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The US Supreme Court confirmed on Tuesday the authenticity of a leaked draft ruling that would overturn four decades of legal abortion protections, but maintained the decision is not final.
The court said the document "does not represent a decision by the Court or the final position of any member on the issues in the case," and Chief Justice John Robert announced he has directed a probe into the exceedingly rare leak.
"To the extent this betrayal of the confidences of the Court was intended to undermine the integrity of our operations, it will not succeed. The work of the Court will not be affected in any way," he said in a statement.
"Court employees have an exemplary and important tradition of respecting the confidentiality of the judicial process and upholding the trust of the Court. This was a singular and egregious breach of that trust that is an affront to the Court and the community of public servants who work here," he added.
Roberts directed the court's marshalls to investigate the source of the leak.
The Politico news website published Monday evening a draft majority opinion in which Justice Samuel Alito rules to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case, which cemented abortion rights across the land.
He is joined in the not yet final ruling by Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, a person familiar with the court's closed-door deliberations told Politico. Democratic appointed Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan are in dissent.
It is not clear which way Roberts will vote, but even without his support the court's conservative wing appears to have sufficient votes to overturn Roe in the nine-member bench.
In the decision, Alito writes that Roe, which has stood for nearly four decades, "was egregiously wrong from the start."
"We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled," he wrote, referring to the original case and a subsequent 1992 ruling that largely upheld them.
US President Joe Biden maintained in an earlier statement that while it is unclear if the draft will reflect the court's final decision, he believes "a woman’s right to choose is fundamental."
"Roe has been the law of the land for almost fifty years, and basic fairness and the stability of our law demand that it not be overturned," he said in a statement.
"If the Court does overturn Roe, it will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose. And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November," he added.
An official decision is expected to be published before the court's current term ends in late June or early July, and the draft could see significant revisions in the interim. Justices could also change their positions as the draft circulates.
Should Roe and Casey be overturned, the matter of abortion rights would fall to individual states to determine. That would almost certainly lead to their complete rollback across wide swathes of the Midwest and South./aa
US President Joe Biden issued a full-throated defense of abortion rights on Tuesday following the leak of an apparent draft Supreme Court ruling that would reverse the long-standing rights.
The Politico news website published Monday evening a draft majority opinion in which Justice Samuel Alito rules to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case, which cemented abortion rights across the land.
He is joined in the not yet final ruling by Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, a person familiar with the court's closed-door deliberations told Politico. Democratic appointed Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan are in dissent.
It is not clear which way Chief Justice John Roberts will vote, but even without his support the court's conservative wing appears to have sufficient votes to overturn Roe in the nine-member court.
In the decision, Alito rules the ruling, which has stood for nearly four decades, "was egregiously wrong from the start."
"We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled," he wrote, referring to the original case and a subsequent 1992 ruling that largely upheld them.
Emphasizing that it is not yet clear if the draft decision is genuine, or if it is going to be the court's final ruling, Biden maintained that he believes "a woman’s right to choose is fundamental."
"Roe has been the law of the land for almost fifty years, and basic fairness and the stability of our law demand that it not be overturned," he said in a statement.
"If the Court does overturn Roe, it will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose. And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November," he added.
An official decision is expected to be published before the court's current term ends in late June or early July, and the draft could see significant revisions in the interim. Justices could also change their positions as the draft circulates.
Should Roe and Casey be overturned, the matter of abortion rights would fall to individual states to determine. That would almost certainly lead to their complete rollback across wide swathes of the Midwest and South.
It is exceptionally rare for a Supreme Court opinion to leak before publication, particularly on such a carefully-watched case.
The court is deliberating on a challenge to Mississippi's ban on abortions after 15 weeks, known as Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. It is just one of several attempts in Republican-led states to restrict abortion rights, several of which are now facing challenges at the top court./aa
Turkiye is preparing a new project that would allow the voluntary return of 1 million Syrian refugees to their country, the nation’s president said on Tuesday.
“We will carry out this project soon with the support of national and international non-governmental organizations,” Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at the inauguration ceremony of newly built houses in Idlib in northern Syria.
Since Turkiye launched its cross-border anti-terror operations in 2016, around 500,000 people have returned to safe zones in northern Syria, the president said via video link.
He underlined that over 57,000 houses for around 50,000 families have so far been built in the Idlib area.
In total, there will be 100,000 houses that will contribute to alleviate the suffering of Syrians, Erdogan said.
He also said the area where houses are being built will also have a mosque, school, healthcare center, bakery, social facility, and playground.
The project will be realized in coordination with local and international NGOs as well local 13 different local councils in northern Syria, according to Erdogan.
Turkiye has been an active provider of humanitarian aid in different parts of the world without any discrimination, he said.
Recently, Turkiye sent over 5,000 tons of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan and 100 truckloads of aid to war-hit Ukraine, Erdogan added.
Separately, Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu inaugurated a complex for orphan children and a mosque built by Turkish non-governmental organizations in Idlib.
Soylu, who was in Idlib for the inauguration of newly built houses in the city, also visited some families who settled in their new homes in the Kemmune region and exchanged greetings for Eid al-Fitr, a three-day festival marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Syria has been locked in a vicious civil war since early 2011, when the regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests.
Since then, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million others displaced, according to UN estimates./aa
By N. P. Upadhyaya (Aryal)
Kathmandu: Needless to say, the credit must go to Ilhan Omar, Democratic representative leader of the US who raised the untold suffering and the plight of the Muslims residing in the Indian Occupied Kashmir in such a loud manner when she took the guts to visit the capital of Azad Kashmir in the third week of February this year during her what could be taken as “maiden” visit to Pakistan.
Her nerve must be admired that she took to task the declared Islamophobic Indian regime while being in South Asia and that too from the territory of India’s immediate rival Pakistan.
Omar’s visit to Muzaffarabad and her due meeting with the President of the AZK, barrister Chaudhry came as an unexpected “event” for the entire Indian establishment which commented on the sudden visit of the US democratic leader as an “unwarranted” one.
Despite the Indian anger, Omar accomplished her “task” in a befitting manner that was certainly long overdue. In a way, Omar’s visit to Pakistan this time must have opened the so far “closed” eyes of the powerful Western countries which is why leaders, representatives, and parliamentarians across the globe have begun to talk about the Islamophobic Indian establishment.
At least the Western media took note of India’s Islamophobic credentials that it has earned after the advent of Narendra Modi as the Prime Minister in India. In Nepal, patriot Nepalese take PM Modi as a South Asian menace of the Himalayan dimension.
Omar while in Muzaffarabad, as stated earlier, held “meaningful” talks with the AJK President Barrister Sultan Mahmood Chaudhry and as per the Tribune Pakistan (April 21), she is learnt to have addressed a press conference also wherein she is believed to have said that the US Foreign Affairs Committee had previously held hearings to investigate the reports of human rights violations in IIOJK and discussed the Modi administration’s anti-Muslim rhetoric and its effects”.
Ms Omar said, “I don’t believe that it is being talked about to the extent it needs to be in Congress and within the administration,” adding that she hoped her visit to AJK motivates more conversations.
“The condemnations and concerns of those who fight for human rights and the question of Kashmir will be included in future hearings within the USA,” Omar assured.
This does mean that the US democratic leader has in advance signaled the US foreign affairs committee to remain prepared to answer her volley of questions on the Kashmiri people’s plight in India occupied Kashmir. The Kashmir issue now is on the US table for discussions, sooner than later.
Omar had voiced her staid concerns in the US Foreign Relations Committee when PM Modi changed the Status of Kashmir on August 5, 2019. Let’s presume that Omar’s February visit to Pakistan must have annoyed India to the hilt which is what Pakistan desired.
Ms Omar is a Somali immigrant and perhaps the lone lady in the US who targets Islamophobic men and the nations like India.
Writes political analyst Asad Ali for the Pakistan Observer (April 29) that the “visit of the US lawmaker to Pakistan and AJK is likely to pave the way for more cooperation between two countries and help Islamabad to make Biden Administration realize how sensitive IIOJK issue is and how India is making the life of Kashmiri people miserable by using unconstitutional and illegitimate tactics”.
Ali adds the visit may help the US in understanding Pakistan’s position regarding the human rights violations in IIOJK by India.
Media outlets claim that IOK is an “open-air jail” for the Kashmiri Muslims which speaks so many things unspoken.
Around the same time when Omar was in Pakistan meeting new executive head PM Shehbaz Sharif and the ousted PM Imran Khan, the world recognized and acclaimed hotheaded critic, author and an Indian Human Rights activist to the core, Ms Arundhati Roy blasted her own Indian government in a far-flung country, the US, wherein she talked on countless political aberrations observed in the functioning of the Indian government after the inaugural of the Modi government in India.
Ms Roy while addressing an academic gathering in the “Sissy Farenthold lecture gathering at the Lyndon B. Johnson auditorium, in the US (April 22) said that to mark the Ram Navami celebrations, violent Hindu mobs armed with swords and staff rampaged through as many as eleven cities.
She further remarked, “led by Swamis and BJP activists, they entered Muslim settlements, dog-whistling outside Mosques, chanting obscene insults, openly calling for the rape and impregnation of Muslim women and the Nar Samhar (genocide) of Muslim men”.
Roy is a noted Indian author best known for her novel “The God of Small Things”, which won the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 1997 and became the best-selling book by a non-expatriate Indian author.
Her recent speech in the US has been noted in various countries more in the European nations which take Indian Prime Minister Modi as their “ideal” person which Modi could never be, take it for granted.
After Omar’s outbursts, some British lawmakers instantly took up the plight of the minority Muslims across India and more so of the Kashmir Muslims who are living under India’s continued oppression.
Of the several MPs from the UK, one Labor Party parliamentarian Ms Naz Shah was the first one to have dazed Boris Johnson’s government when she took to task her own PM and strongly urged PM Johnson to raise the issue of Islamophobia with PM Modi.
Ms Shah, a gutsy lady in her own right, Tweeted, “I ask@BorisJohnson when the alarm bells of genocide, the daily lynching of Muslims, calls for rape of Muslim women & the systematic nature Islamophobia in India is being normalized, as someone who claims to be a champion of human rights, will you raise these issues with PM Modi?”
Unfortunately, Johnson who was on an “India appeasing mission” cleverly skipped raising the issue of India’s increasing Islamophobia for some “understandable” political reasons. This skipping in effect exposed Johnson’s real democratic credentials.
Britain is falsely taken as the “mother of democracy”. But is it? The debate must continue amongst academic circles across the globe.
The British East India Company which ruled mercilessly now independent India for several decades perhaps prefers to be ruled by its own former colony for some “strategic political reasons”.
The British PM for his somewhat erratic acts was taken to task by some hard-hitting parliamentarians and some critical media in Britain like the Guardian.
PM Johnson thus gave a clean chit to the erratic Indian establishment whose “democratic backsliding”, as per the UK’s Guardian Daily is taking its toll, the minority Muslims and the Dalits know this better. Sensible people in Nepal say that India under PM Modi is already a theocratic state.
The recent sad happenings in India wherein the minority Muslims are being brutally targeted, vandalized, Muslim houses and Mosques bulldozed by some “fanatically deviated Hindus” could all be summed up in a sentence, quoting the Sikh writer of eminence Khuswant Singh who in his widely read book “The End of India” says, we repeat it once again, in his own words, (sic), “Unless a miracle saves us, the country will break up”.
He says further that, “it will not be Pakistan or any other foreign power that will destroy us; we will commit hara-kiri”.
Well after Ms Naz hitting hard her own UK government, it was the turn of the argumentative British MP, Zarah Sultana who had abundantly criticized (April 26) PM Johnson for having visited the JCB factory, as stated in our previous article, the day after reports its vehicles were used to destroy ruthlessly the Muslim homes and businesses houses in Delhi. It was a chaotic scene which was shown in the Idiot Box the world over at a time.
Opposition MPs raised concerns over human rights in India after the PM said on a visit last week that the UK hopes to have a trade deal worked out with India by October. Sultana said B. Johnson’s visiting the factory was a blunder.
As if it were not enough, enters yet another British MP Nadia Whittome who said in her recent Tweet, “the BJP (Modi’s governing party) is using JCB diggers to bulldoze the homes and shops of Muslims. Johnson posed with JCB diggers on his recent visit to India, but his minister wouldn’t say whether he even raised these demolitions with Modi”.
MP Whittome asked, reports the WIRE (April 29) “whether Johnson questioned Indian PM Modi about the targeting of Muslim properties, and if not, why not. “Local governments in several other Indian states have also carried out similar demolitions,” she said. “So I ask again, did the PM raise this with Modi? If not, why not? And does the minister accept that the PM’s visit to India has helped to legitimize the actions of Modi’s far-right government?”
PM Boris is already back and thus Nadia’s questions have by now evaporated in the ethereal medium. MP Nadia is a Labor Member of Parliament for Nottingham East and is taken as UK’s youngest MP.
Looking at the increase in the communal and religious violence in India, lady journalist Arfa Khanum Sherwani Tweeted (April 29), “Time for secular forces to stand up against the communal hatred”.
While this story is being written, attention has been drawn to a Tweet posted by Swedish Professor Ashok Swain (April 30), “India’s police are not protecting Muslims in riots! India’s police leading the riots with Hindu Right-wing against the Muslims”.
The video clip that this professor of Indian origin has posted should open the eyes of those who for multiple political and strategic reasons express their happiness in having excellent ties with India under PM Modi. The picture tells everything untold about PM Modi as to how he is up against the “annihilation” of the minority Indian Muslims and the Dalits.
The champions of Human Rights across the world perhaps conclude that “Good or Bad…Our Modi is perfect for strategic-political reasons”. The concerns expressed by several UK parliamentarians like Naz, Sultana, Nadia Whittome, Khalid Mahmood and many others appear to have jolted the office of the European Union’s Human Rights officials.
Without wasting time, one top EU human rights official held official meetings with National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and also with the Minister of Minority Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi who had, to recall, rebuked the concerns expressed by some UK MPs over the Jahangirpuri Bulldozer calculated event by stating that “every citizen of India, including the minorities, is safe and secure”.
Minister Naqvi had dismissed the MPs’ allegations that Muslims in India are being harassed, killed, lynched, their houses destroyed and shops bulldozed.
However, with the sudden arrival of one top European Union HR Official in Delhi who raised several concerns during official meetings with the Muslim Minister Naqvi, let’s presume that the Minister in charge of the minority must have been taken aback.
The EU Human Rights official is learnt to have talked of increasing communal violence in India and, interestingly, the EU official who was concurrently the European Union Special Representative of Human Rights “Eamon Gilmore” and had come to Delhi as one of the guest speakers at India’s foreign ministry sponsored Raisina Dialogue held in the recent days in Delhi.
More than interesting is that the Eamon meeting with Minister Naqvi that the EU representative did raise the issue of the situation in Jammu & Kashmir, and the condition of religious minorities.
To recall, Gilmore in February was in Pakistan wherein he held a meeting with the then foreign minister Qureshi who urged the visiting EU dignitary to take note of grave human rights violations in India occupied Jammu and Kashmir at the hands of Indian security forces.
Asad Ali writes in the Pakistan Observer (April 29) that the “visit of US lawmaker to Pakistan and AJK is likely to pave the way for more cooperation between two countries and help Islamabad to make Biden Administration realize how sensitive IIOJK issue is and how India is making the life of Kashmiri people miserable by using unconstitutional and illegitimate tactics.
Asad adds that the visit may help the US in understanding Pakistan’s position regarding the human rights violations in IIOJK by India.
Meanwhile, Dr Ghulam Nabi Fai, secretary-general of Washington based World Kashmir Awareness Forum, has said (April 28) that the US has a moral obligation, as a world power, to impel India to bring an immediate end to its systematic atrocities in IoK and across the South Asian countries.
A May 2 Tweet posted by an unknown person has a photograph wherein Hindu supremacists place a saffron flag on a mosque in Rajasthan, India a day before Eid. How the Muslim minority react to this (mis)adventure will have to be watched. Perhaps late Khuswant Singh was correct in his statement on India for multiple reasons. That’s all./ peoplesreview
A young 19-year-old Muslim friend from Karnataka who documents hate crimes against minorities in the state, is struggling to convince his parents to let him pursue a career in journalism. Paying no heed to his relentless persuasion, his parents feel that a career in journalism for him is too dangerous today.
While I admire my young friend's zeal and courage, there is substantial merit in his parents' worries. In the India of 2022, journalism is a really dangerous profession. Certainly, It is harder for journalists with a Muslim name writing on human rights and the growing episodic attacks on the Muslim community.
There is literally no rocket science in guessing how does it feel like being a Muslim reporter in India whose daily job is to trawl through daily footage of hate and violence against their community, who writes on hate offenders being ignored by the law and people languishing in Jail under draconian laws. So, it does not matter how much my friend tries to convince his parents, they remain unmoved.
Perhaps, his parents may be aware of journalist Siddique Kappan or Fahad Shah's brazenly unjust incarceration. Kappan, who was arrested on his way to cover the Hathras gangrape and murder case of a Dalit woman, has spent over 1.5 years in jail under the UAPA and a proper trial is yet to begin.
On the other hand, Fahad Shah had secured bail in two cases, but was slapped with the draconian Public Safety Act which can keep him in extrajudicial detention for a long time without a fair trial. This happened while Fahad was awaiting a hearing in the third case.
Threats, Violence and Online Auctions: The Toll They Take
Of late, threats, FIRs and even mob violence for reporting have become a new normal. Last month, a group of journalists, most of them Muslim, were attacked at a Mahapanchayat organised by Hindutva outfits right in the heart of the national capital for covering an event where open calls to violence against Muslims were made.
The mob reportedly grew hostile after the Muslim identity of the reporters was revealed. Later, a police case was filed against one of the victims as well.
At this point of time, sometimes a journalist cannot even afford a human error or a bad typo in their reports.
While physical attacks are scary, constant trolling, death threats and organised harassment campaigns have also become a new normal. Last year, Muslim women, many of them journalists, were put up on a mock 'auction' online at least twice by Hindutva supremacist alt-right groups to silence them.
All this is not happening in a vacuum and even if you somehow overcome all the attacks, the job of constantly trawling through unimaginable amounts of hate against your identity will always hurt.
On 13 April 2022, Times of India Journalist Akhlad Khan passed away. Akhlad was a friend too and a fellow reporter who meticulously covered hate crimes. Three days before his death, he had advised me to look after my mental health after I wrote a long rant against the cruel monotony of documenting violence against Muslims.
At 28, this was Akhlad's second heart attack. The prevalent hate around was choking him from the inside yet he kept warning others to beware of the impact of hate. Despite anxiety and health complications, It was something very personal to him. He did this work as a moral duty.
On the occasion of Eidul Fitr, US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden hosted an event to celebrate the Muslim festival at the White House.
In his speech, Biden said that Muslims were facing violence in the US despite the fact that there should not be any discrimination between humans.
“It's especially important because today, around the world, we're seeing so many Muslims being targeted with violence. No one, no one should discriminate against oppressed or be oppressed for their religious beliefs,” Biden said to an applause.
He also mentioned Islamophobia and how it affects Muslims.
“Today, we also remember all those who are not able to celebrate this holy day, including Uyghurs and Rohingyas and all those who are facing famine, violence, conflict, and disease,” he said.
Biden even mentioned the ceasefire in Yemen, emphasising that it allowed Yemenis "to honour Ramadan and celebrate Eid in peace for the first time in six years."
Toward the end he praised the idea behind America, saying that it was the only nation in the world "that's been organised not based on a religion, race, ethnicity, or geography, but on an idea."/agencies
Russia's national soccer team and the country's club sides have been banned from participating in the Champions League and all other European competitions in 2022-23 seasons following its invasion of Ukraine, UEFA announced Monday.
It is the latest round of sanctions during Russia's war on Ukraine after FIFA and UEFA previously suspended Russian national and club teams in February.
The Switzerland-based governing body also said Russia's bid to host the Euro 2028 or the Euro 2032 tournaments have also been declared ineligible, while no Russian clubs will be allowed to compete in European competitions next season.
Stating that Portugal will take Russia's place in the Women's Euro 2022 being hosted by England in July, UEFA said the decision to rule Russia out as a host followed its regulations that each bidder should "not act in a manner that could bring UEFA, the UEFA final or UEFA final phase, any other bidder the bidding procedure or European football into disrepute."
According to UEFA's updated list of allocated entries, Russian league winner Zenit St. Petersburg's place in the next Champions League group stage will instead go to the champion of Scotland.
UEFA said its executive committee took the latest decisions to "ensure their smooth staging in a safe and secure environment for all those concerned."
UEFA and world soccer governing body FIFA had already suspended Russia's national teams and clubs from international football until further notice due to the Ukraine war./agencies
Muslims in Ukraine celebrated Ramadan Bayram, also known as Eid al-Fitr, on Monday in the shadow of the ongoing war, marking the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
A number of Muslim worshippers gathered at the Islamic Community Center Mosque in the capital Kyiv for the Eid prayers.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA), Seyran Arifov, the president of the Council of Ukrainian Muslims, said that many Muslims had to leave their homes because of the ongoing Russian war on Ukraine.
Some of them take refuge in other countries, while others fled to safer locations within the country, he noted. Expressing concerns over the war, Arifov called on the Muslim community to do their best to contribute to the country and its people.
Seyfullah Rashidov, a professor at Ukraine’s Izmail State University of Humanities, greeted all Muslims on Eid al-Fitr and wished peaceful and healthy life.
Ali Assadi, a Ukrainian citizen of Palestinian origin, said they wish the war would be over soon.
At least 2,899 civilians have been killed and 3,235 others injured in Ukraine since the war with Russia began on Feb. 24, according to United Nations estimates. The true toll is feared to be much higher.
More than 5.4 million people have fled to other countries, with some 7.7 million people internally displaced, data from the U.N. refugee agency shows./aa
Food-delivery drivers in Dubai launched an extremely rare strike over the weekend, staging a mass walkout that crippled one of the emirate's main delivery apps and revived concerns about working conditions.
The strike started late Saturday and ended early Monday, when London-based Deliveroo agreed in a letter to riders to restore workers’ pay to $2.79 per delivery instead of the proposed rate of $2.38 that had ignited the work stoppage as the company tried to cut costs amid surging fuel prices.
The Amazon-backed firm also backtracked on its plan to extend working shifts to 14 hours a day.
“It is clear that some of our original intentions have not been clear and we are listening to riders,” Deliveroo said in a statement to The Associated Press (AP). “We have therefore currently paused all changes and will be working with our agency riders to ensure we have a structure that works for everyone and has our agency riders’ best interest at heart.”
Strikes remain illegal in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), a federation of seven sheikhdoms that bans unions and criminalizes dissent. The Dubai government did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strike.
Delivery workers in Dubai, who became a mainstay in the financial hub as demand boomed during the pandemic, have few protections.
To reduce cost, companies like Deliveroo outsource bikes, logistics and responsibility to contracting agencies – a labor pipeline that prevails across Gulf Arab states and can lead to mistreatment. Many impoverished migrants are plunged into debt paying their contractors exorbitant visa fees to secure their jobs.
The British food delivery service is valued at over $8 billion.
News of the pay cut at Deliveroo – announced internally last week as the cost of fuel soars amid fallout from the war in Ukraine and continuing supply chain chokeholds – was devastating for 30-year-old driver Mohammadou Labarang.
Already, he was paying for the UAE's record fuel prices out of his own pocket and barely scraping by, he said, with a wife and 7-month-old son back in Cameroon to support.
When Labarang logged onto social media, he found he was far from alone. Soon, he said, hundreds of Deliveroo drivers were organizing on Telegram and WhatsApp.
Dozens of drivers parked their bikes by various Deliveroo warehouses in protest, according to footage widely shared on social media. Some shut down their apps. Some rested at their accommodations and refused to work. Others went to restaurants and urged fellow couriers to stop mid-shift.
“All around Dubai we saw food getting cold on restaurant counters,” Labarang said. “It grew far beyond what anybody thought possible."
As a result, the Deliveroo app – one of the most popular delivery apps in the country, particularly during the final days of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan – was largely down over the weekend.
Some drivers shared WhatsApp voice messages with AP from their managers at contracting agencies demanding that they return to work immediately and “don't involve yourself in any illegal activity.”
Aware they risk detention and expulsion for striking, drivers were quick to stress their protest was in no way political.
“We know the rules, we know it's sensitive, this is not against the UAE,” said a 30-year-old Pakistani driver named Mohammed, who declined to give his last name for fear of reprisals.
But he said he also risks his life each day, zipping around Dubai's dangerous roads without accident insurance.
“We are human,” he said as he mounted his motorbike, returning to the grind in downtown Dubai after the strike. “We are not robots.”/AP
Moscow opting for energy, its most powerful lever, and threatening to cut off the gas supply to other countries after Poland and Bulgaria, sent shivers through Europe and is all but certain to test the continent's solidarity
After months of sweeping sanctions, Russia has started using its most powerful export as leverage to counterattack and hit Europe where it hurts the most.
The decision to cut the flow of natural gas to two NATO members marks Russia’s toughest response yet to Western sanctions imposed for its invasion of Ukraine – and is all but certain to test Europe’s solidarity.
The halt in gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria on April 26 after they refused to pay in rubles and Moscow’s threat to cut off other countries as well if they fail to agree to its new payment arrangement has revived Europe’s supply woes.
The move, denounced by European leaders as “blackmail,” has exposed the continent’s weakness and divisions. But whether it will further divide European Union members or will it ensure greater solidarity remains to be seen.
“It’s a classical divide and rule strategy,” said Simone Tagliapietra, a senior fellow at the Bruegel think tank in Brussels.
The decision “is unprecedented and illustrates Russia’s use of gas as a geopolitical weapon,” Tagliapietra told Daily Sabah.
“This ultimately is a key target of Russia’s decision on the ruble payment: To divide European countries and try to leverage this division,” he added.
The escalation follows a decree issued by Russian President Vladimir Putin last month requiring that countries Moscow deems “unfriendly” must pay for gas in rubles under a new payment scheme.
The mechanism obliges buyers to deposit euros or dollars into an account at Gazprombank, which is then converted into rubles, place the proceeds in another account owned by the foreign buyer and transfer the payment in Russian currency to Gazprom.
The situation has left EU member states divided over whether sanctions would be violated if they used Russia’s mechanism.
The difficulty for European buyers is that the decree requires buyers to also open a ruble account at Gazprombank into which their euro or dollar payments would be deposited after conversion into the Russian currency.
The decree would only consider the payment to be complete after the gas-to-rubles conversion is done – a transaction that would involve Russia’s central bank, which is subject to EU sanctions.
EU officials, per news agencies, last week said that if EU buyers declare their payments for gas are completed once the payment has been made in euros and before it is converted into rubles, sanctions would not be breached.
Officials said that opening a ruble account at Gazprombank may breach the EU sanctions.
Europe’s reliance
Poland and Bulgaria “had the right” to oppose the new payment mechanism and stuck to their original contracts to pay for gas, according to Maciej Zaniewicz, an energy policy analyst at the Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM).
“The contract specifically mentions the currency in which payments are made, and these are dollars or euros,” Zaniewicz told Daily Sabah.
Other EU countries might follow the same fate as Poland and Bulgaria, as their own payment dates will come, depending on their approach, Tagliapietra said.
And this is the key issue, he noted, adding: “Will all European countries follow the EU indication to only pay in euros/dollars as indicated in the contracts? Or will some decide to go their own way, complying with the Russian request?”
Russia supplies about 40% of Europe’s natural gas, mostly by pipeline. Deliveries last year were around 155 billion cubic meters (bcm), 52 bcm of that via Ukraine or nearby routes.
Alternative routes include the Yamal-Europe pipeline, which crosses Belarus and Poland to Germany, and Nord Stream 1, which runs under the Baltic Sea to Germany.
Many European countries have cut their reliance on Russian gas in recent years and the EU has said it wants to slash imports by two-thirds this year and end its reliance on Russian supplies over five years through alternative sources, wind and solar, and conservation.
“The EU countries are quite heavily dependent on Russian gas,” Zaniewicz said. Plans are being prepared but he suggested an embargo on this commodity is not currently under consideration.
‘Winter Putin’s best ally’
The gas halt does not immediately put neither Poland nor Bulgaria into dire trouble, according to Tagliapietra and Zaniewicz.
Poland has been preparing for this scenario for years and Bulgaria uses small quantities of gas, which can be replaced relatively easily, said Zaniewicz.
Add to that the fact that the continent is heading into summer, making gas less essential for households. Also, both Poland and Bulgaria’s contracts were expected to end later this year – and both countries have said they do not want to renew them.
The contract with Gazprom supplies around half of Poland’s annual needs – 10 bcm versus total consumption of over 20 bcm.
It can cope with this thanks to liquefied natural gas (LNG) and storage being 76% full, said Tagliapietra.
Supplies from Russia are to be replaced by imports from Norway through the Baltic Pipe gas pipeline, Zaniewicz noted. “It is scheduled to open in October 2022 and will reach its full capacity of 10 bcm – the same as supplies from Russia – in January 2023,” he said.
“Until then, Poland’s demand will be ensured by imports from the LNG terminal, Germany, Lithuania and Slovakia. Poland also has a very high filling of its storage facilities,” Zaniewicz added.
Bulgaria consumes about 3 bcm of gas per year, about 90% of which comes from Gazprom imports via Turkey. The country also gets small quantities of gas from Azerbaijan.
Bulgaria’s gas storage of 550 million cubic meters is only 17.6% full, according to operator data.
“As gas is predominantly used for heating (gas makes 60% of heating and only 5% of power), this is not a short-term issue,” Tagliapietra said.
The problem will be the next winter, he noted, but said the country can get gas from Romania and will soon start importing 1 bcm per year from Azerbaijan via a new interconnector linking it with Greece.
“Winter is the best ally of Mr. Putin. The EU cannot arrive in October 2022 unprepared,” Tagliapietra stressed.
Global energy systems avoided a severe crisis during the winter of 2021/22, but mostly because temperatures were far warmer than normal across most of the northern hemisphere, reducing heating demand.
"We need a strong and coordinated EU response on joint gas purchasing, storage refilling, EU energy market design – and of course, smart sanctions on Russian oil and gas flows to Europe," Tagliapietra noted.
‘Each billion important’
Bulgaria and Poland also are transit countries for Russian gas, he said. Gazprom has clarified that in the event of “unauthorized withdrawal” of Russian gas from transit volumes to third countries, supplies for transit will be reduced by this volume.
The gas cutoff and Moscow’s threat that other countries could be next has sent shivers of worry through the EU, whose 27 nations have not been able yet to agree on the full embargo on Russian imports.
Germany, the largest economy on the continent, and Italy are among Europe’s biggest consumers of Russian natural gas. They have though been taking steps to reduce their dependence on Moscow.
Berlin is looking to build LNG import terminals that would take years, and Italy has reached deals with Algeria, Azerbaijan, Angola and Congo for gas supplies.
Germany previously said it could wean itself off Russian oil by the end of the year but had rejected the idea of an immediate full ban on imports. It, however, last week signaled it could join other member states as it hoped to find a way to replace Russian oil with supplies from other sources soon.
“It comes as no surprise that the Kremlin uses fossil fuels to try to blackmail us,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said last week.
“Today, the Kremlin failed once again in his attempt to sow division amongst member states. The era of Russian fossil fuel in Europe is coming to an end,” she stressed.
Russia’s move “only accelerated the process of becoming independent from Russia,” Zaniewicz noted.
"Russia's aim was, therefore, not to hit Poland or Bulgaria. It was to intimidate the EU not to impose an embargo on Russian oil, as in response Russia would cut off the EU's gas supply," he added.
Tagliapietra said European governments now need to deploy all emergency measures they have at their disposal, both on the supply and demand side, to ensure the security of supply.
“Each billion cubic meter of gas not consumed, is now important,” he noted.
The EU has sought a united front in opposing Moscow’s push to adopt its new gas payments system, but Zaniewicz said “some companies got scared and we can already see that they have agreed to pay in rubles for gas.”
“Hungary was the first to take this decision. It is currently the only country in the EU that pursues a pro-Russian policy, including in the field of energy,” he noted.
“However, the peculiarity of Hungary is that it nevertheless supports successive EU sanctions against Russia. The same may be true of the sanctions on Russian oil that are currently under consideration.”
The EU, including Hungary, can relatively quickly replace Russian oil with supplies from other countries, he said, adding that a ban on its imports “would be very painful for Russia.”
‘Shot itself in the foot’
On Europe’s options, Zaniewicz recalled that the European Commission in early March presented a proposal for a plan to reduce dependence on Russian gas.
This involves increasing imports of LNG, boosting shipments from Azerbaijan, but also increasing the production of biomethane, he said. In addition, it is planned to reduce consumption by replacing gas with renewable sources and increasing energy efficiency.
In addition to the commission’s plans, Zaniewicz said the EU may also increase the use of nuclear and coal power plants and use liquid fuels in some gas power plants.
“However, even taking all these steps into account, if Russia were to cut off gas supplies to the EU completely, it would not be possible to replace about one-third of the gas imported from it this year. This would require a reduction in industrial use, for example,” he noted.
But still, Russia would suffer an even greater loss in case it stopped all flows to Europe, Zaniewicz suggested.
“Revenues from gas and oil exports to the EU exceed Russia’s war budget. This would be a huge blow to Russia.”
All in all, from a strategic perspective, he said Russia has shot itself in the foot.
“While it may frighten some EU countries in the short term, it only reinforces their view that Russia is an unreliable partner in the long term,” he noted.
“By canceling the contract with Poland and Bulgaria, Russia has shown that no country can be sure that it will honor its commitments. By doing so, it has ruined the image it had been developing for years in the EU as a reliable gas supplier,” he explained.
Furthermore, he said the cutoff has given a basis for Poland and Bulgaria to seek compensation for the breach of contract through international arbitration.
“Poland already has experience of winning arbitrations with Gazprom, for example, over its abuse of its monopolistic position,” he noted.
In the long term, Zaniewicz said Russia is eliminating itself from the European gas market.
“We must remember that Europe accounts for around 70% of its gas exports. This gas cannot be sent to China, for example, because there is not enough infrastructure for this,” he added.
Ensuring solidarity among EU countries will now on be fundamental, Tagliapietra said, especially as the continent will need to replenish its gas storage, possibly without Russian gas.
“This is key to make sure Russia’s divide and rule strategy fails.”