Is China detaining Uighur Muslims in secret camps?

China has been accused of detaining more than a million Uighur Muslims in what UN human rights experts say resembles “a massive internment camp, shrouded in secrecy, a sort of no-rights zone”.

The camps are believed to be in the western region of Xinjiang. China denies such camps exist, but says criminals involved in minor offences are sent to what it calls “vocational education and employment training centres” to help with their reintegration into society.

About 10 million Uighur live mostly in Xinjiang. China says its crackdown there is to protect peace and prevent what it calls terrorism.

There have been ethnic riots in recent years and Uighur separatists have been blamed for several attacks, including one in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 2013.

Presenter: Hashem Ahelbarra

Guests:

Andrew Leung – international and independent China Strategist

Andreas Fulda – lecturer at the school of Contemporary Chinese Studies, University of Nottingham

Adrian Zenz – expert on China’s minority policy

Source: Al Jazeera News

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2PlZydn
via IFTTT

England v India: Hosts bowled out for 246 despite Curran’s 78

news image

England v India: Sam Curran scores 78 as England bowled out for 246
Fourth Specsavers Test, Ageas Bowl (day one)
England 246: Curran 78, Moeen 40, Bumrah 3-46
India 19-0
India trail by 227 runs
Scorecard

Sam Curran salvaged England after their top order failed again on the first day of the fourth Test against India in Southampton.

Some fine India bowling coupled with woeful England batting left the hosts 86-6 after they won the toss.

But 20-year-old Curran, recalled to play only his fourth Test, made a spirited 78 to drag them to 246.

He shared stands of 81 with the returning Moeen Ali, who battled to 40, and 63 with Stuart Broad.

Curran was the last man to be dismissed, leaving India to survive four overs and close on 19-0, 227 behind.

Although the tourists are in the stronger position, England would have been in much deeper trouble had it not been for efforts of Curran, who kept them afloat on a day when the ball moved throughout.

Despite England not being at their best with the new ball, England still have a chance of fighting back into the contest if their bowlers can find similar assistance to that enjoyed by India.

England, who lead 2-1, will seal the five-match series with victory on the south coast.

‘A quality innings’ – Curran reaches fifty with huge six

Curran shines once more

Even though he is still new to international cricket, Curran is no stranger to rescuing England. His 63 in the second innings of the 31-run win in the first Test dragged them from 87-7 and helped earn him the man-of-the-match award.

Still, he was left out of the third Test at Trent Bridge in favour of Chris Woakes and Ben Stokes, the latter after he been cleared of affray.

Restored to the team in Southampton because of an injury to Woakes, Curran played an innings full of the qualities that have characterised his short career: determination, sound judgement and no little flair.

With England struggling, Curran demonstrated the confidence and solidity lacked by some of his team-mates, rebuilding with Moeen, who himself showed patience in his first Test since March.

Initially strong square of the wicket, Curran opened his shoulders after Moeen fell, delighting the crowd by fetching off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin over mid-wicket for six and hitting the pace bowlers down the ground.

Only the danger of running out of partners made his batting more agricultural and by the time he was bowled by Ashwin, he was England’s second-highest run-scorer of the series.

England top order folds again

That England have a lead in this series is little to do with their top order – since the first innings of the first Test, where they slipped from 216-3 to 287 all out, they have found themselves 87-7, 89-4, 161 all out, 62-4 and now 86-6.

Joe Root’s decision to bat first on pitch that had its grass removed seemed a sound one, but his batsmen once again floundered.

Keaton Jennings was lbw in bizarre fashion, befuddled into playing no shot to a Jasprit Bumrah inswinger that would have hit middle and leg.

‘A horrible dismissal’ – Jennings ‘completely deceived’ by Bumrah

Root was lbw playing across an Ishant Sharma inswinger while Jonny Bairstow, promoted to number four despite a broken finger, poked at Bumrah to be caught behind.

Alastair Cook played nicely before guiding Hardik Pandya to Virat Kohli, while Jos Buttler played a loose drive to also be caught at third slip off Mohammed Shami.

Ben Stokes played with organisation and a straight bat until he was lbw by one that Shami nipped back.

Even Moeen, who showed restraint, undid his good work with a wild sweep that resulted in a top edge off Ashwin.

Moeen falls to end ‘mighty valuable partnership’ with Curran

India impress before fading late

India outplayed England in the third Test at Trent Bridge and rewarded their successful team by fielding an unchanged XI for the first time in 46 matches.

For long periods, they picked up where they left off last week, carrying a consistent threat with the ball and catching well to take the chances England offered.

Their four fast bowlers once again bowled with pace, pushing the ball to a full length to take advantage of the movement on offer.

Only when Curran reversed the momentum did India wilt slightly. Pandya was expensive and Ashwin at times ineffective.

In addition, England’s cause was helped by 23 byes as wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant struggled behind the stumps.

However, dismissing England for such a modest total gave the tourists the upper hand and a potentially tricky period for openers KL Rahul and Shikhar Dhawan was made easier by England’s width.

‘India should have bowled England out for 150’

England’s Sam Curran: “A lot of the batsmen got some very good balls. It’s a team game so we worry about the end result, and we managed to get 246, which from 86-6 looks a decent score.

“It’s a massive positive for us going into tomorrow with a bit of momentum.”

Former England captain Michael Vaughan on BBC Test Match Special: “Every single day of this series has had some fascinating periods. You feel there is going to be wickets tumbling and then you get a partnership from nowhere.

“The way Curran and Moeen played, India started to chase it. They got frustrated and a bit ragged in the field, so Virat will feel they lost intensity. They should have bowled England out for 150.”

Ex-England spinner Phil Tufnell on TMS: “Early wickets are the key for England in the morning. The pitch will still be doing a little and it is set up for a great Test match.”

More extras than runs for Jennings – the stats

  • England’s 36-4 is their second lowest score when they have lost their fourth wicket at home against India, the other one being 34 in 1936 at Lord’s.
  • Alastair Cook has faced more than 26,000 balls now in Test cricket and batted for more than 608 hours.
  • There have been more extras for England (113) in this series than Keaton Jennings has scored runs (94)
  • Ishant Sharma now has 251 wickets – and 51 against England. He is the seventh India bowler to reach 250 and only the third seamer.
  • Ravichandran Ashwin has never bowled a no-ball. He has bowled more overs in Test cricket without bowling a no-ball than anyone else, going past Graeme Swann, who bowled 2,500 overs.

And finally…

Geoffrey Boycott returned to the TMS commentary box for the first time since having heart surgery in July

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2MGtDra
via IFTTT

The next iPhones, Apple Watch leak as Apple preps for Sept. 12 event

news image

Apple may be preparing to announce new iPhones, iPads and Apple Watches on Sept. 12, but it looks like someone has decided to share the images of the new products a bit early. 

Just hours after Apple sent out media invitations to its next big event, Apple blog 9to5Mac shared images purporting to be of the two new high-end iPhone X successors as well as the new Apple Watch. 

The site says it expects the new devices to be called the iPhone XS, following the “S” naming convention Apple has previously used during years it upgrades the internal specs of the phones without giving the devices any major makeovers.

The new iPhones in the images are similar in appearance to the iPhone X announced last year, complete with a “notch” along the top of the display for the phone’s front camera and Face ID sensors. New: A larger, potentially “plus” model that will have a 6.5-inch screen to go along with the updated 5.8-inch model.

Apple did not immediately respond to a USA TODAY request for comment. 

According to earlier reports displays are expected to be OLED – just like the iPhone X’s – and according to 9to5Mac’s leaked image, the new phones will also be available in a gold version. The iPhone X currently is only available in black or white. 

The images appear to be similar to the marketing materials Apple traditionally uses to show off its new devices. 

A third iPhone is also expected at Apple’s event in September. While it will resemble the iPhone X and new iPhone XS models, this third iPhone is said to have a 6.1-inch display and be available in multiple colors.

It is also expected to be more affordable than the iPhone X replacements, using less premium components such as LCD displays instead of the more vibrant OLED, according to Bloomberg

In addition to images of two of the new iPhones, the site also appears to have gotten ahold of an image of Apple’s new Apple Watch Series 4. As with the iPhone leak, it appears that the Watch image was also part of marketing materials.

While it is hard to tell too much from the image, the leak does appear to confirm earlier rumors that Apple will be giving the Apple Watch its first redesign, increasing the size of the display by shrinking the bezels around the screen.

While not a major overhaul, prior Apple Watch versions mostly featured internal updates such as faster processors, waterproofing and the ability to get 4G LTE cellular connectivity. 

Pricing, availability and full specs all still remain a mystery. Those details, as well as the rumored new iPads and Macs, should be revealed at Apple’s event on Sept. 12. Assuming they don’t leak out first. 

Follow Eli Blumenthal on Twitter @eliblumenthal

Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2N1WyFB

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2PhQdU6
via IFTTT

Apple takes a step towards its own version of Google Glass

news image

Apple's AR headset plans take a step forward.
Apple’s AR headset plans take a step forward.

Image: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

There’s long been murmurs about Apple making its own augmented reality glasses, like Google Glass, and its latest acquisition is another step towards that.

Apple has acquired Denver-based AR lens startup Akonia Holographics, according to a report by Reuters.

Founded in 2012, the startup focused on holographic data storage before shifting to smart glass technologies. 

Akonia’s HoloMirror smart glass utilises a single layer of media, and the company boasts “ultra-clear, full-color performance … [enabling] the thinnest, lightest head worn displays in the world.”

In a statement to Reuters, an Apple spokesperson (as per usual) didn’t give much away: “Apple buys smaller companies from time to time, and we generally don’t discuss our purpose or plans.”

An executive in the AR industry told the outlet that Akonia had become “very quiet” in the six months leading to the acquisition, indicating the deal happened earlier this year.

Back in April, CNET reported Apple was working on a combination AR/VR headset with the codename “T288,” supporting both AR and VR apps, that would launch by 2020.

Each lens would reportedly feature an 8K display per eye, for a total resolution of 16K. That would eclipse the likes of current VR rivals Oculus Rift and the HTC Vive, which both only have 1,080 x 1,200 resolution per eye.

Of course, it’s still early days, and Apple’s headset dreams might just stay that way.

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fvideo uploaders%2fdistribution thumb%2fimage%2f86531%2f2d9249ac 5d9e 4fa6 8466 793e4110ec8f

 

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2opUWHG
via IFTTT

Trans Mountain: Court quashes approval of contentious pipeline

news image

Montreal, Canada – A Canadian federal court has quashed government permits to expand the Trans Mountain pipeline, a decision that has been welcomed by Indigenous leaders and puts the future of the contentious $5bn project in limbo.

In a ruling issued on Thursday morning, the Federal Court of Appeal said the National Energy Board of Canada (NEB) made a “critical error” in issuing a report the federal government relied on to give the project the green light in 2016.

The court said the NEB – an independent regulatory body that oversees permits for oil and gas projects – did not take into account an increase in tanker traffic off the coast of British Columbia as a result of the pipeline’s expansion.

Its report to the government failed to give Ottawa the information “it needed in order to properly assess the public interest, including the project’s environmental effects – matters it was legally obligated to assess,” the ruling states.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau approved the project in November 2016, saying that it would bolster the Canadian economy and create jobs, and that it is in Canada’s national interest to get it built.

The Trans Mountain project involves twinning an existing 1,150km pipeline to ship up to 890,000 barrels of oil every day from the Alberta tar sands to Canada‘s west coast, for export overseas.

In its decision, the court also said the federal government failed to meet the minimum standard required in its consultations with Indigenous people.

Under the Constitution, Canada has a “duty to consult” and accommodate Indigenous people when a project may impact their Aboriginal or treaty rights.

The government did not engage in “responsive, considered and meaningful dialogue” with the Indigenous applicants in the case, which included the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, the Squamish Nation, and the Coldwater Indian Band, among others.

“The law requires Canada to do more than receive and record concerns and complaints,” the court said.

‘It’s a great day’

Indigenous leaders across Canada welcomed the court’s decision.

For several years, they have been leading a growing protest movement against the pipeline, which they say threatens the water and land their communities depend on. 

They have long argued they weren’t adequately consulted, and never gave their consent on the pipeline as well.

“It’s a great day today. We won!” said Chief Lee Spahan, of the Coldwater Indian Band, at a press conference in Vancouver.

“Right from the beginning, we always said water is life. Water is sacred. They can say they consulted, but they never, ever, ever got our consent,” he added.

The court also said the federal government failed to meet the minimum standard required in its consultations with Indigenous people [File: Chris Helgren/Reuters]

Chief Bob Chamberlin, vice-president of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC), said the ruling is “a major win with impacts that will be felt across the country”.

“The project should never have been approved, and we are greatly encouraged that the Federal Court of Appeal has recognised the need for Canada to uphold Indigenous Title and Rights on projects on their territories, and fulfil their commitments to true reconciliation,” Chamberlin said in a statement.

Bill Morneau, Canada’s finance minister, said the government is reviewing the court’s decision carefully, but it has not yet decided what its exact response will be.

“We’re going to review today’s decision to ensure that we’re meeting high standards when it comes to both protecting the environment and meeting our obligations to consult with Indigenous peoples,” Morneau said during a news conference.

“As a government, we take our responsibilities seriously. While we want to make sure that the project proceeds, we also want to make sure it moves ahead in the right way.”

Kinder Morgan approves pipeline’s sale to Ottawa

Also on Thursday, the shareholders of Kinder Morgan, the company responsible for Trans Mountain, voted overwhelming in favour of selling the pipeline to the Canadian government. 

In late May, Canada announced it would spend $3.5bn to buy the pipeline from Kinder Morgan, in essence nationalising the project.

Morneau said the government expects to close on the acquisition of the project as early as Friday.

In its ruling, the court instructed Ottawa to remedy the two problems its decision was based on – including restarting the consultation process with Indigenous people – and come to a “fresh decision”.

Morneau said the government remains committed to the project.

“This is a project that’s in Canada’s national interest, a project that means thousands of good, well-paying jobs for the middle-class, that will help us to get a fair price for Canadian resources,” he said.

But the government still faces an uphill battle, as Indigenous leaders, environmental groups, and several municipalities in BC have vowed they won’t allow the project to be built.

Mike Hudema, a spokesperson for Greenpeace Canada, said Justin Trudeau should “read the writing on the wall”.

“Dump this pipeline and shift the billions of public dollars slated for this problem-plagued project into Canada’s renewable energy economy,” Hudema said in a statement.

“While we will all celebrate this massive win tonight we will be ready to continue the fight should this project ever try to endanger these lands, waters or our collective climate again.”

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2Pm6Wpj
via IFTTT

Listen: US Open day four – Kerber taken to third set

news image

Listen to live US Open – Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic & Caroline Wozniacki in action – BBC Sport


<!–





<!–

<!–
<!–

<!–
<!–

<!–

<!–

<!–


Summary

  1. Roger Federer wins first set 7-5 against Benoit Paire in second round
  2. Fourth seed Angelique Kerber beats Johanna Larsson 6-2 5-7 6-4 to reach third round
  3. Novak Djokovic v Tennys Sandgren (00:00 BST)
  4. Other matches include Lesia Tsurenko v Caroline Wozniacki
  5. Fourth seed Alexander Zverev wins, but 14th seed Fabio Fognini is out
  6. Use the play icon to listen to BBC Sport Radio 5 live sports extra commentary


Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2onStO7
via IFTTT

Reports: French film star Gerard Depardieu ‘absolutely disputes’ raping young actress

news image

Actor Gerard Depardieu adamantly denies a young actress’ allegation that he raped her earlier this month, CNN and Britain’s The Guardian report.

On Monday, the woman, identified as an actress and dancer in her early 20s, filed a police report at a station in southeastern France saying she had been sexually abused on two separate occasions by the 69-year-old star at his home in Paris on Aug. 7 and 13. Police and prosecutors in Aix-en-Provence referred the case to investigators in Paris, The Guardian reports.

Depardieu, a French cinema icon and a friend of the woman’s father, had taken the aspiring actress under his wing. She said the assaults took place while they were rehearsing for a play. 

French-language media outlets Le Parisien and TV news channel BFM were the first to report the story. When the accuser was contacted by Le Parisien, a family member told the newspaper she did not wish to speak to the media.

Depardieu’s attorney, Herve Temime, confirmed to BFM that a report was filed Monday and referred to the Paris prosecutor two days later. He said his client was “totally stunned” by the allegation but acknowledges knowing the woman.

Temime told The Guardian that the his client “absolutely” refuted any accusation of assault or rape. “I regret the public nature of this process, which poses a major prejudice to Gerard Depardieu, whose innocence I am convinced will be recognized,” the attoney added.  

This is not the first time Depardieu’s behavior has been called into question. During the 1991 award season, when he was an Oscar nominee for his lead role in “Cyrano de Bergerac,” a Time reporter asked him to clarify a comment about having had “plenty of rapes, too many to count.” Asked if he had taken part in rapes, he said yes, adding the caveat, “but it was absolutely normal in those circumstances. That was part of my childhood.” 

After the Time interview, conducted in French, sparked outrage, the actor said he’d been mistranslated and had only witnessed rapes. He demanded a retraction, threatening a libel suit. The magazine refused, citing its recording of the conversation.

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

 

Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2LJxRsO

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2wyBI6J
via IFTTT

This life-size Bugatti Chiron model is made of 1 million Lego pieces

news image

If a real Bugatti Chiron sports car will set you back $3 million, might we suggest to you this life-sized, functioning Lego version, which will only set you back 1 million (in Lego pieces). 

At the Grand Prix Formula 1 event in Monza, Italy, Lego unveiled a functioning sports car that looks as close to the original supercar from Bugatti as is possible when using more than 1 million Lego Technic parts, more than 2,300 Lego motors, and 4,000 gear wheels in the engine. It’s just about as one-to-one as you can get with building blocks.

According to Lego, the 3,300-pound car can actually take you from point A to B; a former racing driver took it for a test drive and pushed it to 12.4 mph. Not racing-fast, but still, not bad, seeing as how it’s Lego-based. To put it in perspective, a legit Chiron can reach 60 mph in only 2.5 seconds and has a max speed of 260 mph.

The test drive with Andy Wallace took place at the Ehra-Lessien facility in Germany, where the real Chiron was first tested.

Https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable.com%2fcms%2f2018%2f8%2fb0f9c119 09bb f84f%2fthumb%2f00001

The Lego Bugatti took more than 13,000 work-hours to develop and build, and thanks to Lego’s tireless efforts, a driver and passenger can comfortably sit inside the vehicle. There’s even a working brake pedal and speedometer that shows how fast it’s going. The car’s powered by two batteries, an 80-volt for the motor and a 12-volt for the steering and electronics inside the car, so there’s no revving the engine or shifting gears here — but, hey, the lights work.

The life-sized car was built only a few months after Lego showed off its Bugatti Chiron building set earlier this summer. But that tiny, $350 replica didn’t generate the 5.3 horsepower of its life-sized big brother — impressive, as long as you don’t compare it to the real Bugatti’s 1,500 horsepower.

Https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable.com%2fcms%2f2018%2f4%2f893cfa9b 40e3 1723%2fthumb%2f00001

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2N5O5kK
via IFTTT

Unpacking South Africa’s fraught and complex land debate

news image

Johannesburg, South Africa – Last week, US President Donald Trump ignited a firestorm when he decided to wade into the sensitive land debate in South Africa.

Trump wrote in a tweet that he had asked Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state, to look into “land and farm seizures” and “large scale killings of white farmers”.

Trump’s comment came after he watched a six-minute segment on the issue on Fox News, a conservative US broadcaster. The president was immediately condemned by the South African government and his comments raised the ire of many South Africans, a majority of whom, 24 years after the end of apartheid, are still waiting for land reform to take place.

The question of land remains among the most sensitive and divisive in the country.

Apartheid was, at its core, a system of separate and discriminatory development, with black South Africans either dispossessed or denied access to land, infrastructure and resources, while their white counterparts were given preferential treatment and access to the economy.

The legacies of apartheid persist to this day, with social and economic inequality preserved and perpetuated due to the lack of economic transformation.

Al Jazeera answers the key questions about the fraught and complicated land debate in the country.

Who owns land in South Africa?

Following the end of apartheid in 1994, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) said it would redistribute 30 percent of white-owned commercial farmland to black farmers.

“Our estimate is that [today] 9.7 percent of white commercial farmland has been transferred to black people since 1994,” Ruth Hall, from the Institute of Poverty, Land and Agarian Studies (Plaas), based in Cape Town, says.

Black South Africans black own more than 50 percent of agricultural land in just two of the country’s nine provinces [File: Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters]

It is estimated that white South Africans, who make up around nine percent of the population, own around 73 percent of commercial agricultural land.

As it stands, black people own more than 50 percent of agricultural land in just two of the country’s nine provinces.

Are white farmers being targeted and murdered?

Claims that white farmers are being disproportionately targeted and killed, or that a “white genocide” is taking place in South Africa have been repeatedly refuted.

Agri SA, an agricultural industry association based in Pretoria, reported in June that 47 farmers were killed between 2017 and 2018 – the lowest in 20 years. Omri van Zyl, Agri SA’s executive director, told Al Jazeera that despite the numbers, the organisation still feels that there are a “disproportionate number of farm murders”.

Between 2016 and 2017, there were 19,016 murders in South Africa.

This translates into a murder rate of 34.1 people per 100,000 people of the population. Police statistics indicate that during the same period, there were 74 farm murders.

These include farmers and workers of all race groups.

Afriforum, a right-wing lobby group that has both welcomed and taken credit for informing Trump’s tweet, claims that the murders of farmers translates into a murder rate of 156 per 100,000 people, or 4.5 times higher chance of getting murdered than the average South African.

Fact-checking website Africheck has repeatedly refuted Afriforum’s statistics, arguing that given that it is not clear how many people live and work on farms, the group’s numbers are fundamentally flawed.

There remains no evidence to suggest that farmers as a group suffer more attacks than any other demographic in the country.

Why has land reform been so slow?

Since 1994, the government has followed a “willing-seller, willing buyer” model in which it has bought white-owned farms for redistribution. But this process has been slow, with the ANC accusing landowners of inflating farm prices and therefore hindering redistribution.

Experts, meanwhile, say the primary reason land reform has been slow is due to a lack of political will.

“Land reform has never accounted for more than one percent of the national budget. And this means the programme has been constrained by a limited budget.” Hall, from Plaas, says.

“The second reason is that the department of rural development is extremely weak. We don’t have a lot of state capacity to implement their policies … We estimate that six percent of all commercial farms are bought and sold each year, so we could be going a lot faster [if there was more money].”

Likewise, Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, author of The land is ours: Black Lawyers and the Birth of Constitutionalism in South Africa, says that the law was designed to help government redistribute land but “no explanation has been given as to why this has not happened”.

In other words, “the ANC tolerated a slow and failing land programme for more than two decades”, Hall adds.

Is the constitution to blame?

The ANC has been consistently reprimanded for its slow land reform policy. Pressure has been building on the ruling party, especially from the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), the third largest party in the country, who have turned the land issue into a key election campaign topic.

With national elections due to take place in 2019, the ANC are at pains to illustrate that they are taking the concerns of the large black majority – who remain poor, landless and on the fringes of the economy – on board.

“This has become a party political issue for the first time, and people are aligning themselves with parties based on their position on land,” Hall says.

At its national conference in December 2017, the ANC resolved to expropriate land without compensation as a means to speed up land reform. This then ushered in talk of amending Section 25 of the constitution in order to allow expropriation without compensation to take place.

“It has become pertinently clear that our people want the constitution to be more explicit about expropriation of land without compensation as demonstrated in the public hearings,” party leader and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said.

Ramaphosa has pledged to amend the constitution to allow for the expropriation of land without compensation [File: Mike Hutchings/Reuters]

But legal experts say the constitution is not the problem.

“My own sense is that they are scapegoating the constitution for their failures… I don’t think the problem is legal, it is political,” Ngcukaitobi, the author, says.

“If, after 24 years of an enabling framework, you’ve done nothing to enforce it, it is very difficult to explain to the public why you have done nothing to enforce it … it easier to say the constitution constrains the government.”

Do black South Africans want white-owned farms?

The ANC’s call for amending the constitution has also ushered in hysteria, rampant misinformation and fake news, culminating in Trump’s tweet last week.

Experts say that while the narrative has centred around the fate of white farmers and the seizure of commercial farms, mostly due to the lobbying of Afriforum, the reality is that most black South Africans are not interested in rural land.

“Unfortunately, the conversation is being framed around white farmers … but white farmers will be largely unaffected, because the demand for land is in the urban areas,” Ngcukaitobi says.

Van Zyl, from Agri SA, confirmed that the demand for urban land was on the rise. He added that while farms were not being seized as reported, land occupations closer to urban areas were taking place.

More than 60 percent of South Africans now live in urban areas and the struggle over land is no longer a question of resolving historical dispossession but a matter of inclusion in the country’s economy.

“The political heart of the matter is located in the urban areas … in particular the big metros,” Hall says.

“Remember, apartheid kept black people out of the cities.”

With urban housing either too expensive or low-cost housing too far and inaccessible from the city, millions of black South Africans since the end of apartheid have resorted to occupying vacant plots of land, often belonging to the city or local government.

“People don’t look at land as purely a hard asset. People look at land as a mechanism to be closer to where they work,” Ngcukaitobi says.

“This is where the future of contestation over land is headed,” Ngcukaitobi adds.

At least 11 percent of all households in the country’s urban areas are located in informal settlements. In Gauteng province, considered South Africa’s economic hub, 19 percent of households are in informal settlements – often without proper water, sanitation or legal electricity connections. It is this demographic who consistently face eviction and displacement.

“Our cities are poverty traps 24 years after apartheid,” says Steven Friedman, director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy at the University of Johannesburg.

Friedman says that if one looks at other places around the world where progress has been made in the fight against poverty, one of the common dominators is the proximity of poor people to economic hubs. “Until we change that [here], the poor will simply continue selling things to other poor people,” Friedman adds.

Hall says that ordinary black people want action over land because they are well aware that it is they who are most likely to suffer displacement or dispossession.

“We see it in the urban areas: people from informal settlements are evicted by the state. On commercial farms, large numbers of black people are evicted by white farmers,” Hall says.

She cites cases where commercial farmers evict black workers and their families who have lived on these farms for generations due to financial pressure amid worsening economic conditions, as well as political reasons due to the perceived fear of robberies and violence.

“The rate at which black people are kicked out of commercial farms is faster than that rate at which they accessing land,” says Hall.

“Then in the communal areas, the traditional authorities are evicting people after they get into deals with mining companies … across these three spaces, the cities, the farms, communal areas, we see a process of black people being pushed off land and left in much more vulnerable and insecure positions.”

More than 60 percent of South Africans now live in urban areas, such as Cape Town (pictured) [File: Mike Hutchings/Reuters]

Ngcukaitobi warns that indiscriminate use of expropriation without compensation would hurt poor black families more than it would white families.

He cites the experience of the country’s preparation for the World Cup in 2010, where black families were forced to move to make way for a rail network, and the urban poor were pushed out of the cities in a bid to beautify the metros ahead of the football tournament.

In Durban, some families who were moved to make way for the stadiums are still living in transit camps.

“The likely targets of expropriation without compensation will be the poor and vulnerable and not white people in the suburbs, and we have to put in measures to ensure this does not happen,” Ngcukaitobi says.

Will South Africa become the ‘next Zimbabwe’?

Many commentators continue to point at the experiences of neighbouring Zimbabwe when the question of land reform is debated in South Africa. Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe embarked on a series of land grabs in the early 2000s that led to the collapse of the country’s economy.

Even though there are concerns that land could be transferred to the politically connected, like in Zimbabwe, experts are clear that the situation in South Africa is very different, pointing out to the country’s vigorous civil society and independent judiciary as bulwarks of democracy.

“White people like the idea that they are being targeted,” Ngcukaitobi says, “but the reality is that this is not the case and that black people’s needs have moved from the countryside to the urban areas”.

Last week, David Mabuza, the country’s deputy president, looked to allay fears when he addressed the Land Summit in the northern Limpopo province. He said that no farms would be invaded or grabbed and that farmers did not have to fear for their well-being.

“As the leadership of the ANC and government, we are clear that the implementation of land reform measures must not result in social fractures and racial polarisation,” Mabuza said.

Responding to the address, van Zyl, the Agri SA executive director, said he believed Mabuza’s commitment was “authentic”.

“The problem is that in the rural areas, they [government] are not there. And that means its a practical issue,” van Zyl said.

“Farmers understand that transformation has to happen, and a lot of farmers are doing it already. But we need incentives and mechanisms … it has to be done in a commercially sound way, otherwise everything will implode.”

But it is not clear how government will decide who will get these newly released plots and for experts observing the process, this is what will matter most.

“There has been an astonishing lack of transparency about who the beneficiaries will be,” Ngcukaitobi says. “It has to be transparent.” 

Friedman, meanwhile, says that “Afriforum, like Trump, are only interested in protecting whiteness”.

The rage over land reform among ordinary South Africans is also a manifestation of a larger concern. In 2017, 30 percent of the black South Africans were unemployed compared to 6.7 percent of whites.

“What black South Africans are actually talking about [when they refer to land] is their sense that this is a minority-controlled economy,” Friedman says.

“This is what lies at the heart of a debate that is still not very coherent or straightforward.”

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2LG1RGc
via IFTTT

Drake’s Scorpion Isn’t The Only Place To Hear Michael Jackson’s Voice This Summer

news image

Michael Jackson, the King of Pop, would’ve turned 60 on Wednesday (August 29). Though he died 10 years ago, Jackson and his immortal voice have experienced a renewed place in the spotlight in 2018 thanks in part to an eerie, downbeat vocal sample used by Drake on his Scorpion album track “Don’t Matter to Me.”

Jackson’s part, it was revealed around the time the song dropped, dates back to a 1983 recording session with songwriter Paul Anka. The snippet got shopped around to other artists, including Tyga, a new piece in the Los Angeles Times reports, before Drake locked it down for Scorpion.

“Drake was so passionate about it,” John Branca, the co-executor of Jackson’s estate, told the paper. “It was like how could we not do this one? It fit so well.”

The ghost of Jackson’s voice has also brought with it a string of headlines this week. After fans filed a class-action lawsuit against his estate and his record label, claiming an impersonator sang certain vocal parts on the first album released after Jackson’s death, titled Michael, in 2010, the suit was recently thrown out by appeals court judges.

The piece goes on to quote Sony executive Rob Stringer on how the mining of Jackson’s unreleased catalog has shifted strategies away from new albums in the age of streaming. “We are looking at one-off songs, and in this streaming world that works because it’s a track-based world,” he said. “There are a few gems out there that we may unearth individually over the next months and years, but we’re also very, very careful to make sure the fan base doesn’t feel like they’ve been asked yet again to buy material they have.”

In other words, stay tuned for the next Jackson single — you never know when it could drop (or who might just pop up on it). You also never know who might be using beloved Jackson tracks for their own sampling purposes.

Read More

from Trendy News Day https://ift.tt/2wqeOzc
via IFTTT

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started