Kamis, 10 Juni 2021

China has created a 'dystopian hellscape' in Xinjiang, Amnesty report says - BBC News

Members of the Muslim Uighur minority hold placards as they demonstrate to ask for news of their relatives and to express their concern about the ratification of an extradition treaty between China and Turkey at Uskudar square in Istanbul on February 26, 2021.
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The human rights organisation Amnesty International has said China is committing crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, the north-western region that is home to the Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities.

In a report published on Thursday, Amnesty called on the UN to investigate, and said China had subjected Uyghurs, Kazakhs, and other Muslims to mass detention, surveillance, and torture.

Agnès Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty International, accused Chinese authorities of creating "a dystopian hellscape on a staggering scale".

"It should shock the conscience of humanity that massive numbers of people have been subjected to brainwashing, torture and other degrading treatment in internment camps, while millions more live in fear amid a vast surveillance apparatus," Ms Callamard said.

She also accused UN Secretary General António Guterres of "failing to act according to his mandate".

Mr Guterres "has not denounced the situation, he has not called for an international investigation", Ms Callamard told the BBC. "It is incumbent on him to protect the values upon which the United Nations has been founded, and certainly not to stay silent in front of crimes against humanity."

In the 160-page report based on interviews with 55 former detainees, Amnesty said there was evidence the Chinese state had committed "at least the following crimes against humanity: imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty in violation of fundamental rules of international law; torture; and persecution."

The report follows a similar set of findings by Human Rights Watch, which said in an April report that it believed the Chinese government was responsible for crimes against humanity.

China has been accused by some Western nations and rights groups of pursuing a genocide against the Turkic ethnic groups in Xinjiang - though there is dispute over whether the state's actions constitute a genocide.

The author of the Amnesty report, Jonathan Loeb, said at press conference on Thursday that the organisation's research "did not reveal that all the evidence of the crime of genocide had occurred" but that it had so far "only scratched the surface".

China routinely denies all accusations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

'Severe violence and intimidation'

Experts generally agree that China has detained as many as a million Uyghurs and other Muslims and imprisoned hundreds of thousands more people in its crackdown in Xinjiang, which began in 2017.

There have been widespread reports of physical and psychological torture inside prisons and detention camps in the region.

China has also been accused of using forced sterilisation, abortion, and population transfer to reduce birth rates and population density, and of targeting religious leaders to break religious and cultural traditions.

China denies those accusations, and says its camps in Xinjiang are voluntary vocational and de-radicalisation programmes for combating terrorism in the region.

In its report, Amnesty said counter-terrorism could not reasonably account for mass detention, and that the Chinese government's actions showed a "clear intent to target parts of Xinjiang's population collectively on the basis of religion and ethnicity and to use severe violence and intimidation to root out Islamic religious beliefs and Turkic Muslim ethno-cultural practices".

This photo taken on June 2, 2019, shows buildings at the Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Center, believed to be a re-education camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained, north of Kashgar in China's north-western Xinjiang region.
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The organisation said it believed those taken to the network of camps in Xinjiang were "subjected to a ceaseless indoctrination campaign as well as physical and psychological torture".

Those torture methods, according to the report, included "beatings, electric shocks, stress positions, the unlawful use of restraints (including being locked in a tiger chair), sleep deprivation, being hung from a wall, being subjected to extremely cold temperatures, and solitary confinement".

The "tiger chair" - the existence of which has been reported elsewhere - is said to be a steel chair with leg irons and handcuffs designed to shackle the body in place. Several former detainees told Amnesty they were forced to watch others locked immobile in the tiger chair for hours or even days at a time.

Amnesty also said that the camp system in Xinjiang appeared to be "operating outside the scope of the Chinese criminal justice system or other known domestic law", and that there was evidence detainees had been transferred from camps to prisons.

Though many of the findings have been previously reported, Amnesty's investigation is likely to add to international pressure on China over its actions in Xinjiang. The US state department has previously described it as a genocide, and the parliaments of the UK, Canada, Netherlands and Lithuania have passed resolutions making the same declaration.

In March, the EU, US, UK and Canada imposed sanctions on Chinese officials over the alleged abuses. China responded by imposing retaliatory sanctions on lawmakers, researchers and institutions.

The possibility of China being investigated by an international legal body is complicated by the fact that China is not a signatory to the International Criminal Court (ICC) - putting it outside the court's jurisdiction - and it has veto power over cases taken up by the International Court of Justice. The ICC announced in December it would not pursue a case.

An independent series of hearings was held in London last week, led by the prominent British barrister Sir Geoffrey Nice, aiming to assess the allegations of genocide.

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2021-06-10 21:12:27Z
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Drugs kingpin El Chapo's wife faces long sentence after admitting to helping run his empire - Sky News

The wife of jailed drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman has pleaded guilty to a range of charges after being accused of helping to run his vast empire.

Emma Coronel Aispuro faced accusations she aided El Chapo in managing the Sinaloa cartel, assisting his 2015 prison escape and conspiring to distribute illegal drugs.

The 31-year-old could face life in prison after admitting a drug distribution charge at a federal court in Washington DC.

She also pleaded guilty to other charges of money laundering and engaging in financial dealings for the drug cartel, which could carry a combined 30 years in prison - though she is more likely to spend around a decade in jail.

As part of her plea agreement, she also admitted conspiring to helping her husband escape in 2015 from Altiplano,
a Mexican maximum security prison.

Emma Coronel Aispuro has been accused of helping her husband escape prison
Image: Emma Coronel Aispuro, pictured outside court in February, admitted helping her husband escape from prison in 2015

Coronel, who was born in California and holds both US and Mexican citizenship, could also be fined up to $10 million (£7.1 million).

Wearing a green jumpsuit and white face mask to enter her plea before District Judge Rudolph Contreras, she said she understood the charges and repercussions of her guilty pleas.

More on El Chapo

The judge has set a tentative sentencing date of 15 September.

The former beauty queen was arrested in February on allegations she relayed messages to help her husband traffic drugs between 2012 and 2014 and she continued delivering messages to Guzman during prison visits after his arrest in February 2014.

Clad in a beige uniform marked "3870," the captured drug kingpin answered the Mexican prison guard's questions calmly, barely looking up as he scrubbed black fingerprint ink from his hands.
Image: Guzman is currently serving a life sentence in a Colorado supermax prison

In July 2015, Guzman escaped from a federal prison in Mexico, through a tunnel leading to the Santa Juanita neighbourhood in Puebla.

He was previously arrested in 2001 but had escaped from a Mexican prison with the help of a maintenance worker.

In February 2019, Guzman, 64, was convicted for masterminding the drug empire in a high-profile trial in New York.

He was sentenced to life plus further 30 years, and is being held in a supermax prison in Colorado.

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2021-06-10 19:26:34Z
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Man who slapped French President Macron jailed for four months - Al Jazeera English

Damien Tarel attacked Emmanuel Macron when he was shaking hands with members of the public during a walkabout in France’s Drome region.

A French court on Thursday sentenced a man who slapped French President Emmanuel Macron across the face this week to a prison term of 18 months, 14 of which were suspended.

Damien Tarel, a 28-year-old medieval history enthusiast, has been in custody since the assault on Tuesday, which a prosecutor called “absolutely unacceptable” and “an act of deliberate violence”.

Tarel attacked Macron when the French president was shaking hands with members of the public during a walkabout in France’s Drome region.

Tarel said that several days ahead of Macron’s visit to the region, he had thought about throwing an egg or a cream tart at the president, but added the slap was not premeditated.

“I think that Macron represents very neatly the decay of our country,” he told the court, according to BFM TV.

“If I had challenged Macron to a duel at sunrise, I doubt he would have responded.”

Tarel faced a charge of assault against a public official, an offence that carries a maximum sentence of three years in jail and a 45,000-euro ($54,750) fine.

‘Isolated event’

Macron has shrugged off the assault, calling it an “isolated event”, and he has promised to continue meeting voters despite concerns for his personal security.

Asked about it again during an interview on Thursday with BFM TV, he called it a “stupid, violent act” and suggested it was a consequence of the poisonous atmosphere found on social media.

“You get used to the hatred on social media that becomes normalised,” he said.

“And then when you’re face-to-face with someone, you think it’s the same thing. That’s unacceptable.”

Leaders across the political spectrum have united in condemning the slap, with many seeing it as a symptom of the fraught political climate and declining standards of public debate just weeks from regional elections and 10 months from presidential polls.

“The political climate is turning to vinegar. It’s dangerous what’s happening,” senior leftist MP and regional election candidate Clementine Autain told France Info.

Others saw the assault as a sign of how Macron, a reformist former investment banker, continues to inspire visceral rejection from many French people.

His presidency was rocked by the anti-government “yellow vest” protests in 2018-2019, which were driven in part by anger at his economic reforms as well as his abrasive personality.

Macron, 43, whose personal ratings have risen recently, is expected to seek a second term next year.

Polls show him holding a narrow lead over his main rival, far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

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2021-06-10 17:27:30Z
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Sahel: Macron announces end of Operation Barkhane as it exists - Al Jazeera English

The French president says the continuation of military commitment in the Sahel ‘will not be in the same way’, with details to be announced by end of June.

President Emmanuel Macron has said France’s military operation in the violence-hit Sahel region of West Africa will no longer exist in its current form, adding that it will be replaced by another mission of French troops that will further rely on other partners.

“The time has come; the continuation of our commitment in the Sahel will not be in the same way,” Macron told a wide-ranging news conference on Thursday, announcing a “profound transformation” of his country’s military presence in the region but providing few details.

France currently has about 5,100 soldiers deployed across the semi-arid strip on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert as part of its Operation Barkhane, whose headquarters are in the Chadian capital, N’Djamena.

“We will make a drawdown in an organised way,” Macron said, adding that details, including on the number of soldiers France is keeping in the region, will be finalised by the end of June.

“We will have to hold a dialogue with our African and European partners. We will keep a counterterrorism pillar with special forces with several hundred forces … and there will be a second pillar that will be cooperation, and which we will reinforce.”

The announcement came after Macron in February – during a virtual summit with the leaders of the so-called G5 Sahel countries Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger – had expressed his intention to reduce within months French troop numbers.

Al Jazeera’s Natacha Butler, reporting from Paris, said the timing of the comments was significant, pointing to last month’s coup in Mali and a meeting next week of NATO allies in Brussels, as well as the upcoming French election.

“Operation Barkhane and its presence in the Sahel has become increasingly unpopular in France,” she said. “More than 50 [French] soldiers have died since 2013 and therefore there’s no doubt that Emmanuel Macron is very aware that the French public opinion is turning against it.”

The conflict in the western portion of the Sahel largely between state forces and armed groups linked to ISIL (ISIS) and al-Qaeda has ravaged much of the region over the past decade, sparking a major humanitarian crisis.

Almost 7,000 people died due to the worsening fighting last year, according to data by the Armed Conflict and Location Event Data Project. In late January, the United Nations warned the “unrelenting violence” had internally displaced more than two million people, up from 490,000 at the start of 2019.

Last year, the French government had boosted its Barkhane troop numbers by 600.

France’s military presence has prompted sporadic protests in Mali and other countries, with demonstrators alleging that it is contributing to the worsening of the crisis.

In March, the United Nations reported that a French air attack in central Mali earlier this year had killed 19 civilians at a wedding party. France denied the UN’s findings, maintaining that its forces had struck an “armed terrorist group” near the village of Bounti, while Macron has frequently condemned the animosity towards France, the former colonial power in the region.

Before Thursday’s news conference, teports citing military and diplomatic sources had indicated that an “adjustment” in the French presence would depend on the involvement of other European countries in the Takuba Task Force fighting armed groups in the Sahel alongside the Malian and Nigerien armies. Those forces have ramped up in recent months.

At the February summit, the leaders of the G5 countries had warned Macron against the dangers of a rapid pullout. Since then, the veteran leader of Chad and close French ally, Idriss Deby Itno, has been killed, while Mali has suffered a second coup that has badly strained relations with Paris.

Last week, France suspended its joint military operations with Malian forces and stopped providing defence advice because Mali’s new military government failed to give guarantees to hold free elections.

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2021-06-10 17:03:27Z
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Macron slap: Four months for man who attacked French president - BBC News

A medieval combat enthusiast has been given four months in jail after he admitted slapping French President Emmanuel Macron.

Damien Tarel told the court it was an act of impulse, but the prosecutor said it was a "deliberate act of violence".

The court heard that Tarel subscribed to right-wing or far-right politics and was close to the yellow-vest movement.

President Macron said the attack should not be trivialised but had to be kept in proportion.

He had just left a hotel school in the south-eastern town of Tain-l'Hermitage when he ran towards a crowd waiting behind a metal barrier.

As he slapped the president, Tarel was heard to shout "Montjoie and Saint-Denis! Down with Macronism", using an obscure medieval battle-cry.

The incident was immediately condemned across France's political spectrum, less than a year before presidential elections.

Prosecutors had called for 18 months in prison for assaulting a public official. The three judges said Tarel should be given 18 months, with 14 months of the sentence suspended. His four months in jail will start immediately but the rest will only be enforced if he commits another offence.

A second suspect who filmed the incident is facing prosecution for illegal possession of weapons after local authorities searched his home. He comes from the same town as Damien Tarel.

What did Tarel tell the court?

According to AFP news agency, the defendant appeared in court in Valence wearing the same green T-shirt he wore on the day of his arrest.

Asked why he had attacked the president, he replied that while waiting with his friends in the car beforehand he had considered doing something notable. He had earlier considered throwing an egg or cream tart, but insisted he had not considered slapping Mr Macron.

"When I saw his friendly, lying look, which sought me out as a voter, I was filled with disgust," he was reported as saying to the court.

Condemning the president's politics, he added that he felt he was part of the anti-establishment gilets jaunes (yellow-vests) movement, which staged anti-Macron protests during the early years of his presidency. "I acted instinctively," he claimed.

Friends had earlier described Tarel as apolitical and Le Parisien had quoted one source who summed up his politics as "ideological mush". His Instagram page described him as a historic European martial arts enthusiast, complete with sword and armour.

French actor Jean Reno on the set of the film Les Couloirs du temps: Les visiteurs 2
Getty Images

His battle-cry is perhaps better known nowadays for its use in a 1993 French comedy film called Les Visiteurs.

What Macron says

The French president had earlier dismissed the assault as isolated, while emphasising that "ultra-violent people" should not be allowed to hijack public debate.

French President Emmanuel Macron (C) speaks with France's players before a lunch in Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, France, 10 June 2021
EPA

In a news conference on Thursday ahead of France's involvement in the European football championships, he went further.

"There have been moments of very high tension and violence in our country which I've had to experience as president, during the gilets jaunes crisis. But society is in a different place today."

He said he had decided not to take legal action himself, preferring to leave it to the judicial system.

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2021-06-10 15:57:40Z
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President Biden warns Russia as he opens foreign trip in UK - BBC News - BBC News

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2021-06-10 12:01:25Z
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COVID-19: India records world's highest daily coronavirus deaths as its chief scientific adviser warns a third wave is 'inevitable' - Sky News

India has recorded the world's highest number of coronavirus-related deaths in a single day.

It announced a further 6,148 fatalities on Thursday - after the state of Bihar discovered 3,929 unreported deaths.

Bihar, one of India's poorest states, revised its death toll after being directed to by Patna High Court.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

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Mass COVID graves along the Ganges

The court has been hearing a petition alleging that the number of deaths in the state has been under-reported and inconsistent during the country's second wave of COVID-19.

"All facts must be verified from all sources," the court's chief justice said.

Mangal Panday, Bihar's health minister, said: "We are open to revising the figures if people come forward with genuine papers. Our real intention is to help and not to hide anything. We are not ruling out some names that are still missing."

More on Covid

There have been allegations that India under-reported deaths in April and May when it was hit by a severe second wave of infections.

In April, Sky News investigated the under-reporting of deaths at various crematoriums in the national capital, Delhi, and in Ghaziabad in Uttar Pradesh.

Findings showed huge discrepancies in the actual numbers compared with those given by the authorities.

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India's COVID crisis: 'I wish she was still with us'

One of the reasons is the large number of deaths that happened in people's homes and not in hospitals, which were inundated beyond capacity.

Deaths outside medical facilities do not appear to have been tallied in government figures.

The Delta variant of COVID-19 - first discovered in India - has spread into rural areas. Many deaths have happened in villages and small towns where public health facilities are inadequate or virtually non-existent.

Sky News found hundreds of teachers in Uttar Pradesh died within a few days of being put on election duty.

While the teachers' union has accounted for more than 1,600 deaths, the state government has acknowledged only three due to coronavirus.

There are also reports and videos of hundreds of unaccounted shallow graves along the banks of the river Ganges.

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And you thought your COVID test was difficult?

Last month dozens of bodies were found floating along the river in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, and again most were unaccounted for and unidentified.

India is the second worst-affected country after the United States, having recorded more than 29 million COVID cases, while more than 360,000 people have died.

The vaccination drive which began on 16 January has been slow and mired in controversy, with not enough doses being produced.

India has administered more than 235 million shots so far - less than 5% of the estimated adult population of 950 million has been fully vaccinated.

Those who have only been jabbed once amount to 14% of the population.

Principal scientific adviser K. VijayRaghavan has warned that a third wave of infections is "inevitable".

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2021-06-10 11:41:32Z
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