Yousuf Raza Gilani tests positive for coronavirus

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Former prime minister and senior PPP leader Yousuf Raza Gilani tested positive for the coronavirus on Saturday, according to his son Kasim Gilani.

In a tweet on Saturday, Kasim Gilani alleged that the Imran Khan-led government and National Accountability Bureau endangered the life of his father by summoning him in corruption reference.

The NAB is investigation Gilani in the Toshakhana reference. It has filed a petition in an accountability court against high-profile suspects, including two former prime ministers and a former president.

NAB named former president Asif Ali Zardari, former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, and former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani as suspects in the case.

The bureau has alleged that former premier Gilani facilitated Zardari and Nawaz in buying cars from the Toshakhana by paying 15 per cent of the price of the cars.

Separately, Gilani is also embroiled in a battle with US blogger Cynthia Ritchie, who has alleged that the former prime minister had harassed her “in connivance” with ex-interior minister Rehman Malik 2011.

On Thursday, the US blogger called on Gilani to apologise to her. Ritchie warned that in case the PPP leader did not apologise for levelling allegations against her within 14 days, she would initiate legal action against him. 

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‘The Netflix of bikes’: will a bicycle rental scheme catch on?

Thinking about cycling to work when the office reopens but not sure whether it’s really you? How about trying a no-strings-attached bike subscription service that you can cancel at any time?

Popular for several years in Europe – in particular, the Netherlands – bike leasing has arrived in London – and for many it could be a great way to try bike commuting without having to buy the bike.

The Dutch firm Swapfiets pioneered the concept in Delft in 2014. Since then, it has expanded across the Netherlands and into Belgium, Germany and Denmark.

The model is popular, particularly among students, because it allows users to pay a flat monthly fee from €16.50 (£14.70) on a rolling monthly contract. The basic one-geared bike is insured and if you have a problem the company whizzes round to fix it. Consumers love it because if they decide that cycling is not for them, they leave town – or buy their own bicycle – then they simply give the bike back and walk away. Recently, the company has added geared and electric bikes, too.

Step forward, then, Buzzbike, which hopes its version of the same business model will get hesitant Londoners riding to work, as and when their offices reopen.

Needless to say, it is twice the price of Swapfiets (isn’t everything in London?), although you do get a more sophisticated machine for its £29.99 monthly fee.

Those signing up via the Buzzbike app will receive, says the London firm’s co-founder Tom Hares, a steel-framed bike that would cost £600 to buy. A good-quality lock is supplied and the bike is insured – provided you use the lock to tether the bike to an immovable object.

The company says there is no obligation to keep the machine inside at night – a problem for many – although if you have any sense, you will. If the locked bike is stolen, the user has to pay the £50 insurance excess.








Buzzbike’s bicycles feature reliable components and have puncture-resistant tyres. Photograph: Buzzbike

Those signing up pay £10 to have the bike delivered, or collected at the end. If the user has a mechanical problem, the company promises to quickly send round someone to fix it, punctures aside, which are down to them to repair.

Hares believes his business is suited to people’s change in habits during the current crisis: “The new interest and huge growth in cycling is one of the only good things to come out of the Covid-19 pandemic and we’ve seen a surge in interest in recent weeks. We like to think of ourselves as the Netflix of bikes, in that you can give us a trial and, if it doesn’t work for you, you can hand it back and leave penalty-free with 30 days’ notice.”

He says Buzzbike is about to take delivery of 2,000 new three-speed bikes that it expects to go straight out to customers across the capital. He has the option to receive more, as further customers sign up.

To stop users stealing the supplied bike, customers have to provide credit card details at the start of the process and undertake a basic credit check to authenticate their address, etc.

To help get them on the road, the company offers reduced-price helmets and lights to buy, although you can purchase these anywhere.

So will it work? At £30 a month, this is undoubtedly an expensive way to gain a bike; however, you are getting a new, or almost new, machine, with no maintenance to worry about. At a time when it has arguably become hard to buy any kind of bike, it’s an easy way to see if it’s for you.

The bikes look good, feature reliable components and have puncture-resistant tyres – a must in London. A downside is that they only come in two sizes, meaning those over 6ft 2in may be better off buying a bigger machine elsewhere.

The company also offers the option to buy the bike through its cycle-to-work scheme, for £17 a month. Unlike other schemes, Buzzbike to Work does not require the company to purchase the bike for the employee, and riders can cancel at any time.

The advantage this has over the Santander scheme and others is that it is your bike to use full-time. No cleanliness problems, or having to wait for another person to return one at busy times. Or the long searches for a docking space.

For comparison, Santander bikes cost £2 for each 24-hour membership or £90 a year. Once paid, bike trips of 30 minutes or less are free. If your commute is longer than 30 minutes, you pay £2 for every 30 minutes.

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Stick a Starry Night Sky on Your Ceiling

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Classic adhesive star kits let you be the architect of your galaxy. Some well-reviewed and simple-to-use options include Encambio Alcrea’s original kit ($14 and comes with several sky maps), Airbin’s 3D Domed Glow in the Dark Stars ($14) and LIDERSTAR’s set ($12).

To start your adhesive project, place Polaris (a.k.a. the North Star) first. You can see it year-round in the Northern Hemisphere, and it’s the only star that doesn’t rotate in the sky over the course of an evening. You can then begin to locate circumpolar constellations, which move in a circle around the North Star. From New York City, for example, the two circumpolar constellations are Ursa Major (the Big Dipper) and Ursa Minor (the Little Dipper). Use a pencil to place little dots on your ceiling to mark where you’ll place the glowing stars, and then start sticking.

There are 88 officially recognized constellations, but you will most likely want to focus on 10 or fewer. If you are starting your project now, consider re-creating what’s visible in your sky during the summer months. Viewed from North America, that could be the Summer Triangle — made up of Deneb, Altair and Vega, the brightest stars in the constellations Cygnus, Aquila and Lyra — or the Pleiades Cluster, which is a stellar nursery (where new stars form).

Add more to your galaxy as your motivation and time allow.

Viewing the stars is more pleasurable when you know what you’re looking for, can identify a few of the major constellations and are familiar with some of the ancient stories that gave the constellations their names. Apps like iSky, Google Sky and Star Chart have free versions available for iOS and Android devices, so you can point your phone up to the sky (or whatever you have projected, painted or adhered to your ceiling) and identify what you are seeing — as well as learn the history, science and mythology, effectively putting the whole sky within your reach.

Or, use an app like Night Sky to pull out planets, stars and constellations and look at them in augmented reality, which enables you to see the depth and distance of what’s behind and around them. If you’re planning to travel this summer, Night Sky can show you what you’re able to see in another location, so you can better recognize the stars above once you’re there.

Storytellers used the sky like a picture book to illustrate their tales of gods, mythical heroes and fabulous beasts. “Pictures in the Sky: The Origin and History of the Constellations,” a video made by the Royal Society of London, walks viewers through a variety of celestial back stories.

You could also consult a good book. “The Stars: A New Way to See Them,” by H.A. Rey, provides simple drawings of constellations that are easy to translate onto a ceiling. And “Cosmos: Possible Worlds,” by Ann Druyan — the recently published sequel to Carl Sagan’s “Cosmos” — is a gorgeously illustrated guide to the tales that budding astronomers have been telling each other for centuries.

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Amazon’s business practices examined by two U.S. states

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(Reuters) – State investigators in both California and Washington are examining Amazon’s business practices, two newspapers reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Amazon is seen in Lauwin-Planque, northern France, April 22, 2020. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol

The inquiries focus at least in part on how Amazon treats sellers in its online marketplace, the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times reported on Friday.

Amazon declined to comment on the report of an investigation by California. It was not immediately available for comment outside regular market hours on the Washington review report.

The reports said California state is reviewing Amazon’s practices on selling its own products in competition with third-party vendors. Amazon said its in-house products only account for about 1% of its total annual retail sales.

Washington state is also investigating whether Amazon makes it harder for sellers to list their products on other websites, the NYT reported. The inquiries did not appear to be in advanced stages, the NYT report added, citing sources.

A spokeswoman for the Washington attorney general told the NYT that the office did not confirm or deny investigations. California attorney general’s office told the NYT that it does not comment on any pending or potential investigations.

The California and Washington attorney generals were not immediately available when approached by Reuters for comment.

The U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee last month called on Chief Executive Jeff Bezos to testify about allegations that Amazon uses data from its own third-party sellers to create competing products.

Amazon is already being investigated by the European Commission for its dual role as a marketplace and as a rival, after complaints from traders.

It may also face EU antitrust charges in the coming weeks over its use of data on merchants with whom it competes on its platform, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing a source.

Reporting by Ayanti Bera and Aakriti Bhalla in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli and Alexander Smith

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Chandrachur Singh opens up about the lows of his career and his joint injury : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

Chandrachur Singh was one of the most looked-up to actors after he debuted in Maachis. The actor had given a few hits after the debut but had to take a step back due to his joint injury. After all these years, he’s finally making a comeback with Aarya alongside Sushmita Sen. Both these actors have returned to the industry after a long break and even though they never acted in a film before this, their roles are surely gripping.

In a recent interview, Chandrachur Singh opened up about his injury and how it kept recurring even after surgery and physiotherapy. His shoulder would get dislocated during shoots and that would eventually result in delay. It was one of those things that pulled him down professionally. He further said that he has no regrets and it is all a part and parcel of the learning curve. When asked if the industry had done injustice to him, he said that one has to inspire oneself during a lull and many actors before him have come back stronger after seeing the lows.

Chandrachur Singh has also acted in movies like Josh and Kya Kehna.

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The Greek airport that was left to fall apart

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(CNN) — After months of shutdown, Athens International Airport is gearing up to “welcome the world” once again as Greece moves ahead with plans to gradually lift coronavirus restrictions in a bid to revive its key tourism industry.

But while authorities hope the phased return of international travel from June 15 will eventually bring the arrival halls of the Eleftherios Venizelos hub roaring back to life, a few kilometers to the west, another airport will remain eerily quiet — as it has for much of the last 20 years.

Located on the southern Athenian coast on a site roughly three times the size of Monaco, Hellenikon — which translates to “the Greek” — was for decades the only international airport in Athens.

The former airport complex was originally built in the late 1930s at a time when Greek aviation was still in a nascent stage. During the World War II occupation of Greece by Axis powers, the site was used by Nazi Germany’s Luftwaffe and became a target of Allied air raids.

Major gateway

The airport was once Greece’s largest.

Dimitris Sideridis

Following the end of the war, Hellenikon hosted Greek, US and British forces but by the 1950s it had become Athens’s main hub for commercial air travel. Significant reconstruction work followed, including expanded runways and a new control tower and terminal halls.

With Greece’s tourism industry rapidly expanding, Hellenikon served as the gateway for millions of people arriving from all corners of the globe to explore the country’s archaeological marvels and sun-baked beaches.

Time took its toll, however, and on March 30, 2001 — after years of debates and planning — Hellenikon shut its doors indefinitely to make way for a larger, more modern facility.

Hellenikon shut its doors in 2001.

Hellenikon shut its doors in 2001.

Dimitris Sideridis

“In the 1990s, the airport had ended up handling well above 10 million passengers [annually],” Vasilis Tsatsaragkos, president of the Olympic Airlines Workers’ Cultural Center, tells CNN.

“Hellenikon was unable to meet the country’s dynamically increasing tourism needs.”

In 2004, parts of the disused complex were transformed into venues for the Athens Olympics, hosting baseball, fencing, kayaking and other sporting events.

But years of neglect followed and the 1,530-acre brownfield site — once envisaged largely as a metropolitan park — was left to decay amid disagreements over its redevelopment and Greece’s descent into economic chaos in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

Stalled redevelopment

The airport still contains abandoned airplanes belonging to defunct carrier Olympic Airways.

The airport still contains abandoned airplanes belonging to defunct carrier Olympic Airways.

Dimitris Sideridis

In 2014, a consortium of investors signed a €915 million ($1 billion) development deal, a key part of a post-bailout agreement between debt-saddled Greece and its international lenders.

Under the deal, Hellenikon is to be turned into one of Europe’s largest coastal resorts, filled with luxury hotels and apartments, as well as shopping malls, a park and a casino and entertainment complex.

Efforts, however, to kick-start the project have repeatedly stalled amid political opposition and various bureaucratic obstacles. More than four years ago, at the height of Europe’s refugee crisis, the sprawling site became an informal settlement sheltering thousands of refugees living in harrowing conditions, its abandoned terminals and Olympic facilities filled by a sea of tents.

Over the past year, Greece’s conservative government has pledged to speed up regulatory procedures so that the long- delayed redevelopment project can get off the ground, and some preliminary work is expected to commence in the coming weeks.

Frozen in time

Since its closure, it's been allowed to fall into disrepair.

Since its closure, it’s been allowed to fall into disrepair.

Dimitris Sideridis

Some of its listed buildings that will be preserved from demolition include the former East Terminal building, designed in the 1960s by the firm of groundbreaking Finnish-American architect Eero Saarinen in the 1960s.

Currently, a sense of emptiness permeates its dilapidated, cavernous hall at ground level. A short walk downstairs takes you to what once was a bustling lounge area, now cluttered with debris from half-ruined walls and a collapsed ceiling that exposes bungles of twisted wires hanging overhead.

Elsewhere, a jumble of trash, broken glass and discarded record books reveals the daunting scale of decay, while faded tourism posters and torn maps add a note of gloom to the scene.

Outside the crumbling structures, a small fleet of decommissioned Boeing aircraft, including an imposing 747-200 alongside a Boeing 737 and Boeing 727, sit idle on the edge of the complex.

The rusting, stripped-down passenger jets all belonged to Olympic Airways (OA), the carrier that for decades ruled Greece’s skies and became synonymous with Hellenikon.

When OA ruled the skies

Olympc Airways once had exclusive access to Hellenikon's West Terminal.

Olympc Airways once had exclusive access to Hellenikon’s West Terminal.

Dimitris Sideridis

Launched by business magnate Aristotle Onassis in 1957 following an agreement with Greece’s government for the exclusive use of air transport, OA swiftly expanded its fleet and helped put the country on the global tourist map.

“This was the airline that connected Greece with the whole world — within 23 hours, Athens had ‘contact’ with five continents,” Tsatsaragkos says.

OA quickly became known for its second-to-none luxury cabin service, reflecting the lavish style of its Greek founder and one of the world’s wealthiest men. Its flight attendants were dressed in chic uniforms created by renowned designers such as Coco Chanel and Pierre Cardin while its passengers famously enjoyed their meals on porcelain plates with gilded cutlery and crystal glasses.

Following the 1969 opening of the Saarinen-designed East Terminal, which served all foreign carriers, Hellenikon’s West Terminal was exclusively reserved for OA. Through its gates, a steady stream of celebrities — from Elizabeth Taylor and Sophia Loren to Omar Sharif and Neil Armstrong — was pictured arriving in Greece.

Mementoes from Hellenikon's past will be preserved in a new museum, according to Vasilis Tsatsaragkos.

Mementoes from Hellenikon’s past will be preserved in a new museum, according to Vasilis Tsatsaragkos.

Dimitris Sideridis

But in 1973, the death of Onassis’ 24-year-old son, Alexander, in the crash of a two-engined amphibian Piaggio jet shortly after take off from Hellenikon shocked Greece and the Onassis family, and ultimately led to the end of OA’s “golden age”.

On January 1, 1975, Onassis formally sold the company to the Greek state and died on March 15.

In its first 18 years, OA’s fleet had increased from 15 to 28 — including the technological marvel of the time, a Boeing 747-200B Jumbo bought in 1973 for the Athens-New York route — but the national carrier went on to face major financial problems in the decades that followed due to chronic mismanagement.

Having been renamed Olympic Airlines in 2003, the carrier ceased operations in 2009, several years after its relocation — along with the rest of Greece’s aviation industry — from its former home at Hellenikon.

But the memory of both the abandoned airport and OA will live on in a new museum that will be housed in an earmarked building inside the redeveloped site, according to Tsatsaragkos.

“We have collected 23,000 items documenting the history of both OA and civil aviation,” he says, adding that seven aircraft will be among the future exhibits.

“We keep gathering material. This museum is our big vision.”

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Priyanka Chopra was scolded on sets of her Bollywood debut: throwback

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Priyanka Chopra was reprimanded on sets of her Bollywood debut for not getting steps right: Blast from the past

Priyanka Chopra, who is currently spending quality time with husband Nick Jonas in US, was once yelled at on the sets of her Bollywood debut Andaaz in 2003.

In a throwback video making rounds on the internet, the Quantico star could be heard talking about her early days in Bollywood.

She said she was reprimanded by the choreographer Raju Khan for not getting the dance right for the first song she shot even after 40 takes.

Priyanka said Raju scolded her and threw his mic down saying, “Just because you are Miss World, you think you can become an actress? Go learn how to dance and then come and perform.”

The Sky IS Pink actress further said after returning to India, she went to learn Kathak and practiced six hours everyday to perform in a better way.

Priyanka made her Bollywood debut in 2003 with Raj Kanwar’s directorial Andaaz opposite Akshay Kumar after she was crowned Miss World in 2000.

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Queen celebrates birthday with scaled back military parade at Windsor Castle

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The Queen is celebrating her birthday with a scaled back military parade at Windsor Castle, because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The small ceremonial event, specially designed in just two weeks to ensure the soldiers can maintain social distancing, replaces the traditional Trooping The Colour in central London, which was cancelled due to the COVID-19 restrictions.

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The ceremonial event was specially designed to ensure the soldiers can maintain social distancing
Soldiers keep to social distancing rules during the ceremony
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The scaled back parade was designed in just two weeks

It is the monarch’s first appearance at an official outside event since the start of the coronavirus crisis.

Usually thousands of people gather along the Mall and in front of Buckingham Palace to watch the pageant-filled military parade and to see members of the Royal Family as they travel in carriages, and on horseback, before appearing on the balcony together.

Guardsmen keep to the social distancing rules as they stand in formation for the ceremony
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The brief ceremony is taking place inside the grounds of Windsor Castle

It is the first time the Trooping The Colour has not been staged since 1955.

This year, the public were asked to stay away, with the brief ceremony taking place inside the grounds of Windsor Castle carried out by a detachment from the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, whose colour was due to be trooped this year at The Queen’s Birthday Parade on Horse Guards.

The soldiers and band of the Household Division had to learn new ceremonial drill to ensure they stayed at least two metres apart.

Queen Elizabeth II during a ceremony at Windsor Castle to mark her official birthday.
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The Queen has been at Windsor Castle throughout the pandemic

Lieutenant Colonel Guy Stone, head of ceremonial events for the Household Division, who led the planning for the one-off event, told Sky News: “It’s not a thousand soldiers and there aren’t hundreds of horses, it’s very much smaller.

“It’s modest, it’s discreet, it’s appropriate and it’s socially distanced.

“It’s a chance for us to really make sure the Queen’s birthday is marked but also a chance for us to give gratitude for her guidance through this really difficult period.”

Trooping The Colour has marked the official birthday of the monarch for more than 260 years.

The tradition was started by King George II whose birthday was in November. Because the weather wasn’t very good at that time of year he decided to combine an official birthday parade with an annual military parade in the summer.

The Queen has been at Windsor Castle throughout the pandemic, along with her husband the Duke of Edinburgh, who celebrated his 99th birthday last Wednesday.

A new photograph of the couple was released to mark the occasion.

Until the parade, the Queen had not been seen outside at any official events since lockdown started.

However, earlier this week she took part in her first official video call, with her daughter Princess Anne, talking to carers across the country to celebrate their efforts.

She has also recorded two televised messages for the nation during the pandemic, but both were filmed under strict restrictions to protect her from the virus.

The monarch was photographed two weeks ago riding a pony in the grounds of Windsor Castle.

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Churchill statue ‘may have to be put in museum’

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PA Media

Image caption

A statue of Churchill in Parliament Square was boarded up ahead of a Black Lives Matter protest on Friday

A statue of Winston Churchill may have to be put in a museum to protect it if demonstrations continue, his granddaughter has said.

Emma Soames told the BBC the war-time prime minister was a “complex man” but he was considered a hero by millions.

She said she was “shocked” to see the monument in London’s Parliament Square boarded up, although she understood why it was necessary to do so.

It came after protesters daubed “was a racist” on the statue last weekend.

Ms Soames said it was “extraordinarily sad that my grandfather, who was such a unifying figure in this country, appears to have become a sort of icon through being controversial.”

“We’ve come to this place where history is viewed only entirely through the prism of the present,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

Ms Soames acknowledged her grandfather had often held views which “particularly now are regarded as unacceptable but weren’t necessarily then”.

However she added: “He was a powerful, complex man, with infinitely more good than bad in the ledger of his life.”

She said if people were “so infuriated” by seeing the statue it may be “safer” in a museum.

“But I think Parliament Square would be a poorer place without him,” she added.

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PA Media

Image caption

Last weekend the statue of Winston Churchill was spray-painted with the words “was a racist”

However, author Shrabani Basu, who has written books about the British Empire, said there were “two sides of Churchill” and “we need to know his darkest hour as well as his finest hour”.

She argued that in India, Churchill is not seen as a hero, citing his role in the 1943 Bengal famine, during which at least three million people are believed to have died.

While Ms Basu said she did not want to see the statue removed from Parliament Square, she said people should be taught “the whole story” about the war-time figure.

On Friday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson branded the boarding up of the statue to protect it from potential vandalism as “absurd and shameful”.

Mr Johnson said the former prime minister had expressed opinions which were “unacceptable to us today” but remained a hero for saving the country from “fascist and racist tyranny”.

“We cannot try to edit or censor our past,” he wrote of moves to remove tributes to historical figures. “We cannot pretend to have a different history.”

Why does Churchill divide opinion?

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Media captionBritain’s wartime leader divided opinion in his own lifetime, and remains a divisive figure today

Winston Churchill, who lived between 30 November 1874 and 24 January 1965, is often named among Britain’s greatest-ever people but for some he remains an intensely controversial figure.

Despite his leading the country through the darkest hours of World War Two and being prime minister twice, critics point to his comments on race and some of his actions during both world wars.

Churchill told the Palestine Royal Commission that he did not admit wrong had been done to Native Americans or aboriginal Australians as “a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place”.

His supporters argue that he was by no means the only person to hold these sorts of views during the period.

He also advocated the use of chemical weapons, “I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against uncivilised tribes,” he wrote in a memo.

Another criticism is for his part in the Bengal famine in India in 1943, during which at least three million people are believed to have died after Allied forces halted the movement of food in the region – including through British-run India – following the Japanese occupation of Burma.

The statue in London’s Parliament Square was boxed up ahead of a Black Lives Matter protest in Westminster on Friday evening.

A demonstration planned for Saturday was brought forward by a day because of fears there could be violent clashes with far-right groups.

The Met Police have placed restrictions on several groups intending to protest on Saturday, including requiring demonstrations to end at 17:00 BST.

Other monuments have been removed ahead of separate protests planned over the weekend, while the Cenotaph war memorial, in nearby Whitehall, has also been covered.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said other “key statues”, including one of Nelson Mandela, would be protected, saying there was a risk statues could become a “flashpoint for violence”.

It comes after the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was thrown into the harbour in Bristol during a Black Lives Matter protest on Sunday.

Demonstrations have been taking place across the world following the death in police custody of African American George Floyd in Minneapolis last month.

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Lawyers push for Slapp suit regulation in SA as Australian miner sues environmental activists – The Mail & Guardian

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The Western Cape High Court this week heard a case where Australian mining company’s Mineral Resources Commodities (MRC) and its local subsidiary, Mineral Sands Resources (MSR), are suing a group of activists and environment attorneys for a total of R14.25-million in three cases of alleged defamation. 

The mining companies claim that the defendants made statements that caused reputational damage in relation to its Tormin mining activities on the West Coast. This mine started in 2014 and, despite opposition, has recently been granted permission to expand its beach mining operations. 

The company wants to mine titanium in the sand dunes of Xolobeni, in the Pondoland region of the Eastern Cape, but for more than a decade the residents have opposed it. But the fight over its application has seen an anti-mining activist murdered and the mineral resources department embroiled in the controversy. 

The defendants — social worker John Clarke, environment lawyers Corman Cullinan, Christine Redell and Tracey Davies, Xolobeni activist Mzamo Dlamini and Lutzville activist Davine Cloete — deny defaming the company.  

Thandeka Kathi, an attorney at the Centre for Applied Legal Studies, told the Mail & Guardian that in defence of the defamation suit they are arguing that the group is the victim of a strategic lawsuit against public participation (Slapp), which she said is meritless and instituted for ulterior purposes. 

The European Centre for Press and Media Freedom warns that Slapp is not just an attack on freedom of speech but it aims to shut down important speech by intimidating critics and they will drain their resources in the process. It adds that one core characteristic of this kind of action is the disparity of power and resources between the plaintiff and the defendant.

Kathi said South Africa does not have anti-Slapp legislation and this is something the attorneys are trying to get the courts to develop so that small voices can defend themselves when big corporations want to stifle them. 

The Australian mining company’s presence in the country has been marred with controversy.  The company’s attempts to mine in the Eastern Cape have been linked to its Western Cape mine.The residents opposing dune mining at Xolobeni, which they say will damage a delicate ecosystem on which some of their economy relies, have used alleged transgressions at the Tormin mine to push back against the new mining application.

The M&G in 2018 published details of a report by global poverty alleviation nonprofit Oxfam, saying: “It appears MSR’s modus operandi is to do what it wants to do, regardless of the regulatory environment within which it exists or the priorities of other role-players.” 

Oxfam found that MSR had not delivered on its upliftment programme, despite revenues of R750‑million and a profit of R150‑million after tax in 2017.

Leanne Govindsamy, head of the Centre of Environmental Rights’s corporate accountability and transparency programme, said in a statement that such tactics undermine South Africa’s “constitutional democracy, the right to freedom of expression, including academic freedom and pose a threat to the robust and healthy civil society movement in South Africa”. 

One example of defamation the mining companies are suing for was allegedly made in a 2017 lecture at the University of Cape Town’s Summer School. Reddell, Davies and Cloete presented lectures as part of a series called the “Mining The Wild and the West Coast: ‘Development’ at what costs?”

When discussing the operations at the Tormin mine Davies said: “We have a situation where this company operates and continues to operate in circumstances where it is in breach of multiple environmental laws, mining laws, municipal by-laws as well as planning laws.” 

She also said: “They have armed guards on site and they have, on occasions, been extremely violent.” 

The mine’s lawyers complained that such comments which were made are “wrongful and defamatory”. 

But, the University of Cape Town, which is a second amicus curiae in the matter, argued for protection of “academic freedom” explaining that statements made in an academic setting should be protected. 

It said that for the “academic project to succeed, academics and students must be able to freely exchange ideas. If they fear being sued for defamation for what they say in the classroom, or what they write in journals or textbooks, the academic project will grind to a halt — the production of knowledge.”

In addition to the Slapp suit, the defendants’ lawyers say the mining company is suing without making any allegation that they have suffered any financial loss because of the alleged defamatory statements. Yet the company wants damages to the tune of R14.25-million or for a public apology from the defendants. 

The mining company’s lawyers took an exception to the defendants’ pleas [the Slapp suit and claimed loss of income], stating that the “exception to both of the special pleas in each of the actions because they lack averments necessary to sustain the defences they purport to raise. These are the exceptions that require determination.”

A decision either way will set a precedent in the law about free speech, which Deputy Judge Patricia Goliath will have to weigh up.

Tshegofatso Mathe is an Adamela Trust business reporter at the Mail & Guardian



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