Jammu group questions new J&K Class-IV recruitment rules

0

By: Express News Service | Jammu |

Published: June 6, 2020 6:26:41 am





Sharma on Friday said that according to the rules, any person can apply in any district of J&K, and given that “we seriously need to consider that Kashmiris can apply in any district of Jammu’’.

A day after he welcomed the new rules for recruitment of Class-IV employees in Jammu and Kashmir as “reasonable classification”, Ankur Sharma, chairman of Ikkjutt Jammu, which claims to fight against purported attempts by Kashmiris to change Jammu’s demography, on Friday criticised the same rules, saying that these will lead to “waves of Kashmiri settlements in districts of Jammu’’, who will “invade Jammu demographically’’.

Ikkjutt Jammu is against even settlement of nomadic Gujjars and Bakarwals in plains of Jammu division, calling it “land jihad by separatist jihadi elements”.

On Thursday, the J&K administration had notified rules providing for a common written test across the Union Territory for Class-IV posts arising at even district and divisional levels. Earlier, recruitment to Class-IV district- and divisional-level vacancies was made from among candidates from respective districts or divisions.

Sharma on Friday said that according to the rules, any person can apply in any district of J&K, and given that “we seriously need to consider that Kashmiris can apply in any district of Jammu’’. He said, “They (candidates from Kashmir) can get a job, buy property, get a house on rent, settle and live peacefully in any district of Jammu. Many of them even after encroaching forests and state lands in Jammu province are living peacefully.”

But, he asked, “can candidates from Jammu do the same and live peacefully in any district of Kashmir?’’

Sharma said, “Given the fact that De Facto Islamic State is calling shots in J&K, out of total number of posts advertised, what percentage of it do we think will go to Kashmir vis-a-vis Jammu: 70:30, 80:20, or 90:10? Even if it is 70:30, waves of Kashmiri settlements in districts of Jammu will invade Jammu demographically.”

📣 The Indian Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@indianexpress) and stay updated with the latest headlines

For all the latest Jammu News, download Indian Express App.

© The Indian Express (P) Ltd

Source link

In CA: Hoses to septic tanks could work on rioters, longtime cop posts

CLOSE

It’s Arlene Martínez with news to take you into the weekend. 

But first, check out what to wear, what your rights are, how to treat pepper spray and tear gas and other tips before you head out to protest. 

In California brings you top stories and commentary from across the USA TODAY Network and beyond. Sign up for free delivery right to your inbox. 

Newsom calls for policing to get into the 21st century

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday ordered the state police training program to stop teaching officers how to use a long-controversial hold designed to block the flow of blood to the brain. The carotid restraint, aka sleeper hold or blood choke, is named because it applies pressure to the carotid arteries that supply blood to the brain.

It marked his first action on police use of force following nearly two weeks of protests across the country over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Floyd died on Memorial Day after a police officer put his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as Floyd repeatedly said, “I can’t breathe.” The officer continued applying the pressure even after Floyd stopped moving altogether. 

Since then, there’s been a renewed push for law enforcement to review their use-of-force policies, along with calls to defund or dramatically decrease spending on police.

San Diego police officers used the carotid hold 574 times between 2013 and 2018, and as late as last year staunchly defended the practice, saying it saved lives. On Monday, the department banned its use, effective immediately.  So did the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department. 

Newsom said departments are using methods that “put people’s lives at risk. That has no place any longer in 21st century practices and policing.”

Temecula Mayor James Stewart resigns after sending an email in which he stated he didn’t “believe there’s ever been a good person of color killed by a police officer” in Riverside County. Stewart says he isn’t sure how “good” got added to his voice-composed message. 

Shasta County Sheriff Eric Magrini said he didn’t invite militiamembers to attend a protest earlier this week in Redding, but he knew they were coming. 

The mayor of San Luis Obispo, where police used tear gas to disperse protesters, has asked for a wide-reaching explanation into the department’s use-of-force policies. The council set aside $160,000 this week for anti-racism efforts. (Opinion)

A group of doctors say unequivocally, coronavirus cases will rise as a result of the protests. 

Traveling considerations and watch to learn

So you wanna road trip? One couple who traveled from the Ojai Valley to Kansas City, Missouri, found few “pleasures of the open road.” 

And while we’re talking travel, some states require quarantining when you cross into their territory. Find out which state requires what.

20 movies and shows towatch in a pandemiclearn about racism in America. 

Phase 3: Get ready to work out, drink and camp

Schools, day camps, bars, gyms, campgrounds and professional sports can start reopening in counties that have met certain thresholds related to number of cases, tracing and preparedness starting next Friday. 

Mark Ghaly, the state’s top health official, said the state will release guidance to help the businesses reopen safely and minimize the risk of spreading the coronavirus.

The guidelines will also include rules on hotels, casinos, museums, zoos and aquariums and the resumption of music, film and television production. Nail salons are not yet cleared to reopen.

What’s happening in our prisons and courts 

An explosion of coronavirus cases was recorded at the Chuckawalla Valley State Prison in Blythe, surging from 148 on May 26, to 794 three days later. 

Nationwide, 40,000 people incarcerated at prisons have tested positive. Here’s a state-by-state look at where those cases are located. 

Monterey County moves toresume jury trials. 

What else we’re talking about

Oil companies like California Resources Corp. toil with collapse or bankruptcy, but that won’t stop its top executives from seeing big paydays.

Can the Apple Watch or Fitbit detect or predict the coronavirus in a wearer? New research, including out of the Stanford Healthcare Innovation Lab, aims to find out.

Amazon cuts $2 per hour hazard pay; Target will keep its for another month.

J.C. Penney announces which of its stores will permanently close. Nine California locations are on the list.

If racism exists, he’s ‘never’ seen it, Simi Valley cop-turned-elected official says

An elected official and 30-year LAPD veteran took to Facebook earlier this week to share a suggestion: “Wanna stop the riots? Mobilize the septic tank trucks, put a pressure cannon on em… hose em down…. the end.”

Simi Valley City Council member Mike Judge captioned the post with, “This is brilliant, it will also enforce the mask rule!”

On Thursday night, as petitions calling for his resignation neared 6,000 signatures, Judge apologized for “any offense my Insensitivity caused.” He said he spoke with an African American friend who told him those who don’t know him wouldn’t realize it was a joke.

In initially defending the post, Judge said he’d “never” seen an instance of racism. He then (wrongly) explained that a young, black activist who invited him to walk during a “peaceful protest” probably got the perception there was racism because of the role Simi Valley played in the 1992 trial of Rodney King. 

The trial of the four officers caught on videotape beating King was moved to Simi Valley over concerns publicity over the case would bias jurors against the officers; legal experts at the time argued Simi’s demographics would in turn bias jurors in favor of the officers.

Mikiiya Foster, a black teenager who is organizing a protest on Saturday, shot down Judge’s explanation. “As a white male he openly discredits a black woman’s experience with racism instead of coming from a place of understanding and empathy,” she said. 

In California is a roundup of news from across USA TODAY Network newsrooms. Also contributing: The Marshall Project, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, San Diego Union-Tribune, San Luis Obispo Tribune. 

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/06/05/california-protests-use-force-militia-covid-19-fri-news/3155790001/



Source link

The Bachelor’s Bekah Martinez and Garrett Yrigoyen Argue Over Police Support Amid Protests

Bachelor Nation is divided after Garrett Yrigoyen posted a statement in support of “Thin Blue Line,” a phrase used in association with Blue Lives Matter countermovement.

In a lengthy statement, the 31-year-old expressed that he stands in solidarity with the “hundreds of thousands of men and women of all races that represent this Thin Blue Line.” He explained, “It’s important for me to recognize the ones who stand in the gap and put their lives on the line each and every single day for humans of different race and ethnicity, including those who hate them. The Thin Blue Line represents each officer protecting protestors, properties, and businesses while being threatened, attacked, shot, shot at, hit with vehicles, and other forms of brutality.”

The star, who is engaged to former Bachelorette Becca Kufrin, added that he’s sympathizes with the “over 300 [law enforcement officers] injured, shot, or killed in just one week.” According to a NBC News report, numerous law enforcement officers have suffered injuries during protests. Despite Garrett’s suggestion, which he did not provide sourcing for, the rate of police injuries or fatalities is not publicly clear.

Celebrities Attending Protests Over George Floyd’s Death

“They continue to put in overtime away from their families, stay silent while being threatened, hated, and assaulted. We can’t judge an entire group of people by the actions of a few. We can’t judge the peaceful protesters by the actions of the few violent protesters, and we sure can’t judge all cops by the actions of a few bad ones,” Ygrigoyen continued. “Remember when they put on the badge they’re still humans, with raw emotion, the more brutality they face the more on edge they become, they make mistakes, they have compassion, and no matter how terrible they are treated or whatever negative is said to them, they still show up for us when we need them!”

He concluded his message by imploring his followers to “remember” the law enforcement officers across the country.

Bekah Martinez, Garrett Yrigoyen, Twitter

His post drew ire from numerous people, including fellow Bachelor Nation members including Bekah Martinez, Nick Viall and Kendall Long among others.

“Uhhhhh law enforcement CHOOSES to put on a blue uniform. Black people don’t choose to be black. big difference. also “the more police brutality they face the more on edge they become”…. that’s scary as f–k,” Bekah commented. She also wrote “it’s interesting” that Garrett was “silent” when he posted a plain back square, referencing Black Out Tuesday, but voiced his support for cops.

“You’ve made your views known before and here’s a great reminder that not much has changed,” she stated.

The situation escalated when Garrett responded to Bekah’s criticism on his Instagram Story. In the post, he screenshotted Bekah’s comment and wrote, “I remember you saying how much you loved me to Becca and that you made a mistake for judging me in the past without knowing me… Needless to say you never got to know me, still don’t know me and you’re no longer invited over.”

Bekah Martinez, Garrett Yrigoyen, Twitter
Bekah Martinez, Garrett Yrigoyen, Twitter

Yrigoyen also explained that he was “advised to not caption” his black square, but insisted that it “doesn’t make me a racist nor does it take away” from the Black Lives Matter movement.

Without directly mentioning Garrett, Bekah expanded on her stance in a separate Instagram post.

“Here’s the thing: being black is not a uniform you can remove on your days off, it definitely does not protect you from the justice system, it is not something you get PAID to be, and it is most certainly not something you can quit or retire from,” she reasoned. “STOP COMPARING THE EXPERIENCE OF A CHOSEN CAREER TO THE EXPERIENCE OF BEING BLACK. You can love a cop, marry a cop, have a brother who’s a cop…and you can still hate the Blue Lives Matter movement and what it represents. you can choose to support cops AND understand that the ‘thin blue line’ flag now represents and signals BLUE LIVES MATTER to the majority of the population.”

In the comments section, Bekah clarified that she doesn’t “hate cops or don’t think their lives matter,” but she believes the Thin Blue Line flag “is in direct opposition to Black Lives Matter, regardless of whatever it was originally intended to represent.”

Becca Kufrin, Garrett Yrigoyen
Becca Kufrin, Garrett Yrigoyen

As her final say on the matter, Bekah revealed she made a $1,000 donation to the National Police Accountability Project in Garrett’s name.

The back and forth between Garrett and Bekah has seemingly stopped for the time being, but his fiancée Becca announced on her Instagram Story that she would address the controversy on the next episode of Bachelor Happy Hour with Rachel Lindsay.

In addition, she stated that she’s having “many conversations” behind the scenes. “Because I’m silent on my IG right now doesn’t mean I’m silent in my life,” Becca wrote.

In 2018, Becca and Garrett’s relationship was thrust into the spotlight when Bachelor contestant Ashley Spivey posted screenshots that suggested Garrett liked several offensive posts, including some that mock Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg and the trans community. He apologized for his actions and explained that he didn’t realize “the effect of a double tap or like on Instagram,” but hoped Becca would understand.

Then, as it was revealed that Becca accepted a proposal from Garrett, the couple shared they were working through the controversy together. “The Instagram situation, I don’t condone that,” Becca said at the time. “I know that he stands by his apology and he feels so bad for everyone that he did offend, and he didn’t mean it, but I just want to move forward and to learn and to grow, and to continue to educate ourselves, and that’s all you can ask for in another person, is that somebody who recognizes if they make a mistake and do something wrong, and want to learn and grow from it, and that’s what he’s shown me.”



Source link

CA to Resume Film & TV Production as Governor Shares Reopening Plans


California to Resume Film and Television Production as Governor Announces New Reopening Plan | Entertainment Tonight


































Source link

D.C. mayor has huge ‘Black Lives Matter’ name painted on street leading to White House

WASHINGTON — District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser on Friday had “Black Lives Matter” painted on the street that leads to the White House where protesters have been demonstrating following George Floyd’s death in police custody.

“There are people who are craving to be heard and to be seen, and to have their humanity recognized, and we had the opportunity to send that message loud and clear on a very important street in our city,” Bowser said at a press conference. “And it is that message, and that message is to the American people, that Black Lives Matter black humanity matters, and we as a city raise that up as part of our values as a city.”

The mayor said that the people who painted it were from the D.C. Public Works Department.

“There was a dispute this week about whose street this is,” John Falcicchio, chief of staff for Bowser, a Democrat, said earlier in a tweet. “Mayor Bowser wanted to make it abundantly clear that this is DC’s street and to honor demonstrators who (were) peacefully protesting on Monday evening.”

President Donald Trump slammed Bowser Friday afternoon, tweeting, “The incompetent Mayor of Washington, D.C., @MayorBowser, who’s budget is totally out of control and is constantly coming back to us for ‘handouts’, is now fighting with the National Guard, who saved her from great embarrassment…over the last number of nights. If she doesn’t treat these men and women well, then we’ll bring in a different group of men and women!”

Trump continued to attack Bowser into Friday evening, calling her “incompetent.”

“.@MayorBowser is grossly incompetent, and in no way qualified to be running an important city like Washington, D.C. If the great men and women of the National Guard didn’t step forward, she would have looked no better than her counterpart Mayor in Minneapolis!” he said in a tweet.

People were seen painting the words “Black Lives Matter” on Friday morning in large block letters in yellow across 16th street, which leads to Lafayette Square and the White House.

Bowser tweeted later in the morning that that particular section of 16th Street has been renamed “Black Lives Matter Plaza.”

The official D.C. chapter of the Black Lives Matter Global Network, however, suggested in a tweet that this move was merely an empty gesture by Bowser.

A giant Black Lives Matter sign is painted on 16th Street near the White House on June 5, 2020.Daniel Slim / AFP – Getty Images

“This is a performative distraction from real policy changes. Bowser has consistently been on the wrong side of BLMDC history. This is to appease white liberals while ignoring our demands. Black Lives Matter means defund the police. @emilymbadger say it with us,” the account tweeted.

This comes several days after Trump ordered the U.S. Park Police and National Guard troops forcefully removed demonstrators who were peacefully protesting outside the White House on Monday evening. The crowd was dispersed so Trump could walk out of the White House to St. John’s Episcopal Church for a photo-op in which he held up a Bible.

Bowser blasted Trump for what occurred, tweeting, “I imposed a curfew at 7 pm. A full 25 minutes before the curfew & w/o provocation, federal police used munitions on peaceful protesters in front of the White House, an act that will make the job of @DCPoliceDept officers more difficult. Shameful! DC residents — Go home. Be safe.”

Bowser also sent letters to Govs. Mike DeWine of Ohio, a Republican, and Phil Murphy of New Jersey, a Democrat, ordering them to remove their National Guard troops from the city.

Bowser, who also sent a letter to Trump earlier this week ordering him to remove federal law enforcement and military members, said the troops were sent to the city by the White House without her knowledge. Washington has a National Guard, but since the city is a special federal designation it is controlled by the president.

“However, as we have increasingly seen in recent days their presence is unnecessary and may be counterproductive to ensuring the protests remain peaceful,” she wrote in separate letters to both governors.

Murphy said in a press conference earlier Monday that it was intended to be a “short-term deployment” to help protect federal monuments. A spokesman for Murphy said in a statement Friday that the deployment will end Friday.

“There were approximately 85 National Guard members sent to DC and their mission was anyway scheduled to end at 9:00 a.m. tomorrow prior to this tweet. They were sent for a very limited mission protecting monuments and are on the night shift tonight near the Lincoln Memorial,” the spokesman said.

DeWine did not immediately respond to Bowser’s request but tweeted earlier he had removed a member of the Ohio National Guard who expressed “white supremacist ideology.”

The painting of the phrase Black Lives Matter came as Bowser shared a letter addressed to Trump from Thursday in which she requested that he withdraw “all extraordinary federal law enforcement and military presence from Washington, D.C.” now that she has ended the state of emergency for the city and the Metropolitan Police Department didn’t make any arrests on Wednesday night.

CORRECTION (June 5, 2020 2:06 p.m.): Photo captions on a previous version of this article incorrectly described who painted “Black Lives Matter” on 16th Street in Washington, D.C. City employees painted the tribute at the mayor’s instruction; the painters were not protesters.



Source link

Twitter Locks Account That Posts Trump’s Tweets Verbatim After Less Than 3 Days

The Twitter account @SuspendThePres, which tweets the exact same words as President Donald Trump, was set up to determine if Twitter’s algorithms would flag it as inappropriate. 

It achieved its goal in less than three days, after posting Trump’s May 29 tweet describing protesters as “THUGS” and threatening violent intervention in Minneapolis. 

Twitter hit the account with a 12-hour lock approximately 68 hours later and deleted its version of the president’s “THUGS” tweet. According to the account holder, who also tweets as @BizarreLazer, Twitter’s reasoning for the violation was “glorifying violence.” 

Trump’s tweet was flagged for the same reason, but it remains online — albeit branded with a disclaimer indicating that “it may be in the public’s interest for the tweet to remain accessible.” There’s also a disclaimer on the official White House account’s version of the tweet, which was cross-posted from Trump’s account. 

A Twitter spokesperson told HuffPost that Trump’s status as a world leader made his tweet of public interest despite violating the platform’s rules, and cited two blog posts from Twitter detailing its policies on the subject.

“This isn’t a Trump rule — we’ve applied this previously,” the spokesperson said, citing an example from April in which Brazilian politician Osmar Terra tweeted that quarantine measures would only increase cases of COVID-19. 

This echoes the statement the @TwitterComms account supplied in May, which argued that “it is important that the public still be able to see the tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance.”

The @SuspendThePres account, which encourages followers to “report my rule violating tweets,” began tweeting on May 29. In private messages exchanged with HuffPost, the account holder clarified that they are a U.S. citizen and preferred to remain anonymous “to allow the experiment to stand for itself.” They said the impetus for the account was Trump’s executive order against social media companies.

“The order in question would strip media platforms big and small alike from liability protections, which in effect could shut down a significant portion of them,” they noted, adding, “If I ran a blog the first thing I’d do is cut off commenting … It would in effect be large scale internet censorship.” 

“I decided to run this experiment right after that executive order,” they said. “I wanted to see for myself if [Trump] was indeed violating the [terms of service]. What better way to test out the hypothesis than to see if they suspended me for the exact same language?”

@SuspendThePres’ account holder said the company’s response has “raised a whole host of additional questions,” including, “Will Twitter continue to find the tweets in violation? How many times? How long does it take in general to remove offending content from the platform? Will Twitter shutdown the experiment permanently? Will Twitter be more/less/equally lenient towards future presidents?”

Asked about Twitter’s decision to categorize Trump’s tweets as within the public interest, the account holder called the situation “a rock and a hard place for the platform and social media as a whole.”

“On one side you have to have community standards for the masses that need to be followed, and on the other side you have people of such significance using the same platform that the rules are bent for. It makes sense that Twitter wants the world to be aware of what’s going on… I definitely understand the pushback as well – the argument of ‘why should regular social media users be held to a higher standard than world leaders?’ It’s a pretty big conversation and I’m sure it will be discussed for years to come.”

In the meantime, @SuspendThePres will continue tweeting Trump’s words, and on Thursday, announced its intention to expand the experiment to another social network — the one owned by Mark Zuckerberg. 

Jesselyn Cook contributed reporting.



Source by [author_name]

Coronavirus live news: China warns of Covid-linked ‘racial violence’ overseas










Mexico reports 4,346 new cases and 625 deaths










Victoria reports no new cases for the first time since pandemic began

Updated










Updated










Updated










Summary

Updated



Source link

Facebook’s Zuckerberg promises a review of content policies after backlash

0

FILE PHOTO: Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., October 23, 2019. REUTERS/Erin Scott

(Reuters) – Facebook (FB.O) CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Friday said he would consider changes to the policy that led the company to leave up controversial posts by President Donald Trump during recent demonstrations protesting the death of an unarmed black man while in police custody, a partial concession to critics.

Zuckerberg did not promise specific policy changes in a Facebook post, days after staff members walked off the job, some claiming he kept finding new excuses not to challenge Trump.

“I know many of you think we should have labeled the President’s posts in some way last week,” Zuckerberg wrote, referring to his decision not to remove Trump’s message containing the phrase “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

“We’re going to review our policies allowing discussion and threats of state use of force to see if there are any amendments we should adopt,” he wrote. “We’re going to review potential options for handling violating or partially-violating content aside from the binary leave-it-up or take-it-down decisions.”

Zuckerberg said Facebook would be more transparent about its decision-making on whether to take down posts, review policies on posts that could cause voter suppression and would look to build software to advance racial justice, led by important lieutenants.

At a staff meeting earlier this week, employees questioned Zuckerberg’s stance on Trump’s post.

Zuckerberg, who holds a controlling stake in Facebook, has maintained that while he found Trump’s comments “deeply offensive,” they did not violate company policy against incitements to violence.

Facebook’s policy is either to take down a post or leave it up, without any other options. Now, Zuckerberg said, other possibilities would be considered.

However, he added, “I worry that this approach has a risk of leading us to editorialize on content we don’t like even if it doesn’t violate our policies.”

Reporting by Ayanti Bera in Bengaluru and Peter Henderson in Oakland; Editing by Anil D’Silva and Leslie Adler

Source link

Bashed and burned, 3 Chinese are murdered in Zambia as racial tensions run high

0

But CCTV footage seized by police, and seen by CNN, revealed a brutal afternoon of carnage.

At midday on Sunday, May 24, three Zambian attackers with iron bars entered the grounds of a Chinese-owned textile warehouse in Lusaka. Police said they were pretending to be potential customers.

But the trio did not want to do business.

Over the next 17 minutes, the CCTV footage shows, they beat two men and one woman to death in the courtyard, before dragging their bodies into the adjoining warehouse.

That’s where the footage ends. According to police, the attackers then dismembered their bodies and used flammable materials from the Blue Star clothing business to set their bodies and the building ablaze, burning them so severely that it took Zambian authorities three days to retrieve their charred remains from the rubble.

Before fleeing, the attackers raided the property for valuables. A blood-stained machete was found by police.

The gruesome murder of 52-year-old Cao Guifang, the wife of the textile warehouse owner — who was in their home province of Jiangsu, in eastern China, when the attack happened — and her two male employees, Bao Junbin, 58, and Fan Minjie, 33, came at the end of a week when anti-Chinese sentiment in the Zambian capital was nearing boiling point.

In the days leading up to the murder, Lusaka Mayor Miles Sampa had accused Chinese bosses in the capital of “slavery reloaded,” used the derogatory term “Chinaman,” and, stoking racial divides, reminded the public in a video posted on his Facebook account that “black Zambians did not originate coronavirus. It originated in China.”

There are an estimated 22,000 Chinese nationals living in Zambia, operating 280 companies, mostly spread between Lusaka and the copperbelt in the north. Beijing owns about 44% of Zambia’s debt, which has led to fear among some Zambians that China has too much control over the country.

While police have not directly linked the murder to anti-Chinese sentiment, the crime came as a reminder of the violent outbursts some Chinese have faced while living in Zambia, a key partner for China along its coveted Belt and Road project.

“Even some of the people who stayed here for more than 20 years, they’ve also been shocked by such kind of criminal activities,” says Eric Shen, a Chinese businessman who has been living in Zambia for more than a decade.

Forced quarantine

Zambia reported its first coronavirus cases on March 18. As with much of Africa, the initial infections did not come from China, but Europe, after a couple who had recently returned from a trip to France imported the virus.

The central African nation went into partial lockdown, shutting borders, businesses and implementing social distancing rules.

As the pandemic took its toll on Zambia’s economy, reports began to emerge that some Chinese businesses were defying the lockdown measures, either by continuing to serve Chinese customers, or by quarantining Zambian workers inside their premises.

Mayor Sampa began a campaign to expose such cases.

On May 18, Sampa shut down a Chinese restaurant, which had reportedly denied Zambian patrons, for selling products labeled in Chinese and not English, as prescribed by the law. A few days later, he revoked the license of a Chinese barber shop for “discriminating against blacks.”
After those raids, Sampa posted video of himself bursting in on Chinese managers eating dinner at a truck assembly factory, where workers had allegedly been told to live on-site during the pandemic, and not return to their families, so they could keep working without risking getting infected in the community.

“We found Zambian workers made to sleep in a small container (six people in one container) with mattresses put on the floor,” Sampa wrote on Facebook.

In the video, one Chinese manager responds: “We don’t allow them to go home because of the corona issue.”

Sampa responds: “Chinaman … (there) is no excuse to enslave them.”

On the same day, Sampa visited a cement factory, where he said workers had been held for two months.

When a Chinese boss explains in the video Sampa posted to Facebook of the visit that within the plant, all the workers were not able to go out, Sampa replies: “That is illegal. You are holding them hostage. That’s slavery.”

One Zambian employee at the cement factory told CNN: “We were asked by our (Chinese) bosses to stay and work from here until the coronavirus is over because they fear we might contract it from the community and bring it to our workplace.

Mayor of Lusaka Miles Sampa asks staff at a Zambian cement factory about reports 100 Zambian workers have been prohibited from leaving the site during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“But they provide us food, mosquito nests and mattresses where we sleep. We sleep like in a camp … but some of our colleagues who refused have been sacked and they will reapply once the company reopens.”

Another Zambian employee of the same company claimed that his Chinese boss threatened to beat him if he refused to stay. “We were being forced by our Chinese bosses and they threatened to beat you if you refuse. That is how some of us ran away — right now, we just want the government to help us claim our unpaid salaries,” he said.

When CNN contacted the factory, an employee who declined to give his name denied accusations of wrongdoing.

“We are not holding them to be prisoners — we are just protecting them from this corona disease,” he said. “The workers are paid more for sleeping at the plant.”

He would not say how much extra had been provided, but one employee said the workers are normally paid 1, 600 Zambian kwacha ($95) per month.

Rekindled old fires

The Chinese presence in Zambia has been controversial for decades.

In 2005, an explosion at a mine near Chambeshi, a town in Zambia’s copperbelt, killed dozens of Zambian workers. Five years later, two Chinese managers opened fire on Zambian workers who were protesting bad labor conditions at the Collum coal mine. In 2012, Zambian workers killed a Chinese supervisor at the same mine.

The incidents attracted global media attention and have often been held up as proof of poor Chinese labor standards — not only in Zambia but across the African continent.

So when the issue of Zambian workers being forced into quarantine by Chinese bosses emerged during the pandemic, “it rekindled some of the old sentiment that people have had against Chinese employers,” says Kanenga Haggai, lecturer in the Department of Development Studies at the University of Zambia and PhD candidate at Southeast University, in China. “If not well handled, then it has the potential to ruin China’s relations with Zambia, on a people-to-people level.”

Today, China trades more with Zambia than any other country in Africa bar Kenya. In 2018, bilateral trade was in excess of $5 billion.

Yet while Zambian exports to China are considerable, thanks to its copper output, what many ordinary Zambians see on the ground is the pervasion of Chinese people and companies in their country. Major infrastructure projects including airports, highways and dams in Zambia have been built by Chinese state-owned, or linked, firms.

Wu Jiu Hua (L) and Xiao Li Shan (C), the two Chinese managers alleged to have shot 12 workers at Collum coal mine, leave the Choma Magistrate Court with other Zambian suspects on November 2, 2010 in Sinazongwe.
China also operates in the crucial mining sector, as do companies other foreign nations, and a Beijing-backed — although not owned — company even bought a 60% share in the Zambian state broadcaster. Local media frequently run inflammatory headlines, such as “How China is slowly colonizing Zambian economy.”

“Zambians feel that China is slowly taking over their land, business, and that now Chinese people are given privileged treatment from the government officials,” says Haggai. “We’ve seen a lot of Chinese are acquiring huge chunks of land.”

Chinese influence is a lightning-rod political issue in the country. In 2018, a Lusaka politician proposed building a China City, where Chinese expats would be restricted to doing their small business, after Zambians complained about foreigners engaging in their trades such as chicken rearing and running restaurants and salons, which have traditionally been their domain.
Before that, in 2006, the late Zambian politician Michael Sata claimed that 80,000 Chinese were “infesting” Zambia as he ran for the presidency on a xenophobic campaign, which led to racial attacks on Chinese-run workplaces. Chinese shopkeepers had to barricade their stores against attacks by looters. The actual number of Chinese in the country is much lower.

While Sata had threatened to recognize Taiwan as an independent state before taking office, when he finally became President, on his fourth attempt in 2011, he embraced China as “Zambia’s all-weather friend” and abandoned his campaign promises.

Mayor Sampa is Sata’s nephew, and he likely understands how well taking a hard line on China will play with voters.

Michael Sata in 2006 during an address at a political rally.

In a time of heightened racial tensions globally, Haggai says that Sampa should be cautious in the language he uses when talking about the Chinese presence to not stoke xenophobia.

“Of course, he has the mandate and the responsibility to check what is going on in the companies and factories in his jurisdiction, but he must be careful with what he says because this has become a very sensitive issue that might fuel further resentment against Chinese people,” he says.

After being advised to stay in his lane by central government authorities, perhaps mindful of Zambia’s economic dependence on China, Sampa issued an apology to the Chinese community.

He said: “I wish to apologies unreservedly … for the tone and language used towards one of their nationals in particular on the use of the word ‘Chinaman.’ I did not know hitherto that it was derogatory term, but they have since lodged in a formal complaint against my use of the word.

“Finally, I wish to assure all foreign investors in the city of Lusaka that my office is there to support their businesses 100% … we shall engage them in a more civil manner through relevant offices and institutions.”

A sign welcomes Chinese Premier  Hu Jintao to Ndola on March 25, 2007 in Zambia.  Hu  visited Africa in early 2007 and also Zambia.

A memorial

On Monday, hundreds gathered at the scene of the murder in Lusaka to pay their respects to the Chinese migrants who lost their lives. Zambians and Chinese stood side by side, wearing face masks, as they mourned the dead.

Zambian employees from the textile business said a few words, along with fellow Chinese expatriates, according to Eric Shen, the Lusaka businessman who was master of ceremonies.

According to friends, Cao and her husband had been in Zambia for about 20 years, and from their warehouse they sold textiles, bedding and clothing they imported from Nantong, their home region of China which is known for textile production.

A memorial for the Chinese victims was held on Monday this week in Lusaka.

The Zambian ambassador to China, Winnie N. Chibesakunda, told state-run tabloid the Global Times that Zambia will strengthen measures to protect the lives of Chinese living in the country. In October 2015, three Chinese people were killed in a robbery in Kitwe, and in November 2017 a Chinese national died in an armed robbery in the copperbelt.

“The government of the Republic of Zambia has instituted investigations to bring the perpetrators of this gruesome act to justice and shall endeavor to continue strengthening measures to protect the lives of Chinese living in Zambia,” she stated. Zambian authorities have arrested two men and one woman on suspicion of murder.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said that the murders were an isolated case that “won’t affect the mainstream of friendly cooperation between China and Zambia.”

Shen, the Lusaka-based businessman, concluded that, “these kinds of criminal activities can happen anywhere, any place, any time in this world.” He said the Chinese community was trying not to link the killings to rising anti-Chinese sentiment, in a place where many have chosen to call home.

CNN’s Shawn Deng also contributed to this report.

Source link

Defiant Washington DC mayor has ‘Black Lives Matter’ painted on street near White House

“We want troops from out-of-state, out of Washington, DC,” Bowser, who has called for the District of Columbia to be granted US statehood, told reporters on Thursday.

The city also installed a street sign for “Black Lives Matter Plaza” at the intersection of H and 16th Streets.

“Black Lives Matter” is seen painted on a street in Washington, DC.Credit:Bloomberg

“The incompetent Mayor of Washington, DC, @MayorBowser, who’s budget is totally out of control and is constantly coming back to us for ‘handouts’, is now fighting with the National Guard, who saved her from great embarrassment,” Trump responded on Twitter. “If she doesn’t treat these men and women well, then we’ll bring in a different group of men and women!”

On Friday, a US official said the Pentagon would be sending back the remaining 900 active-duty troops who had been deployed to the Washington, DC, area.

Streets around the White House have been a focus of demonstrations that have swept the nation to protest the May 25 death of Floyd, 46, after a white police officer pinned him to the ground with a knee to the neck for nearly nine minutes.

Protests have also rocked cities including Atlanta, Denver, Detroit and Los Angeles, as well as many smaller communities.

A newly installed street sign designates Black Lives Matter Plaza NW in Washington, DC.

A newly installed street sign designates Black Lives Matter Plaza NW in Washington, DC.Credit:Bloomberg

After video footage from upstate New York raised further questions about the handling of demonstrators by law enforcement, two Buffalo police officers seen on Thursday shoving a 75-year-old protester to the ground were suspended and placed under investigation.

All 57 members of their police tactical unit quit the unit to protest their treatment, local media said Friday.

Responding to the still-resonating outcry over Floyd’s death, Minneapolis officials on Friday voted to end the use of knee restraints and choke holds.

California Governor Gavin Newsom said on Friday that he would end state police training in the use of restraints that restrict the carotid artery in the neck.

Loading

Activists have also called for cities to defund police departments. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who in April proposed increasing law enforcement funding, this week proposed some $US150 million in cuts to the Los Angeles Police Department.

The demonstrations have erupted as Americans and businesses struggle to recover from sweeping lockdowns imposed by state and local officials due to the coronavirus.

Trump, who is seeking re-election in November, was cheered on Friday by an unexpected jump in US employment in May, defying predictions of further job losses inflicted by the pandemic.

“What’s happened to our country and what you now see has been happening is the greatest thing that could happen for race relations, for the African-American community, for the Asian-American, for the Hispanic-American community, for women, for everything,” Trump said.

Bowser, who is black, represents a city that is 47 per cent black, according to Census data.

She has said she is fine with DC National Guard helping to keep order in Washington, but is examining all legal options to reverse the deployment of federal forces from elsewhere.

Further demonstrations were planned for Washington, DC on Saturday, and memorial services were expected over the next several days. Floyd’s funeral is planned for Tuesday.

Loading

The change in mood reflected a determination by activists and organisers to turn outrage over Floyd’s death into a renewed civil rights movement and reform police departments and the US criminal justice system.

Despite the improvement overall in Friday’s jobs report, unemployment among African Americans was higher in May than in April, a statistic that critics were certain to cite as underscoring racial disparities in American society.

The unemployment rate for African Americans is 3.5 percentage points higher than the national rate of 13.3 per cent, while the rate for whites is 12.4 per cent, nearly a full point below the national rate.

Most Viewed in World

Loading

Source by [author_name]