Tag: InternationalNews

  • Eight men who own as much wealth as three billion people

    {Eight men own as much wealth as that held by the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity, a new report has revealed.}

    They are Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Amancio Ortega of Zara fashion chain, investment guru Warren Buffett, telecommunications magnate Carlos Slim Helu, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and entrepreneur Michael Bloomberg, all of whom own a combined total net worth of Sh44.3 trillion ($426.2 billion).

    “It is obscene for so much wealth to be held in the hands of so few when one in 10 people survive on less than Sh208 ($2) a day,” said Ms Winnie Byanyima, executive director of Oxfam International, which prepared the report dubbed An economy for the 99 per cent. “Inequality is trapping hundreds of millions in poverty; it is fracturing our societies and undermining democracy.”

    The report shows the gap between the rich and the poor is far much greater than originally feared, with the poorest half of the world having less wealth than previously thought.

    The situation is not different in Kenya, where the richest Kenyans’ net worth is more than Sh70 billion yet 42 per cent of the country’s 44 million people live below the poverty line.

    The report shows how broken economies are funnelling wealth to a rich elite at the expense of the poorest in society — a majority of whom are women — at such an astonishing rate that the world could see its first trillionaire in just 25 years, a figure one would need to spend Sh100 million every day for 2,738 years to finish.

    {{Prevent deaths}}

    The report also outlines how the super-rich, who own big corporations, dodge taxes by using a network of tax havens and drive down wages for their workers through an army of wealth managers in order to maximise returns on investment to their wealthy shareholders, a network that is not available to ordinary savers.

    This costs poor countries at least Sh10.39 trillion ($100 billion) every year, which is enough to give education to the 124 million children who are not in school and fund healthcare interventions that could prevent the deaths of at least six million children every year.

    According to the report, Kenya lost more than Sh100 billion in 2011 through tax incentives to corporations, depriving the country of vital revenue, yet informal traders face difficult application processes and strict requirements to benefit from financial services such as credit and loans.

    Many are forced to operate on a more casual basis by paying unlawful daily fees to county governments that end up costing them more than an annual licence because they cannot afford to pay a one-off annual trading permit fee.

    In Nairobi alone, the report says, an estimated 2.2 million people work in the informal sector and live in under-served settlements and slums yet big business and the super-rich use their money and connections to ensure government policies work for them.

    {{Take home millions }}

    “Across the world, people are being left behind,” said Ms Byanyima in the report. “Their wages are stagnating yet corporate bosses take home millions of dollars in bonuses; their health and education services are cut while corporations and the super-rich dodge their taxes; their voices are ignored as governments sing to the tune of big business and a wealthy elite.”

    This widening inequality gap has seen women suffer more by often being employed in low-pay sectors, where they face high levels of discrimination and take a disproportionate amount of unpaid care work that pushes them to the bottom of the pile.

    Ms Byanyima said a fairer tax system and better regulation of wages and hours for informal workers could help to close the gap between the rich and the poor in Kenya.

    She called on governments to increase taxes on both wealth and high incomes to ensure a more level playing field and also generate the funds needed to invest in healthcare, education and job creation.

    Bill Gates, founder of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Oxfam report has named him as one of the world’s richest 8 who own a total of Sh44.3 trillion.
  • Trump: Cut sanctions on Russia for nuclear arms deal

    {Incoming US president says weapons should be reduced, weeks after joining Putin in call for nuclear expansion.}

    Donald Trump, the US president-elect, has told a British newspaper that he will offer to end sanctions against Russia in return for a nuclear arms reduction deal with the Kremlin.

    In an interview with The Times of London published late on Monday, Trump said he wanted nuclear weapons arsenals of the world’s two biggest nuclear powers – the United States and Russia – to be “reduced very substantially”.

    “They have sanctions on Russia – let’s see if we can make some good deals with Russia. For one thing, I think nuclear weapons should be way down and reduced very substantially, that’s part of it,” Trump was quoted by the newspaper as saying.

    However, on December 22 Trump tweeted that the US must “greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until the world comes to its senses regarding nukes”. Around the same time, Russian leader Vladimir Putin also called for the strengthening of “strategic nuclear forces”.

    In Monday’s interview, Trump said that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), an alliance formed to counter the military power of the former USSR, has become obsolete.

    NATO has not been “taking care of terror”, he said.

    Trump also criticised Russia for its intervention in the Syrian war, describing it as “a very bad thing” that had led to a “terrible humanitarian situation”.

    The interview was conducted by Michael Gove, a Conservative Party member and prominent Brexit campaigner who is known to be close to Rupert Murdoch, owner of Fox News.

    In Moscow, members of parliament gave a mixed reaction to Trump’s statement on the sanctions imposed by the Obama administration on Moscow over the Ukraine crisis.

    Konstantin Kosachev, head of the upper house of parliament’s international affairs committee, was cited by the RIA Novosti news agency as saying getting the sanctions annulled was not a goal in itself and not worth making security concessions for.

    But another Russian senator, Oleg Morozov, was quoted by the same agency as saying that Moscow would be ready to discuss the issue of nuclear cuts, something he said Russia itself favoured.

    {{Russian connection}}

    News of Trump’s plan came as the outgoing US intelligence chief said that Trump lacks a full understanding of the threat Moscow poses to the US.

    CIA Director John Brennan’s message on national television came five days before Trump becomes the nation’s 45th president, amid lingering questions about Russia’s role in the 2016 election.

    “Now that he’s going to have an opportunity to do something for our national security as opposed to talking and tweeting, he’s going to have tremendous responsibility to make sure that US and national security interests are protected,” Brennan said on Fox News, warning that the president-elect’s impulsiveness could be dangerous.

    “Spontaneity is not something that protects national security interests,” Brennan said.

    Questions about Trump’s relationship with Russia have dominated the days leading up to his inauguration.

    Retired General Michael Flynn, who is set to become Trump’s national security adviser, has been in frequent contact with Russia’s ambassador to the US in recent weeks, including on the day the Obama administration hit Moscow with sanctions in retaliation for the alleged election hacking, a senior US official said.

    After initially denying the contact took place, Trump’s team publicly acknowledged the conversations on Sunday.

    “The conversations that took place at that time were not in any way related to the new US sanctions against Russia or the expulsion of diplomats,” said Mike Pence, the incoming vice president, also in an appearance on Fox News.

    Contact as Obama imposed sanctions raised questions about whether Trump’s team discussed – or even helped shape – Russia’s response.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin unexpectedly did not retaliate against the US for the sanctions or the expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats, a decision Trump quickly praised.

    “Great move on delay (by V. Putin) – I always knew he was very smart!” Trump tweeted.

    Trump has repeatedly called for a better relationship between the US and Putin’s government.

    “I think he has to be mindful that he does not have a full appreciation and understanding of what the implications are of going down that road,” Brennan said.

    Trump has repeatedly called for a better relationship between the US and Russia
  • Dozens killed and wounded in Alcacuz prison riot

    {President Michel Temer says he is following developments after fresh outbreak of violence at overcrowded facility.}

    At least 30 inmates were killed in a prison riot in Brazil’s northeastern region that broke out late on Saturday, a person with direct knowledge of the situation said.

    The person, who requested anonymity because forensic work is under way, said the number of casualties could rise.

    About a dozen inmates in the Alcacuz prison located in the state of Rio Grande do Norte have been taken to nearby hospitals, the person said.

    The riot began around 5pm local time (17:00 GMT) in Alcacuz, and continued until 7am (09:00GMT), when police officers took control of the prison.

    Officials said they waited until dawn before entering the prisons after they gained control of the situation.

    “This way we guaranteed a calm intervention, a pacific intervention without resistance from the inmates,” state security chief, Caio Cesar Bezerra, told local media.

    President Michel Temer said on Twitter that he had been following the situation.

    Alcacuz, like many of the country’s prisons are overcrowded. The prison holds 1,000 inmates in a facility built for just prisoners.

    Violence is common in overcrowded prisons and 40 percent of inmates have yet to be sentenced.

    The outbreak of violence at Brazil’s prisons began January 1 when 56 inmates were killed in the northern state of Amazonas.

    That riot, which lasted for 17 hours in the Anisio Jobim Penitentiary Complex (Compaj) in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state, saw bodies butchered, decapitated and burned after clashes between rival drug gangs.

    Violence is common in overcrowded prisons and 40 percent of inmates have yet to be sentenced
  • ‘Shelling kills civilians’ in Syria’s Wadi Barada area

    {Monitoring group says seven dead in assault on village in contested valley which supplies water to the Syrian capital.}

    Troops allied to the Syrian government have shelled a village in a rebel-controlled area near its capital Damascus, killing at least seven civilians, according to a monitoring group.

    The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said shells hit al-Reem banquet hall in the village of Deir Qanun on Sunday.

    The incident occurred in the Wadi Barada valley, which is the main source of water for Damascus.

    The banquet hall has been housing hundreds of civilians who have escaped the intensified fighting for Wadi Barada that started on December 22, according to local activists.

    The SOHR said besides the fatalities, at least 20 other people were wounded in the attack, some of them critically.

    “This is the highest toll there since the beginning of the truce [on December 30],” said Rami Abdel Rahman, SOHR’s head.

    A difference source, the activist-operated Wadi Barada Media Centre, said 12 people were killed and more than 20 injured in Sunday’s shelling.

    The group posted pictures of the bloodied floors of the hall on social media, some of them showing bodies with severed limbs.

    Medical teams have been unable to move around the valley because of the fighting and it is not clear if the dozens of injured are getting any immediate care, according to Fuad Abu Hattab, an exiled local resident and a Wadi Barada Media Centre activist.

    The Syrian Civil Defence, a team of volunteer first-responders in rebel-held parts of Syria, also put the death toll at 12.

    Heavy clashes between government troops and rebel forces have rocked Wadi Barada since Saturday, after the death of the government official who negotiated a deal to restore water to Damascus.

    Ahmed al-Ghadban had been on his way to the main Ain al-Fijeh spring with government maintenance teams when he was killed.

    Opposition fighters and government officials have traded blame over the killing of the retired army officer, who had assumed his duties on Saturday.

    Under the agreement, Ghadban was to oversee teams working to repair the infrastructure that supplies Damascus with water in exchange for a cessation of hostilities and the withdrawal of rebel fighters willing to do so.

    About 5.5 million in Damascus and its suburbs have been without water since December 22.

    Fighting has persisted in Wadi Barada since the December 30 ceasefire brokered by Russia and Turkey.

    The ceasefire and planned talks are the latest efforts to negotiate an end to a conflict that has killed more than 400,000 people since it began with anti-government protests in March 2011.

  • Francois Hollande: Two-state solution is the only way

    {France’s Hollande tells representatives from 70 countries it is up to Palestinian and Israeli leaders to achieve peace.}

    Paris, France – A two-state solution in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the only way to bring lasting peace and security to the Middle East, Francois Hollande, France’s president, said.

    His comments came as officials and civil society groups from more than 70 countries gathered to discuss ways of bringing the decades-old conflict back to the negotiating table.

    During Sunday’s conference in Paris, Hollande highlighted the wars in Syria and Iraq and said Middle East peace can only be achieved through a negotiated settlement directly between Palestinians and Israelis.

    “How could we expect the Middle East to return to stability if we cannot find a solution for one of its oldest conflicts?” he asked.

    The summit on the moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace process was the second called by France in the last eight months.

    It was not attended by either Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, or Mahmoud Abbas, Palestinian Authority president, which led many observers to question its significance.

    The one-day Paris conference focused on economic incentives, efforts by civil society groups, and “capacity building” for a future Palestinian state.

    France has been a major backer of the Palestinians, providing $43m in aid in 2015 and Palestine remains the leading beneficiary of French budgetary assistance.

    Hollande noted more than 150 organisations from Palestine and Israel have been brought together under the peace initiative with positive results.

    But despite France’s efforts, analysts expressed scepticism at the relevance of the Paris summit.

    Alain Gresh, a journalist from France’s Le Monde diplomatique newspaper, said the initiative was launched in response to the French parliament vote in December 2014 to officially recognise the State of Palestine, which failed to come to fruition.

    “The then-foreign minister Laurent Fabius said they wouldn’t recognise it, but that they’d try a diplomatic initiative. And if this initiative was to fail, they’d recognise Palestine. But little by little, this talk of recognition disappeared,” said Gresh.

    Of the 193 UN member states, 137 officially acknowledge Palestine as an independent state.

    {{Lost opportunity}}

    Francois Burgat, a political scientist and author, said if the French government wanted to meaningfully bring about peace, it could have taken a harder line with Israel as the occupying power.

    “In the last crisis in Gaza, we saw Hollande affirm Israel’s ‘right to defend itself’ and for the first 15 days into the war, France took no initiative to stop the bloodshed,” Burgat, a senior research fellow at the French National Center for Scientific Research, told Al Jazeera.

    While no Palestinian officials attended the Paris meeting, Husam Zomlot, ambassador at large for the Palestinian government, told Al Jazeera the French peace initiative was “a crucial step to reaffirm the international consensus about the Palestinian cause – that is a cause of foreign military occupation that must end”.

    The two-state solution, agreed on in the 1993 Oslo accords, has been largely lost with negotiations between the two sides broken off by ever-increasing Israeli settlement activity and violence carried out by both sides.

    The settlements are considered illegal under international law and were denounced last month by the passing of a UN Security Council resolution, which was vehemently castigated by Israeli officials.

    Netanyahu, meanwhile, denounced the French summit.

    “The conference convening today in Paris is a futile conference,” he said.

    “It was coordinated between the French and the Palestinians. It aims to force conditions on Israel that conflict with our national interests.

    “It further distances peace because it hardens the Palestinians’ positions and helps them avoid direct negotiations without preconditions.

    “Tomorrow will look different – and tomorrow is very close.”

    {{Trump card}}

    Another variable in any two-state solution is the role of the US, Israeli’s staunch ally.

    President-elect Donald Trump has nominated a pro-settlement American as US ambassador to Israel and suggested the US embassy could be moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in what would be a highly contentious decision.

    Jean-Marc Ayrault, France’s foreign minister, said on Sunday that Trump’s embassy move would have “extremely serious consequences”.

    While the Paris meeting was praised by participants, Gresh said he believes even French officials are sceptical it will help revive peace talks as Trump prepares to assume the US presidency on January 20.

    “I don’t think French diplomats think this initiative will go anywhere, especially because of Trump,” he said.

    “When the French thought about this initiative, they thought they’d be working with [presidential candidate Hillary] Clinton, but now they clearly see this going nowhere.”

    Hollande said ultimately it is up the leaders of Israel and Palestine to secure a lasting peace.

    “The idea is not to dictate to the parties in the conflict the way forward,” he said.

    “I would like to reaffirm here that direct negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis are the only way forward. It is up to their leaders to find an agreement and to convince their people of the necessary compromises.”

  • Bahrain executes three over police killings

    {Trio convicted of carrying out a 2014 deadly attack on police executed by firing squad, state news agency reports.}

    Bahrain has executed three men found guilty of killing three policemen, including an Emirati officer, prosecuters in the island kingdom said.

    The three faced the firing squad on Sunday, a week after a court upheld their death sentences over a bomb attack in March 2014, the prosecution said in a statement carried by the official BNA state news agency.

    The executions came a day after demonstrations broke out across Shia villages following rumours that the authorities were going to execute the three men.

    They are the first in six years in the Gulf kingdom, according to London-based human rights group, Reprieve, which had warned on Saturday against the move.

    Scores of men and women took to the streets after the families of the three were summoned to meet them in prison, a measure that usually precedes the implementation of death sentences, witnesses said.

    “No, no to execution,” the protesters chanted.

    Bahraini authorities said a police officer was wounded in a shooting during one of the protests.

    The interior ministry said the officer was hurt when several people shot at a police patrol in Bani Jamra, west of the capital Manama. It gave no further details.

    The high court on Monday upheld the death sentences against the trio convicted in a bomb attack in March 2014, which killed the policemen.

    Seven other defendants received life terms.

    The Emirati officer was part of a Saudi-led Gulf force which rolled into Bahrain in March 2011 to help security forces put down a month of protests led by the country’s Shia majority.

    “Reports that Bahrain is set to carry out its first executions in six years, based on confessions extracted through torture, are deeply alarming,” Reprieve director Maya Foa said on Saturday.

    Brian Dooley, head of the Washington-based Human Rights Defenders, said if the executions were carried out it “would be a new, enormously alarming step from Bahrain’s regime”.

    “Washington should warn its Gulf ally that this would be a reckless, frightening level of repression to pursue, likely to spark rage and further violence in an already volatile region,” he said in a statement.

    Bahrain is a strategic ally of the United States and home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet.

    The UAE helped put down a month of protests by Bahrain's Shia majority in March 2011
  • Iraqi forces ‘retake Mosul University’ from ISIL

    {Army says it has seized strategic university complex used as base by ISIL fighters following two days of fierce clashes.}

    Iraqi special forces have taken full control of a strategic university in eastern Mosul, according to senior commanders, the latest advance in a major push to drive ISIL out of its last urban stronghold in Iraq.

    The capture of the Mosul University campus, seized by ISIL fighters when they took over the city in 2014, came after two days of intense clashes.

    “Security forces have fully liberated the Mosul University,” Talib Shaghati, the commander of the elite terrorism-combat service, told state TV on Saturday.

    “The forces seized chemicals in the laboratories of the universities and defused explosives and car bombs,” he added, without providing details.

    Used as a base by ISIL, also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant group or ISIS, the university complex lies in the north of the city on the east bank of the Tigris River that splits Mosul in two.

    Earlier on Saturday, bulldozers had smashed through a wall surrounding the sprawling campus and dozens of counter-terrorism service troops sprinted through carrying rocket-propelled grenade launchers.

    While they still came under heavy small arms fire, Iraqi soldiers at the university said ISIL resistance was significantly less than what they had faced during the first weeks of the Mosul operation.

    “We were targeted with only four car bombs where before (ISIL) would send 20 in one day,” special forces Lt. Zain al-Abadeen told the Associated Press news agency.

    “And they aren’t armoured like before, they’re just using civilian cars.”

    Iraqi forces have now captured most districts in eastern Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city.

    {{Destroyed bridges}}

    The massive push to retake Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, from ISIL was launched on October 17.

    The initial phase of the US-backed offensive saw a variety of forces, including Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, retake significant swathes of land in little time but the going has been tough inside the city itself.

    New tactics employed since the turn of the year, including night raids and better defences against suicide car bombs, have given the campaign fresh momentum, according to US and Iraqi military officials.

    The destruction of all bridges over the river in air strikes has also made it difficult for ISIL fighters in east Mosul to resupply or escape to the west bank, which they still fully control.

    US and Iraqi military officials say ISIL has further damaged at least two of them to try to hamper an army advance.

    The western side of Mosul, which is home to the old city and some of the ISIL fighters’ traditional bastions, was always tipped as likely to offer the most resistance.

  • Syria’s main opposition bloc backs Astana peace talks

    {Clashes continue in parts of Syria in advance of scheduled peace talks in the Kazakh capital later this month.}

    Syria’s main opposition bloc has backed planned peace talks in Kazakhstan’s capital later this month between the Syrian government and rebel groups.

    A nationwide ceasefire began in Syria on December 30 to pave the way for new peace talks, which Russia hopes to convene in Astana on January 23 with Turkish and Iranian support.

    After a two-day meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) said on Saturday it would extend its support to an anti-government military delegation attending the talks.

    “Concerning the forthcoming meeting in Astana, the (High Negotiations) Committee stresses its support to the military delegation … and expresses hope that the meeting would reinforce the truce,” the HNC said.

    It added the Astana summit “paves the way for political talks” in Geneva in early February, hosted by the United Nations.

    Also on Saturday, Turkey’s foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Ankara and Moscow had decided to invite the United States to the Astana talks.

    Cavusoglu also reiterated that Turkey remained opposed to the inclusion of the People’s Protection Units (YPG), the Syrian Kurdish armed group, in the meeting.

    OPINION: The Assad conundrum

    Syria has been ravaged by violence since widespread protests in March 2011 calling for President Bashar al-Assad’s ouster.

    More than 310,000 people have been killed and over half the population has been forced to flee.

    Diplomatic efforts to end the conflict have thus far failed, but Moscow and Ankara are hoping that this month’s talks will lead to a political solution.

    Outbreaks of violence

    The ceasefire deal appeared increasingly strained on Saturday, with outbreaks of violence in northwest Syria and near the capital, Damascus.

    Fresh raids on Saturday in the town of Maarat Masrin in the northwest province of Idlib killed eight people, most of them civilians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    A day earlier, three civilians – including a child – were killed in strikes on the nearby town of Orum al-Joz, Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the UK-based monitoring group tracking developments in Syria’s conflict through a network of contacts on the ground, said.

    Idlib province is controlled by a rebel alliance led by Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, which changed its name from al-Nusra Front after breaking ties with al-Qaeda last year.

    Like the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham is excluded from the truce deal.

    New clashes also broke out Saturday in Wadi Barada, the main source of water for Damascus.

    Water supplies from the area to around 5.5 million people in the capital and its outskirts have been cut since December 22 because of fighting.

    Rebels and government troops had reached a local agreement on Friday so that water access could be restored, but the Observatory reported a resumption of violence on Saturday.

    “Regime forces and [Lebanese movement] Hezbollah violated the agreement” by battering a town in Wadi Barada with rocket fire, Abdel Rahman told AFP news agency.

    “They took advantage of the halt in military activities there to advance and flex their muscles,” he said.

    Syrian clashes have continued despite prior efforts to reach a lasting peace deal
  • UK students push for more non-white thinkers on courses

    {Students at SOAS want more black scholars on their courses but reject reports they want to drop white philosophers.}

    London, England – Students at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) have launched a campaign to include more African and non-European thinkers on their courses.

    The “Decolonising SOAS” campaign aims to address a dearth in non-European thinkers on the institute’s curriculum and to more critically examine European thinkers and their ideas on race.

    Administrators at the college, which is part of the University of London, have welcomed the drive to review the content on its programmes and are working with academics and students to look at what changes can be brought in.

    “We’re called the School of African and Oriental Studies, so it makes sense that we include more thinkers from the regions we teach,” said Ali Habib, co-president at SOAS students’ union and one of the activists leading the campaign.

    “In one course, Introduction to Political Theory, we had 28 thinkers and philosophers, of whom only two, [Mahatma] Gandhi and Frantz Fanon, were not white,” he added.

    The campaign has broad backing from students, with up to 900 attending events in support of the initiative.

    Undergraduate politics student Halimo Hussain told Al Jazeera that including more non-white thinkers would enrich her studies.

    “A diversity of thinkers is a necessary step in broadening our world view,” she said, adding: “Whiteness is seen as so neutral within academia that when we question the relevance or importance of white thinkers it’s met with resistance by those who benefit from the status quo. ”
    Media backlash

    Hussain was referring to a strong backlash from British media outlets, with many falsely characterising the campaign as an attempt to drop white philosophers from the curriculum.

    In the past week news outlets including the Daily Mail, the Telegraph, RT, and the Huffington Post have published articles, which have been shared tens of thousands of times, claiming that SOAS students want to get rid of philosophers such as Plato and Descartes.

    Habib said the reports, which all stemmed from the Daily Mail piece, were fabricated and no such plans existed.

    “We don’t want to get rid of Kant, for example, but instead teach his ideas critically, so not to ignore his views on other races,” he said.

    The articles prompted a flood of hate mail targeting Habib and other student union officials directly.

    One image sent to Habib , which was seen by Al Jazeera, uses the racial slur “n*****” to describe black people and suggested they are better suited to eating watermelons than academia.

    SOAS academic Meera Sabaratnam said she was concerned by how the issue had been covered by the media.

    “It is deeply worrying that the students’ campaign was so thoroughly misrepresented by both mainstream and tabloid press, even after explicit clarifications were given to journalists publicly,” she said.

    “This is unacceptably poor journalism, and has the effect of delegitimising these very valuable and appropriate questions,” she added.

    Sabaratnam, who teaches international relations, said rather than remove thinkers from the syllabus, the campaign was trying to broaden the historical context in which European thinkers were studied.

    Including more non-European voices was necessary, given a shifting world order she said.

    “[The] world order is changing, and all societies, including western ones, would greatly benefit from a more considered engagement with knowledge traditions and thinkers from outside the traditional western canon.”

    Sabaratnam’s colleague at SOAS, Kerem Nisancioglu, questioned why openly racist European thinkers were canonised while anti-racists were marginalised in university courses.

    “Wouldn’t a university education that genuinely aspires to improving how we understand and engage with the world confront these questions, rather than hide from them?” He asked.

    “It seems to me that this [media] furore has less to do with university curricula and everything to do with ensuring people of colour that speak out against racism are stepped on as ruthlessly as possible.”

    The campaign at SOAS comes amid efforts to ensure black voices are better represented in academia.

    Late last year Birmingham City University announced that it would be convening an undergraduate degree in black studies, the first of its kind in Europe.

    About 92 percent of academics in the UK are white and just 0.49 percent are black according to a report by the Runnymede trust .

    Activists at SOAS say reports they want to remove white philosophers from the curriculum are fabricated
  • Israel Lobby: Headlines, resignations, calls for probe

    {Al Jazeera releases last installment of investigation that explores Israeli attempts to influence British democracy.}

    Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is a crazy politician surrounded by weirdos and extremists, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson is an idiot whose deputy Alan Duncan should be taken down, and Crispin Blunt is among a group of MPs that are strongly pro-Arab rather than pro-Israel.

    This all according to Shai Masot, who last year introduced himself to Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter Robin Harrow (alias), as a senior political officer at the Israeli embassy in London.

    Masot, who was at the centre of Al Jazeera’s six-month investigation, resigned earlier this week following the release of the damning footage from “The Lobby” on Sunday.

    Al Jazeera Investigations’ story of the Israeli government’s brazen, covert influence campaign in Britain gained significant attention after being published by international media from The New York Times and The Guardian to Le Monde and Haaretz.

    The front page of Britain’s Mail on Sunday read: “Israel plot to ‘take down’ Tory minister”, referring to Masot’s plans to unseat Duncan.
    Inquiry urged

    Parliamentary officer Maria Strizzolo, Masot’s associate who hinted that she hoped “a little scandal” would bring Duncan down, also quit her job soon after the story broke.

    Senior politicians have raised concern over Masot’s comments, which apparently targeted Duncan for being a critic of Israel’s settlement policy in the occupied West Bank.

    Corbyn, leader of the opposition on Friday called on British Prime Minister Theresa May to launcn an inquiry. “This is clearly a national security issue,” he wrote in a letter shared with media.

    He describes the actions of Israeli embassy official Shai Masot as “improper interference in this country’s democratic process”.

    Labour politician Emily Thornberry, who describes herself as both a friend of Israel and Palestine, also called on the government to “launch an immediate inquiry into the extent of this improper interference and demand from the Israeli government that it be brought to an end”.

    Scottish National Party MP Alex Salmond also backed an official investigation “so that we can be confident our elected officials are free to carry out their jobs to the best of their ability and without fear of having their reputation smeared by embassy officials who do not agree with their views”.
    Boris Johnson: Matter closed

    Foreign Secretary Johnson, however, rejected calls to discipline Israel over Masot’s plot.

    Speaking in the Commons on Thursday, Johnson said: “Whatever he [Masot] may exactly have been doing here his cover may well be said to have been … truly blown – so the matter can be considered closed.”

    “The Takedown”, the fourth and final episode of “The Lobby”, features the damning conversation at a London brasserie that led to Masot and Strizzolo’s resignations.

    The extent to which the embassy influences the Labour Friends of Israel (LFI) parliamentary group with strategic and financial support is also revealed.

    Robin is told by pro-Israel activist and parliamentary officer Michael Rubin that, according to Masot, “the Israeli embassy will be able to get a bit of money” to establish an LFI offshoot for young people.

    Throughout the investigation, Robin posed as a graduate activist with strong sympathies with Israel keen to help combat the growing Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

    {{‘Deliberate interference’}}

    At one point, Masot offered Robin a leading role in setting up the youth branch of the LFI, introducing him to members of the pro-Israel lobby as the new chairman of the group.

    British journalist and author Peter Oborne, who has researched the pro-Israel lobby in the UK, told Al Jazeera: “If you were trying to fool the British people by setting up a front organisation which masquerades or says that it is genuine Friends of Israel but actually is run from Tel Aviv that’s troubling.

    “Just imagine it being sort of apparently spontaneous pro-Iranian organisation in Britain and it turned out that it was run from Tehran or inspired by Tehran. That will be outrageous.”

    Oborne described as “shocking” the exchange between Masot and Strizzolo, relating to “taking down” Duncan.

    “This is a clearly deliberate attempt by a foreign government to interfere in the workings of British democracy and to secure the destruction of career of a minister in the British government,” he said.