Society's ChildS


Attention

Veteran Russian Ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, drops dead in New York City

Vitaly Churkin
© Associated Press photo/Seth Wenig
Vitaly Churkin, who served as Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations since 2006, "died suddenly" in New York, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced.

Churkin would have turned 65 on Tuesday.

The announcement "of the untimely passing away of Ambassador Vitaly Churkin this morning" was met with shock when it was delivered during a session at the UN headquarters.

"He was a dear colleague of all of us, a deeply committed diplomat of his country and one of the finest people we have known," a UN official who delivered the news to her colleagues said.

The moment of silence in Churkin's memory was announced at the UN.


Comment: On the same day in Syria...

Four Russian officers assassinated in remote-detonated car blast outside airbase in Syria

Someone is trying to create tension...


Biohazard

Rising concerns about a possible nuclear incident in Europe after radioactive iodine levels spike

particulate matter
© Institute de Radioprotection et de Süreté Nucléaire.
Concerns about a potential, and so far unsubstantiated, nuclear "incident", reportedly in the vicinity of the Arctic circle, spread in the past week after trace amounts of radioactive Iodine-131 of unknown origin were detected in January over large areas in Europe according to a report by the Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, the French national public expert in nuclear and radiological risks. Since the isotope has a half-life of only eight days, the detection is an indication of a rather recent release. As the Barents Observer adds, "where the radioactivity is coming from is still a mystery."

The air filter station at Svanhovd - located a few hundred meters from Norway's border to Russia's Kola Peninsula in the north - was the first to measure small amounts of the radioactive Ionide-131 in the second week of January. Shortly thereafter, the same Iodine-131 isotope was measured in Rovaniemi in Finnish Lapland. Within the next two weeks, traces of radioactivity, although in tiny amounts, were measured in Poland, Czech Republic, Germany, France and Spain.

Norway was the first to measure the radioactivity, but France was the first to officially inform the public about it.

"Iodine-131 a radionuclide of anthropogenic origin, has recently been detected in tiny amounts in the ground-level atmosphere in Europe. The preliminary report states it was first found during week 2 of January 2017 in northern Norway. Iodine-131 was also detected in Finland, Poland, Czech Republic, Germany, France and Spain, until the end of January", the official French Institute de Radioprotection et de Süreté Nucléaire (IRSN) wrote in a press release.

Comment: There were spikes in radioactive iodine in Europe in 2011 as well. Are you taking your iodine?


Bullseye

Daesh militants subjecting Sunni women to abuse, detention and forced marriage

Daesh prisoners
© AP Photo/Seivan M. Salim
Islamic State militants (ISIL or Daesh, outlawed in Russia) in Iraq are detaining, abusing and forcing Sunni Arab women into marriage, a prominent rights watchdog said on Monday.

"Little is known about sexual abuse against Sunni Arab women living under ISIS rule... Their care and rehabilitation requires a multifaceted response, with authorities providing the needed medical and psychosocial support and working to stamp out stigma around sexual violence within the wider community," Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch said.

The watchdog's researchers in January 2017 conducted interviews with a number of women, who had escaped from the Daesh-held town of Hawija, Iraq, to Kirkuk. Four of the interviewees said they had been detained by Daesh in 2016, for periods between three days and a month. The interviews revealed cases of destruction of property, physical violence, forced marriage and sexual abuse.

Comment: Life under Daesh: Women who escaped Mosul describe atrocities


Red Flag

UK police deny there is any link between reported spikes in hate crimes and Brexit vote

Anti-Brexit protest
© Neil Hall / Reuters An anti-Brexit protester holds a sign outside the Houses of Parliament, London
There is "no evidence" indicating that there is a link between Britain's vote to leave the EU and the current spike in hate crime, police say.

The majority of Britain's police forces reported a higher number of hate crime incidents in the three months that followed the Brexit vote than in any quarter since 2012.

According to the Home Office, the month of July 2016 saw a 41 percent spike in hate crimes.

However, Essex Police says 33 of the country's 42 police forces saw the highest number of reports on record due to greater awareness and confidence in officers.

"There is no evidence to suggest any increase has been specifically and directly caused by any one event or issue," a spokesperson for the force told Echo News, a local Essex paper.

Comment: See also: UKIP leader Nuttall: Blatant spike in post-Brexit hate crime is 'fabricated'


Light Saber

Leading by example: Indian man's single mission turned a dying river into a paradise

KAli Bein river india
© Sant Balbir Singh Seechewal
In the year 2000, Sant Balbir Singh Seechewal decided that it was time to clean up a sacred part of the Hoshiarpur district of Punjab, the Kali Bein river.

For centuries, city governments along the river had been dumping their human waste and garbage into this sacred Sikh waterway. After unsuccessfully attempting to convince the governments to stop dumping waste into the river, Seechewal drew on the Sikh tradition of kar sewa (free voluntary service).

That's when Sant Sichewal (also spelled Sancherwal, Sabarwahl, and Sant Balbir Singh Seechewal) jumped in for a cleansing bath of a different kind: one designed to awaken the people. He began cleaning the river single-handedly until his example, and his many narrations on the history and value of the Bein to Sikh history drew hundreds of followers to the task.

Stock Up

Long way to go: Saudi women take top financial jobs in major shift from tradition

Saudi stock exchange
© Faisal Al Nasser / ReutersThe country's stock exchange is worth $439 billion.

For the first time in its history Saudi Arabia has appointed women to senior positions in national financial institutions, marking a dramatic social shift in the highly-conservative nation with strict laws curtailing female independence.

In a move greeted as a victory for gender equality, Samba Financial Group named Rania Mahmoud Nashar as their new CEO on Sunday. Her new role began this week, reported Bloomberg.

The appointment comes days after Sarah Al Suhaimi was named the first female to chair the country's stock exchange (Tadawul), worth $439 billion. Something of a gender equality trailblazer, Al Suhaimi became the first female head of a Saudi investment bank, NCB Capital Co, in 2014.

Family

The joy and fear of being a mother in Gaza

Nesma Seyam with her daughter.
© Nesma SeyamThe author with her daughter.
The doctor studied the test results, raised her head and smiled.

"Pregnant," she said. "Congratulations, you are pregnant!"

All I could muster in response was: "Why?"

Joy, excitement and fear knotted inside me. My husband and I would soon have a baby, filling our life with love and noise.

But a storm of questions raged in my head. I immediately began to fear that Israel would bomb us again.

How would we run away if that happened? How would we survive?

I was scared and nervous. The memories of all the wars I had lived through came alive and overpowered me.

Family

Fox News poll shows Americans split on whether to trust Trump or media

Trump
A new Fox News poll finds that slightly more U.S. voters trust President Trump's administration to tell the truth than the media.

The survey released on Friday found that 45 percent of voters trust the White House to "tell the public the truth" while 42 percent of voters could say the same about the news media.

Ten percent of responders remained undecided.

Comment: Do the people trust Fake News polls too?

Further reading: Taking names and kicking butt: Top 8 moments from yesterday's Trump press conference


Che Guevara

Anti-Trump rallies hit cities across US, #IAmAMuslimToo protest in Times Square

© Carlo Allegri / ReutersPeople take part in an "I am Muslim Too" rally in Times Square Manhattan, New York
Protesters took to the streets of New York City's Times Square to take part in the #IAmAMuslimToo march, while separate anti-Trump demonstrations took place in other US cities.

The rallies are aimed at speaking out against President Donald Trump's recent travel ban on seven mainly-Muslim countries, and to highlight interfaith solidarity among the American population.

The so-called 'muslim travel ban' has faced widespread condemnation both at home and abroad and is currently embroiled in legal challenges across the United States with the president vowing to redraft the executive order as early as next week.

Roses

Trauma of war: The betrayal felt in East Ukraine will take decades to heal, locals say

 A woman on the site of a destroyed building
© Valeriy Melnikov / SputnikA woman on the site of a destroyed building, Donetsk.
As Ukraine marks the anniversary of the 2014 coup in Kiev that led to conflict in the east of the country, RT spoke to people in Donbass who see themselves as having been betrayed by their fellow countrymen.

Over 10,000 people have been killed in the bloody conflict in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions, which started after the population there refused to accept the coup and proclaimed independence from Kiev.

"They consider us to be terrorists. You see, we are walking peacefully, like normal, simple people, why are we terrorists? They think we are, that's why they don't have any pity for us," one local man told RT's Murad Gazdiev.