Author: AFP

  • UK’s The Guardian stops posting on ‘toxic media platform’ X

    UK’s The Guardian stops posting on ‘toxic media platform’ X

    Britain’s The Guardian newspaper announced Wednesday it would no longer post content from its official accounts on Elon Musk’s X, branding it a “toxic media platform” home to “often disturbing content”.

    “We think that the benefits of being on X are now outweighed by the negatives,” the left-leaning newspaper, which has nearly 11 million followers on X, said in a statement on its website.

    It added that its “resources could be better used promoting our journalism elsewhere”.

    “This is something we have been considering for a while given the often disturbing content promoted or found on the platform, including far-right conspiracy theories and racism,” the statement noted.

    “The US presidential election campaign served only to underline what we have considered for a long time: that X is a toxic media platform and that its owner, Elon Musk, has been able to use its influence to shape political discourse.”

    The paper’s main X handle — @guardian — was still accessible Wednesday but a message on it advised “this account has been archived” while redirecting visitors to its website.

    The Guardian noted that X users would still be able to share its articles, and that it would still “occasionally embed content from X” within its articles given “the nature of live news reporting”.

    It also said its reporters would still be able to use the site and other social networks on which the paper does not have an account.

    “Social media can be an important tool for news organisations and help us to reach new audiences but, at this point, X now plays a diminished role in promoting our work,” The Guardian added.

    Musk purchased X, formerly known as Twitter, for $44 billion in 2022 and has consistently courted controversy with his use of the platform, particularly during the recent US presidential election.

    Musk endorsed Donald Trump and used his personal account boasting nearly 205 million followers to sway voters in favour of the Republican, with a slew of incendiary, misleading posts criticised for cranking up the political temperature.

    Trump on Tuesday announced that the Tesla and SpaceX billionaire would lead a so-called Department of Government Efficiency in his incoming administration, alongside the entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy.

  • 14 dead in Astore wedding bus crash, bride survives

    14 dead in Astore wedding bus crash, bride survives

    A bus carrying guests home from a wedding plunged into a river in the northern city of  Pakistan, Astore, killing at least 14 people, officials said Wednesday, with the bride so far the only known survivor.

    “There were 25 people on the bus and so far 14 dead bodies have been recovered while 10 are still missing,” said Wazir Asad Ali, a rescue official in Gilgit-Baltistan.

    “The bride is out of danger, and she is being treated in a Gilgit hospital,” Ali added.

    Naik Alam, a senior police official from the area, told AFP the driver appeared to have been speeding when he lost control at a curve.

    The groom’s family had travelled from Punjab, more than 500 kilometres (300 miles) away, for the wedding and were returning home when the accident happened.

    Road accidents with high fatalities are common in Pakistan, where safety measures are lax, driver training is poor, and transport infrastructure is often decrepit.

    In Balochistan in August, 12 men died when their bus crashed into a ravine on the Makran Coastal Highway.

    In another accident that month, 24 people on board a bus were killed when it plunged into a ravine near the town of Azad Pattan on the border between Punjab province and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

  • Portraits of pain: smuggled Palestinian art shows trauma of Gaza

    Portraits of pain: smuggled Palestinian art shows trauma of Gaza

    When war erupted in Gaza, Palestinian artists had only one way to share their work expressing the harrowing reality of the conflict: having it smuggled out of the besieged territory.

    For six months, they handed over paintings and other artworks to people leaving Gaza through its Rafah border crossing with Egypt until Israeli ground forces closed it in May when they took control of the frontier.

    “The paintings document the brutality of war and massacres… carrying pain and sorrow, but also embodying an unwavering resolve,” said Mohammad Shaqdih.

    He is deputy director of Darat al-Funun, an art gallery in the Jordanian capital Amman exhibiting pieces that were smuggled out in a show entitled “Under Fire”.

    While the works themselves managed to escape the war-torn territory, the four artists who created them — Basel al-Maqousi, Raed Issa, Majed Shala and Suhail Salem — were not so lucky.

    They remain trapped within the narrow coastal strip where Israel’s military campaign has killed more than 43,500 people, mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, and created a humanitarian disaster.

    The artworks “depict the daily realities of war and the hardship these artists endure, who have been displaced and lost their homes”, said Shaqdih.

    He said the gallery was already familiar with the artists on display before the war broke out on October 7, 2023, when Palestinian militant group Hamas launched an unprecedented attack on southern Israel.

    – ‘Nightmares’ –

    That attack resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

    “The language of art is universal. Through these paintings, we are trying to convey our voices, our cries, our tears and the nightmares we witness daily to the outside world,” said Maqousi, 53, speaking to AFP by phone from Gaza.

    The exhibition features 79 artworks crafted from improvised materials including medicine wrappers, and using natural pigments made from hibiscus, pomegranate and tea.

    The drawings show people under bombardment, displaced families on donkey-drawn carts, makeshift tents, weary and frightened faces, emaciated children clinging to their mothers and blindfolded men surrounded by military vehicles.

    “I can’t paint with colours and expensive pigments because there are more pressing priorities here in Gaza, like food, drink and finding safety for myself and my family” reads a text by Suhail Salem next to his sketches drawn in school notebooks with ballpoint pens.

    In a letter displayed alongside his work, Majed Shala describes how he was displaced to the southern city of Deir al-Balah. His house, studio and 30 years of artworks were completely destroyed.

    “When the war first started, I felt completely paralysed, unable to create or even think about making art,” he wrote.

    – ‘Far more devastating’ –

    As time passed, “I started to document the real-life scenes of displacement and exile that have affected every part of our daily lives,” he added.

    His words are displayed next to a painting of a man embracing his wife amid a scene of destruction.

    “These scenes remind me of the stories our elders told us about the 1948 Nakba,” or “catastrophe”, he wrote, referring to the exodus of around 760,000 Palestinians during the war that led to the creation of Israel.

    “But what we’re living through now feels far more devastating, far worse than what people endured back then.”

    Exhibition visitor Victoria Dabdoub, a 37-year-old engineer, said she was moved by the artwork.

    “It is important that works like these are shared worldwide so that people can feel the pain, sorrow, and suffering of the people of Gaza,” she told AFP.

    On the wall nearby is posted a message from artist Raed Issa: “We assure you: if you’re asking how we are, we are far from all right! Constant bombing and terror, day and night! Gaza is in mourning, waiting for relief from God!”

  • Short cut to feminism: How an assault changed Korean woman’s outlook

    Short cut to feminism: How an assault changed Korean woman’s outlook

    Aspiring South Korean writer On Ji-goo never considered herself a feminist but changed her mind after being physically attacked by a man for having short hair.

    “I know you are a feminist,” her attacker yelled as he beat her up at the convenience store where she worked part-time.

    Her assailant, in his 20s, also severely assaulted an older man who tried to intervene, telling him: “Why aren’t you supporting a fellow man?”

    On was left with hearing loss and severe trauma but insisted on pressing charges—resulting in a landmark ruling last month where, for the first time in South Korea, a court recognised misogyny as a motive for a hate crime.

    “I now think I’m a feminist,” On, who wanted to use her pen name for security reasons, told AFP in an interview.

    The Changwon District Court ruling “has historical significance, but it seems to hold even greater meaning for me personally”, she said.

    The attack generated outrage in South Korea, and On became an inadvertent heroine for the country’s women’s rights movements.

    Short hair has been very loosely associated with feminism in South Korea, which remains socially conservative despite its booming economy and the global popularity of its K-pop and K-drama content.

    Same-sex marriage is not recognised, and among advanced economies it has relatively low rates of female workforce participation and one of the worst gender pay gaps.

    Militant moments

    As part of the global #MeToo movement that emerged around 2017, South Korean women held enormous rights demonstrations and won victories on issues from abortion access to harsher punishment for spycam crimes.

    In their most militant moments, some campaigners went viral by destroying makeup products or cutting their hair short on camera to protest against the country’s demanding beauty standards.

    It also saw the emergence of the extreme 4B movement, which rejects dating, sex, marriage, or childbearing with men.

    The movement, which means “Four Nos” in Korean, has been trending since Donald Trump won the US presidential election.

    But South Korea has also seen a recent anti-feminism backlash, with President Yoon Suk Yeol courting young men on the campaign trail with denials of institutional discrimination against women and promises to abolish the Ministry of Gender Equality, which his supporters claimed was “outdated”.

    The backlash previously ensnared unsuspecting victims such as triple Olympic archery champion An San, who was bullied online during the 2021 Tokyo Games for her short hair.

    Writer On said she followed the furore at the time, even reporting online abuse she saw.

    “When I first heard that having short hair meant you were a feminist, I found it absurd,” On said.

    “Athletes often find it more convenient to have short hair when they are training,” she added, noting she had cut her own hair short before being assaulted last year because of the hot weather.

    Archer An never officially commented on the online abuse, and her “pride and confidence, along with her ability to simply ignore negativity, were truly impressive,” said On.

    “Over time, I found myself (inspired by) her sense of dignity and confidence… thinking: ‘Is there really anything that I should be ashamed of?’”

    Getting worse?

    A spate of high-profile deepfake pornography cases were uncovered this summer, targeting female students and staff at the country’s schools and universities.

    A Seoul court jailed one perpetrator for 10 years last month for assaulting women who attended the nation’s top Seoul National University, saying his actions stemmed from “hatred toward socially successful women”.

    One victim, whose campaign name is Ruma, told AFP that her assailant “wanted to emphasise that no matter how accomplished a woman is, she can be trampled on and treated like a prank by men.”

    Activists such as Jung Yun-jung, who supported On through her trial, say the situation could worsen as inequality and competition for jobs increase.

    South Korea has one of the world’s lowest birthrates as well as a falling marriage rate, with experts pointing to intense competition over jobs and housing a factor, leaving young people despondent for their futures.

    On is still on medication to treat the mental and physical wounds of her attack, but she has found purpose in supporting other women who may find themselves victimised in similar circumstances.

    Feminism, in the end, is about believing that “women’s rights are equally as important”, she said.

    “In that sense, I had indeed been a feminist even before the incident.”

  • 2024 ‘virtually certain’ to be hottest year on record: EU monitor

    2024 ‘virtually certain’ to be hottest year on record: EU monitor

    This year is “virtually certain” to be the hottest in recorded history with warming above 1.5C, EU climate monitor Copernicus said Thursday, days before nations are due to gather for crunch UN climate talks.

    The European agency said the world was passing a “new milestone” of temperature records that should be a call to accelerate action to cut planet-heating emissions at the UN negotiations in Azerbaijan next week.

    Last month, marked by deadly flooding in Spain and Hurricane Milton in the United States, was the second hottest October on record, with average global temperatures second only to the same period in 2023.

    “Humanity’s torching the planet and paying the price,” said United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in a speech on Thursday, listing a string of calamitous floods, fires, heatwaves and hurricanes across the world this year so far.

    “Behind each of these headlines is human tragedy, economic and ecological destruction, and political failure.”

    Copernicus said 2024 would likely be more than 1.55 degrees Celsius (2.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1850-1900 average — the period before the industrial-scale burning of fossil fuels.

    This does not amount to a breach of the Paris deal, which strives to limit global warming to below 2C and preferably 1.5C, because that is measured over decades and not individual years.

    “It is now virtually certain that 2024 will be the warmest year on record and the first year of more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels,” said Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) Deputy Director Samantha Burgess.

    “This marks a new milestone in global temperature records and should serve as a catalyst to raise ambition for the upcoming Climate Change Conference, COP29.”

    – Wild weather –

    The UN climate negotiations in Azerbaijan, taking place in the wake of the United States election victory by Donald Trump, will set the stage for a new round of crucial carbon-cutting targets.

    Trump, who has repeatedly called climate change a “hoax”, pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement during his first presidency. While President Joe Biden took the United States back in, Trump has threatened to withdraw again.

    Meanwhile, average global temperatures have reached new peaks, as have concentrations of planet-heating gases in the atmosphere.

    Scientists say the safer 1.5C limit is rapidly slipping out of reach, while stressing that every tenth of a degree in temperature rises heralds progressively more damaging impacts.

    Last month the UN said the current course of action would result in a catastrophic 3.1C of warming this century, while all existing climate pledges taken in full would still amount to a devastating 2.6C temperature rise.

    And in a report on Thursday, the UN warned that the amount of money going to poorer countries for adaptation measures was barely one-tenth of what they needed to spend on disaster preparedness.

    In a month of weather extremes, October saw above-average rainfall across swathes of Europe, as well as parts of China, the United States, Brazil and Australia, Copernicus said.

    The United States is also experiencing ongoing drought, which affected record numbers of people, the EU monitor added.

    Global warming is not just about rising temperatures, but the knock-on effect of all the extra heat in the atmosphere and seas.

    Warmer air can hold more water vapour, and warmer oceans mean greater evaporation, resulting in more intense downpours and storms.

    Copernicus said average sea surface temperatures in the area it monitors were the second highest on record for the month of October.

    C3S uses billions of measurements from satellites, ships, aircraft and weather stations to aid its calculations.

    Copernicus records go back to 1940.

    But other sources of climate data such as ice cores, tree rings and coral skeletons allow scientists to expand their conclusions using evidence from much further in the past.

    Climate scientists say the period being lived through right now is likely the warmest the Earth has been for the last 100,000 years.

  • Afghan women not barred from speaking to each other: morality ministry

    Afghan women not barred from speaking to each other: morality ministry

    Women in Afghanistan are not forbidden from speaking to each other, the Taliban government’s morality ministry told AFP on Saturday, denying recent media reports of a ban.

    Afghan media based outside the country and international outlets have in recent weeks reported a ban on women hearing other women’s voices, based on an audio recording of the head of the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (PVPV), Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, about rules of prayer. 

    PVPV spokesman Saiful Islam Khyber said the reports were “brainless” and “illogical”, in a voice recording confirmed by AFP. 

    “A woman can talk to another woman, women need to interact with one another in society, women do have their needs,” he said. 

    He added, however, that there were exceptions according to Islamic law, such as those described by Hanafi that women should use hand gestures instead of raising their voices to communicate with other women while praying.

    Women in Afghanistan are barred from singing or reciting poetry aloud in public, according to a recent “vice and virtue” law detailing sweeping codes of behaviour, including that women’s voices should be “concealed” along with their bodies when outside their homes. 

    Women’s voices have also been banned from television and radio broadcasts in some provinces.

    The law codified many rules the Taliban government has imposed based on their strict interpretation of Islamic law since they came to power in 2021, with women bearing the brunt of restrictions the United Nations has called “gender apartheid”. 

    The Taliban authorities have banned education after secondary school for girls and women, also barring them from various jobs as well as parks and other public places. 

    The Taliban government has said all Afghan citizens’ rights are guaranteed under Islamic law. 

  • Canada on ‘high alert’ bracing for migrants fleeing US

    Canada on ‘high alert’ bracing for migrants fleeing US

    Canadian authorities said Friday they’re on “high alert” with all eyes on the US border as the country braces for a possible influx of migrants from the United States.

    US President-elect Donald Trump has promised the largest mass deportation in American history, accusing immigrants of “poisoning the blood of our country.”

    During his first presidential term from 2017 to 2021, tens of thousands of migrants, including Haitians stripped of US protections, fled north to Canada.

    “We’re on high alert,” a Royal Canadian Mounted Police spokesman, Sergeant Charles Poirier, told Agence France-Presse.

    “All of our eyes are looking at the border to see what’s going to happen… because we know that Trump’s stance on immigration might drive up illegal and irregular migration to Canada,” he said.

    In Ottawa, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland met Friday with a group of ministers tasked with handling thorny issues that might emerge between Canada and the incoming Trump administration.

    She sought to reassure that Canada was ready for a possible uptick in migrant arrivals.

    “We have a plan,” she told a news conference after the meeting without giving details. “Canadians need to know… our borders are safe and secure, and we control them.”

    Watching out for a possible influx comes as Canada is slashing its own immigration targets.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has said it wants to slow population growth while it bolsters key infrastructure and social services.

    Quebec Premier Francois Legault this week also expressed concerns about a large number of arrivals overwhelming his province’s already strained ability to house them.

    Immediately following Tuesday’s election, online searches in the United States about moving to Canada jumped tenfold.

    The legal status of the people making those queries is unclear, but some US citizens opposed to Trump’s return to power have reportedly been querying Canadian immigration and relocation services.

    Google Trends pointed to search terms such as “immigrate to Canada,” “Canada immigration process” and “how to move to Canada.”

    The government estimates the processing of permanent residency applications can take up to one year, while projected wait times for refugee claims is 44 months.

    Entering Canada between border checkpoints is illegal, and dangerous, especially in winter months, the RCMP’s Poirier noted.

    “We understand the misery and fear that drives people to try to cross into Canada (through forests or fields or across lakes and rivers), but there are real dangers,” he warned.

    “It’s starting to get cold. We’ve seen some tragedies in the past. People were severely frostbitten and had to have amputations. People also suffered severe hypothermia,” Poirier said.

    Some have died.

    Rule changes in 2023 have also made it harder for people coming from the United States to succeed in making asylum claims in Canada, and they would likely be returned to the United States.

    Poirier said “more boots on the ground” are expected to be deployed along the world’s longest non-militarized border in the coming days, as authorities expect migrants to start hitting the road soon, ahead of Trump’s inauguration in January.

    Additionally, cameras, sensors and drones have already been set up along this 8,891 kilometres (5,525 miles) stretch, and information is being shared between Canada and the United States in real-time, he added.

    Despite months of planning, Poirier warned that if thousands of migrants come all at once and cross at many border points, “it could become unmanageable.”

  • Delhi plans drone flights to combat smog crisis

    Delhi plans drone flights to combat smog crisis

    India’s capital unveiled plans Friday to fly special drones to clear pollution from its smog-choked skies — a plan derided by experts as another “band-aid” solution to a public health crisis.

    New Delhi and the surrounding metropolitan area, home to more than 30 million people, consistently tops world rankings for air pollution in winter.

    The smog is blamed for thousands of premature deaths each year and is an annual source of misery for the capital’s residents, with various piecemeal government initiatives failing to measurably address the problem.

    Friday marked the start of a trial for an aerial drone tasked with flying around the city’s pollution hotspots to spray water mist in an effort to clear dust and harmful particulate matter from the air.

    “We have been examining different technological solutions and best practices from across the world,” Delhi environment minister Gopal Rai said after launching the initiative.

    “This one drone is part of a pilot project by a company. We will study, and if it succeeds, we will take this forward.”

    Rai said that once the trial was over, the Delhi government would issue a tender to purchase two more drones.

    If implemented, the three drones would be responsible for mitigating air pollution across a city that stretches across 1,500 square kilometres (580 square miles) — around the same size as greater London.

    A technician at the site, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said the drones carried a maximum 16 litres (4.2 gallons) of water and could only operate for a few minutes at a time before they needed to be refilled.

    “But these are not the solution to air pollution,” Sunil Dahiya of advocacy group Envirocatalysts told AFP. “These are band-aid solutions.”

    Prior government efforts to mitigate the smog, such as a public campaign encouraging drivers to turn off their engines at traffic lights, have failed to make an impact in the city.

    Delhi opened a “smog tower” — a 25-metre (82-foot) tower in the city centre containing fans that were touted as filtering 1,000 cubic metres of air per second — to much fanfare in 2021.

    The project was panned by experts when it was launched and is no longer operational.

    “Cutting emissions at the sources of the pollution is more important,” Anumita Roychowdhury, executive director of the Centre for Science and Environment in New Delhi, told AFP.

    “We have enough studies to show that vehicles, industry, and construction are the areas that need intervention to tackle the issue.”

    The level of PM2.5 particles — the smallest and most harmful, which can enter the bloodstream — registered above 300 micrograms per cubic metre in Delhi this week, according to monitoring firm IQAir.

    That is 20 times the daily maximum recommended by the World Health Organization.

  • One Direction star took cocaine, alcohol, antidepressant before death

    One Direction star took cocaine, alcohol, antidepressant before death

    One Direction star Liam Payne consumed cocaine, alcohol and a prescription antidepressant before falling to his death from a Buenos Aires hotel balcony last month, Argentine prosecutors said Thursday.

    The prosecutor’s office added that three people were charged with supplying him with drugs and one of them was also charged with abandoning a person in a vulnerable state.

    “The results of the toxicological studies, which have been communicated to his family, revealed that, in the moments prior to his death and over a period covering at least his last 72 hours, Payne had traces of polydrug use of alcohol, cocaine and a prescription antidepressant in his body,” the prosecutors said.

    Payne was found dead on October 16 after plunging from the balcony of his third-floor room at the CasaSur Hotel in the Argentine capital.

    An autopsy found he died after sustaining “multiple traumas” and “internal and external hemorrhaging” from the fall.

    One of the highest-grossing live acts in the world in the 2010s, One Direction went on indefinite hiatus in 2016.

    Payne went on to enjoy a degree of solo success but his career had languished recently.

    His death at age 31 prompted a global outpouring of grief and condolences from family, former bandmates, fans and others.

    – Three charged with drugs supply –

    Prosecutors said one of the three people charged in the case had accompanied him on a daily basis during his stay in Buenos Aires and was charged with abandoning a person who later died as well as supplying him with narcotics.

    The second suspect is a hotel employee accused of twice supplying Payne with cocaine while he was staying at the CasaSur. A third person is also accused of supplying him with the drug on October 14, two days before his death.

    The prosecution ruled out self-harm and the “physical intervention of third parties” as the cause of Payne’s death, saying that the injuries he sustained were compatible with those caused by a fall.

    “Payne was either not fully conscious or was in a state of markedly diminished or absent consciousness at the time of the fall,” the report said.

    He was found dead after hotel staff called emergency services to report “a guest who is overwhelmed by drugs and alcohol, and destroying his room.”

    – Body flown home –

    The toxicological report was published a day after the singer’s father Geoff Payne repatriated his body to Britain aboard a flight from Buenos Aires to London.

    Payne’s death has prompted a debate about whether the music industry has a duty of care for the mental health of stars who find fame at a young age.

    The singer from Wolverhampton in central England had spoken publicly about struggles with substance abuse and the pressures of teenage stardom.

    He first auditioned for the hugely popular television talent show “The X Factor” at the age of 14 but was unsuccessful.

    Two years later he hit gold on the program, which teamed him up with Niall Horan, Harry Styles, Louis Tomlinson and Zayn Malik to form One Direction.

    Over the next six years, the group enjoyed global fame and legions of screaming fans, selling more than 70 million copies of their five albums. They went on four world tours and won nearly 200 awards.

    Payne is survived by a seven-year-old boy, Bear, with Girls Aloud star Cheryl Tweedy.

  • ‘Game of Thrones’ movie in early development

    ‘Game of Thrones’ movie in early development

    Could the dragons of Westeros finally be coming to the big screen?

    At least one “Game of Thrones” movie is in very early stages of development, trade outlets The Hollywood Reporter and Deadline reported Thursday.

    The original HBO “Game of Thrones” television show became a global cultural phenomenon during its eight-season run from 2011-2019, garnering huge audiences and a record 59 Emmys.

    Based on George R.R. Martin’s fantasy novel series “A Song of Ice and Fire,” the hit show about violent, feuding noble families has already spawned TV spinoff “House of the Dragon,” with more small-screen adaptations confirmed to be in the works.

    But while Martin and “Thrones” showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss have discussed potential movies based on the universe in the past, parent company Warner Bros Discovery has been opposed to bringing the franchise to theaters.

    The Hollywood Reporter suggested Thursday that recent leadership changes at the studio, and the success of franchises that have hopped between big and small screens such as “The Batman,” “Dune” and the upcoming “Harry Potter” TV series, may have finally prompted a change.

    Warner Bros “has been quietly developing at least one film” set in the “Thrones” universe, it reported.

    Deadline said there have been only “preliminary discussions,” and no stars are yet attached to the proposed movie.

    “We have no comment on this,” a Warner spokeswoman told AFP.

    amz/nro