Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Status profiling: Research suggests simply wearing a police uniform changes the way the brain processes information

    {New research from a team of cognitive neuroscientists at McMaster University suggests that simply putting on a uniform, similar to one the police might wear, automatically affects how we perceive others, creating a bias towards those considered to be of a low social status.}

    The study, recently published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, raises important questions about stereotypes and profiling, and about how the symbolic power and authority associated with police uniforms might affect these tendencies.

    “We all know that the police generally do an excellent job, but there has also been a great deal of public discourse about biased policing in North America over recent years,” says Sukhvinder Obhi, an associate professor of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour and senior author of the study, which was conducted with postdoctoral researcher Ciro Civile.

    “We set out to explore whether the uniform itself might have an impact, independent of all other aspects of the police subculture, training or work experiences,” he says.

    Across a series of experiments, researchers examined how study participants -all of them university students — shifted their attention during specific tasks. In some cases, participants wore police-style attire.

    During one experiment, participants were asked to identify a simple shape on a computer screen and were distracted by images of white male faces, black male faces, individuals dressed in business suits and others dressed in hoodies. Researchers tracked and analyzed their reaction times to compare how long they were distracted by the various images.

    Researchers were surprised to find no difference in reaction times and no evidence of racial profiling when the distractors were white or black faces. This is surprising, they say, because previous research, much of it conducted in the United States, has revealed that many people associate African Americans with crime.

    While more work is needed to explore this further, Obhi suggests the apparent lack of racial bias in the current study might highlight a potentially important difference between Canadian and American society.

    The differences, however, were revealed when participants were distracted by photos of individuals wearing hoodies. Reaction times slowed, indicating that the images of hoodies were attention-grabbing. Critically, this bias towards hoodies only occurred when participants were wearing the police-style garb.

    “We know that clothing conveys meaning and that the hoodie has to some extent become a symbol of lower social standing and inner-city youth,” says Obhi. “There is a stereotype out there that links hoodies with crime and violence, and this stereotype might be activated to a greater degree when donning the police style uniform. This may have contributed to the changes in attention that we observed. Given that attention shapes how we experience the world, attentional biases toward certain groups of people can be problematic.”

    This is especially important for police officers, he explains, who might unconsciously perceive a threat where one doesn’t exist or vice versa.

    Researchers hope to study the uniform and its effect on police officers and are conducting follow-up studies with collaborators in the United States.

    A photo of a police-style uniform worn by study participants.

    Source:Science Daily

  • No shortcuts to acquire a driver’s license as aspiring driver is arrested for attempted bribery

    {An aspiring driver has been arrested in Remera, Gasabo District for allegedly attempting to bribe a police officer after failing the driver’s license test.}

    Chief Inspect of Police (CIP) Emmanuel Kabanda, the traffic and road safety spokesperson, said that

    Hakizimana Munyarugamba, who was looking for category A, tried to offer a bribe of Rwf100, 000 to the supervising officer after failing the tests as means to add him on the list of those who passed.

    “The suspect after getting information that he fell short of the pass mark, he resorted to entice the officer with the money, who immediately arrested him,” said CIP Kabanda.

    He asked members of the public to refrain from any temptation to corrupt law enforcement officers or any other leader “because they will be arrested and prosecuted for the crime.”

    He said: “Rwanda National Police endeavors to be a corrupt free institution and acts of bribery and corruption in general and given due attention in fighting it as a high impact crime.”

    “Police have put in place clear process for accessing public services; it has been made easier and timely to acquire a driver’s license but also strengthened measures against such malpractices, ” he said.

    He cited the recent high-tech traffic management systems as one of the measures to further reduce human contacts and wondered why the public is still interested in using underhand methods.

    CIP Kabanda, hailed the conduct of the police officer for exhibiting the police values.

    He said RNP is founded on a very strong ideological foundation guided by top leadership to spearhead the national policy against corruption.

    “This is also emphasized in RNP training programme to refrain taking bribes and fight all acts of graft without favour.”

    He advised all aspiring drivers to thoroughly learn driving as they must fulfill the requirements, adding that “no shortcuts will be entertained.”

    “What is Rwf 100, 000 compared to allowing someone a permit to kill people on roads”, he wondered?

    He also said that police has established proper channels where members of the public can seek redress in case they are not satisfied with the verdict of the examining police personnel in case of the driving permits and any other service offered by the institution.

    Source:Police

  • Ngororero: Police intensifies public awareness against drug abuse

    {The District Police Unit of Ngororero has strengthened its activities to further raise awareness against the scourge of drug trafficking and abuse.}

    Assistant Inspector of Police (AIP) Aliane Muhorakeye, the District Community Liaison Officer (DCLO), while speaking to residents of Ngororero Sector, recently, reminded the residents that identifying and reporting drug dealers and abusers equally lies among their responsibilities.

    “Some of you have experienced the ill-effects of drugs abuse; some have been assaulted, sexually abuse; others have become victims of theft, while children have ended up dropping out of school and mothers beaten by husbands…these are things that cause insecurity that you prevent by reporting drug dealers and abusers,” Muhorakeye said.

    The awareness also included general body physical fitness

    exercise that brought together residents and students from various schools and local leaders to build healthy bodies.

    AIP Muhorakeye asked students never to waste the privilege to study and as pillar for development.

    She also tipped them on tricks used by human traffickers and asked anyone with information of missing persons to report to police in a bid to locate and rescue them.

    Source:Police

  • Monkey fights help explain tipping points in animal societies

    {Previous studies of flocks, swarms, and schools suggest that animal societies may verge on a “critical” point — in other words, they are extremely sensitive and can be easily tipped into a new social regime. But exactly how far animal societies sit from the critical point and what controls that distance remain unknown.}

    Now an analysis of conflicts within a captive community of pigtail macaque monkeys has helped to answer these questions by showing how agitated monkeys can precipitate critical, large-scale brawls. In the study, fights were often small, involving just two or three monkeys, but sometimes grew to be very large, with as many as 30 of the 48 adults in the society. Bryan Daniels at the ASU-SFI Center for Biosocial Complex Systems, together with David Krakauer and Jessica Flack of the Santa Fe Institute, used ideas and models from statistical mechanics to ask whether the monkeys’ conflict behavior was near a critical point. They report what they found in this week’s Nature Communications.

    Daniels, Krakauer, and Flack discovered that the distance from the critical point can be measured in terms of the “number of monkeys” that have to become agitated to push the system over the edge. Daniels says that in this system “agitating four or five individuals at a time can cause the system to destabilize and huge fights to break out.” However, Daniels says, each monkey makes a distinct contribution to group sensitivity — and these individual differences may allow distance from the critical point to be more easily controlled. Group members that break up fights can move the system away from the critical point by quelling the monkeys that contribute most to group sensitivity. Other group members, by targeting and agitating these individuals, can move the system towards the critical point and ready it for reconfiguration.

    Animal societies may benefit from the group sensitivity that lets them cross critical social thresholds. Being sensitive allows for rapid adaptation — think fish switching from foraging mode to escape mode — but it can also make a society less robust to individuals’ mistakes. This tradeoff between robustness and adaptability is related to distance from the critical point.

    An open question is whether animal societies collectively adjust their distance from criticality, becoming less sensitive when the environment is known and more sensitive when the environment becomes less predictable. Daniels says, “I think we’ve just scratched the surface.”

    Source:Science Daily

  • Giant flying reptile ruled ancient Transylvania

    {New research suggests that a giant pterosaur — a toothless flying reptile with a 10 metre wingspan — may have been the dominant predator in ancient Romania.}

    Palaeontologists examined the creature’s unusual gigantic neck vertebra and believe it was a formidable carnivore and major predator that terrorised dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals of Cretaceous-age Transylvania. It provides the first evidence of large predatory animals in the region at that time.

    Dr Mark Witton, from the University of Portsmouth and Dr Darren Naish from University of Southampton, both in the UK, examined several fossilised remains of the creature, known as Hatzegopteryx, which belongs to the flying reptile group Azhdarchidae.

    Usually this species’ tubular neck bones give them extremely long necks, over 2.5 metres in length in the largest species. However, the researchers suggest Hatzegopteryx had a considerably shorter and stronger neck, and with larger muscle masses. Other remains of Hatzegopteryx include a jaw joint indicative of a half-metre wide skull and reinforced limb bones. Dr Witton suggests that the proportions and structural reinforcement of all these elements are unlike those of any other azhdarchid species and would have made Hatzegopteryx a powerful and dominant predator.

    He said: “The difference in structural properties between giant azhdarchid neck bones is remarkable — they’re in different biomechanical leagues, with Hatzegopteryx many times stronger than anything else on record. This, along with our calculations of neck length and muscle mass, suggests giant azhdarchids may have been radically different in appearance and behaviour.

    “The large, reinforced skeleton and muscle power would have made it a formidable predator of other animals when stalking ancient prairies and woodlands. It may have even been capable of attacking animals too large or vigorous for other flying reptiles, even the other giants.”

    Dr Witton said that Hatzegopteryx lived in a peculiar island ecosystem where many of the dinosaurs were dwarfed or belonged to relict lineages extinct in the rest of the Cretaceous world. “Ancient Transylvania was a strange place for a number of reasons, including the fact that we’ve yet to find evidence of large predatory animals that lived alongside Hatzegopteryx, such as giant carnivorous dinosaurs. This is despite centuries of sampling.”

    The study thus potentially provides an answer to a mystery about life in Late Cretaceous Romania.

    “Perhaps without large predators to challenge them, this island provided an opportunity for giant pterosaurs — already formidable animals — to become the dominant predators,” said Dr Witton.

    “The finer details of ecology and lifestyle for Hatzegopteryx remain unknown because we’re still working from scraps of its skeleton, but the emerging picture of its lifestyle are fascinating. In some respects our unexpected findings highlight how little we actually know about these animals. We’ve had these scrappy remains for years, but we need to ask the right questions, and perform the right tests, to realise their significance. Future giant pterosaur research and discoveries.

    A giraffe and human show the scale of a long-necked azhdarchid Arambourgiania (centre) and the 'new look' short-necked Hatzegopteryx (right).

    Source:Science Daily

  • Kagame lauds Rwanda, Oklahoma Christian University cooperation

    President Paul Kagame has lauded the cooperation Rwanda has with Oklahoma Christian University from the United States describing it as a good example of cooperation among people sharing same vision.

    He made the remarks yesterday as he and first lady Jeannette Kagame attended 10th anniversary of the cooperation between Rwanda and Oklahoma Christian University where 420 Rwandans have graduated.

    President Kagame lauded the university for having welcomed Rwandan students, equipped them with knowledge of international competence.

    “The cooperation with Oklahoma Christian University is among commendable fruitful cooperation with higher institutions worldwide,” he said.

    Kagame requested graduates at Oklahoma Christian University to work hard to bear good fruits, address challenges and contribute to finding individual and national problems.
    He assured them that he and first lady Jeannette Kagame will support the association of graduates at Oklahoma Christian University when they return home.

    President Kagame promised to maintain the cooperation and achievements of Rwanda, Oklahoma Christian University.

    Rwandan students have been attending Oklahoma Christian University since 2006 on a 50% government bursary with the rest met by the University.

  • Protests over detention of immigrants across US

    {Detentions of undocumented migrants seen as culmination of big shift in the US policy since January 25 executive order.}

    Texas, USA – Protests have erupted across the US after the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency swept across several US cities, detaining undocumented migrants.

    Early Friday’s raids came quickly after President Donald Trump signed three executive orders on Thursday reportedly aimed at crime reduction.

    Los Angeles, Austin and Phoenix have all seen demonstrations.

    Demonstrators in Los Angeles shut down a highway following reports of raids, and Arizona has seen increased numbers at a number of weeks-old protest sites following the detainment of Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos.

    Garcia de Rayos was the first undocumented immigrant to be detained late on Wednesday in Phoenix, prompting increased demonstrations in front of Phoenix’s central ICE office.

    Jose Matus of the Arizona-based Indigenous Alliance without Borders, a non-profit that works to educate indigenous and non-indigenous people living on the border of their rights, told Al Jazeera that Garcia de Rayos had been deported along with her family.

    “They found she had a police record, so they decided to take her. It’s part of Trump’s idea to deport so-called felons,” Matus said.

    The moves are seen as a culmination of a huge shift in the US immigration policy following Trump’s January 25 executive order to “ensure the faithful execution of the immigration laws” of the country.

    The ICE reportedly declined to deport Garcia de Rayos for four years under former President Barack Obama, who was informally known as the “deporter-in-chief”.

    Matus did not view her as a threat to US national security.

    In Austin, at least five undocumented residents have been detained.

    {{‘Scrambling’ for information}}

    Cristina Parker, the immigration programmes director at Austin-based Grassroots Leadership, which organises against deportations and mass incarceration, informed Al Jazeera there may be more.

    “Everyone is scrambling to get information. There are unconfirmed reports of detentions across the city. Those who are most affected by these actions are the hardest to get in contact with, currently,” Parker said.

    Austin has been the epicentre of the national battle over so-called sanctuary cities, an unofficial designation of cities that generally offer safety to undocumented migrants and often do not use municipal funds or resources to advance the enforcement of federal immigration laws.

    According to local reports, the ICE detained each of the five in separate, targeted raids.

    Robert Painter, the interim executive director of American Gateways, which provides low-cost legal help to immigrants, told Al Jazeera on Friday morning that ICE’s actions were “counterproductive … they only sow mistrust between the immigrant community and the government”.

    Painter was similarly unable to provide a firm number of how many had been detained or if they were being deported.

    “We stand ready to advocate for our immigrant community and provide representation wherever we can,” he concluded.

    Back in Arizona, Matus was similarly defiant: “We’re going to continue protesting. Now that the courts have blocked the Muslim ban, there’s the wall. The Tohono O’odham tribe, whose lands cross the [US-Mexico] border, they don’t want that there.”

    Native Americans have seen an increase in threatening policies, including infrastructure initiatives and Trump’s revival of the Dakota Access Pipeline that protesters at Standing Rock had fought for months to defeat.

    “We’re also worried about the changes to border crossing following these executive orders. It’s a lot of threats,” Matus said.

    Demonstrations erupted in front of Phoenix’s central ICE office on Wednesday

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Paris police say rape of black man an ‘accident’

    {More protests planned as assault on 22-year-old arrested in Paris suburb is deemed accidental by French investigators.}

    Tensions between police and protesters have flared again in the French capital after a police investigation concluded that the anal rape of a young black man by an officer using a truncheon was an accident.

    The conclusion on Thursday came a week after the arrest in the northern Paris suburb of Aulnay-sous-Bois of the 22-year-old victim, who has been identified only as Theo.

    According to AFP news agency, a police source said that having taken into account CCTV recordings and witness accounts, “there are insufficient elements to show that this was a rape”.

    A video of the scene shows a policeman “applying a truncheon blow horizontally across the buttocks with a truncheon” and Theo’s trousers “slipped down on their own”, the source said.

    However, an investigating magistrate had charged one of the police officers with rape and three others with aggravated assault and is still examining the case.

    Protesters planned to gather on Saturday in front of the Bobigny court, which is where a judge will decide on February 20 whether the accused policemen will face trial.

    Video that apparently showed Theo’s arrest circulated on the internet, showing the youth worker on the ground against a wall being beaten by four men.

    Theo, whose family say he was not known to police, required surgery for severe anal injuries after he was assaulted with a truncheon, and also suffered head trauma.

    ‘Police harass us’

    The case has revived the contentious issue of policing in France’s deprived suburbs.

    Fury over the incident has culminated in days of peaceful protests and riots, with fireworks thrown at police as cars and rubbish bins were set on fire leading to dozens of arrests.

    Theo, who said that police raped him with a baton, called for calm while being treated. Francois Hollande, the French president, visited him in hospital.

    Bruno Le Roux, interior minister, said on Friday that police equipped with body cameras would patrol “sensitive areas” to film arrests and searches.

    Yasser Louati, a French human rights and civil liberties activist, told Al Jazeera: “The police is now seen as an occupying force, not a force of protection for the weak and against crime.

    “There is an atmosphere of open defiance to the state … the fear is that this might spark riots before the election, [which] may be a blessing for the right and far right.”

    Dorian Chacon, a football coach who lives in Aulnay-sous-Bois, told Al Jazeera: “They’re supposed to protect us. They don’t, they harass us. We don’t feel safe here. They claim this is an accident: they take us for idiots. It’s a total lack of respect.”

    Billel Kerzazi, Theo’s friend, told Al Jazeera: “It’s someone we know, so it’s painful to think of what happened to him.”

    Rezmond Bukri, who also lives in the suburb, said: “The police are denying it, but they have to take responsibility, it’s not right.”

    Women hold signs reading "Justice for Theo" during a protest on February 6

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Jitters in Hong Kong over billionaire’s disappearance

    {Reported abduction of Xiao Jianhua by Chinese agents unnerves businessmen with links to semi-autonomous territory.}

    The disappearance from Hong Kong of Xiao Jianhua, a China-born billionaire businessman, has sent a chill through mainland business circles linked to the city, and some are looking to move their assets, according to financiers, lawyers and Chinese businessmen.

    Hong Kong, a global financial centre and a “special administrative region” of China, has served as a major hub for mainland capital since the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

    But reports that Xiao was abducted by Chinese agents from the luxury Four Seasons hotel have helped undermine confidence in the legal autonomy that has underpinned the economy.

    Hong Kong police have said Xiao crossed the border into China on January 27 through a checkpoint and are still investigating the case.

    {{Unspecified location}}

    A source close to Xiao, who holds a Canadian passport, said he is now in an unspecified location in China, and that Xiao’s wife and brother had “fled” Hong Kong to Canada.

    The Canadian consulate in Hong Kong said they had no further information on the family.

    A second source close to Xiao said on Thursday he was still able to get in touch with the tycoon, with “some difficulties”.

    Shortly after his disappearance, a local newspaper ad purporting to be from Xiao himself said he had not been abducted, but was seeking medical treatment “outside the country”.

    The uncertainty is unnerving businessmen with links to the city.

    “I don’t dare go to Hong Kong,” said Guo Wengui, a Chinese property and investment tycoon who said he knows Xiao and used to visit Hong Kong regularly.

    Now, he says he would not consider Hong Kong a safe place for his assets.

    {{Life in exile}}

    Guo has lived in exile for several years, having been investigated by Chinese authorities several times, including in connection with a fraud case.

    No charges have ever been laid and Guo said he had done nothing wrong.

    A senior corporate lawyer with a global law firm said some of his mainland Chinese clients living in Hong Kong had asked him for advice on moving assets out in the two weeks since news Xiao’s case broke, possibly to Japan, Singapore or South Korea.

    “They want to change location. They freaked out,” he said.

    Xiao, who runs financial group Tomorrow Holdings and has close ties with some of China’s top leaders and businessmen, is ranked 32nd on the 2016 Hurun China rich list, China’s equivalent of the Forbes list, with a net worth of $6bn.

    Until his disappearance, Xiao had for some years resided at the Four Seasons Place serviced apartments in the heart of the city, a favourite haunt of wealthy mainland Chinese businessmen.

    {{‘Significant decline’}}

    A person with knowledge of the matter at the hotel said there had been a “significant decline” in Chinese occupancy since the news broke.

    “Many mainlanders checked out,” the person said.

    The hotel, including its three Michelin-starred restaurant Lung King Heen, was quieter now, said a Hong Kong regular who often meets mainland Chinese clients there.

    The corporate lawyer source, who also frequents the Four Seasons, said several of his mainland Chinese clients had moved out of the property recently, citing concerns from the incident involving Xiao.

    Xiao disappeared from the Four Seasons hotel

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Palestine writer ‘unable to go home’ after ban on novel

    {Ramallah-based writer stranded abroad after controversial novel banned and an arrest warrant issued.}

    A Palestinian author says he is unable to go home to the occupied West Bank after authorities there confiscated copies of his latest novel and issued a warrant for his arrest.

    Abbad Yahya, 29, who is currently on a visit to Qatar, says he learned of the warrant and the banning of his novel, Crime in Ramallah, through the official Palestinian news agency while abroad.

    He fears he will be jailed if he returns.

    Speaking to the AFP news agency, Yahya said: “I don’t know what to do. If I go back, I will be arrested, and if I stay here … I can’t stay far from my home and family.”

    Yahya, who lives in Ramallah, has been accused of including “sexual terms” in a provocative work that tackles issues considered taboo in Palestinian society.

    Themes explored in the book include politics, religion and homosexuality.

    {{Morality and public decency}}

    Ahmed Barak, Palestine’s attorney general, said Crime in Ramallah contained “indecent texts and terms that threaten morality and public decency, which could affect the population, in particular, minors”.

    The decision “does not violate freedom of opinion and expression”, Barak said.

    The novel, Yahya’s fourth, was released two months ago and charts the lives of three young men who work in a bar where a young woman is murdered.

    The book goes on to show how the incident affects each man’s life.

    Incidents portrayed in the book seek to symbolise the Palestinian national movement and what Yahya sees as its failure to secure independence from Israeli occupation.

    It also criticises Palestinian leaders and touches on the complexities of modern Palestinian culture.

    “Like all societies in the region, our society is seeing the growth of fanaticism and extremism and is reproducing social conservatism,” said Yahya.

    “These trends appear in the society in a mixture of religious and national slogans.”

    Yahya’s book, and the reaction to it, has set off a wide-ranging public debate in Palestine.

    The writer said on Tuesday that the decision to ban his novel was an “unprecedented” attack on freedom of expression, and that he doubts that authorities have fully read it.

    {{‘Reader should judge’}}

    According to Yahya, his editor and distributor, Fuad al-Akleek, was arrested on Monday and released on Tuesday morning after interrogation.

    “The police seized all copies in bookshops from Jenin to Hebron,” he said.

    Speaking to local news media, Yahya challenged the effectiveness of the ban, saying that people who wanted to find a way to read the book would be easily able to.

    He said that Palestine had a long line of intellectuals, writers, poets and artists, and that the ban could destroy what they had accomplished for Palestinian society.

    Had the person who ordered his novel banned read them, perhaps their work would have been banned, too, Yahya said.

    Adel Osta, a professor of literature, has joined several writers in criticising Yahya, saying he “went too far in crossing the red lines of Palestinian society”.

    {{‘Job of the writer’}}

    Murad Sudani, the head of the Palestinian Writers Union, said he wrote a “silly novel that violates the national and religious values of the society in order to appease the West and win prizes”.

    “The job of the writer in our occupied country is to raise the hope and enlighten people – not to break the national and religious symbols,” Sudani said.

    “My freedom as a writer ends when the freedom of the country begins.”

    While Yahya’s Facebook page has been inundated with messages of support, he said several people had left threatening messages conveying their intention to harm him and his family.

    Some in government, though, commended both Yahya and his novel.

    Ehab Bseiso, Palestinian culture minister, said in a Facebook post that he was interested in reading the book.

    He also urged the attorney general to repeal the book ban and Yahya’s arrest warrant.

    {{‘Brutal censorship’
    }}

    The cultural department of the Palestine Liberation Organisation has condemned what it calls an “unjustified” decision that opened the door “to abuses of brutal censorship”.

    “To use the term public decency is a form of manipulation and unacceptable justification because it has no legal or logical definition. It opens the doors for an endless censorship, which violates freedom of expression and right to creative writing,” it said in a statement on Tuesday.

    Human rights organisations in the West Bank have called on the attorney general to reverse the ban and withdraw the charges against Yahya, saying that the actions violated international law.

    “It is not a crime to distribute a book,” Akleek, a novel distributor, said. “The one who judges a novel and author is the reader.”

    Yahya said he learned of warrant for his arrest while abroad

    Source:Al Jazeera