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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Palestinian teen killed during village's attempt to defend mountain from invading Israeli illegal squatters

Mohammed Abdel Karim Hamayel  killed
© Quds News Network
Mohammed Abdel Karim Hamayel
For the Palestinians of the northern occupied West Bank, putting your life on the line to defend your land is just a part of life.

Countless Palestinians have paid the highest price for attempting to fend off Israeli settlers and soldiers from their cities, towns and villages. On Wednesday, another Palestinian was added to that list.

15-year-old Mohammed Abdel Karim Hamayel succumbed to his wounds on Wednesday, hours after he was shot by Israeli forces, along with dozens of other young men from his hometown of Beita, south of Nablus.

Hamayel was shot when dozens of armed Israeli troops stormed Jabal al-Arma, or al-Arma Mountain, on the outskirts of Beita, and began violently confronting crowds of Palestinians who were staging a sit-in on the mountain.

Blue Planet

This system cannot be sustained: Tribal nations enter negotiations over Colorado River water

Colorado River Basin
The Colorado River Basin is the setting for some of the most drawn-out and complex water issues in the Western U.S. In 2019, the Colorado River Drought Contingency Plan — a water-conservation agreement between states, tribal nations and the federal government for the basin, now in its 20th year of drought — passed Congress. This year, it goes into effect.

2020 will also see the start of the renegotiation of the Colorado River Interim Guidelines. The guidelines, which regulate the flow of water to users, were created in 2007 without tribal consultation and are set to expire in 2026. The 29 tribal nations in the upper and lower basins hold some of the river's most senior water rights and control around 20% of its annual flow. But the tribes have often been excluded from water policymaking; around a dozen have yet to quantify their water rights, while others have yet to make full use of them. Most of the tribal nations anticipate fully developing their established water rights by 2040 — whether for agriculture, development, leasing or other uses. Drought and climate change are still causing shortages and uncertainty, however. Already, the Colorado River has dropped by about 20%; by the end of this century, it could drop by more than half.

High Country News spoke with Daryl Vigil (Jicarilla Apache, Jemez Pueblo and Zia Pueblo), water administrator for the Jicarilla Apache Nation. Vigil, the interim executive director of the Ten Tribes Partnership, helped co-facilitate the Water and Tribes Initiative, coalitions focused on getting increased tribal participation on Colorado River discussions. Those efforts are critical, Vigil says, "because left to the states and the federal government, they've already proven that they will leave us out every time."

HCN and Vigil spoke about "the law of the river" — the colloquial term for the roughly 100 years of court cases, treaties, agreements and water settlements that govern the Colorado — as well as tribal consultation and climate change.

Question

Questions remain over Israel's role in WhatsApp case against spyware firm

What'sApp
© Dado Ruvić/Reuters
WhatsApp has said its lawsuit against the Israeli spyware maker NSO Group encountered an unusual delay because of a legal holdup involving the government, raising questions about whether Israel will play a role in the company's case.

WhatsApp filed its lawsuit in October, alleging that NSO Group had hacked 1,400 of its users, including journalists, senior diplomats, government officials and human rights activists.

In a recent series of legal filings, NSO Group - which only recently hired a lawyer in the case - accused Facebook, which owns WhatsApp, of lying to court when it said it had served its lawsuit against the group under the protocols of a legal process known as the Hague Convention. The convention allows litigants to serve defendants with legal documents in foreign countries.

Comment: See also:


Health

'Ability to help may reach limit': Italian doctor tells RT medics 'exhausted' helping isolated patients - and other coronavirus news

italian medical workers
© Reuters / Flavio Lo Scalzo
Italian medical workers wearing protective masks wait by a medical checkpoint at the entrance to a hospital.
If the number of the infected keeps rising, patients with better chances of survival will have to be prioritized, an ER doctor at the epicenter of the Italian outbreak told RT's Ruptly video agency.

In the city of Piacenza, in the heart of northern Italy's coronavirus outbreak, overworked medical personnel are reaching their breaking point - and there seems to be no sign that the epidemic is letting up. With a population of just over 100,000, the city was placed on lockdown on Sunday, after suffering 50 deaths and more than 630 coronavirus diagnoses.

Visibly tired and with bags under his eyes, Davide Bastoni, who works in the emergency room of the Gugliermo Da Saliceto Hospital in Piacenza, told Ruptly that the battle against Covid-19 has been unceasing - and humbling.

"The night was very exhausting... This epidemic permits us to understand the fact that at the end of the day, we are all human beings, we are all the same, when facing these outbreaks or these viruses," said Bastoni.


Dressed in a white smock and a hair net, the doctor confessed that protecting against the highly-contagious has separated patients from their caregivers.

"They are all patients who need human contact, who need some words of comfort, which is difficult to give them because we have the masks and all the protective devices," the medical professional noted. He said that trying to make treatment more "humane" has forced clinicians to "reinvent" how they communicate with their patients.

Comment: Italy is shutting down Rome's Ciampino airport, and the main terminal at the central airport. One slightly humorous symptom of the public panic: Italians are buying out the pasta sections of local stores, but are still avoiding smooth pasta.


More telling: worldwide consumption of Chinese and Italian food has dropped 37% and 24% respectively in the last weeks.

China's health authorities say China has passed the peak of the outbreak there:
As of Wednesday night, the NHC recorded 15 new cases in mainland China, down from Tuesday's 31 and Monday's 36.

Meanwhile, Zhong Nanshan, Chinese coronavirus adviser and the epidemiologist who discovered the SARS coronavirus in 2003, said he believes the global Covid-19 epidemic will be over by June. There are some promising signs, like the lower re-infection rate among recovered patients, he said, although many cases imported into China show no overt symptoms of the virus.
Zhong says he predicts a fading by June, but on the condition that countries take "urgent action":
Some countries still don't take the situation very seriously and fail to aggressively contain the Covid-19, Zhong said. In this case, the epidemic might be prolonged even despite the summer heat that makes viral stains relatively inactive, the doctor warned.
Airline stocks nosedived after Trump's announcement of the US-Europe travel ban. Russian scientists have developed a test for the virus that gives results within 15 minutes, but it won't be available until this fall. Russia and Europe delayed their joint Mars mission until 2022 over the panic. Like the CFR cancelling their coronavirus conference over coronavirus, a Russian religious procession on the theme has also been cancelled, over coronavirus. Russia has sent 500 diagnostic systems to Iran, capable of handling 50,000 tests. Iran is seeking an IMF loan for $5 billion to deal with their own crisis. Another 75 people died there yesterday, and confirmed cases passed 10,000. (The U.S. military thinks the virus has affected Iran's leadership decision-making, for the worse, of course.)

A Brazilian official who met with Trump on March 7 has tested positive (Bolsonaro is being tested). Trump isn't concerned. Canadian PM Trudeau is self-quarantining after his wife displayed flu-like symptoms. #MeToo? Beijing had harsh words in response to the U.S. saying they bungled the first two months of the spread in China (technically, they did - but as noted yesterday and above, they seem to have gotten things under control since then). And finally for this update:


He's probably right, about the official figures being low. But that has a bright side: it means that more cases than previously acknowledged are actually mild or asymptomatic (meaning the mortality rate will be much lower than currently thought).

See also:


X

Truthdig employees stop work to protest labor conditions

Truth
Senior editors and contributors at Truthdig, including Executive Editor Kasia Anderson, Managing Editor, Jacob Sugarman, Foreign Editor Natasha Hakimi Zapata and Book Editor Eunice Wong, along with columnists Chris Hedges, Lee Camp and Paul Street and the cartoonist Dwayne Booth, aka Mr. Fish, as well as blogger Ilana Novick, announced in a joint letter today they were beginning a work stoppage today to protest what they describe as unfair labor conditions and the effort by the publisher, Zuade Kaufman, to remove the site's founding Editor-in-Chief and co-owner Robert Scheer.

The letter, posted briefly on the site before being taken down and sent out to the 45,000 people on Truthdig's email list read:

This letter is to announce that the undersigned members of Truthdig's editorial team, Executive Editor Kasia Anderson, Managing Editor Jacob Sugarman, Foreign Editor Natasha Hakimi Zapata, Book Editor Eunice Wong and blogger Ilana Novick, along with columnists Chris Hedges, Lee Camp and Paul Street and cartoonist Mr. Fish will begin a work stoppage, effective immediately.

In recent months, as has been publicly reported, Truthdig Publisher Zuade Kaufman and Editor in Chief Robert Scheer have been engaged in an ongoing dispute. That dispute is approaching its nadir as we are concerned Ms. Kaufman is attempting to take control of Truthdig, thus effectively removing Mr. Scheer from the website he co-owns and co-founded. This is unacceptable to us.

Arrow Down

College student charged with faking hate crime against herself

Anayeli Dominguez-Pena
University celebrates slew of diversity mandates it implemented in response to hoax

A student who reported herself as a victim of a hate crime has been charged with faking it.

California's La Verne Police Department said it determined that last year's "series of threats" against a University of La Verne student group and its leader Anayeli Dominguez-Pena were actually sent by Dominguez-Pena herself.

The threats were so severe that the university "cancelled classes for a day to 'reset' and deal with the threats," the department said. Dominguez-Pena has been charged with two felonies and two misdemeanors: criminal threats, perjury, "electronic impersonation" and six counts of filing a false police report.

Bad Guys

NBA suspends their season due to Coronavirus fears - NHL also suspends play while NCAA cancels March Madness tournament

NBA coronavirus
© Mario Tama/Getty Images
The National Basketball Association has decided to suspend their season, in reaction to the coronavirus.

The announcement came shortly after a game between the Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder, after a player on the Jazz tested positive for the coronavirus.

The NBA released a statement announcing their decision:


Comment: The NHL followed the NBA's lead in suspending play, while the NCAA has canceled the upcoming men's and women's basketball tournament. The governor of New York has also shut down all Broadway theaters and banned gatherings of more than 500 people.


Heart - Black

A lot more than baby on board: Woman caught trying to sneak insane amount of contraband into Brazilian prison

Contraband
© Twitter/ Coronel Tadeu
Guards at a Brazilian prison were truly baffled when a 'pregnant' woman attempted to visit her husband but when asked several routine questions, revealed she was in fact attempting to smuggle in everything but the kitchen sink.

The 22-year-old woman was visiting her hubby who was banged up in the Nelson Hungria Penitentiary Complex near Belo Horizonte. Guards noticed she was wearing a rather fetching, if oddly-shaped, jumpsuit.

Pregnant women are not normally subjected to body scans when visiting inmates in Brazilian prison but, when officers attempted a pat down, the young woman crumbled and confessed to attempted smuggling. But nothing could have prepared the prison guards for the vast trove of contraband they were about to find strapped to the woman's body.

People 2

Canada: New Trudeau law could jail parents who oppose gender conversion

dad and kids
© juliane-liebermann/unsplash
Under the guise of prohibiting "conversion therapy," Bill C-8 would make it a criminal offence for parents to help their own gender-confused children find peace in accepting their biological gender. The Liberal government's proposed legislation, introduced as a First Reading on March 9, defines "conversion therapy" as "a practice, treatment or service designed to change a person's sexual orientation to heterosexual or gender identity to cisgender, or to repress or reduce non-heterosexual attraction or sexual behaviour."

This proposed House of Commons legislation has the same major flaws that the Senate's Bill S-202 had, as I argued in 2019. Under C-8, parents could spend up to five years in jail for trying to help their son accept himself as a boy, or for helping their daughter to accept herself as a girl. Bill C-8 also would impose prison terms up to five years for doctors, counsellors, psychiatrists, psychologists and other paid professionals whose treatment for gender confusion departs from politically correct orthodoxy. Parents would be punished if they do anything other than encourage a confused child to "transition" to the opposite gender. Transitioning is an extreme form of intervention that includes taking puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and undergoing permanent surgical sterilization, including the removal of healthy organs such as breasts and testicles.

Comment: Some day, hopefully, these bureaucrats pushing gender transitioning on kids will be held accountable for their crimes.

See also:


Microscope 1

Irony: Coronavirus conference gets canceled because of coronavirus

new york commuter coronavirus
© Victor J. Blue—Bloomberg/Getty Images
A commuter wears a mask and gloves while walking through a subway station in New York, U.S., on March 9, 2020.
So much for keeping business rolling during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Council on Foreign Relations has canceled a roundtable called "Doing Business Under Coronavirus" scheduled for Friday in New York due to the spread of the infection itself. CFR has also canceled other in-person conferences that were scheduled from March 11 to April 3, including roundtables in New York and Washington and national events around the U.S.

The CFR's confabs are joining a long list of canceled or postponed gatherings, including the annual New York auto show. The Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association said Tuesday that the car show will be rescheduled to late August.