Staff

Staff

Iran's top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was killed by bullets that destroyed his spine, local media reported on Sunday.

Ali Fadawi, deputy commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Army, gave details of the assassination of Fakhrizadeh that took place late last month, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency.

Stating that the attack was carried out with a weapon that was placed on a roadside pickup and controlled remotely using electronic systems, Fadawi said that no assailant was found at the scene.

He said that the scientist had 11 bodyguards along with him when the incident took place and added that the pickup used in the attack was parked 10-15 meters away from the scene.

The bullets shot from the automatic weapon hit Fakhrizadeh’s waist area and destroyed his spine which led to his death, ISNA quoted Fadawi as saying.

Fadawi said following the attack, the pickup was exploded to destroy the weapon, from which 13 bullets were fired.

He said the other bullets were fired by the bodyguards of the scientist.

“The automatic weapon installed in the pickup was also equipped with a smart satellite system that zoomed into Fakhrizadeh’s face and used artificial intelligence,” ISNA quoted Fadawi as saying.

Fadawi did not mention as to how many bullets hit the victim’s body.

Fakhrizadeh was killed by unknown gunmen on the outskirts of the capital Tehran on Nov. 27, becoming the fifth Iranian nuclear scientist to be assassinated since 2010./aa

Kuwait’s prime minister submitted his government’s resignation on Sunday in a routine procedure after parliamentary elections that took place on Saturday, state news agency KUNA said.

Kuwait’s emir accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Sabah Al Khalid Al Sabah and asked the cabinet to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a new government is appointed.

Kuwaitis voted in legislative polls on Saturday, with the Gulf state’s worst economic crisis in decades posing a challenge for the government’s often stormy relationship with a parliament blamed for blocking reforms.

The results of the functional elections in the name of the voice / the name of the vote / the sixteenth vacuum resulted in 50 candidates winning the National Assembly, of whom 31 were new representatives, while 19 of the members of the National Assembly, the Voice, returned to the Council after their victory in the elections.

In front of the election results, a 62% change, as 7 members of Parliament did not contest the last elections, while the next 24 elections from the House of Representatives 2016 failed 

The large number of female candidates in the election race, Kuwaiti women could not win in any of the five constituencies.

The department registered for the first time in Parliament in 2017, and they are Issa Al-Kandari, Adnan Abdul-Samad and Issa Al-Shaheen, while 6 new faces entered the National Assembly for the first time, in addition to Deputy Dr. Hassan Gohar, who was a member of previous councils, and the voting rate in the first district exceeded 70%, and the results of the first constituency came as follows:

First circle

Hassan Johar, 5,849 votes

Youssef al-Gharib 5064 votes

Ahmed al-Shuhumi 4129 votes

Hamad Ruhuddin 3783 votes

Issa Al-Kandari 3398 votes

Ali Al-Qattan 3320 votes

Adnan Abdul Samad 3052 votes

Abdullah Al-Tariji 2472 votes

Abdullah Al-Mudhaf 2,437 votes

Osama Al-Shaheen 2,167 votes.

The second circle

As for the second constituency, it recorded the success of 5 members of the former National Assembly, namely Marzouq Al-Ghanim, Muhammad Al-Mutair, Khalil Al-Saleh, Badr Al-Mulla, and Hamad Al-Harshani, while 5 new deputies succeeded, and the rate of change reached 50% in the district and the voting rate in the second district reached 70.3%. The results of the second circuit according to the following:

Marzouq Al-Ghanim 5179 votes

Mohammed Al-Mutair 3456 votes

Khalil Al-Saleh 3117 votes

Hamad Al-Matar 2903 votes

Salman Al-Azmi 2,666 votes

Khaled Al-Ayed Al-Anzi: 2565 votes

Badr Al-Hamidi 2534 votes

Badr Al-Mulla 2,483 votes

Hamad Al-Harshani 2208 votes

Ahmed Al-Hamad 2195 votes.

The third circle

Moving to the third constituency, we find that the percentage of change in it is 70%, as in the "first", which is the highest rate of change at the level of the five districts, and each of the deputies Dr. Abdul Karim Al-Kandari, Youssef Al-Fadhala and Saadoun Hammad from the House of 2016, along with 7 new representatives for the first time entering the hall Abdullah Al-Salem, and the results of the third department came as follows:

Abdul Karim Al-Kandari 5585 votes

Osama al-Munawer has 3,858 votes

Muhannad Al-Sayer 3565 votes

Hisham Al-Saleh 3345 votes

Abdul Aziz Al-Saqabi 3340 votes

Yusef Al-Fadhala 2992 votes

Mubarak Zaid Al-Mutairi 2,982 votes

Saadoun Hammad 2,979 votes

Faris Al-Otaibi 2,942 votes

Sleazy Mudhafa 2904 votes

The fourth circle

In the fourth constituency, the percentage of change was 60%, as 4 deputies from the 2016 Council won: Shuaib Al-Muwaizi, Thamer Al-Sweit, Mubarak Al-Hajraf and Saad Al-Khanfour, while 6 new deputies entered the House after gaining the confidence of the constituency’s voters, and the voting rate in this fourth district was 70.8% The results of the fourth constituency were as follows:

Shoaib Al-Muizri 6,200 votes

Fayez Ghannam, the audience, 5,774 votes

Musaed Al-Ardi Al-Mutairi 5750 votes

Mohammed Obaid Al-Rajhi 5198 votes

Saud Abu Sulaib 5100 votes

Thamer Al-Swait 4935 votes

Marzouq al-Khalifah 4760 votes

Al-Daihani sorted 4701 votes

Saad Al-Khanfour 4520 votes

Mubarak Al-Hajraf 4422 votes

The Fifth Circle

The percentage of change in the Fifth District was 60%, with MPs Hamdan Al-Azmi, Khaled Al-Otaibi and Dr. Muhammad Al-Huwailah and Nasser Al-Dossari, in addition to the entry of former deputy Ahmed bin Mutia and 5 new deputies, and the results of the fifth constituency came as follows:

Hamdan Al-Azmi 8387 votes

Badr Al-Dahoom 8371 votes

Mubarak bin Khajmah 6801 votes

Summer summer 6,294 votes

Khaled Al-Otaibi, 5387 votes

Hammoud Mubarak Al-Azmi 5347 votes

Saleh Diab Al-Mutairi 5113 votes

Nasser Al-Dossary 4750 votes

Muhammad Al-Huwailah 4720 votes

Ahmad Muti` Al-Azmi 4,651 votes

It is noteworthy that the National Assembly 2020 election race witnessed competition between 326 male and female candidates in various constituencies, while the total number of voters reached 567,694 male and female voters, of whom 273,940 were males and 293754 were females./ 

ALQABAS

 

Violence erupted in Paris on Saturday for the second consecutive weekend at a mass protest against a new security law, with demonstrators clashing with police, vehicles set alight and shop windows smashed.

The weekly nationwide protests are becoming a major headache for President Emmanuel Macron's government, with tensions intensified by the beating of a black music producer by police last month.

Members of the Yellow Vests movement, which shook Macron with protests against economic hardship in France over the winter of 2018-2019, were also prominent in the rally.

Windows of a supermarket, property agency and bank were broken while several cars burst into flames along Avenue Gambetta as demonstrators marched towards Place de la République in eastern Paris, AFP reporters said.

Objects were also thrown at police who responded by using tear gas, in a repeat of the violent scenes from the protests last weekend against the security law that would restrict publishing pictures of the faces of police.

Some demonstrators used objects left into the streets to create impromptu barricades that they then set on fire.

Protesters, some letting off smoke bombs and firecrackers, shouted slogans like "Everyone hates the police."

Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin wrote on Twitter that 22 people had been detained in Paris so far by police, who he said were facing "very violent individuals".

'No contradiction'

It was one of almost 100 protests planned throughout France on Saturday against the new security law with thousands gathering in cities including Marseille, Montpellier and Nantes, where two police officers were wounded by a Molotov cocktail.

Police had deployed in force to avert trouble after the violent clashes erupted during the demonstration in Paris a week ago that saw dozens wounded.

“The bill will not jeopardise in any way the rights of journalists or ordinary citizens to inform the public,” Alice Thourot, an MP for Macron’s La République En Marche (LREM) party and the co-author of the clause, told Le Figaro two weeks ago. Article 24 would “outlaw any calls for violence or reprisals against police officers on social media – and that only”, Thourot said.

Article 24 was intended in part to "allay justifiable fears among the police that they are being filmed on duty, identified on social media and endangered in their private lives, as the big platforms indulge subscribers in their favourite pastime: the trending vendetta", wrote Jeremy Harding, a frequent commentator on French politics, in the London Review of Books.

But journalists' groups and human rights organisations have led protests for weeks to have the government scrap or revise the bill, saying it would make it harder to prosecute cases of abuse. "We're heading towards an increasingly significant limitation of freedoms," Karine Shebabo, a protester at Saturday's demonstration in Paris, told Reuters.

After four French police officers were charged November 30 over the beating and racial abuse of black music producer Michel Zecler, MPs from Macron's party pledged a "complete rewrite" of part of the draft law.

Under a sign demanding the withdrawal of the security law, CGT union leader Philippe Martinez said several causes were coming together.

"There is no contradiction between public and individual freedoms and the need to fight job insecurity and unemployment," Martinez told AFP.

He referred to the "abuse of employers" and the loss of worker protections.

Not 'reducing freedoms'

The new clashes came after Macron gave hugely-anticipated interview on Friday to Brut, a video-based news portal aimed at young people. Voters aged 18-24 are the age group among which the president is the most popular, according a survey by Odoxa for Le Figaro and France Info published on Friday.

Macron acknowledged "there are police who are violent" and insisted that "they need to be punished".

He acknowledged that "when you have a skin colour that is not white, you are controlled much more (by police). You are identified as a problem factor. And that cannot be justified."

But he also lashed out at the violence against police at last weekend's rally in Paris, which he blamed on "crazy people".

"I cannot let it be said that we are reducing freedoms in France," he said.

 

Alexander Nazaryan

WASHINGTON (YN)— The crudely drawn image shows the gates to Auschwitz, the most notorious of the Nazi extermination camps. There stand two black-clad figures, each holding a syringe. Look more closely, and the steel sign above the entrance, which in the real world reads “Arbeit macht frei” (“Work makes you free”), has been altered to “Impfen macht frei,” or “Vaccination makes you free.”

Look closer yet, and a portrait in the distance turns out to be that of Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and philanthropist, who has devoted much of his energy to improving public health. Conspiracy theorists falsely believe he will profit from coronavirus vaccinations. In an especially outlandish variation of that baseless charge, vaccinations are a cover for a plot to inject everyone with microchips that will track their locations.

Vaccines do not contain microchips.

“All these Neo-Lib Zio-globalist rats must be locked up in an island with huge walls,” the accompanying caption says in part. Another image shared by the same Twitter account compares Dr. Anthony Fauci, the leading American immunologist, to Satan.

This is what the Biden administration will be up against come Jan. 20, when the president-elect takes the oath of office. Two versions of a coronavirus vaccine have been manufactured during the Trump administration; Dr. Moncef Slaoui, who is heading the vaccination effort for the outgoing administration, said he expects some 20 million Americans to be vaccinated by the end of the year.

That means the brunt of the effort will be borne by Biden and his top health officials, who will need to overcome the objections of political opponents, conspiracy theorists and skeptics in order to reach the 70 percent vaccination rate that is generally accepted as the threshold for herd immunity. They will have to do so in a climate where misinformation and political recrimination travel at the speed of light.

Although the Biden coronavirus task force has not released many details about how it plans to distribute the vaccine, its members are acutely aware of what they are dealing with.

“Convincing people to get vaccinated is going to be our biggest challenge of all,” the epidemiologist Celine Gounder told CBS News last month. Gounder, who is a member of the Biden coronavirus task force, acknowledged that “a history of vaccine skepticism” will add to the burden. That many of President Trump’s supporters do not accept that Biden legitimately won the election will also complicate matters.

“You have people who don’t want to be told by the government what to do,” Gounder said. “You have people who don’t trust pharmaceutical companies. You also have communities of color that have a long distrust of the health care system.” She added that it will be necessary to “think outside the box here and be a bit creative,” but did not specify what she meant.

A spokesperson for the Biden transition team did not respond to a request for comment.

As the grotesque Auschwitz parody suggests, the most conspiratorial vaccine skeptics believe that vaccination is tantamount to death, either because those vaccines contain deadly chemicals or because they have side effects that did not surface or were not disclosed during clinical trials. Neither of those claims is true, but that won’t stop people from making them.

The Auschwitz meme is but a small sign of the enormous challenge that public health officials will have in the coming weeks and months, as the U.S. and some European governments prepare to inoculate their populations against COVID-19. The disease has killed about 1.5 million people worldwide.

“There’s not two sides to everything,” says Dr. Paul Offit of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, widely regarded as one of the foremost vaccine experts in the world. Offit told Yahoo News that he regards himself as a “vaccine skeptic,” by which he means that he looks for scientific evidence before declaring a vaccine safe for public use.

Offit acknowledges that “vaccines do have serious side effects.” But those effects are not, as vaccine conspiracists would have it, locked away in the vaults of “deep state” operatives but, rather, freely published by the U.S. government. Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca, the three Western companies that have already manufactured vaccines, have published their own safety data, which strongly suggests that their vaccines are safe.

Some worry that because the vaccines were manufactured and tested within months, not years, dangerous side effects could manifest later on, after millions have already been vaccinated.

“There are no long-term side effects of vaccines. That is a myth,” Offit counters, explaining that vaccine side effects manifest within a matter of six weeks, which means that people participating in clinical trials would have already shown those more troubling, longer-term symptoms.

To some people, such fact-based assurances will make no difference. Among the nation’s most prominent anti-vaccination advocates is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., nephew of John F. Kennedy and a onetime environmental lawyer. Kennedy’s anti-vax activism has recently been amplified by groups that endorse the QAnon conspiracy theory.

Although he has no medical expertise, and although he routinely makes claims that have been debunked, Kennedy insists he is merely engaging in the scientific process. Somehow, that engagement consistently puts him at odds with the medical establishment and public health guidelines.

Speaking to Yahoo News earlier this week, Kennedy downplayed the wide availability of vaccine safety data. “Let’s not approve a vaccine for which we don’t have safety data,” he said, steering clear of accusations about shadowy cabals injecting the unsuspecting masses with microchips. Yet he essentially came out on the side of discouraging people from receiving an inoculation.

A longtime nemesis of the anti-vax movement, Offit distinguishes between vaccine skeptics, who may have concerns that could be assuaged, and “vaccine cynics,” as he calls the more hard-core detractors. Those cynics, Offit says, will remain unpersuaded no matter how much evidence they are shown. “Forget them,” he says. “I think they’re a minor player in this game right now.”

But then there are people like Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who has two degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “I support your right to take a vaccine and I support your right to refuse a vaccine,” he wrote recently on Twitter. “This should not be controversial in America.”

That might align with Massie’s staunchly libertarian principles, but it’s not what epidemiologists want to hear. Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, told Yahoo News that for a vaccine to be effective, at least 70 percent of the population has to be inoculated. Otherwise, the virus will continue to proliferate.

Massie’s office declined an interview request from Yahoo News.

The writer Molly Jong-Fast, who participated in the Pfizer vaccine trial and wrote about her experience for the New York Times, says she has encountered few outright conspiracy theorists who consider her an unwitting puppet of an international cabal. She is more aware of “low-key” detractors who “just don’t trust” the coronavirus vaccine.

“Thank you for doing it, but I won’t ever do it,” such people tell her. “These people are not anti-vaxxers,” she adds. Jong-Fast specifically blamed Massie for enabling this more muted form of skepticism.

It doesn’t help that the vaccine is arriving at a time of acute political mistrust, which poses risks for both the outgoing Trump administration and the incoming Biden one. The president-elect will struggle to gain credibility with the millions of Americans who believe Trump’s false claims that he won last month’s election. In fact, he lost it by about 7 million votes. But some far-right outlets continue to promulgate Trump’s claims of victory, intersecting in places with equally erroneous claims that the coronavirus vaccine is unsafe.

To make matters more complicated, suspicions about the presidential election and suspicions about the vaccine have been absorbed into QAnon, says Martin Gurri, a scholar of media and politics who was formerly an analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency. The QAnon conspiracy theory, which holds that a global ring of pedophiles is trafficking children for sexual purposes or to extract their blood, is itself a version of Pizzagate, which posited that a sex trafficking operation was being run by Democrats out of the basement of a Washington, D.C., pizzeria.

The connection between all these shadowy forces is difficult to comprehend, which may well be the point, if you believe that those forces are powerful beyond the understanding of an ordinary citizen. The mindset is that one should unravel conspiracies where possible, but also resist — including by refusing to take a coronavirus vaccine.

“We must stop at nothing to #SaveTheChildren,” wrote a Twitter user who goes by the handle of @mgarner1317, and who has more than 1,000 followers, earlier this month, using one of QAnon’s trademark hashtags. “Pedos are the first battle next up, mandatory vaccines, big pharma, GMOs, fluoride, hateful indoctrination, gang culture, Trans agenda, drug normalization, social media, big tech, MSM, and many more. The war against them, is real.”

In this version of events the coronavirus vaccine is part of a broader multinational, neoliberal agenda, one that includes expanded rights for transgender people and the legalization of drugs. Those are, of course, unrelated developments, but the very allure of conspiracy theories is that they tease out connections where none seem to exist.

Gurri says this convergence of conspiracies reflects a crisis that is bound to outlast the coronavirus pandemic, whenever it finally ends. That crisis stems from a growing distrust of elites and the institutions they represent. The world of the internet — social media in particular — incessantly feeds that distrust, offering compelling counternarratives.

“People are looking for something that is not the elites,” Gurri says. “They have absolutely lost all trust” in official authority and are bound to look for insight from “very intelligent amateurs” who seem to promulgate credible information in responsible ways.

Not all those amateurs believe that pedophiles are drinking the blood of kidnapped children. Today’s vaccine conspiracies are bolstered by groups with official-sounding names, like the National Vaccine Information Center, which sounds like it may be a government clearinghouse (it is very much not), or Physicians for Informed Consent.

“This whole anti-vaccine empire is mainstream now,” Hotez says. “It’s not fringe anymore.” He notes that Amazon’s vaccine page is dominated by “fake” books that cast doubt on vaccinations. The retail giant allows such books to be sold and issues no warning that they peddle misinformation. Hotez believes that Silicon Valley has been far too lenient, and that the Biden administration must confront that leniency as soon as it can.

“We’ve got to figure out how to dismantle the empire,” Hotez told Yahoo News. It will be imperative to shut down anti-vax Facebook groups or Instagram accounts, he believes. “It would create a massive dent in what they’re doing.”

For the next month and a half, any such efforts will fall to the Trump administration, despite the fact that the president himself lost interest long ago in responding to the pandemic in a substantive way.

An official currently working at the federal Department of Health and Human Services, who would speak only on the condition of anonymity, alluded to a badly bungled attempt by HHS communications adviser Michael Caputo to enlist pro-Trump celebrities in pitching the vaccine to the American public. Caputo has since left the administration, and that contract was canceled.

The HHS official said that the “vaccine acceptance effort is focused on what we are calling ‘the movable middle,’” a reference to the skeptics both Offit and Hotez believe could be persuaded to take the vaccine. The department would do so through a “science-based approach that included rigorous evaluation and regular impact reporting,” the official said, referring to a report commissioned by HHS Secretary Alex Azar following Caputo’s public meltdown and eventual departure from Washington.

The official said the department was “still working through market research” compiled by the Fors Marsh Group, a public relations firm based outside Washington, D.C.

Other, less formal efforts are also underway. Former Presidents Obama, Clinton and George W. Bush have all said they will take the coronavirus vaccine, potentially on live television.

But they will be up against social media influencers who spread a countervailing message. The actress Letitia Wright, who starred in the popular film “Black Panther,” recently posted an anti-vaccine video to her Twitter account. After heavy criticism, she appears to have deleted the video. But subsequent posts maintained a defiant attitude.

“If you don’t conform to popular opinions. but ask questions and think for yourself...you get cancelled,” Wright wrote.

It is not yet clear what Trump will do. Formerly a skeptic of vaccines, he has been angered by the timing of the coronavirus vaccines’ arrival, accusing pharmaceutical companies of delaying their announcements of successfully concluded trials intentionally to undermine his reelection chances. He may have little desire to take steps that would ultimately redound to the benefit of the Biden administration, even if those steps would save American lives.

Even as many Americans celebrated Joe Biden's election win, some Black Americans and people of color knew work still had to be done.

"Americans feel like we won a war," Toni Sanders, an activist based in Washington, D.C., told ABC News.

"We were in the negative and now we're back at zero," she said, referring to the transition of power from President Donald Trump to President-elect Biden.

Many Black Lives Matter activists say they fear America's strides in fighting racism and social injustice could regress in this new administration.

Erika Wilson, an associate professor of law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said Biden's victory could be deceiving.

"Instead of saying, 'I voted for Barack,' it'll be, 'I voted for Biden and against Trump,' as the new measuring stick for saying that one is not racist," Wilson told ABC News. "Going back to normal for Black people looks a lot different than it might look like for other folks in the sense that they're not reminded daily through the president's tweets or comments of America's very close connections to racism and white supremacy."

She added, "'Normal' is a wealth and wage gap, health disparities, extrajudicial killings by police officers. That is the baseline of 'normal' for Black people in America."

While public outrage and uproar overtook the country this summer after the police-involved killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, America was also reckoning with "systemic racism." These forms of racism are fixed and part of every institution, from law enforcement to education to housing.

Economic disparities are overwhelmingly disproportionate for Black Americans. At the height of the pandemic, the unemployment rate spiked for African Americans more than any other racial group, according to the Economic Policy Institute. In 2018, the overall income for Black Americans was about 42% lower than white Americans, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Author Michael Eric Dyson delves into racial unrest and the killings of Taylor, Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery in his new book, "Long Time Coming: Reckoning with Race in America."

"Hopefully, the trauma and tragedy of these deaths will inspire you to stay on the battlefield that much longer," Dyson, a professor at Vanderbilt University, said.

Dyson said white nationalists may continue to intimidate minorities after Trump leaves office. But he still believes the country's progress toward racial equality will continue under Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

"This is an opportunity for us to push back and say no, we ain't going back to the normal underground bigotry that was waiting for the opportunity to rise to the surface," he argued.

Activists have called for dismantling systems built on the ideologies of racism and implicit bias, hoping that the same Americans marching on the front lines this summer for Black Lives Matter don't stop fighting.

For many, the first step is urging non-people of color to challenge systems from within.

"You can't just say, 'I'm not racist.' You have to be anti-racist, you have to fight against racism actively," Sanders explained.

Added Dyson, "Now that you're awake, stay awake. We cannot rest. If we rest, then we've lost what we've gained."

Wilson is specifically calling for affirmative action programs and race-conscious measures.

"We have to continue to use the political energy that we mobilized to get Biden and Harris elected to push them to enact progressive policies that will not allow us to go back to normal, but that will hopefully undo some of the structural racism that creates these kinds of inequalities," she said.

Dyson said the protests have to be broader to be effective.

"We've got to push white people to go into the streets as they did with us at the Black Lives Matter protests, but also come to corporate America, come to institutions of higher education, come to your jobs, your homes and do the hard but necessary work of challenging them from within," Dyson said. "The war ain't over."

A massive fire broke out Saturday morning in a vacant building in New York City and spread to a 19th-century church, leaving both structures uninhabitable.

The fire started around 5 a.m. at a building on East 7th Street in the East Village neighborhood, according to NBC New York.

The blaze ultimately resulted in six alarms. The New York City Fire Department said four firefighters suffered minor injuries.

"Our units arrived in three minutes, very fast response time. Upon arrival, we had heavy fire showing from the corner building on East 7th Street. We quickly transmitted additional alarms to get more help here," the fire department said in a statement.

"Fire had extended into the church on 2nd Avenue and also into another building on 7th Street. We had all of our units in position and we were quickly able to contain it to that area."

Photos from the fire showed large flames shooting from the top of a building and heavy smoke in the air. The cause of the blaze is under investigation by fire marshals.

The Middle Collegiate Church, which was organized in 1628, was destroyed in the fire.

"We are devastated and crushed that our beloved physical sanctuary at Middle Collegiate Church has burned," Rev. Jacqui Lewis said in a statement. "And yet no fire can stop Revolutionary Love. We thank God that there has been no loss of life. We know that God does not cause these kinds of tragedies but is present with us and to us as we grieve, present in the hugs and prayers of loved ones."

Lewis said that the church had moved to online worship because of the coronavirus pandemic and will continue to do so.

"We pray for the first responders. We pray for our neighbors who are also affected by this fire. And we covet your prayers as we grieve," she said.

According to the church's website, it is the oldest congregation of the Collegiate Churches of New York and its history has been linked to many key events in American history.

"Our bell tower is the home to New York’s Liberty Bell, which rang in the birth of our country on July 9, 1776. It has rung for the inauguration and death of every American President. It also rings during momentous New York City events, including remembering the attacks on 9/11," the church said./ NBC

A Europe-based Rohingya rights group on Saturday expressed concern over Bangladesh’s plan to relocate more than 100,000 Rohingya refugees to a remote island. 

“We urge the international community, including the newly elected United States administration, South Asian nations, civil society groups and international organizations to help and persuade the Bangladeshi government to halt this procedure immediately,” the European Rohingya Council said in a statement.

Citing weak makeshift settlements for more than 1 million stateless Rohingya in Bangladesh’s southern district of Cox’s Bazar, the country’s authorities have started shifting 100,000 Rohingya refugees to Bhashan Char, a distant island reportedly prone to cyclone and other natural disasters.

Despite huge outcries by the international community and rights defenders, Bangladesh on Friday transferred the first batch of 1,642 Rohingya to the island that emerged only 20 years ago in the Bay of Bengal and has never been inhabited.

Another 3,500 will be sent to the island this week and the relocation is expected to be completed within a week, the Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha news agency reported, citing naval sources.

The European Rohingya Council, however, said: “Every year, Bhashan Char remains submerged under rain water for several months and vulnerable Rohingyas will be further marginalized if they are forced to move here”.

Citing storms as “usual occurrence” at the island area, it added: “We vehemently oppose this relocation plan […] and if the Rohingya refugees are moved here, then they will face natural catastrophe of unimaginable magnitude”.

Call for peaceful repatriation

The rights body also advised Bangladesh to pay more attention to a peaceful and sustainable repatriation of Rohingya to their original land of birth in Myanmar’s Rakhine State.

“Bangladesh attempted to start repatriation of [Rohingya] refugees to Myanmar under a bilateral framework last November, but no refugee was willing to go back due to lack of safe conditions and continued genocide of Rohingyas in Myanmar,” it noted.

According to Amnesty International, more than 750,000 Rohingya refugees, mostly women and children, fled Myanmar and crossed into Bangladesh after Myanmar forces launched a crackdown on the minority Muslim community in August 2017, pushing the number of persecuted people in Bangladesh above 1.2 million.

Meanwhile, dozens of other global rights defenders and platforms including the United Nations, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Fortify Rights have also urged Bangladesh to halt the relocation plan until a comprehensive feasibility study is done over the habitability of the island.

However, Bangladesh’s Foreign Ministry in a press release on Friday claimed that the island of 13,000 acres “has all modern amenities, year-round fresh water, beautiful lake and proper infrastructure and enhanced facilities”.

These include uninterrupted supply of electricity and water, agricultural plots, cyclone shelters, two hospitals, four community clinics, mosques, warehouses, telecommunication services, police station, recreation and learning centers, playgrounds and protective dam rounding the project area, the ministry added.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Louise Donovan, communications officer of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said: “We have heard reports from the camps that some refugees may feel pressured into relocating to Bhashan Char or may have changed their initial views about relocation and no longer wish to move. If so, they should be allowed to remain in the camps”.

She said that they have watched “troubling images” of some distressed refugees during the relocation process.

“We again emphasize that all movements to Bhasan Char must be voluntary and based upon consultations and full information regarding the conditions of life on the island and the rights and services that refugees will be able to access,” Donovan added./aa

For Turks, coffee is not simply a drink, it is a lifestyle, Gizem Salcigil White, who is known as the Turkish Coffee Lady, said Saturday as the US capital marked World Turkish Coffee Day. 

White is the founder of the Turkish Coffee Lady Foundation in the US state of Virginia, which aims to promote Turkey’s 500-year-old coffee culture, and its significant historical value while building intercultural cultures.

On the World Turkish Coffee Day, the foundation hosted a virtual celebration along with Habitat Association (Habitat), a non-governmental organization based in Istanbul.

"A cup of Turkish coffee is remembered with appreciation for 40 years, which means offering a cup of coffee binds a friendship," said White in her opening remarks.

Turkish coffee was added to UNESCO's list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity on Dec. 5, 2013. Since then, World Turkish Coffee Day has been celebrated on Dec. 5 every year.

Turkish Ambassador to the US Serdar Kilic also sent a written message to mark the day, saying that Turkish coffee has a history that goes back to the 16th century.

"It is more than coffee," said Kilic, who added that Turkish coffee is symbolic of hospitality and friendship.

The US capital has also declared Dec. 5 World Turkish Coffee Culture Day following an initiative by the Turkish Coffee Lady Foundation.

Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser thanked the foundation for "sharing the rich tradition" of Turkish coffee "and bridging cultures - one coffee at a time" ahead of the virtual celebration.

"This event will provide a history of Turkish coffee, help build bridges, strengthen friendships and develop an appreciation and understanding of Turkish culture and tradition," Bowser said in a letter to the foundation.

White extended gratitude and appreciation to the mayor.

During the event, a video was aired to show how to make a traditional foamy Turkish coffee.

Items needed are a long handled copper pot, called cezve, and a small demitasse cup, just like an espresso cup. Ingredients are fine powder Turkish coffee (a full teaspoon for each person), cold fresh water and sugar is optional.

Put one coffee cup of water and one teaspoon of coffee for each person into a pot and use low heat to boil the coffee, and then comes froth on the top, says White in the video.

Just before it overflows, remove the pot from heat and divide the froth into the coffee cup with a teaspoon and bring the rest of the coffee to boil again and then pour into the cup, she concludes.

The foundation also ran a message Saturday that read: "Celebrating World Turkish Coffee Day and its 500 year old culture" on the Nasdaq building in New York City./aa

Arabs in eastern Syria on Saturday protested against the YPG/PKK terrorist group, which sells hundreds of trucks of oil every day to the region under the control of Bashar al-Assad regime, leaving them without fuel.

The people living in Syria’s Deir ez-Zor province called on the terror group to end the occupation of the oil fields.

According to local sources, around 1,000 people gathered in the countryside of Deir ez-Zor and staged a demonstration against the terrorist group.

Deir ez-Zor is a major link between Iran and Lebanon. Pipelines and trade routes from Iraq and Jordan also pass through the province.

With the help of Russia and Iran-backed militias, the central and western parts of Deir ez-Zor fell to Syria’s Bashar al-Assad regime after Daesh/ISIS terrorists retreated from the region in November 2017.

Deir ez-Zor, bordering the eastern bank of the Euphrates River, is currently under the control of the YPG/PKK terrorist organization.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and EU -- has been responsible for the deaths of 40,000 people, including women, children and infants. The YPG is the PKK's Syrian offshoot.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​/aa

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