Staff

Staff

On the morning of Nov. 5, Eric Trump, one of the president’s sons, asked his Facebook followers to report cases of voter fraud with the hashtag Stop the Steal. His post was shared over 5,000 times.

By late afternoon, conservative media personalities Diamond and Silk had shared the hashtag along with a video claiming voter fraud in Pennsylvania. Their post was shared over 3,800 times.

That night, conservative activist Brandon Straka asked people to protest in Michigan under the banner #StoptheSteal. His post was shared more than 3,700 times.

Over the next week, the phrase “Stop the Steal” was used to promote dozens of rallies that spread false voter fraud claims about the U.S. presidential election.

New research from Avaaz, a global human rights group, the Elections Integrity Partnership and The New York Times shows how a small group of people — mostly right-wing personalities with outsized influence on social media — helped spread the false voter fraud narrative that led to those rallies.

That group, like the guests of a large wedding held during the pandemic, were “superspreaders” of misinformation around voter fraud, seeding falsehoods that include the claims that dead people voted, voting machines had technical glitches, and mail-in ballots were not correctly counted.

“Because of how Facebook’s algorithm functions, these superspreaders are capable of priming a discourse,” said Fadi Quran, a director at Avaaz. “There is often this assumption that misinformation or rumors just catch on. These superspreaders show that there is an intentional effort to redefine the public narrative.”

Across Facebook, there were roughly 3.5 million interactions — including likes, comments and shares — on public posts referencing “Stop the Steal” during the week of Nov. 3, according to the research. Of those, the profiles of Eric Trump, Diamond and Silk and Straka accounted for a disproportionate share — roughly 6%, or 200,000, of those interactions.

While the group’s impact was notable, it did not come close to the spread of misinformation promoted by President Donald Trump since then. Of the 20 most-engaged Facebook posts over the last week containing the word “election,” all were from Trump, according to Crowdtangle, a Facebook-owned analytics tool. All of those claims were found to be false or misleading by independent fact checkers.

The baseless election fraud claims have been used by the president and his supporters to challenge the vote in a number of states. Reports that malfunctioning voting machines, intentionally miscounted mail-in votes and other irregularities affected the vote were investigated by election officials and journalists who found no evidence of widespread voter fraud.

The voter fraud claims have continued to gather steam in recent weeks, thanks in large part to prominent accounts. A look at a four-week period starting in mid-October shows that Trump and the top 25 superspreaders of voter fraud misinformation accounted for 28.6% of the interactions people had with that content, according to an analysis by Avaaz.

“What we see these people doing is kind of like setting a fire down with fuel, it is designed to quickly create a blaze,” Quran said. “These actors have built enough power they ensure this misinformation reaches millions of Americans.”

In order to find the superspreaders, Avaaz compiled a list of 95,546 Facebook posts that included narratives about voter fraud. Those posts were liked, shared or commented on nearly 60 million times by people on Facebook.

Avaaz found that just 33 of the 95,546 posts were responsible for over 13 million of those interactions. Those 33 posts had created a narrative that would go on to shape what millions of people thought about the legitimacy of the U.S. elections.

A spokesperson for Facebook said the company had added labels to posts that misrepresented the election process and was directing people to a voting information center.

“We’re taking every opportunity to connect people to reliable information about the election and how votes are being counted,” said Kevin McAlister, a Facebook spokesperson. The company has not commented on why accounts that repeatedly share misinformation, such as Straka’s and Diamond and Silk’s, have not been penalized. Facebook has previously said that Trump, along with other elected officials, is granted a special status and is not fact-checked.

Many of the superspreader accounts had millions of interactions on their Facebook posts over the last month, and have enjoyed continued growth. The accounts were active on Twitter as well as Facebook, and increasingly spread the same misinformation on new social media sites like Parler, MeWe and Gab.

Dan Bongino, a right-wing commentator with a following of nearly 4 million people on Facebook, had over 7.7 million interactions on Facebook the week of Nov. 3. Mark Levin, a right-wing radio host, had nearly 4 million interactions, and Diamond and Silk had 2.5 million. A review of their pages by The Times shows that a majority of their posts have focused on the recent elections, and voter fraud narratives around them.

None of the superspreaders identified in this article responded to requests for comment.

One of the most prominent false claims promoted by the superspreaders was that Dominion voting software deleted votes for Trump, or somehow changed vote tallies in several swing states. Election officials have found no evidence that the machines malfunctioned, but posts about the machines have been widely shared by Trump and his supporters.

Over the last week, just seven posts from the top 25 superspreaders of the Dominion voter fraud claim accounted for 13% of the total interactions on Facebook about the claim.

Many of those same accounts were also top superspreaders of the Dominion claim, and other voter fraud theories, on Twitter. The accounts of Trump, his son Eric, Straka and Levin were all among the top 20 accounts that spread misinformation about voter fraud on Twitter, according to Ian Kennedy, a researcher at the University of Washington who works with the Elections Integrity Partnership.

Donald Trump had by far the largest influence on Twitter. A single tweet by the president accusing Dominion voting systems of deleting 2.7 million votes in his favor was shared over 185,000 times, and liked over 600,000 times.

Like the other false claims about voter fraud, Trump’s tweet included a label by Twitter that he was sharing information that was not accurate.

Twitter, like Facebook, has said that those labels help prevent false claims from being shared and direct people toward more authoritative sources of information.

Recently, BuzzFeed News reported that Facebook employees questioned whether the labels were effective. Within the company, employees have sought out their own data on how well national newspapers performed during the elections, according to one Facebook employee.

On the #StoptheSteal hashtag, they found that both The New York Times and The Washington Post were among the top 25 pages with interactions on that hashtag — mainly from readers sharing articles and using the hashtag in those posts. (People sharing the articles could have been intending to debunk the campaign.)

Combined, the two publications had approximately 44,000 interactions on Facebook under that hashtag. By comparison, Straka, the conservative activist who shared the call to action on voter fraud, got three times that number of interactions sharing material under the same hashtag on his own Facebook account.

The New York Times.

It's been happening for several years now, especially in the autumn, but it never ceases to unsettle meteorologists like myself: Temperatures in the Arctic are astonishingly warmer than they should be.

According to the University of Maine's Climate Reanlayzer, this weekend the Arctic Circle was an average 12 degrees Fahrenheit above normal. This is not just one location, but the average of all 7.7 million square miles. That is a huge area, nearly double the size of the entire United States, being on average 12 degrees above normal.

Now, it's far from toasty warm in the Arctic; temperatures are near zero in many places. But as you can see in the image below, which illustrates departures from normal, the bright red shaded patches indicate that temperatures are greater than 20 degrees Celsius (30-40 degrees F) above where they should be at this time of year.

The Arctic is more than 12 degrees above normal. Repeat: the average for the entire Arctic is 12 degrees above what was normal in 1990. Would be even more extreme compared to pre-industrial. pic.twitter.com/lC6ruo5Wdr

— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) November 22, 2020

"It's all but becoming an annual reminder of the rapid climate change we have observed in the Arctic," explains Dr. Zack Labe, an Arctic climate specialist from Colorado State University.

While the pace of global warming is the fastest we have seen in millions of years, nowhere is it warming faster than the Arctic. Temperatures in the Arctic are rising at three times the pace of the rest of the globe.

In 2020, Arctic warming is among the highest levels yet.

*Yikes* Lower atmosphere temperature anomalies over the last 6 months in the northernmost region of the #Arctic...[Data from JRA-55 reanalysis; averaged ≥80°N latitude; 925 hPa level] pic.twitter.com/TFc9XW2hTI

— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) November 18, 2020

The rapid warming trend in the Arctic can be traced to the unique makeup of the Arctic Ocean, which is rapidly changing. The Arctic is mainly ocean covered by millions of square miles of sea ice most of the year. But since the 1970s, sea ice extent has been decreasing quickly and sea ice volume has dropped by two-thirds.

Each year Arctic sea ice reaches its minimum in September. This year was the second lowest on record. While that in itself is significant, what happened next was even more surprising. The recovery of sea ice stalled for a few weeks, with October breaking records for the lowest sea ice extent on record.

This resulted in the Northeast Passage along the Siberian coast, which used to be rarely ever open, remaining passable for a record 112 days, shattering the old record by about a month.

Finally! The northeast passage through the Arctic Ocean, along the Siberian coast, has finally frozen shut after a record 112 days.Open seaways in the Arctic Ocean used to be rare, with some years never opening at all, and now open water lasts for months. pic.twitter.com/edcb4ZOEBb

— Robert Rohde (@RARohde) November 3, 2020

Although the Arctic is warming all year round, the strongest warming — known as Arctic amplification — occurs during the fall months.

"All of the heat that was absorbed into the ocean from the summer is released back into the atmosphere as sea ice begins reforming ahead of the winter," explains Labe. "There is [still] a large area of open water that would normally be sea ice covered."

As a result, the lack of sea ice cover and open water is allowing heat to be transferred from the ocean into the overlying atmosphere very late into the season. That is amplifying temperatures to abnormal levels.

The plot below shows how Arctic amplification during the autumn months is boosting warming faster than any other time of year.

#Arctic air temperature anomalies broken down by season[JRA-55 reanalysis; 1958-2019; >67°N latitude ---> grey map region] pic.twitter.com/Laon5bD3ti

— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 23, 2020

"The Arctic has transitioned from a state of old and thick sea ice to one with thin, first-year ice accompanied by rapidly warming ocean and air temperatures," explains Labe, providing evidence that the Arctic is shifting into a new climate regime.

This is having implications outside of the Arctic Ocean as well. In Siberia, from January to June 2020, a heat wave so widespread, prolonged and intense occurred that scientists found it would have been essentially impossible without human-caused climate change, and was made at least 600 times more likely by greenhouse warming.

That abnormal warmth has persisted all year.

Temperatures anomalies over the last 9 months in Siberia... it has been an extraordinary year of weather/climate extremes[Data from JRA-55 reanalysis] pic.twitter.com/Ch19NIqJJl

— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) November 18, 2020

So what does this all mean to most of the world's population that lives far south of the Arctic? This is one of the most intensely studied and debated topics in climate science right now, and one that is yet to have a clear answer.

With such dramatic changes occurring across the Arctic, scientists agree there's bound to be a domino effect into the mid-latitudes. While the details are still being worked out, what appears most clear is that Arctic amplification is linked to more climate extremes in the Northern Hemisphere, potentially by shifting atmospheric and perhaps even ocean steering currents.

What's happening in the Arctic, says Labe, is consistent with our projections in global climate models, lending credibility to future projections. He warns that we should pay close attention to the dramatic changes in the Arctic because it's a bellwether for the rest of us: "The Arctic is really a warning sign of future climate change around the rest of the planet."/ NBC

WASHINGTON — The nation is entering “a very vulnerable period” that could see the number of coronavirus deaths rise rapidly, Dr. Anthony Fauci warned in conversation with Yahoo News on Monday.

The warning comes at a time when the virus is already causing widespread devastation, averaging close to 1,500 deaths per day, according to the COVID Tracking Project. About 257,000 people have succumbed in the United States to COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

Asked if that number could double, Fauci expressed concern about the onset of colder weather and the “sequential holiday seasons” of Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and New Year’s Eve.

“You do the math on that,” Fauci said. “Two to three thousand deaths a day times a couple of months, and you’re approaching a really stunning number of deaths.”

Three thousand deaths per day for the next two months would bring the total number of American deaths to above 400,000, with plenty of devastation still ahead. Although coronavirus vaccinations will begin within a matter of weeks, the inoculations will not stem the viral tide in the near future. That means thousands more could die during the winter months, even as the end of the pandemic starts to come into view.

“It isn’t inevitable that that will happen,” said Fauci, a veteran of the HIV/AIDS epidemic whose previous dire predictions about the path of the coronavirus pandemic have come true. He said that people should not panic but ought instead to take basic precautions, such as seeing people outside the household in outdoor settings only and wearing masks.

“We can blunt the curve and blunt that trajectory, which is almost exponential,” he said. “It’s possible.” Fauci has been making that case more or less since the pandemic began, but he has routinely been undermined by President Trump, who has dismissed the coronavirus as a minor threat inflated by Democratic foes. He has turned face masks into an object of the divisive culture wars on which he thrives.

Fauci excoriated governors who have consistently downplayed the dangers of the coronavirus, even as thousands fall seriously ill and die in their states. The virus has proved a political challenge for elected leaders regardless of party, but Republican governors have, for the most part, been more reluctant than their Democratic counterparts to institute mask mandates or other restrictions that could slow the spread of the virus.

“It’s beyond stunning to me, it’s almost incomprehensible, how in places where you have the intensive care beds completely full,” Fauci said, “and intensive care patients needing to be housed in other places, and you have the possibility of pending shortages of staff — that in those same places they’re still saying it’s fake news, it’s a hoax.”

Speaking to Yahoo News on Monday, Fauci marveled at those who insisted on such an approach. “How could you possibly do that when it’s staring you right in the face in the place where you live?” he wondered. “That people are dying in intensive care units. I don’t get that. At all.”

GENEVA(AA)

Carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in the atmosphere hit a new record of 410.5 parts per million in 2019 and will likely rise this year despite a minor cut in emissions due to COVID-19 lockdowns, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Monday.

CO2 is a key greenhouse gas that traps heat in the atmosphere and contribute to climate change, and it has risen by nearly 50% since pre-industrial times, said the WMO in its annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin.

"The CO2 which we have now in the atmosphere is accumulated since 1750," Oksana Tarasova, WMO’s head of Atmospheric and Environment Research Division, said at a news conference in Geneva.

"So, it's every single bit which we put in the atmosphere since that time actually forms the current concentration. It's not what happened today or yesterday; it's the whole history of the human economic and human development, which lead us to this global level of 410."

Due to the pandemic, the industrial slowdown has not curbed record levels of greenhouse gases trapping heat in the atmosphere, increasing temperatures, and driving more extreme weather, ice melt, sea-level rise, and ocean acidification, according to the WMO report.

Lockdowns have cut emissions of many pollutants and greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

But any impact on CO2 concentrations from the cumulative past and current emissions is no more significant than the typical year to year fluctuations in the carbon cycle and the high natural variability in carbon sinks like vegetation.

The rise in carbon dioxide levels has continued in 2020.

"Since 1990, there has been a 45% increase in total radiative forcing – the warming effect on the climate - by long-lived greenhouse gases, with CO2 accounting for four-fifths of this," said the report.

WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said: "Carbon dioxide remains in the atmosphere for centuries and in the ocean for even longer."

The last time the Earth experienced a comparable concentration of CO2 was 3-5 million years ago when the temperature was 2-3°C warmer, and sea level was 10-20 meters higher than now. But there were not 7.7 billion inhabitants.

Preliminary estimates indicate a reduction in the annual global emission between 4.2% and 7.5%.

Globally, an emissions reduction on this scale will not cause atmospheric CO2 to go down, said the report.

CO2 will continue to go up at a slightly reduced pace (0.08-0.23 ppm per year lower).

The increase in CO2 from 2018 to 2019 was more extensive than that observed from 2017 to 2018 and also larger than the average over the last decade.

The figure represented a balance of fluxes in the atmosphere, the oceans, and the land biosphere said the WMO.

SANAA

The lives of millions of Yemeni children are at "high risk" as the country moves closer to famine, UNICEF warned on Monday.

“Chronic poverty, decades of underdevelopment, and over five years of unrelenting conflict have exposed children and their families to a deadly combination of violence and disease," Executive Director Henrietta H. Fore said in a statement.

Yemen has been beset by violence since 2014, when Iran-backed Houthi rebels overran much of the country, including the capital Sanaa.

The crisis escalated in 2015 when a Saudi-led military coalition launched a devastating air campaign aimed at rolling back Houthi territorial gains.

Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict, which is seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Fore said more than 12 million Yemeni children need humanitarian assistance, nearly 325,000 children under the age of five suffer from severe acute malnutrition, while more than five million children face a heightened threat of cholera and diarrhea.

She added that the COVID-19 pandemic has turned a "deep crisis" into an "imminent catastrophe."

The official appealed to address an urgent funding gap of $300 million, as well as to end the years-long war.

“Children in Yemen need peace. An end to this brutal conflict is the only way they can fulfil their potential, resume their childhood and, ultimately, rebuild their country,” Fore said./aa

MOGADISHU, Somalia

One of the worst cyclonic storms Monday struck the Horn of Africa nation Somalia, killing eight fishers and destroying roads, houses, fishing boats, communication masts, and power lines.

Cyclone Gati, which brought along heavy rains with above average strong winds, mainly affected Bossaso and Hafun regions in the northeastern Puntland State.

Hafun District Commissioner Mohamed Yusuf Garow confirmed the deaths to local media, noting: “Roads, power lines and houses have been destroyed. The rain has weakened but expected to pick up in the evening.”

Urging fishers not to venture out to sea, he said though the cyclone has weakened, the sea remains rough due to strong winds.

Flash floods and extreme hypothermia have also killed an unknown number of livestock. Bossaso is famous for its ports from where livestock are exported to markets in the Gulf countries. Many farmers herd their animals in the region awaiting export which might take weeks or even months.

The Food and Agriculture Organization said in a Monday statement: “Heavy rains surpassing expected annual total amounts were reported in some areas including Bossaso (128mm), Balidhidin (103mm), Iskushuban (72mm) and Caluula (72mm) in a single day. Several other places continue to experience heavy downpour this morning.”

Experts said the rains which will be experienced in the Horn of Africa region during the cyclone period amount to the full average that meteorologists record in a whole two-year rain period in the same region.

Fishing activities, transportation and other businesses have been paralyzed in Bossaso along the Gulf of Aden and other coastal towns.

Internally displaced people are said to be among the worst affected by the rains./aa

LONDON(AA)

Market reaction to Turkey's reforms will be "very positive," as they will attract more investors to the country, the chair of UK-based think tank Chatham House told Anadolu Agency on Monday.

Saying that monetary policies in developed countries will support emerging markets in the coming days, particularly after the US Federal Reserve in August shifted to asymmetric targeting higher average inflation, Jim O'Neill said:

"That should be particularly good for countries that are relying on foreign capital inflows like Turkey."

"If Turkey is serious about reforms, this is a great moment for that," he added.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Nov. 13 pointed to a new era of reforms in the economy and judiciary, saying that new steps will raise the standards for democratic rights and freedom.

O'Neill underlined that for an investor seeking high yield, a country set to undergo serious reforms is the best destination to invest in the debt markets of an emerging market.

"I hope that Turkish leadership is serious about reform. Because if it’s so, I think the markets' reactions will be very positive," he said. 

W spells recovery

O'Neill suggested that Turkey should boost its saving rates and domestic private investment rates to be less dependent on persistently volatile external capital flows.

Turkey can take advantage of the shift in global supply chains shift due to the coronavirus pandemic, O'Neill said, adding: "Because of its geography, Turkey is in such a great position to be a manufacturer for so many parts of the world, particularly Europe. In principle, Turkey is in an extremely strong position in that sense."

Touching on new lockdown measures in big economies, he said a V-shaped recovery in the third quarter lost its momentum, and would likely take the shape of a more complex W instead.

The good news about vaccines in the coming days will be helpful for investment spending, he said, adding: "In 2021 we will definitely get a strong cyclical rebound."

O'Neill stated that China will be the only G20 country posting GDP growth this year.

"And it’s the only one that you can say that with some kind of confidence at the end of 2021, it’s going to be 10% bigger than it was in 2019," he added.

MOSCOW

A total of 345 people were detained during anti-government protests in Minsk, the Belarusian capital on Sunday, the country's Interior Ministry said on Monday.

The demonstrators marched in the streets, burnt automobile tires, and made false calls about barring railroads, spokeswoman Olga Chemodanova said in a post on her Telegram channel.

"A total of 345 people were placed in detention facilities yesterday for violating the law on mass events and are awaiting the court order," she said.

People were placed in detention where they are supposed to stay until the court decides their fate.

Belarus has been rocked by mass protests since President Alexander Lukashenko was re-elected to a sixth term on Aug. 9.

Both the US and EU have rejected the presidential election, and imposed sanctions against top Belarusian officials for their role in vote manipulation and crackdown on protesters./aa

IZMIR, Turkey 

Foreign students in Turkey volunteered for the Turkish Red Crescent to help the victims of a powerful earthquake shaking the country’s Aegean region last month.

On Oct. 30, a magnitude 6.6 tremor rattled Turkey’s third largest city of Izmir which killed at least 115 and injured over 1,000 people.

The Turkish Red Crescent works on the ground with some 9,000 volunteers and 300 employees, including foreign students who came to Turkey to attend university.

Students from Azerbaijan, Somalia, Yemen, Syria, Egypt, and Afghanistan have been working to alleviate the suffering of the quake victims in Izmir since the first day of the disaster.

Suleyman Aliyev, an Azerbaijani student who lives in Turkey for two years, said they decided with his friends to become volunteers for the Turkish Red Crescent after the quake.

“People are very depressed. I try to make them laugh by supporting them voluntarily,” said Aliyev, who works at the aid depot.

Fatima Abdi from Somalia was among the volunteers. “I worked in the aid depot, served in the soup kitchen. It is very nice to help people. Pain dies down when shared. The Turkish Red Crescent is doing very successful work in this regard.”

Fatun Ali, another Somalian student, said that he knew the Turkish Red Crescent from the works that it carried out in his country.

“As soon as I learned the earthquake, I came voluntarily to the city,” Ali said, wishing that people in Izmir would heal their wounds soon.​​​​​​​

DHAKA, Bangladesh(AA)  

Bangladesh must abandon its plans to relocate Rohingya refugees to a remote island in the Bay of Bengal, a top global rights group has said.

The island of Bhashan Char has not yet been declared safe for human habitation by the UN and many of the Rohingya refugees are still reluctant to relocate, Amnesty International said in a statement on Friday.

It accused Bangladeshi authorities of pressuring the Rohingya community, currently confined to crammed camps in the southern district of Cox’s Bazar, to consent to being shifted to the disaster-prone island.

Citing media reports, the group said Bangladesh is aiming to relocate 300 to 400 Rohingya refugees to the island in November.

“Rohingya refugees, interviewed by Amnesty International this month, said that government officials in charge of refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar have coerced them into registering for relocation,” the statement said.

Omar Waraich, South Asia head at Amnesty International, stressed that the island has yet to be “deemed safe for human habitation” and there are still “serious questions over this relocation procedure”.

“Based on the experiences of those that Amnesty International has spoken to, many of the Rohingya who have signed up to relocate to Bhashan Char are doing so out of compulsion rather than choice,” he said.

“Any decisions relating to the relocation of refugees must be transparent and involve the full participation of the Rohingya people. In the meantime, plans for any further relocations must be abandoned.”

He called on Bangladeshi authorities to allow the UN to carry out an assessment of Bhashan Char and “immediately return the hundreds of Rohingya refugees currently on the island to their families in Cox’s Bazar.”


‘Rohingya willing to relocate’

The Bangladesh government, meanwhile, is insisting that the Rohingya refugees are willing to shift to the island.

The country’s foreign minister has put forward this claim on several recent occasions, saying last week that a decision has been taken to relocate around 100,000 Rohingya to Bhasan Char from Cox’s Bazar.

“Most of them [Rohingya] have agreed to go there [Bhashan Char]. The relocation process is being delayed only because of pressure from international agencies and NGOs,” AK Abdul Momen was quoted as saying by state-run Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha news agency.

He said the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar were overcrowded and disaster-prone, claiming that the remote island offers the Rohingya community a shot at a better life.

“Bhasan Char is a beautiful place; I wish to build a resort there. The Rohingya can work and earn on the island too, be it agriculture or rearing livestock,” the minister said.


‘World’s most persecuted people’

The Rohingya, described by the UN as the world's most persecuted people, have faced heightened fears of attack since dozens were killed in communal violence in 2012.

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.

Some 600,000 Rohingya remaining in Myanmar’s Rakhine State were still the target of a government campaign to eradicate their identity, and were living under “threat of genocide”, according to a UN-mandated Fact-Finding Mission’s report last September as quoted by Human Rights Watch.

Since Aug. 25, 2017, nearly 24,000 Rohingya Muslims have been killed by Myanmar’s state forces, according to a report by the Ontario International Development Agency (OIDA).

More than 34,000 Rohingya were thrown into fires, over 114,000 more beaten, and as many as 18,000 Rohingya women and girls were raped by Myanmar's army and police, said the OIDA report, titled Forced Migration of Rohingya: The Untold Experience.

Over 115,000 Rohingya homes were burned down and some 113,000 others vandalized, it added.

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