EU to consider escalating legal dispute with Britain over divorce treaty
EU to consider escalating legal dispute with Britain over divorce treaty

FILE PHOTO: European Union’s Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier walks at Westminster in London, Britain October 28, 2020. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Commission will consider escalating its legal dispute with Britain over the violation of the Brexit withdrawal treaty because Britain did not answer the EU’s initial actions within the allotted one-month deadline, the EU executive said.

The EU sent a formal letter of notice to London at the start of October over its internal market bill that breaches agreements in the treaty ending Britain’s membership of the European Union.

A European Commission spokesman said on Tuesday that Britain had failed to reply and that the Commission would therefore now consider the next step in the legal dispute which is a reasoned opinion.

Reporting by Jan Strupczewski; Editing by John Chalmers

Buddhist Times News – First Buddhist Chaitya, more stupas excavated in Gujarat’s Vadnagar
Buddhist Times News – First Buddhist Chaitya, more stupas excavated in Gujarat’s Vadnagar

First Buddhist Chaitya, more stupas excavated in Gujarat’s Vadnagar


By  —  Shyamal Sinha

The Covid lockdown interval has yielded a serious treasure for the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) crew working at Vadnagar, the hometown of PM Narendra Modi. This features a pretty well-preserved construction believed to be a Chaitya, a shrine with a prayer corridor, and two stupas in the neighborhood.

The word caitya appears in the Vedic literature of Hinduism. In early Buddhist and Hindu literature, a caitya is any ‘piled up monument’ or ‘sacred tree’ under which to meet or meditate.
The historic marvels have been dug up from close to the grain godown in Vadnagar and date again to the 2nd to seventh Century. This time interval coincides with Chinese traveller-monk Hiuen Tsang’s go to to the traditional city in the seventh Century.
A crew of ASI’s Excavation Branch V has been stationed in the traditional city since 2015 to hold out cultural sequencing of the PM’s hometown. Work in season 2019-20 was primarily targeted on two spots – Amba Ghat on the banks of Sharmishtha Lake, and the neighborhood of grain godown close to the railway line.
“The main structure, possibly a Chaitya, was excavated from the site spread over a 50X20 metre area. It is an apsidal (semi-circular) structure. The structure is being closely studied but is believed to be a Buddhist Chaitya because of it’s unique design,” mentioned sources near the event. “The Chaitya structure dates back to 2nd-3rd Century CE. It also shows signs of repairs around 5th Century CE onwards.”
‘Built chaityas rarer than rock-cut ones’
chaitya, chaitya hall, chaitya-griha, or caitya refers to a shrine, sanctuary, temple or prayer hall in Indian religions. The term is most common in Buddhism, where it refers to a space with a stupa and a rounded apse at the end opposite the entrance, and a high roof with a rounded profile.Strictly speaking, the chaitya is the stupa itself, and the Indian buildings are chaitya halls, but this distinction is often not observed. Outside India, the term is used by Buddhists for local styles of small stupa-like monuments in NepalCambodiaIndonesia and elsewhere.

The chaitya and stupa are situated away from the traditional boundary of the city with a water physique in the neighborhood. These traits are sometimes discovered in historic Buddhist websites. We have all causes to consider this to be a website that will have been one of many 10 websites noticed by Hiuen Tsang,” mentioned an professional.
Archaeology specialists mentioned that discovering a constructed chaitya is much less frequent than a rock-cut one. Devni Mori, one other landmark Buddhist website in Gujarat, had an apsidal construction, they added.
A round stupa measuring 3mx1.5m was discovered from the identical construction, which specialists affiliate with the sooner part of the chaitya. Another memorial stupa — a 2mx2m sq. — has been discovered from the identical website. “It’s identified as a memorial stupa as we have also found a space to keep the revered relics. This structure dates to 5th-7th century CE,” mentioned an professional related to the venture.
Experts related to the venture say the recent discoveries additional cements Vadnagar’s stake as an necessary Buddhist centre in the previous millennium. In the previous decade, a Buddhist construction, believed to be a nunnery, was unearthed by the state archaeology division. Later excavations by ASI have thrown up a superstructure on the banks of Sharmishtha Lake, 23 chambers believed to be a monastery, and a big cache of Buddhist artefacts.

Apparently the last rock-cut chaitya hall to be constructed was Cave 10 at Ellora, in the first half of the 7th century. By this time the role of the chaitya hall was being replaced by the vihara, which had now developed shrine rooms with Buddha images (easily added to older examples), and largely taken over their function for assemblies.


Oxford Road Fortifies Executive Team – Appoints Steven Abraham as President, Brings on Kraig Kitchin and Jennifer Laine
Oxford Road Fortifies Executive Team – Appoints Steven Abraham as President, Brings on Kraig Kitchin and Jennifer Laine
By partnering with these three individuals of stunning reputation and talent, our company has never been positioned to reach even greater heights.””

— Oxford Road Founder and CEO, Dan Granger

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES, November 3, 2020 /EINPresswire.com/ — Oxford Road, a leading agency in audio and spoken word media, today announced three key additions to its executive team, as the company enters a new phase of growth and charts an expanded course of industry innovation and new initiatives. Widely respected global agency veteran Steven Abraham joins Oxford Road as its new President. Audio industry veteran and pioneer Kraig Kitchin joins as Strategic Advisor. Jennifer Laine, former fashion industry leader, president of an experiential learning company, and Oxford Road ally, formally joins the company to lead Marketing and key strategic initiatives.

“I’ve always subscribed to David Ogilvy’s notion that by hiring people bigger than we are, we shall become a company of giants. By partnering with these three individuals of stunning reputation and talent, our company has never been positioned to reach even greater heights.” said Oxford Road Founder and CEO, Dan Granger. “Oxford Road launched in 2013 and quickly became one of the fastest-growing companies in America. In the last few years, we have focused on building a world class infrastructure and deepening our competitive advantage. We are now poised to win our category by enabling our clients to win theirs.”

The appointments come at a time of notable expansion for the agency — with 50 active clients in 2020 achieving accelerated growth across thousands of media properties, it was time to call in the Big Guns. Granger continued, “As many companies slowed down this year, we made a conscious decision to speed up. These hires will allow us to stay Mission Focused and provide the expertise to provide a world class offering to our clients. Steven has been a rising star in our field, being recognized as ’40 Under 40′ for his work in Europe and more recently an L.A. Adweek Allstar. His experience as a Managing Director with Mediacom and OMD will ensure that all of our clients receive the same level of sophistication in strategy and service as the largest brands in America. Under Steven’s leadership, we will help see through our next phase of growth and expand our capabilities as traditional media channels make their final shift into the digital age. We are grateful for his global agency pedigree, and most importantly his alignment with our Mission to provide best-in-market performance at maximum scale for our clients. And besides, everyone knows I’m a sucker for a British Accent.”

While the installation of Mr. Abraham as President immediately adds new horizontal capacities for the agency, it also fuels the critical march toward leadership and core capabilities in audio. Bolstering their position even further, Oxford Road welcomes Mr. Kraig Kitchen as Strategic Advisor. According to Granger, “Kraig has been a mentor to me since well before I started the agency, so I am deeply humbled that he will now be closely advising the team in a formal capacity.”

Kraig Kitchin is a living legend in audio. A co-founder of Premiere Radio Networks, he led the network for 10 years to become the nation’s largest radio network measured by both annual revenues and audiences reached. Kitchin oversaw radio programming hosted by an all-star roster of personalities including Ryan Seacrest, Steve Harvey, Rush Limbaugh, Delilah, Jim Rome, Dr. Laura, Casey Kasem, George Noory, Bill Handel and scores of others. He was named one of the most Powerful People in Radio for ten consecutive years. Kitchin currently operates several businesses in partnership with top ranked and distinguished radio personalities. He is President of the talent management firm, SoundMind, with a focused effort toward managing the businesses of high-profile radio personalities and production companies.

Granger continues, “Kraig is not only immortalized on the Mount Rushmore of leaders in the audio field, he is one of the finest human beings I’ve ever known. This is still very much a relationship business and Kraig’s guiding hand will ensure that we elevate our contributions to client, media and talent relationships beyond anything ever achieved by an agency. His involvement is a critical ingredient to achieve our ambition of being the absolute leader in the space.”

As Oxford Road’s core agency business continues to grow and strengthen, innovation remains a top priority including development of the firm’s proprietary ad scoring system, Audiolytics™ and pioneering work in the evolution of the Smart Speaker landscape. Granger is clear that the road ahead travels toward an expanded purpose, for which Ms. Laine will be instrumental. He noted, “Jennifer has been a brilliant collaborator in orchestrating an agency rebrand (https://oxfordroad.com/) and partnering with us in the launch of work to extend our brand across the ecosystem. We’ve always been strong on substance, and now Jennifer’s contribution ensures we have equal strength in style. What’s more, she has made possible initiatives to further expand our mission as an organization and commitment to live out the idea of stakeholder capitalism during these turbulent times. In addition to helping establish Oxford Road’s podcasting arm and inaugural series, she is masterfully steering the ship on the undertakings we will reveal in the coming months. Stay tuned.”

Three Backgrounds of the Highest Order

Prior to joining Oxford Road, Mr. Abraham was a Managing Director of OMD USA. He has served other posts as Managing Director EVP of MediaCom LA, Global Client Director at Mediacom Global, VP of Media and Advertising Universal Pictures International and is currently a strategic business development advisor to Orfium, a leading software development business in the online content rights management space. An accomplished international media professional with 25 years of experience in the media and entertainment industry, his varied agency and company roles and responsibilities have ranged from planning, developing and implementing global multi-million dollar through-the line campaigns on behalf of multinational companies.

“I’ve been impressed by Dan’s style and approach and the way he has led the agency. Oxford Road is a hidden gem,” said Abraham. “This is a very attractive, appealing opportunity for me to come in and help a team of extremely smart practitioners in media, in a specific space, and enable them to spread their wings into other kinds of media environments, whether that be digital, analog, or any of the emerging platforms that are out there. Furthermore, it’s the agency’s concept of ‘influence’ that resonates here. The aim of adding the element of influence in the messages to consumers that they want to reach, toward helping behavioral changes that are ultimately going to be better for them within the communication that they consumers and getting involved within the conversation rather than just implementing somewhat traditional, two-dimensional advertising. That guiding principle at Oxford Road is attractive to me.”

Oxford Road’s newest strategic advisor, Mr. Kitchin, continues to operate several businesses in partnership with top ranked and distinguished radio personalities. Among other ongoing endeavors, he acts as co-President of Big Shoes Productions, Inc., a radio programming production company, owned by radio host, Delilah and is co-President of the talent management firm, Sound Mind, with a focused effort towards managing the businesses of high-profile radio personalities. He is Chairman of the National Radio Hall of Fame.

Kitchin added, “From day one, Dan Granger and the team at Oxford Road have been genuinely committed to client success. There’s not a time that I have been with any of the team members where I have just not felt this sense of urgency and this sense of competitiveness to want to come through for the client. It’s pure. There’s no distraction. They are entirely geared towards, ‘How do we do great work for clients?’”

Ms. Laine has formally joined the company to oversee strategic marketing and business development in addition to the critical aforementioned initiatives. These include producing “Oxford Road Presents,” namely its limited run series currently in progress, “The Divided States of Media,” focuses on the current polarized state of media as they, and the brands who support them, deal with programming and policy decisions against a backdrop of an increasingly divided populace as well as the culmination of this series, an initiative expected to debut in the weeks to follow the election, Media Roundtable. This initiative soon to be announced is in partnership with the National Institute for Civil Discourse and Ad Fontes Media, creator of the Media Bias Chart.

“With such a long-standing regard for Dan, the agency and their visionary and totally effective ways, the timing is perfect for my officially joining the team at Oxford Road,” Laine shared. “The strategic marketing work is fundamental. But, it’s the expanded vision for business, media partnerships and cultural impact that we expect to make the media industry safer for brands, and better for consumers. And therefore, the daily lives of our audiences who we all ultimately serve.”

Granger concludes, “With the partnership now complete with these three individuals of unparalleled talent, experience and character, there is now only one thing left to do: Win.”

For more information on the Media Roundtable, and how to get involved in the collective for better media business practices, please contact kallen@witstrategy.com.

Download “Oxford Road Presents: The Divided States of Media” here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/oxford-road-presents-the-divided-states-of-media/id1510649799

Kendall Allen Rockwell
WIT Strategy
+1 917-714-9213
email us here

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EU thanks PH gov’t, MILF on designation of monitoring team chair
EU thanks PH gov’t, MILF on designation of monitoring team chair

The European Union (EU) Delegation to the Philippines on Tuesday thanked the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) for the recent designation of Heino Marius as the new Chair of the Third Party Monitoring Team (TPMT).

EU Chargé d’Affaires Thomas Wiersing (PNA)

In a statement, EU Chargé d’Affaires Thomas Wiersing also reiterated Europe’s commitment to the peace process. Since 2008, the EU has been one of the biggest supporters of the Mindanao Peace Process through a comprehensive approach.

“The European Union is pleased to note that the Peace Implementing Panels of the Government of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front have designated Heino Marius as Chair of the Third Party Monitoring Team”, Wiersing said.

He emphasized that the EU supports the political settlement through providing a humanitarian and human rights law expert to the International Monitoring Team (IMT) and supports the functioning of the TPMT which monitors the implementation of all the agreements signed by the parties, including the 2014 peace agreement.

A German national, Marius joined the European Commission in 1993 and served in various posts in EU Delegations in Ethiopia and India. In 2000, he was posted at EC headquarters in Brussels, and as Deputy Head of Unit for Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives. Since the third quarter of 2013, Marius serves as Deputy Head of Division for South East Asia with the European External Action Service (EEAS).

As a key partner in promoting peace, security, and economic development in Mindanao, the EU is also spot-on in addressing the wider effect of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) among vulnerable groups through its Peace and Development in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (PD BARMM), a Php1.4 billion funding aimed to improve the social cohesion and resiliency of communities, and at the same time, address the health, social and economic impact of COVID-19 in the region.

The Php1.4 billion likewise helps to consolidate the hard-won peace in Bangsamoro by supporting the new administration, the parliament, the judicial system, and civil society through the transition.

Rise Mindanao, another EU program, focuses on the immediate priority of food security by supporting agro-cooperatives and strengthening the service delivery of local authorities. 

With the EU providing Php2 billion, this program helps to provide job opportunities for farmers, women, youth, and indigenous people.

Through its civil society partners, the EU is also working on COVID-19 information campaigns such as advocacy materials to inform communities on how to prevent the virus and cope with the pandemic.

Multi-lingual videos and infographics are being produced and disseminated widely, in particular to youth and women, to increase public understanding of COVID-19.

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EU watchdog slams Germany for lapses in Wirecard fraud
EU watchdog slams Germany for lapses in Wirecard fraud

LONDON/FRANKFURT (Reuters) – Germany failed to do enough to avert the Wirecard fraud, the European Union’s markets watchdog said on Tuesday as it delivered a highly critical verdict on the country’s handling of its biggest post-war corporate scam.

FILE PHOTO: The headquarters of Wirecard AG, an independent provider of outsourcing and white label solutions for electronic payment transactions is seen in Aschheim near Munich, Germany, September 22, 2020. REUTERS/Michael Dalder/File Photo

Wirecard’s former Chief Executive Markus Braun and other executives have been held on suspicion of running a criminal racket that defrauded creditors of 3.2 billion euros ($3.73 billion).

Those accused, including Braun, deny any wrongdoing.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) began a fast-track review in July into how Germany’s markets regulator BaFin and the country’s accounting watchdog the Financial Reporting Enforcement Panel (FREP) enforced EU transparency rules governing company information for markets and investors.

ESMA said in a rare 190-page rebuke of another regulator that it found a number of deficiencies, inefficiencies and legal and procedural impediments relating to BaFin’s independence from issuers and the Finance Ministry.

“For BaFin … there is a heightened risk of influence by the Ministry of Finance given the frequency and detail of reporting to the MoF in the Wirecard case, in some cases before actions were taken,” the ESMA report said.

German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz told reporters he welcomed the report and that its recommendations were broadly in line with the government’s action plan to address supervisory shortcomings highlighted by the Wirecard scandal.

“So I don’t look at this (report) as something critical,” Scholz added.

There were deficiencies even though BaFin and FREP had adequate resources, though confidentiality requirements prevented them from sharing information, ESMA said.

BaFin’s internal controls failed to pick up that some of its market abuse team were buying and selling Wirecard shares, ESMA noted.

Deputy finance minister Joerg Kukies told Reuters in October that it would ban watchdog staff from trading shares in companies it regulates following the scandal.

CRUSHING VERDICT

Markus Ferber, a German member of the European Parliament, said the report was a “crushing verdict” on financial supervision under the oversight of Finance Minister Olaf Scholz.

Wirecard, whose shares were included in Germany’s index of blue chip companies, stunned markets in June when it said that 1.9 billion euros it had claimed to hold in accounts were missing.

The European Commission asked ESMA to undertake the review and will use the findings to determine if there is a need for more centralised EU supervision of markets to stop such scandals from happening again.

“The Wirecard case has once again highlighted that high-quality financial reporting is essential for maintaining investor trust in capital markets, and the need to have consistent and effective enforcement of that reporting across the European Union,” ESMA Chair Steven Maijoor said in a statement.

In a response included in the ESMA report, BaFin said it disagrees that it should have demanded further examination of Wirecard’s financial statements after allegations surfaced in the press.

“As long as BaFin has no specific indications that go beyond only public publications like press articles, BaFin cannot issue a report to the public prosecutor’s office,” the regulator said.

FREP said ESMA’s findings are “not supported by the evidence and explanations” provided during the review and are “distorted by hindsight bias”.

Fabio De Masi, an influential German lawmaker, said the report was a “slap in the face” for BaFin.

Germany’s coalition government in October agreed a package of reforms to financial and accounting rules aimed at avoiding another Wirecard scandal.

Additional reporting by Christian Kraemer in Berlin; Editing by Edmund Blair, Kirsten Donovan and Louise Heavens

Sudanese government rejects religion workshop recommendations: SPLM-N Hilu
Sudanese government rejects religion workshop recommendations: SPLM-N Hilu




November 2, 2020 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North, led by Abdel Aziz al-Hilu, revealed that the head of the Sudanese government delegation, Shams al-Din Kabbashi, rejected the recommendations of the workshop on the relationship between state and religion.

A workshop on the state’s relationship with religion was held in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, over the past week concerning the gaps between the government and the movement, as a result of the joint agreement between al-Hilu and Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok on September 3.

“The Movement agreed to the facilitators and experts’ report proposing to separate religion from the state, in order to ensure a peaceful solution,” said the Movement’s spokesman, Koko Mohamed Jagdoul, in a statement extended to the Sudan Tribune on Monday.

“But in the closing session, Kabbashi rejected the outcomes of the workshop after having accepted them and congratulated the facilitators outside the hall.”

Jagdoul further pointed out that the head of the government delegation, Kabbashi, and the delegation’s spokesperson, Mohamed Hassan Eltaishi, were absent from most of the workshop sessions.

Consequently, the SPLM-N held Kabbashi responsible for the failure of the workshop, noting that its paramount goal was to reach a consensus on the relationship between religion and the state.

“Failure to accept the 3 September agreement means not accepting the separation of religion from the state and rejecting the peace process,” stressed the spokesman.

On September 3, the Sudanese Prime Minister agreed to introduce the subject of the relationship between the state and religion in the peace talks with al-Hilu, hold informal workshops, then reach a common understanding on the matter before resuming formal talks.

The SPLM demand made including the relationship of the state with religion in the peace negotiations their chief condition.

The workshop, which took place on Saturday and Sunday, was attended by representatives of both the Sudanese government and the SPLM-North and several experts, and in addition to the Public International Law & Policy Group (PILPG), the African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD), the PDS consultants, and the South Sudanese mediation team.

The SPLM-N spokesman said that the workshop held deep discussions on the debate about keeping religion out of secular government affairs.

Furthermore, local and international experts presented several models of the separation in a Muslim majority country, but the Turkish model appeared to be the most comparable to the Sudanese situation, he said.

“The two parties agreed on a final report draft proposed by the facilitators and experts, and it was read to the participants from both parties without objection.”

However, surprisingly, the representatives of the transitional government voiced reservations about some provisions, he added.

Sudan Tribune sought some clarification from Eltaishi, the spokesman for the Sudanese government delegation, but he did not comment on the alleged failure of the workshop.

A member of the Sovereign Council commented that the transitional government is looking forward to setting a time for the commencement of direct negotiations between the government and the Movement.

The September 3 agreement stipulates that negotiations will resume only after reaching an agreement concerning the relationship between religion and the state.

Kabbashi and Eltaishi returned to Khartoum on Monday evening.

(ST)

European Observatory, WHO/Europe and European Commission publish special issue of Eurohealth examining health system responses to COVID-19
European Observatory, WHO/Europe and European Commission publish special issue of Eurohealth examining health system responses to COVID-19

As countries across the WHO European Region face a steep surge in COVID-19 transmission, the latest issue of Eurohealth, released today, considers whether there is still an opportunity to use the crisis to tackle underlying problems besetting our health systems.

This special edition is a collaboration between the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, WHO/Europe and the European Commission, and draws on data from the COVID-19 Health System Response Monitor launched in April.

It includes contributions from WHO Regional Director for Europe Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge and WHO/Europe colleagues Dr Natasha Azzopardi-Muscat and Dr Dorit Nitzan; European Observatory Director Dr Josep Figueras; and Ms Sandra Gallina and Ms Isabel de la Mata from the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety.

As well as offering perspectives on the pandemic, this issue of Eurohealth provides analyses of the policy decisions, progress and challenges experienced across countries under the following headings:

  • Preventing transmission
  • Physical infrastructure and workforce capacity
  • Health service provision
  • Paying for services
  • Governance.

Finally, the publication provides an overview of emerging innovative practices in managing the pandemic and ongoing service provision, and outlines policy lessons for the future.

United action for better health

Understanding how health systems have responded to COVID-19 is an important part of the European Programme of Work’s (EPW) core priorities. The EPW shapes the European Region’s contribution to WHO’s 13th General Programme of Work, which sets out the triple-billion goals: more people benefitting from universal health coverage, more people better protected from health emergencies, and more people enjoying better health and well-being.

Eurohealth is a quarterly publication that provides a forum for researchers, policy-makers and experts to express their views on health policy issues and so contribute to a constructive debate on health policy in Europe.

Religion, love and society: Award-winning play ‘Nadirah’ starring Sharifah Amani, Patrick Teoh back by popular demand
Religion, love and society: Award-winning play ‘Nadirah’ starring Sharifah Amani, Patrick Teoh back by popular demand
The play by Singaporean playwright Alfian Sa’at will resonate with Malaysian audiences. — Picture courtesy of Instant Café Theatre

PETALING JAYA, Nov 3 — It is a play that captures the complex nature of religion and love in a multicultural family.

More than a decade since its debut, Nadirah remains just as relevant today, if not more.

Written by Singaporean playwright Alfian Sa’at and set in the Lion City, the award-winning play will be screened virtually to audiences around the globe this month, brought to you by Malaysia’s Instant Café Theatre

The plot follows Nadirah, the popular vice-president of her university’s Muslim Society, played by Sharifah Amani.

She convenes interfaith meetings where she wants to encourage students to talk openly about their faith and to respect one another’s spaces.

Nadirah is the product of an ethnically mixed marriage — her father is Malaysian Malay while her mother is a Singaporean Chinese who converted to Islam.

One day, Nadirah’s mother tells her she’s going to remarry and the man she loves is Robert, a Christian, leaving Nadirah devastated.

How does Nadirah make peace between various religions in school when she’s having the same problems at home?

Can mother and daughter worship different gods?

Although the story is set in Singapore, Malaysians audiences and viewers across the world will resonate with the story as religion increasingly becomes a matter of public contestation, producers of the play said in a press release

Just like many theatre companies around the world, Instant Café has taken their beloved performances to the digital platform to keep the arts alive.

Sharifah Amani and Singaporean actress Neo Swee Lin in a scene from ‘Nadirah’ which will be screened globally this month. — Picture courtesy of Instant Café Theatre

Following last month’s successful one-day screening which sold 749 tickets from 14 countries, requests have been pouring in to rescreen Nadirah.

The production audiences will be watching was performed at the Festival Tokyo in 2016 and stars Malaysian talents Iedil Dzuhrie Alaudin, Farah Rani and Patrick Teoh while Singaporean actress Neo Swee Lin takes on the role of Nadirah’s mother.

Nadirah is presented in English and Malay with English, Malay and Japanese subtitles, directed by Jo Kukathas.

Five per cent of Nadirah’s proceeds will be donated to assist Covid-19 efforts in Sabah where the pandemic has hit poverty-stricken communities.

The rest of the ticket sales will go towards Instant Café’s next project And Then Came Spring with Malaysian-based Afghan refugee company Parastoo.

Instant Café Theatre will be having seven screenings at different times to suit most major time zones around the world.

Tickets are priced at RM13, RM23, RM33, RM55 and RM100 to allow audiences to pay what they can in these difficult times whist helping to rebuild the theatre company.

There are also RM8 community tickets available for those who aren’t able to afford the ticket prices, applicable to those residing in Malaysia.

Nadirah will be screened online from November 19 to 22, visit here for tickets.

For community tickets, email [email protected].

Po Delta: Laudato si’ Garden born out of nature’s tenderness - Vatican News
Po Delta: Laudato si’ Garden born out of nature’s tenderness – Vatican News

Asia Galvani * – Venice

A “health and pleasing interconnection between the territory’s resources, human life, activity, on the productive, educative, social, economic and civic levels, care for nature and for creation, respecting the eco-systems and bio-diversity”. These are the words Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, used to describe the Laudato si’ Garden, which rose up in the heart of the Po Delta’s Venice Regional Park. He himself strongly desired that this initiative see the light of day. Present for the inauguration in Rosolina, in the Province of Rovigo on Sunday, 4 October 2020 were the Cardinal and other civic, military and religious leaders. In addition to Rosolina, seven municipalities in the area sponsored it: Ariano nel Polesine, Corbola, Loreo, Porto Viro, Porto Tolle, Taglio di Po.


Inauguration of the Laudato si’ Garden

The speakers

Sister Alessandra Smerilli, coordinator of the Vatican Covid-19 Committee’s “Economy” task force, explained during the event that the project reveals “a new model of development characterized by respect for the earth and care for each other”. She was also one of the day’s primary coordinators, along with Rosolina’s mayor, Franco Vitale. The Salesian Sister added that it is a sign of how to emerge “better” even from the crisis connected with the coronavirus. 

The speakers alternated between people representing various institutions (from Luca Zaia, President of the Region of Venice) and testimonies from others, including that of Cardinal Turkson, Sister Alessandra, “Security” task force coordinator Alessio Pecorario, Beatrice Finh, Executive Director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (Nobel Peace Prize 2017).

Father Joshtrom Isaac Kureethadam, the person responsible for the special anniversary Laudato si’ Year and coordinator of the “Ecology” taskforce of the Vatican Covid-19 Commission, wanted to emphasize the “spiritual significance of the garden” during the inauguration, that is, the place “where we are with the Creator, with God Himself”, but also “in community, with the people near us and communion with the earth”. The garden thus becomes a sign of “union with the Creator, union among ourselves and union with the earth and all of the creatures on earth.”


The Orchestra and Maestro Francesco Sartori, Maestro Diego Basso and tenor Francesco Grollo

Musical backdrop

Tenor Francesco Grollo provided the interludes between the various speakers: “Music”, he explained, “is a universal message. It embraces everyone and connects earth and heaven”. Accompanied by the Italian Symphony Rhythmic Orchestra, directed by Maestro Diego Basso, by the Art Voice Academy and Opera House Choirs, he embellished the event with the “Concert for Integral Ecology”, held on a floating platform overlooking the laguna. Those present were captivated by the execution of the pieces “Tu ci sei” (You exist) and “Canto della terra” (Hymn of the Earth), accompanied on the piano by composer Francesco Sartori who wrote the two original pieces inspired by values expressed in Laudato si’. At the end of the performance, members of the orchestra were surprised when they realized that the floating platform had gradually and slowly tilted, following the ripples of the tide. “Nature’s tenderness,” Maestro Basso explained, “accompanied us and brought us where she wanted us to be”.


Presentor Eugenia Scotti with Sister Alessandra Smerilli

The pact between humanity and nature

At the end, Cardinal Turkson inaugurated the Laudato si’ Chapel, a Living Chapel, that recalls the one inaugurated in June in Rome’s Botanical Garden. This was done in the presence of a representative of each continent, so as to establish a sort of global pact between humanity and nature. “We wanted the structure to be simple and quaint so as not to invade the beauty and depth that nature offers us by its very being, but that it might be mingled with it,” explains the Laudato si’ Chapel on the Po Delta’s architect Mario Cucinella. The moment in which he illustrated this aspect of the chapel was particularly moving because it was accompanied by an extraordinary execution of Panis Angelicus and by the rose colors of the sunset that everyone there saw.


Cardinale Turkson blesses the Living Chapel

Reactions from young people

“I am really proud to have this Garden in my own city”, sixteen-year-old Irene Duò from Rosolina declared. She was at the side of Cardinal Turkson and Father Kureethadam during the blessing of the Chapel. Irene continued saying, “I was truly moved when I and the other young people placed a plant in the Cardinal’s hands who then placed it in a small wooden planter. The environmental problem is the most urgent one and during the event I felt strongly responsible for it because I began to understand better that each one of our actions can provide a cleaner environment for those around us”. Twenty-one-year-old Marica Padoan, originally from Treviso who hopes to be a professional photographer, took pictures of the event. “While taking the photos”, she explained, “I became aware of the attention that had been taken to harmoniously place what had been manufactured by people into this Garden. What a gift to discover some of Laudato si’s themes through direct immersion in an extraordinary natural background.” 

*Cube Radio – Salesian University Institute, Venice and Verona

Conservative European Parliamentarians Nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize on Eve of Presidential Election
Conservative European Parliamentarians Nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize on Eve of Presidential Election

A coalition of 14 conservative European parliamentarians, led by the Sweden Democrats, on Monday nominated U.S President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.

”For his courage and commitment to the cause of peace in the Middle East, the Balkans, and on the Korean Peninsula, we wish to nominate United States President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize,” the coalition said in a statement.

”In support of America’s global leadership for peace and prosperity under President Donald J. Trump. Our nomination is the largest nomination yet, with 14 parliamentarians from 11 different European nations nominating Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize,” it said.

The group cited President Trump’s Abraham Accords, which normalized relations between Israel and several Arab nations such as the United Arab Emirates, Sudan, and Bahrain.

They also cited the “promising economic partnership for peace” between Kosovo and Serbia, as well as Trump’s efforts on reconciliation between North and South Korea. They said:

Bringing a warm peace to the Balkans, a brighter future of hope in the Middle East, and first steps to reconciliation on the Korean peninsula, few world leaders have done more to build a better world for the Twenty-First Century. President Trump has shown the world that peace is not only possible, but within reach.

“While there is more to do, President Trump’s search for peace has laid the groundwork for another historic peace that will continue to play a vital role in global prosperity beyond his own White House years,” they said.

The nomination comes a day before the U.S. presidential election, on Tuesday, November 3. The group said:

In 2016, President Trump ran on a promise to keep the U.S out of new Middle Eastern quagmires. While America’s global leadership under Trump has proved once more to be the beacon of hope for democracy, human rights and free peoples, the character of his endeavors overseas has stayed consistently true to his promise.

The parliamentarians included:

Swedish MPs Mattias Karlsson, Björn Söder, Tobias Andersson, Sweden Democrats (SWE)
Andrew Rosindell, Conservative Party (UK)
Thierry Baudet, Party Leader & MP, Forum for Democracy (NL) Iván Espinosa de los Monteros, MP, VOX (ESP)
Søren Espersen, Danish People’s Party (DK)
Sammy Wilson MP, Conservatives (NIR)
Zsolt Csenger-Zalán, Fidesz (HU) Grzegorz Bierecki, Law & Justice (PL)
Uldis Budriķis MP, New Conservative Party (LV)
Ulf Isak Leirstein, MP, Independent (NO)
Sebastian Tynkkynen & Vilhelm Junnila, MP, True Fins (FI)

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On Election Day, religion plays a key factor for some voters
On Election Day, religion plays a key factor for some voters

When President Donald Trump was elected in 2016, he courted evangelical voters with promises of filling the Supreme Court with justices who could nullify Roe v. Wade and with the nomination of Mike Pence, an evangelical Christian, as his running mate. 

In 2020, much is the same for Trump. After almost four years in office, he continues to attract evangelical voters. But now, he’s facing former vice president Joe Biden — only the fourth major-party Catholic presidential nominee. 

In this election, both have made abortion — a key issue for many of faith — a topic of discussion.

Trump nominated Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court just weeks after Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. Barrett — who was confirmed to the court by the Senate — had signed her name to ads against abortion

Biden, on the other hand, has promised to make Roe v. Wade the “law of the land.” 

Christianity is the predominant religion among North Carolinians with 77% of adults in the state identifying as Christian, according to the Pew Research Center. 

And with North Carolina a battleground state, courting the religious vote is key for each candidate seeking to win one of the proclaimed Bible Belt states.

Love your neighbor as you love yourself

For the majority of his life, Kyle Sigmon wasn’t involved in politics. When he preaches to his congregation as a pastor, he doesn’t tell people how to vote or talk about politics in general. 

He doesn’t see church as a place to tell people how to vote, but rather a place for people to form their opinions. 

Kyle Sigmon, associate pastor of FaithBridge United Methodist Church, wants people to look at the words Jesus said and apply them to their lives. (Jesse Barber)

“I want my church, my congregation, my people to just look at Jesus and to learn more about what Jesus wants, how we should live our lives,” said Sigmon, an associate pastor at FaithBridge United Methodist Church in Blowing Rock. “I think that will automatically affect how we vote.”

Sigmon said he started to focus more on politics because of his religious beliefs. Jesus’ teachings and America’s history — the good and bad — really helped Sigmon think about politics in a broader sense and how it can affect others.

The Sermon on the Mount — the longest of Jesus’ sermons recorded in the New Testament —  helped Sigmon realize politics are important because the message is about living as one of God’s followers and politics can be part of being a follower of Christ. 

The teaching of loving your neighbor as you love yourself is an important factor to Sigmon. Some people go to church every Sunday. Others go multiple times a week. And even more go when they can. Despite attending church or not, their faith has an impact on their lives and when they vote. 

“I think as Christians, we actually have to go to the polls and think, ‘how will this person look out for others?’” Sigmon said. “If we really want to love our neighbor, it’s not just literally loving the person who is next door to me, but do I actually have influence systemically?”

And for Sigmon and other people of religious beliefs, voting is a way to bring those values to society.  

Historically, religion has always been a key factor in politics — from the time of people riding in horse drawn carriages to self-driving cars. 

A History of Religion and Politics

Photo illustration/Liberty Missionary Baptist Church in Meat Camp, North Carolina. (Jesse Barber)

Lerone Martin is an associate professor of religion and politics at Washington University in St. Louis. He is also the director of American cultural studies at the university and teaches African American studies. 

“Religion has always been central to political behavior in the United States,” Martin said. 

Martin said religion in American politics can be traced back to the abolitionist movement. Abolitionists, Martin said, felt compelled by their faith to fight the legalization of slavery and its practice in the U.S.

“On the other side, you had folks whose faith compelled them to believe that slavery was not just a coherent aspect of their Christian faith, but actually that Christianity gave permission, or directed people, to engage in enslavement,” Martin said. 

Lerone Martin is a religion and politics professor at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis. (Courtesy of the John C. Danforth Center)

And to Martin, probably the most outstanding example of religion affecting politics and society is the Civil Rights Movement. 

“There were countless civil rights workers who believed that their faith compelled them to demonstrate against the unequal treatment of people of color in this country and to change laws that they believed were unjust,” Martin said.

For example, Martin said, someone like Martin Luther King Jr. would be guided by their faith to know that God is a God of justice. Therefore, because God was a God of justice, the destruction of society should be regulated and geared toward making sure every American is justly treated.  

“(His) faith would say what matters — in addition to one’s personal piety — is to make sure that the structures of American society are set up in such a way that every citizen is treated equally and fairly,” Martin said. 

People who have that perspective sometimes call themselves “social gospelers” where they would have a “social gospel” that relates to how society should be shaped in a way that treats people equally. 

“Throughout American history, some of the largest political movements — both in terms of legislation, but also in terms of activism — have been compelled by a very, very, very strong commitment to religious faith,” Martin said.

Today, Martin said, certain faith groups are associated with particular political parties, which was not always the case. 

According to Pew Research, 56% of Evangelical Protestants and 70% of Mormons lean Republican. On the other side, 44% of Orthodox Christians and Catholics lean Democratic. 

“People exercise their faith in the way that they vote and I think that’s always been the case historically in this country,” Martin said. “I think we should anticipate that it will continue to be important.”

Religious Influence on Politics 

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” – The Amendment of the United States Constitution.

In this long exposure photograph, a billboard along the side of highway 321 near Boone, NC reads, “Jesus is the answer to all your problems.” (Jesse Barber)

In North Carolina, 39% of adults go to church at least once a week while 36% go at least once or twice a month, according to Pew. Another 24% seldom or never attend church Despite attending church or not, faith has an impact on voting. 

“Whether consciously or unconsciously, their faith has shaped those ideas of the good, of the moral, and of the ethical,” Martin said. “When they go into the voting booth, they look for the candidate that they believe can help to bring about that kind of society.”

Mikaela McAdams attended The Lamb’s Chapel –– one of the largest churches in her area — while growing up in Burlington.

McAdams wouldn’t just go to church on Sundays, she would practically live there. McAdams said she would be at church seven days a week, and sometimes even slept there. 

At the time, her church and her Christian views had a heavy influence on her politics. 

“When I was active in church, I wasn’t able to vote, but at the time it had me mentally in this state of ‘Oh, I have to vote for this person, I have to vote for this Republican or Democrat just because I have a Christian belief,’” McAdams said. 

McAdams’ is no longer active in the church and lives in Boone with her fiance. She said she could see how much religion affected people’s political views during the 2016 election. McAdams said there was so much bitterness and divide in the church during the election, which distanced her from religion. Because she grew up in the church, she mostly follows people she grew up with in church on social media. 

Preachers on Sanford Mall giving sermons out loud about the “sins of man” and “judgement of god.” (Jesse Barber)

“I still see stuff from my family and friends in the church that push their religious beliefs for a political agenda,” McAdams said. 

For Alexander Paunovic, religion has a direct bearing on who he votes for. 

“I think that the only authority the government has is the authority that’s been granted to it by God,” said Paunovic, who received his religious studies degree from App State. “I’d really have to take anything the Bible says and weigh it up against a political candidate.”

Paunovic, who is a seminary student at Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, holds himself to the original Westminster Confession of Faith, which assumes the Bible is the word of God. It gives Paunovic a system of ethics and principles to follow.

“That being the case, the Bible must be our starting point in determining any political position that we hold, or determining what we believe about the role of government in general,” Paunovic said. 

Paunovic considers himself an establishmentarian, meaning he believes the government should establish Christianity as the national religion.

One of the only reasons Paunovic would vote for a political candidate is if they declared Christ as king and would enact laws according to that belief. 

“Unless that be the case, I probably would never vote for a political candidate,” Paunovic said. 

Paunovic does not plan to vote in this election and said he would most likely write in a candidate if he did.

Maggie Watts, a freshman, has a different outlook on how her Christian faith influences her politics. 

Watts grew up going to a nondenominational church every Sunday and still goes to church in Boone. She says Christianity influences her vote.

“The biggest thing for me definitely, growing up as a Christian with politics, is always to choose the party or choose a leader that will unify the country the most and would treat the poor and the oppressed with love and give them respect and dignity,” Watts said. 

Watts does not believe President Donald Trump lives those Christian values in his life and that his campaign is built on hate — which she said is everything Christianity goes against. 

Both conservatives and liberals believe that faith should be more than spoken, it should be lived, Martin said. But, how it’s lived out can be different, which can separate someone from being liberal or conservative based on their faith. 

Some believe it’s not just about personal piety, Martin said, but also about thinking about society and making society more just — like Martin Luther King Jr.. 

“There are others who believe that the primary aim of faith is to the salvation of souls and that’s what we should focus our energy on — not on changing society, but just on changing souls,” Martin said. 

A Conservative Leaning  

Political science major River Collins, senior, has been the president of the College Republicans at Appalachian State University for about a year. His concentration is in American politics and is hoping to work his way up the political ladder to Congress. (Kara Haselton)

Arianna Moore is the president of the Orthodox Christian Fellowship chapter at App State. She knows some evangelical Christians who are stereotyped as being more conservative. But to her, that comes also from conservatives weaponizing evangelical Christianity. 

“It controls its base with manipulative rhetoric and cheap images — like Trump holding the Bible outside of that church for a press conference,” Moore said. “Abuse of these symbols for political gain is a mockery of Christianity and I find it reprehensible.”

Moore is referring to the time President Trump walked across Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., to hold a Bible up in front of the historic St. John’s church for a few pictures. Before he walked across the square, thousands of demonstrators — protesting against police brutality — were removed with tear gas and other forcible measures. 

When she tells someone that she’s a Christian, Moore said she feels people automatically assume she’s conservative.

River Collins, president of the App State College Republicans, said he thinks a lot of people associate Christians with the Republican Party. 

“Christians are over stereotyped as conservative,” Collins said. 

According to Pew Research, 78% of those who “believe in God; absolutely certain” are conservative while 59% of those who “believe in God; fairly certain” are moderate. 

Those who attend a religious service at least once a week are 50% more likely to be conservative, according to Pew. 

Abortion: A Religious and Political Issue

In 1973, the Supreme Court decided in Roe v. Wade that a woman had the right to choose to have an abortion without excessive government restriction. 

“When it was decided, many of the Protestant denominations, including the Southern Baptist, for example, were fine with Roe v. Wade,” Martin said. “They were like, ‘You know, this is a decision that should be between a woman and her doctor or a woman, her husband and her doctor.’”

In recent years, many states have introduced laws that have severely restricted a woman’s access to an abortion. In June, the Supreme Court struck down a Louisiana law requiring a doctor performing abortions to have admitting privileges to practice at nearby hospitals. 

According to the New York Times, that would have left the state with only one abortion clinic. 

Many are concerned that Roe v. Wade will be overturned with the confirmation of new Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett — a conservative Catholic appointed to the court by President Trump. 

During his campaign in 2016, Trump won over voters with promises to combat abortion and nominate Supreme Court justices who would be open to dismantling Roe v. Wade

In a June 2019 poll by Monmouth University, one-third of Americans said abortion would be a top issue for them in the 2020 election. Two percent said it was the most important issue. 

“What we’re talking about here is what’s been determined as single-issue voters and folks who feel like there’s one major issue for which they vote,” Martin said. 

Single-issue voters are typically devoted to one public issue, especially a political one. In terms of abortion, 4% of U.S. adults say they will vote only for a candidate who shares their views on the abortion, according to Gallup.  

Paunovic understands why someone would have a single issue when voting. 

Arianna Moore a junior studying Public Health stands with her Orthodox study bible outside of her student apartment. Moore said her favorite verses are Proverbs 31:8-9. (Ashley Foreman)

“If it’s something as substantial as millions of babies being killed in the womb, then I would say that that’s a pretty good position to base your politics on,” Paunovic said. 

Emma Albertino is the president of App State’s pro-life club, Students For Life. To her, abortion is one of the biggest issues when she goes to vote. 

She sees abortion as a topic that surpasses and discussion of religion and politics. 

I am pro-life, because I believe that every life has value from conception until death,” Albertino said. “I do not think that a person’s value changes based on religion, politics, race, sex, gender or any other difference. Philosophically, life has value.”

Without the right to life, Albertino said, no other rights can exist, “including the rights to freedom of religion and freedom of political choice.”

Collins said he’s met Christians who can’t stand the idea of any form of abortion. 

Because of that, Collins said he feels people with that belief often gravitate to the Republican Party, which ordinarily supports pro-life candidates and policies.

Despite being pro-life, some Christians still favor the Democratic Party. 

“I am very pro-life,” said Sigmon, who is a registered independent. “I think unfortunately, a lot of the people who are very anti-abortion, their pro-life stance kind of ends at birth.” 

Sigmon said he feels people aren’t fighting for the life of people after birth. 

“They are not also fighting for universal health care, so that that baby and that mother can continue to live healthily and that they have what they need,” Sigmon said. “It’s simply just about birth and I think we should look at all of life if we ought to be pro-life.” 

Growing up in the church, McAdams felt she was pressured to vote for a Christian, pro-life candidate because if not, then she wouldn’t be Christian. 

“If you don’t vote Republican, if you don’t vote for the pro-life candidate, whoever that may be, you’re wrong,” McAdams said. 

Moore and Watts are both Christians and both said they would not get an abortion because it violates their religious beliefs. 

Moore, a public health major, looks at the broader aspect of why someone gets an abortion. 

According to an anonymous study by the Guttmacher Institute in 2004, one-fourth of women reported they were not ready for another baby as a reason for getting an abortion. Of those women surveyed, 23% reported it was because they could not afford another child. 

“Issues like abortion and gay marriage, while important, take the center stage and blind voters to the destructive policies that cut Medicaid, food stamps, and other welfare programs,” Moore said. “If we don’t lift these people out of poverty, if we don’t give them options and support, they’ll feel trapped.”

Florida records every reason for an abortion that occurs in the state. In 2018 in Florida, about 74% of reported abortions were elective and 20% reported it was due to economic or social reasons. 

Watts doesn’t just think about abortion when she votes, but the lives of people who are suffering right now from oppression or poverty. 

“They need to realize that they are just as important as the lives of unborn children, and that they have to just look to the candidate that’s going to treat them as Jesus would treat them,” Watts said. 

Watts said she knows people have questioned how a Christian could vote for a pro-choice candidate, but she views it as voting for someone who is loving and more open to those who are poor. 

“And that is exactly what the faith is about — loving thy neighbor, helping the poor,” Watts said. “Neither political party is Biblically sound, so there is no right or wrong answer here in regards to faith.”

Moving Forward

Perkinsville Baptist church’s stained glass illuminated in the night. (Jesse Barber)

Martin said religion will continue to influence politics, but he believes in the future that there are certain trends to watch. One is how people are becoming less affiliated with a religion –– not necessarily those who are not religious, but those who don’t identify with a religion. 

From 2009 to 2019, those who identify as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular,” increased from 17% to 26%, according to the Pew Research Center.

Martin also predicts that younger adults will move toward a more liberal understanding of faith. For example, Martin said younger people of faith may not be interested in abortion as much as climate change; or more concerned about poverty over same-sex marriage.

“That might have an impact upon how we understand and experience religion and politics,” Martin said. 

Moving forward, Pastor Sigmon hopes more people take the teachings of Jesus Christ more seriously. 

“I would like to see more people caring for the marginalized, the oppressed,” Sigmon said. “I would like to see more people fighting for equality and for that to not be a polarizing, partisan issue.” 

Time to upgrade Asean-EU relationship
Time to upgrade Asean-EU relationship
Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at the EU Asean leaders meeting in Brussels last month. (AFP photo)

Today, Americans will go to the polls to elect their 46th president. It doesn’t matter who the next president will be, the incumbent Donald Trump or his challenger, Joe Biden. Why? As far as Indo-Pacific region is concerned, the die has been cast due to the strategic competition between the two superpowers, the US and China. Therefore, the presidential outcome and impact on the global stage remain unchanged. New rhetoric and approaches might be generated but that would be it.

Essentially, we have to coexist with the US policy initiatives, influence and spell. Worse still, the US has also dragged China along as its No.1 nemesis. This double-billing has created huge crises for the countries in the region. However, there is a small window for them to be creative in shaping their own future.

The frequently asked question is: Can any country do anything about this debacle? Apart from Washington and Beijing, no single nation can create an alternative power that can rival the two. Moscow has that capacity but its interest in the region is insufficient and is coupled with an inability to sustain serious engagement with Asean. It would require extraordinary political will and a joint effort by the international community to challenge and engage the US and China with a certain level of leverage.

In the short term, both the EU and Asean are two regional groupings that can, when working in tandem, rival the US and China. Both have political and economic dynamics and potential with a combined population of 1.1 billion. They also share similar global outlooks as free and open regions that support multilateral cooperation in solving common cross-border problems. They share the same objectives of safeguarding the rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific.

In the past, they have worked closely together to implement the Paris Climate Change Accord. In November 2017, Asean and the EU issued a joint communique on their positions on climate change, much to the chagrin of the US, which decided to pull out of the Paris agreement. Both sides pledged “to work together to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change, in the context of sustainable development and efforts to eradicate poverty in order to keep the global average temperature rise to well below 2C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels”.

Unfortunately, Asean-EU cooperation has not been running as smooth as one might expect due to differences over norms and values. Therefore, some of the noble objectives remain inspirational at best. For the time being, the most important task for Asean is to officially announce the EU as a strategic dialogue partner without delay so that their bilateral cooperation can be further boosted.

Early last year, Asean agreed to upgrade the grouping’s oldest dialogue partner to a strategic one, on par with other dialogue partners such as China, Japan, Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, Russia and the US. Asean agreed in principle to promote the EU’s status conditionally depending on a new consensus. Since the decision was made before the Covid-19 pandemic, the time is now right to reconsider the grouping’s position on the EU.

As Yeo Lay Hwee argued in Asean-EU Partnership: The Untold Story, both sides have to avoid the “singularity trap” with Asean as it would derail the broader strategic need for engagement. It was an open secret that Malaysia and Indonesia blocked the official announcement of EU strategic partnership due to a dispute over palm oil. The decision was made in January 2019 and the time has come to re-evaluate in light of Covid-19.

The EU must continue to work closely with Malaysia and Indonesia and address their concerns. Some valuable lessons from Thailand’s painful but the successful three-year engagement with the EU over illegal, unreported and regulated fishing or IUU could be useful. If there was mutual trust and effective dialogue, both sides could certainly overcome the “singularity trap” which often pops up to deter much-needed progress in Asean-EU cooperation. Myanmar, Cambodia and the Philippines also have sensitive bilateral issues with the EU that need to be settled.

Indeed, the importance of the EU and Asean has increased manifold following the intensification of US-China rivalry that has now permeated the tech sector and their international networks of friends and foes. In addition, the American First policy has further dampened Washington’s more globalised outlook and belittled its prestige. It will take a few years before the US is able to restore its reputation and reboot its global policies and strategies.

Therefore, the recent release of Germany’s Indo-Pacific strategy has added value to the EU’s overarching influence and interest in this part of the world. This latest strategy is its most detailed international endeavour with the region, encompassing all aspects of Germany’s long-term strategies with guidelines to engage Asean and the rest of Indo-Pacific.

Obviously, as the current president of the EU, Germany hopes that this fresh strategy will later be adopted as the EU official Indo-Pacific strategy. If that is the case, it will help to strengthen Asean and EU cooperation as never before, as the Asean Outlook on the Indo-Pacific and German strategy complement each other very well. They share lots of common initiatives, especially in areas of protecting the environment, investing in connectivity, strengthening sustainable free trade as well as peace security and strategic matters.

France is the other EU member to come up with an Indo-Pacific strategy. Although the United Kingdom is now no longer part of the EU, its economic and military might, as well as its status in the region, are still widely respected. Together, the trio represents a formidable force that can provide a much-needed alternative security umbrella for the region.

Unlike the US or Australia’s Indo-China Strategies, the German guidelines do not decouple with China even though the document mentioned its name 46 times. Berlin’s moderate but strong views on China resonate very well with the countries in the region. Indeed, Asean and the EU can further pick and choose issues or projects from their wish-lists that will not endanger their ties with China or the US. For instance, the Asean-EU cooperation to promote high-quality infrastructure could be one. Other areas would include maritime cooperation and training. In the near future, cooperation could be broadened to include the eradication of marine debris, which has been one of the growing concerns of countries in the Indo-Pacific.

Both regional organisations were created to promote peace and stability as well as economic development. Looking beyond the US-China rivalry, it is hoped that sooner rather than later Asean and the EU can really overcome the itchy bilateral issues that have prevented the forming of an effective strategic partnership. This collective force could play a positive role in Indo-Pacific as Asean and the EU can prevent both the US or China from establishing hegemonic power.

Protect children and relief workers caught up in conflict, urges UN rights envoy
Protect children and relief workers caught up in conflict, urges UN rights envoy

Special Representative Virginia Gamba stated that “once again children paying the highest price and the COVID-19 pandemic has put an additional burden on them, their families and communities all over the world”.

“Now more than ever we must all act to protect children and support all international efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19, particularly in situations of armed conflict”, she asserted.

“I join the UN Secretary-General in his appeal for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world — UN envoy

Needing cover

Ms. Gamba pointed to several incidents, including in Libya, where “the few functional health facilities engaged in the COVID-19 response in Tripoli and Benghazi were repeatedly hit and damaged by shelling”.

And last week in Cameroon, she recalled that “several children were reportedly killed, and several others wounded when a school was attacked in the South-West Region”.

Meanwhile in Somalia, attacks against schools and hospitals by Al-Shabaab continue at “an alarming rate, often in conjunction with other grave violations, such as the abduction and recruitment of children”, added the Special Representative.

“In Afghanistan, indiscriminate attacks on schools, universities and other educational facilities are taking place despite the beginning of historic peace talks”, she continued.

Just today, gunmen disguised as police officers stormed Kabul University, taking hostages, and killing and wounding people. 

Keep schools safe

Parties to conflict, whether Governmental forces or non-State armed groups, must keep schools and hospitals safe and not use them for military purposes, urged the UN envoy. 

“I join the UN Secretary-General in his appeal for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world and, once again, call upon all parties to conflict to abide by their obligations under international law and prevent attacks against education and health facilities, as wellas other civilian infrastructure and protected personnel”, she concluded.
 

Bestselling New Zealand Duo Secures Simultaneous Worldwide Release For Latest Laugh-out-loud Picture Book
Bestselling New Zealand Duo Secures Simultaneous Worldwide Release For Latest Laugh-out-loud Picture Book

New Zealand author-illustrator duo Dawn McMillan and Ross
Kinnaird will see the latest in their bestselling series of
hilarious ‘bum’ children’s picture books release
simultaneously in North

America, the UK, Ireland,
Australia and New Zealand at the start of 2021.

New
York-based Dover Publications and London-based Scholastic UK
jumped at the opportunity to purchase rights for My Bum
is SO NOISY!
from originating publisher Oratia
Books,

after previous titles I Need a New Bum
and I’ve Broken by Bum achieved bestseller status
internationally.

Packed with laugh-out-loud rhymes and
zany illustrations, their latest creation follows our hero
on comical adventures caused by his bum and the astounding
and uncontrollable noises

it makes, building to a
crescendo of hilarity.

The first print run for My
Bum is SO NOISY!
will be over 120,000 copies
globally.

“Now more than ever, we could all do with
a laugh – and Dawn and Ross’ books bring laughter in
abundance,” says Fiz Osborne, Editorial Director,
Illustrated Books for Scholastic UK. “We can’t wait to
share My Bum is SO NOISY! with readers next
year.”

Dawn McMillan conjures up the storylines of
the Bum books from her coastal home outside Thames, and Ross
Kinnaird brings them to life from his waterside studio on
Auckland’s North Shore.

“It’s been wonderful to see
the series reach so many readers worldwide, and we hope that
My Bum is SO NOISY! will bring more fun and laughter
to kids and adults alike,” they say.

Oratia publisher
Peter Dowling reports that CITIC Press also plans to publish
the new book in China in early 2021.

“We’re
thrilled to be part of Dawn and Ross’ international
success, which proves the appeal of Kiwi creativity
worldwide,” he says.

My Bum is SO
NOISY!
By Dawn McMillan and Ross
Kinnaird. Published by Oratia
Books

Publication: early 2021 | ISBN:
978-0-947506-81-0 | RRP
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Church unearthed where Jesus said to tell Peter to establish Christianity
Church unearthed where Jesus said to tell Peter to establish Christianity

(Photo: REUTERS / Gil Cohen Magen)Archaeologist Yosef Garfinkel speaks to the media at Elah Fortress or Khirbet Qeiyafa, some 20 km (12 miles) from Jerusalem, November 2, 2008. Archaeologists in Israel said on Thursday they had unearthed the oldest Hebrew text ever found, while excavating a fortress city overlooking a valley where the Bible says David slew Goliath.

Archeologists have uncovered one of the earliest churches in the Holy Land at the foot of breathtaking waterfalls in the scenic Banias Nature Reserve in Israel’s north.


The church is at a site traditionally believed to be where Jesus gave Peter the keys to the kingdom of Heaven, Christian Today reported.

The rare circa AD 400 Byzantine church was build atop a Roman-era temple to Pan, the Greek god from whom the park takes its name, The Times of Israel reported.

Christian builders in the 4th-5th century modified the Roman pagan temple to fit the needs Christianity, a relatively new religion at the time, University of Haifa Professor Adi Erlich said in a brief Hebrew-language video announcing the find.

Erlich posits that the church was built to commemorate Jesus’s interactions with Peter.

It is in this region that Jesus directed Peter with establishing Christianity with the famous phrase, “You are Peter, and, on this rock, I will build my Church… I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven,” recorded in the Gospel of Matthew 16:18.

The church suffered damage through an earthquake at one point, but was renovated in the 7th century, a press release on the site said.

Israel Nature and Parks Authority head of heritage and archaeology Dr. Iosi Bordowicz said that the Banias National Park has stunning archaeology, spreading from the Roman period through the Crusader era.

Bordowicz said the finds will be conserved and made accessible to the many thousands of tourists who in non-COVID-19 times visit the breathtaking waterfalls from all over the world.

Copyright © 2020 Ecumenical News

Belarus, Denmark, France and Slovenia to fill seats on the WHO Executive Board
Belarus, Denmark, France and Slovenia to fill seats on the WHO Executive Board

Following the results of a secret ballot postal voting process, earlier this week the Deputy Executive President of the 70th session of the WHO Regional Committee for Europe, Dr Iva Pejnović Franelić, announced that Belarus, Denmark, France and Slovenia would put forward their candidatures for the WHO Executive Board at the Seventy-fourth World Health Assembly (WHA) in May 2021.

The secret ballot postal vote is a novelty in the conduct of WHO European Region governing bodies’ work, adaptive to the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The WHO Executive Board is composed of 34 individuals, each designated by a Member State from the six WHO regions, and elected to serve by the World Health Assembly (WHA). The Board meets twice a year and its main function is to advise and give effect to the decisions and policies of the WHA.

Currently the following European countries serve on the Executive Board: Austria, Finland, Germany, Israel, Romania, Russian Federation, Tajikistan and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

‘If we invest in health systems, we can bring this virus under control’ – WHO chief
‘If we invest in health systems, we can bring this virus under control’ – WHO chief

“Public health is more than medicine and science and it is bigger than any individual and there is hope that if we invest in health systems…we can bring this virus under control and go forward together to tackle other challenges of our times”, UN World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told journalists in a regular press briefing.

‘Seize the opportunity’

Speaking via video conference from self-quarantine, having himself been in recent contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19, the symptom-free WHO chief noted that over the weekend cases spiked in some countries in Europe and North America.   

“This is another critical moment for action…for leaders to step up…for people to come together for a common purpose”, he said. “Seize the opportunity, it’s not too late”.

He also flagged that where cases are going up exponentially and hospitals reaching capacity “patients and health workers alike” are at risk. 

“We need countries to again invest in the basics so that measures can be lifted safely and Governments can hopefully avoid having to take these measures again”, the UN agency chief asserted.

As some countries are putting in place measures to ease the pressure of health systems, he attested that building “stronger systems ensuring quality testing, tracing and treatment measures are all key”.

“WHO will keep working to drive forward science, solutions and solidarity”, the WHO chief concluded.

Battling COVID

To understand more about how hospitals can prepare and cope with COVID-19, three guests spoke about how their countries were coping with the pandemic.

The Republic of Korea went from the second highest caseload of coronavirus patients globally to one of the lowest – without having to lock down the country – by drawing on lessons it learned from the 2015 MERS COVID outbreak, according to Yae-Jean Kim, Professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunodeficiency Department of Pediatrics, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine.

In addition to rapid PCR swab testing and rapid isolation, she explained that physicians for the Republic of Korea, among other things, developed “drive-through testing facilities”; had a community treatment centre for milder cases; prepared public hospitals for high-risk communicable diseases; and had private hospitals pick up overload cases.   

From South Africa, Mervyn Mer, Principal Specialist at Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital, University of the Witwatersrand, said they worked within their capacity to reach the greatest number of people.

Since the pandemic struck South Africa months after other countries, they used their time to draw up a protocol to maximize “everything we feasibly could”, including expanding the capacity of existing hospitals as opposed to putting up field hospitals, he said. 

Meanwhile, new WHO staff member Marta Lado, an infectious disease specialist and chief medical officer of Partners In Health in Sierra Leone, underscored that the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak had that country how to manage infectious diseases through contact tracing, surveillance, critical care and PPE use.

“One of the most important lessons learned is how we were able to develop a critical care training” that covered monitoring patients vital signs and for shock as well as ventilation and oxygen, she detailed. 

MUSEVENI: Uganda is ready for takeoff
MUSEVENI: Uganda is ready for takeoff

FULL SPEECH

Countrymen and Country Women,

The NRM is presenting to you a Manifesto for the period of 2021-2026.  This Manifesto builds on the big successes of the NRM ever since 1965 when we formed a Student Movement, on the basis of new principles, having come out of the old Political Parties of DP, UPC and Kabakka Yekka, that were based on sectarianism of religion, tribe and gender chauvinism.

Over the years, this Student Movement, came to understand the long journey of 4½ million years of the human race, on this Earth, as well as Africa’s position in that long journey.

In the speech I gave to the Conference in Namboole on the 25th of January, 2020, I pointed out to the country how the human being, initially only living in Africa until about 100,000 years ago, used his unique characteristics of his big brain, a hand that can shape things by holding and working and his bi-pedalism (walking on two legs), to make tools (stone, hammer, chisel, etc.) and use those tools to do work for purposes of producing or catching food (hunting, fishing, agriculture) and improving his quality of life.  In that effort, he was assisted by the continuous discovery of new technologies that used the laws of nature to assist production (the invention of fire 1.5million years ago, iron in the year 1200 BC etc.).  These continuous discoveries changed the way of living of man and the way he was producing wealth and food or he was catching food (hunting, fishing).  The invention of fire enabled man to descend from the trees and live in caves; enabled people to cook (kuteeka), roast (kwootsya), kukara (dry on fire), kutarika (grilling, to smoke), kujumbika (earth-oven, cooking pit), rather than eating the food raw (kukoota, kumeketa); and, eventually, enabled man to get the hard metal of iron (ekyooma) out of the iron ore, a rock or soil, known as obutare.

This ability of man to discover new technologies, reached a watershed point (a revolutionary boundary point) in the year 1440, when a German man by the names of Johannes Gutenburg, invented a Printing Press.  Most of the previous tools were powered by human muscle.  However, the Printing Press used technology of a screw press.  In the year 1698, Thomas Savery, a person from England, invented the water pump that was being powered by condensing steam.  Eventually, by the year 1812-1813, the water pump technology, was developed into the steam-engine technology that, started pulling trains.  This change by part of the human race from the use of the muscle-power to machine power, came to be known as the Industrial Revolution  the first Industrial Revolution. The second Industrial Revolution was the invention of electricity and the third one was the automation of machines.  The human race, is now entering the 4th Industrial Revolution of Artificial Intelligence, machines that have got artificial brains.

This is great for the human race.  However, the problem is that Africa, the pioneer of civilization, the origin of the human race, had missed out on these water-shed phenomena.  Why?  Two reasons.  The first, the failure by our indigenous rulers to detect the new danger of Europeans that broke out of Western Europe, blocked by the Ottoman Turks that captured Constantinople (Istanbul) in the year 1453 AD, when they started looking for a Sea route to the East (Asia) to replace the Marco-Polo land route that had been blocked by the Turks.  These chiefs, failed to unite us to fight this new danger.  Instead, putting on leopard and lion skins, pretending to be those animals in courage, they were busy fighting one another.

Secondly, at the very moment new inventions were being made in Europe and China, Africa came under assault by these new arrivals, starting with the bombardment of Mombasa by Vasco Da Gama on the 7th of April 1498, on his way to India.  Indeed, the first slaves were taken from Sierra Leone in the year 1652.  By 1862, when the first European arrived in Uganda, Uganda was still a three class society of farmers (livestock and crops) and fishermen, Artisans (black smiths, carpenters, banogoozi – ceramics, bashakiizi – herbalists, bakomagyi – bark cloth makers etc.) and the feudal rulers.  The Europeans had used the 400 years since Columbus and Vasco Da Gama, to advance in Science (the steam engine, quinine etc.) and military technology (breech-loaders and the maxim machine gun).

Our chiefs, had misused the 400 years, fighting one another; but the Europeans, had used those 400 years to discover answers to our only reliable defenders: the long-distances of Africa and its jungle, rivers and forests; the mosquitoes and the tsetse flies; and the ferocious-tribesmen, but poorly led by the chiefs, poorly armed and isolated from one another by the same myopic chiefs but also by the difficult terrain.

By 1900, the Conquest of the whole of Africa was complete, except for Ethiopia.  As I have told Ugandans repeatedly, this conquest of Africa was potentially fatal.  Many of the other Peoples that were conquered, never survived.  The Red Indians of North America, the Aztecs of Mexico, the Incas of Peru, the Indians of Bolivia, the Indians of Brazil, the Caribes of the Caribbean, the Aborigines of Australia, the Maoris of New-Zealand, etc.  Many of these groups were either exterminated or are still greatly marginalized.  Their languages and cultures were replaced by European languages and cultures.  The languages in use now in those lands are: English, Spanish, Portuguese and French and not the indigenous languages of those peoples.

By the 1950s, part of Kenya was being called the “White Highlands”.  South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia were being paraded around as White Countries.  Angola, Mozambique, Guinnea Bissau and Cape Verde and Sao Tome were “Overseas Provinces of Portugal”.  The complicating and redeeming factor in Africa were the genes of the Africans and the advanced civilization of Africa.  We could not easily die because our cattle, goats, chicken, that stayed with us in our huts, had long inoculated us against the zoonotic diseases.  We, therefore, survived in spite of the slave trade, the genocide, the colonial wars, the hard labour etc.

When we, therefore, met at Igongo as CEC on the 23rd of December, 2018, I proposed to CEC in the Paper I presented, that while addressing the issues of Uganda’s Political – Social – Economic metamorphosis, we should ask the following questions:

  • How was Uganda’s economy in 1900?
  • How was it in 1962-1971?
  • How was the economy in 1986?
  • How is it now?
  • Where do we intend to take it?  And what stimuli shall we use to achieve our goals?

This way of erecting milestones, can help us discipline the discussion.  The Manifesto is a voluminous and comprehensive document that has dealt with these questions following my proposal to them.  I thank the Manifesto Committee so much that was led by Prof. Ephraim Kamuntu.