubende Church of Uganda Primary School and says the impact on student numbers has been huge.

"The school enrolment is 692 pupils, now we have only 16. It is due to Ebola. Parents fear their pupils to be affected by this, we can say it is a pandemic disease."

Even some teachers are opting to stay home in fear of catching the virus, which appears to be spreading. That is despite government advice for schools to stay open.

David Ssali is a teacher at Madudu CoU Primary School and says: "We have sensitised them and showed them some of the materials, which were available to us but still they have that fear because of seeing the way children and other old people are dying."

But there are concerns students in Madudu will be at a disadvantage compared to other parts of the country as they miss classes and even exams.

The Uganda National Examinations Board, the body mandated to set exams for all schools in the country, recently released its examination roadmap for 2022.

Rosemary Byabashaija, head of Mubende District Ebola Task Force, is keen to ensure children do not miss out on their education.

"The curriculum in the entire country is one; the other schools are going on," she says. "This is the last term in the year. They will all sit for their exams, they will not say Mubende will sit another time they are going to sit at the same time.

"So, I would propose and appeal to our teachers and leaders to see that we just need to step up the measures of, seeing that people are not getting in direct contact with each other, but the classes and schools should continue."

Authorities are encouraging schools to put extra measures in place to reassure parents.

The latest outbreak of Ebola was announced on 20 September. Since then, there have been over 35 positive cases, with many unaccounted for deaths.

Worry and Fear': Incessant Israeli Drones Heighten Gaza Anxiety

Saturday, 1 October, 2022 -

Children react following an Israeli air strike in Gaza City on August 6, 2022. 
(AFP)
Asharq Al-Awsat

Gaza teenager Bissam says she has trouble sleeping and concentrating as the buzzing sound of Israeli military drones above the crowded Palestinian enclave drives her to distraction.

When she is at home in the cramped family apartment, the 18-year-old said she feels that "the drone is constantly with me in my bedroom -- worry and fear don't leave our homes.

"Sometimes I have to put the pillow on my head so I don't hear its buzz," she said, adding that the drone noise gives her headaches.

Unmanned surveillance aircraft have become an integral part of Israel's 15-year-old blockade of the impoverished enclave, and 2.3 million Palestinians endure their incessant hum, AFP said.

Bissam, whose family requested their surname be withheld for security reasons, said that together with the street noise, the drones create an unbearable cacophony.

"At night I try to review the lessons for my exams, but I can't read because of this annoying racket," she said from the cramped Gaza City apartment she shares with her parents and five siblings.

Each month, Israel uses drones above Gaza for 4,000 flying hours -- the equivalent of deploying five of the unmanned aircraft permanently in the sky -- the military told AFP.

The drones "collect intelligence data 24 hours a day", said Omri Dror, a commander from Israel's Palmachim airbase where the aircraft take off.

- 'I'm scared like my children' -


During an 11-day war in May 2021 between Israel and Gaza fighters, the Israeli army deployed 25 drones for 6,000 flight hours to constantly monitor the territory, according to army data.

It intensified that presence during a three-day conflict in August this year, using 30 drones for a total of more than 2,000 flight hours.

Bissam's mother Rim said she struggles to calm her children when the drones fly overhead, fearing an Israeli air strike could follow even if there is no active conflict.

"I'm basically scared like them. How can I reassure my children?" the 42-year-old said.

The din above the family home is particularly acute due to its proximity to a base of the Al-Qassam Brigades -- the armed wing of Gaza rulers Hamas -- but drones are also heard above busy shopping streets.

"The kids sleep intermittently. We wake up, we sleep, then we wake up" again, Rim said.

- 'Always the drone is there' -

In Gaza's southern city of Khan Yunis, psychiatrist Iman Hijjo treats Palestinians whose conflict trauma is triggered by the sound of Israeli drones.

Israel and Hamas have fought four wars over the past 15 years.

"When an insect moves around you, you can hit it, but not the drone," Hijjo said, adding that the situation leads to a "sense of powerlessness".

"The drones keep Gaza's skies closed, without a horizon or hope," she said.

Children suffer "fear and anxiety" as a direct result of the drones, Hijjo said, lamenting a lack of scientific research to determine longer-term impacts.

"Children need to feel safe in order to develop," fellow psychiatrist Sami Oweida said. "But with the presence of drones in the sky, these feelings cannot flourish."

The unmanned aircraft are so omnipresent that artists have even referenced them in their works.

The "sound of drones flying above my family and friends stops the games, the chatting and the laughter", Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha wrote in his recent English-language collection "Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear".

He told AFP that "the buzzing of the drones and the intermittent raids of the F16 (warplanes) have become an integral part of our lives".

"I write about the sky, the sea, the clouds, the setting sun, my children, my neighbors," he added. "But always, the drone is there. It fails to leave us."

Booking.com issues warning on West Bank



AFP
Published: 01 October ,2022: 

Online travel agency Booking.com has added warning banners to both Israeli and Palestinian properties in the occupied West Bank, under a new policy on conflict zones, the company said Saturday.

For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.

“Please review any travel advisories provided by your government to make an informed decision about your stay in this area, which may be considered conflict-affected,” the company’s website now says, in searches for accommodation in Jewish settlements or Palestinian locales.

The update comes as tensions see near-daily arrests and clashes in the West Bank, resulting in the deaths of dozens of Palestinians, many of them armed militants.

The warning, which went live on Friday, does not appear on properties in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem or Golan Heights, both territories which like the West Bank, were seized in the 1967 Six-Day War.

According to Booking.com, similar messages have appeared for months on properties in breakaway northern Cyprus, while Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh and South Ossetia were included in the latest update, with plans to “roll out banner notifications in more than 30 regions over the next few months.”

The warnings are “to ensure that customers have the information they need to make informed decisions about destinations they are considering, which may be categorized as conflict-affected areas and which may pose risks to travelers,” Bookings.com said in a statement.

The West Bank warning was lauded by Human Rights Watch (HRW) as a “welcome step towards informing consumers that they are renting homes in occupied territories.”

But Omar Shakir, its Israel and Palestine director, said the fact that Booking.com operated at all in the West Bank constituted a “contribution to serious rights abuses.”

“The company should stop brokering rentals in illegal settlements in places like the occupied West Bank,” he said in a statement.

HRW has been pressuring international companies to cease their West Bank operations.

In 2019, online accommodation booking platform Airbnb announced it would remove listings in Israeli settlements in the West Bank, but it reversed the decision as it battled lawsuits in Israel and the United States.

Read more:

Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces during clash in West Bank

US calls for probe of 7-year-old Palestinian boy’s death during Israeli raids

In West Bank, soldiers raid, seize money, clash with residents, make arrests, and in Gaza attack fishermen

01/October/2022 

Israeli army jeeps raiding towns in the West Bank.

RAMALLAH/GAZA, Saturday, October 1, 2022 (WAFA) – Israeli soldiers raided and seized money, clashed with residents and made arrests in the West Bank while in Gaza, the Israeli navy attacked fishermen’s boats with shells and machine gunfire, according to various sources.

Soldiers raided Jalazon refugee camp, north of Ramallah, early this morning, broke into homes and seized a large sum of money, according to Palestinian security sources.

Residents clashed with the invading soldiers, who fired rubber-coated metal bullets and tear gas at the Palestinians causing one injury by a rubber bullet, who was admitted to hospital and reported in stable condition.

Confrontations were also reported near the village of Arraba, south of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, said local sources, after the army had set up a checkpoint today near the town and stopped and checked papers of Palestinians on the road. There were no reports of injuries in the confrontations despite the soldiers firing tear gas and sound bombs at the Palestinians.

At the same time, soldiers this morning blocked an access road to Jenin city and prevented people from using that road, forcing them to look for alternative routes to move around.

Similarly, soldiers this morning set up a checkpoint at the entrance to the village of Deir Abu Mishaal, northwest of Ramallah, stopped vehicles and checked papers causing serious traffic jams and a long line of cars waiting to leave or enter the village.

Meanwhile, soldiers today detained Palestinians in the south of the West Bank after raiding their homes, three from various areas of the city of Hebron, and four others, including a 13-yar-old child detained in Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem, according to Palestinian security sources.

In the Israeli-besieged Gaza Strip, Israeli navy ships today fired shells and machine gunfire at Palestinian fishermen’s boats sailing in the northern coast of the Strip, reported WAFA correspondent.

He said the navy fired several shells and shot several rounds of machine gunfire and tear gas at the fishermen forcing them to return to shore without any reports of injuries.

Israel, as part of its 16-year-old air, sea and land blockade on the Gaza Strip, allows fishermen to sail for only three nautical miles in the northern coast and six in the southern coast.

M.K.

Israel forces, settlers attacked 15 mosques in West Bank since start of year

September 30, 2022 

Palestinians stage a protest against Jewish settlers' raid at Al-Aqsa Mosque
 in Gaza City, Gaza on September 25, 2022 [Mustafa Hassona - Anadolu Agency]

September 30, 202
Israeli occupation forces and right-wing Jewish settlers have attacked 15 mosques since the beginning of the year, Palestinian Minister of Endowments and Religious Affairs Hatem Al-Bakri said in a statement yesterday.

Bakri explained that these violations come as part of the occupation's policy aimed at allowing settlers to carry out aggression without restriction, which could push the region into a religious war.

In 2021, the Palestinian Authority documented attacks on more than ten mosques in the West Bank, in addition to dozens of others that resulted from Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip.
Receding ice leaves Canada's polar bears at rising risk

If female bears go more than 117 days without adequate food, they struggle to nurse their young.

PUBLISHED
SEP 29, 2022

CHURCHILL, Canada - Sprawled on rocky ground far from sea ice, a lone Canadian polar bear sits under a dazzling sun, his white fur utterly useless as camouflage.

It's mid-summer on the shores of Hudson Bay, and life for the enormous male has been moving in slow motion, far from the prey that keeps him alive: seals.

This is a critical time for the region's polar bears. Every year from late June, when the bay ice disappears - shrinking until it dots the blue vastness like scattered confetti - they must move onto shore to begin a period of forced fasting.

But that period is lasting longer and longer as temperatures rise - putting them in danger's way.

Once on solid ground, the bears "typically have very few options for food", explains Mr Geoff York, a biologist with Polar Bear International (PBI).

Mr York, an American, spends several weeks each year in Churchill, a small town on the edge of the Arctic in the northern Canadian province of Manitoba. There, he follows the fortunes of the endangered animals.

This is one of the best spots from which to study life on Hudson Bay, though transportation generally requires either an all-terrain vehicle adapted to the rugged tundra, or an inflatable boat for navigating the bay's waters.

Mr York invited an AFP team to join him on an expedition in early August.

Near the impressively large male bear lazing in the sun is a pile of fishbones - nowhere near enough to sustain this 3.5m, 600kg beast.

"There could be a beluga whale carcass they might be able to find, (or a) naive seal near shore, but generally they're just fasting," Mr York said. "They lose nearly a kilogram of body weight every day that they're on land."

Climate warming is affecting the Arctic three times as fast as other parts of the world - even four times, according to some recent studies. So sea ice, the habitat of the polar bear, is gradually disappearing.

A report published two years ago in the journal Nature Climate Change suggested that this trend could lead to the near-extinction of these majestic animals: 1,200 of them were counted on the western shores of Hudson Bay in the 1980s. Today, the best estimate is 800.

Summer scarcity

Each summer, sea ice begins melting earlier and earlier, while the first hard freeze of winter comes later and later. Climate change thus threatens the polar bears' very cycle of life. They have fewer opportunities to build up their reserves of fat and calories before the period of summer scarcity.

The polar bear - technically known as the Ursus maritimus - is a meticulous carnivore that feeds principally on the white fat that envelops and insulates a seal's body.

But these days, this superpredator of the Arctic sometimes has to feed on seaweed - as a mother and her baby were seen doing not far from the port of Churchill, the self-declared "Polar Bear Capital".

Today, these enormous beasts live a precarious existence.

If female bears go more than 117 days without adequate food, they struggle to nurse their young, said Dr Steve Amstrup, an American who is PBI's lead scientist.

Males, he adds, can go 180 days.

As a result, births have declined, and it has become much rarer for a female to give birth to three cubs, once a common occurrence.

It is a whole ecosystem in decline, and one that 54-year-old Mr York - with his short hair and rectangular glasses - knows by heart after spending more than 20 years roaming the Arctic, first for the ecology organisation WWF and now for PBI.

During a capture in Alaska, a bear sunk its fangs into his leg. Another time, while entering what he thought was an abandoned den, he came nose-to-snout with a female.

Mr York, normally a quiet man, said he "yelled as loud as I ever have in my life".

Today, these enormous beasts live a precarious existence.

"Here in Hudson Bay, in the western and southern parts, polar bears are spending up to a month longer on shore than their parents or grandparents did," Mr York said.

As their physical condition declines, he said, their tolerance for risk rises, and "that might bring them into interaction with people (which) can lead to conflict instead of co-existence".

Patrolling the town

Provincial Polar Bear Patrol Officer Ian Van Nest at the shoreline of the Hudson Bay outside Churchill on Aug 7, 2022. 

Binoculars in hand, Mr Ian Van Nest, a provincial conservation officer, keeps an eye out through the day on the rocks surrounding Churchill, where the bears like to hide.

In this town of 800 inhabitants, which is only accessible by air and train but not by any roads, the bears have begun frequenting the local dump, a source of easy - but potentially harmful - food for them. They could be seen ripping open trash bags, eating plastic or getting their snouts trapped in food tins amid piles of burning waste.

Since then, the town has taken precautions: The dump is now guarded by cameras, fences and patrols.

Across Churchill, people leave cars and houses unlocked in case someone needs to find urgent shelter after an unpleasant encounter with this large land-based carnivore.

Posted on walls around town are the emergency phone numbers to reach Mr Van Nest or his colleagues. When they get an urgent call, they hop in their pickup truck armed with a rifle and a spray can of repellent, wearing protective flak jackets.

Mr Van Nest, who is bearded and in his 30s, takes the job seriously, given the rising number of polar bears in the area.

Sometimes they can be scared off with just "the horn on your vehicle", he said. But other times "we might have to get on foot and grab our shotguns and cracker shells", which issue an explosive sound designed to frighten the animal, "and head onto the rocks and pursue that bear".

Some areas are watched more closely than others - notably around schools as children are arriving in the morning "to ensure that the kids are going to be safe".

There have been some close calls, like the time in 2013 when a woman was grievously injured by a bear in front of her house, before a neighbour - clad in pyjamas and slippers - ran out wielding only his snow shovel to scare the animal away.

Sometimes, the animals have to be sedated, then winched up by a helicopter to be transported to the north, or kept in a cage until winter, when they can again feed on the bay.

Churchill's only "prison" is inhabited entirely by bears, a hangar whose 28 cells can fill up in the autumn as the creatures maraud in mass around town while waiting for the ice to re-form in November.

Planet's air conditioning

A female polar bear and her cub look for something to eat on the shoreline of the Hudson Bay near Churchill on Aug 5, 2022. 

The fate of the polar bear should alarm everyone, said Dr Flavio Lehner, a climate scientist at Cornell University who was part of the expedition, because the Arctic is a good "barometer" of the planet's health.

Since the 1980s, the ice pack in the bay has decreased by nearly 50 per cent in summer, according to the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre.

"We see the more - the faster - changes here, because it is warming particularly fast," said Dr Lehner, who is Swiss.

The region is essential to the health of the global climate because the Arctic, he said, effectively provides the planet's "air conditioning".

"There's this important feedback mechanism of sea ice and snow in general," he said, with frozen areas reflecting 80 per cent of the sun's rays, providing a cooling effect.

When the Arctic loses its capacity to reflect those rays, he said, there will be consequences for temperatures around the globe. Thus, when sea ice melts, the much darker ocean's surface absorbs 80 per cent of the sun's rays, accelerating the warming trend.

A few years ago, scientists feared that the Arctic's summer ice pack was rapidly reaching a climatic "tipping point" and, above a certain temperature, would disappear for good.

But more recent studies show the phenomenon could be reversible, Dr Lehner said.

"Should we ever be able to bring temperatures down again, sea ice will come back," he said. That said, the impact for now is pervasive.

"In the Arctic, climate change is impacting all species," said Dr Jane Waterman, a biologist at the University of Manitoba. "Every single thing is being affected by climate change."

Permafrost - defined as land that is permanently frozen for two successive years - has begun to melt, and in Churchill the very contours of the land have shifted, damaging rail lines and the habitat of wild species.

The entire food chain is under threat, with some non-native species, like certain foxes and wolves, appearing for the first time, endangering Arctic species. Nothing is safe, said Waterman, from the tiniest bacteria to enormous whales.

A summer refuge

A polar bear swims to catch a beluga whale along the coast of Hudson Bay near Churchill on Aug 9, 2022.

That includes the beluga whales that migrate each summer - by the tens of thousands - from Arctic waters to the refuge of the Hudson Bay.

These small white whales are often spotted in the bay's vast blue waters. Swimming in small groups, they like to follow the boats of scientists who have come to study them, seemingly taking pleasure in showing off their large round heads and spouting just feet from captivated observers.

The smallest ones, grey in colour, cling to their mothers' backs in this estuary, with its relatively warm waters, where they find protection from killer whales and plentiful nourishment.

But there has been "a shift in prey availability for beluga whales in some areas of the Arctic", said Ms Valeria Vergara, an Argentine researcher who has spent her life studying the beluga.

As the ice cover shrinks, "there's less under the surface of the ice for the phytoplankton that in turn will feed the zooplankton that in turn will feed big fish", said Ms Vergara, who is with the Raincoast Conservation Foundation.

The beluga has to dive deeper to find food, and that uses up precious energy.

And another danger lurks: Some climate models suggest that as early as 2030, with the ice fast melting, boats will be able to navigate the Hudson Bay year-round.

Sound pollution is a major problem for the species - known as the "canary of the seas" - whose communication depends on the clicking and whistling sounds it makes.

The beluga depends on sound-based communication to determine its location, find its way and to locate food, Ms Vergara said.

Raincoast Conservation Foundation's Senior Research Scientist Valeria Vergara poses in Churchill, northern Canada. 

Thanks to a hydrophone on the "Beluga Boat" that Ms Vergara uses, humans can monitor the "conversations" of whales far below the surface.

Ms Vergara, 53, describes their communications as "very complex", and she can distinguish between the cries made by mother whales keeping in contact with their youngsters.

To the untrained ear, the sound is a cacophony, but clearly that of an animated community.

Scientists wonder, however, how much longer such communities will last?

Far from the Arctic ice, one lonely beluga became lost in the waters of France's Seine river before dying in August. And in May a polar bear meandered its way deep into Canada's south, shocking those who discovered it along the Saint Lawrence River. 

PHOTOS AFP

PATRIARCHY IS EVERYWHERE
Women working at Australia’s Antarctica camps were sexually harassed, report finds


‘Women have to work in the field with their abusers for weeks at a time’

Alisha Rahaman Sarkar

Australian women working at research stations in Antarctica have endured a widespread and predatory culture of sexual harassment in the male-dominated field, a new report has found.

Women experienced sexual harassment in the form of requests for sex, uninvited touching, displays of offensive or pornographic material and sex-based insults, according to the report, based on the external review of culture at Antarctic research stations.

The women also described “a homophobic culture” on stations.

Some women claimed they felt compelled to hide their menstruation while on field missions because of the fear of being judged as incompetent by their male counterparts.

They were also forced to ration menstrual products such as tampons and at times improvise due to lack of availability, revealed the report, commissioned by the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD).


Recommended

The AAD runs four permanent research stations akin to “small towns” in Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic.

Meredith Nash, who wrote the report, said some women feel unsafe at the Antarctic stations and it would be unethical to continue sending women until their safety can be assured.

“Women have to work in the field with their abusers for weeks at a time because they simply can’t leave,” Ms Nash told the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC).

The Nash inquiry was initiated after several women raised harassment complaints.

Australia’s environment minister Tanya Plibersek said she was “gobsmacked” by the findings of the report. “As a minister, I take a zero-tolerance response to sexual harassment in any workplace I am responsible for,” she said.

“I have been very clear with the department. We need to make sure that every person working either at head office or in the Antarctic feels safe and if they make a complaint, they can make that complaint without any fear of victimisation,” she told ABC.

“I hope the report will be a catalyst for further change.”

Following the damning findings, Kim Ellis, the director of AAD, said in a statement to staff members that the behaviours needed to improve and urged people to report concerns.

“I am deeply concerned by the experiences it describes at our workplaces where people have been sexually harassed, discriminated against and excluded,” Mr Ellis said.

“It doesn’t matter how many people may have experienced this behaviour – we know that under-reporting is almost certainly a factor – the fact that anyone at all experiences this treatment is not OK,” he added.

‘Predatory,’ widespread sexual harassment on Australia’s Antarctic research bases, report finds

By Martin Goillandeau and Tara Subramaniam, CNN
Sat October 1, 2022

Mawson Station, Australian Antarctic Territory, Antarctica.Auscape/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
CNN —

Australian women working on research bases in Antarctica have been plagued by a widespread culture of sexual harassment, a recently released report found.

The report, commissioned by the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD), notes that the women reported unwelcome requests for sex, inappropriate sexual comments and displays of offensive or pornographic material.

“Given the underrepresentation of women in the AAP (Australian Antarctica Program) (especially during winter) some women also described the culture as ‘predatory’ and objectifying,” the report said, while other participants described a homophobic culture on stations.

The report, conducted by associate professor Meredith Nash from the University of Tasmania, also revealed female expeditioners feel they “must go to great lengths to make their menstruation invisible” and go through “additional psychological and physical labor to manage” menstruation, including changing their menstrual products without privacy or adequate sanitation.

Australia’s Environment and Water Minister Tanya Plibersek said in an interview with Australian public broadcaster ABC she was “gobsmacked” to read the report.

“Let me be absolutely clear: there is no place for sexual harassment or inappropriate behavior in any workplace,” Plibersek said in a statement Thursday, calling the treatment described in the report as “unacceptable.”

The report made recommendations on how to change the culture at the stations, including the creation of an “equity and inclusion task force.”

Plibersek said Australia’s Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water is working through the recommendations.

Australia is not alone in combating these issues.

The report on the Australian research bases in Antarctica comes a month after the US National Science Foundation (NSF) released an assessment of the US Antarctic Program which found that “sexual harassment, stalking, and sexual assault are ongoing, continuing problems in the USAP community.”
UK
Striking rail and postal workers to demonstrate in demand for fair pay

Lauren Gilmour - 16h ago

Passengers have been warned to expect “significant disruption” as rail workers across several companies walk out this weekend in an ongoing row over pay.


RMT, Aslef and CWU members will gather at Edinburgh Waverley on Saturday for a demonstration as they take further strike action
 (Andrew Milligan/PA)© PA Wire

Unions Aslef and the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) have voted “resoundingly” to take strike action against the companies they say have failed to give rail workers a pay rise matching inflation.

Network Rail workers who are members of the RMT are staging two 24-hour stoppages on Saturday October 1 and Saturday October 8, as part of a dispute over pay.

ScotRail has warned passengers that “significant disruption” will be expected on the network as signallers and safety critical staff walk out as part of the RMT strikes.

A handful of services are expected to run on key routes, with the rail operator urging travellers to check the app and website ahead of travelling.

While the rail operator usually runs about 2,150 services per day, over the next two Saturdays it will only run trains on 11 routes across the central belt, Fife, and the borders.

On October 1 and October 8, ScotRail will run 379 trains – one more than it was able to put on during strike action in August.

While ScotRail drivers are not striking, drivers across other companies such as LNER and the TransPennine Express will walk out on Saturday.

Services will resume on Sunday, but these may face disruption as signal boxes are restarted.

Postal workers from the Communication Workers Union will also take strike action on Saturday in an ongoing dispute over changes in working terms and conditions.

Rail and postal workers will gather at Edinburgh Waverley on Saturday morning to show their “mutual solidarity” for each other and demand a fair wage from their employers.

Aslef Regional Organiser Kevin Lindsay said: “Workers have had enough of bosses paying themselves huge dividends and salaries whilst expecting workers to take real terms wage cuts.

“We are delighted to be standing shoulder to shoulder with our brothers and sisters in the RMT and CWU who are also facing the same fight and struggle as our members.

“We will also stand together and show our solidarity with other workers in struggle.”

David Simpson, ScotRail service delivery director, said the knock-on effects of the industrial action would impact on services on both Sunday October 2 and Sunday October 9 as well.

Andrew Haines, Network Rail chief executive, said: “Despite our best efforts to compromise and find a breakthrough in talks, rail unions remain intent on continuing and co-ordinating their strike action.

“This serves only to ensure our staff forgo even more of their pay unnecessarily, as well as causing even more disruption for our passengers and further damaging the railway’s recovery from the pandemic.

“Passengers who want to travel this Saturday, and indeed next Wednesday and next Saturday, are asked only to do so if absolutely necessary. Those who must travel should expect disruption and make sure they check when their last train will depart.”

Further industrial action will take place later in the month, when RMT members working for ScotRail will walk out on strike on Monday October 10.
Cow’s milk becomes pricier than non-dairy alternatives in UK

01 October 2022 - BY KATIE LINSELL

With prices rising for everything from food to utility bills, milk has been hard-hit with the cost of production climbing to a record high.

Image: 123RF/Aurélie Le Moigne

The cost-of-living crisis has pushed the price of cow’s milk, a staple for households across the UK, above dairy-free alternatives for some shoppers. 

A two-pint bottle of own-brand milk now costs £1.25 ($1.38) on average across four of the UK’s main supermarkets, a 36% jump since January. The nearest comparable own-brand alternatives, which come in one-liter bottles, cost £1.05 for soya milk, £1.07 for almond milk and £1.24 for oat milk, according to retail research company Assosia.

Typically, plant-based products such as oat milk have cost more than cow’s milk, with some cafes facing criticism for charging extra for the non-dairy options. Vegan activists and customers suffering from lactose allergies have even complained that the charges are discriminatory.

But now with prices rising for everything from food to utility bills, milk has been hard-hit with the cost of production climbing to a record high. Other dairy products have suffered notable price spikes with Lurpak butter requiring security tags used to stop expensive products from being shoplifted.

The pricing difference is not the same when branded products are taken into account. An analysis of data from Trolley.co.uk including branded and unbranded products shows milk costing £1.71 on average, the same as oat milk and slightly cheaper than soya milk at £1.73 and almond milk at £1.78. 

Still, in every analysis cow’s milk has posted the biggest price increase this year. The two most recent editions of Bloomberg’s monthly Breakfast Index also found that milk had the largest rise among fry-up ingredients including eggs, butter, sausages, tea bags, and bread.


(Bloomberg) --
(Bloomberg) --
Image: Bloomberg

In the long term, the average price of non-dairy milk is falling as supermarkets bring out their own-label cheaper versions of big brands like Oatly and Alpro. By contrast, cow’s milk went through that process long ago when grocers started selling it as a loss-leader to pull in consumers, said Susie Stannard, consumer insight manager for the dairy sector at the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board which represents farmers. 

While Stannard still sees cow’s milk as the cheaper option, she says “the prices are getting closer.” 

“It is likely that the cost-of-living crisis will accelerate this shift,” she said.

Massive expansion

Higher prices on the shelves have already led consumers to adapt how they shop, choosing cheaper own-brand products and visiting discount supermarkets. Now that the cost of milk is creeping up above its traditionally premium competitors, shoppers may switch to non-dairy products based on price, according to Richard Lim, CEO at Retail Economics.

“If the alternatives are at a significantly different price point to dairy products, then it wouldn’t surprise me that people would experiment with other products,” said Lim. “There are so many different alternatives and it’s a new market that’s expanded aggressively over the last five years.”

Along with other staples like eggs and cheese, milk is one of the most competitive products when it comes to supermarket pricing. It’s a benchmark for consumers, and grocers try to keep the price low as a method of maintaining market share. The rising price of milk “is evidence of just how much pressure the retailers are under,” said Lim.

Feed and fertiliser

Some of the pressure on milk comes from the cost of cow feed, fertiliser and fuel as well as energy prices. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has impacted the production and transport of fertiliser, used to grow feed for cattle, while in Europe more than 70% of fertiliser production capacity has been curtailed as prices for natural gas, the number one input for most nitrogen fertiliser, has soared.

The UK’s largest dairy producer, Arla Foods, pushed up milk prices in August citing the impact of extremely dry weather on the cost of feed, fertiliser and fuel.

Input costs “have all risen significantly, and like everyone, farmers are also seeing the drastic increase in energy prices,” said a spokesperson for Arla.

Cow’s milk is still by far the most popular option, with 95% of British households buying it over the past 12 weeks compared with 22% choosing alternative milks, according to Kantar Worldpanel data.

bloomberg.com

RELIGIOUS VIOLENCE

As Leicester tries to understand its recent unrest, impact of global Hindutva cannot be ignored

Research shows Hindutva sentiment has been on the rise in Britain since 2014.
The Haymarket Memorial Clock Tower is a prominent landmark at the main pedestrian junction in central Leicester. 
| NotFromUtrecht, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Since late August, the city of Leicester in England has seen violent confrontations between groups of Hindu and Muslim men. The situation escalated on September 17 when about 200 Hindu men marched through a Muslim-majority area of east Leicester. Wearing masks, hoodies and balaclavas, they chanted “Jai Shri Ram” (meaning “Hail Lord Ram”).

In response, groups of Muslim men gathered in the area. A flag was forcibly removed from a Hindu mandir. Bottles and other missiles were thrown. Further violence ensued the following evening when the outer wall of a mosque was graffitied and a Hindu flag was burned.

Leicestershire police called for calm and at least 47 people have been arrested. Mayor Peter Soulsby has announced an independent review into what caused this disturbance.

Soulsby reportedly expects the review to make immediate headway. My research into unrest in Bradford in 2001 shows that an official response that sacrifices complexity in favour of quick solutions only serves to attribute blame at the expense of real understanding.



I investigated the 2001 disturbances in Bradford, when up to 1,000 young men of South Asian and Muslim heritage battled hundreds of police officers, following a banned march by the far-right National Front in the city earlier in the day. Not only was there pressure to explain why the disturbances had happened but also pressure to find solutions. This resulted in the disturbances being largely blamed on the city’s Muslims, the lives they lived and the values they adhered to.

The sustained and deliberate provocation of white far-right groups, meanwhile, was overlooked. So too, like almost every other disturbance involving minority communities, a host of social, political and economic factors.

In Leicester, no single group has, as yet, been blamed. However, there is a similar reluctance to dig into the complexity of the situation. Though proactive in communicating information about its policing of the disturbances, Leicestershire Police has referred, not specifically to Hindus or Muslims, but to “the community”.

Temporary Chief Constable Rob Nixon has variously thanked “the community for their ongoing support”, made reference to a “community meeting”, expressed gratitude to “the community who have joined us in calling for calm” and reiterated his commitment to working “alongside community leaders” to find solutions.

Political geographer Arshad Isakjee has shown applying the notion of “community” to ethnic and religious minorities makes the lazy assumption that ethnic minorities have more in common with each other than white or Christian communities do.

What’s more, it homogenises all people deemed to be within the group in question, thereby “othering” them as distinct from anyone outside that group. In other words, the problem becomes “their problem”, not “ours”. The onus is put on them to provide “solutions” to what is actually a vast array of social problems.

Community groups and community leaders do of course exist, in Leicester as elsewhere. But it is entirely possible that they may be oblivious to what is happening or out of touch with those outside of their immediate circles of influence. This is especially true of religious leaders who are unlikely to engage those who do not attend the same places of worship or who practice their faith differently.
Blaming outsiders

On September 20, Hindu and Muslim religious leaders issued a joint statement, describing Hindus and Muslims as “a family” who share a city that is “a beacon of diversity and community cohesion”. It echoed the increasingly popular explanation that the trouble was instigated by outsiders, bolstered by media reports that eight of the 18 people arrested on September 18, 2022 did not reside in Leicestershire.

“We together call upon the inciters of hatred to leave our city alone,” the joint statement said. “Leicester has no place for any foreign extremist ideology that causes division.” Soulsby made the same point when announcing the inquiry, saying that it would be necessary to investigate whether the disturbances were “motivated by extreme ideologies imported from elsewhere”.

Some will assume this to be Islamist extremism. Despite there being no evidence to support such an assumption, research shows that a key trope of Islamophobia is the conflation of all things Islam with extremism. The mere involvement of Muslims will be evidence enough for some to jump to such a conclusion.

However, it is necessary – given the slogans chanted in Leicester and wider concerns dating back to 2019 – to also examine the extent to which Hindu nationalist ideologies or “Hindutva” is causing tensions outside of India’s borders.

Research shows Hindutva sentiment has been on the rise in Britain since 2014. This far-right ideology promotes hatred towards all non-Hindu religious minorities and Muslims in particular.

Despite this, local media has begun to distance the city’s established Hindu communities from blame. Instead it cites wide claims that Hindu nationalism has been imported into the city by recent migrants from India.

For two decades, Leicester has presented itself as the most ethnically harmonious city in Britain. This differentiates it from cities such as Birmingham or Bradford, which have seen disturbances involving ethnic and religious minorities. Blaming outsiders and imported ideologies has the potential to protect Leicester’s reputation.

Soulsby has reportedly said to be baffled by the violence. To believe that such things could never happen in Leicester suggests either wilful ignorance or collective denial at the level of the city’s leadership. To ensure that all the different people that make up the city, as well as the problems they face, can be both understood and responded to, this needs to change.

The review offers a crucial opportunity to actually understand what is happening. There needs to be a full recognition that communities are not homogenous. Whether in Leicester or elsewhere, neither Muslim nor Hindu communities are one-dimensional or singular.

There also needs to be a recognition that the problems experienced by religious communities are not necessarily religious. Their lives are impacted by socio-economic and socio-political factors that transcend ethnic and religious identities.

Further, the impact of the global on the local cannot be overlooked, as the influence of Hindutva in Leicester, as elsewhere in Britain demonstrates. To take this into account is not to apportion blame. Ignoring it, however, won’t help us fully understand what is happening

Finally, the review cannot be premised on the basis that the solutions to the disturbances can be singularly found within Leicester’s communities. This is a collective issue that has the very real potential to have a detrimental impact on our collective futures.

This article first appeared on The Conversation.

SEE LA REVUE GAUCHE - Left Comment: Hinduism Is Fascism
GEMOLOGY ACTIVISM
Yianni Melas, the Greek Modern-Day Indiana Jones of Gems

ByPaula Tsoni
October 1, 2022
Yianni Melas discovered the aquaprase, the first new gem of the 21st century. 
Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

World-acclaimed gems guru and human rights activist Yianni Melas has been budded the modern-day Indiana Jones of gems, a nickname first attributed to him by the French Vogue in 2016 shortly after his discovery of a never-seen-before brand new gemstone.

Nonetheless, the high-achieving gemologist and gem explorer poses a sole condition for aspiring interviewers—to feature him as a Greek before anything else.

As a top-class rough gem trader and gemstone adviser to major international jewelry brands, but also as an ethical mining advocate, anti-kleptocracy activist, teacher, speaker, and TV personality, Yianni Melas has been roaming the Earth for over three decades, making fascinating discoveries, bonding with communities, and positively impacting the lives of people every step of the way.

“I have to say that my life has been really incredibly fun and interesting,” Melas tells Greek Reporter in an interview as he celebrates his sixtieth birthday.

Greek Indiana Jones’ new gem discovery

It was in 2016 that Yianni Melas made international headlines for the discovery of “the first new gem of the 21st century.” The aquaprase, as it is named, was discovered by Melas three years earlier at an undisclosed location in Africa.

On a planet that has consistently been dug up for centuries, the chances of such a find are almost impossible.

“If you spend 35 years in the jungle and that much amount of time immersed in exploring, sometimes God throws something to you,” Melas said. “In this particular case, he threw to me the most incredible gift because for the rest of history that gemstone will be associated with me; a Greek gemologist,” Melas points out.

Yianni Melas discovered the aquaprase at an undisclosed location in Africa.
 Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

Although at first, experts opined that the blue-green gem that he had presented them with was simply a new variation of the chrysoprase, a gem known since the times of Alexander the Great, Melas insisted that it couldn’t be.

The name “chrysoprase” in itself -an ancient Greek amalgamation of the colors gold (chryso) and green (prasino)- would dismiss such a claim.

Eventually, extended scientific tests at the Gemological Institute of America (GIA), where Melas had worked as a teacher, confirmed that the stone’s chemical composition was indeed entirely never-before-seen, and so the aquaprase was officially recognized and trademarked as a new gem.

“To discover a new gemstone is not something that happens so easily. It truly is a remarkable feat. I have unearthed all kinds of gemstones that are new discoveries, but these were part of known gemstones, eg. a new ruby deposit, and a new emerald deposit. But aquaprase is, gemologically, a brand new gem”, Melas details.
Empowered by Greek heritage

When a 12-year-old Yianni Melas was leaving his home island, Rhodes, to continue his education in the USA in 1974, he gave his severely ill grandfather one promise as they said goodbye at the airport. That was to make the surname Melas known across the world.

Little could the young boy or his deteriorating grandfather, imagine, at that time, the great extent to which this ambitious promise would materialize over the next few decades.

“My pappou was my greatest teacher and what I loved about him was that he worked so hard for his family”, Melas says of his grandfather today.

“That promise was a lot of motivation; the forces that drive you are not necessarily sometimes your own. They sometimes are the foundation upon which others have given and which you feel that you owe something to, to make sure that those people are recognized”.

Having quit his studies in medicine to pursue gemology, Melas volunteered to catalog the John Sinkankas library of ancient, antique and contemporary books, acquired by the GIA in the 1980s. He spent a year reading about the journeys of legendary treasure hunters and explorers, from Marco Polo to Tavernier.

“In these books, there were treasure maps and pictures of all their travels and drawings. That was the moment that created the excitement for me to travel”, he recalls.

The opportunity appeared when the young Greek gemology teacher met Helmut Swarovski and persuaded him to introduce natural stones to his brand; gemstones that Melas would discover and buy on Swarovski’s behalf.

Yianni Melas (left) with Helmut Swarovski in the 1990s. 
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

Upon his arrival to Africa, established Greek miners like the Pappas brothers, took the inexperienced GIA instructor under their wings and taught him the secrets of gemstone hunting in the wild.

Melas’s leap into activism

Starting off as a rough gem trader in Kenya, then Tanzania, Madagascar, Zambia, through his work Melas began to see the positive effects that the gem trade could have in developing nations, which lead to his involvement in human rights activism and beneficiation.

He places heavy emphasis on giving back to the communities where gems are discovered, with priority to gem and jewelry education so that the indigenous community fully benefits from these “gifts of God”, as he calls gemstones.

Growing into a devoted advocate of ethical mining and self-empowerment of artisanal miners in the communities that he worked in, Melas sensed that one reason for his sensitivity to human rights struggles was his growing up listening to stories about his mother’s harsh childhood in WWII Greece.

Yianni Melas with artisanal miners in Africa.
 Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

“A lot of people would like to say that you see so much unhappiness and so much misery and everything else and you become an activist. No. That was a part of it. I think the main reason was my mother.

“When I heard her stories about being a 5-year-old growing up under those terrible WWII circumstances, it made me realize that, although Greece today is not going through that, a lot of the kids at war throughout the world, in this particular case now Ukraine, were still going through some very hard times.

“I felt that no child should have to go through what my mother went through. And so whenever I was fighting for human rights, I was actually fighting for something not to repeat itself”, he confesses.

Melas’s activism started in junta-run Burma in the 1990s: “This was an incredible place to understand just how corruption in the military and in politics could really change the way that the people lived; a hardcore lesson in how natural resources could only benefit the rich and powerful.

“The only people that were benefiting from the natural resources of Burma were those connected to the military, while the average citizens were really struggling to feed their families”, he explains.


During his years in the country, Melas would secretly participate in dangerous pro-democracy propaganda. Had he been caught, he would have faced execution.

“Looking back, I think about those things that I did and I realize I had an angel on top of me”, he admits.

A hunger strike that brought down an empire

In the years that followed, Melas continued his activism in countries like Botswana and Zimbabwe.

One of his hardest fights was fought for Angola, where he became instrumental in the exposure of political corruption which eventually led to the bankruptcy of Swiss luxury jeweler De Grisogono. It was owned by Isabel Dos Santos, the daughter of Angola’s president, who was also the richest woman in Africa.

“By coincidence, I found out that Angola had an incredible wealth of diamonds and of oil, and yet it had the highest mortality rate for children under five. 256 out of 1000 children were dying before reaching the age of 5″, he recalls.

Yianni Melas sorting gems with artisanal miners in Bangkok. 
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

Around that same time, Melas’s own daughter became ill with a horrible cough that the doctors could not diagnose.

“At night, Electra would turn blue, as she couldn’t even breathe, and every night I wouldn’t sleep, for months. At one stage I almost had a nervous breakdown because I didn’t know what to do, and so I made a tama to the Madonna, promising that, if my daughter was cured, I would do my best, in my whole life, to help children survive life-threatening diseases”.

When a Greek doctor diagnosed the child with pertussis, an eradicated disease that Melas had apparently brought with him from Africa, it became clear to him that he had to keep his tama; his contract with God.

“I kept thinking how there were fathers and mothers just like me, in Africa, who couldn’t save their kids. So I had to do something to boycott this kleptocracy that kept the people of Angola in poverty”, he says.

In November 2017, Melas started a 31-day hunger strike in Geneva, in protest of the Christies’ auction of a 163-carat Angolan diamond sold by De Grisogono. He then continued the last three weeks of his hunger strike in Athens, where he used to walk 5 km daily from his rented flat in the district of Koukaki up to the Acropolis and back, for motivation.


“I remember every step I took, the pain was unimaginable. But I said to myself, if I can save even one kid from this, I will do it” – and he did.

On day 28 of the hunger strike, the new President of Angola publicly recognized the corruption involved with De Grisogono. Three years later, the Financial Times exposed the full story and the brand went bankrupt.

Yianni Melas places heavy emphasis on giving back to the communities where gems are discovered, with priority to gem and jewelry education.
 Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

Planning ahead

Besides his gem-hunting and human rights activism, Melas has been designing jewelry in his personal time for over 30 years, feeding his dream to someday launch his own jewelry brand.

“There is a reason why I didn’t release my brand then, and that’s because when you are doing activism and at the same time you are selling something, it’s very difficult to prove why you are doing this”, he expounds.

“A lot of people do activism to make themselves look glorious so that they could sell whatever they are making, and I didn’t want to do that.

“Everybody is on sustainability and beneficiation these days and everyone is trying to prove how ethical they are, and I realize that, if I could give the bad guys one reason that they could associate my activism as a way to promote something, then that would basically dilute the message of ethics and truth which I wanted to talk about”, he adds.

However, as he turned 60 in May, Melas reminds himself that all warriors have to one day ride into the sunset.

“Being involved in human rights really sucks all your energy out of you. It’s not the way people perceive it. You are constantly giving and there’s very little that you get out of it, other than for yourself and the legacy you leave behind for your family, for your children. I am so tired from all these wars; there are far more than you imagine”, he notes.

“So I promised myself that, at 60, I would stop being that person trying to save the world and I would finally do what I wanted to do without people questioning me in a way, what my motivation was.

“And I think now, what I’d like is that nobody can say that I lived this luxurious life of robbing the poor or whatever, everything that’s associated with blood diamonds and all these things, and nobody can say that because I’ve been actually on the opposite side, supporting human rights”.

A young Yianni Melas in the jungle in Vietnam. 
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Yianni Melas

Greek Indiana Jones’s new creative journey

Past his milestone 60th birthday, Melas envisions himself on a small Greek island, like Symi or Rhodes, by a taverna, having his meze, playing tavli, and enjoying life.

“I will still be involved in human rights, but because this time I will be in the gem trade and jewelry market as a brand, I will focus on less confrontational and dangerous activism and instead focus on bringing gem cutting and jewelry education to the mining communities”, he states.


On the other hand, Melas can’t rule out embarking on new international adventures.

“Exploring has become part of who I am, my DNA. And thanks to the way that the world works with the internet today, you could be in the middle of the jungle and you could be designing and searching for gemstones that you are going to actually put into the jewelry that you want”, he concludes.


In the meantime, Melas will continue to be an ambassador to the Greek culture and the values of democracy, as he firmly believes that, as Greeks, we must represent ourselves as honorable as we can.

At the time of publication, he was defending the rights of Iranian women and preparing to make a public statement from the Acropolis of Rhodes to support the 150 protests taking place across the globe on October 1st, 2022, in solidarity of the Iranian people.



Opposition groups secure nearly 60% of Kuwait's National Assembly

September 30, 2022 

People cast their votes in parliamentary elections at a polling station in Shamiya, Kuwait on September 29, 2022. [Jaber Abdulkhaleg - Anadolu Agency]

September 30, 2022 at 2:19 pm

Kuwaiti opposition groups secured nearly 60 per cent of the seats in the 50-seat National Assembly, according to the final results of early parliamentary elections announced on Friday, Anadolu News Agency reports.

According to the results, only 23 members of the previous parliament managed to keep their seats in the new parliament, while 27 are new members.

The state-run KUNA news agency said 305 candidates, including 22 female candidates, ran for seats in the assembly.

The number of representatives of the Shia bloc rose from six to nine.

Two people who are currently in jail also won seats.


The Muslim Brotherhood group in Kuwait, known as the Islamic Constitutional Movement (Hadas), secured five seats, the same number as in the previous parliament.

While the previous National Assembly had no women members, the results showed at least two women joining the body.

On Thursday, Kuwaiti voters cast ballots in the Gulf country's parliamentary elections, the second such vote in two years.

Last month, Crown Prince Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, who has taken on most of the ruling Emir's duties, dissolved the National Assembly, citing a political standoff between the government and the legislature.

The National Assembly is the Gulf State's legislative authority and is mandated to observe the work of the executive authority and issue laws, which come into effect after being ratified by the country's ruler.

KUWAIT

After two years, women return to parliament. Two opposition candidates, Jenan Bushehri and Alia Al Khaled, won their election battle on Sept. 29. Of the 50 seats up for grabs, opposition forces gained 28