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Murder and manslaughter increased in 2020 by 29.4% over 2019, according to new data released by the FBI on Monday.
The increase is the largest since the FBI began compiling data since the 1960's. Although the jump in violent crime was already known, the FBI's data compiled from law enforcement agencies around the country confirmed more detailed aspects of US crime.
The data shows that murders by guns make up more than 2 out of 3 murders. The data also shows that violent crime rose by 5.6% from 2019 to 2020, and assaults increased by 12%. Property crimes decreased by 7.8%.
Officials say they are seeing murders increase again in 2021, but at a slower pace than in 2020. In Chicago, one of the nation's hot spots for gun violence, the number of shootings continues to reach double digits on typical weekends. Earlier this month, between Thursday night, Sept. 16 and Friday morning, the city recorded 23 people shot and 4 killed in gun violence.
The reason for the spike in murders vary. Criminologists have pointed to economic hardships in the wake of the pandemic.
Conservatives, meanwhile, have blamed liberal, large cities for restricting police officers in the wake of the George Floyd murder in 2020. Liberals have long blamed easy access to guns and the US Justice Department has been taking a more aggressive stance toward illegal gun trafficking, as have the city of Chicago and the state of New York./agencies
US President Joe Biden took a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine live on television Monday, a quick and routine moment that he hoped would inspire more Americans to get both booster shots and the initial vaccine shot.
"About 23% [of Americans] haven't gotten any shots, and that distinct minority is causing an awful lot of damage for the rest of the country," he told reporters. "This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated."
Last week, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved booster shots for the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for those over the age of 65 and those who have underlying health conditions, such as obesity and diabetes. Those Americans are required to have gone at least six months since their last dose.
Days after the FDA's recommendation, the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, then expanded the booster shot eligibility to include workers in high-risk settings and institutions, such as health care workers and teachers.
Approvals for booster shots for the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines are expected within days.
Biden got his first dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine on live television on Dec. 21 of last year, then got his second dose on Jan. 11.
While lifting his sleeve and taking the third shot on Monday, Biden continued to talk about how the US is the global leader in getting vaccines out to the rest of the world.
"We're doing more than any other nation combined" to get doses out, he said.
But addressing vaccine hesitancy in the US, Biden added, "One thing's for sure, a quarter of the country can't go unvaccinated."/agencies
French President Emmanuel Macron was hit by an egg Monday afternoon while making a visit to a restaurant trade fair in Lyon, France.
The moment was captured widely on social media, the president was seen greeting fair-goers and cheerily socializing when a brown egg hit him on the left shoulder. It bounced off without breaking as Macron's security staff instantly shielded him from further harm.
A man opposite the president was seen being cornered immediately and detained in handcuffs.
The man who threw the egg at Macron shouted "Long live the revolution" as he threw the egg, and he was then arrested.
The incident happened while Macron was making an appearance at the International Catering, Hotel, and Food Show in the city, known as France's culinary capital.
On a trip to Tain-L'Hermitage in June, Macron was slapped in the face by a man while shaking hands in the crowd gathered there. The man was immediately seized by guards surrounding the president.
According to Euronews, the president took Monday's incident in his usual courageous fashion.
"If he has something to say to me, let him come," he said following the incident./agencies
Seven Palestinian inmates in [Israeli] prisons have staged a hunger strike to protest their detention without trial, a Palestinian NGO said on Monday.
In a statement, the Palestinian Prisoners Society said the detainees include two who are being hospitalized.
"The [Israeli] occupation continues its intransigence and refusal to respond to their demand of ending their administrative detention, in an attempt to bring the striking prisoners to a difficult and dangerous health stage," the NGO said.
The policy of administrative detention allows [Israeli] authorities to extend the detention of a prisoner without charge or trial.
There are around 4,850 Palestinian detainees in [Israeli] prisons, including 520 administrative detainees, according to institutions concerned with prisoners’ affairs./agencies
Indicators of a world vitality crunch pushed oil costs above $80 a barrel for the primary time in three years as markets grappled with the prospect of widespread gasoline shortfalls heading into the tip of the 12 months.
Brent, the worldwide benchmark, rose as a lot as 0.8 per cent to $80.19 a barrel throughout Asia buying and selling on Tuesday, hitting a three-year high for the second consecutive day. Tuesday’s rise introduced the value of crude virtually 55 per cent greater for the 12 months up to now.
The newest positive factors for Brent got here amid a broad rally in vitality markets, with growing competition between Europe and China serving to drive fuel costs to report ranges in current weeks.
A shortfall in world fuel manufacturing, together with a concerted drive in China to chop down on air pollution from heavy business, is anticipated to push crude greater as industries shift to utilizing oil to generate energy.
Chinese language authorities’ clear vitality drive, a part of an effort to stave off an annual choking haze as Beijing prepares to host the Winter Olympics in February, has led to widespread outages which have disrupted manufacturing unit exercise and left many properties with out energy within the nation’s north-east.
Chinese language energy producers have struggled to take care of a pointy drop in manufacturing that has pushed thermal coal costs within the nation up 96 per cent this 12 months.
Oil costs are additionally rising in China, with crude futures in Shanghai up 27 per cent from a low touched in late August, forcing Beijing this month to announce its first-ever public auction of state petroleum reserves to home refiners.
In the meantime, the UK has been gripped by a fuel supply crisis triggered by half by a scarcity of haulage drivers, with motorists queueing for petrol and stations working dry after a spate of panic-buying.
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“We’re not simply the UK and Europe, however a possible world vitality disaster coming into the winter,” mentioned Robert Rennie, world head of market technique at Westpac.
He added that with world vitality demand rising as nations ease journey restrictions imposed to include coronavirus, oil may face a worldwide scarcity, with US inventory levels effectively under common forward of the year-end peak consumption interval.
“Throw on prime of that energy outages in China and considerations about ranges of stock world wide, and it’s comprehensible that we’re seeing upward strain on crude”, Rennie mentioned.
The unfold of gasoline shortfalls prompted Goldman Sachs this week to mission a world vitality rally for months to come back. The funding financial institution forecast Brent would hit $90 a barrel earlier than the tip of the 12 months.
In China, state media tried to ease considerations by promising a swift finish to rolling outages.
A front-page report on Tuesday within the Financial Data Day by day, a newspaper run by state information company Xinhua, mentioned authorities have been taking steps to ease electrical energy shortages and stop unannounced energy cuts./agencies
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UK climate activists on Monday breached a court injunction and staged another demonstration in one of the country’s most busiest motorways.
Members of Insulate Britain, the climate campaign that has organized the demonstrations and sit-ins, breached the High Court order that was issued last week and blocked a section of London's M25 motorway.
"This morning 52 people that have been involved in Insulate Britain's two weeks of motorway protests blocked the M25 in breach of the injunction granted by the High Court last Tuesday,” the group said in a statement.
"You can throw as many injunctions at us as you like, but we are going nowhere. You can raid our savings and confiscate our property. You can deny us our liberty and put us behind bars. But that is only shooting the messenger. The truth is that this country is going to hell unless you take emergency action to stop putting carbon into the air,” the statement added.
Activists occupied the main roundabout that leads to Heathrow International Airport with police detaining some protesters. The sit-in is the sixth time the group has targeted the main artery into London.
Police have confirmed they are at the site of the protest and have arrested and detained a number of activists.
“We're attending a protest at Junction 14 of the #M25 near Heathrow Airport where activists are blocking traffic on a slip road,” the Metropolitan Police said on Twitter.
“We are on scene and have opened one lane of the carriageway. Arrests are being made - we will share updates shortly,” it added.
On 21 Sept., the High Court in London ruled that demonstrators and protesters are prevented from occupying motorways and highways as well as other strategic roads that are linked to the Port of Dover.
The injunction entered into force last week and so anyone caught in breach of the order could face arrest and a prison sentence.
Insulate Britain is a branch of the wider Extinction Rebellion movement. The group runs a niche campaign that seeks to force the government to retrofit homes to cut climate emissions./aa
Following demand from the Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) to delete 'Islamophobic' content in a school book in Telangana, the state authorities on Sunday assured appropriate action while the publisher has apologised and decided to delete the objectionable photograph. The director of school education clarified that the objectionable photograph was not published in the government prescribed text book of 8th class but in the Question Bank prepared and published by VGS Brilliant Series publication, a private firm.
The director said in a statement that appropriate action will be initiated against the publishers responsible for this. SIO's Telangana chapter had strong exception to the picture of a 'terrorist' showing him holding a rocket launcher in his right hand and carrying holy Quran in his left hand. It was published in the chapter 'National movement - the last phase 1919 -1947'.
Dr Talha Faiyazuddin, president, SIO Telangana condemned the publication of Islamophobic content and urged the state's education minister P. Sabita Indra Reddy to initiate action against the publisher. He said such content will prejudice students' minds. "It is creating and propagating stereotypical, hateful and Islamophobic view towards Muslim community, by showing a person holding a gun in his right hand and the holy Quran in left hand. It is a discriminatory and hateful content which destroys the harmony, unity and integrity of the society," he said.
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Meanwhile, VGS Publishers has apologized for carrying the picture. It announced that it will delete the picture and reprint the books. It also promised to withdraw unsold books from the market.
The Vijayawada-based publisher in a statement expressed regrets. "It was not at all intentional. We do not intend to hurt anybody's sentiments. However, we have decided to delete the picture and reprint the books," it said.
"We are also in the process of collecting back unsold copies from the market to avoid any further inconvenience to anyone," it added.
Earlier in the day, Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM) legislator Ahmed Balala called upon the education minister to demand criminal case against the publisher. He also urged the government to seize the books carrying the objectionable and blasphemous photograph.
The MIM leader said the photograph promotes hate and incorrect information about Islam and the glorious Quran. "This is blasphemous and hurting the feelings of Muslims. Islam neither endorses/promotes terrorism nor the people who use the Glorious Quran to justify terrorism. This is highly objectionable and will not be tolerated and may spread hate in the community," the MIM leader wrote in his letter to the minister.
The contents of a class 8 social studies book in Telangana have come under fire for an alleged Islamophobic image. The picture that features in the ‘National movement - the last phase 1919-1947’ chapter of a ‘Question Bank’ showed a ‘terrorist’ holding a rocket launcher in his right hand and the holy Quran in the left. The image prompted the Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) to write to the Telangana Government demanding the immediate removal of the image, reported news agency IANS.
Reacting sharply to the photo, SIO Telangana president Talha Faiyazuddin criticised the publication of the photo and requested the state’s education minister P Sabitha Indra Reddy to launch an inquiry against the publisher.
Faiyazuddin said that such content in textbooks creates hateful prejudices against the Muslim community in the students’ minds. He added that the image showing the person holding a gun and Quran at the same time, propagated hate against Islam and intended to disrupt the harmony, unity and integrity of the society.
The student organisation demanded that the government should infuse peace in the minds of students through peace education and peace curriculum in educational institutions. The state government authorities assured SIO of appropriate action against the publisher.
The content drew strong reactions from netizens as well and social media users lashed out at the publication for disrupting harmony. “Why Social Studies book is misguiding the students in Telangana? How come someone design a Terrorist holding Quran in one hand and gun on the shoulder? Stop this immediately," wrote a user.
The picture that features in the 'National movement - the last phase 1919-1947' chapter of a 'Question Bank' showed a 'terrorist' holding a rocket launcher in his right hand and the holy Quran in the left.
The contents of a class 8 social studies book in Telangana have come under fire for an alleged Islamophobic image. The picture that features in the ‘National movement - the last phase 1919-1947’ chapter of a ‘Question Bank’ showed a ‘terrorist’ holding a rocket launcher in his right hand and the holy Quran in the left. The image prompted the Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) to write to the Telangana Government demanding the immediate removal of the image, reported news agency IANS.
Reacting sharply to the photo, SIO Telangana president Talha Faiyazuddin criticised the publication of the photo and requested the state’s education minister P Sabitha Indra Reddy to launch an inquiry against the publisher.
Faiyazuddin said that such content in textbooks creates hateful prejudices against the Muslim community in the students’ minds. He added that the image showing the person holding a gun and Quran at the same time, propagated hate against Islam and intended to disrupt the harmony, unity and integrity of the society.
The student organisation demanded that the government should infuse peace in the minds of students through peace education and peace curriculum in educational institutions. The state government authorities assured SIO of appropriate action against the publisher.
The content drew strong reactions from netizens as well and social media users lashed out at the publication for disrupting harmony. “Why Social Studies book is misguiding the students in Telangana? How come someone design a Terrorist holding Quran in one hand and gun on the shoulder? Stop this immediately," wrote a user.
However, after the issue was highlight by many stakeholders, VGS Publications- the publisher of this social studies book, issued an apology letter and expressed regret over the picture. The Vijaywada-based publisher has assured to withdraw all the unsold books from the market and publish new ones without the picture.
Causeur magazine ran a cover image of five ethnically-diverse children with a mocking title 'Smile, you are great-replaced!', which suits the far-right's manufactured fear of demographic change.
Causeur, a French magazine, used the photos of five baby boys reflecting different ethnicities and introduced them with a provocative phrase title: "smile you are great-replaced!''.
For its September issue, the magazine's main topic is stated on the cover with a subtitle that read: "The new demography of France with documents and figures'’. It clearly shows the magazine intends to stoke the fears of demographic change, a classic example of how media organisations tend to toe the far-right line.
The multi-ethnic babies illustrated in the magazine are meant to show how France is changing from predominantly white to ethnically diverse country, a reality many countries are facing due to globalisation and free trade agreements. The US takes pride in its diversity, although white supremacy is on the rise there as well.
For Causeur, the understanding of demographic change is pretty pedantic, illustrative of how the white population is dwindling. The publication's management and editors are feeling threatened by fellow French citizens who come from different backgrounds, such as Africans, Muslims and Asians. Them replacing the French people is a common fear that influences the country's politics to a great extent.
While this extremist initiative pleased many far-right French people, others condemned the racist references of the magazine betokening hate speech crime rather than freedom of expression.
''Uninhibited racism''
Elisabeth Moreno-Minister for Gender Equality, Diversity and Equal Opportunities- denounced the magazine on September 17 and described it as 'disgraceful' while saying that the inter-ministerial delegation for the fight against racism filed a criminal charge against the publication of the magazine.
Moreno made a statement on social media describing the sheer racism on the magazine cover as the abject front page by saying: “Let us be clear: behind the conspiracy theory of the ‘great replacement’ based on skin colour or ethnic origin hides uninhibited racism”.
Former Interior Minister and politician from the ruling Republican March (LREM) party Christophe Castaner declared that Causeur magazine covered racism targeting children and that he was proud to defend a France where all children are born with the same rights and discrimination will always be a crime.
Thomas Portes, spokesman for presidential candidate Sandrine Rousseau also pointed out the magazine cover on Twitter saying it is ''despicable'' and that Causeur should be sanctioned immediately for its racist publication.
Aude Lancelin, on the other hand, who used to be a journalist for the magazine, described it as an "Islamophobic rag".
The Great Replacement theory behind the cover
On September 17, the magazine's editorial director Elisabeth Levy made statements to justify the choice of the cover during a french talk show called Do not touch my TV.
“We made this one to alert a phenomenon,” she said.
''There is a growing share [in France] of the births of children [who] have one or two parents of foreign origin outside Europe and of foreign culture. For me, the problem is not that our society is multiethnic. It is multicultural. If all these children were brought up like French people, in terms of values and manners, I wouldn't give a damn [but] that's not the case "
She also highlighted issues such as community order for the Maghreb and sub-Saharan populations.
Previously, Levy participated in the headscarf debates in October 2020, claiming that the headscarf was the uniform of the enemies of France.
Levy laments a change that, in her view, threatens the cultural mosaic of France as she emphasizes the importance of raising awareness on this issue.
But what is the basis of this so-called ''phenomenon'' that causes fear from such a threat?
As Moreno indicates and the magazine's cover title shows, it lies on a theory called The Great Replacement which was adopted by French-far right movement The Identitarians.
The Identitarians' origin comes from a French network of thinkers and writers called New Right and the French nationalist movement Bloc Identitare. It was founded by xenophobic partisans in 2002.
After, they were named Generation Identity as the movement embraced the American alt-right while connecting itself with the European far-right. Soon, they expanded over many other European countries with their far-right extremist ideology and practices.
So far, the movement has had many pro-racist and anti-refugee rhetoric and actions. For instance, during a demonstration against racism last year, the movement unfurled a banner that says "White Live Matters" to disrupt the anti-racist protests.
At that time, Levy supported the movement's action by saying "Bravo" while appearing on a tv program on a French channel called Cnews.
The movement and its supporters strongly defend this Great Replacement theory that was put forward by the French thinker, Renaud Camus.
The theory suggests that European societies lose their identities and sub-cultures due to the constant increase of non-Europeans and Muslims. It claims that soon, the Europeans will lose their population in their own region.
Hence, the concept of ‘defending Europe’ has become the main theme of the Identitarians and this idea shapes the perception and discourse strategies of its followers. In this regard, the far-right magazine Causeur and its September cover are considered a concrete product of such theoretical understanding.
On September 24, France’s top administrative court, the Council of State, approved the French authorities’ December 2020 dissolution of the Collective Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF), a leading anti-discrimination group. The court’s decision seriously damages the country’s self-proclaimed reputation as a champion of freedom of expression and association.
Over the years, CCIF has played a key role in providing legal support to people facing anti-Muslim discrimination and documenting the discriminatory impact on Muslims of France’s counterterrorism measures.
In its judgment, the court said that CCIF’s denunciation of France’s hostility toward Muslims in its fight against terrorism, as well as the group’s failure to “moderate” third parties’ antisemitic and other hostile comments in response to CCIF social media posts, constitute incitement to discrimination, hatred, and violence, justifying the decision to close it down. The court also accepted disputed allegations that CCIF maintained close links with supporters of radical Islamism, including through its former executive director.
Under international and European human rights law, states can only interfere with rights to freedom of association, freedom of religion and belief, and freedom of expression when such interference has a lawful basis, is necessary and proportionate. Dissolving an independent organization should be a measure of last resort in the event it advocates a clear, imminent threat of violence or has acted in grave violation of the law. The Council of State rejected all other arguments by the French government that CCIF gave rise to such a threat, yet nevertheless upheld the decision to close it down.
The dissolution of CCIF is part of a broader crackdown by French authorities in response to attacks attributed to Islamist extremists. A controversial law intended to “fight against separatism and attacks on [French] citizenship” was adopted last August, prompting concerns from France’s national human rights commission and the European Commission.
The closure of CCIF and last week’s ruling are likely to have a chilling effect on freedom of expression and association of those working on non-discrimination in France and elsewhere in Europe. Shuttering CCIF weakens the country’s credibility as a champion for rights and sets a dangerous example for governments quick to use vaguely defined laws to silence critics. French authorities should stop pushing censorship on civil society organizations and instead demonstrate their commitment to freedom of expression and association, and their determination to fight discrimination./agencies