Eagles star DeSean Jackson under fire for posting anti-Semitic quotes he attributed to Hitler

Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver DeSean Jackson, one of the NFL’s most recognizable stars, is being widely condemned for posting anti-Semitic quotes he attributed to Hitler on Instagram.

On his Instagram story from Monday, Jackson showed a picture of text detailing a conspiracy theory about a Jewish plot to oppress African Americans.

Jackson cited Adolf Hitler as the source of the anti-Semitic text, but it’s more likely to have come from the book “Jerusalem” by Dennine Barnett.

Then in another Instagram post on Monday, Jackson blacked out much of that offensive text and wrote “this,” pointing to only one portion of the screed about a “plan for world domination,” apparently as evidence he’s not anti-Semitic.

Jackson posted an apology video on Instagram on Tuesday and spoke directly into the camera.

“I probably should have never posted anything that Hitler did, because Hitler was a bad person and I know that,” Jackson said. “I was just trying to uplift African Americans.”

He continued: “I just want to let you guys know I apologize. I didn’t intend any harm or any hatred toward any people. I’m for one, I’m for love and I extend it every day. People who know me know I have no hatred in my heart. I never try to put another religion down to uplift my religion or my race. From the bottom of my heart I just want you guys to understand that.“

Jackson has in the past professed his admiration for Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who has long used anti-Semitic and homophobic rhetoric. The Nation of Islam has been deemed an extremist hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The 33-year-old Jackson has played 12 seasons in the NFL with Philadelphia, Washington and Tampa Bay. He’s now on his second stint with the Eagles.

His 10,420 career receiving yards ranks him fifth among active players.

The Eagles on Tuesday said they’ve spoken to Jackson and told him, “Regardless of his intentions, the messages he shared were offensive, harmful, and absolutely appalling.”

“We are disappointed and we reiterated to DeSean the importance of not only apologizing, but also using his platform to take action to promote unity, equality, and respect,” according to a team statement.

While the Eagles said they will have “meaningful conversations” with Jackson, the team statement made no mention of any discipline against the standout pass catcher.

The NFL also said on Tuesday it found Jackson’s social media postings to be offensive.

“DeSean’s comments were highly inappropriate, offensive and divisive and stand in stark contrast to the NFL’s values of respect, equality and inclusion,” according to a league statement. “We have been in contact with the team which is addressing the matter with DeSean.”

The Anti-Defamation League of Philadelphia said it was disappointed by Jackson’s posts and pleaded with him to turn away from Farrakhan: “We urge Mr. Jackson to use his platform as a professional athlete to promote unity and positivity, rather than the divisive words of a bigot.”

Also on Monday, Jackson appeared to question whether African Americans and Native Americans, as communities hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, should be among the first groups to receive vaccines — when or if they’re ever developed.

Associated Press contributed.



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Deutsche Bank hit with $US150 million fine over links to Jeffrey Epstein

New York found “significant compliance failures” in Deutsche Bank’s dealings with Epstein, who the bank had considered “high-risk”. It also knew of Epstein’s history of sex trafficking and abuse, including his 2007 guilty plea to state prostitution charges, yet ignored these “red flags” and processed hundreds of transactions “obviously implicated” by his past.

In its statement New York also criticised unrelated dealings by Germany’s largest bank with Danske Bank’s Estonia branch, which is embroiled in a massive money laundering scandal, and the Federal Bank of the Middle East.

Epstein was a Deutsche Bank client from August 2013 to December 2018, when the relationship ended after further negative press surfaced about his misconduct.

The transactions processed by the German bank included payments to alleged accomplices, lawyers, victims, Russian models and women with Eastern European surnames, and “suspicious” cash withdrawals averaging $US200,000 a year.

‘Not suspicious’

Email traffic showed that Deutsche Bank weighed the risks of retaining Epstein as a client but put them aside, enticed by the millions of dollars in annual revenue he might generate.

According to a consent order, two Deutsche Bank employees visited Epstein in his New York home in early 2015 and asked about new allegations of sex with underage girls.

But they appeared “satisfied” by Epstein’s response and did nothing to verify the allegations, the consent order said.

The bank also chose in 2017 not to scrutinise payments to a Russian model and a Russian publicity agent. “Since this type of activity is normal for this client it is not deemed suspicious,” a compliance monitor said in an email.

New York said Epstein had more than 40 Deutsche Bank accounts, some of which were for the “Butterfly Trust”, whose beneficiaries included co-conspirators in alleged sexual abuse.

This created a risk that payments could be used to “further or cover up criminal activity and perhaps even to endanger more young women,” the New York settlement, which reflected Deutsche Bank’s cooperation over several years, revealed.

Accepting Epstein as a client “was a critical mistake and should never have happened,” Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Christian Sewing told staff in a memo.

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The New York regulator said Deutsche Bank was also sanctioned for ignoring warning signs while processing billions of euros of payments for Danske Bank, which it ranked as “high-risk” in 2007, before shortly afterwards identifying alerts on its foreign customers with Russian or Latvian connections.

The German bank ignored internal warnings of the risks until late 2015, transferring at least $US150 billion from Russia and other former Soviet states during that time.

Deutsche Bank also acknowledged deficiencies in its monitoring of Danske Estonia and FBME.

“We all have to help ensure that this kind of thing does not happen again,” Sewing said.

❏ Support is available for those who may be distressed by phoning Lifeline 13 11 14; Mensline 1300 789 978; Kids Helpline 1800 551 800; beyondblue 1300 224 636.

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Letter to BS: India must outsmart China after the recent face-off in Ladakh

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Following the recent face-off be­t­ween India and China, it’s very hard to read the Chinese mind as to what led to such a rapid change in its tone. Perhaps China feels insecure today especially after other countries have been blaming it for the Covid-19 pandemic, anticipati­ng a new global alliance against it. India must outsmart China by keeping it engaged not by military escalation, but by building on regional projects such as the BCIM (Ban­gla­desh, China, India, Myanmar) economic corridor; infrastructure projects of Brics and the Asian Development Bank etc. India’s foreign policy must take a new step — that of reading the neighbours’ mind.


Arjun S Bengaluru



can be mailed, faxed or e-mailed to: The Editor, Business Standard,Nehru House,


4 Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg,


New Delhi 110 002


Fax: (011) 23720201 ·


E-mail: letters@bsmail.in


All must have a postal address and telephone number



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Brazilian AIDS Patient Shows No Sign of Virus After Experimental Drug Therapy

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A Brazilian man infected with the AIDS virus has shown no sign of it for more than a year since he stopped HIV medicines after an intense experimental drug therapy aimed at purging hidden, dormant virus from his body, doctors reported Tuesday.

The case needs independent verification and it’s way too soon to speculate about a possible cure, scientists cautioned.

“These are exciting findings but they’re very preliminary,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an AIDS specialist at the University of California, San Francisco. “This has happened to one person, and one person only,” and it didn’t succeed in four others given the same treatment, she said.

Another UCSF specialist, Dr. Steven Deeks, said: “This is not a cure,” just an interesting case that merits more study.

The case was described at an AIDS conference where researchers also disclosed an important prevention advance: A shot of an experimental medicine every two months worked better than daily Truvada pills to help keep uninfected gay men from catching HIV from an infected sex partner. Hundreds of thousands of people take these “pre-exposure prevention” pills now and the shot could give a new option, almost like a temporary vaccine.

If the Brazil man’s case is confirmed, it would be the first time HIV has been eliminated in an adult without a bone marrow or stem cell transplant. Independent experts want to see whether his remission lasts and for the intense drug combination that he received to undergo more testing.

“I’m very moved because it’s something that millions of people want,” said the 35-year-old man, whose spoke to The Associated Press on condition that his name not be published. “It’s a gift of life, a second chance to live.”

Transplants are how two other men, nicknamed the Berlin and London patients for where they were treated, were cured previously.

“I’m the living proof it’s possible to be cured,” Adam Castillejo, the London patient, said in a news conference at the AIDS meeting, which is being held online because of the coronavirus pandemic.

He and the Berlin patient, Timothy Ray Brown, had donors with a gene that confers natural immunity to HIV infection. Such transplants are too medically risky and impractical to attempt on a large scale, so doctors have been trying other approaches.

It’s hard to eliminate HIV because it establishes an early “reservoir” of blood cells where it lies dormant and can’t be attacked by medicines or the immune system. Infections can be controlled with drugs, but as soon as patients stop taking them, the dormant virus activates and renews the disease.

Dr. Ricardo Diaz of the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil led a study testing strong and new drug combinations to try to purge this reservoir.

“We are trying to wake up the virus” and boost the immune system’s ability to eliminate it once it’s flushed out of hiding, Diaz explained. The Brazil man had been taking a standard three-drug combo to suppress his virus. In September 2015, Diaz added two newer ones to intensify his treatment — dolutegravir and maraviroc — plus nicotinamide, a form of vitamin B3 that may help expose dormant virus.

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After nearly a year, the patient went back to the standard three drugs for two more years, then stopped all HIV medicines in March 2019. The virus has been undetectable in many blood and tissue samples since then.

“We can’t search the entire body, but by the best evidence, we do not have infected cells,” Diaz said.

The most convincing evidence: Tests show the man has lost nearly all HIV antibodies — substances the immune system makes when fighting the virus.

Eager for independent verification, the patient said he went to a counseling center for an anonymous HIV test in February. It was negative.

“He made a picture of the results” and sent a photo of them, Diaz said.

The antibody results are “the most fascinating part of this story,” said Deeks. “These are solid scientists” and “the team may have come up with something that helps,” but it’s going to take verification of these results and much more testing to know, he said.

In particular, doctors will want to see proof from blood tests that the patient truly had stopped his HIV medicines. Diaz said all HIV patients in Brazil get their medicines from a government health program and that he verified the man had stopped.

“I think it’s very promising. This patient might be cured,” but it will take more time to know, Diaz said.

The treatment did not succeed in four others treated the same way, or in any of the others in the 30-person study testing related approaches.

Diaz said he has approval for a new study in 60 patients, sponsored by government grants in Brazil and by ViiV Healthcare, the British company that makes maraviroc.

Dr. Anton Pozniak, head of the AIDS conference and an HIV specialist at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London, said more time is needed to see if the virus rebounds.

“I’m waiting. I’m a skeptic about all of this … until a couple of years go by,” he said.

The separate study on prevention involved nearly 4,600 people in North and South America, Asia, and Africa. It tested shots of ViiV’s experimental drug cabotegravir against daily pills of Truvada, the Gilead Sciences drug already approved for preventing HIV infection.

The study was stopped early, in May, when the shot seemed at least as effective as the pills. Final results now show the shot works better — there were 13 new infections among those who got it versus 39 among those taking Truvada, said the study leader, Dr. Raphael Landovitz of the University of California, Los Angeles.

“People can stay protected without having taken a pill every day,” he said. “You get a shot and you don’t have to do anything for two months. That’s incredibly powerful.”

The results “could revolutionize prevention for HIV worldwide” and give a new option for people who don’t want to take a daily pill, Gandhi said.

ViiV has said it will seek U.S. approval for cabotegravir; its eventual price is unknown. Truvada costs $1,600 to $1,800 a month, but what patients pay out of pocket depends on insurance and other factors. With either drug, people are still urged to use condoms to prevent other sexually spread diseases.

Contact us at editors@time.com.

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Recent Commercial Real Estate Transactions

$2 MILLION

302 Fifth Street (between Fourth and Fifth Avenues)

Brooklyn

This three-story, 2,772-square-foot building in Park Slope has two two-bedroom apartments and one three-bedroom. The building, constructed in 1910, was delivered vacant.

Buyer: 302 5th St

Seller: Michael Hack and Allan Quis

Brokers: Daniel Shawah, Derek Bestreich, Luke Sproviero, Adam Lobel, Toby Waring and Gabriel Kates of Bestreich Realty Group

$10 MILLION

1150 Pelham Parkway (between Williamsbridge Road and Yates Avenue)

The Bronx

Built in 1955, this six-story, 7,558-square-foot apartment building in the Morris Park neighborhood has six three-bedroom apartments, 18 two-bedrooms, six “junior four” units and 20 one-bedrooms. It has a 22-space parking garage and an elevator.

Buyer: Paul Gjonaj

Buyer’s Broker: Rosewood

Seller: A&R Management

Seller’s Brokers: Robert M. Shapiro, Jonathan Squires and Michael Fioravanti of Cushman & Wakefield

$7.25 MILLION

6 East Second Street (between Bowery and Second Avenue)

Manhattan

Built in 1900, this four-story, 6,420-square-foot building in the East Village was home to Arturo Vega, creative director for the Ramones. The building has three full-floor apartments and one ground-floor commercial unit. The Ramones played their first show of 1975 in Mr. Vega’s loft, which also became a crash pad for Joey and Dee Dee Ramone.

Seller: Klosner family

Brokers: Paul Massey, Zach Redding and Daniel O’Mahony of B6 Real Estate Advisors

$8.795 MILLION

2771 Bainbridge Avenue (between East 196th and East 197th Streets)

The Bronx

This 73,500-square-foot building in Bedford Park has 60 rent-stabilized apartments and an elevator. It has been owned by the same family since it was built in 1949.

Seller: Bainbridge Gardens

Brokers: Marco Lala, Jack Lala, Dave Raciti and Michelle Lala of RM Friedland

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Does Emmanuel Macron have a women problem?

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PARIS — There are statements politicians come to regret. In 2017, as a presidential candidate, Emmanuel Macron said he “would like” his prime minister to be a woman.

Three years and two prime ministers later, French women are asking: Where is she?

After all, nothing prevented the French president from replacing previous Prime Minister Edouard Philippe with a female successor, rather than his eventual choice of little-known conservative Jean Castex.

But the president’s gender issue goes way beyond the head of government.

As new ministers were taking office Tuesday following Castex’s nomination last week, feminist activists protested the nomination of new Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, whom one woman has accused of rape, and new Justice Minister Éric Dupond-Moretti, who has made controversial comments on the MeToo movement.

Demonstrators protest the appointment of Gerald Darmanin to Macron’s Cabinet in Paris on July 7, 2020 | Thomas Coex/AFP via Getty Images

“This government is a disgrace,” feminist association Osez le féminisme tweeted, referring to accusations targeting Darmanin.

A woman accused Darmanin of raping her in 2009 after she asked for his help in clearing her criminal record. Darmanin strongly denied the accusations. After the charges were initially dropped, the case was recently reopened as part of an appeal procedure.

Gabriel Attal, a government spokesman, said on Tuesday that “we can’t hold the presumption of innocence as sacred … and at the same time consider that some people, because of the positions they hold, cannot benefit from this presumption of innocence.” He added, “We cannot consider that because there are investigations one shouldn’t hold a government position.”

An Elysée official told French news agency AFP that “after a legal analysis, the relevant services have assessed that there was no obstacle to [Darmanin’s] nomination.”

New Justice Minister Dupond-Moretti, until now a star lawyer involved in many high-profile cases, has also angered feminists for his dismissive stance on the MeToo movement.

He has previously spoken against new proposed rules to penalize catcalling and other sexist harassment. Asked about the Harvey Weinstein scandal, Dupond-Moretti said last year, ‘There are also women who get aroused by power.” He described situations where powerful men pressure women into giving sexual favors for professional advancement as “sex promotions.”

Dupond-Moretti also defended former International Monetary Fund boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who resigned over sexual assault allegations in 2011, in a separate case. In that case, Strauss-Kahn was accused of aiding and abetting prostitution. Dupond-Moretti said the allegations amounted merely to “friends having a good time.” (Strauss-Kahn was acquitted in that case.)

And as he took office on Tuesday, Dupond-Moretti pledged that one of his key focuses would be to work on “the presumption of innocence.” He said: “Justice is not rendered in the street or on social media or in the media,” adding that “l’honneur des hommes” doesn’t “deserve to be thrown to the dogs.” He left it open to interpretation whether he meant the honor of all mankind, or specifically men.

“I’m going to throw up,” feminist activist Caroline De Haas tweeted about Dupond-Moretti’s nomination.

Women in second place

While the new government includes 17 women and 14 men, a majority of key posts went to men, including the economy, finance, interior and justice ministries. Six of the top 10 ministers are men.

No. 1 in protocol order is Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian. In second place is Barbara Pompili, the highest-positioned woman in the executive branch, who holds a broad portfolio spanning energy, environment and transport. The next woman on the list is Defense Minister Florence Parly, in fifth position.

Barbara Pompili is the highest-ranking woman in Macron’s government | Bertrand Guay/AFP via Getty Images

The Elysée argues the appointment of Pompili and others is proof that the president is taking gender balance seriously. Three of the four ministers who will be key to the country’s post-coronavirus recovery plan, the top priority for the government, are women, an Elysée official said: Pompili, Labor Minister Elisabeth Borne and Cohesion Minister Jacqueline Gourault, who will be liaising with local institutions.

Still, Macron didn’t put his money where his mouth is: Bercy, the powerful economy and finance ministry that will be front and center in the recovery plan, still has a man — Bruno Le Maire — at its helm.

For someone who defined himself as a “progressivist” above all and who once hailed gender equality as a top cause for his term in office, the optics are not good.

Besides the controversies surrounding Darmanin and Dupond-Moretti, activists have pointed to past statements made by the new junior minister in charge of gender equality, Elisabeth Moreno, who once said she didn’t want sexism-awareness campaigns to kill the mood in the workplace.

Moreno is taking over from Marlène Schiappa, who became the face of gender equality issues with vocal stances and controversial proposals. Schiappa suffered a crushing defeat in last month’s local elections, failing to get elected in Paris.

She remained in the government and became a junior minister in charge of citizenship — reporting to none other than Darmanin.

Rym Momtaz contributed reporting.



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New video format ‘halves data use of 4K and 8K TVs’

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Although 8K televisions are becoming more common, there is currently little content available in that resolution

A new video-encoding technology that promises to cut data use by at least half has been announced, after three years of talks involving some of the tech industry’s largest players.

The standard should make it possible for people with slow connections to stream footage in higher quality than before, without pauses for buffering.

It could also pave the way for on-demand services to offer 8K content.

But one expert warned it would probably take years to catch on.

The codec – which is called both H.266 and Versatile Video Coding (VVC) – was announced by Germany’s Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute.

It said Apple, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Ericsson, Intel and Huawei were among those that had worked on its development.

It hopes that in time, smartphones and other cameras will be able to automatically record and play back footage in the format. However, new chips will need to be developed before they can do so.

In the interim, recordings will need to be re-encoded to take advantage of the extra compression made possible. Playback will probably require a fast processor because today’s hardware was not designed with the codec in mind.

Codec choices

H.266 is designed to require half the bitrate – the amount of data transmitted per second – as today’s standard H.265.

The H.265 codec itself halved the bitrate requirement of its predecessor H.264, which is still widely in use.

“H.265 requires about 10 gigabytes of data to transmit a 90-minute ultra-high definition [4K] video,” explains a press release.

“With this new technology, only 5GB are required to achieve the same quality.”

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Some experts believe VR headsets will only be able to match reality when they can display 16K or higher resolutions

In order to stream 8K video reliably, tests have indicated that homes would require internet connections capable of more than 85 megabits per second (Mbps), which is beyond what many properties have today. However, that has the potential to drop to a more manageable 40-50Mbps if H.266 takes off.

Another benefit of the tech is that users should be able to save double the amount of footage on the same amount of storage, assuming they do not take advantage of the codec to capture it in higher quality.

Many people’s homes are not big enough to house a television that is large enough to appreciate the four-times boost in the number of pixels that 8K offers over 4K.

However, the jump in resolution has big advantages for virtual reality, which fills the user’s field of view.

In addition, it offers a more efficient way to stream higher-resolution 360-degree footage to next-generation headsets, where the extra detail can make a big difference as users are only ever seeing a section of the recorded image at a time.

But just because the standard exists, it does not mean it will be universally embraced.

Google has previously opted to use a format it developed itself – VP9 – instead of H.265 to encode YouTube videos.

And a consortium – which includes Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Samsung – has already developed a successor, AV1. The video-game streaming platform Twitch has already said it intends to switch “100%” to the format by 2024.

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Google avoided some of the licence fees involved with H.265 by using a different codec for YouTube

“The codec story is always the same: everyone always wants to get better-quality video in a more efficient state, but the challenge is getting people to adopt it,” commented Ben Wood from the CCS Insight consultancy.

“To be successful, a codec has to get broad adoption from all the key players. And deciding to back one can be somewhat of a religious decision.”

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Lack of Ruling on Nature of Crimes in Xinjiang ‘a Shortcoming’ of Trump Administration: Adrian Zenz

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Adrian Zenz, a senior fellow in China Studies at the Washington-based Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, has emerged as a leading expert on the mass incarceration of Uyghurs in internment camps in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR). Last month, he published a report detailing a dramatic increase in recent years in the number of forced sterilizations and abortions targeting Uyghurs in region, which he concluded may amount to a government-led campaign of genocide according to the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. Last week, Representative James P. McGovern (D-Mass.) and Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), the chairman and cochairman of the U.S. Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) sent a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin urging them to respond to the report by condemning the population control policy and imposing sanctions on Chinese officials responsible.

Zenz recently spoke with RFA’s Uyghur Service director Alim Seytoff about the letter, which he said is part of a bid by the bipartisan group of lawmakers to pressure U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration to take a stronger stance on the situation in the XUAR, where authorities are believed to have held up to 1.8 million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in a vast network of internment camps since April 2017. While Trump last month signed legislation that provides for sanctions against Chinese officials deemed responsible for abuses in the region under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, such measures have not yet been taken.

My response was that when the senators and the members of congress mentioned ‘atrocity crimes’ they basically challenged the State Department to make a determination of what is the nature of the crimes and the atrocities in Xinjiang … The legal determination can be made by legal experts from a government, such as the United States government, and I believe that would be the State Department who would make such a determination. On the other hand, such a legal determination can be made by the United Nations. So, for example, the State Department could make a determination that these are crimes against humanity. It could also make a determination that these would amount to genocide as laid forth by the United Nations Convention.

To call something genocide legally—there’s only one legal definition of genocide and that’s the United Nations Convention. And it is now, for the first time, that there is fairly conclusive evidence of one of the criteria of the convention—namely the prevention of births. So, the United Nations Genocide Convention definition is fairly narrow. It does not include things like cultural genocide, ethnocide, etcetera. I think it’s easier to make a determination for crimes against humanity because crimes against humanity do not require an atrocity to meet the exact definition of the U.N. Genocide Convention. But the [U.S.] Holocaust [Memorial] Museum [in Washington], they said earlier this year that China’s actions in Xinjiang may constitute crimes against humanity.

The main purpose of the letter is to request a legal determination and a public determination of what exactly is the nature of the crime because, so far, the State Department has only made statements on it. It has called it a crime, it has called it an atrocity, it has said that it is bad, it’s disruptive, it must be condemned, it must be stopped, but it has not made a public determination of the nature of this crime. And I think, by not having done so, it also is less responsible for taking certain courses of action. So, this is a shortcoming—a shortcoming of the State Department. This letter seeks to address this shortcoming and challenges the State Department and the Treasury to make such a determination and announce it publicly.

Reported by Jewlan for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.



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Amid New Surge In Virus Cases, Israel’s Top Public Health Official Resigns

Israeli security forces control access to a neighborhood that has been isolated following an increase in coronavirus cases in the southern coastal city of Ashdod last week.

Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images


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Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images

Israeli security forces control access to a neighborhood that has been isolated following an increase in coronavirus cases in the southern coastal city of Ashdod last week.

Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images

Israel’s top public health official resigned Tuesday, claiming leaders ignored her warnings and reopened the country too quickly, driving a new surge of COVID-19 cases that officials are scrambling to contain.

Siegal Sadetzki, the leading epidemiologist heading Israel’s coronavirus response and director of the Israeli Health Ministry’s Public Health Services, posted her nine-page resignation letter on Facebook on Tuesday, the same day Israel quickly reimposed restrictions shutting down wedding and entertainment venues, bars, clubs, gyms and swimming pools.

“Unfortunately, for the last few weeks, the compass handling the pandemic lost its direction,” Sadetzki wrote. “We’ve watched with frustration as the hourglass of possibilities has run out. On this basis I reached the conclusion that under the new conditions in which my professional opinion is not accepted — I can no longer assist with an effective response to curb the spread of the virus.”

In recent days, Israel has had record-high numbers of around 1,100 daily infections, nearly twice the peak seen in the spring, with serious cases doubling about every four days. According to the Health Ministry, the country currently has at least 12,700 active cases, with 35 patients on ventilators. At least 338 have died.

Sadetzki praised Israel’s nationwide lockdowns in the spring, which brought an initial wave of infections to as low as about 10 cases a day. She blamed the latest wave in large part on Israel’s swift reopening of schools in May and wedding venues in June.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had declared victory over the pandemic in May and encouraged Israelis to go out and “enjoy yourselves.” Several weeks of post-pandemic euphoria washed over the country as it reopened schools, restaurants and beaches. (Officials shut schools where virus cases were detected.) During the peak springtime wedding season, wedding venues were allowed to host up to 250 guests.

Now Netanyahu warns this week’s new restrictions are necessary to prevent the health system from collapsing and can prevent a nationwide lockdown.

Democracy advocates criticized a new law passed Tuesday, shortly after midnight, giving Netanyahu and his Cabinet emergency powers to impose further pandemic restrictions for up to a week before lawmakers may amend or cancel them.

Netanyahu was initially lauded for his handling of the first wave of the virus, but polls published Monday by Israeli Channel 12 TV found his public approval rating in handling Israel’s health crisis dropped from 74% in May to 46% in July, and approval of his handling of the economy during the pandemic dropped from 53% in May to 33% in July.

Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem are also facing a spike in infection rates, mostly blamed on wedding and funeral gatherings, with at least 5,000 confirmed cases and 21 deaths. The Palestinian Authority imposed a five-day lockdown on Friday, blocking movement and closing most businesses. On Tuesday, it extended the lockdown by an additional five days and banned all weddings and gatherings.

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‘A lot of worry’: residents of other Melbourne housing blocks want more done to stave off Covid-19

The Victorian government is facing calls to bring mobile testing into all of Melbourne’s high-rise public housing estates and to ramp up cleaning and culturally appropriate resources to prevent a repeat of the “hard lockdown” inflicted on 3,000 residents since Saturday.

As the state’s premier, Daniel Andrews, cited a record 191 new cases while reintroducing stage 3 restrictions across Melbourne, residents in other large high-rise towers across the inner city still expressed fear about the prospect of their own hard lockdown and said they were frustrated by a lack of resources and support.

It is hoped that the 3,000 people subjected to the “hard lockdown” in the nine towers in Flemington and north Melbourne – which prevents them from leaving their building under any circumstances – will be brought back into line with the rest of the city from midnight Wednesday.

But just on the other side of Melbourne’s CBD, at the Carlton public housing estate, Cory Memery, 48, said a lack of action by authorities at his high-rise block was causing a “a lot of worry” among residents.

Many of his concerns were the same as those that residents in the north Melbourne and Flemington estates had raised with authorities months ago, as reported by the Guardian on Tuesday.

In Carlton, there was very little hand sanitiser in common areas and it was intended to be shared between hundreds of people, Memery said, standing next to the building’s housing office, closed due to the pandemic.

“There needs to be hand sanitiser on every floor,” he told the Guardian. “That is an absolute given.”

Memery also asked for mobile testing to be brought into the estates. “Bring the facilities to us – there might be people that are [then] willing to be tested.”

Memery said there had been no discernible difference in his building. “It’s just the normal practices, they come up and clean my floor once a fortnight. It’s been that way forever. I haven’t seen the cleaning brigade who go out and do the tram stops come in here, but I have seen that in other estates.”

East of the Carlton estate, Penelope Drummond was watching the situation in Flemington and North Melbourne unfold on television from her north Richmond high-rise flat and feeling “very anxious”.

She thought the cleaning services had definitely been improved in her building – one of five in the massive estate – but was worried about hundreds of residents being forced to share only two lifts.

“There is cleaning going on in the lift. I see there are extra cleaners going around,” Drummond said. “Is it enough? No. Is anything enough?

“A lot of people are wearing masks because they have heard that is the right thing to do in this environment.”

Drummond agreed with calls for mobile testing to be brought to her estate. “I would like to think that would happen here as a preventative measure.”

Later on Tuesday, Nine News reported a resident at the Flemington high-rise who had tested positive had also worked at the north Richmond estate, where he had patrolled three floors in one of the buildings.

The state government is now facing calls from political opponents on its left and right for an increased testing regime in public housing estates.

The federal Greens leader, Adam Bandt, whose electorate takes in most of Melbourne’s inner-city public housing high-rises, on Tuesday wrote to the government with his state Greens colleague Ellen Sandell calling for more resources and mobile testing.

“There is no excuse for communal hand sanitiser bottles being empty for days on end in a pandemic or for lifts to be out of action,” he told the Guardian.

“We also need priority on-site testing at these towers, so residents can be cleared of the virus as soon as possible and treatment given to those who test positive.”

The left-leaning City of Yarra council was expected to pass a motion on Tuesday night calling on the government to provide mobile testing for all public housing residents, among other measures.

Stephen Jolly, a veteran councillor in Yarra, where there are 12 public housing high-rises, said residents were worried there was nothing being done to prevent their own estates facing a hard lockdown.

“We need testing,” he said. “And if someone tests positive, it shouldn’t be that we lock down the whole tower. We don’t do that for private blocks of units.”

The Victorian Liberals’ housing spokesman, Tim Smith, said there should be “compulsory testing in all public housing”.

“If anyone tests positive in public housing, they must be immediately quarantined in either hospital or appropriate crisis accommodation,” he told the NCA Newswire.

But Ranko Cosic, a community leader and resident at the Atherton Gardens estate in Fitzroy, baulked at the idea of mandatory testing.

He said bringing testing to residents in the public housing flats was a “very good option”.

“I think the residents should have a choice, otherwise it comes across like you’re being forced.”

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