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This is Arab American Heritage Month and we are delighted that it has been celebrated by the State Department, dozens of state and local governments, and the Democratic Party.
It is a recognition we’ve long sought and deserve, precisely because Arab Americans have been plagued by a range of hostile behaviours: outright discrimination, maligning or denying our identity, political exclusion or silencing our voices. All had painful consequences but were all too often dismissed because they weren’t acknowledged as bigotry.
This manifested itself in a variety of forms. We were denied employment or excluded from coalitions because we were Arabs. Candidates returned our contributions or rejected our endorsements. Our heritage was denigrated by Hollywood and other forms of popular culture. Worse still, our cultural products were misappropriated.
Personal examples abound
In 1973, I was hired by a college, but was told I could only teach courses in religion. Anything to do with the Middle East was off limits because they said, “It would be controversial to have a person of your background in that role.”
When I applied to teach at another college, I was told that my being an Arab might be helpful in getting some funding for the school. In either case, it wasn’t my qualifications that mattered, it was my ethnicity.
In 1978, on Halloween, at my children’s grade school, some classmates dressed as “Arabs” carrying bags of money or toy guns. When I asked the principal to speak to the children’s parents about how hurtful this had been, she declined.
Then in 1984, the late Senator Alan Cranston, on finding out that I was of Arab descent, asked with a nervous chuckle, “What kind of crazy Ay-rab are you?” His comment came at the end of a meeting he was having with Jesse Jackson during which he pressed Jackson to make amends to the Jewish community for insulting language he had been reported to have made. Apparently, Cranston didn’t think Arabs were deserving of the same concern.
That same year, I did an exhaustive study of portrayals of Arabs and Arab Americans on American network television. I found no Arab Americans and the only portrayal of Arabs were terrorists or greedy suspicious oil sheikhs.
People, not potatoes
When I met with the vice-president for programming at one network and told him how hurtful this was for our children, his was response was, “Everyone has a complaint. The potato folks were here last week upset that we had a character on one of our shows claiming that potatoes are fattening.” I couldn’t make him understand that we were people, not potatoes.
While our heritage and ethnicity were vilified, our cultural products were misappropriated, adding insult to injury. We were denounced as being overly sensitive when we protested Rachel Ray calling tabouli, hummus, and baba ghanoug Israeli cuisine. In the language of the day, we weren’t being overly sensitive, we were objecting to being cancelled.
In 1983 we were invited to serve in the leadership of the committee to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s March on Washington, some groups threatened to withdraw unless the invitation was rescinded. They charged that our community, had not been a part of the civil rights movement — which was patently untrue and hurtful. They sought to define us and would not accept us as an ethnic community.
Mischaractersation of our ethnicity
As a result of this mischaracterisation of our ethnicity, we have long been plagued by instances of painful exclusion. After attending a fund-raiser with Arab Americans and American Jews, a candidate for mayor in Philadelphia was attacked by his opponent for “going soft on Arabs.” Instead of living up to his promise to be “the mayor for all Philadelphians,” he returned the contributions — only to those made by Arab Americans. In the years that followed, a number of other candidates did the same.
Because my community organised, fought back, and won many allies, we have overcome many of these obstacles, but others remain. We now participate in politics and claim our ethnicity and heritage with pride. But the same bigotry rears its ugly head from time to time. It is a form of discrimination.
Beginning with the Bush Administration and continuing through the Obama years, we’ve been confronted with a new challenge to our right to define ourselves — dividing our community on the basis of religion. This, too, is a form of erasure — since it denies us the right to define ourselves as an ethnic community.
When our heritage is defamed, when our culture or ethnicity are denied, when we are excluded because of our beliefs, or silenced because others don’t want our voices heard — it’s bigotry.
And we must demand that it end. That’s why we celebrate Arab American Heritage Month. It affirms who we are — proud and accomplished Arab Americans who will not be denied our right to define ourselves./ Gulf News
Turkish Red Crescent conducted food distribution in Mogadishu's Kahda district on Saturday.
Red Crescent officials in Somalia who spoke to Anadolu Agency on the telephone said the group distributed more than 500 parcels of food to people in need, including those who are internal displaced in the capital, Mogadishu.
"Turkish Red Crescent has been conducting humanitarian aid activities in Somalia since 2011, distributed 500 food parcels to families in need in the Kahda region," said the head of a Turkish Red Crescent delegation, Orhan Kokcu.
The Turkish Red Crescent will continue to distribute food in Somalia during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and will distribute 7,000 parcels, it added.
More than 116,000 Somalis have been displaced by extreme water shortages since October 2020, according to a joint statement by the UN and Somali government earlier this month.
Most parts of the country is facing critical water shortages, with more than 50 districts facing moderate to severe drought conditions, according to the Somalia and UN office./aa
Sixty-eight suspects were arrested in Turkey as part of an investigation into cryptocurrency exchange platform, Thodex, a security source said on Sunday.
The Chief Public Prosecutor's Office in Istanbul issued arrest warrants for 80 suspects for alleged links to the website that is currently inaccessible, the source said on condition of anonymity due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
Police carried out simultaneous raids in eight provinces and the arrests were made. Efforts are underway to arrest the remaining suspects, it added.
Also, a large number of digital material and documents were seized during operations.
The Justice Ministry separately initiated legal action against Fatih Faruk Ozer for the search with a red notice and for his repatriation from Albania.
Turkey's Interior Ministry confirmed Wednesday that Ozer left the country for Albania.
Earlier, the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office in Istanbul appealed to Thodex staff for testimonies about the platform, which has allegedly upset hundreds of thousands of members.
Lawyer Abdullah Usame Ceran filed a criminal complaint against Ozer, the founder and CEO of the platform, alleging "aggravated fraud."
After transaction issues, the platform shared releases on Monday and Tuesday, announcing a six-hour maintenance period.
On Wednesday, it made another announcement that it would enter a partnership and that members would be able to make transactions after a five-day maintenance period.
Meanwhile, Turkey's financial crimes watchdog announced it blocked all of the platform's bank accounts in the country as of Wednesday.
Turkey's Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) initiated an investigation into the person in charge and the company./aa
International NGOs on Saturday criticized Europe after at least 172 migrants drowned in the Mediterranean Sea.
“The racist violence of the European border regime inflicts pain & trauma on peoples & communities around the world. We promise we will keep fighting to abolish it,” tweeted Alarm Phone, an NGO that helps migrants cross the Mediterranean Sea to Europe.
“Europe's border regime will keep killing if not stopped. State actors & @Frontex only seek to protect borders rather than people. They need to be abolished & replaced by a Civil Rescue Coordination Centre that has the objective of rescuing people rather than killing them,” it said, referring to the European Border and Coast Guard Agency.
Alarm Phone said 130 people who called the group in distress “were left to drown by the European and Libyan authorities” and 42 people on a third boat are still missing.
A German NGO, Sea-Watch, on Friday said: “130 people drowned - EU authorities & @Frontex knew about the distress case, but denied rescue. The #OceanViking arrived on scene, only to find 10 bodies.”
A search and rescue team member, Alessandro, who was on the Ocean Viking, said on the SOS MEDITERRANEE website: “Outside, somewhere in those same waves, a dinghy carrying 120 people. Or 100, or 130. We will never know, because they are all dead.”
Alessandro said the search and rescue operation resumed at dawn but no coordination or help was provided from any state.
“If an airplane had crashed in the same area, the navies of half of Europe would have been there, but they were just migrants, soil for the Mediterranean cemetery, for whom it is pointless to run, and indeed we were left alone,” he said.
At least 172 people were killed in three different shipwrecks in the central Mediterranean Sea, and the number drowning in the world’s deadliest crossing has more than doubled in 2021, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Friday.
“Over the past three days, we have received reports that there were at least three boats,” that have sunk “in the central Mediterranean,” said IOM spokeswoman Safa Msehli at a UN news conference.
She noted that the IOM was quoting tolls given by NGOs operating rescue ships in the area.
On one of the boats, there were 130 people, a second was carrying two, while a third vessel that sank, 40 people were believed to have perished.
“This actually brings the death toll in the central Mediterranean alone to close to 500 people, which is almost three times as many as the death toll in the same period of last year,” said Msehli.
“In the Mediterranean as a whole, there have been 523 recorded deaths. If we add the numbers from yesterday, that's 650 recorded deaths.”
She said in the central Mediterranean alone, “which remains the deadliest sea crossing,” there were, as of Thursday, close to 500 deaths, compared to 149 in the same period last year./aa
Health officials in Tunisia and Lebanon confirmed more coronavirus infections and related deaths Saturday.
Tunisia’s Health Ministry said 61 people died in the last 24 hours, taking the death toll to 10,231.
It said the virus was detected in 2,229 more people, bringing infections to 298,572. The recovery tally stands at 248,013.
As many as 28 people in Lebanon died from the virus, pushing the death toll there to 7,118, the Health Ministry announced.
Another 1,511 people tested positive, with infections rising to 519,615, while the number of recoveries is 445,163.
Since first being detected in Wuhan, China in December 2019, the pandemic has claimed more than 3 million lives in 192 countries and regions.
More than 146.07 million cases have been reported worldwide, with recoveries now exceeding 84.1 million, according to figures compiled by US-based Johns Hopkins University./aa
A wanted PKK terrorist was neutralized in northern Iraq in a joint operation by Turkish security forces and its National Intelligence Organization (MIT), said a security source on Saturday.
Dalokay Sanli, codenamed Sinan Mirhan, a so-called senior PKK member who was sought by Interpol with a red notice, was neutralized by an operation of the MIT and the Turkish Armed Forces in northern Iraq, said the source, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
Turkish authorities use the term "neutralize" to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.
The activities in European countries of the terrorist have long been followed by the MIT, it said, adding that the MIT determined that he had gone to northern Iraq’s Gara region to direct armed activities.
The operation was launched after intelligence emerged that the terrorist had been planning attacks in large Turkish cities on strategic facilities, including suicide bombs and sabotage.
He joined the PKK in 1999 in Greece and took part in both terrorist training and instruction activities, said the source.
He was also in charge of directing the actions of the group that was behind summer forest fires in Turkey.
The separatist terrorist group PKK often uses bases in northern Iraq, just across Turkey’s southern border, to hide out and plot terror attacks in Turkey.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and the EU – has been responsible for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa
A photo exhibition on the atrocities committed by Armenia during its decades-long occupation of the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh was held in Sweden’s capital on Saturday.
The exhibit, organized in Stockholm by the Swedish Azerbaijani Association (SAF), featured photographs of civilians maimed by land mines planted by Armenian forces.
“We want people in Sweden to see the massacres and atrocities committed by Armenia during its 30-year occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh,” Sevda Dadasheva, president of SAF, told Anadolu Agency.
Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, and seven adjacent regions in 1991.
Last September, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces in the area, violating several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.
Azerbaijan, supported by Turkey, mounted a successful response and liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages in a 44-day conflict that ended after a Russia-brokered cease-fire on Nov. 10.
“We recently liberated the Nagorno-Karabakh region from Armenian occupation. Still, though, the Armenian army has planted mines in the area to prevent Azerbaijanis from returning to their ancestral lands and continues to do so,” said Dadasheva.
“More than 1 million Azerbaijanis have been unable to return to their native lands. This should be considered a war crime.”/aa
Directorate General of Civil Aviation DGCA issued a new circular to stop all commercial flights arriving directly to Kuwait from India until further notice based on instructions of health authorities and after evaluation of global corona crisis pandemic status.
According to the circular, passengers arriving from India are not allowed to enter Kuwait directly or via another country provided they have they have spent 14 days outside India prior to arrival to Kuwait.
Only Kuwaitis and their first degree relatives (Husband, Wife and children) and their domestic workers are exempted from this decision. However operation of air freight flights will continue from India.
Kuwait’s ambassador to Belgium and the head of mission to the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Jassem Al-Badawi stressed that Kuwait gives priority to caring for and protecting the rights of the expatriate workforce, Al Anbaa reported.
Ambassador Al-Badawi said in a virtual seminar on (immigrants in the Gulf) organized by the Committee on Relations with the Arabian Peninsula in the European Parliament on Thursday, that Kuwait not only prioritized the health and safety of expatriate workers but also has passed laws and legislation to monitor employers.
“We have provided international organizations and non-governmental organizations with free, unrestricted, and unconditional access so that they can verify all efforts and protection measures in place to guarantee the rights of expatriate workers in Kuwait,” he added.
He pointed out that Kuwait and the European Union held their second informal dialogue on human rights on March 30th, where the issue of workers’ rights was discussed comprehensively and all questions raised by the European side were fully answered.
Ambassador Al-Badawi highlighted some of the major steps taken by Kuwait to protect expatriate workers, including the establishment of a formal mechanism to settle disputes between workers and employers.
He explained that Kuwait has also taken other steps in this regard, forming a crisis and emergency management team to ensure the safety and protection of workers during the (new Corona-Covid 19) pandemic and to strengthen communication between the competent authorities and the relevant embassies and consulates to ensure the safety, protection, and rights of expatriate workers.
“Kuwait is one of the most generous countries in the world, and it has been recognized as an international humanitarian center by the United Nations … and in this spirit, we strive to guarantee human rights and dignity in all parts of the world, including at home,” he said.
For his part, Committee Chairman Hannah Neumann announced that the parliamentary meeting between the European Parliament and the Kuwaiti National Assembly would be held by default on May 20.
In this regard, Ambassador Al-Badawi said, “I personally hope that this meeting will achieve tangible results.”
For their part, other Gulf ambassadors to Brussels, several members of the European Parliament, and representatives of international labor and migration organizations spoke during the webinar on the situation of expatriate workers in the Arab Gulf./ agencies
At least 745 people have been killed in a military crackdown against anti-coup protesters in Myanmar, according to the latest figures released by a rights watchdog.
The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners said in a daily briefing late Friday that 3,371 people are in detention, 79 have been convicted and arrest warrants have been issued for at least 1.118 others.
The violence continued despite Association of Southeast Asian (ASEAN) leaders gathering on Saturday in Jakarta to discuss the evolving situation.
Myanmar junta leader Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing is expected to attend.
The rights group claimed the junta is "brutally assaulting anyone who stands against the junta. Women are not spared against the brutality."
“Females are being systematically tortured, [physically and mentally] sexually assaulted with intent,” it said.
The monitoring group reported that a 17-year-old girl, who was released from Shwe Pyi Thar interrogation center in Sanchaung Township, Yangon, was "verbally assaulted and touched inappropriately” on her shoulder then threatened with a gun by "so-called police from number 24 police station."
Meanwhile, local media reported anti-coup protesters returned to the streets of downtown Yangon on Friday after a weeks-long absence following a military-led massacre that killed hundreds nationwide.
The rally that was led by activists from the All Burma Federation of Student Unions (ABFSU) and youth from several Yangon townships marched along Anawrahta road and was not met with any violence by police or soldiers, according to the Myanmar Now news agency.
“What do we want? Democracy!” protesters shouted.
Amid indiscriminate killing aimed at crushing the uprising, the mass rallies that began in the city in February were reduced to deadly cat and mouse games between hard-core protesters and regime forces.
The march on Friday was aimed at breathing life into street protests, said one organizer.
“We marched in the heart of the city so that protests in the urban areas regain momentum,” said the organizer, who asked not to be named for security reasons.
Marchers demanded the abolishment of the “fascist” military and the establishment of a federal union.
“The military will not retreat because it doesn’t want to abandon power. The crackdowns will happen again in the most brutal ways,” the organizer added./aa