UAE President Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Passes Away

His half-brother Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed is the de facto ruler of the US-allied country.

Dubai: United Arab Emirates President Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan has died, the Ministry of Presidential Affairs said on Friday. He was also ruler of Abu Dhabi emirate.

“The Ministry of Presidential Affairs mourns to the UAE people, Arab and Islamic nations and the world the death of President His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who passed away on Friday,” the ministry said in a statement on state media without giving further details.

Under the constitution, vice-president and premier Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, ruler of Dubai, would act as president until the federal council which groups the rulers of the seven emirates meets within 30 days to elect a new president.

Khalifa, born in 1948, had rarely been seen in public since suffering a stroke in 2014 and his half-brother Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, known as MbZ, has been the de facto ruler of the US-allied UAE, an OPEC oil producer.

“The UAE has lost its righteous son and leader of the ’empowerment phase’ and guardian of its blessed journey,” MbZ said on Twitter, praising Khalifa’s wisdom and generosity.

The UAE would observe a 40-day mourning period with flags flown at half-mast as of Friday and suspend work at all public and private sector entities for three days, the ministry said.

Condolences started pouring in from Arab leaders including Bahrain’s king, Egypt’s president and Iraq’s prime minister.

Khalifa came to power in 2004 in the richest emirate Abu Dhabi and became the head of state. He is expected to be succeeded as ruler of Abu Dhabi by Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed.

Abu Dhabi, which holds most of the Gulf state’s oil wealth, has held the presidency since the founding of the UAE federation by Khalifa’s father, the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, in 1971.

India to Provide Assistance to Families of Two Killed in UAE: Envoy

Two Indians and a Pakistani national were killed and six others injured in Monday’s attack claimed by Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Dubai: India has said that it will provide “whatever assistance is possible” to the families of the two Indian citizens killed in a suspected Houthi drone attack near the Abu Dhabi airport that sparked multiple explosions in the capital of United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Two Indians and a Pakistani national were killed and six others injured in Monday’s attack claimed by Houthi rebels in Yemen.

The explosions were caused by “small flying objects”, possibly drones, that hit three petroleum tankers in Abu Dhabi.

Speaking to The National newspaper on Monday, India’s ambassador to the UAE, Sunjay Sudhir, said the Indian government would provide whatever assistance is possible to the families of the two deceased Indian citizens.

The Indian embassy is yet to announce the names of the two Indians killed in the attack. Meanwhile, messages of condemnation and solidarity have poured in from various quarters, a day after the drone attack.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia called Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and deputy supreme commander of the UAE Armed Forces. The Saudi Crown Prince expressed his deepest condolences for the deceased and his wishes for a speedy recovery for the injured. Saudi Arabia’s ministry of foreign affairs also condemned the attack in the strongest terms.

“The UAE reserves the right to respond to these terrorist attacks and criminal escalation,” a statement from the UAE’s ministry of foreign affairs and international cooperation said.

Foreign minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed said that the drone attacks, which struck Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) fuel facilities and the airport, will not go unpunished.

The UAE has been part of a Saudi-led military campaign against the Houthi rebels in Yemen since 2015. Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed also received a phone call from King Abdullah of Jordan, during which he condemned the Houthi attack on facilities and civil areas in the UAE.

The king affirmed Jordan’s support for the UAE in facing threats to its security and expressed his condolences.

United States secretary of state Antony Blinken also called Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed to affirm the country’s condemnation and denunciation of the terrorist attack of the terrorist Houthi militia on civil areas and facilities in the UAE.

(PTI)

Gujarat ATS Seizes 120 Kg of Heroin Worth Rs 600 Crore, Arrests Three

The drug consignment was sent to the accused persons by Pakistani contacts near the Indo-Pakistan international maritime boundary line, and was to be delivered to an African country, officials said.

Ahmedabad: The Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) has seized 120 kg of heroin, valued at Rs 600 crore in global market, from the state’s Morbi district and arrested three persons in this connection, police officials said on Monday.

The drug consignment was sent to the accused persons by Pakistani contacts in the Arabian Sea near the Indo-Pakistan international maritime boundary line, and was to be delivered to an African country, they said.

It was initially kept hidden in a coastal area near Salaya in Gujarat’s Devbhumi Dwarka district before being moved to Morbi’s Zinzuda village from where it was seized on Sunday, State Director General of Police Ashish Bhatia told reporters.

“Acting on an intelligence input on Sunday, the Gujarat ATS raided an under-construction house in the village and recovered 120 kg of heroin worth Rs 600 crore in the international market. Three persons were arrested in this connection,” the DGP said.

“The consignment was sent by one Zahid Bashir Baloch, a resident of Pakistan who is a wanted absconder in the earlier seizure of 227 kg heroin by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) in 2019,” he said.

“It was intended to be transported to an African country,” the senior police official said.

“The heroin was delivered to the apprehended accused, identified as Mukhtar Hussein and Samsuddin Hussainmiyan Saiyyed, at the sea in the last week of October at the given coordination shared by Baloch with Mukhtar Hussein’s brother Isa Rav,” he said.

“The conspiracy for the contraband delivery was hatched in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), like in most cases in the past,” the official said.

“The drug consignment was to be handed over to the Indian smugglers to be transported to an African country, in accordance with the normal modus operandi of narcotic smugglers from Pakistan and Iran to use Indian counterparts for transporting drugs to the conduit,” he said.

Also read: Rs 20,000-Crore Heroin From Afghanistan Seized at Gujarat Port

“In the present case, the accused persons, apprehended by the Gujarat ATS, decided to divert the consignment, intended for Africa, to India and misappropriate it and sell it to various buyers,” he said.

The under-construction house from where the drug consignment was seized belonged to a third accused person, identified as Gulam Hussein Umar Bhagad, he said.

“Smugglers opt for the Indian route because it is cheap, short distance, and they can easily hide their illegal activities because detection is not easy among around 25,000 fishing boats plying in the area,” he said.

Bhatia said the Gujarat coast is being used as a transit point to transport drugs being sent along the Indo-Pak international boundary line by Pakistani and Iranian heroin smugglers.

“However, the Gujarat Police have been successful in neutralising all such attempts and all the consignments sent by these cartels have been successfully seized and the accused persons arrested,” he said.

Minister of State for Home Harsh Sanghavi lauded the Gujarat Police for their efforts to tackle the drug menace.

“Another achievement of Gujarat Police. Gujarat Police is leading from the front to eliminate the drugs. Gujarat ATS has nabbed around 120 kilo drugs,” he tweeted in the morning.

The ATS in a release said the interrogation and investigation in such cases have revealed that “various geopolitical reasons are responsible for this surge in the number of attempts being made through Gujarat coast.”

Last week, the state police had seized heroin and methamphetamine drugs worth Rs 313.25 crore from three persons in Devbhumi Dwarka district.

Earlier, in the single largest heroin haul in India in September, authorities seized around 3,000 kg of the drug, believed to be from Afghanistan and likely worth Rs 21,000 crore in the global market, from two containers at the Mundra port in Gujarat’s Kutch district, officials earlier said.

(PTI)

Once Heroes, Kerala’s Ex-Gulf Workers Forge New Futures

Whilst once they came home wealthy and revered, bearing gold, sunglasses, clothes and funds to buy homes, the COVID-19-induced lockdown has forced them to return sheepish and penniless.

Yeroor: It is not yet dawn but Yeroor village is long awake, the hum of productivity floating over ‘Gulf Street’, a lush green boulevard named for the thousands of workers who leave the southern Indian state of Kerala every year for jobs in the Middle East.

But now the workers are back, from machine operator Sudheesh Kumar, who has been forced into manual labour in Yeroor to make ends meet, to former banker Binoj Kuttappan, who has taken up dog breeding in state capital Thiruvananthapuram for a living.

Binoj Kuttappan plays with his dogs at the breeding facility he has set up in the backyard of his house in Thiruvananthapuram, India, February 18, 2021. Kuttappan, a banker in Abu Dhabi for over a decade, returned to his hometown in Kerala last year during the pandemic and started a dog breeding business with plans afoot for air-conditioned kennels, a garden for dogs and a pet accessories shop. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

In the single biggest reverse migration in more than 50 years, workers from the Gulf have streamed back to the coastal state of Kerala in the past year, propelled by a pandemic that deflated dreams of overseas riches and changing family fortunes.

Whilst once they came home wealthy and revered, bearing gold, sunglasses, clothes and funds to buy homes, now they have returned sheepish and penniless.

“Prior to COVID, they were celebrated as heroes. Now they have nothing,” said Irudaya Rajan, a professor who has studied migration patterns in Kerala, India’s southernmost state.

“This is the first time they have returned empty-handed and will end up borrowing and selling assets,” said Rajan, professor at the Centre for Development Studies in Kerala.

Kerala is one of the states that sends the most workers to the Gulf, accounting for about 2.5 million of 6 million Indians there. Kerala received about 19% of $78.6 billion transferred to India from overseas workers in 2018, the highest state tally in the country that is the world’s top recipient of remittances.

But more than 1.1 million people have returned in the last 10 months, 70% having lost their jobs as domestic workers, builders, waiters, chefs and more, official data shows.

Sudheesh Kumar poses with bananas he plucked from his farm in Yeroor, India, February 17, 2021. Kumar worked at the Jeddah airport and returned last year to his village, and now seeks work at farms and the local stone quarry to repay loans he took to build a two-storey house for his family. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

This has upended workers and their families’ lives, and destroyed businesses dependent on the India-Gulf migration.

The evidence is plain to see in the 13,000-strong population of Yeroor.

While Gulf Street is lined by rows of neat, whitewashed bungalows built with money earned overseas, a nearby stone quarry is billowing out clouds of dust as workers start drilling and digging even before the sun is up.

Kumar, 50, spent 22 years in the Middle East, with his final job in Saudi Arabia operating machines at Jeddah airport’s waste water treatment where he earned triple the average Kerala wage.

In March 2020, he flew home – briefly, he thought – but flights were grounded in a bid to contain the new coronavirus.

Now the father of two splits his time between farm labour and the stone quarry, a reversal of fortunes he’d never envisioned when he first ventured overseas.

“I had planned my life when I left 22 years ago. I had any ordinary man’s dreams – a house, good education for my children,” a deflated Kumar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation outside his house, sweat beading his brow.

Kumar has been forced to sell his car and farmland to pay off a loan for his four-bedroom home in Gulf Street.

Now he is earning Rs 400 a day compared to a fixed monthly Rs 20,000 in Jeddah with overtime on top.

“My heart pained the first day I lifted stones 22 years after I had left it all for a better life. I have no shame in doing hard labour, but how did I land here? Where did I go wrong? Was building this house a mistake?” Kumar said.

Binoj Kuttappan bathes a puppy at the dog breeding facility he has created in the backyard of his house in Thiruvananthapuram, India, February 18, 2021. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

Exodus

During the Gulf War 30 years ago and the 2008 financial crisis, many workers were forced back to Kerala, but this time the numbers are far higher number and the job market tighter.

State officials say they have already helped 1,000 people with subsidised loans to launch their own ventures.

A nationwide initiative linking returnees with jobs has notched up more than 30,000 registrants, about 80% of them from the Gulf States of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman, according to a government release.

From mall to quarry

Shamna Khan, 30, whose right leg is badly swollen by lymphoedema, never needed to work because her husband Shafir sent enough money home from his job in a glitzy Qatar mall.

The couple turned their mud and clay house to concrete, laid tiles, built an indoor bathroom and got help for Shamna’s leg.

But after Shafir returned jobless last March, Shamna registered for India’s rural job scheme for about Rs 300 a day that guarantees a minimum 100 days of work in their village such as building roads, digging wells and trenches at farms.

“I am happy to work as I can support my family, but my leg is prone to infections,” said Shamna, as she dug a trench at the village’s rubber plantation.

Sharif, who works at the quarry, worries about the looming uncertainty, his unpaid loans – and Shamna’s health.

“All I wanted was to provide for my family, get my wife treated and send our son to a good school,” Sharif said. “There is no other work here.”

Sharif Khan lifts stones at a quarry in Yeroor village, India, February 17, 2021. Khan worked at a mall in Qatar but returned to his village jobless last year during the pandemic. He starts from home at 5 am every day to beat the rush of people seeking work at the stone quarry. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

Passion, plan

More than 90% of Indian migrant workers, most of whom are low- and semi-skilled workers, work in the Gulf region and South-East Asia, according to the United Nations.

Connecting them with jobs are recruitment agencies and travel firms which match workers with employers and book them on flights – a hectic business that Ajimon Mak, 45, nurtured for 14 years in Kerala’s capital Thiruvananthapuram.

Ajimon Mak loads fresh fish into the freezer at his fish stall in Thiruvananthapuram, India, February 22, 2021. Mak overcame family resistance to start the fish business after his travel company shuttered during the lockdown last year. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

“Ticketing was my main business, it was a passion and I was always busy. During the lockdown I saw it all go down to zero,” said Mak, lifting a tuna by its tail from the freezer in his newly-opened fish shop in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala’s capital.

To fill the gap Mak moved into fishmongering, initially taking orders online and running home deliveries but then also renting a shop.

“People will always need food,” he said.

Former banker Binoj Kuttappan, 40, also forged a new path after returning to Thiruvananthapuram from Abu Dhabi last year following layoffs at his financial service company and decided to turn his passion for dogs into a breeding business.

Sudheesh Kumar and his daughter pluck vegetables in their small kitchen garden in Yeroor, India, February 17, 2021. Kumar worked at the Jeddah airport and returned last year to his village, and now seeks work at farms and the local stone quarry to repay loans he took to build a two-storey house for his family. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

“I would have never done this if not for the pandemic,” said Kuttappan, showing off seven dogs – a golden retriever, a labrador and a Saint Bernard among others – that he bought for Rs 150,000.

With plans for a pet accessories shop, a garden for dogs and air-conditioned kennels, he has no plans to return to the Gulf – but others are counting the days until they can go back to higher earnings.

Shamna Khan poses for a picture at a rubber plantation where she is employed under the rural scheme in Yeroor village, India, February 17, 2021. Khan took up work for the first time despite her swollen right leg due to lymphoedema after her husband returned jobless from Qatar during the pandemic. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

At a slum in Thiruvanthapuram, Kala Malliga earns Rs 300 a day by making and selling up to 1,000 paper bags after her husband lost his job as a salesman at a local market. She hopes he finds work in the Gulf some day.

Kala Malliga walks with her handmade paper bags to deliver them at Thiruvananthapuram, India, February 24, 2021. Malliga took up work for the first time after her husband lost his salesman’s job at the local market declared a COVID hotspot. Her earnings have made her “feel like an equal” at home but she hoped her husband finds work in the Gulf some day. Photo: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rakesh Nair

Shafir Khan plans to seek work at Lulu Mall that is being built in Thiruvananthapuram, while Sudheesh Kumar has started calling up agencies seeking work in the Gulf.

“My savings for our future are gone and now our future looks bleak,” said Kumar. “I no longer think of making a profit. I only think of surviving the day.”

‘Release Christian Michel Forthwith’: UN Body Slams India on Detention of Aviation Consultant

UN’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said in a ruling that India has illegally detained Michel, violating the right to a fair trial and due process.

London: In an unprecedented indictment of India by any branch of the United Nations, the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD), which functions under the UN High Commission for Human Rights, has censured India for its treatment of British aviation consultant Christian Michel, who has been in custody in Delhi for 27 months without a trial.

The Wire has obtained extracts of the order, which has not officially been released. It comes in response to an Anglo-French petition submitted on Michel’s behalf last year. India’s Ministry of External Affairs has rejected the WGAD’s opinions.

The story of WGAD’s decision being imminent and the likelihood of this being an adverse conclusion for the Narendra Modi administration was first and exclusively touched upon in The Wire on February 8.

The verdict is yet to be made public. But Michel’s lawyers – Paris-based Zimeray & Finelle and London-headquartered Guernica 37 – in a communique shared extracts of the outcome. A source at the UN Human Rights Commission in Geneva confirmed the adjudication had taken place and that this would soon be published. The source indicated as well “the advance edited version of the opinion will be posted on the website of the Working Group between the next 7 to 14 days”.

In a diplomatically worded, but unmistakable ruling, the working group in its “Opinion No 88/2020” is said to have stated: “The violations of the right to a fair trial and due process (in Michel’s case) are of such gravity as to give Mr Michel’s deprivation of liberty an arbitrary character.”

Also read: Christian Michel’s Claims of Coercion, Torture Could Spark Fresh Diplomatic Challenges for India

WGAD has also referred the matter to the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture for further action. The “Republic of India” has as a result contravened both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Francois Zimeray of Zimeray & Finelle said: “We welcome the recognition by the UN experts that the lack of due process is utterly unacceptable.” Michel’s Indian lawyer in New Delhi Aljo Joseph commented: “The verdict will be a milestone against arbitrary detention.”

‘Arbitrary detention’

WGAD also asserted that the United Arab Emirates unlawfully arrested and handed over Michel to the Indian government. It further maintained he had been held in India arbitrarily since December 2018.

The body has recommended that the appropriate remedy would be for the Government of India to release Michel “immediately” and for both the Indian and UAE authorities to grant him an enforceable right to compensation and other reparations in accordance with international law.

Indian investigators had alleged Michel was involved in the 2010 sale of AgustaWestland VVIP helicopters to the Indian government. His lawyers reacted by saying this accusation was made “without any proper evidential basis that the sale involved fraudulent conduct”. They added: “This unsupported allegation has been rejected twice by the Italian Courts, due to the complete absence of evidence.”

File photo of the AgustaWestland helicopter. Photo: Reuters.

The extradition of Michel, who was resident in Dubai, had previously been rejected by UAE courts. He was subsequently transferred by the Emirates into the hands of Indian officials – he had said that he was ‘kidnapped while he was cycling in Dubai. He was given to the Indian authorities and has been in Tihar Jail since.

The handing over was done apparently in ‘exchange’ for the pick of Princess Latifa in the middle of the sea by Indian armed forces. She was in a yacht with her friend, who is Finnish, and a French crew.

“As part of a shameful exchange following the abduction of Princess Latifa, the daughter of the ruler of Dubai, (by Indian coastguards),” his lawyers said, the suggestion being a quid pro quo occurred between Modi and Latifa’s father Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum.

Also read: Why the Drama Over Christian Michel’s Extradition to India Was Unwarranted

BBC’s flagship investigative programme Panorama recently broadcast pieces to camera secretly sent by 35-year-old Latifa – who said she has been held hostage by her father since – described how she was captured by Indian coastguards who boarded her yacht in international waters firing guns.

After being transported to India, Michel has, his lawyers said, “languished in squalid conditions, abandoned by all, awaiting trial on charges that amount to a flagrant denial of justice for more than two years”. In a 35-page letter written to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson last month, Michel set out his dismay in the failings of the British government.

His lawyers charged that “he has been subjected to not only repeated and prolonged interrogations aimed at securing a confession by way of duress, but also to inhuman or degrading treatment that is of such severity that it constitutes torture” by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Department.

They went to the extent of contending: “It is noteworthy that Christian experienced all this – in breach of basic human rights conditions – without being charged with a criminal offence, leading to the conclusion that this arbitrary detention was politically motivated.” Both in Dubai and Delhi, Michel was repeatedly asked by the CBI to initial a statement saying he paid bribes to the Gandhi family of the Congress party.

Toby Cadman, a barrister at Guernica 37, remarked: “Christian was asked to sign a forged Budget Sheet in exchange for being a witness in the proceedings that would lead to all charges being dropped against him as well as the Red Notice (issued against him by Interpol) being withdrawn. Christian refused to cooperate…which resulted in his extradition.”

Michel’s legal team called on the British Foreign Office “to take immediate steps to intervene”. It impressed upon “the Governments of India and United Arab Emirates to respect the UN ruling and implement the recommendations fully to demonstrate their commitment to the rule of law”. “Nothing short of Christian’s immediate release and repatriation to the United Kingdom and to his family will suffice.”

Johnson’s office was requested to comment. It did not reply. Neither did the Indian ambassador to the UN in Geneva.

MEA response

In response to media queries, MEA spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said that India rejects the WGAD’s indictment and wishes to “make it clear” that the Working Group is not a judicial body, “and therefore, its opinions are not legally binding on the Member States.”

“We regret that the conclusions drawn by the Working Group are based on limited information, biased allegations from an unidentified source and on an inaccurate understanding of India’s criminal justice system,” Srivastava added.

Noting that the extradition, arrest and custody were in accordance with the Extradition Treaty and due process of law, the MEA said Michel had never been denied his rights to legal counsel, consular access or a fair hearing.

“The Working Group should be aware that India has a robust grievance redressal mechanisms against allegations of violations of human rights in a vibrant and independent judiciary and a ‘category A’ National Human Rights Commission compliant with the Paris Principles,” the MEA said.

“The allegations which form the basis of the opinion rendered by the Working Group are contrary to facts. The Government of India therefore, rejects the opinion rendered by the Working Group,” Srivastava ultimately noted.

Ashis Ray is a former editor-at-large of CNN. He currently analyses international affairs on BBC.

Note: The article has been updated with the MEA’s response.

‘Now We Want Real Justice,’ Say Sisters of Saudi Activist Hathloul After Her Conditional Release

Hathloul, who campaigned for women’s right to drive and to end Saudi’s male guardianship system, spent nearly three years behind bars and is currently forbidden to leave Saudi Arabia.

Dubai: The sisters of prominent Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul said on Thursday they wanted real justice for her and the lifting of a travel ban, the day after she was released from prison on a suspended sentence.

Hathloul, 31, has campaigned for women’s right to drive and to end Saudi’s male guardianship system. She spent nearly three years behind bars in a case that drew international condemnation and remains forbidden to leave Saudi Arabia for five years. Rights groups and her family say Hathloul was subjected in prison to electric shocks, waterboarding, flogging and sexual assault – accusations that Saudi Arabia denies.

“What we want now is real justice,” Lina al-Hathloul told an online news conference, speaking from Brussels. “That Loujain is completely, unconditionally free.” She said her sister would fight the travel ban and that their parents were also unable to leave the country.

Another sister, Alia, said Hathloul was now at the home of their parents, who were overjoyed to have her back. The first thing Hathloul did after speaking to her siblings, they said, was to go to the supermarket for ice cream.

Lina tweeted a picture of Hathloul on Wednesday, smiling but thinner than before, with a new grey streak in her hair.

Also read: Saudi Arabia Arrests More Women’s Rights Activists: Human Rights Watch

The sisters said she had lost weight from the hunger strikes she had staged to protest against her prison conditions. “She’s very strong,” said Alia, who also lives in Brussels. “I’m so proud of her ability to keep high hopes, to be very positive and to say ‘OK, I went through horrible things – but life continues’.”

Loujain al-Hathloul was arrested in March 2018 in the United Arab Emirates, where she was studying, and flown back to Saudi Arabia against her will. She was one of at least a dozen women’s rights activists who were arrested as Saudi Arabia ended a ban on women driving cars, at least two of whom are still in prison, human rights sources said.

Allegations of torture

She was given a sentence of five years and eight months last December under broad cybercrime and terrorism laws for activities including calling for an end to male guardianship and communicating with global rights groups, activists, foreign diplomats and international media. UN rights experts said the charges were spurious.

Hathloul served most of the custodial half of her sentence, which is suspended for a further two years and ten months.

“She is very determined to use all means that exist within the legal framework in Saudi Arabia … in order to obtain her rights,” Alia said. “She was tortured, and she cannot forget this very dramatic period in her life.”

Also read: Saudi Women Are Fighting for Their Freedom – and Their Hard-Won Victories Are Growing

Loujain told her siblings that she had not initially mentioned the torture during phone calls from prison because guards had held an “electroshock device” to her ear and threatened to use it if she mentioned her treatment. An appeals court dismissed the torture claims on Tuesday, citing a lack of evidence, her family said.

Saudi officials have not commented publicly on Hathloul’s conviction, sentencing or release, and the government media office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday.

Asked whether Loujain would continue her activism, her sisters said her release was conditional but that they could not elaborate. Since her chargesheet, which the family made public last year, referred to her social media posts, she risked violating the terms of her release if she posted online again, Lina said.

The sisters were unsure if they are under a travel ban themselves and said they would not yet risk returning to Saudi Arabia.

(Reuters)

Anushka Sharma Slams Sunil Gavaskar for ‘Distasteful’ Comments, He Denies Being ‘Sexist’

Gavaskar found himself in the midst of a controversy for making an unsavoury comment against Kohli and Sharma after the Indian captain’s forgettable outing in the IPL match.

Mumbai: Actor Anushka Sharma on Friday slammed former Indian cricketer Sunil Gavaskar for his “distasteful” remark about her while commenting on husband Virat Kohli’s performance in the ongoing Indian Premier League (IPL).

Gavaskar found himself in the midst of a controversy for making an unsavoury comment against Kohli and Sharma after the Indian captain’s forgettable outing in the IPL match, held in Dubai.

Anushka, who has faced negativity and trolling in the past as well for Kohli’s performance, said she was tired of being dragged into cricket.

“It’s 2020 and things still don’t change for me. When will I stop getting dragged into cricket and stop being used to pass sweeping statements?” the actor said in a long statement posted on her Instagram Stories.

Gavaskar was a part of the commentary team as Virat Kohli-led Royal Challengers Bangalore lost to Kings XI Punjab on Thursday night and the Indian captain did not do well in the match.

He made a controversial comment about the cricketer’s practice by referencing a video of Kohli and Sharma playing cricket during the lockdown.

Aur jab lockdown tha to sirf Anushka ki bowling ki practice ki unhone. Vo dikhayi di video me. (He has only faced Anushka’s bowling during the lockdown. That’s what we saw in the video).

Also read: Will Having the IPL in UAE Dispel or Reignite the Spectre of Match Fixing?

In her statement, the 32-year-old actor, who has accompanied Kohli to Dubai, asked for an explanation from Gavaskar for his remark.

“That, Mr Gavaskar, your message is distasteful is a fact but I would love for you to explain why you thought of making such a sweeping statement on a wife accusing her of her husband’s game?

“I’m sure over the years you have respected the private lives of every cricketer while commenting on the game. Don’t you think you should have an equal amount of respect for me and us?” Sharma said.

The actor said Gavaskar could have used other words to speak about Kohli’s performance, instead of bringing her name in his commentary.

In her concluding note, Sharma said, “Respected Mr Gavaskar, you are a legend whose name stands tall in this gentleman’s game. Just I want to tell you what I felt when I heard you say this.”

In the past as well, Sharma has reacted sharply to her name being used in cricket controversies.

In October last year, she had shut down reports that claimed that selectors were asked to serve her tea during ICC World Cup 2019.

“I have stayed quiet through all the times I was blamed for the performance of my then-boyfriend, now-husband Virat and continue to take the blame for the most baseless things involving Indian cricket. I kept quiet then,” she had written.

“Today. I have decided to speak up because someone’s silence cannot be taken as their weakness,” she had said at the time.

Gavaskar, however, defended his remarks, saying it was in reference to a video clip where Kohli and Anushka were seen enjoying some tennis ball cricket in their compound.

“Firstly, I would like to say, where am I blaming her, I’m not blaming her. I am only saying that the video showed she was bowling to Virat. Virat has only played that much bowling in this lockdown period,” Gavaskar told the India Today news channel.

“It is a tennis ball fun game that people have to pass time during the lockdown, so that’s all, so where am I blaming her for Virat’s failures.”

Gavaskar also rubbished allegations on social media that he made a “sexist comment”.

“I’m the one who has always batted for wives going with husbands on tours. I am the one who has always said that like a normal guy going to the office for a 9-5 job when he comes back home, he comes back to his wife, similarly, why can’t cricketers have their wives with them,” Gavaskar said.

He then also explained what exactly he said.

“…..Anushka was bowling to him, so that’s what I said, that’s the only bowling, I have not used any other word. She was bowling to him, that’s all, where am I blaming her, where I am being sexist in this.”

Saudi Arabia Deserves Condemnation on Yemen – Not Gratitude

Saudi Arabia created the humanitarian catastrophe in Yemen. So why is the UN praising the kingdom for tossing Yemen a measly amount of humanitarian aid?

The United Nations describes itself in its charter as an international moral authority created to “save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.” But activists who are trying to end the US war on Yemen say that, in a dark twist on this mission, the international body is withholding criticism from the US-Saudi military coalition, and effusively praising its leaders, to avoid jeopardising donations to humanitarian funds aimed at helping ease the suffering created by that war.

As Jehan Hakim, the chair of the Yemeni Alliance Committee, puts it, “The same hand we’re asking to feed Yemen is the same hand that is helping bomb them.”

On June 15, UN secretary-general António Guterres removed the US-Saudi military coalition, which has been waging war in Yemen for more than five years, from an international blacklist of states and armed groups responsible for killing and maiming children, in a huge PR win for Saudi Arabia. He cited a supposed decrease in child killings, even as he acknowledged the coalition was responsible for killing 222 children last year, 171 of them from bombings — a number that certainly does not include the toll of famine and disease outbreaks (including COVID-19) worsened by the war and blockade. The UN’s move provoked instant rebuke from antiwar and humanitarian organisations, particularly as it coincided with reports that, the same day the report came out, the US-Saudi coalition had bombed a vehicle in northern Yemen, killing thirteen civilians, four of them children.

Hassan El-Tayyab, lead lobbyist on Middle East policy for the Friends Committee on National Legislation, a progressive lobby organisation, says the move has a simple explanation. “To me,” he says, “it’s really clear what they’re trying to do: they’re trying to curry favour so that Saudi Arabia will pony up more money for Yemen to keep humanitarian aid going.”

El-Tayyab’s theory is supported by a number of indicators. In June 2016, former UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon publicly admitted that he removed Saudi Arabia from the same “child-killer list” in the UN’s 2015 report in response to unspecified threats to pull funding from UN programs. (Media outlets found these threats came from Saudi Arabia, one of the largest UN donors in the Middle East.) “The report describes horrors no child should have to face,” Ban said at a press conference in 2016. “At the same time, I also had to consider the very real prospect that millions of other children would suffer grievously if, as was suggested to me, countries would defund many UN programs.”

Despite this admission, Ban did not immediately restore the US-Saudi coalition to the blacklist, although it was eventually returned.

Girls stand at the entrance to their tent at a camp for internally displaced people in the northwestern city of Saada, January 30, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Naif Rahma

But there are more recent indicators to draw on. On June 2, the UN cohosted a virtual donors’ summit with Saudi Arabia to raise money for humanitarian relief in Yemen, which is being devastated by COVID-19, in large part because the US-Saudi coalition has decimated its hospital system and a Saudi-led blockade is cutting off critical medical supplies.

Guterres, who made the recent decision to scrub Saudi Arabia from the blacklist, gave the opening remarks for the event. “I thank the government of Saudi Arabia for cohosting this pledging event, and for your continued commitment to humanitarian aid to the people of Yemen,” he said. Saudi Arabia was the highest donor at the event, pledging a token $500 million in aid, the exact amount of money Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, spent on his personal yacht. The United States pledged $225 million, or less than the cost of three of the numerous F-35 fighter jets the US military has purchased from Lockheed Martin.

These numbers also pale in comparison to the value of the arms the United States ships to Saudi Arabia — amounting to at least $3 billion in 2019 — despite calls for a global embargo due to Saudi atrocities in Yemen. Yet the event, the global equivalent of a GoFundMe campaign for Yemen aid, fell $1 billion short of its goal, or roughly the equivalent of only two of the Leonardo da Vinci paintings bin Salman bought for himself in 2017.

El-Tayyab says he is concerned about whether the US aid that was pledged will be sent to Houthi-held areas, where a majority of Yemen’s population lives. “We don’t know if the aid is going to get to north Yemen,” he said. “A major sticking point is what is actually happening to Houthi-held territory. Is the aid getting to where the majority of the country lives?”

Shireen Al-Adeimi, Yemeni-American antiwar activist, board member of Just Foreign Policy, and frequent contributor to In These Times, agreed with El-Tayyab’s explanation for why the coalition was removed from the UN blacklist. According to Al-Adeimi, the UN lives in fear that the very countries responsible for unleashing humanitarian crises will withdraw funding for humanitarian aid. “Anytime the UN has held any kind of fundraiser for Yemen, they go out of their way to thank the coalition countries for whatever aid they pledge,” she says. And indeed, on April 9, Mark Lowcock, the UN’s under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, tweeted, “Thank you to KSA [Kingdom of Saudi Arabia] for announcing another major contribution to humanitarian aid in Yemen! Your generosity will benefit millions of people who need help.” This echoes similar effusive praise he’s given the coalition for its humanitarian donations to Yemen (see here and here).

An April 2018 exchange between Guterres and a reporter at a press event for a Yemen fundraising conference sheds light on this dynamic. The reporter asked Guterres about the event, at which both Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, also part of the military coalition in Yemen, were significant donors.

“How do you see the contradiction of one country presenting itself as a main donor and a main helper of Yemen while it is striking since three years the country, including civilian areas?” Guterres replied, “This country is giving money to repair what it is destroying. Well, we all know that there is a war, we all know who are the parties to the war, but the two things need to be seen separately. Independently of the fact that there is a war, there are humanitarian obligations that are assumed by countries, and today we were exactly registering a very strong support of the international community to the people of Yemen.”

Also read: Understanding the Yemen Conflict

One could argue that the UN is forced to perform ethical gymnastics, due to the Trump administration’s abrupt withdrawal of tens of millions of dollars in assistance from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the World Food Programme’s 50% cut to aid in Houthi-held areas, and threats to close critical UN-run food aid programs in Yemen, all as COVID-19 is battering the country. The UN has no choice, therefore, but to do what any fundraiser must do: cavort with unsavoury donors, and flatter the wealthy in hopes that they will keep the organisation afloat.

But the UN is not just a passive observer of the Yemen war: by shielding the United States and Saudi Arabia from even the most modest political consequences for a war that has unleashed the worst humanitarian crisis in the world, it has used its institutional power to enable this onslaught. In 2015, just six months into the war, Saudi Arabia launched a diplomatic campaign to prevent the UN from launching a human rights investigation, abetted by the silence of the Obama administration. This effort was ultimately successful. What if it had not been: imagine if, more than five years ago, the war had been roundly denounced on the global stage.

Even activists who acknowledge the tragic irony of relying on the perpetrators of a war to provide aid to victims of that war are themselves forced to call on the United States to restore aid. In late May, more than eighty progressive and antiwar organisations signed a letter calling on chairs and ranking members of Congress to “do everything in your power to press USAID to reverse its suspension.” The letter warns, “Millions more are needed, in particular, for emergency stocks of personal protective equipment, ventilators, ICU beds, and other vital supplies for Yemen’s battered health care system.”

Jehan Hakim, who is part of a coalition of activist groups that is fighting to restore this aid, says the effort brings up difficult political questions. “It really feels like a violation of us, calling on this agency [USAID] that is part of the system that is profiting off of this war with arms sales and all this military support.” But, she says, US activists face a stark reality: abrupt withdrawal of aid in the midst of a pandemic will certainly kill numerous Yemenis. “People ask us, ‘Why are you calling on USAID? They’re problematic.’ And I’m like, I know, but what about the people who need the food right now? We’re doing it for the people.”

Unlike the UN, Hakim and her fellow organisers do not flatter the military coalition. And most importantly, they are working to end the war — the root of the suffering, even after the Trump administration in 2019 vetoed an effort to end US participation in the war. “We’re in talks right now with a few other organisations to draft a fresh War Powers Resolution,” says Hakim. “This is the strongest vehicle we have to check US involvement. Without arms, military support, intelligence sharing, and targeting assistance the US is providing, the coalition cannot continue to aggress in Yemen in the same way.”

“We’re going to keep pushing,” Hakim says.

Sarah Lazare is web editor at In These Times. She comes from a background in independent journalism for publications including the Intercept, the Nation, and Tom Dispatch.

This article was published in Jacobin. Read it here

As Pressure Rises, MEA Suggests Allowing OCI Card Holders on Repatriation Flights in Due Course

However, officials said that there was no timeline for this proposal, which could be allowed “at some stage”.

New Delhi: While the programme to bring back Indians stranded abroad, on repatriation flights, has entered its second week, there is a particular group that has been out of its ambit, who have been clamouring to be included.

It is now learnt that the Ministry of External Affairs has suggested that certain categories of Overseas Citizen[s] Of India should be included in the operation. However, there may not be an immediate change in short term policy, based on the suggestion.

Even before the start of the operation, ‘Vande Bharat Mission,’ on May 7, the MEA and Indian missions had got repeated queries on whether foreign passport holders with OCI cards would be allowed to board the special flights. However, from the beginning, officials had ruled it out and said that the flights would be only for Indian nationals.

Also read: From May 7 Onwards, India to Bring Back ‘Distressed’ Nationals Stranded Abroad

But, as the days went on, the steady trickle of requests have turned into a torrent. “There has been a lot of pressure,” said an MEA official.

The Wire has learnt that MEA, based on the feedback, has written to the home ministry to allow for some categories of OCIs to be brought back on the flights. However, officials said that there was no timeline for this proposal which could be allowed “at some stage”.

India has stopped all incoming and outgoing international scheduled passenger flights since March 22. However, the visa-free travel facility granted to OCI card holders was suspended much earlier from March 13, which prevented them from travelling to India before the lockdown began.

The rationale to only have Indian nationals on board the repatriation flights was not surprising, especially since the government is dealing with large numbers.

As per the latest annual report of MEA, more than 34 lakh OCI cards have been issued. The OCI card system was launched in August 2005, with the main provision being a life-long visa for visiting India. Despite the name, the card holder does not become an Indian citizen – or have voting rights in the country.

When missions abroad began the exercise to estimate the number of Indian nationals, the figures proved daunting. Till now, over 1.8 lakh people have registered.

After the home ministry provided the guidelines for filtering out only “compelling cases”, MEA drew up the list of passengers who fulfilled those criteria.

So far, over 12,000 Indian nationals have been brought back in 56 flights from 12 countries.

“It was during the operation of Vande Bharat that we were getting a lot of requests from Indian nationals who were scheduled to travel, that their minor children are OCI holders. Since rules doesn’t allow OCI holders to be on the flights, they dropped out. They didn’t want to be separated,” he said.

Besides, there were also many students abroad holding OCI card with foreign passports, but their families were Indian nationals and living in India. “The assumption that we had was many of the OCI card holders were in developed countries, comfortably well off and settled. But, if they are students, that is not the case”.

There were many cases of Indian students with OCI cards stranded abroad highlighted on twitter with their parents posting with the hashtag ‘#getourkidsback”.


One of the main concerns about allowing OCI card holders in the flights was the availability of quarantine facilities. As per the standard operation procedure, all travellers on the repatriation flights will have to undergo mandatory quarantine for 14 days in institutional facilities, which is administered and supervised directly by state governments.

“There is a co-relation between how many people we can get back and capacity of quarantine centres”.

Currently, state governments have arranged for paid quarantine in both public and private facilities like hotels. 

As per MEA records, nearly all the flights are returning fully packed. If there is any review in policy, it will have to be at the end of the second phase, when the first batch would have finished their quarantine period. “It will happen at some stage, after MHA has taken a comprehensive view,” said the official.

However, with 1.8 lakh registered Indian nationals with “compelling reasons” to return – the wait for OCI card holders may be longer. “Once we meet the minimum expectation of our nationals, we will be able to meet others too,” said sources on Thursday.

The second phase, which overlaps with first one, begins on May 17. This next phase will expand the coverage of countries from 12 to 31 and introduce a hub-and-spoke model for flights. This means that one flight can go to at least two domestic destinations to offload passengers.

Meanwhile, there is a continuous stream of tweets tagging Indian government ministers and ministries to bring attention to the urgent requirement for many OCI holders to return to India. Most of them fell into the categories of “compelling reasons” drawn up by MHA, which range from unemployed or fired workers, family emergency and pregnant women.


There were several cases where couples and families feared being separated as they had different nationalities.


Incidentally, India had allowed foreign spouses and nationals when evacuation flights were operated from China before the lockdown. However, officials pointed out that those flights were made on an emergency basis as Wuhan had been the epicentre of the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic.

From May 7 Onwards, India to Bring Back ‘Distressed’ Nationals Stranded Abroad

Unlike earlier air evacuees, passengers will have to pay for seats on the special flights. Passage on the naval ships, however, could be free of cost.

New Delhi: The government on Monday announced that repatriation flights to bring back Indian nationals stranded abroad will start from the Gulf countries May 7 onwards.

In a press statement, the Ministry of Home Affairs announced that the government will be “facilitating the return of Indian nationals stranded abroad on compelling grounds in a phased manner”.

The effort will begin from May 7 using both aircraft and naval ships, on the basis of a standing operating protocol, it said.

Last week, Indian missions in the Gulf had issued a questionnaire asking Indian nationals to register their interest to return and provide details of their intended final destination.

There was a deluge of applicants, with the UAE alone registering over two lakh citizens till Monday night. In this phase, India plans to bring back Indians from six countries in the region, which will be expanded to include United States, United Kingdom, Malaysia and Iran.

Also read: Anxiety and Escalating Costs: A Couple’s First Person Account of Being Stuck in New Zealand

As per sources, Indian government has capped the number of people who will be brought back in first phase at around 1.9 lakh. The numbers may go up to half a million by the end of the second phase. The first two flights on May 7 will be from Abu Dhabi to Kochi, followed by Dubai to Kozhikode.

This means the Indian missions will have to prepare the list of “distressed” Indian citizens – for example, people who have lost jobs – who would require early return.

Sources told The Wire that the government has drawn up a criteria for “compelling grounds, which include being laid off or fired from job. Indians who have applied for amnesty for undocumented workers and are waiting to be deported will also get priority. The other conditions are citizens on short term visa, like that of tourism, students or if they have life-threatening medical conditions, that require urgent surgical procedures.

The ministry of external affairs will issue a separate public statement with details of standard operating protocol, as well as, the details of the entire process.

The home ministry also made it clear getting a seat on the non-scheduled commercial flights would be on payment basis. So far, the ticket price has not been decided, but it is likely to be similar to the rates before the pandemic began and air transport ground to a halt, worldwide.

The naval ships, as per a source, could be used to bring back Indians who cannot afford to pay for flight tickets.

Incidentally, an Indian naval ship will bring back 700 Indians from Male’ to Kochi on May 8. Here also, the citizens who will be brought back will have to meet certain criteria for “compelling” reasons to return to India. Maldives’ capital city has seen a surge in recorded cases of coronavirus infection in last couple of weeks.

India had earlier brought back over 2,400 citizens from China, Japan, Iran and Italy, before the entire country went into lockdown from March 25. Those flights, which accommodated students, tourists and pilgrims, had been operated by Air India and did not require any payment.

India sent medical teams to Iran and Italy to conduct tests, so that only those with negative results were brought on the packed flights. However, even with those precautions, several of those who came back from Italy and Iran tested positive for coronavirus during their quarantine period in India.

In the upcoming flights, Indians will only be allowed on the flight after a pre-departure medical screening, but there is no indication if a test will be done. “Only asymptomatic passengers would be allowed to travel,” said the statement.

During the flight, passengers will have to follow health protocols on wearing masks and social distancing.

After landing in India, “everyone” on the repatriation trip has to download and register themselves on the Aarogya Setu app.

Once in India, respective state governments will take over all arrangements, “including for testing, quarantine and onward movement of the returning Indians”.

Southern states, especially Kerala, are expected to get the bulk of the returnees. A separate registration programme by the Kerala government had found that 300,000 Keralites wanted to return.

The returnees will have to pay the state governments for a compulsory 14-day quarantine that could be spent in a hospital or other special facilities, like hostels and hotels. “COVID-19 test would be done after 14 days and further action would be taken according to health protocols,” said the MHA press note.