Besieged Areas of Syria Receive Latest Delivery of Aid

According to UN, there are more than half a million Syrians living in 18 areas across the country besieged by the war.

A convoy carrying humanitarian goods wait to enter the besieged area of Moudamiya Al Sham in the suburbs of Damascus, Syria February 17, 2016. REUTERS/Omar Sanadiki

A convoy carrying humanitarian goods wait to enter the besieged area of Moudamiya Al Sham in the suburbs of Damascus, Syria, February 17, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Omar Sanadiki

Beirut: Trucks carrying medical and food aid entered two blockaded towns near Damascus on Wednesday, June 29, meaning that humanitarian agencies have now reached all besieged areas of Syria this year, the UN said.

The 38-truck convoy carried aid for some 20,000 people the UN estimates are living in the rebel-held towns of Zamalka and Irbin, which are being besieged by the government side.

“Today is the first time we are able to move a joint convoy of the UN, the Red Cross and Syrian Red Crescent…to these two towns since November 2012, nearly four years ago,” the UN resident and humanitarian coordinator Yacoub El Hillo told reporters before the trucks headed in.

“It will mean that since the beginning of this year the UN, the International Committee of the Red Cross(ICRC) and the Syrian Red Crescent have been able to reach all the besieged areas of Syria,” he added.

The ICRC said the aid included food parcels and wheat flour, hygiene kits and medicine.

The UN says there are more than half a million Syrians living in 18 areas across the country that are besieged by warring sides in the five-year conflict. Aid agencies reported deaths from starvation in government-besieged Madaya earlier this year.

Hillo said the delivery to Zamalka and Irbin would last about a month and called for sieges to be lifted and regular aid access granted.

Aid agencies have repeatedly called for regular access to areas under siege, saying that one-off deliveries quickly run out and that those in need remain blockaded.

Data From EgyptAir Black Box Sheds Light on Crash

Evidence points to a fire in the aircraft while a terror attack possibility seems unlikely to officials.

A flight recorder retrieved from the crashed EgyptAir flight MS804 is seen in this undated picture issued June 17, 2016. Credit: Egyptian Aviation Ministry via Reuters

A flight recorder retrieved from the crashed EgyptAir flight MS804 is seen in this undated picture issued June 17, 2016. Credit: Egyptian Aviation Ministry via Reuters

Cairo: Investigators have downloaded data from one of the black box flight recorders on EgyptAir Flight MS804 and are preparing to analyse it, bringing them closer to discovering what caused the jet to crash, Egypt’s investigation committee said on June 29.

The Airbus A320 plunged into the eastern Mediterranean Sea en route from Paris to Cairo on May 19, killing all 66 people on board. The cause of the crash remains unknown.

“Preliminary information shows that the entire flight is recorded on the FDR since its takeoff from Charles de Gaulle airport until the recording stopped at an altitude of 37,000 feet where the accident occurred,” Egypt’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee said in a statement.

Search teams have salvaged both of the so-called black box flight recorders. Investigators are now preparing to analyse data from the flight data recorder.

“Recorded data is showing consistency with SCARS messages of lavatory and avionics smoke,” the committee said, referring to the Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System, which routinely downloads maintenance and fault data to the airline operator.

The plane had sent a series of warnings indicating that smoke had been detected on board through SCARS.

Recovered wreckage from the jet’s front section showed signs of high temperature damage and soot, the committee said. Those were the first physical signs that fire may have broken out on the A320 airliner, in addition to maintenance messages indicating smoke alarms in the avionics area and lavatory.

The committee said these findings would need further analysis to discover the source and reason for the marks, however.

Second black box

The second black box, the cockpit voice recorder, is still being repaired in laboratories belonging to France’s BEA aircraft accident investigation agency, where the data chips from both recorders were sent after the devices were retrieved from the Mediterranean earlier this month.

The Bureau of Investigation and Analysis for Civil Aviation Safety (BEA) is involved in the investigation because France is both the flight’s point of origin and home to Airbus, the plane’s manufacturer. Fifteen of those killed were French.

A United States National Transport Safety Board investigator is also involved, since the plane’s engines were built by a consortium led by the US company Pratt & Whitney.

If intact, the cockpit recorder should reveal pilot conversations and any cockpit alarms, as well as other clues such as engine noise.

A search vessel contracted by the Egyptian government from Mauritius-based Deep Ocean Search is still searching the Mediterranean for human remains.

No explanation for the disaster has been ruled out, but current and former aviation officials increasingly believe the reason lies in the aircraft’s technical systems, rather than sabotage.

The Paris prosecutor’s office opened a manslaughter investigation on June 27 but said it was not looking into terrorism as a possible cause of the crash at this stage.

The crash is the third blow since October to Egypt’s travel industry, which is still suffering from the 2011 uprising that ended Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule.

A Russian plane crashed in the Sinai Peninsula in October, killing all 224 people on board in an attack claimed by the Islamic State. In March, an EgyptAir plane was hijacked by a man wearing a fake suicide belt. No one was hurt.

(Reuters)

Assimilation and Racism: Bengaluru’s International Student Community on Wanting to Belong

Many foreign students are keen to fit in while in India. But persistent racism, discrimination and inaction by the authorities makes this extremely difficult.

Many foreign students are keen to fit in while in India. But persistent racism, discrimination and inaction by the authorities makes this extremely difficult.

Students at Chancery Hotel for the iftaar meal. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

International students at Chancery Hotel for the iftaar meal. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

“They call it beans”, said Mobarak Abdalla, a 24-year-old student from Sudan studying pharma at East Point College in Bengaluru, unsure of the name he had used for the traditional Sudanese dish, Ful Madames, made up of mashed fava beans mixed with boiled eggs and tomato. His friends had prepared it from scratch and served it up with white bread and mango juice. The boys, some 10 of them, were at his rented flat in the city’s Kamanahalli area, for the evening iftaar meal and to watch the Euro Cup. With college shut, they slept and fasted during the day and were up all night feasting or playing football – a drastic change from the high tension that prevailed only a few months back.

“We want to know how to become friendly with the locals. Even if they’re wrong, we have to follow their rules because it’s for our own safety,” he said.

On February 6, Mobarak was at the city’s Freedom Park with a group of international students. They were protesting the mob attack on a Tanzanian student on January 31 in Bangalore and also held a candle light vigil for the local woman who died in the accident that triggered the mob fury. Enraged and shocked, the young students were looking for a way out of this friction. Mobarak said he wanted to learn Kannada because locals sometimes refuse to speak to him in English even if they can. On the other hand, Bakhir, an Afghani student, spoke of a more peaceful coexistence with his Indian friends. “I have so many Indian friends and we are living in perfect harmony. He added, “This recent incident with the Tanzanian student was really shocking and I didn’t really expect that such a thing could happen because Indians are really peaceful and great people”. Bakhir came to India two years ago on an Afghan government scholarship to pursue a BBA degree at Brindavan College.

In fact, at a meeting organised by Alternative Law Forum, a Bengaluru-based legal aid group, many students from African countries expressed their desire to build bridges with the locals. One of them even suggested, “We could have a food festival where we could serve biryani. We are even ready to clean up after”.

Such responses from African students and their effort to reach out to the local community has a wider context. A sense of fear has gripped students from African countries after the January incident and the recent killing of a Congolese student in South Delhi on May 20. Twenty-eight-year-old Bokor Moussa once nurtured romanticised notions about studying in India, but now thinks the security of African students is often compromised. “Since 2015 we’re getting harassed by colleges, policemen, even the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO). Now if someone asked me if India is a good place to study, I tell them to never come [here]”. An undergraduate student from Chad, Bokor serves as the current president of the Association for African Students in India (AASI).

Unchecked institutional harassment

Karnataka alone attracts the highest share of foreign students (36.4%), according to a 2014 study. Out of the 25,000 students from different African countries studying in private and public institutions in India, an estimated 6000 are in Bengaluru alone. Most African students, however, come through agents and fall for advertisements with incorrect and hyped-up depictions of colleges affiliated to Bangalore University (BU). “My cousin was studying here and I checked the website. But the website was totally different from the college”, said Mobarak.

Mobarak Abdalla. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

Mobarak Abdalla. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

In some cases, students have found facilities in the institutes are not up to the mark or as advertised, forcing them to apply for a ‘no objection certificate’ to be transferred to another college, which becomes another excuse for the college to extort the full course fee from them. Colleges have also been found to withhold certificates from students and ask for a ransom in the form of additional fees. This subsequently lands the students in trouble with the FRRO. The bona fide certificate is a document students are required to submit to extend their visa every six months to a year. In 2014, the People’s Union of Civil Liberties filed a complaint to the Karnataka State Human Rights Commission against Sree Omkar College of Commerce and Management on behalf of  some Ugandan students, who alleged that the principal impounded their passports, and denied them attendance and bona fide certificates, which delayed their visa renewal. In response to the allegations, the director of the FRRO stated “the circumstances [were] beyond the jurisdiction of FRRO [cannot be] controlled by FRRO, and hence the action taken by them [the college] cannot be treated as cruel treatment and torture to students”. However, the FRRO officials are required to make inspection visits to colleges where foreign students are enrolled.

The police report, which concluded “this is not a case of human rights violation but a case of students violating conditions laid down in the agreement between the students and the college management”, was pronounced erroneous by the commission for “failure to look into the allegations against the college management and the arrest of one of the students contrary to the provisions of the Registration of Foreigners Rules”.

In another complaint by a student of St. Hopkins College of Management who could not write an exam due to non availability of question paper at the centre, the state human rights body directed the FRRO to “avoid forcing the student to produce an undertaking from the college stating that he will not engage in any illegal activities during his stay in India, except where compelling reasons of national security requires depriving his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such procedures established by law”. In both cases, the commission upheld the human rights of the students against unlawful harassment by the college or the FRRO.

It is this nexus between the college, FRRO and the police that has trapped many African students into overstaying their visa. None of the non-African students I spoke to had paid for a bonafide certificate.

Abigail Femi (23), who completed her bachelors and masters degrees at the Indian Institute of Science, said that parents back home still relied the most on word-of-mouth or a friend’s recommendation for institutes to send their children to . “In Nigeria, students cross check a list of accredited universities on the website of the ministry of foreign affairs. So you look at the website and check if the school is on the government website, then it’s okay”. The information on the government website, however, may not always be updated.

African students more vulnerable to discrimination

Bokor said it is mostly African students who face institutional harassment, but he still finds it difficult to call the problem one of race. “Universities like Christ College don’t treat students like this. It is only the colleges under BU because they don’t have any control over the affiliated colleges. When we approached BU with this problem, they told us they’re only responsible for results and conducting exams,” he said.

Twenty-five-year-old Safra Riswan Hussein, a Sri Lankan student and general secretary of the Federation of International Students Associations – Bangalore (FISA-B), said she hasn’t been treated any differently than an Indian. But that’s largely because she speaks Tamil, the second most common regional tongue in the city. FISA-B mostly comprises of students from developing countries in Asia, West Asia and Africa through scholarships provided by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR).

Twenty-three-year-old Anik Chowdhury from Bangladesh, studying at Acharya Bangalore Business School, has seen students from African face more challenges in finding a house or with the police. “While getting police verification report, I was asked to get my landlord’s signature but an African friend of mine was asked to bring his landlord to the station”, he said.

Mauritian student Gavesh Kumarsingh Deonanan (20) made local friends with relative ease as opposed to fellow FISA-B member Djery Doucoure (25) from Mali whose eight course mates in Teachers Academy are either from Mali or Congo. Gavesh talked about wanting to make more international friends while Djery mostly was comfortable with moving around in “his own” circles. “When we come here, we mostly get in touch with our own brothers. We want to hang out with other international students but we have to make some sacrifices. They can treat you in a different way that makes you feel bad but you’ll still be there because you want to be friends”, said Djery, who came to India through an agent. Gavesh came to Bengaluru to study commerce at Brindavan College through the ICCR scholarship and speaks English well. “When I go to the dhabas and hang with my local friends, they’ve told me that they hold some kind of a grudge against African students. I don’t know why,” he said.

Abigail Femi. Credit: Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

Abigail Femi. Credit: Credit: Association of African Students in India

Abigail explains that many of the students from African countries are from low income backgrounds and have come to study through ICCR scholarships, unlike students from US, UK or Australia who make it to the institutions directly. Referring to institutes like Christ College, she said, “These universities are expensive and the students come on exchange programs from developed countries. For African students, it is a privilege to be able to come to school that is not so expensive compared to universities in their own country. They feel so grateful for the opportunity and the colleges take advantage of it”.

She was asked to pay a different amount during admission but she held her ground. “I can’t stand injustice. They wanted me to go but I paid the same amount as everyone else did”. Despite paying the entire three-year tuition fee in her first year, her college had asked her to pay the fee again in the subsequent year. “The office lady told me there was some mix up and the person who made the mistake has left the job so I needed to pay,” she said, adding that the college has now changed for the better.

Despite a directive being issued in October 2015 by Karnataka State Higher Education Council’s overseas centre for foreign students, 30% of the universities have not yet appointed a nodal officer to address the grievances of foreign students, a Times of India report said. Meanwhile, FISA-B plans to start an international cell in every college to address the problems faced by foreign students and a website that would cover FRRO relations and guidelines in all Indian states. “When students come here they’re totally blank. They don’t know where to go, what to do or what are the procedures. So this cell will have one person from the college administration and international students”, Safra said.

Denial of racism: absence of any real engagement by the authorities and political leaders

The government’s blanket denial of racism has only served to further mask the racism African nationals are subjected to practically everyday. Bengaluru police called the attack on the Tanzanian student a case of ‘mistaken identity’. Sadanand Gowda, a BJP MP from North Bengaluru, went on the offensive and urged the state government to constitute a special squad to monitor foreign students, alleging that many in the city had overstayed their visa. The reference to ‘African students’ here is hardly veiled.

There’s a visible resistance from non-African students to call Indians racist and they attribute these incidents to “a small minority”. Mobarak said the gulf between cultures in African countries and India leads to a huge clash and hostility towards the former. “Even if you watch TV, they deny racism. If you deny racism, then you let locals do the same thing again”, he said.

Mobarak’s fears are not unfounded. Days after the Congolese student was killed, foreign minister Sushma Swaraj tweeted that the government would “launch a sensitization program to reiterate that such incidents with foreign nationals embarrass the country”. Minister of state for foreign affairs V.K. Singh called the incident a “minor scuffle blown up by the media” and asked citizens to question the “motive of the media”. All this while African nationals were being targeted in a series of attacks in Mehrauli in what seemed to be a further backlash to the stone pelting of Indian shops in Congo.

“The response is very weak”, Bokor said about the government’s response to these attacks. He said he had approached the state home minister with a petition that is yet to see a definitive response. Student associations, which otherwise guide foreign students with the procedures and their way around colleges and the FRRO, have yet to be lent a serious ear by state and central authorities. FISA-B had approached Bengaluru’s police commissioner for a meeting with international students to address their problems, which was postponed thrice before it was cancelled. “We even got six colleges who agreed to participate and the last time P. Harishekaran, the additional Commissioner of police (east division), promised to give us a date after speaking to the home minister. They told us to share the presentation before the seminar, which means they want to know what exactly will be discussed and we refused to do it”, said Mobarak. Bokor, however, credited Harishekaran for being the only helpful official.

Far from assuring students of their safety, local police raided student hostels and paying guest (PG) accommodations for unannounced checks after the January incident. The police visited Safra’s PG, where she lives with four other Sri Lankan students, everyday and asked her owner to fill out some papers and took the girls to the station in the police jeep. “We wasted two-three hours waiting for the commissioner who asked us if we had any problems because ‘the media is showing everyday there’s a problem with international students so tell us your problem’, on the evening before an exam. They asked to take some pictures with the assistant commissioner and said it is ‘just for the media’.  We felt like they don’t want to take proper action but just show that they are doing something,” she said. After this incident, the owner of the PG vowed never to take in international students and her friends blamed the African students for the inconvenience. “I have a lot of African friends and I felt that they started treating them differently,” Safra adds.

For now, AASI has set up a legal cell for African students with Alternate Law Forum and Manthan Law, another legal aid group. “We will be sitting every Thursday evening at Alternate Law Forum for anyone to walk in and seek legal advice. Students can also call the helpline number (7338422514) for immediate assistance,” said Darshana Mitra, a lawyer with the forum.

Students at Chancery Hotel for the iftaar meal. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

Students at Chancery Hotel for the iftaar meal. Credit: Makepeace Sitlhou

Last Sunday, the student members of FISA-B convened at the Chancery Hotel for an iftaar dinner, with dates and fruits served as entrees followed by some run-of-the-mill hotel food. The event was more symbolic as students from different faiths to break bread together. Joining their merriment were K. Ravi Shanker and Benoni Doss who run International Students Hospitality Organisation and Friends of International Students respectively. In the absence of any deliberate effort by the government and colleges to assimilate them, international students look up to Ravi and Benoni as paternal figures in a foreign land.

Benoni and his wife are among 12 families in the city who have volunteered to act as local guardians to international students. “What these students experience here will be the impressions they carry back home. We aspire to make lifelong relationships with them,” said Benoni, who works at a software company. An engineer by profession, Ravi has been assisting foreign students facing discrimination from colleges and landlords since 2000. Ask him about his source of funding and he quickly rebuts that he never intended to do this work “commercially”.

“After all,” he said, “making foreign students feel welcomed is at the core of India’s atithi devo bhava (the guest is equivalent to God) tradition”.

Makepeace Sitlhou is a freelance writer based in Bangalore. She tweets at @makesyoucakes.

Date for Reconvening Syria Peace Talks is Unclear, Says UN Envoy

The continuing breach of cessation of hostilities in the area combined with a lack of humanitarian aid have made the resumption of talks difficult.

UN special envoy on Syria Staffan de Mistura speaks during a news conference in Vienna, Austria, May 17, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Leonhard Foeger

UN special envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura speaks during a news conference in Vienna, Austria, May 17, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Leonhard Foeger

United Nations: The UN envoy to Syria told the UN Security Council (UNSC) on June 29 that it remains unclear when the next round of UN-brokered peace talks will take place, adding that there was no point in talking without some assurance of progress.

The last round of talks between the Syrian government and opposition broke up at the end of April as government forces, backed by Russia, escalated their assault on rebel-held areas in the northern city of Aleppo.

“I have not…indicated a fixed date in July,” Staffan de Mistura told reporters after briefing the 15-nation UNSC on his work to secure a negotiated solution to the five-year-old Syrian civil war. “I’m still aiming within July, but not at any cost and not without some guarantees.”

“When you convene a conference or talks…you want to make sure that it has good chances of success,” he said. “Having just a conference for the sake of a conference, we can do that anytime. We can do it tomorrow, if you want.”

A “cessation of hostilities” that had brought peace to much of Syria for two months has largely broken down and the war has resumed in many areas.

The negotiations on a political transition focus on the future of President Bashar al-Assad, supported by Russia and Iran but who Western and Gulf Arab governments would like to see replaced.

British ambassador Matthew Rycroft told reporters that the conditions were not there for a new round of UN-brokered talks between the Syrian government and opposition.

“There continues to be such a breach of the cessation of hostilities, such a lack of humanitarian access, that it’s very hard to see how the conditions can be arrived at for political talks to resume,” he said. “That is such a tragedy, above all for the people of Syria.”

De Mistura suggested he has not given up on an August deadline for the Syrian parties to present the outlines of a political deal, though UNSC diplomats say it is a deadline that will almost certainly be missed.

“What we need is that the stakeholders do come with a feeling of urgency and work on some ideas on how to bridge the differences,” he said.

Despite some increases in humanitarian aid access inside Syria, the UN said that hundreds of thousands of civilians in Syria need food and medicine.

(Reuters)

Ivory Coast: Gay Men Attacked for Showing Support to Orlando Shooting Victims

Ivory Coast is one of the few African countries where same-sex acts are legal and have never been criminalised.

Mourners gather under a LGBT pride flag flying at half-mast for a candlelight vigil in remembrance for mass shooting victims in Orlando, from San Diego, California, US June 12. Credit: Reuters/Mike Blake/File Photo

Mourners gather under a LGBT pride flag flying at half-mast for a candlelight vigil in remembrance for mass shooting victims in Orlando, from San Diego, California, US June 12. Credit: Reuters/Mike Blake/File Photo

Dakar: Six gay men in Ivory Coast were abused and forced to flee their homes after they were pictured signing a condolence book for victims of the recent attack on a gay nightclub in, a rights group said on June 29.

The US embassy in the Ivorian capital of Abidjan hosted an event a fortnight ago to honour the Florida victims and published a photo of the six men on its website with the caption: ‘LGBTI community signing the condolence book’.

A gunman pledging allegiance to the Islamic State militant group killed 49 people at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub on June 12 in the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.

Days after the tribute in Abidjan, Louna, one of the men in the photo, was walking in his neighbourhood when a mob pushed him to the ground, stole his phone and wallet, and beat him.

“I don’t have a life anymore,” said the 36-year-old, who only gave his nickname for fear of further attacks.

Louna said he did not know the photo had been posted online until a friend called him and told him that he had seen it.

“I can’t go out. I don’t know who might recognise me,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Abidjan, adding that he fears he will never be able to return home.

Another man in the picture was also attacked after the photo was circulated on Facebook and other websites, said the head of an Abidjan-based gay rights group, who asked to remain anonymous.

The other four men in the photo were verbally abused and all six fled their homes, he added.

While the director of the rights group gave the US embassy permission to post the photo on their website, he said he would not have done so if he had known what the caption would say.

“We are afraid now. There is no security,” he said.

Ivory Coast is one of the few African countries where same-sex acts are legal and have never been criminalised.

While it is considered one of the most tolerant countries for sexual minorities in the region, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people face widespread abuse, stigma and violence, rights groups say.

The photo remained on the US embassy’s website as of June 29. Embassy officials were not immediately available to comment.

(Thomson Reuters Foundation)

How the Mafia is Causing Cancer

When doctors in rural Italy began to see a surge in cancer cases, they were baffled. Then they made the link with industrial waste being dumped by local crime syndicates.

When doctors in rural Italy began to see a surge in cancer cases, they were baffled. Then they made the link with industrial waste being dumped by local crime syndicates.

Drums of toxic waste. Credit: mobilestreetlife/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

Drums of toxic waste. Credit: mobilestreetlife/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

A few days before I visited the rather scruffy Hospital of Saint Anna and Saint Sebastian in Caserta, a boy aged 11 arrived complaining of headaches. Doctors feared the worst – and sure enough, the case was rapidly diagnosed as another child with brain cancer. Some of these young patients arrive in agonising pain, others mystified by falling over all the time; they do not know lethal tumours are swelling up inside their heads. Yet more turn up with cancer in their blood, their bones, their bladders. There are so many cases not all can be treated in the hospitals of Campania, a largely rural region of southern Italy.

It was too early to provide a prognosis for the boy with the brain cancer, let alone to offer real comfort to his distraught family. Yet in a town where doctors used to rarely come across a child with cancer, never mind brain cancer, they now see these traumatic cases crop up almost every month. Too many young patients are ending up dead, some barely out the womb but with bodies riddled with disease. Then there are all the women getting breast cancer unusually early, the men with lung cancer despite never smoking, the children born with Down’s syndrome despite the comparatively young age of their mothers.

So why is this happening in an area north of Naples known as the ‘Triangle of Death’? The answer, locals believe, can almost certainly be found in places such as an old quarry three miles away by the historic town of Maddaloni, which I visited with an energetic 57-year-old youth worker named Enzo Tosti. As we drove there, he told me he was having treatment to counter the high levels of dioxins found in his blood five months earlier. “My wife works for the hospital as a radiologist and she is very concerned,” he said. “I thought about leaving for my health and going to live somewhere else, but where would I go? This is my land.”

The area known as the 'Triangle of Death' in southern Italy. Credit: Guarracino/Wikimedia Commons

The area known as the ‘Triangle of Death’ in southern Italy. Credit: Guarracino/Wikimedia Commons

It was a glorious evening after a rain-sodden day, golden sun dipping through lavender-streaked skies as we turned off the main road and passed an orange grove, then fields full of fledgling bean plants. It was easy to understand his attachment to this striking area of Italy, some of the most fertile land in Europe thanks to the volcanic eruptions of Vesuvius to the south. But for all the natural beauty, the scenes confronting me could not have been more depressing.

As we clambered from the car, Tosti clamped his hand over his mouth and told me to hurry. Rubbish lay everywhere, with plastic sacks, paint containers and glass bottles littering the ground. I stumbled over the undulating land, pockmarked with crevices and potholes, as I struggled to keep up with my guide. Descending one dip we were struck by the acrid stench of chemicals and saw a small plume of smoke seeping from the earth. But Tosti waved away questions. “We can talk in the car,” he said. “Let’s get away from here.”

I thought about leaving for my health and going to live somewhere else, but where would I go? This is my land.

As we drove away, he explained how the mafia had dumped huge quantities of contaminated industrial waste there, and had then unexpectedly obtained backdated permission for their actions. Yet these hazardous materials were left in the midst of prime agricultural land, next to a car dealership, with bingo halls and furniture stores down the road, and just a few hundred yards from a town of 39,000 people. A criminal investigation was launched 18 months ago into the incident, but local people do not expect to see convictions as a result of it.

For this was far from an isolated incident. There are thousands of similar dumps all over this once-paradisiacal slice of Italy: in canals and caves, in quarries and wells, under fields and hills, beneath roads and properties. According to one mafia supergrass, for many years businesses in the prosperous north of the country paid organised crime to dispose of toxic waste illegally rather than pay far higher rates to have it dealt with safely. So the Camorra, the crime syndicate that operates across Campania, contaminated great chunks of their own backyard, littering the landscape with heavy metals, solvents and chlorinated compounds. There is evidence that barrels were buried, containers driven into rivers, hazardous materials mixed in with household rubbish, chemical sludge spread on fields as ‘fertiliser’, asbestos burned in open air. And only now is the tragic legacy of the mafia’s idiocy finally becoming clear.

But it is too easy to blame just gangsters for the probable deaths of thousands of people. The story of this illegal waste disposition stains Italy. It reveals the dark side of capitalism; there are allegations of state complicity, of cover-ups by police, politicians and prosecutors. One mafia kingpin even claimed trucks drove from Germany carrying nuclear waste to dumps in Campania. Yet even if such things have been halted now, this region also offers wider lessons for the world as the rich West ignores similar activities in low-income countries. Doctors and scientists believe this polluted Italian landscape provides a perfect experiment in ‘exposomics’ – the evolving study of health damage caused by exposure to harmful chemicals in environmental contamination.

The saga’s roots can be traced back to a devastating Italian earthquake in November 1980 that left almost 3,000 people dead and 280,000 homeless. Billions of pounds in aid poured in, although most ended up in the wrong pockets. Rebuilding the ruined roads and buildings boosted mafia profits, since they dominated construction in the region – a handy way to launder money from drugs and prostitution. As cash flowed in, the clans expanded their interests in areas such as quarrying, which provided raw materials for their work. Then an enterprising businessman-lawyer with gangland links who owned several waste dumps realised they could make big money by hiding industrial waste amid the detritus of daily household lives. So in the late 1980s, the mafia moved into a lucrative new area of business.

Soon farmers began to notice strange incidents in fields and forests. They had been given a new liquid fertiliser, yet it seemed so strong that it corroded metal tanks, leaked from lorries and stunted plants. One day a forestry official in Brescia gave a young journalist named Enrico Fontana a vial of this fertiliser and said “smell what they are giving people to spread on agricultural land”. The reporter recoiled at the bitter stench: it was cyanide. So in 1990 he published two exposés in L’Espresso, a prominent news weekly, disclosing that organised crime was dumping dangerous materials on fields and in landfill sites.

Evidence to support his claims slowly began to mount. A mafia supergrass called Nunzio Perrella told investigators in Naples all about the new trade, leading to scores of arrests of gangsters and corrupt officials in March 1993. They were soon free, however. Yet the following year Fontana – now working on investigations for Legambiente, an environmental group – published a report called Garbage Inc., revealing the same people were trafficking illegal waste in other parts of Italy. There was a public outcry, a parliamentary commission and polluted parts of Campania were declared an officially degraded zone.

“We thought we had a result. Our job was done,” Fontana told me with a rueful smile as we sat drinking coffee in the sun outside Legambiente’s headquarters in Rome. “But then nothing happened. Nothing. What was missing was that we did not put together legal dumping with illegal dumping. And while it was obvious this was bad for the land, we did not notice any health outcomes at that stage, since they are not obvious immediately.”

The supergrass described dumping operations taking place in the dead of night – with the connivance of senior police officers, politicians and businesspeople.

Fontana coined the phrase ‘eco-mafia’ and began issuing annual reports into their actions. Yet he was unaware at the time of two other important developments. First, a police officer in Campania named Roberto Mancini stumbled on the scale of the mafia’s new activities, discovering they were hiding toxic waste from businesses in the industrial north among local household waste poured into landfill sites. He wrote a memo for his superiors detailing his findings. But the report was buried and Mancini was later transferred to Rome. With cruel irony, Mancini died two years ago from cancer, his career wrecked by attempts to unwittingly save thousands more from the same fate.

Then came the case of Carmine Schiavone, one of the most important supergrasses in Italian history. As a leader of the notorious Casalesi clan in Naples, he confessed to losing count of the number of people killed on his orders. His explosive testimonies revealed widespread bribery of politicians and eventually put 16 crime bosses behind bars for life, after trials that dragged on for years and left five witnesses dead. Yet Schiavone claimed to have broken the mafia code of silence out of fears for the environment. And his most devastating disclosures were given in private to a 1997 parliamentary committee in Rome about toxic waste dumping – and then astonishingly kept secret for almost 17 years.

“We are talking about millions of tonnes,” said Schiavone, who even claimed German nuclear waste was ferried to Campania. “I knew that people were doomed to die.” In front of the committee he described dumping operations taking place in the dead of night, guarded by men in military uniforms and with the connivance of senior police officers, politicians and businesspeople. The supergrass showed state officials the locations of sites because, he predicted with startling accuracy, nearby residents would be “dying of cancer within 20 years”.

This illegal trade was a by-product of tax dodging in a country with one of the highest levels of evasion in western Europe. Businesses massaging their incomes had to mask the scale of their activities – and that meant hiding huge amounts of hazardous waste. By the turn of the century, so much was being dumped in Campania it could not be hidden easily among household rubbish, so the mafia began burning it. Trucks would turn up at night, waste would be emptied, then huge fires started – 6,300 times a year at one point. Locals lined doors with damp towels to keep out vile smells – and the area was branded the ‘Land of Fires’.

The fires intensified environmental damage and spread the health consequences. Soon doctors began to notice an upturn in birth defects and cancers, which they would discuss in bafflement over meal breaks. Among them was Alfredo Mazza, a lively Neapolitan – then training to become a cardiologist – who enjoys the cut and thrust of political campaigning. “Lots of people were becoming ill,” he said. “I knew young people who were sick from school, some friends died, lots of people in this area were dying. People said to me: you are a doctor from this area – you must take on this battle.”

Mazza asked health authorities for the cancer data for an eastern region of Campania with high levels of dumping – and when he received the results, he believed it showed evidence of links between environmental degradation and a rising incidence of tumours. Male death rates from bladder and liver cancer in this rural district were about twice national rates, for instance, and female mortality from liver cancer was more than three times the Italian average. And while improved diagnosis and treatment were boosting survival rates elsewhere, local medics were seeing rising mortality and younger patients. “The age was important,” he said. “Cancer is usually found in older people, but these were younger people dying.”

Although we are a city on the sea and not industrial, it was like we were living in one of the world’s worst industrialised areas.

The pugnacious young doctor took the devastating data to a local prosecutor and demanded action, but was fobbed off. So he wrote to the Lancet, which published his landmark work in September 2004 in what was to be the first of many reports into the Land of Fires. The article provoked a furore, fuelling local protests over a planned new incinerator, yet led to little real action from the authorities – although Mazza told me he learned later from a friend that Italian intelligence began monitoring him as a ‘troublemaker’.

Now an established heart consultant who has published subsequent studies into the health consequences of hazardous waste, Mazza admits it is impossible to prove precise links between toxic materials, tumours and congenital malformations. But he believes they are only just beginning to see the full scale of health problems. “We are living in the Triangle of Death. These areas suffered terrible damage for many years. Yet still we do not know how many areas are affected, how bad the damage will be or how long it will last.”

§

Two years after his Lancet report, the tales of gangsters driving across Italy to dump lorries filled with toxic waste in rivers and bury contaminated containers under lush fields reached a wider audience when highlighted in Gomorrah, the ground-breaking mafia exposé by journalist Roberto Saviano. Among the 6 million buyers of the book was an oncologist in Naples named Antonio Marfella, long baffled by both his increasing number of patients and their decreasing age. He knew this was a global phenomenon, yet the speed of change seemed alarmingly fast in Campania.

Marfella held a senior post as head consultant at the Fondazione G Pascale in Napoli, a 235-bed hospital that is the region’s only cancer centre. He said they started seeing the surge in cases around the turn of the century, with the average patient age plummeting from 60 years old to under 40. Suddenly once-rare bone cancer cases became commonplace in children, and the age of most breast cancer patients fell below 40, which is when screening starts in Italy. “Although we are a city on the sea and not industrial, it was like we were living in one of the world’s worst industrialised areas,” he said.

Naples had long been infamous for inept management of its rubbish, with landfill sites filling up strangely fast. Indeed, even as Marfella turned the book’s pages in 2007 there were protests in the streets from residents fed up with the stench of rubbish rotting in the summer heat. Suddenly the white-haired consultant began to understand what was going on around him: “It opened up a vision that seemed unbelievable,” he said. “We knew there was mismanagement of household waste, but we did not know that organised crime had gone outside its usual activities of drug dealing and prostitution into hazardous waste.”

In the nearby town of Acerra, dead and deformed sheep had begun appearing. Then the 50-year-old shepherd tending this flock turned up at the hospital with such aggressive cancer riddling his bones and his blood that doctors could not determine where it had started; one month later he was dead. His daughter asked for tests on his body and these revealed unusually high levels of dioxins. After it emerged his sheep had been tested four times with similarly disturbing results, she launched a court case for damages.

Marfella gave expert evidence in court, which led to a request to speak about the situation in the Italian parliament in January 2008. “I said there were the same levels of toxins in these agricultural areas as were found in industrial sites, which was a paradox. I said it was like postindustrial sites – and I suggested a hypothesis I believed from Gomorrah.” Yet he was demoted on his return from Rome for being ‘alarmist’, a decision that has cost him thousands of pounds a year in lost income.

§

Around this time a woman named Anna Magri gave birth to Riccardo, her second son. When I met the 39-year-old car retailer in her neat flat in a village near Caserta, the boy’s tiny shoes were displayed alongside his picture on a dresser: he died shortly before his second birthday, having spent most of his short life fighting leukaemia discovered when he was six months old. “We thought he was teething which was why he was so upset, crying all the time. I was breastfeeding him but I could not pick him up because he would scream. He was in so much pain,” said his mother.

Anna, who was pregnant during the 2007 rubbish crisis, remembers thick black smoke rising over her village from waste set alight on a nearby hill. “We did not think about the toxic waste issue because it had not come out yet,” she said. “I had seen fires all over the place, but now I know what they were. I am convinced his death was due to the toxic waste when it was burning, with all the illegal dumping.”

It will never be established whether her son was dealt a raw deal by fate or if his death was more sinister. One study, however, indicated significantly higher levels of dioxins in breast milk from mothers in the worst-afflicted area than from others living in surrounding areas. Other research has found worrying concentrations of dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in animal milk, even in the buffalos that produce the region’s famous mozzarella cheese. PCBs are man-made compounds once used widely in electrical products and are banned in many countries due to environmental and health concerns.

I asked Anna what she thought about the goons she believes killed her child, people she passed daily in the street. “They were stupid because they live here and their children live here too.” Yet this shocking saga goes far beyond the stupidity of greedy gangsters. The Italian state is guilty of at best grotesque and fatal incompetence, at worst a murderous cover-up in league with wealthy, tax-dodging industrialists that may have caused the deaths of at least 2,000 people already, according to one recent official study.

Schiavone claimed the worst offenders were the industrialists dealing with the mafia, since they knew the devastating damage of their deeds.

In 2004 there were more than twice as many known dumping sites in Campania than in the northern region of Lombardy; four years later, this number had more than doubled. The fires burned, but officials ignored them. One paediatrician showed me a map of these microdumps, each one a black dot, heavily clustered in the Triangle of Death zone around Acerra, Nola and Marigliano. Then he showed me another he had made with red dots denoting cases of child brain cancer overlaid on top; almost all overlapped in the same small area of the region.

Yet only now is the full extent of the scandal coming to light. Partly this is thanks to a campaigning local priest named Father Maurizio Patriciello, a former nurse who writes for the Italian bishops’ newspaper and enjoys stirring things up on social media. One hot night in June 2012 he could not sleep because of the smoke and stench of burning chemical waste, so he went on Facebook at three in the morning and asked if others were suffering the same effects. By six he had more than 1,000 responses from neighbouring villages, so he went to his bishop and demanded action.

“Families here are terrified,” the silver-haired, smooth-talking Catholic priest told me when we met in his church on a grim estate, watched intently by a gang of hooded men outside the heavy iron gates. “They know that even today there are so many sick people. They have to go for treatment in the north because hospitals here are full. If a woman asks for a mammogram they give it to her in three months, but if you wait that long it can be too late.”

Patriciello helped grieving parents such as Anna form protest groups, lobbied politicians in Rome, penned polemical articles, organised huge marches and joined with campaigners who sent pictures of mothers with their dead children to the Pope and Italian president. He even met Schiavone before the supergrass died two years ago, finding “an insignificant old man with white hair”. Patriciello claims that the gangster confessed his crimes to the priest, but claimed the worst offenders were the industrialists dealing with the mafia, since they knew the devastating damage of their deeds. It is hard to disagree.

It also emerged two years ago that the United States Navy, whose European command is based in Naples, had conducted its own three-year, $30 million study into the local air, soil and water. It tested hundreds of contaminated or alarming locations, finding high levels of ‘unacceptable health risk’ in private wells and worrying levels of uranium in 5 per cent of samples. It found there to be no impact on military personnel, but three areas near its base were placed off-limits, tap water was banned and troops were advised to avoid ground-floor flats, where the risk of inhaling contaminants was highest.

Thanks to the campaigners and hefty European Union fines for failing to combat illegal waste disposal, Italy’s politicians were finally prodded into action. Farming was banned around some contaminated sites. Then they passed a special Land of Fires act of parliament in 2014, which banned the burning of waste while putting extra cash into cancer detection and public health promotion in the region. Parliament also ordered the National Institute of Health to collect all available epidemiological evidence. An earlier study by the body had found a correlation between hazardous waste and health outcomes such as cancer mortality and birth malformations, but no direct cause.

They have poisoned our land and stolen our children.

The results of the inquiry, which looked into mortality, cancer incidence and hospital admissions in 55 municipalities, emerged earlier this year – and were devastating. Life expectancy in Campania two years lower than in the rest of the nation. Mortality rates in the Triangle of Death 10 per cent higher for men than elsewhere in the region, 13 per cent higher for women. More cancer cases in these bucolic rural areas than in the most contaminated industrial sites. These included a 17 per cent rise in cancers of the central nervous system for children under 14 around Naples – and a 51 per cent rise for infants in their first year, who are particularly vulnerable to environmental contamination because of their physiology.

“It is not that every case is down to the toxic waste, but you can see a clear pattern,” said Pietro Comba, one of the authors of a report that directly blamed illegal dump sites and uncontrolled burning of waste. “There were particular signs with stomach, liver and lung cancer, plus breast cancer in women. And it was significant that these excesses are not uniform across the region. In many municipalities there is no departure from the norm, then it is very high in some others.”

Even these staggering findings offer only correlation, not proof of cause. But they add to a growing body of global evidence linking pollution to health problems: there’s incontrovertible evidence of ocular and central nervous system damage having been caused by the dumping of deadly toxic waste in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, in 2006, just as there are studies into contaminated waste dumps in Asian countries and the USA indicating impaired cognitive development. As Comba says, it is far harder to determine what causes a tumour to develop in a child’s brain than to find a link between asbestos and mesothelioma. “We have very strong evidence, but we cannot say with total certainty that this toxic waste is leading to child cancer.”

§

Slowly but surely, Italy is moving to clean up these dumps and clear up a tragic scandal, although as yet there have been few prosecutions, and campaigners remain pessimistic key perpetrators will ever meet justice. “These people will never come to court because they are important industrialists,” said Marzia Caccioppoli, 40, a seamstress whose only child died three years ago of a type of brain cancer usually seen as the result of radiation exposure in adults. “They have poisoned our land and stolen our children.”

But while industrialists no longer pay gangsters to bury hazardous chemicals beneath grazing buffalo in Campania, rich northern nations and multinational companies are still dumping chemical, electrical and industrial waste in low-income countries. This has been dubbed ‘toxic colonialism’; spot checks have found one in three containers leaving the European Union contain illegal e-waste, for example. Yet given the growing body of evidence, not to say sheer common sense, companies concerned must be aware of the consequences for the children picking apart wiring and their parents sifting through waste in places such as the Philippines, Nigeria and Ghana.

When I visited the Hospital of Saint Anna and Saint Sebastian in Caserta, where the latest case of a child with a brain tumour had been diagnosed, I met a passionate paediatrician named Gaetano Rivezzi. Born in a village seven miles away, he was the man who showed me the disturbing maps overlaying child cancer cases on dump sites. “Before it was paradise here – there were 1,000 things you could grow. Then priests started to count the funerals of children and doctors became more concerned,” he recalled.

Rivezzi told me he had been in medicine for three decades. “Campania is a laboratory to understand the link between the environment and health. The danger can’t be undone, but it is important and we must learn from this,” he said. “When I began, a child with cancer was incredibly rare. Not now, not here. The tumours are different, the diseases are different, the pathology is different. And you can see the same things now in Africa, where pollution is leading to serious problems.”

He is right to say we must learn from a scandal that has left death and devastation in its wake across such a beautiful part of Europe. It scars the state of Italy, not just the fields, hills and waters of Campania. Yet perhaps the ultimate tragedy is that gangsters in all their different guises seem indifferent to the consequences of such actions, and still carry on their deadly game of dumping toxic waste around the world.

Additional photography (backdrop) by R Lane, Wellcome Images

This article first appeared on Mosaic and is republished here under a Creative Commons licence.

Home-Grown Militants Behind Recent Spate of Attacks, Say Bangladesh Police

In an escalation of violence against liberals, atheists, foreigners, gays and religious minorities, ISIS and al Qaeda have claimed responsibility for more than 30 killings since early 2015.

File photo of the funeral of secular blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider in Dhaka, 2015. Credit: Andrew Biraj/Reuters

File photo of the funeral of secular blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider in Dhaka, 2015. Credit: Andrew Biraj/Reuters

Dhaka: Early in June, a man walked into the Dhaka premises of the Ramakrishna Mission, a Hindu centre for spirituality and learning in the Bangladesh capital, and delivered a handwritten note warning of an attack by ISIS.

Days later, armed policemen were sitting inside the mission’s compound among orange-robed monks, the gates outside were closed and fewer people than normal showed up at a medical clinic it runs for the neighbourhood.

“We are monks, we will live and die here, but people with families are worried,” Swami Shivananda, a priest managing the administration of the mission, said of the country’s Hindu community, which accounts for 10 % of the population.

Islamic State (IS) and al Qaeda have claimed responsibility for the killings of more than 30 people since early last year, in an escalation of militant violence targeting liberals, atheists, foreigners, gays and religious minorities.

They have shocked the largely moderate Muslim country of 160 million people and heightened fears that Bangladesh, once hailed as the next Asian tiger economy with its huge garment industry, could lose out to more stable competitors in the region.

Unlike some security experts, Bangladesh authorities say the two international jihadi movements are not directly involved in the murders, many of which were carried out with machetes.

But, as the police at the Hindu mission attest, the danger is real, and counter-terrorism officials warn it could get worse with one local militant group adopting al Qaeda’s methods and calling on the expertise of a former army major implicated in a failed 2011 coup.

Deadly rivalry

Security officials say two local militant groups, Ansar-al-Islam and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen, are behind the killings.

Of the two, Ansar, which pledges allegiance to al Qaeda, has emerged as the most organised and dangerous, they say, while Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen is seen as a looser organisation that claims it represents IS but has no proven links to it.

“By now we have a clear idea of the organisational structure, command and control and methods of operations of Ansar-al-Islam,” Monirul Islam, chief of Bangladesh’s counter-terrorism police, told Reuters in a recent interview.

“They follow the ideology of al Qaeda, their operational leaders are mostly educated men, (from a) middle class background. They declare their allegiance to al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) and, through it, to Ayman al-Zawahri,” he said, referring to al Qaeda’s global leader.

According to Thomas Joscelyn, senior editor at The Long War Journal that tracks jihadi groups worldwide, there was evidence of more direct links between Bangladesh and al Qaeda, and he warned the Islamist militant threat had been underestimated.

“We now have competition between al Qaeda and the Islamic State in Bangladesh, which means that the jihadist pool is deep enough for both organisations to operate in the country.”

In May, 2015, AQIS leader Asim Umar claimed responsibility for the murder of Avijit Roy, a US citizen and blogger hacked to death in Bangladesh that February. US officials said at the time they were unable to confirm the claim.

Initially, Ansar struck bloggers and publishers critical of radical Islam, then university teachers, including one who asked a woman student to remove her veil in class.

In April, it said it murdered two gay rights activists, saying they were promoting anti-Islamic activities, police said.

Mysterious ex-officer

Also worrying for authorities is the apparent rise within Ansar’s ranks of former army major Syed Mohammad Ziaul Haque, who went into hiding after the military accused him of involvement in a plot to overthrow the government in 2011.

“We have a suspicion that the ex-major is one of their leaders,” said counter-terrorism chief Islam. “He is in hiding. We know his capability. If he is involved, it is a strength for Ansar-al-Islam.”

Zia, as intelligence agencies call him, was from the engineer corps and trained in special operations.

His would be the first known case of a Bangladesh military officer switching sides to join a militant group, although it has happened elsewhere.

A military spokesman said Zia had been dismissed from service five years ago, but added that he was not in a position to speak about Zia’s activities since then.

Zia’s involvement with Ansar was first mentioned by the head of its predecessor group following his capture in 2013, two police officials said.

Zia was helping in the training of the fighters, motivating them to carry out jihad against ‘anti-Islam’ forces and also taught bomb-making skills, one official briefed on the interrogation report said.

Reuters could not independently verify the police claims.

At the same time, ISIS has said it was behind the killings of Hindus, Buddhists and members of minority Muslim sects, which have accelerated in recent weeks.

Security officials tie those deaths to Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen, a home grown group inspired by ISIS’s vision of a caliphate.

Police official Islam said authorities had found computer evidence that Bangladesh-origin foreign fighters, some in Syria, were claiming attacks on behalf of ISIS as soon as they occurred.

But he said there was no evidence of operational ties with the Middle East-based movement.

(Reuters)

EU Rebuffs Scottish Leader’s Plea to Stay on in Europe

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has indicated that a second referendum for Scottish independence is likely.

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has indicated that a second referendum for Scottish independence is likely.

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is welcomed by European Parliament (EP) President Martin Schulz ahead of a meeting at the EP in Brussels, Belgium, June 29, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Eric Vidal

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is welcomed by European Parliament (EP) President Martin Schulz ahead of a meeting at the EP in Brussels, Belgium, June 29, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Eric Vidal

Brussels: Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon got a “sympathetic” hearing in Brussels on June 29 as she pleaded her case for Scots to stay in the EU, showing how Britain’s vote to leave the bloc could splinter the UK.

But she drew a rebuff from Spain and a mixed response from European officials.

EU leaders met for the first time without Britain. Outgoing Prime Minister David Cameron flew home after briefing his 27 peers on the evening of June 28 on last week’s referendum defeat.

Pro-independence leader Sturgeon has said that Scotland, where voters backed staying in the EU by a near 2-1 majority, must not be dragged out of the EU against its will.

She wants to negotiate directly with Brussels to protect the membership rights of Scots – and is open to a new independence referendum if that is the only way to keep Scotland in the bloc.

But Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, struggling to prevent the autonomous region of Catalonia from breaking away, said Madrid would oppose any EU negotiation with Scotland.

“If the UK leaves, Scotland leaves,” he said after the first meeting of the 27 EU partners without Britain.

Sturgeon, pointedly referring to Rajoy as “acting” premier following the unclear outcome of Sunday’s Spanish election, said she was not at all surprised to hear such “starting positions” from Madrid and she was well aware of the difficulties.

“We are very early in this process,” she told reporters, stressing that her priority was to have Scotland’s voice heard. “I have been heartened today to hear a willingness to listen.”

A spokesman for Jean-Claude Juncker, the EU Commission chief who irked some European diplomats by meeting Sturgeon at such a critical time in EU relations with London, stressed that he had listened but would not interfere in British domestic politics.

Europe vs London

The 27 EU leaders sent a firm message to London that there would be “no negotiations of any kind” on future trade relations until the UK officially triggers the EU treaty’s exit clause.

“This should be done as quickly as possible,” they said in a joint statement.

In a clear warning to Britain’s Leave campaigners, added at the last minute, the 27 also said that access to Europe’s prized single market “requires acceptance of all four freedoms” of movement for goods, capital, persons and services.

Leave campaigners such as former London mayor Boris Johnson, a favourite to succeed Cameron as Conservative Party leader and prime minister, have said they want free access to the EU common market, but would retain the right to control migration.

Cameron, who campaigned to stay in the EU and announced he would step down by October after he lost last week’s referendum, said on June 28 that Britain’s future relations with the bloc could hinge on its willingness to rethink free movement of workers, which he blamed for the referendum result.

Sympathy for Scotland

There has been a surge in sympathy in many parts of Europe for the 5.5 million Scots, whose strong vote to stay in the EU was overridden by the English, who outnumber them ten to one. Britain as a whole voted 52-48% to leave.

But countries like Spain that have dealt with regional separatism are strongly opposed to any direct EU talks with Scotland. Back in London, Cameron told parliament negotiations had to be carried out by the UK as a whole.

European Council President Donald Tusk, the chairman of the summit of EU leaders, pointedly declined Sturgeon’s request for a meeting. Nonetheless, Sturgeon prevailed upon Prime Minister Enda Kenny of Ireland, another part of the British isles facing serious Brexit problems, to remind leaders of Scotland’s wishes.

Officials from some EU states called Juncker’s decision to meet Sturgeon a provocation designed to raise pressure on London to give formal notice to quit. He rejected such suggestions.

“Scotland has won the right to be heard in Brussels,” Juncker told a news conference. A spokesman said after the two met that he had listened to Sturgeon but stressed the issue must be dealt with in the context of UK’s constitutional affairs.

Officials briefed on talks Sturgeon held with senior figures in the European Parliament said she discussed whether there was any legal way that a breakaway Scotland might somehow remain in the EU once the United Kingdom completed its so-called Brexit.

EU officials stressed, as they did before Scots voted against independence in a 2014 referendum, that Scotland could not apply to join the EU until it was a sovereign state. Senior officials dismissed the notion that Scotland could take over the empty British chair at the European Council table.

Sturgeon has raised the prospect of the Scottish parliament trying to block Brexit legislation to keep the entire UK in the EU, but has also said she believes a new referendum on Scottish independence is now highly likely.

Complication

With the EU facing years of uncertainty in negotiating the withdrawal of its second-biggest economy, the Scottish factor is a complication most governments would rather avoid.

“This is a way of putting pressure on London to trigger the exit clause,” a senior official in one EU government said of EU efforts to bounce London to the negotiating table, while Cameron has insisted only his successor will set the clock ticking on a two-year deadline to withdrawal.

The leaders launched a period of political reflection, with their next informal meeting set for September in Bratislava, culminating in a set of reform proposals to get a better grip on migration, bolstering security and creating jobs and growth.

“Europeans expect us to do better when it comes to providing security, prosperity as well as hope for a better future. We need to deliver on this, in a way that unites us, not least in the interest of the young,” a joint statement of the 27 said.

Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel called the British vote a wake-up call for Europe and said: “It’s important to have this meeting of 27 because it will show the unity of the 27.”

But officials said that facade of unity was punctured in the meeting by calls from Poland and the Czech Republic for the EU to do less and return more powers to national capitals. Foreign ministers of both countries have called for Juncker to step aside after the Brexit vote – a suggestion he brushed aside.

Juncker earlier challenged Cameron’s explanation of the referendum defeat, saying successive British leaders had engaged in “Brussels bashing” and should not be surprised if their citizens had believed them.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel doused any hopes that Britain might yet reverse its decision, warning after the dinner with Cameron against “wishful thinking”.

While she persuaded fellow leaders to give London more time to hand in its formal notice to quit, Merkel said Britain could not drag out the process endlessly. She made clear that a new government would not be allowed to “cherry-pick” the parts of EU membership benefits that it liked.

(Reuters)

Fact Checking Narendra Modi’s Times Now Interview

Narendra Modi seems to have developed a flair for presenting evolutionary policy steps built on his predecessors’ work as revolutionary and original contributions to national development.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to Times Now, his first TV interview since taking office, on 27 June 2016. As with his Wall Street Journal interview the month before (critiqued here), Modi covered a lot of ground, from economic reform to domestic politics to foreign policy. Here we specifically examine some of his claims regarding his ambitious development agenda.

Modi has developed a flair for presenting evolutionary policy steps built on his predecessors’ work as revolutionary and original contributions to national development. Take his repeated claim regarding the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY):

It’s not in words but in actual achievement. I had said that within a given time frame, we will open bank accounts for the poor. For something that had not been done for 60 years, setting a time frame for it was in itself a risk.

The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojna is not only about opening bank accounts for the poor. Because of this the poor are feeling that they are becoming a part of the country’s economic system. The bank that he was seeing from afar, now he is able to enter that bank. This brings about a psychological transformation.

Very moving, but it’s a bit much for Modi to hog the credit. It is true that the PMJDY has accelerated the spread of basic savings bank deposit accounts (BSBDA), and increased their usefulness by adding life and accident insurance. But the entire architecture of financial inclusion (BSBDAs, Aadhaar, electronic payments, RuPay cards) was created and implemented long before Modi took office.

In the two years before Modi, the UPA opened 44 and 61 million BSBDAs respectively, which under Modi jumped to 147 million in 2014-15 and 67 million in 2015-16 (see table below). Assuming conservatively that another government would have opened 61 million BSBDAs per year (as the UPA did in 2013-14), the Modi effect looks something like this:

Screen Shot 2016-05-29 at 10.11.52 PM

A solid step forward? But with 243 million bank accounts already in place before he was sworn in, the only thing we are seeing for the first time is such self-congratulation.

We have taken up construction of toilets. I had gone to Chhattisgarh and had the opportunity to get the blessings of one mother. An adivasi mother heard about the scheme for building toilets. She sold her four goats and built a toilet. That 90 old mother uses a walking stick and goes around the cluster of 30 or 40 houses in the tribal village and has been spreading the message to build toilets. This change is becoming the reason for the change in the quality of life.

Encouraging yes, but hardly novel. There is little doubt that open defecation is a public health hazard that contributes to the spread of diarrhoea, intestinal worm infections and other diseases that cause stunting, malnutrition and even death among young children. Which is why the government has for decades sought to furiously build toilets throughout rural India — with a discernible bump in Modi’s second year:

Screen Shot 2016-06-29 at 12.52.27 PM

To be fair, Modi isn’t claiming exclusive credit here, and he is right to highlight the importance of behavioural change in his adivasi mother example. Open defecation in rural India has dropped much more slowly than in, say rural Bangladesh, partly because Bangladesh has targeted social norms in addition to building toilets. The UPA’s Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (launched in 2012-13) and the current Swachh Bharat Abhiyan both recognised this reality, and Modi’s vocal advocacy could play an important role here.

That said, reports still suggest that behaviour change is lagging behind (here, here and here). The important point is that toilet construction is necessary but insufficient by itself to reduce open defecation.

You must have seen that the maximum electricity generation since Independence has occurred this year. The maximum amount of coal mined has been in this year. The maximum length of roads being constructed daily is happening in this year. The fastest loading and unloading of steamers at sea ports is happening now.

As previously explained in Modi’s autopilot achievements, there is always a good chance in a rapidly growing economy that every year will see one or the other record broken. Maximum electricity generation since independence? True for every year since 1975-76. Maximum coal mined? True for every year since 1980-81 (except 1998-99). Maximum length of roads being constructed? Probably true (but look here for context). Fastest loading and unloading of ships? True for every year since 2012-13. These claims work well on Twitter and Facebook, but are mostly meaningless in the Indian context.

After independence, for the first time, we have brought in Pradhan Mantri Fasal Beema Yojana which can cover maximum number of farmers. The farmer will have to pay only 2%, the government will take care of the rest.

Yes, Mr Prime Minister, if we pretend that the following two never happened: the NDA’s 1999 National Agricultural Insurance Scheme (NAIS) and the UPA’s 2013 National Crop Insurance Scheme (NCIS — which clubbed the 2010 modified NAIS, the 2007 Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme and the 2009 Coconut Palm Insurance Scheme). And the NCIS’ Hindi name has a familiar ring to it: the Rashtriya Fasal Bima Karyakram. The one time the UPA manages to instituted a programme without a Gandhi name attached to it, Modi replaces “national” with “prime minister”.

The new insurance scheme is certainly an evolution over its predecessors: premium rates are lower (with the government subsidy and contingent liabilities correspondingly higher), and harvested crops are now covered nationally (earlier this only applied to coastal regions). First time after independence? I don’t think so.

We have brought in Soil Health Card. We have a Soil Health Abhiyan. The farmer will know the fertility of the land through it. Whether a fertilizer needs to be used or not, the farmer will understand. On an average, a farmer with 1 hectare of land will be able to save Rs 15000-20000. So we have brought in scientific methods.

Another unfortunate exaggeration. Soil health cards have been in use since 2003, and even the UPA issued around 2.8 crore cards in its final three years, bringing the total in circulation to around 6.8 crore (source here). Modi relaunched the scheme on 19 February 2015, promising to issue 14 crore cards over the next three years, but progress has been slower than expected. The number of cards issued as on 28 June 2016 is 2.1 crore, short of the required pace albeit faster than what the UPA achieved.

But before you break out your gau-champagne, one reason is that farms were earlier being individually tested. Soil samples are now being taken from 10-hectare (in rain-fed areas) or 2.5-hectare (in irrigated areas) zones, which in effect clubs several farms together. This has speeded up the process of issuing soil health cards, but has made the results potentially less relevant to individual farmers.

Now like the initiative we have taken, we have started the Mudra Yojna. More than three crore people in the country comprise washermen, barbers, milkman, newspaper vendors, cart vendors. We have given them nearly 1.25 lakh crore rupees without any guarantee.

The Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency (MUDRA) Bank certainly sounds like a good idea. But there are literally dozens of financing schemes for micro-, small- and medium-sized entrepreneurs. The MUDRA Bank, currently a unit of the Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI), appears to be a supercharged version of SIDBI’s Credit Guarantee Scheme that over about a decade until 2014 had given Rs 76,650 crore in guarantees to 1.6 million small entrepreneurs (as this Business Standard article points out). And the wisdom of dishing credit out via “mega credit campaigns“, which used to be called “loan melas” in an earlier era, will only be known over time.

The bottomline: Modi is overseeing a range of policy initiatives, many of which could well bear fruit. But as his good friend Barack once said: “You didn’t build that.”

Amitabh Dubey analyses politics and government policy. He also blogs at chunauti.org, where this article originally appeared. Read the original article.

UN Adds 2,500 Peacekeepers to Mali to Curb Further Deadly Attacks

A peace deal signed in 2015 by the government and separatist groups has failed to prevent violence in Mali by Islamist militants.

Soldiers from the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Mali (MINUSMA) take part in the traditional Bastille Day military parade in Paris July 14, 2013. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/Files

Soldiers from the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali take part in the traditional Bastille Day military parade in Paris July 14, 2013. Credit: Reuters/Christian Hartmann

UN: The UN security council agreed on Wednesday, June 29, to add just over 2,500 peacekeepers to the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali, which has been hit by a series of deadly attacks and has become the deadliest place to serve for UN peacekeepers.

The French-drafted resolution, which was approved unanimously by the 15-nation council, said the Mali peacekeeping mission (MINUSMA) should “take all necessary means to carry out its mandate … [and] to move to a more proactive and robust posture”.

The increase will bring the force’s maximum size to 13,289 military personnel and 1,920 police.

A peace deal signed last year by Mali‘s government and various separatist groups has failed to prevent periodic violence in northern Mali by Islamist militants, who have also staged assaults on high profile targets in the capital Bamako, Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast.

French UN Ambassador Francois Delattre, council president this month, said implementation of that peace agreement was now one of MINUSMA’s strategic priorities, along with taking a tougher stance to protect civilians in the face of a “resilient terrorist threat”.

Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) has claimed an attack on two UN sites in northern Mali at the end of last month, in which a peacekeeper from China and three civilians were killed and over a dozen others wounded.

Delattre said that “highly specialized European contingents” – including special forces and intelligence experts – would be among the additional forces sent to Mali.

French forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters who had hijacked the Tuareg uprising to seize Mali‘s desert north in 2012. But it has since proved difficult to prevent Islamists staging deadly attacks.

A UN peacekeeping mission was then deployed. But the militants have since reorganised and launched a wave of attacks against security forces, peacekeepers and civilian targets and have threatened neighboring countries.

According to the UN, 101 peacekeepers have been killed since MINUSMA deployed.

(Reuters)