Sunday, March 17, 2024

India applies its controversial anti-Muslim law on the eve of elections
March 17, 2024


India will kick its exemplary secular legal system on the eve of the elections. The Government of Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi has ordered the implementation of a Citizenship Law that is better known as anti-muslim law. It was enacted two years ago and massive and deadly protests recommended putting it in the refrigerator. It is recovered by Modi when he seeks his third term in another Islamophobic attack that satisfies the Hindu majority.

The law of humanitarian wording and disturbing spirit, will grant Indian citizenship to illegal immigrants of various religious minorities (Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Parsis, Jains and Christians) arriving from three Muslim-majority countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan). The 11 years accredited in India will no longer be necessary, but it will be enough to prove arrival before 2015 to obtain the documents through an urgent procedure. If the law seeks to protect persecuted minorities, it is surprising that it does not include the Rohingyas of Myanmar, the Ahmadis of Pakistan or the Hazaras of Afghanistan. Muslims are excluded because, according to Modi, they are neither a minority nor do they need state protection.

Amnesty International maintains that the new law legitimizes discrimination based on religion and violates constitutional values ​​of equality and human rights international. Some states where Modi’s party does not govern have announced that they will not apply it. It is a state-wide problem because the community of almost 200 million Muslims (the third largest in the world) is spread throughout the country. The law has also encouraged nativism, localism and indigenismmodern euphemisms for lifelong xenophobia.
Persecution and punishment

Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, representative of the Hindu right, has over the last decade undermined the secular principles of the world’s largest democracy. Religious minorities lament the persecution and punishment of dissidents. No group has suffered more than Muslims.. Just a month earlier, two mosques were demolished in New Delhi and the state of Uttarakhand. It was raining in the wet: Modi had inaugurated a Hindu temple in January where there was a mosque for 500 years until it was demolished by nationalists. Religious conflicts cyclically integrate the black chronicle. Muslims who allegedly ate cow meat, an animal sacred to Hindus, have been lynched. Their homes and businesses have been demolished by what is known as “picket justice” and boycotts are not strange. Some are already talking about a genocide.

Modi’s thunderous silence encourages outrages, analysts judge. From his party there are many combative references to Muslim refugees. The Ministry of the Interior defined them as “termites” and “infiltrators” that put national security at risk. Minorities also fear the National Register of Citizens with which India intends to identify and expel those without papers. It only works in the northern state of Assam but New Delhi wants to extend it to the entire country.

Police and paramilitaries have arrived to the northeast of New Delhi this week. The loudest protests broke out there when the law was enacted, although they ended up spreading to several states. They left more than a hundred dead and thousands arrested before Modi put a stop to it. The United States, Canada and the United Kingdom advised against the arrival of tourists to the country and the then Japanese president, Shinzo Abe, canceled his visit. It is not ruled out that social upheavals will return.


India’s citizenship law slammed as anti-Muslim, Modi’s election ploy to woo Hindu voters

March 17, 2024 
by Kofi Jane


These refugees can acquire Indian citizenship within five years even if they enter the country without papers.

India’s Home Minister Amit Shah on March 11 announced details about the implementation of the CAA. Shah, a close Modi aide, said on X the CAA would “enable minorities persecuted on religious grounds in neighbouring countries to acquire Indian citizenship”.

Critics have slammed the delayed implementation of the law by four years, saying it was deliberately timed just before the election. On Saturday, India’s election authority said polls would begin in phases on April 19.

The 2019 demonstrations triggered a crackdown and led to the deaths of more than 100 people, mainly Muslims. Several Muslim scholars accused of inciting violence at the protests were also arrested and jailed.

Is India targeting Muslims with committee to address population growth?

The law’s implementation on March 11, just weeks before Modi seeks an unprecedented third term in the election, has reignited fears of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) alleged anti-Muslim bias.

Protests erupted across India, including in Delhi, following Shah’s announcement. Government forces were deployed in recent days to quell the unrest in Muslim-majority areas in the capital. Activists from various organisations staged demonstrations, burning copies of the law.

Legal experts say the rules would make India a sanctuary for Hindus and marginalise its 200-million Muslim minority. Before the CAA, an applicant’s faith was not specified by the authorities and a foreigner could be eligible for Indian citizenship after 11 years of residence.

Critics noted that the CAA ignores persecuted Muslim individuals overseas such as Hazara Muslims in Afghanistan, Ahmadis in Pakistan or Rohingyas in Myanmar, many of whom have been detained in India after fleeing their countries. Amnesty India said in a post on X on March 14 that the CAA violates constitutional principles of equality.

Since assuming power in 2014, the BJP has faced criticisms for fostering a hostile climate against Muslims in India. Over the past decade, many Muslim Indians have accused authorities of human rights abuses ranging from property demolitions to attacks on religious sites.

Political analysts and rights advocates say the government has prioritised electoral gains over addressing the country’s economic challenges.

Lawyer Aman Wadud said the CAA was discriminatory against Muslims, and dismissed claims by Delhi that the new law gave refuge to religiously persecuted communities.

“Any illegal immigrants from six non-Muslim communities can seek citizenship, regardless of persecution. The talk of religious persecution is mere political rhetoric,” Aman told This Week in Asia.

“Look at statements from BJP leaders like the Assam Chief Minister calling all Muslims ‘Bangladeshis’. They are persecuting Muslims here through such laws and rhetoric that paints them as outsiders.”

Muslims pray after breaking their fast together by sharing a meal in the courtyard of Jama Masjid on the first Friday of the holy month of Ramadan in Ahmedabad, India, on March 15. Photo: AP

A Delhi-based research fellow, who wished to remain anonymous, said the CAA and the National Register of Citizens (NRC) were part of the same divisive agenda by Modi’s BJP government.

The researcher said the NRC aimed to identify “undocumented immigrants” – a group the government had anticipated would be predominantly Muslim – by demanding documentation that many could not produce due to loss or damage over the years.

However, in Assam, when the NRC rules were implemented, most on the undocumented list were non-Muslims.



“The CAA cannot be seen in isolation. It’s one arm of the pincer while the other is the NRC. By launching them separately, the BJP tries to portray them as distinct but they are two arms of the same political endeavour.”

Members of All India Lawyers Union shout slogans as they protest against the implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act at the Madras High Court in Chennai on March 14. 
Photo: AFP

Safoora Zargar, a Muslim student activist, said the move to implement the CAA ahead of the 2024 elections was a sign of Delhi’s weakness and urged activists to continue defending Indian democracy.

“The government has to resort to such overt vulgar displays of power to give reason to its voter base to vote for them again despite all the failures,” she told This Week in Asia.

The CAA has also drawn international criticisms since it was mooted.

The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights expressed concerns earlier this week over the law’s discriminatory nature, saying India might have breached its international human rights obligations.

US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller earlier this week emphasised the importance of religious freedom and equal treatment under the law for all communities in India, saying Washington was monitoring the situation closely to gauge the impact of the CAA.

Members of All India Students’ Association and other non-governmental organisations protest against the implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), in Bengaluru, India, on March 13. 
Photo: EPA-EFE

However, India’s Ministry of External Affairs spokesman Randhir Jaiswal on Saturday said the CAA was “an internal matter of India, aligned with our inclusive traditions and our enduring commitment to human rights”. The US and UN reactions were “misplaced, misinformed and unwarranted”, he added.

Neighbouring Pakistan has lambasted the law as discriminatory, with its foreign office spokesman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch on Friday calling India a “Hindu fascist state”.

Dr Zafarul-Islam Khan, a former chairman of the Delhi Minorities Commission, said the implementation of the CAA was to “exploit” communal divisions for electoral gains and further undermined the status of Indian Muslims.

He warned, “More steps will follow until Indian Muslims are finally turned into second-class citizens.”


India’s Controversial Citizenship Law Slammed by Opposition

Swati Gupta
Mon, March 11, 2024


(Bloomberg) -- 

India implemented a religion-based law that’s seen as discriminatory toward Muslims, sparking a backlash from opposition parties, who accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government of polarizing voters weeks before elections.

The Citizenship (Amendment) Act — which fast-tracks citizenship rights for immigrants from neighboring nations except for those who identify as Muslim — was enacted through a notification in the Gazette of India on Monday. Although the law was passed more than four years ago, it takes effect just days before India is expected to announce its election dates.

Questioning the timing of the notification of the rules just before the elections, Jairam Ramesh, the spokesperson for the Indian National Congress said it’s “evident that it is being done to polarize the elections.” Leaders in opposition-controlled states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu also slammed the move as divisive, vowing to oppose it.

The CAA prioritizes citizenship for Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and people of several other faiths from three neighboring Muslim-majority countries — Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan — who entered India before 2015. The Ministry of Home Affairs said Monday applicants can apply for citizenship through a web portal.

When the law was passed in 2019, it triggered violent protests and panic among many Indians who risked becoming stateless without proper documentation. The law is seen as a precursor to a proposed population register, which will require Indians to prove their citizenship.

If that happens, critics fear that Muslims who immigrated from the three neighboring countries and who have lived in India for decades without official papers may be deported or placed in detention camps. In Assam, which borders Bangladesh and is the only state that’s implemented a population register, 1.9 million people were rendered stateless by the process.

Modi has previously denied that the CAA law discriminates against Muslims. His ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is widely expected to return to power, buoyed by strong support from its majority Hindu base.

Opposition parties and state chief ministers issued statements Monday criticizing the timing and the motivation behind the government’s move.

“This is to divide the people, incite communal sentiments and undermine the fundamental principles of the Constitution,” Pinarayi Vijayan, Kerala’s chief minister, said in a post on social media platform X. “This move to stratify Indian citizens who have equal rights, must be opposed unitedly.” He added that the CAA won’t be implemented in his state.

Amit Shah, India’s home minister who has been a fierce advocate of the CAA, posted on X that the enactment of the law fulfills one of Modi’s promises, and would allow persecuted minorities in neighboring countries to acquire citizenship in India.

Opposition groups and activists fear the BJP will expand the population register in Assam to other states, as it’s promised. That would strip rights from tens of millions of Indians until they gain residency again through the CAA, although that path wouldn’t apply to Muslims.

According to the most recent census, Hindus account for 80% of India’s population of 1.4 billion, while Muslims make up about 14%.
 Bloomberg Businessweek





Rare copies of Quran on display at Riyadh exhibit

Event highlights diversity of Islamic calligraphy and embellishment

Published: March 17, 2024 

A copy of the Quran at King Abdul Aziz Public Library.
Credit: Source: King Abdul Aziz Public Library

Cairo: An exhibition underway in the Saudi capital Riyadh displays 42 rare copies of Quran highlighting diversity of Islamic calligraphy and embellishment.


Organised by the King Abdul Aziz Public Library, the show is being held at the institution’s branch at the King Abdul Aziz Centre in Riyadh’s Al Muraba Quarter.

Opening the event, the library’s supervisor-general Faisal Abdul Rahman said the exhibit features a “distinguished” collection of the library’s acquisitions of rare gilded and embellished copies of the book.

“The value of this exhibit lies in shedding light on arts of embellishment and gilding as well as different schools of embellishing the Holy Quran,” he added.

“It is part of the library’s cultural programme that focuses on holding thematic exhibitions on national, religious and cultural occasions inside and outside the kingdom,” said the official.

For 40 years, the King Abdul Aziz Public Library has given particular attention to showcasing Islamic and Arab heritage through acquisitions of rare photos, miniatures and manuscripts.


The library organised an exhibition on annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage at the British Museum, the Paris-based Arab World Institute.


In 2007, the library produced a film on Hajj shown at a large number of theatres around the world.

Other exhibitions, Abdul Rahman noted, focused on Arabic poetry and calligraphy.

Ramadan usually marks the peak season of Umrah or minor pilgrimage at the Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site, in the Saudi city of Mecca.

Muslims from around the world would flock in Ramadan to Saudi Arabia, Islam’s birthplace, to perform Umrah and prayers at the Grand Mosque and the Prophet’s Mosque – Islam’s two holiest places.

A Reminder to humanity never to close its eyes to the atrocities of war

Saddam Hussein's regime attack with poison gas on the Kurdish city of Halabja on 16 March 1988 stands as a "reminder to humanity never to close its eyes to the atrocities of war," said KON-MED.


HALABJA MASSACRE
ANF
NEWS DESK
Sunday, 17 March 2024

The poison gas attack on the Kurdish city of Halabja in Iraq in 1988 stands as a "reminder for humanity never to close its eyes to the atrocities of war," said the Kurdish umbrella organization KON-MED in a statement published on the anniversary of the massacre.

Condemning this heinous attack as a war crime and genocide would be an important step towards justice, said KON-MED, adding: "As the umbrella organization of Kurdish cultural associations in Germany, we would like to underline the responsibility of German companies that were involved in Iraq’s chemical weapons program. This responsibility also applies to all victims of the Anfal operation, as part of which the poison gas attack on Halabja was carried out. Under the pretext of counterinsurgency, up to 182,000 people were murdered by the Saddam regime in the course of genocidal measures in the late phase of the First Gulf War."

The statement added: "The memory of the massacre in Halabja must live on, not only as a dark page of history, but also as a warning for the future. We must never forget that war crimes and atrocities against humanity cannot be justified. Our commitment is to ensure that such acts never happen again and that the victims receive appropriate justice and recognition."

KON-MED said that "in recent years there have been repeated reports from Kurdish guerrillas about the use of poison gas by the Turkish state in South Kurdistan (North Iraq), which was directed against these same guerrillas," and demanded that the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) "investigate these allegations. We fear for our brothers and sisters in Kurdistan."

36 years ago, the massacre of Halabja

Today marks 36 years since Saddam Hussein massacred thousands of his own people in a chemical attack on the city of Halabja.


HAL

Today marks the 36th anniversary of the chemical attack on the Kurdish town of Halabja in South-Kurdistan. Systematically terrorizing the Kurdish population, Saddam Hussein attempted to silence his critics and at the same time test his chemical and biological weapons.

Saddam Hussein was the first leader in modern times to brutally use chemical weapons against the Kurdish people. Between 1987 and 1988, he had chemical attacks directed towards 40 Kurdish villages, and tested his weapons on thousands of innocent civilians. The worst of these attacks destroyed the town of Halabja in March 1988.

Chemical weapons used in Halabja

The attack was meant to kill as many people as possible. The first barrage shattered protective glass in windows throughout the city, making sure the gas reached its targets.

Saddam’s regime mixed mustard gas and nerve agents to increase the effect of the chemical attacks. Mustard gas attacks the nose, throat and lungs, while Sarin, Tabun and VX attack the eyes and respiratory channels.

One gas had a strong, sweet aroma, like apple blossoms, said survivors, intended to make people inhale deeply to find out what was causing the smell. Another chemical was used as a paralyzing agent, causing people to collapse to the ground.

A third and lethal gas was used because it’s heavier than air. Anyone who fell, or crouched low for safety, or took shelter in a basement. They were dead within minutes.

Men, women, and children died indiscriminately as toxic gas seeped into their homes, through broken windows, filling the spaces where they’d taken shelter.

Chemical weapons also contaminate food and water supplies, soil and wildlife.

Effects of the attack in Halabja

5000 civilians, among them many women, children and elderly, died within hours of the attack. More than 10.000 people were blinded or injured in other ways that destroyed their lives. Thousands of people lost their lives in epidemics or from birth injuries in the following years. Thousands more were forced to leave their homes.

Up to 5,000 people perished that day. Thousands more were injured, most of them civilians.

An old man, a survivor of that day, Abdurrahman Reşit Emin, told ANF that he lost his mother and two siblings in the massacre which he describes as "moments of a grimness that would not end". Emin said that the air was covered with the smell of apples: "We were dumbfounded. The sky in Halabja was shaken with sounds of warplanes, of which there were around 10-15, as I might not remember the exact number. Everything happened so fast. Thousands of people drew their last breath in ten minutes. Dead bodies were lying everywhere one looked. The rest left the city and took the migratory route. Those left to poverty and sickness were as many as the dead. Everyone became miserable. Some lost their minds, some went blind."

KNK: Turkish state plans new massacres like Halabja


The KNK Executive Council, pointing to the plans of the occupying states to carry out new massacres like Halabja, called on all forces not to remain silent in order to prevent massacres and defend the interests of the people of Kurdistan.


HALABJA MASSACRE


ANF
NEWS DESK
Saturday, 16 March 2024

The Kurdistan National Council (KNK) Executive Council condemned in a written statement the 36th anniversary of the genocide perpetrated by Saddam's fascist regime with a chemical weapons attack against the civilian population in Halabja in 1988.

The KNK statement on Saturday said the following:

"On 16 March 1988, thousands of Kurds were massacred, while thousands of others were injured and displaced in a genocidal attack with chemical weapons on the city of Halabja in Southern Kurdistan. The Halabja Massacre was not the first in the history of the Kurdish people and it seems that it will not be the last. Such massacres carry the aim and intention of the brutal occupying states to destroy the Kurdish people so that nothing remains in the name of Kurdishness, so that they do not have a status and identity.

The Halabja Massacre, one of the most painful and brutal massacres in human history, carried out with a racist mentality, showed the whole world how deep the enmity against the Kurdish people is. Thousands of Kurds, women, men, children and the elderly were brutally massacred with chemical weapons. This massacre was carried out in front of the eyes of the world and no state opposed it. The United Nations, the United States, Europe and other countries remained silent in the face of this massacre. They raised their voices against Saddam's fascist and dictatorial regime only when their own interests were threatened.

Today, the same scenario is being repeated by the occupying states. On these days, the anniversary of the Halabja Massacre, the occupying states, especially the Turkish state, the dictator and racist regime of the AKP-MHP, are preparing new plans for massacre and genocide against the Kurdish people and want these plans to be realised. The Iraqi central government, the regional government, are also intended to participate in these plans and the KDP forces are at the center of these plans. These plans are a great threat to the four parts of Kurdistan and to all the interests of the Kurdish people.

For this reason, we call on all forces, parties, political organisations, social institutions, all patriotic and conscientious groups to take a stand against the occupation plans and not to remain silent. Only in this way can we embrace the martyrs of Halabja, prevent massacres like Halabja and defend the interests of the people of Kurdistan.

We commemorate the martyrs of Halabja with all our patriotic feelings and promise that we will fight against the murderer and genocidal enemy by strengthening our duty for our national unity."




Prisoners enter 112th day of hunger strike to demand freedom for Öcalan

The hunger strike launched by prisoners in jails in Turkey and North Kurdistan to demand Abdullah Öcalan's freedom continues on its 112th day.


PRISONERS ON HUNGER STRIKE

ANF
NEWS DESK
Sunday, 17 March 2024



The hunger strike launched by political prisoners in jails in Turkey and North Kurdistan to demand the physical freedom of Kurdish people’s leader Abdullah Öcalan and a political solution to the Kurdish question, has reached its 112th day.

Abdullah Öcalan and Ömer Hayri Konar, Veysi Aktaş and Hamili Yıldırım, who are held in Imralı, have not been allowed to meet with their families and lawyers for 36 months.

In order to end the isolation in Imralı and ensure the physical freedom of Abdullah Öcalan, the "Freedom for Abdullah Öcalan, solution to the Kurdish question" campaign was launched on 10 October 2023, with simultaneous statements made in 74 cities around the world.

As part of the campaign, political prisoners went on hunger strike on 27 November 2023.

Hunger strike to continue until after local elections

The prisoners had originally said that they would bring the hunger strike, which is carried out alternately, to a new phase as of 15 February, if no steps were taken regarding their demands. However, in a statement they announced that they would continue the hunger strike until after the local elections to be held on 31 March.

In a statement, Deniz Kaya said on behalf of the PKK and PAJK prisoners on 12 February: "We will continue our hunger strike action, which we started on 27 November 2023, in order to end the isolation imposed on our Leader, and which we announced to the public that we will take it to a new phase on 15 February, so that it does not affect the election activities. We would like to state that we have extended the hunger strike until the post-election period so that it does not hinder the elections."

The statement also said: "We declare to the public that if the isolation of our Leader continues until after the election, we will take our action to the next level and continue until we get results," and called on all democratic institutions and circles to take responsibility to meet their demands.




Since Expanded War in Ukraine Began, Telegram has Become Most Widely Used Social Media Platform in Russia, Logunova Says

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Mar. 17 – Until Putin launched his expanded war in Ukraine, Telegram channels or “telega” as they are known in Russia lagged far behind other social media platforms in that country. But a combination of restrictions or bans on the latter and growing interest in news have pushed Telegram to the top, Olga Logunova says.

            The Russian specialist on media at King’s College London says that Kremlin bans and restrictions helped Telegram grow but that interest in unrestricted news has played if anything a greater role, given Telegram’s growth after key events sparked greater interest among Russian media consumers (ridl.io/explaining-the-rise-of-telegram/).

            The Putin regime has responded by flooding Telegram with bots, something that increases suspicions about the platform’s reliability; and increasingly Russians are concerned about the lack of end-to-end encryption on this channel. Unless those are somehow addressed, Telegram’s future may be less successful than its recent past.

            In her Riddle portal article, versions of which are available in English as well as Riussian, Logunova provides extensive statistical data in support of her conclusions.


With War in Ukraine, Putin is Demolishing His Argument that Russia Can't Change and Become Democratic, Gallyamov Says


            Staunton, Mar. 17 – Putin has long justified his own authoritarianism by insisting that Russia has always had that tradition, but with his war against Ukraine, he has violated another Russian tradition, the belief in close ties between Russians and Ukrainians, and thus shown that as a result, everything, including democratization, is now possible, Abbas Gallyamov says.

            For most of his time in power, Putin’s formula that “’it has always been this way’” has served as an effective argument to gain public support for the Kremlin leader’s maintenance of the status quo, the former Putin speechwriter and now opposition commentator says (t.me/abbasgallyamovpolitics/4449 reposted at kasparov.ru/material.php?id=65F142ABE082D).

            But over the past two years, by launching an expanded war against Ukraine, Putin has undermined his own claims in this regard by challenging the equally widespread Russian notion that the Russian and Ukrainian people have always been friends and that a war between the two was inconceivable.

            Neither Putin nor his opponents yet recognize how these two things are related and how his actions in the latter case demolish his insistence in the former, Gallyamov suggests. But an examination of the causes of the French revolution provides a clue to just how intertwined these two things are.

            Alexis de Tocqueville, one of the most thoughtful historians of that conflict, notes that the French monarchy sowed the seeds of its own demise by destroying the regional parliaments, institutions that the French thought were just as ancient and just as unchangeable as the monarchy itself.

            After the king dispersed the parliaments both in Paris and in the regions, the French people concluded that everything, including a more democratic system, was possible. Something similar, Gallyamov argues, is  now possible in Russia today. And he draws that conclusion in dramatic language:

            “After the first Russian killed the first Ukrainian and the first Ukrainian killed the first Russian, nothing is impossible for Russians anymore” because “the conservative order” on which Putin has relied “no longer exists.”

CGTN poll: 'American democracy' brings chaos to the world

CGTN




The U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 6, 2023. /CFP


The United States is exporting "democratic standards" and pursuing "democratic transformation" around the world, which is leading to instability, conflicts and disasters. According to polls launched by CGTN and the Renmin University of China through the New Era Institute of International Communication, global respondents were deeply dissatisfied with the United States' continuous utilization of the democracy issue to suppress other countries for its own benefit, as well as to exacerbate the world's division and conflict between camps.

U.S. export of democracy highlights its nature of hegemony

According to the survey, 71 percent of global respondents criticized the U.S. for interfering in the internal affairs of other countries and suppressing other countries under the cover of "democracy. Meanwhile, 62.3 percent of respondents expressed strong dissatisfaction with the United States' hegemonic behavior in abusing sanctions and economic compulsion.

In the survey, nearly 70 percent (68 percent) of the global respondents are very worried about the U.S.' long history of inciting "color revolutions" and waging "proxy wars" around the world. 65.8 percent of respondents were strongly opposed to forcing another country to change its political system through revolution and aggression.

'Beacon of Democracy' draws global criticism

According to the poll, 84.3 percent of global respondents believe that democracy presents in various ways across countries and cultures. There is no superior model of democracy or one-size-fits-all political system. 84.8 percent of the respondents are of the opinion that when deciding on a political system, a country should consider its history, culture, and national conditions. 80.3 percent of the respondents believe that the existence of various civilizations in the world has a positive effect on world development. 79.5 percent of the respondents expressed strong opposition to the United States' pursuit of hegemony on a global scale under the banner of "democracy." 86.8 percent of respondents urged the United States to end its hegemonic practices as soon as possible. When dealing with other countries, it should be based on the concept of mutual respect and seeking common ground while reserving differences.

The data presented above includes three global polls, including the "Impressions of America" poll, with a total of 39,315 respondents from 32 countries worldwide, ranging from developed countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, Spain, and Japan to developing countries such as Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, Malaysia, Peru, and Pakistan.

Moscow polling station protesters pay tribute to Navalny


By AFP
March 17, 2024

Navalny's widow Yulia Navalnaya had called on people to go to
 polling stations at the same time and spoil their ballots - 
Copyright AFP NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA

Queues formed outside Moscow polling stations on Sunday as some voters heeded a call by supporters of late opposition leader Alexei Navalny to cast protest votes in Russia’s presidential election.

AFP reporters at two polling stations saw larger numbers of voters at noon (0900 GMT) compared to earlier in the day following the call for a “Midday Against Putin” protest.

Navalny, President Vladimir Putin’s most prominent rival, died in mysterious circumstances in an Arctic prison last month.

His widow Yulia Navalnaya had called on people to go to polling stations at the same time and spoil their ballots as a protest.

Since the start of Russia’s full-scale offensive in Ukraine in 2022, public dissent in Russia has been stifled and government critics have been jailed or forced to flee.

After casting his ballot at a polling station where Navalny used to vote, IT worker Alexander said he came because this was one of the few ways he could protest.

“If I hadn’t done this, I would have felt like a coward,” the 29-year-old said.

Elena, 52, said people were “too afraid” to come out in large numbers.

“I don’t want Russia, my homeland, to be like this… I love my country, I want it to be free.”

Natalya, a 65-year-old pensioner, said she came with her friend Elena, a 38-year-old engineer, to spoil her ballot in memory of Navalny.

“I came to give my farewell to him. He is a hero to me,” Natalya said.

Elena added: “This is our only opportunity to express our opinion.”

– ‘Symbolic action’ –

Images shared on social media by Navalny’s team showed larger queues of voters at other polling stations in Moscow and elsewhere in Russia.

At another polling station in southwest Moscow, Leonid, an 18-year-old student, said there were “not that many people” taking part in the protest but he was “just happy that some people came”.

The polling station in a school was where Navalny scored his highest result — 70 percent — in his failed bid to become Moscow mayor in 2013.

Navalny later attempted to run against Putin in the 2018 presidential election but his candidacy was rejected.

Olga Mironenko, a 33-year-old IT worker, said she had never voted for Putin but it was difficult to express her views in a country where “you can’t even express your opinion on social media”.

She said it had felt good to come to the polling station and be “with people who are on the side of light and truth”.

Denis, 21, who works in advertising, said: “I came to express solidarity with a very important person. It’s a symbolic action.”

“This election is a way to honour Navalny’s memory,” he said.

Climate activists disrupt Rome marathon


By AFP
March 17, 2024


Last Generation warns of a spring and summer full of climate hazards for Italy as temperatures rise - Copyright AFP NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA

will Three activists from climate movement Last Generation briefly interrupted the Rome marathon on Sunday before police arrested them, the group said.

The protesters disrupted the race at 9:00 am (0800 GMT) before officers moved them to the side of the road and took them to the police station, Last Generation said in a statement.

Last Generation warns of a spring and summer full of climate hazards for Italy as temperatures rise, with “deaths at work due to the heat, deaths in cities that are unliveable”.

Mida, a 26-year-old student who was one of the detained protesters, was quoted in the statement as saying she wanted to “sound an alarm because we will experience an unbelievable drought”.

The group demands the state create a reparations fund of 20 billion euros ($22 billion) for “all people suffering damage due to climate change”.

In recent months, Last Generation activists have thrown soup, cakes and paint on cultural sites and artworks in museums in shock tactics to spread their message.

Scientists say climate change induced by human activity is increasing the intensity, frequency and length of extreme weather events such as droughts, heatwaves and wildfires.

New book explores Donald Trump’s alleged love for dictators

Former White House staff say Donald Trump expressed admiration

 for Adolf Hitler. Photo: Getty

Former US president Donald Trump once said he believed Adolf Hitler did some good in his life, a new book alleges.

Perhaps it shouldn’t be too shocking as he did try to get cosy with Russian president Vladimir Putin, who according to his former chief of staff, Trump thinks is an “OK guy”.

General John Kelly was once Trump’s chief of staff and now he is spilling his secrets, which weren’t really that well kept.

In CNN anchor Jim Sciutto’s upcoming book, The Return of Great Powers, Kelly has revealed what Trump makes of world leaders, both past and present.

According to Sciutto in an article published on CNN, and based on conversations he has had, Trump thinks China’s Xi Jinping is “brilliant” but North Korea’s Kim Jong-un is merely an “OK guy”.

Kelly also alleged the former president said Putin “wouldn’t be doing these things” if NATO didn’t exist.

It’s not overly shocking. Trump has publicly praised leaders who are usually seen as enemies or adversaries of the US.

In an interview with Fox News, Trump praised Xi for ruling China with an “iron fist” and said he was “smart, brilliant, everything perfect”.

Trump went from calling Kim on Twitter (now X) to having a bizarre relationship with him.

Later on, the two apparently shared letters, which Trump said were “beautiful” and said the two “fell in love”.

Trump’s alleged admiration for Hitler

Regarding Trump’s comment regarding Hitler doing some “good things”, Kelly said he pressed him on it.

“He said, ‘Well, [Hitler] rebuilt the economy’. But what did he do with that rebuilt economy? He turned it against his own people and against the world. And I said, ‘Sir, you can never say anything good about the guy. Nothing’,” Kelly said according to CNN.

Kelly said he found it hard to believe Trump “missed the Holocaust and the fact 400,000 Americans were killed thanks to Hitler”, but he has a theory as to why Trump might admire such a despised historical figure.

“But I think it’s more, again, the tough guy thing,” Kelly said.

In the past, Trump’s camp has denied the allegations he thought Hitler did some good.

When approached by CNN, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung did not address the allegations, but instead took aim at Kelly and Bolton.

He said the two “completely beclowned themselves and are suffering from a severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome”.

Cheung added they need to seek “professional help because their hatred is consuming their empty lives”.

U.S. President Donald Trump receives a football from Russian President Vladimir Putin as they hold a joint news conference after their meeting in Helsinki, Finland July 16, 2018.

Donald Trump likes to think of himself as a tough guy, former advisers say.

The ‘tough guy thing’

John Bolton also served in the Trump administration, as the US national security adviser. He also spoke to Sciutto.

Like Kelly, Bolton believes Trump’s alleged admiration for autocrats is due to how he sees himself, or how he wants other to see him.

“He views himself as a big guy,” Bolton said.

“He likes dealing with other big guys, and big guys like Erdogan in Turkey get to put people in jail and you don’t have to ask anybody’s permission. He kind of likes that.”

However, Kelly insists Trump is “not a tough guy by any means”; instead, he is the “opposite”, but it is how he likes to envision himself.

Trump was shocked by the lack of power

Kelly also believes the former president’s fondness for dictators is because “that’s who he is”.

He explained all presidents of the US are shocked to find out they have little power, without going through Congress, when they come into office.

“But in his case, he was shocked that he didn’t have dictatorial-type powers to send US forces places or to move money around within the budget,” Kelly said.

“And he looked at Putin and Xi and that nutcase in North Korea as people who were like him in terms of being a tough guy.”