Wednesday, July 07, 2021

WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange Faces Ruling on Extradition to US

How the 20-Year War Changed Afghanistan | FT Film

Jul 2, 2021 • An Afghan photojournalist, former politician, young musician, Nato interpreter, female filmmaker, and a student whose mother was assassinated, reveal the impact of war... as US troops pull out and the Taliban gains ground

One Year of China's Hong Kong Security Law | DW News

Jun 30, 2021 • Global rights group Amnesty International sharply criticized the national security law the Chinese government imposed on Hong Kong one year ago. It has created a "human rights emergency" in the city, it said.

Hong Kong authorities have been using the law to target dissent and justify "censorship, harassment, arrests and prosecutions that violate human rights," Amnesty added.

"In one year, the National Security Law has put Hong Kong on a rapid path to becoming a police state and created a human rights emergency for the people living there," Amnesty's Asia-Pacific Regional Director Yamini Mishra said.

China introduced the controversial national security law a year ago to crack down on what it deems subversion, secessionism, terrorism, and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison.

Beijing insisted the measure was needed to restore stability in Hong Kong, which witnessed huge and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in 2019. But rights activists and critics of the Chinese government view it as a means for Beijing to impose its will on Hong Kong and crush dissent.


Myanmar Police Defect to Anti-government Militias as Civil War Looms - BBC News

Jul 7, 2021 • As Myanmar heads towards a new civil war, the police are coming under intense pressure to decide whether to stay loyal to the military or join the civilian militia, the People’s Defence Force.

Since the military coup on 1 February, police have been used to brutally suppress mass protests. Some protesters have taken up arms to fight back, forming civilian militias called the People’s Defence Force.

The BBC has been given rare access to the first group of police officers who defected and joined the people’s side. Some of those officers even say they’re prepared to use their weapons against their former colleagues.


COVID in Latin America: Peru Struggles with Lamda Variant +++ Cuba Ships Out Vaccine | DW News

Jul 7, 2021 • Health authorities across Latin America are battling a rise in coronavirus infections. The region already has the highest COVID-19 death rate in the world. Brazil has suffered the most fatalities in the region, with more than half a million deaths. Followed by Mexico, where over 230-thousand people have died. And PERU has reported nearly 200-thousand deaths. DW's Johan Ramirez reports from Lima - where the new lambda variant is pushing the public health care system to breaking point. Cuba is expected to give the regulatory green light in the coming days to one of its vaccines against COVID-19. Cuba hopes that could help speed up vaccinations across Latin America.

EU Urged to Suspend Funds to Hungary over ‘Grave Breaches of the Rule of Law’

THE GUARDIAN: Action follows Viktor Orbán passing law banning LGBT content in schools and mishandling of EU funds

Ursula von der Leyen is being urged to suspend EU funds to Hungary to force Viktor Orbán to address concerns over politicised courts and corruption.

MEPs who work on the European parliament’s budgetary control committee are calling on the European Commission president to use a newly created EU law to freeze payments to Hungary for “grave breaches of the rule of law”.

It is the latest salvo against the Hungarian prime minister, who last month faced unprecedented criticism from fellow EU leaders over a law that bans the depiction of gay people in educational material. The European parliament is expected to condemn that law in a resolution on Thursday that will urge the commission to launch a fast-track legal case against Hungary over discrimination against LGBT people. » | Jennifer Rankin in Brussels | Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Trump Told Chief of Staff Hitler ‘Did a Lot of Good Things’, Book Says

THE GUARDIAN: Remark shocked John Kelly, author Michael Bender reports / Book details former president’s ‘stunning disregard for history’

On a visit to Europe to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of the first world war, Donald Trump insisted to his then chief of staff, John Kelly: “Well, Hitler did a lot of good things.”

The remark from the former US president on the 2018 trip, which reportedly “stunned” Kelly, a retired US Marine Corps general, is reported in a new book by Michael Bender of the Wall Street Journal.

Frankly, We Did Win This Election has been widely trailed ahead of publication next week. The Guardian obtained a copy.

Bender reports that Trump made the remark during an impromptu history lesson in which Kelly “reminded the president which countries were on which side during the conflict” and “connected the dots from the first world war to the second world war and all of Hitler’s atrocities”.

Bender is one of a number of authors to have interviewed Trump since he was ejected from power.

He reports that Trump denied making the remark about Hitler.

But Bender says unnamed sources reported that Kelly “told the president that he was wrong, but Trump was undeterred”, emphasizing German economic recovery under Hitler during the 1930s. » | Martin Pengelly in Washington | Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Nightmare Scenario review: Trump, Covid and a lasting national trauma »

Can You Be Gay in China? | Ricky Bradbury

Jun 22, 2021 • Ricky Bradbury has been gay in China since 2006. He’s an English teacher from Brazil and is living with his Chinese husband in south China in the last few years. In this conversation we discuss the Chinese gay community, the local LGBTQ+, gay bars, and why living here as a gay man is better than what most people may think.

What Do the Chinese Think of Gays?

Nov 1, 2020 • I did this public interview in Hebei, China, asking people what they think of homosexuals, and do they think of gays and lesbians differently. Here's what I got!

Chinese Court Ruled Homosexuality Can Be a Mental Disorder

Mar 3, 2021 • An eastern Chinese provincial court in China has upheld that homosexual behaviors can be considered a personality disorder in a recent verdict despite appeals.

Democracy Now : Top US & World Headlines — July 6, 2021

Welsh Red: Ex-postal Worker and Retired Nurse Grab Gold with a Pinot Noir

THE GUARDIAN: Monmouthshire’s White Castle Vineyard scoops top prize against global rivals in prestigious blind tasting award

First it was English winemakers that had vineyards in traditional wine-making regions such as France looking over their shoulder, now it is Wales, after a “deliciously fresh” pinot noir from Monmouthshire scooped a prestigious wine award.

White Castle Vineyard’s “pinot noir reserve 2018”, a red wine that costs £25.50 a bottle, has become the first Welsh vintage to win a gold medal in the Decanter World Wine Awards (DWWA).

Robb Merchant, a former Royal Mail worker who runs White Castle with his wife, Nicola, a retired nurse, described the win as “fantastic” for the vineyard which had been his “wife’s dream” to establish. » | Zoe Wood | Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Covid-19 : le confinement de Sydney prolongé

LE POINT : Les habitants de la ville la plus peuplée d’Australie, reconfinés depuis le 26 juin, vont devoir faire avec cette mesure au moins une semaine supplémentaire.

Les autorités australiennes ont annoncé que la ville de Sydney allait être confinée pour au moins une semaine supplémentaire face au regain épidémique du Covid-19 et de son variant Delta. Les cinq millions d’habitants de la ville la plus peuplée d’Australie vivent depuis le 26 juin avec l’interdiction de sortir de chez eux pour tenter de contenir la progression du virus. Censée durer deux semaines, cette mesure a été prolongée mercredi d’au moins sept jours. Ce qui signifie que le confinement sera au minimum en vigueur jusqu’au 16 juillet.

« Ce variant Delta change la donne, il est extrêmement transmissible », a déploré Gladys Berejiklian, Première ministre de Nouvelle-Galles du Sud, État ayant Sydney pour capitale. « Nous ne voulons pas nous retrouver dans la position où il faudrait constamment passer de confinement en déconfinement », a-t-elle ajouté, expliquant que prolonger le confinement était « la meilleure façon pour faire en sorte que ce soit notre seul confinement avant que toute la population soit vaccinée ». Les habitants ne peuvent actuellement sortir que pour acheter des denrées essentielles, obtenir des soins médicaux, faire de l’exercice, aller à l’école ou au travail s’ils ne peuvent pas travailler à domicile. » | Source AFP | mercredi 7 juillet 2021

Regards énamourés et tendres étreintes : Jodie Foster et son épouse Alexandra Hedison au Festival de Cannes

LE FIGARO : La photographe de 51 ans et l’actrice de 58 ans, qui a reçu la Palme d'or d'honneur du Festival de Cannes, ont esquissé une apparition remarquée sur le tapis rouge, ce mardi 6 juillet, à l’occasion de la cérémonie d’ouverture de l’événement.

Elle lui a, tour à tour, présenté Spike Lee et Maggie Gyllenhaal. Jodie Foster est ainsi apparue au bras d’Alexandra Hedison, son épouse depuis 2014, lors de la cérémonie d’ouverture du Festival de Cannes, qui se tenait ce mardi 6 juillet. L’actrice de 58 ans, qui a reçu la Palme d'or d'honneur, et la photographe de 51 ans, ont esquissé une arrivée remarquée sur le tapis rouge de l’événement. Toutes deux ont ainsi affiché leur complicité, entre regards énamourés, tendres étreintes, baiser volé et éclats de rire. » | Par Chloé Friedmann 1 | mardi 6 juillet 2021

Der Klimawandel öffnet die Schleusen des Himmels

TAGES ANZEIGER: Modellrechnungen sagen schon seit Jahrzehnten vorher, dass Starkniederschläge in einer wärmeren Welt heftiger ausfallen. Das wird nun durch eine globale Datenstudie bestätigt.

Die vom Menschen verursachte Erderwärmung hat Starkniederschläge bereits in den letzten Jahrzehnten intensiviert, und zwar global – genau wie es Klimamodelle vorausgesagt hatten. Das zeigt eine aktuelle im Fachmagazin «Nature Communications» erschienene Studie. «Das ist sowohl methodisch als auch im Bezug auf die Datensätze die wohl vollständigste Studie, die den menschlichen Einfluss auf die Starkniederschläge belegt», sagt der Klimaforscher Reto Knutti von der ETH Zürich, der nicht an der Studie beteiligt ist. » | Joachim Laukenmann | Dienstag 6. Juli 2021

Biden warnt vor Ausbreitung der Delta-Variante

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINER ZEITUNG: Der Kampf gegen das Coronavirus ist aus Sicht des amerikanischen Präsidenten noch nicht vorbei. Er sieht Impfverweigerer in Gefahr: Nahezu jeder Covid-19-Todesfall treffe Ungeimpfte.

Angesichts der Ausbreitung der Delta-Variante des Coronavirus hat der amerikanische Präsident Joe Biden die Amerikaner abermals eindringlich zum Impfen aufgerufen. Die potentiell gefährlichere Delta-Variante sei in manchen Teilen der Vereinigten Staaten bereits für die Hälfte aller Infektionen verantwortlich, sagte Biden am Dienstag im Weißen Haus. „Unser Kampf gegen dieses Virus ist nicht vorbei.“

Biden kündigte neue Maßnahmen seiner Regierung an, um die Impfquote zu erhöhen. So sollen unter anderem Helfer in Gemeinden von Tür zu Tür gehen, um über Impfungen zu informieren. Auch mobile Kliniken sollen verstärkt zum Einsatz kommen. » | Quelle: dpa | Mittwoch 7. Juli 2021

Aux Etats-Unis, l’ouragan Elsa se rapproche des côtes de Floride

LE MONDE : Elsa, temporairement rétrogradé samedi en tempête tropicale, est le premier ouragan de la saison dans l’Atlantique. Il devrait toucher terre « mercredi matin » en Floride.

La saison des ouragans a démarré aux Etats-Unis. Après avoir frappé les Caraïbes, la tempête Elsa, redevenue un ouragan, se dirigeait, mardi 6 juillet, vers les côtes de Floride. A 23 heures mardi (5 heures à Paris, mercredi), Elsa se trouvait, selon le Centre national des ouragans (NHC), juste devant la baie de Tampa, accompagnée « de fortes pluies et de rafales de vent se propageant à l’intérieur des terres dans le sud-ouest et le centre-ouest de la Floride ». » | Le Monde avec AFP | mardi 7 juillet 2021

Egypt : When a Search Crosses the Line

THE NEW YORK TIMES: These women crossed paths with the Egyptian justice system./ Each said she was sexually abused by the authorities.

These women were either arrested for speaking out or had gone to the authorities to report a crime.

In each case, they said, they were sexually abused by the officials sworn to protect them.

Whether they are victims of crimes, witnesses or the accused, women who encounter Egypt’s criminal justice system risk being taken aside and stripped, groped, prodded and violated.

This treatment is illegal, but in this authoritarian and patriarchal country, there is almost nothing they can do about it.

The women in these videos, speaking publicly for the first time, described sexual violations that they said were committed in police stations, prisons and hospitals. » | By Mona El-Naggar, Yousur Al-Hlou and Aliza Aufrichtig | Monday, July 5, 2021

Read in Arabic HERE »

Tuesday, July 06, 2021

History of Homosexuality on Film

July 2, 2015 – With gay marriage now legal in America, let's take a look back at how homosexuality has been portrayed on film. It's 120 years of misrepresentation in 10 minutes!

Foreigner : I Don't Want to Live Without You (Tradução)