Bangladesh interim government reverses ban on Jamaat-e-Islami party

washington — The Bangladeshi interim government has overturned a ban on a controversial religious-based political party, adding an element of uncertainty to the country’s prospects as it moves toward new elections following the ouster of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Jamaat-e-Islami and its affiliate Islami Chhatra Shibir had been banned on August 1 amid countrywide protests that led to the ouster of Hasina and her ruling Awami League party four days later. But the interim government announced the lifting of the ban in an official bulletin Wednesday, saying there wasn’t evidence connecting the parties to terrorism or violence.

Jamaat Secretary-General Mia Ghulam Parwar welcomed the decision in an interview with Voice of America’s Bangla Service, saying the original ban was “illegal, as it was initiated by an illegal government.”

“We made a demand to the present interim government to revoke it. … The government did justice by resisting a tyranny. I thank God Almighty for this,” Parwar said.

When asked about participation in new elections now being organized by an interim government, Parwar said, “Jamaat is an election-oriented party. If the election is acceptable to all, we will participate in that election, inshallah.”

Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, secretary-general of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), which was the largest opposition party during Hasina’s rule, also welcomed the decision to lift the ban.

“Jamaat is a political party. I think it was not right to ban them,” he told VOA. “They have been in politics for a long time. They were represented in the parliament. Therefore, the decision to revoke the banning of Jamaat-Shibir is correct.”

Different takes

Political analyst Badiul Alam Majumdar, founder of the civil society organization Citizens for Good Governance, told VOA he believed the decision was “logical” because the party had been banned by the Awami League government “as a strategy to suppress and counter the movement.”

“The more political parties there are in the country, the better,” Majumdar added. “Political parties can be banned for several reasons. Impeachment should be done for logical reasons, not as political maneuvering. I think reverting the decision to ban Jamaat is a right one.”

Critics of Jamaat-e-Islami, however, worry that re-legalizing the party will undermine efforts to move the country forward.

“Although the rehabilitation of Jamaat is unexpected, this decision of the interim government did not surprise me,” said Imran H. Sarker, spokesperson for the Gonojagoron Moncho human rights movement.

“This is not an isolated incident. The whole process is part of a long process of turning Bangladesh into a communal, failed and dysfunctional state.”

Gonojagoron Moncho led a movement in 2013 demanding justice against those who committed atrocities during the country’s war for independence from Pakistan in 1971. As a result, some leaders of Jamaat who had been active in the party leadership in 1971 were charged with crimes under a 1973 law, the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act.

American political observer Adam Pitman wrote in an opinion piece, “Jamaat had a decade to put itself on the right side of the law. Jamaat had a judgment they could have used as a self-help guide: Disavow communal politics; place women in leadership positions; commit to a secular, democratic system of government. They chose not to.”

Jamaat-e-Islami history

Once an ally of the BNP, Jamaat-e-Islami reached new highs politically in the 1991 general elections, helping then-BNP leader Khaleda Zia to become the first female prime minister of Bangladesh.

But their coalition lost favor because of a series of terrorist attacks, poor governance and corruption, leading to a sharp decline in Jamaat’s representation in the 2008 elections.

To present a more nationalist image, Jamaat has separated itself from its counterparts in Pakistan and India. However, there is still an acceptance struggle going on in Bangladesh because of the party’s cooperation with the Pakistani army during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War.

Jamaat was restricted from participating in elections by the Election Commission in 2013 after it was deregistered. That came after the Awami League administration established the International Crimes Tribunal, which tried and convicted several senior Jamaat officials of war crimes during the 1971 conflict. 

Jamaat has remained quiet and focused on religious activities while maintaining its organizational structure, even after much of its leadership was lost to executions and convictions. 

 

Foreign governments, especially Pakistan and Turkey, have expressed sympathy for Jamaat, creating diplomatic tensions with the now-deposed Hasina government.

Majumdar suggests that lifting the ban on Jamaat-e-Islami alone won’t shape Bangladesh’s political future, but he acknowledges that religion may play a role.

“Time will tell what kind of impact this decision will have on future politics,” he said. “Where will people’s support go? However, it is true that we are gradually becoming religious due to which the public support of such political parties may increase.”

This story originated in VOA’s Bangla Service.  

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More food, other relief reaching millions of famished Sudanese   

geneva — Breakthroughs providing for greater humanitarian access that were achieved in the first round of U.S.-mediated peace talks on Sudan are holding and expanding, the United States’ special envoy for Sudan said. The talks wrapped up in Geneva last Friday.

“We were able over a couple of weeks working intensively around the clock and with other partners and back in our capitals around the world for this ALPS [Aligned for Advancing Lifesaving and Peace in Sudan] group to be able to produce some very significant breakthroughs,” Tom Perriello told journalists at an online news conference Thursday.

He credited the ALPS group, which includes Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, the African Union and the United Nations, for negotiating the opening of two of three vital access routes “into areas of famine and acute hunger.”

“We were able to get agreement on the opening of the Adre border, agreements from the RSF [Rapid Support Forces] and SAF [Sudanese Armed Forces] to guarantee access along those routes,” he said, adding that negotiators received similar pledges from the warring parties of guarantee of access “across the Dabbah Road coming east from Port Sudan.”

“Both of those remain active and open now with dozens of trucks crossing. Nearly 6 million pounds of food and emergency relief are reaching areas in need. We need that to continue and to accelerate,” Perriello said. “And we are actively negotiating on a daily basis for additional expansions, including access through Sennar State into the heartland of Sudan.”

The negotiators estimate that the opening of the three routes combined would reach 20 million people with lifesaving food, medicine and other crucial aid.

The World Food Program reports that more than half of Sudan’s population — 26.5 million people — is suffering from acute hunger, including more than 755,000 people on the verge of famine.

Since the rival parties went to war in April 2023, the United Nations reports,  more than 18,800 people have been killed and more than 33,000 injured. The U.N. calls Sudan the world’s largest displacement crisis, noting that more than 12 million people have been uprooted from their homes — 10.7 million displaced inside Sudan and another 2 million as refugees in neighboring countries.

Considering the multiple dangers — the bombings, shelling, violence and abuse to which the Sudanese people are subjected every day — negotiators sought and were able to achieve another breakthrough on civilian protection.

“We were able to get a commitment to a code of conduct by the Rapid Support Forces with a deadline by the end of the month of being able to put that out publicly to all those fighting under their auspices,” Perriello said, adding, “We have made that same request of the army.” 

Still no peace accord

However, he noted that the Geneva talks failed to reach an agreement on the cessation of hostilities. 

“We, unfortunately, we see a lack of political will at the time for the parties to stop fighting, and in fact are accelerating. … We have to find a way to get the parties together to find an end to this war that is leading to the suffering of millions inside Sudan, as well as spilling over increasingly into neighboring countries,” Perriello said.

While the Rapid Support Forces sent a delegation, the Sudanese Armed Forces stayed away, citing concern about the presence of the United Arab Emirates at the negotiating table. The SAF alleges the UAE sent arms to the RSF, a claim the UAE denies.

Perriello acknowledged the difficulty of reaching a peace agreement with only one of the warring parties present. He said that despite this handicap,  agreements on humanitarian issues have been reached because he has been in regular contact with SAF representatives by telephone. These efforts “are continuing, and the engagement with both the RSF and the army is a daily engagement,” he said.

Given the level of urgency presented by the crisis in Sudan, Perriello said, nonstop negotiations to improve the desperate plight of the Sudanese people are continuing virtually 24/7 with all participants.

“I do think in addition to the stark scale of humanitarian suffering, you also now have a crisis that represents a real regional threat to instability,” he said. “We do believe ultimately there is no military solution to this conflict, and a mediated solution is the quickest way to ensure a stable and sovereign Sudan.”

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China’s lending to Africa increased in 2023, study shows

Johannesburg  — Chinese lending to Africa rose for the first time in years in 2023, new research by Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center showed Thursday. But the $4.61 billion loaned last year is still far less than China’s commitments to the continent pre-pandemic.

In the heady early days of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s global infrastructure project, the Belt and Road Initiative, or BRI, China’s loans to Africa surpassed $10 billion each year.

That lending dropped sharply at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and stayed low as China experienced its own economic slowdown. The decrease in loans also came as some African borrowers entered drawn-out debt overhauls.

Lucas Engel, a data analyst who co-authored the Boston University study, explained why he thinks lending was up somewhat in 2023 despite China’s troubles.

“Investment should be viewed in the context of China’s overall economic heft and the importance China attaches to its relationship with Africa,” Engel said, “especially strategically important long-term borrowers that China has developed close relationships with.”

The Boston University paper found a couple of trends when analyzing China’s loans to eight African countries and two regional financial institutions last year. The researchers said one thing that was unique was that more than half the money was loaned to African multilateral banks.

They said this was likely a form of risk mitigation, and Cobus van Staden, managing editor at the China Global South Project, a thinktank based in Pretoria, agreed.

“If you’re lending to African multilateral institutions, that means you are in a mix of lenders and there are de-risking mechanisms in place, partly because the risk is also separated across many actors,” van Staden said. “If you’re lending bilaterally, particularly to a government, then you … the risk impact is higher.”

Despite this growing risk aversion, the researchers noted China was still lending to three major longtime borrowers: Angola, Nigeria and Egypt.

Critics have accused China of ensnaring African countries in “debt traps,” by which large sums owed to Chinese companies make African governments beholden to Beijing economically and politically. However, economists have widely debunked the “debt trap” theory.

Another thing the Boston University research found was that China was once again committed to energy lending after a two-year hiatus. China committed loans to three renewable energy projects in Africa in 2023, in solar and hydropower.

This is in line with China moving away from the large infrastructure projects of the past to so-called “small is beautiful” projects and a “green BRI.”

Lauren Johnston, associate professor of China studies at the University of Sydney, said it was not surprising that despite the 2023 uptick, China’s loans to Africa hadn’t rebounded to anywhere near previous levels. She noted that initially China was financing large projects like the building of dams, roads and railways. Now, that’s done.

“Maybe this is like a period of consolidating those investments rather than just carrying on and building the next big investment,” Johnston said. “It’s a period to consolidate and grasp the economic value and imbed the returns and successes, and learn from any issues with those earlier loans.”

Next week, Xi will address African leaders gathered in Beijing for the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation.

Van Staden said some new loan announcements may be made, but he added a caveat.

“I don’t necessarily expect a single big number,” he said. “I think the announcements will probably be more diffuse.”

Boston University’s Engel said it was difficult to estimate the volume of financing that would be announced at the summit, but he expected pledges in diverse areas of cooperation.

The Chinese embassies in Pretoria and Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to VOA’s request for comment.

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Alleging illegal content, France charges Telegram boss; Russia gives warning

London — Russia on Thursday warned France not to turn the investigation of Pavel Durov, the boss of Telegram, into a “political persecution” after the billionaire 39-year-old CEO was put under formal investigation relating to activities on his social media platform.

Moscow has implied there are political motivations behind the arrest of Durov, who was detained Saturday as he disembarked his private jet at Paris-Le Bourget airport, near the French capital.

“The main thing is for what is happening in France not to run into political persecution,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters Thursday. “Of course, we consider him a Russian citizen and, as much as possible, we will be ready to provide assistance. We will be watching what happens next,” Peskov said.

France strongly denies there are any political objectives behind his arrest and maintains the investigation is being conducted according to the rule of law.

Durov holds joint Russian, French and United Arab Emirates citizenship. He was released from police custody Wednesday evening on $5.6 million bail. He is banned from leaving France and must report to a police station twice a week.

TJ McIntyre, an associate professor at University College Dublin’s School of Law and an expert on technology law and cybercrime, said Durov faces a range of preliminary charges, “ranging from failure to take action on the sale of drugs on Telegram, failure to prevent the distribution of child sexual abuse material on Telegram, failure to provide information on users when requested as part of criminal investigations, going so far as to include accusations of money laundering.”

McIntyre added that it was unusual for the CEO of a social media website to be held liable for the content it hosts. “Now, he has, himself, been indicted, which takes the investigation to the next level.”

The preliminary charges, which were outlined Wednesday in a statement by Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau, also appear to concern allegations involving organized crime, including “complicity in the administration of an online platform to enable an illicit transaction.”

Speaking outside the courthouse in Paris on Wednesday, Pavel Durov’s lawyer rejected the allegations. “Firstly, Telegram complies in every respect with European digital regulations and is moderated to the same standards as other social networks,” lawyer David-Olivier Kaminski told reporters.

“I’d like to add that it’s totally absurd to think that the head of a social network could be involved in criminal acts that don’t concern him either directly or indirectly,” Kaminski said.

Durov founded Telegram a decade ago. After reportedly facing regulatory pressures in his native Russia, Durov chose Dubai as the company’s headquarters, gaining UAE citizenship in 2021. Local media report that he was given French citizenship later the same year. His wealth is estimated by Forbes at upwards of $15 billion.

While other social media platforms have frequently been accused of harboring illegal content, French investigators say Telegram repeatedly failed to engage with regulators or to comply with laws on moderation.

“They are widely perceived as being a scofflaw when it comes to taking down illegal content posted by users. And if that’s true, if they were notified of specific content by users that violated the law and they didn’t take it down, then they’ve forfeited immunity under the big EU law on this, the Digital Services Act,” said Daphne Keller, director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford Law School’s Cyber Policy Center.

Telegram made a point of refusing to comply with laws on content moderation, said McIntyre. “You have a lot of aggressive rhetoric from the owner saying in essence that this is a service which is dedicated to freedom of expression, [and] it will set out to refuse a lot of state requests. And that I think has come back to bite him now.”

Other social media platforms will be watching closely, according to Keller.

“I think we should assume that most ordinary big platforms, the Facebooks, the YouTubes, etc., are not endangered by this. They have massive teams operating content moderation systems and … removing illegal content if they’re notified about it. I don’t think they could be subject to charges like this.

“Now it may be that X, Elon Musk’s platform, actually has been dropping the ball on doing these things. Certainly, that’s something that EU Commissioner [for Internal Market and Services] Thierry Breton has alleged.”

Elon Musk, the owner of X — formerly Twitter — posted online in support of Durov this week, reposting comments he made in a March interview that moderation was “a propaganda word for censorship.”

Musk is likely worried about the implications of Durov’s arrest, said McIntyre.

“I think Mr. Musk shares a lot of his views with this particular defendant, and I think he would be rightly worried as to the implications of this for him and for his service in Europe in general. But it might not be as extreme a case as Telegram.

“Certainly, there are issues with Twitter [X] failing to respond to government requests, failing to take proper steps to moderate its content. And it’s not impossible that you’d see a similar action taken against him personally,” McIntyre told VOA.

Telegram has more than 900 million global users, including in Russia and Iran. It is widely used by the Russian and Ukrainian militaries in Moscow’s war on Ukraine. The platform does not use end-to-end encryption.

“To some extent, it gives this defendant a good deal of leverage — in that if he were to promise cooperation on some of these fronts, there would be a lot of very valuable information that he would have that could be made available to, for example, the French authorities. As a lawyer, I can only speak to the judicial procedure, but what happens behind the scenes may be as influential as the judicial procedure itself,” McIntyre said.

French President Emmanuel Macron wrote on X that the arrest of Durov was in no way a political decision. “France is deeply committed to freedom of expression and communication, to innovation, and to the spirit of entrepreneurship.”

Russia has in the past blocked access to Telegram after it refused to give state security services access to private conversations, and that move prompted large street protests in Moscow in 2018. Additionally, some Russian lawmakers are now accusing France of censorship.

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China uses media trips in soft power play to boost image

Beijing is sending international reporters to Chinese cities to showcase culture, technology and tourism. What’s missing, say analysts, is an uncensored picture of China and its human rights abuses. Victoria Amunga for VOA News has the story. Videographer: Jimmy Makhulo

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Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia building Baltic defense line

Baltic countries are moving to protect NATO’s eastern flank in the face of Russian aggression. The Baltic defense line — a new fortification system along their borders with Russia and Belarus — is meant to shield NATO allies from potential attacks. VOA’s Eastern Europe Bureau Chief Myroslava Gongadze reports from the Latvia-Russia border. VOA footage and editing by Daniil Batushchak.

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Pakistan security officials in ‘Taliban’ captivity appeal for help

ISLAMABAD — Militants in northwestern Pakistan released video Thursday of an army colonel and his brother, a senior civilian security officer, showing them in captivity and requesting authorities help secure their freedom.

The officers are part of a group of four people, including their third brother and a nephew, whom gunmen abducted Wednesday evening while attending their father’s funeral in the militancy-hit Dera Ismail Khan district.

The outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, also known as the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for kidnapping the four men but did not share their demands publicly.

“We are safe and well and in the custody of the Taliban in a remote area where the Pakistani government has no control,” Lieutenant Colonel Khalid Amir stated in the 35-second video.

Two men dressed in traditional attire, holding assault rifles, are seen in the background with their faces deliberately kept out of the video frame.

“We appeal to the government and our higher authorities to promptly accept the Taliban’s demands for our release,” Amir said without elaborating.

The brother of the army officer, Asif Amir, a police assistant commissioner, made a similar statement and urged his relatives to pressure Pakistani authorities to secure their freedom.

Area security officials confirmed the identities of the hostages and the authenticity of the video to VOA on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to discuss the matter with the media.

The fate of the other two hostages was not immediately known. The TTP sources claimed that they do not produce videos of civilian captives who are not associated with the Pakistani military and law enforcement agencies.

The Pakistani Taliban routinely carry out hit-and-run attacks against security forces and government targets in Dera Ismail and other districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan.

Pakistan maintains that the TTP, a globally designated terrorist group, orchestrates deadly cross-border attacks from sanctuaries on Afghan territory and receives growing support from the Islamist Taliban leaders of the neighboring country.

The violence has killed hundreds of Pakistanis, primarily security forces, in recent months, straining Islamabad’s ties with Kabul’s de facto Afghan rulers.

Taliban officials reject the Pakistani allegations, saying the TTP is not present in Afghanistan.

However, recent United Nations security reports disputed Taliban claims and described the TTP as “the largest terrorist group in Afghanistan,” being trained and equipped in al-Qaida-run training camps in areas near the border with Pakistan. The U.N. assessments also noted that Afghan Taliban fighters are participating in TTP-led cross-border attacks in Pakistan.

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Germany tightens security, asylum policies after deadly festival stabbing

Berlin — Germany’s coalition government on Thursday agreed to tighten security and asylum policies following a deadly stabbing attack linked to the Islamic State militant group which has fueled far-right opposition and criticism of Berlin’s migration policies approach.

Three people were killed and eight wounded in the attack which took place during a festival in Solingen as the western city was marking 650 years. The incident has heightened political dispute over asylum and deportation rules ahead of next month’s state elections as the suspect was a failed asylum seeker from Syria.

The package introduces stricter gun regulations, including tighter ownership rules, a general ban on switchblades, and an absolute ban on knives at public events such as folk festivals, sporting events and trade fairs.

Federal law officers will be authorized to use Tasers, and background checks for weapon permits will include new federal agencies to prevent extremists from obtaining weapons.

Berlin will also tighten asylum and residency laws and procedures, including lowering the threshold for “severe deportation,” when the deportee has committed a crime involving a weapon or dangerous tool.

Criteria for excluding individuals from asylum or refugee status will be tightened, including harsher penalties for serious crimes, including for youth offenders.

Asylum seekers will be excluded from receiving benefits in Germany if they have claims in other European countries and refugees who travel to their home countries without compelling reasons risk losing their protection status, the document read.

This rule would not apply to Ukrainian refugees, it said.

The government will push for reforms to the Common European Asylum System, simplifying transfers and deportations, and will also seek to enable the deportation of individuals who have committed serious crimes or are considered terrorist threats to Afghanistan and Syria.

The package also outlines measures to combat “violent Islamism,” including giving law enforcement authorities permission to use biometric data from publicly accessible online sources for facial recognition to identify suspects.

The government will strengthen the domestic intelligence agency’s powers when it comes to financial investigations and continue to ban Islamist organizations, according to a government document outlining the measures.

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Cameroon media denounce surge in attacks as 2025 election nears

Yaounde, Cameroon — Journalists in Cameroon say attacks on reporters have surged as the country prepares for next year’s presidential elections. Ninety-one-year-old President Paul Biya, who has ruled the country for over four decades, may run again. Rights groups say six journalists have been assaulted by gunmen in the past weeks, while several reporters and a radio station have been ordered to stop broadcasting.

The Network of Cameroon Media Owners, or REPAC, says four of its members have been brutally attacked by men armed with rifles and machetes in Cameroon’s capital, Yaounde, in the last three weeks.

Emmanuel Ekouli, publisher of the weekly newspaper La Voix du Centre and Cameroon correspondent for Reporters Without Borders, which promotes and defends press freedom, was attacked by armed men in front of his home last week, according to REPAC.

Ekouli told VOA he was stabbed several times and that his telephone, recording equipment and laptop were taken.

REPAC said that last week armed men also tried to abduct its president, Francois Mboke, the publisher of the newspaper Diapason, but that his neighbors raised an alarm and the armed men escaped.

Xavier Messe, publisher of the Le Calame newspaper and Arsene Nkonda, publisher of the Identities newspaper, were also attacked by men with machetes this month. 

Besides the physical attacks on journalists, Cameroon media professionals say they are increasingly being silenced as Cameroon prepares for next year’s vote.

President Biya, who has ruled Cameroon for over four decades, has not said whether he will run in the October polls, but his supporters have called on him to seek reelection.

REPAC says Biya’s supporters, especially government ministers, are trying to intimidate the media organizations that criticize the president’s long tenure in power.

At RIS FM radio in the capital Yaounde, a guard told VOA that staff members, including journalists, have not been coming to work since armed policemen closed the station this month. 

Innocent Tatchou, the station’s information director and editor-in-chief, says he is certain that government officials, uncomfortable with RIS FM’s strong denunciation of endemic corruption, ordered Cameroonian police to close the media outlet without prior notice. He says RIS FM has filed a court complaint for the seal to be lifted so that the station can resume broadcasting.

Cameroon’s National Communications Council says RIS Radio and its station manager, Sismondi Barlev Bidjoka, were suspended for six months for broadcasting what the council claimed were unfounded and offensive statements against Biya’s top aide, Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh.

Bidjoka has accused Ngoh of corrupt practices, a claim Ngoh denies.

Council President Joseph Chebongkeng Kalabubse denies allegations the government is using the council to silence journalists. However, he says some journalists need a refresher course on ethics. 

“In the days ahead, we will deploy council members to organize workshops and seminars to be able to sensitize and educate our peers on what is at stake and the expectations from them,” he said, speaking on Cameroon state Radio CRTV. “All these are measures which the council is taking to ensure that as we gear up towards the 2025 presidential elections, we will be able to live up to expectations.”

Cameroon’s Union of Journalists reports that two presenters of political TV programs were also attacked by unknown men this month.

Eyong Tarh, secretary general of the Center for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa, says African journalists and media organizations are often attacked before, during and shortly after elections because governments do not want reporters to expose the continent’s rampant corruption and theft.

“Whenever elections take place in Africa, international media, like the BBC, like the Voice of America and private media houses expose malpractices,” he said. “As a result, journalists, the media houses that are involved in such reporting usually go through so much intimidation from the governments.”

Human Rights Watch said in July that it is becoming increasingly difficult to speak freely in Cameroon, adding that as elections approach, authorities should fully respect Cameroonians’ freedom of expression.

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Britain resumes bid for tougher police powers over street protests

LONDON — Britain has revived its attempt to give police wider powers to impose conditions on street protests, a decision that a civil rights group said showed a worrying disregard for the rule of law.

The group, Liberty, successfully challenged the changes to public order laws made by the country’s previous Conservative government. London’s High Court ruled in May that the government exceeded its powers by lowering the threshold for police to impose conditions.

The interior ministry’s appeal against the ruling was delayed in July – shortly after Labor won a parliamentary election – to allow for talks with Liberty about the change.

Britain’s new government this month decided to pursue the appeal which Liberty director Akiko Hart said was a disappointing decision.

A spokesperson for the interior ministry said all public order legislation had to be balanced against the fundamental right to protest.

“However, we disagree with the court’s ruling in this case and have appealed their decision,” the spokesperson said.

Liberty’s case focused on the Public Order Act, under which police can impose conditions on a protest which could cause “serious disruption to the life of the community.” The law was amended last year to allow police to impose conditions where a protest could cause “more than minor” disruption.

Liberty said the new powers gave police almost unlimited powers to shut down protests, citing the arrest in Britain of Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, who was later acquitted.

The High Court ruled the new powers were unlawful, but put the quashing of the new powers on hold pending appeal.

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Germany expels head of banned Muslim association

FRANKFURT, Germany — Germany has told the Iranian head of the recently banned Islamic Center Hamburg (IZH) that he is being expelled from the country and has two weeks to leave, authorities in Hamburg said on Thursday.

The interior ministry of the German city state of Hamburg said in a statement that it had informed Mohammad Hadi Mofatteh that he has until Sept. 11 to leave or else be deported.

Mofatteh had been head of the IZH since summer 2018, the statement continued.

He did immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment sent via social media.

According to findings by Hamburg’s domestic intelligence agency, he was the official deputy of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Germany as head of the IZH, until recently.

Bild newspaper and broadcaster NDR first reported on the expulsion orders.

Social media accounts associated with the IZH and its website have been taken down in Germany after the country banned the IZH and subsidiary organizations in July for “pursuing radical Islamist goals,” according to the federal interior ministry.

The ministry said the IZH, which includes one of the oldest mosques in Germany known for its turquoise exterior, had acted as a direct representative of Khamenei and sought to bring about an Islamic revolution in Germany.

Following the closure of the IZH, Iran summoned the German ambassador in Tehran.

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Myanmar junta jails journalist for life in ongoing crackdown

Yangon, Myanmar — A military court in Myanmar has jailed a journalist for life and sentenced another to 20 years in prison after convicting them under a counterterrorism law, their editor said on Thursday.

Myo Myint Oo and Aung San Oo, who work for the independent online news service Dawei Watch, were sentenced after being denied the right to legal defense and not being allowed to speak in court, editor Ko Kyaw told AFP.

Since overthrowing Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government in February 2021, Myanmar’s military junta has waged a sweeping and bloody campaign against dissent, including targeting independent journalists.

The two journalists were arrested at their homes in the coastal town of Myeik, about 560 kilometers south of Yangon on December 11.

Myo Mynit Oo, 40, was handed a life sentence on May 15, while Aung San Oo, 49, was handed a 20-year jail term on Feb. 16.

They were “violently interrogated” for four days in a detention center before being transferred to the Myeik Prison, a statement from Dawei Watch said.

Ko Kyaw said he learned about the sentences earlier this year but delayed announcing them for the security of the journalists’ families, without providing further details.

The court has not given a detailed explanation of the case, Ko Kyaw said.

Myanmar is now one of the world’s biggest jailers of journalists with 62 detained, second only to China, according to the Paris-based campaign group Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

Myanmar now ranks 171 out of 180 in RSF’s 2024 World Press Freedom Index.

Last September a Myanmar journalist was jailed for 20 years after being indicted on several charges, including breaching a natural disaster law and a telecommunications law while covering the aftermath of a deadly cyclone.

Several foreign journalists have been detained, including U.S. citizen Danny Fenster, who was jailed for 11 years in 2021, before being pardoned and released days later.

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Afghan girls, women suffer three years after US withdrawal 

washington — The hardships and heartbreak of three years of Taliban rule are reflected in the shining brown eyes of schoolgirl Parwana Malik. And on the anniversary of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, advocates say Washington should take a harder look at the plight of countless young girls who have suffered under the hard-line regime.

In 2021, as the last U.S. troops were leaving after two decades in the country, Malik’s father sold her into marriage to a much older man.

She was 9 years old — young even by local standards, which see many Afghan girls married off in their teens.

In 2021, the U.N. Children’s Fund sounded the alarm about a drastic rise in child marriage as Western forces and aid organizations withdrew, and as desperate Afghan families lost the safety net those groups provided. Some betrothals, they said, involved infant girls as young as 20 days old.

And local media have reported that girls as young as 7 have been married off to Taliban commanders.

“What the Taliban is doing to women and girls is absolutely a crime against humanity,” said Stephanie Sinclair, a photographer and founder of the nonprofit group Too Young to Wed. “And Afghan girls and women inside the country are really suffering, unlike anywhere else in the world.”

Earlier this month at an event marking the anniversary, a Taliban official gave a defiant speech criticizing foreign interference.

The new leadership “eliminated internal differences and expanded the scope of unity and cooperation in the country,” said Deputy Prime Minister Maulvi Abdul Kabir. “No one will be allowed to interfere in internal affairs, and Afghan soil will not be used against any country.”

Neither he nor the other three speakers at the event spoke about the day-to-day struggles of civilians. Women — including female journalists — were barred from the event. And this month, the regime passed a law that restricts women’s movements and requires them to cover their bodies and silence their voices in public.

The U.N.’s human rights body condemned the law as “egregious” and demanded its repeal.

“The newly adopted law on the promotion of virtue and the prevention of vice by the de facto authorities in Afghanistan cements policies that completely erase women’s presence in public, silencing their voices and depriving them of their individual autonomy, effectively attempting to render them into faceless, voiceless shadows,” said Ravina Shamdasani, a spokesperson for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights.

The Taliban are not officially recognized as Afghanistan’s leaders by the U.N. or by most countries. Yet this regime has been slowly gaining recognition. China this year became the first country to accept credentials from a Taliban-appointed ambassador. And Russia’s foreign minister recently called the Taliban “the real power” in the country.

“We never removed our embassy from there, and neither did the People’s Republic of China,” said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. “The Afghan ambassador presented his credentials to Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing along with other ambassadors. Kazakhstan recently decided to remove them from the list of terrorist organizations. We’re planning to do the same.”

Washington has refused to recognize the Taliban as the legitimate government, and has kept its distance, though the White House has repeatedly mentioned that it maintains leverage over the group and has “over the horizon” capabilities to strike.

U.S. President Joe Biden did not mention the Taliban in his statement this week marking the anniversary of the chaotic U.S. withdrawal. He likes to describe Afghanistan as “the graveyard of empires” — so called because of the stubborn resistance to foreign influence by its lionized protectors.

Near the top of that ladder is late resistance fighter Ahmad Shah Massoud, dubbed the “Lion of the Panjshir.” The anti-Soviet guerrilla leader — slain by Taliban sympathizers in 2001 — is memorialized everywhere in the vivid green valley of that name. Panjshir was the last of the nation’s 34 provinces to fall in 2021.

From exile, Massoud’s eldest son now leads the nation’s resistance movement. This week, Ahmad Massoud, head of the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan, argued that trampling the human rights of half of the population is not just bad policy but also bad politics.

“They do not represent the will of the population,” he said. “Afghanistan’s youth, especially young girls, have dreams and aspirations no different from their peers around the globe.”

Vice President Kamala Harris also issued her own statement on the anniversary of the U.S. withdrawal. Like Biden, she did not mention the regime’s dismal treatment of girls and women — though her campaign for her nation’s top job is a strong repudiation of the Taliban’s rule that girls cannot be schooled past sixth grade.

Republican presidential challenger Donald Trump also focused on the deaths of 13 American servicemembers in criticizing the Biden administration’s pullout.

“Caused by Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, the humiliation in Afghanistan set off the collapse of American credibility and respect all around the world,” he said. “And the fake news doesn’t want to talk about it.”

Sinclair urged American leaders to focus not on the men in charge but on the female voices they have silenced, and to impose harsher consequences for it.

“I saw those statements, and I really think that we really need to put more accountability, make more accountability, for the Taliban about addressing their crimes,” she said.

She and other advocates are urging foreign powers to further squeeze the regime.

“Otherwise, we’re inching towards normalization little by little,” she said. “The next thing we’re going to hear is that primary schoolgirls are going to be out of school. … It’s only going to get worse. It’s been clear that this is not Taliban 2.0. This is the original hardline stance that they had in the late ’90s. And we really need to do better.”

And now, amid these dismal discussions: a plot twist.

Too Young to Wed persuaded Parwana’s aged husband to return her to her family. Her story inspired the group to launch a fund in her name, which now feeds about 1,000 Afghan families per month and provides essential supplies like blankets and infant supplies.

And Parwana is now back where she belongs, Sinclair says: in school.

“She’s quite the character,” Sinclair said. “She has a lot of big opinions, and she wants to be a teacher or a doctor, and she wants to do something, and she’s got the power to do it. … The problem is, she’s not living in a society that is permitting it under this regime, and unfortunately, there are millions of Parwanas right now.”

And as Parwana nears sixth grade — where most girls worry not about husbands but schoolwork, friends and the gale-force winds of puberty — she carries a heavy burden on her young shoulders: the knowledge that, unless something changes, her education will soon end.

But in the few years she has left, her smile wide and deep brown eyes shining with hope and joy, she clutches something else close to her chest: schoolbooks.

Some information for this story came from The Associated Press.

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French authorities issue preliminary charges against Telegram messaging app CEO

PARIS — French authorities handed preliminary charges to Telegram CEO Pavel Durov on Wednesday for allowing alleged criminal activity on his messaging app and barred him from leaving France pending further investigation.

Both free-speech advocates and authoritarian governments have spoken out in Durov’s defense since his weekend arrest. The case has also called attention to the challenges of policing illegal activity online, and to the Russian-born Durov’s own unusual biography and multiple passports.

Durov was detained on Saturday at Le Bourget airport outside Paris as part of a sweeping investigation opened earlier this year and released earlier Wednesday after four days of questioning. Investigative judges filed preliminary charges Wednesday night and ordered him to pay 5 million euros bail and to report to a police station twice a week, according to a statement from the Paris prosecutor’s office.

Allegations against Durov, who is also a French citizen, include that his platform is being used for child sexual abuse material and drug trafficking, and that Telegram refused to share information or documents with investigators when required by law.

The first preliminary charge against him was for ”complicity in managing an online platform to allow illicit transactions by an organized group,” a crime that can lead to sentences of up to 10 years in prison and 500,000 euro fine, the prosecutor’s office said.

Preliminary charges under French law mean magistrates have strong reason to believe a crime was committed but allow more time for further investigation.

David-Olivier Kaminski, a lawyer for Durov, was quoted by French media as saying “it’s totally absurd to think that the person in charge of a social network could be implicated in criminal acts that don’t concern him, directly or indirectly.”

Prosecutors said that Durov is, “at this stage, the only person implicated in this case.” They did not exclude the possibility that other people are being investigated but declined to comment on other possible arrest warrants. Any other arrest warrant would be revealed only if the target of such a warrant is detained and informed of their rights, prosecutors said in a statement to the AP.

French authorities opened a preliminary investigation in February in response to ”the near total absence of a response by Telegram to judicial requests” for data for pursuing suspects, notably those accused of crimes against children, the prosecutor’s office said.

Durov’s arrest in France has caused outrage in Russia, with some government officials calling it politically motivated and proof of the West’s double standard on freedom of speech. The outcry has raised eyebrows among Kremlin critics because in 2018, Russian authorities themselves tried to block the Telegram app but failed, withdrawing the ban in 2020.

In Iran, where Telegram is widely used despite being officially banned after years of protests challenging the country’s Shiite theocracy, Durov’s arrest in France prompted comments from the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei weighed in with veiled praise for France for being “strict” against those who “violate your governance” of the internet.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday that Durov’s arrest wasn’t a political move but part of an independent investigation. Macron posted on X that his country “is deeply committed” to freedom of expression but “freedoms are upheld within a legal framework, both on social media and in real life, to protect citizens and respect their fundamental rights.”

In a statement posted on its platform after Durov’s arrest, Telegram said it abides by EU laws, and its moderation is “within industry standards and constantly improving.”

“Almost a billion users globally use Telegram as means of communication and as a source of vital information. We’re awaiting a prompt resolution of this situation,” it said.

In addition to Russia and France, Durov is also a citizen of the United Arab Emirates and the Caribbean island nation of St. Kitts and Nevis.

The UAE Foreign Ministry said Tuesday that it was “closely following the case” and had asked France to provide Durov “with all the necessary consular services in an urgent manner.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said he hoped that Durov “has all the necessary opportunities for his legal defense” and added that Moscow stands “ready to provide all necessary assistance and support” to the Telegram CEO as a Russian citizen.

“But the situation is complicated by the fact that he is also a citizen of France,” Peskov said.

Telegram was founded by Durov and his brother after he himself faced pressure from Russian authorities.

In 2013, he sold his stake in VKontakte, a popular Russian social networking site which he launched in 2006.

The company came under pressure during the Russian government’s crackdown following mass pro-democracy protests that rocked Moscow at the end of 2011 and 2012.

Durov had said authorities demanded that the site take down online communities of Russian opposition activists, and later that it hand over personal data of users who took part in the 2013-14 popular uprising in Ukraine, which eventually ousted a pro-Kremlin president.

Durov said in a recent interview that he had turned down these demands and left the country.

The demonstrations prompted Russian authorities to clamp down on the digital space, and Telegram and its pro-privacy stance offered a convenient way for Russians to communicate and share news.

Telegram also continues to be a popular source of news in Ukraine, where both media outlets and officials use it to share information on the war and deliver missile and air raid alerts.

Western governments have often criticized Telegram for a lack of content moderation.

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