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Thursday, December 10, 2015

Mark Zuckerberg Vows to ‘Fight to Protect’ Muslim Rights on Facebook

Just days after Donald Trump called for a “a total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the U.S., Mark Zuckerberg said they are completely welcome on Facebook and vowed to fight to protect Muslim rights on his social media platform. “I want to add my voice in support of Muslims in our community and around the world,” the Facebook founder and CEO wrote on his page. “After the Paris attacks and hate this week, I can only imagine the fear Muslims feel that they will be persecuted for the actions of others.” Zuckerberg, 31, and his wife Priscilla Chan welcomed their daughter, Max, on Dec. 1, and the importance of family is clearly on his mind.

''As a Jew, my parents taught me that we must stand up against attacks on all communities. Even if an attack isn’t against you today, in time attacks on freedom for anyone will hurt everyone,” he said in a message to his more than 43 million followers. 

Trump sparked outrage and bitter backlash with a statement posted to his campaign website on Monday, which claimed there was a “great hatred towards Americans by large segments of the Muslim population.” Jeb Bush called his presidential rival “unhinged,” while many people have compared his intentions to those of Hitler and Nazi Germany.

See the full message from Zuckerberg below.
I want to add my voice in support of Muslims in our community and around the world.
After the Paris attacks and hate this week, I can only imagine the fear Muslims feel that they will be persecuted for the actions of others.
As a Jew, my parents taught me that we must stand up against attacks on all communities. Even if an attack isn’t against you today, in time attacks on freedom for anyone will hurt everyone.
If you’re a Muslim in this community, as the leader of Facebook I want you to know that you are always welcome here and that we will fight to protect your rights and create a peaceful and safe environment for you.
Having a child has given us so much hope, but the hate of some can make it easy to succumb to cynicism. We must not lose hope. As long as we stand together and see the good in each other, we can build a better world for all people.

$10bn for Africa’s green power

Canada, France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United States, Sweden, Netherlands and the European Union (EU) will jointly provide the money which will help developing countries adapt to global warming and build renewable energy sources.
Germany is contributing $3.3 billion, while France, the US, Britain, Canada, Japan, Italy, Sweden, Netherlands and the EU Commission would contribute the remaining $6.7 billion.
The announcement was made during the ongoing climate talks at the 21st Conference of Parties (COP) to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
The Africa Renewable Energy Initiative aims to achieve at least 10 GW of new and additional renewable energy generation capacity by 2020 which would be sufficient to generate at least 300 GW by 2030.
The partners said they supported Africa's leadership and would work closely with African partners to bridge the access gap and develop renewable energy potential in the region.
The partners said: “In this context, we welcome the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative as a transformative, Africa-owned and led inclusive effort to accelerate and scale-up the harnessing of the continent's renewable energy potential.
“We welcome the contributions from countries interested in helping Africa harness its renewable energy potential and improve access to sustainable energy for all.
“We welcome the significant financial commitments that have already been made by a number of countries to accelerate efforts to harness Africa's renewable energy potential and expand energy access across the continent, and we commit to mobilising at least $10 billion cumulatively from 2015 to 2020.
Meanwhile, developed countries jointly committed to a goal of mobilising jointly $100 billion a year by 2020 from a wide variety sources.
More than 622 million people in Africa are living without access to electricity, including about two thirds of the population of sub-Saharan Africa.
The struggle of most African states to meet electricity demand poses a major obstacle for economic growth and increased living standards. Access to energy in developing countries is essential for the reduction of poverty and promotion of economic growth.

Why the Paris climate summit matters to Africa

Senior politicians from around the world have congregated in Paris this week to thrash out details of a global climate agreement at the 21st Conference of the Parties -- or COP21.
African negotiators hope for a deal that commits industrialized countries to limiting their carbon emissions and preventing catastrophic global warming, and which makes resources available for those countries already on the frontline of climate change.
The impacts of climate change on Africa are complex and unpredictable -- as they are across the world. Over the past decade, almost every region of the continent has experienced a greater frequency of extreme weather events, such as droughts or floods.
In the Horn of Africa, the kinds of droughts that used to happen once in a generation happen every few years. In Southern Africa, the impacts of the El NiƱo weather event, which typically causes droughts, seem to be worsening, and water shortages have strained the infrastructure across the region. All along the Sahel -- the arid band of Africa that fringes the Sahara desert -- droughts have become the norm, destroying areas that were once productive.
"Events that used to be once in 30 years are happening with greater frequency," says Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, ex-minister of finance of Nigeria and former managing director of the World Bank. "There's a lot of worry about the impact of climate change on food production, land management, on issues relating to livelihoods."
African agriculture is particularly vulnerable to unpredictable weather. In Sub-Saharan Africa, more than 95% of agriculture is rain-fed, meaning that it is entirely dependent on the weather -- unlike irrigated agriculture, which often use boreholes or water stores.
The majority of African farmers are also smallholders, who typically grow food for themselves and their families and sell the surplus. They are often unable to save much money between seasons, and the loss of their crops due to drought or flood can push them over the poverty line.
These small farmers are particularly vulnerable to unpredictable weather. Without access to detailed weather forecasting or new, drought-resistant varieties of crops, small farmers -- who have planted at the same time and in the largely the same way for generations -- lack the tools to adapt.
Crop failures undermine food security and push people into poverty, creating deep social pain. They could also be economically devastating. Agriculture is the single largest employer on the continent, and many countries have pegged their hopes for future economic growth and diversification on the sector.
The collapse of rural livelihoods adds to pressure on Africa's cities. The continent is already urbanizing rapidly, due to a combination of population growth and economic changes. By 2050, the continent's urban population is forecast to grow from 435 million people today, to 1.3 billion, according to the Mo Ibrahim Foundation.
This migration, exacerbated by climate change, adds to pressure on urban services and infrastructure. Many rural-to-urban migrants struggle to find formal and stable employment, adding to already significant social tension over inequality and jobs, while cities themselves are vulnerable to the changing climate.
Some higher altitude cities, such as Kenya's capital, Nairobi, have been free of malaria for decades, but a warming climate is creating the conditions for the spread of the disease, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
In other cities, water stress -- due to reduced rainfall in surrounding areas -- raises the spectre of water-borne diseases as citizens turn to untreated supplies. In Botswana's capital Gaborone, residents have had to buy water from private suppliers after the city's main dam dried up, and local experts warn that there was an immediate and negative health impact, with cases of diarrhoea spiking.

Growth and infrastructure

Even well-managed economies, such as Botswana, are struggling with the impacts of extreme weather. Neighbouring South Africa, which is also one of the richest countries on the continent, has had to implement rolling water outages in major cities as it struggles with supplies. Both countries now have to set aside billions of dollars to invest in their infrastructure.
The additional drain on resources is another brake on economic development for a continent that has been growing rapidly for the last 15 years. African governments and development experts are worried that climate change could halt or reverse these gains, if countries do not prepare for its impacts.
However, Okonjo-Iweala is hopeful that the continent is able to innovate and build resilience to climate impacts.
"I think the awareness is increasing, because people are seeing the consequences of climate change. There is no doubt that the issues of drought and flood have... manifested in a way that people are now beginning to take notice," she says.
Twenty-six countries have now signed up to an African Union-led facility, the African Risk Capacity, which offers insurance against extreme climate events, quickly disbursing money to help governments to finance emergency response. The ARC is also looking at ways to finance longer-term projects to adapt and build resilience.
"There are innovative financing mechanisms. We are all searching for ways to finance the solutions to these problems. This really provides one of these solutions," Okonjo-Iweala, who chairs the ARC's governing board, says. "We are building more and more instruments to help countries withstand climate change."

Oscar Pistorius to appeal to South Africa's highest court

PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) — Oscar Pistorius will try to appeal his murder conviction in South Africa's highest court, his lawyer said Tuesday, possibly extending a legal battle that began nearly three years ago when the double-amputee Olympian shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp to death in his home.

As Pistorius sat in the dock in a wood-paneled courtroom, defense lawyer Barry Roux unveiled the plan to take the sensational murder case to an 11-judge court known for abolishing the death penalty and affirming basic human rights after the 1994 end of white minority rule in South Africa

If the Constitutional Court chooses not to hear the case, Pistorius will be back in a lower court on April 18 for the start of a sentencing process, meaning he will remain under house arrest under bail terms announced Tuesday for at least the next several months.

Pistorius had already been living under restrictions at his uncle's home in Pretoria since October after serving one year of a five-year prison sentence for manslaughter. That conviction, however, was thrown out last week when an appeals court convicted the former track star of murdering Steenkamp, a model who was in a toilet cubicle when her boyfriend fired through the door on Valentine's Day 2013.
Prosecutors said he killed her after an argument; Pistorius said he killed her by mistake, thinking there was an intruder in the house.
On Tuesday, Pistorius was granted bail of the equivalent of $692 in South African currency — he paid an amount 100 times higher when he first appeared in court for the shooting, though he was not placed under house arrest at that time.
Judge Aubrey Ledwaba also instructed that Pistorius be placed under electronic monitoring and may only leave his uncle's home between 7 a.m. and 12 p.m.
Bail is often denied in cases where a conviction is overturned for a harsher verdict, but Pistorius' compliance with previous bail and house arrest conditions may have influenced the judge's decision, said Manny Witz, a South African legal expert.
At the Constitutional Court, Witz said, Pistorius' lawyers could try to argue that the Supreme Court of Appeal convicted him of murder based on a factual finding when it questioned whether Pistorius really thought he was in danger on the night he shot Steenkamp.
In South Africa, appeals must be based on questions around the interpretation of the law, rather than questions based on facts surrounding a case.
Prof. Stephen Tuson at the Wits School of Law in Johannesburg said there was no guarantee that the Constitutional Court would hear Pistorius' case even though it has the authority to hear any matter, including those deemed to be non-constitutional.
The April 18 date for sentencing will allow the Constitutional Court time to decide whether it will take Pistorius' case, said prosecution spokesman Luvuyo Mfaku. The defense has 15 days to submit appeal papers to the court, he said.
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel was doubtful about Pistorius' appeal prospects.
"We're not convinced that the accused has made out a good case and that his application to the Constitutional Court will be successful, but we acknowledge that he has the right to bring such an application," said Nel.
The appeals court had said that regardless of who was behind the door, Pistorius should have known someone could be killed if he fired multiple times. Under South African law, a person can be convicted of murder if he or she foresaw the possibility of someone dying through their actions and went ahead anyway.
Earlier, the state argued that Pistorius may try to flee, and asked for strict bail conditions but did not say he should be sent back to prison before sentencing. Under the bail terms, Pistorius may not travel further than a 12-mile (20-kilometer) radius from his uncle's mansion and must hand over his passport to the police.
The minimum sentence for murder in South Africa is 15 years, though a judge can reduce that sentence for what the law describes as exceptional circumstances.

Philippines police officers fired over 2009 massacre

The Philippines' police board has dismissed 21 officers for being "co-conspirators" in the country's worst political massacre six years ago when the son of a politician and his bodyguards shot dead 58 people, including 32 journalists.
The officers were dismissed for failing to stop the killings in the southern province of Maguindanao in November 2009, according to a police statement issued on Thursday.
All but one of the officers were found guilty of grave misconduct.
The remaining officer, Inspector Saudi Matabalao Mokamad, was found to have ignored the shooting he heard from the crime scene and not reporting it to his superiors.
He was dismissed on lesser charges.
"The 20 respondents were held liable for opting to become silent spectators to a crime unfolding before their very eyes," said the statement.
"Their inaction manifests complicity and unity of action to those who committed the abduction, and later the murders, themselves."
The main suspect accused of ordering the killings, Andal Ampatuan Sr, died of a heart attack in a government hospital in July this year.
His son went on trial in 2010 and is currently in jail.
The officers were accused as "co-conspirators" for setting up a checkpoint and for blocking the convoy of the victims who were on their way to file the certificate of candidacy of Vice Mayor Esmael Toto Mangudadatu, who was running against a member of the influential Ampatuan clan.
Al Jazeera's Marta Ortigas, reporting from Manila, said the case "was really a rivalry between two political clans".
She said 22 members of the rival family were among the dead.

"The justice system in the Philippines is renowned for going very, very slowly," she said.
"A case against a single suspect can take up to 10 years. In this case, there are over 100 named suspects all involved in one major trial. No convictions are expected any time soon."
The massacre, one of the world's deadliest attacks against media workers, saw some shot in their genitals before they were buried in a hilltop grave using an excavator.
Lawyers for the victims' families welcomed the dismissal of the police officers before adding that they were "very disappointed" with the pace of the dismissal proceedings.
"This is the very first time since the massacre six years ago that the victims have received some form of justice," they said.
The slow pace of the legal proceedings has angered the families of the victims and frustrated President Benigno Aquino, who took office in 2010 and promised a verdict before his term finishes in mid-2016.
All the accused police officers are currently detained at the Quezon City jail annex in Camp Bagong Diwa in Taguig, facing multiple murder charges before a Quezon City regional trial court.

Lee Rigby Killer Adebolajo Sues Prison Service



Michael Adebolajo is accused of the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich
Michael Adebolajo claimed he had been assaulted by five officers at the high-security Belmarsh Prison.
The officers involved were suspended from work after the incident but were later told they had no case to answer.
A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) spokesman said it will "robustly" defend the compensation claim.
He said: "The public will be rightly outraged at the thought of this man receiving compensation from the taxpayer and we robustly defend claims made against the Prison Service."
The MoJ said it has successfully defended two thirds of prisoner claims over the last three years.
Adebolajo was convicted last year, alongside Michael Adebowale, of murdering the 22-year-old soldier who was run over and hacked to death near Woolwich barracks in May 2013.
Adebolajo was condemned to die in prison with a whole-life term for the murder, while Adebowale was sentenced to life with a minimum 45 years.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

India and Pakistan Will Resume High-Level Bilateral Talks

Contentious neighbors India and Pakistan are set to resume talks for the first time in three years, the two countries said Wednesday, signaling a major step forward in a peace process that has broken down several times in the past.
The “Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue” was announced in the Pakistani capital Islamabad by India’s Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj alongside Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan’s prime-ministerial adviser on foreign affairs.
Swaraj is in Islamabad for a regional peace summit called the “Heart of Asia” conference, and is the most senior Indian official to visit Pakistan since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi assumed office in May 2014. She also met Modi’s Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif on Wednesday.
The perennially frosty ties between the two South Asian powers, which have fought three wars — two over the disputed border region of Kashmir — since their independence from Britain in 1947, has seen unsuccessful attempts at reconciliation by successive governments. Pakistan insists that any talks should include Kashmir, while India’s focus remains on the cross-border terrorism it accuses Pakistan of fomenting.
The past year has been no different, with the relationship deteriorating amid periodic military firefights at the border and a previous round of high-level talks also called off earlier this year. There has been a thaw recently, however, with the national security advisers of both countries conducting a “cordial” meeting in Bangkok on Monday, soon after Modi and Sharif spokeon the sidelines of the Paris Climate Conference in late November.
Swaraj, for her part, earlier said it was time for the two nations to “display the maturity and self-confidence to do business with each other and strengthen regional cooperation,” adding that India is prepared to approach the dialogue at a pace “comfortable” to Pakistan.
“The entire world is waiting and rooting for a change,” she said. “Let us not disappoint them.”