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Western Balkans Leaders Commit To Strengthen Economic, Social Ties To Prepare Region For Future

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Four leaders from the Western Balkans region, heads of government and ministers of EU member states and neighbouring countries today set out measures to continue the ongoing dialogue on the Western Balkans and cooperation aimed at providing stability for the region and strengthening economic growth and competitiveness, and preparing for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

Leaders from Albania, Kosovo*, Montenegro and Serbia as well as Croatia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Germany and Switzerland met at World Economic Forum headquarters in Cologny-Geneva, Switzerland. The meeting was convened as part of the ongoing Strategic Dialogue on the Western Balkans, which began at the Forum’s Annual Meeting in Davos in January 2018.

Specifically, the leaders set out measures in a Forum Communiqué on the Western Balkans to strengthen dialogue and cooperation, especially with respect to fostering inclusive growth, skills and talent development, boosting trade, preparing for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, enabling public-private cooperation and empowering the next generation of leaders.

The communiqué outlines an intention to collaborate on:

  • Establishing an affiliate Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution: as part of the Forum’s network of Centres for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, this centre will help prepare the region for the fundamental economic and societal shifts presaged by emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence
  • Organizing a Regional South Eastern European Summit in 2019 with all relevant leaders from the region and Europe
  • Setting up a Western Balkans Competitiveness Council to improve the region’s fundamental drivers of productivity, including better infrastructure, well-functioning markets, efficient institutions and a healthy ecosystem for innovation and entrepreneurship
  • Formalizing a cooperation agreement with the World Economic Forum’s Centre for Cybersecurity
  • Opening 10 new Global Shaper hubs across the region, thereby ensuring a platform for collaboration for the next generation of leaders

Participants agreed to continue the dialogue on the Western Balkans with the objective to bring solutions to the outstanding challenges the region still faces, and will meet again during the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum 2019 in Davos, Switzerland.

“The Western Balkans has often played an outsized role in the history of Europe. Today, by committing to work together on the economic and societal issues that are shaping our world, its leaders are sending a clear signal that the only way to ensure future peace, stability and prosperity is through greater openness, cooperation and collaboration,” said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum.

“The Forum Communiqué on the Western Balkans we set out today marks a significant shift for the partners of the Western Balkans. By committing to work together on a path towards economic growth and societal stability, these leaders are improving the prospects not only of their own people, but also for the region as a whole,” said Børge Brende, President of the World Economic Forum.

“Serbia has been through a tough programme of reform, prioritizing education and the economy. This implementation has brought stability, but our region will only achieve long-term stability if we are able to establish a narrative of cooperation based on mutual respect and shared values,” said Ana Brnabić, Prime Minister of Serbia.

Present at the meeting were: Ana Brnabić, Prime Minister of Serbia; Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey; Miroslav Lajcák, Minister of Foreign and European Affairs of the Slovak Republic; Ursula von der Leyen, Federal Minister of Defence of Germany; Krystyna Marty, Deputy State Secretary and Deputy Political Director, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland; Borut Pahor, President of Slovenia; Lilyana Pavlova, Minister for the Bulgarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union 2018; Zoran Pažin, Deputy Prime Minister for Political System, Internal and Foreign Policy and Minister of Justice of Montenegro; Andrej Plenković, Prime Minister of Croatia; Edi Rama, Prime Minister of Albania; and Hashim Thaci, President of Kosovo*.

*This designation is without prejudice to positions on status, and is in line with United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999) and the International Court of Justice Opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence


Critical Thinking: A Needed Nutrition To Resist The Virus Of Falsehoods – OpEd

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Deliberate online falsehoods (DOFs), also known as disinformation and fake news, is a problem that has again drawn the attention of the Singapore public.

Last Thursday (Sep 20), the Select Committee on DOFs published a report that explains the committee’s findings on the causes and impact of the problem. The report also recommends countermeasures such as critical thinking to address the problem.

The report paves the way for a multitude of efforts that could be taken at the institutional, societal and individual levels to protect the Singapore public from the harmful impact of DOFs.

As with any complex problem, the public would have a wide range of views on DOFs. These views dissect both the explanations for the causes of the problem and the recommended countermeasures to address the problem.

DOFs is not a straightforward problem as it could either gestate internally or be engineered by external actors. Different intentions drive its spread, and different end outcomes determine its methods.

It is inherent in falsehoods to be both persuasive and deniable. What is not deniable is the predominant intention to cause harm. There could be no single solution and hence a raft of countermeasures is necessary.

THE BEST DEFENCE IS CRITICAL THINKING

Critical thinking is perhaps the most important countermeasure as it could serve as the most fundamental defence against DOFs. Laws and cyber tools could deter the purveyors of DOFs and disrupt their methods but may have limited effect in making people – the targeted audience – more resilient.

There are also concerns over whether certain laws would undermine critical thinking. People must want and be able to think critically before they would even acknowledge the necessity of fact-checking and support quality journalism.

Critical thinking could help people to realise that no one is immune to ideological and cognitive biases when forming their thoughts and making their decisions.

It is the first step to determine what needs to be done – for example, teaching critical thinking skills – to counter DOFs. The next step, more importantly, is how to better teach critical thinking skills.

COMBATING DOFS

People now live in a confusing environment where many complex problems exist and are intertwined. For example, the Singapore public is expected to defend themselves against the dangers of DOFs, intolerance of cultural differences, extremism, foreign influence and cyber threats.

In fact, asymmetric warfare entails the use of disinformation and cyber threats to undermine a nation-state by targeting the people’s minds and emotions, and infrastructure.

While it is necessary to expect people to do more to defend themselves, is too much being expected out of them? Is it therefore possible to teach fundamental concepts of critical thinking that are versatile and could be applied to a broad range of dangers?

Could these concepts be adapted for people of various ages, education levels, professional and cultural backgrounds? Could these concepts be enduring and hence applicable for contemporary and future dangers?

Could these concepts be politically-neutral and undergirded by universal human values so that there is more buy-in from people regardless of where they lie on the political spectrum?

TWO LESSONS FROM COUNTER-EXTREMISM

There are two concepts that may form part of a framework for critical thinking or enhance current methods of teaching critical thinking. The appreciation of these concepts could help people defend effectively against DOFs and other dangers that may undermine social cohesion by targeting minds and emotions.

These concepts may be adapted from counter-extremism literature in which radical propaganda is seen as a form of disinformation.

The first concept is moral disengagement which entails the cognitive process of dehumanising other people – the “others” – who are different racially, religiously, economically, culturally or politically.

This process enables people to overlook that the “others” are also humans and hence behave unfairly and cruelly towards them. This behaviour may manifest in the act of accepting and circulating narratives that could cause harm to the “others”. Harm may manifest in physical and non-physical ways.

A historical example is the Singapore communal riots of 1964 in which one of the possible causes is toxic narratives inducing one group to perceive another group as deceitful, harmful and deserving of harm.

A contemporary example is the spread of falsehoods over social media that justifies violence against the Rohingyas who are perceived by their attackers as malicious outsiders.

People who consume online information must guard against this cognitive process which could render them susceptible to narratives that influence them into distrusting and hating the “others”.

The second concept is advantageous comparison – a cognitive process applied to make an act seem less negative and hence acceptable when it is a response to negative actions committed by “others”.

An extremism example is individuals sharing radical propaganda online. They perceive this act as the right thing to do and harmless compared to the injustice – perceived or actual – that those who share the same religion suffered at the hands of “others”.

“Others” may include public institutions that these individuals perceived as having treated them or those who share the same religion unfairly.

A socio-political example is respectable political supporters who resort to spreading rumours to help gain an advantage over “others”. They perceive this act as acceptable because the “others” have used falsehoods in the hustings. A study on The Spread of True and False News Online by MIT researchers highlights this example.

Such acts would not uphold justice but perpetuate misconceptions and distrust among people and between people and public institutions. People who share online information must guard against this cognitive process which could render them complicit – intentionally or inadvertently – in the spread of falsehoods.

Critical thinking is not a countermeasure that could be implemented straightforwardly but it is fundamental. It is not only about having more educational programmes but more importantly, honing the concepts that constitute effective critical thinking.

It is the cognitive nutrition and exercise that progressively builds up resistance against the viruses of falsehoods.

*Muhammad Faizal Abdul Rahman is a Research Fellow with the Homeland Defence Programme at the Centre of Excellence for National Security, a unit of the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. This article was published at ChannelNewsAsia.

Kavanaugh Feeding Frenzy: Truth About Republican White Men, Rape And Violence – OpEd

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The news media feeding frenzy over allegations — that are likely cooked up by the radical left-wing of the Democratic Party — against Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh is arguably the most attention-getting crime story regarding rape since the 2006 Duke University lacrosse team was tried and convicted not in a courtroom, but in the court of public opinion by the Democratic Party and their news media fellow-travelers.

These college students were smeared and condemned by the ambulance-chasing news organizations even had a chance to fully condemn all white males for being rapists, abusers of women and deceivers.

New York Times Public Editor Dan Okrent diagnosed the media coverage of that case in a documentary as journalists excited to find all their pet social-justice issues in one story.

“It was white over black, it was male over female, it was rich over poor, educated over uneducated. All the things that we know happen in the world coming together in one place and journalists, they start to quiver with a thrill when something like this happens,” Okrent said.

The Duke University rape case received more media attention than the war on Iraq, the Iranian nuclear threat and even the professional baseball steroid scandal.  It was a huge story not because it was about a vicious, brutal rape—those stories occur daily throughout the United States; it got an enormous amount of news media play because it’s a case involving affluent, privileged white male suspects and a poor black woman who claimed she was raped. The alleged rapists had hired their black victim as a topless dancer for their “frat-boy party.”

This was a case that appeared ripe for the race demagogues who never miss an opportunity to exaggerate, spin and divide for political reasons. This latest case of white-on-black violence provided black activists, feminists and liberals the ammunition they need to push their agenda forward: more legislated protections for blacks and for women, two major “victim groups” in American society.

But the activists, politicians and members of the press were working from a false premise and crime statistics proved it.

Dr. William Wilbanks, former professor of criminal justice at Florida International University, contended that the  perception of white-on-black violence including rape and gang violence is based on myths created by many with a political agenda.

(In the name of full disclosure, Dr. Wilbanks and this writer go back quite a few years. I first interviewed him for the now-defunct magazine Crime Beat regarding police racism. Later, I met up with Wilbanks at a police memorial banquet in Miami. While his detractors accuse him of being a right-wing racist, in fact Wilbanks is a liberal Democrat.)

A top criminologist, Wilbanks has studied interracial crime for more than 25 years and he’s been quoted by some of the top journalists and commentators in the business including Pat Buchanan, Bill O’Reilly and others.

When it comes to interracial rape and sexual assault, the statistics contained in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report and the Department of Justice’s National Crime Survey during Wilbanks’ study revealed that white rapists chose black victims 8,448 times.

However, black rapists chose white victims in 17,572 cases. In other words, according to Wilbanks, there were more than twice as many black-on-white rape cases as there were white-on-black cases. Overall white-on-black violence cases numbered 100,111, whereas black-on-white cases totaled 466,205. Therefore, blacks using violence against whites is over four times more likely than the reverse.

In New York, an incident occurred in 1988 that divided that city: A gang of white youths chased a black man onto a highway where he was struck and killed by an automobile. The prosecutors threw the book at the young men who were convicted and sentenced for manslaughter. The crime became known as The Howard Beach Incident and the case became a book and a TV movie-of-the-week. It was the case that pushed legislators to pass New York’s hate crime law.

On the other hand, a gang of black youths chased a white New York University student screaming, “Get the white boy!” The student ran onto a city street and was struck and killed by an automobile. First, the police denied it was a hate crime. Then the prosecutors decided to try the case in Family Court, which means the worst these killers face is 3 years in a juvenile facility.

While the race-baiters would have Americans believe that a growing number of blacks are victimized by white gangs in the United States, the opposite is true.

The number of white-on-black gang attacks was 2,645, while the number of black-on-white gang attacks was 20,042. There were almost ten times as many black-on-white gang attacks as there were white-on-black attacks.

Interracial crime figures are even worse than they sound—and not for the reasons Revs. Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson will tell you.  Since there are more than six times as many whites as blacks in America, it means that any given black person is vastly more likely to commit a crime against a white than vice versa.

Parakram Parv: An Ode To The Brave Soldier – OpEd

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The nation celebrated “Parakram Parv” from 28 September to 30 September, to commemorate the bravery of its soldiers as demonstrated by the daring raids on terrorist camps set up by Pakistan in Pakistan Administered Kashmir (PaK) with the intention of infiltrating militants into the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. The raids, carried out on the night of 28-29, September, 2016, simultaneously on seven different locations were a true example of faultless planning and execution, not to mention the great courage and heroism shown by those entrusted with the responsibility.

On September 18, 2016, Pakistan trained militants attacked an Indian Army camp in Uri killing 18 soldiers. Six days later, while addressing a public rally in Kozhikode on the sidelines of the BJP National Council meet, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said “Militants should hear out clearly that India will never forget the Uri attack…. I want to tell the leadership of Pakistan that the sacrifice of our 18 Jawans will not go in vain.” This wasn’t an empty threat! 11 days later, commandos of Indian army’s elite Special Forces crossed the Line of Control (LoC) and hit multiple targets in PaK.

The targets of the surgical strike were terrorist launch pads near the LoC that were created jointly by the ISI and militant groups for accommodating militants prior to their infiltration into Kashmir. The surgical strikes took the Pakistan army by complete surprise. The Special Forces were able to destroy a large number of militant launch pads and inflict heavy casualties on the unsuspecting militants and Pakistan army soldiers present there. The crowning glory was that neither Pakistani soldiers nor militants could cause any harm to the commandos of the Special Forces who carried out the operation. Though Pakistan denied that any surgical strike had taken place, locals residing near the launch pads targeted confirmed that the Pakistan army and militants had used tractors and jeeps to hastily remove dead bodies and evacuate the injured.

In the aftermath of the surgical strikes the Pakistan army organised a special trip for media persons to some places near the LoC to convince them that everything was normal. Much to the eternal embarrassment of the Pakistan Army’s public relations establishment, it later became known that the media persons were intentionally taken to the wrong places just to mislead them into believing that nothing had happened! The truth of the strike was further revealed by videos made public which showed the strike in progress with the GPS coordinates indicating the precise locations of the targets that were clearly visible.

It is not easy for any government to take the decision of hitting militant sanctuaries on the other side of the international border or LoC as even a small slip-up can spell complete disaster and endanger the lives of the raiding force personnel as well cause immense embarrassment at the national and international level. It goes to the credit of Prime Minister Modi that he approved a surgical strike against NSCN (K) militant camps on the Myanmar side of the international boundary in 2015 and followed it up by giving a ‘go ahead’ to another surgical strike inside PaK in 2016. This gave the Indian Army the opportunity to display its consummate professionalism and its Special Forces lived up to the nation’s expectations.

With two successful surgical strikes in as many years, every Indian was and continues to be rightly proud of the country’s armed forces and the morale of the men in uniform has skyrocketed.

The biggest take-away from the surgical strikes is that even after India admitted that its Special Forces had crossed the LoC and hit several militants launch pads, no country criticised New Delhi’s punitive strike. Compare this with the strong international condemnation of the 1999 LoC transgression in Kargil even after Pakistan claimed that it was not involved and the intruders were “Kashmiri fighters.” The best part was that since Pakistan consistently denies the existence of militant infrastructure on its soil, Islamabad couldn’t internationalise the surgical strikes as an aggressive action that needed to be strongly condemned. It could not even play its omnipresent nuclear threat card.

A defence analyst has aptly summed up Pakistan’s sorry predicament by saying, “For Islamabad it was a Catch 22 situation; acceptance of the surgical strike and playing the victim card could get it a little sympathy and possibly evoke some criticism of India’s action. But the moment it did so Islamabad would invite international criticism for having terror infrastructure on its soil. So, in order to diplomatically embarrass India, Pakistan needed to accept existence of terrorist launch pads on its soil; but the moment it did so it would become a sponsor of terrorism and would have to face diplomatic flak!”

There is undoubtedly much to celebrate for the nation in commemoration of so daring a military feat. A celebratory initiative, Parakram Parv (Celebration of Achievements) declared by the Union Government provided a good opportunity to the citizens of the country to honour their braves. The celebration was launched by Prime Minsiter Narendra Modi himself by inaugurating a weapons display and exhibition at Jodhpur Military Station close to the International Border with Pakistan. The Prime Minsiter coincided the inauguration with the Commanders Conference which was also held at Jodhpur and attended by The Defence Minsiter, three Service Chiefs and other senior government functionaries. Weapon displays and exhibitions were organised in other military stations across the country elicited a great response from the civilians. Functions were organised in schools, colleges and universities in which NCC cadets played an active role. There were some voices of discontent heard from the opposition parties and certain other vested interests but then, such opportunism is a part of the politics of a democracy. The nation at large came forth with all its heart to acknowledge the bravery and dedication of the soldiers of the country that keeps the citizens safe from inimical designs of many enemies.

( Writer is a senior journalist and political commentator )

India: Let Not Ousted Directors Of IL&FS Go Scot-Free – OpEd

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Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services Ltd. (IL&FS ) is a India based holding company that operates through 109 other companies that are either subsidiaries, group companies or joint ventures with others, set up to promote infrastructure projects in India.

The company is in serious financial mess due to serious corporate related deficiencies. The investors in the company include several leading banks and financial institutions in India such as State Bank of India (SBI) and Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) as well as Orix Corporation of Japan, Abudhabhi Investment authority and others.

IL&FS which has assets over Rs. 135000 crore and debt of Rs. 91,000 crore and has defaulted in repayments. As large public money is involved in this company and possible closure of this company would cause serious problems for several investors and mutual fund companies, Government of India is left with no alternative other than taking control of the management of the company. Government of India has dissolved the company board and appointed an adhoc board to manage the affairs until alternate arrangements would be made.

It is good that government of India has ousted the directors of IL&FS and appointed another board. It could have been done six months earlier.

Obviously, such mismanagement has happened since the erstwhile directors of the company have treated the company as a play thing and have shown extreme level of irresponsible attitude in managing the firm.

In all such happenings in the past, the companies suffer but the directors including the appointed directors and nominees of the government go scot-free.

The fact that even as the company was in such severe financial crisis , IL&FS remuneration committee headed by former LIC Chairman sanctioned Rs. 20 Cr. annual salary for Chairman Ravi Parthasarathy, and Rs. 7.8 Cr. for Vice Chairman and Managing Director indicate the callous attitude. IL & FS audit committee headed by Maruti Suzuki chairman and former shipping secretary of government of India seem to have been acting as silent spectators.

Public sector undertakings like LIC, State Bank of India, Central Bank of India who have sizeable equity just remained as passive observers.

Government of India has now ordered a probe. This is not alone enough. Until the probe is completed, it should be ordered that all the erstwhile directors of IL&FS as well as those who were members of the audit committee and those who were members of the remuneration committee should not be allowed to function as directors in any other companies whether private or public sector and their passports must be seized. They are not only inefficient but also appear to be dishonest, un professional and irresponsible.

What about the management of LIC, SBI and other public sector organisations who have equity in IL&FS? The top office bearers in these institutions have just closed their eyes and have allowed matter to drift to such chaotic state. They need to be held responsible and accountable.

There is so much of public investment and tax payers money involved. Government of India has a huge responsibility and has to create pubic confidence that Government of India will not allow such people holding top positions and enjoying enormous salaries and perks to go scot-free when such scandals of Himalayan proportion happen.

The fraud in Punjab National Bank and Vijay Mallya episode are still fresh in memory and the government has to convince the people that it would protect public interest at any cost.

Government of India should ensure that the country’s corporate bodies and public sector undertakings must be protected from such persons.

Public perceptions matter and one can be sure Government of India would be aware of this aspect.

The guilty persons who have failed in their duty and responsibility in managing public funds should not only be taken to task but should also be seen to be taken to task.

Emissions-Free Energy System Saves Heat From Summer Sun For Winter

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A research group from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, has made great, rapid strides towards the development of a specially designed molecule which can store solar energy for later use. These advances have been presented in four scientific articles this year, with the most recent being published in the highly ranked journal Energy & Environmental Science.

Around a year ago, the research team presented a molecule that was capable of storing solar energy. The molecule, made from carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen, has the unique property that when it is hit by sunlight, it is transformed into an energy-rich isomer – a molecule which consists of the same atoms, but bound together in a different way.

This isomer can then be stored for use when that energy is later needed – for example, at night or in winter. It is in a liquid form and is adapted for use in a solar energy system, which the researchers have named MOST (Molecular Solar Thermal Energy Storage). In just the last year, the research team have made great advances in the development of MOST.

“The energy in this isomer can now be stored for up to 18 years. And when we come to extract the energy and use it, we get a warmth increase which is greater than we dared hope for,” says the leader of the research team, Kasper Moth-Poulsen, Professor at the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering.

The research group have developed a catalyst for controlling the release of the stored energy. The catalyst acts as a filter, through which the liquid flows, creating a reaction which warms the liquid by 63 degrees Celsius. If the liquid has a temperature of 20C when it pumps through the filter, it comes out the other side at 83C. At the same time, it returns the molecule to its original form, so that it can be then reused in the warming system.

During the same period, the researchers also learned to improve the design of the molecule to increase its storage abilities so that the isomer can store energy for up to 18 years. This was a crucial improvement, as the focus of the project is primarily chemical energy storage.

Furthermore, the system was previously reliant on the liquid being partly composed of the flammable chemical toluene. But now the researchers have found a way to remove the potentially dangerous toluene and instead use just the energy storing molecule.

Taken together, the advances mean that the energy system MOST now works in a circular manner. First, the liquid captures energy from sunlight, in a solar thermal collector on the roof of a building. Then it is stored at room temperature, leading to minimal energy losses. When the energy is needed, it can be drawn through the catalyst so that the liquid heats up. It is envisioned that this warmth can then be utilised in, for example, domestic heating systems, after which the liquid can be sent back up to the roof to collect more energy – all completely free of emissions, and without damaging the molecule.

“We have made many crucial advances recently, and today we have an emissions-free energy system which works all year around,” says Kasper Moth-Poulsen.

The solar thermal collector is a concave reflector with a pipe in the centre. It tracks the sun’s path across the sky and works in the same way as a satellite dish, focusing the sun’s rays to a point where the liquid leads through the pipe. It is even possible to add on an additional pipe with normal water to combine the system with conventional water heating.

The next steps for the researchers are to combine everything together into a coherent system.

“There is a lot left to do. We have just got the system to work. Now we need to ensure everything is optimally designed,” says Kasper Moth-Poulsen.

The group is satisfied with the storage capabilities, but more energy could be extracted, Kasper believes. He hopes that the research group will shortly achieve a temperature increase of at least 110 degrees Celsius and thinks the technology could be in commercial use within 10 years.

More Bad News For Artificial Sweetener Users

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FDA-approved artificial sweeteners and sport supplements were found to be toxic to digestive gut microbes, according to a new paper published in Molecules by researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

The collaborative study indicated relative toxicity of six artificial sweeteners (aspartame, sucralose, saccharine, neotame, advantame, and acesulfame potassium-k) and 10 sport supplements containing these artificial sweeteners. The bacteria found in the digestive system became toxic when exposed to concentrations of only one mg./ml. of the artificial sweeteners.

“We modified bioluminescent E. coli bacteria, which luminesce when they detect toxicants and act as a sensing model representative of the complex microbial system,” says Prof. Ariel Kushmaro, John A. Ungar Chair in Biotechnology in the Avram and Stella Goldstein-Goren Department of Biotechnology Engineering, and member of the Ilse Katz Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology and the National Institute for Biotechnology in the Negev. “This is further evidence that consumption of artificial sweeteners adversely affects gut microbial activity which can cause a wide range of health issues.”

Artificial sweeteners are used in countless food products and soft drinks with reduced sugar content. Many people consume this added ingredient without their knowledge. Moreover, artificial sweeteners have been identified as emerging environmental pollutants, and can be found in drinking and surface water, and groundwater aquifers.

“The results of this study might help in understanding the relative toxicity of artificial sweeteners and the potential of negative effects on the gut microbial community as well as the environment.

Furthermore, the tested bioluminescent bacterial panel can potentially be used for detecting artificial sweeteners in the environment,” says Prof. Kushmaro.

Traces Of Opiates Found In Ancient Cypriot Vessel

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Researchers at the University of York and the British Museum have discovered traces of opiates preserved inside a distinctive vessel dating back to the Late Bronze Age.

Vessels of this type, known as ‘base-ring juglets’, have long been thought to have links with opium use because when inverted they resemble the seed head of the opium poppy; they are known to have been widely traded in the eastern Mediterranean ca. 1650 – 1350BC.

Researchers used a range of analytical techniques to study a particular juglet housed in the British Museum, which is a sealed vessel, allowing the contents inside to be preserved. This meant that there was a rare opportunity for scientists to investigate what components might have survived.

Initial analysis by scientists at the British Museum showed that the juglet residue was mostly composed of a plant oil but hinted at the presence of opium alkaloids, a group of organic compounds derived from the opium poppy, and that are known to have significant psychological effects on the human body.

To conclusively detect the alkaloids and demonstrate the presence of opiates in the oil-based residue of the vessel, however, a new analytical technique was needed.

Using instruments in the Centre of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry at the University of York, Dr Rachel Smith developed the new analytical method as part of her PhD at the University’s Department of Chemistry.

Dr Smith said: “The particular opiate alkaloids we detected are ones we have shown to be the most resistant to degradation, which makes them better targets in ancient residues than more well-known opiates such as morphine.

“We found the alkaloids in degraded plant oil, so the question as to how opium would have been used in this juglet still remains. Could it have been one ingredient amongst others in an oil-based mixture, or could the juglet have been re-used for oil after the opium or something else entirely?”

In the past, it has been argued that these juglets could have been used to hold poppy seed oil, containing traces of opium, used for anointing or in a perfume. In this theory, the opium effects may have held symbolic significance.

Professor Jane Thomas-Oates, Chair of Analytical Science in the Department of Chemistry, and supervisor of the study at the University of York, said: “The juglet is significant in revealing important details about trade and the culture of the period, so it was important to us to try and progress the debate about what it might have been used for.

“We were able to establish a rigorous method for detecting opiates in this kind of residue, but the next analytical challenge is to see if we can succeed with less well-preserved residues.”

This is the first time that reliable chemical evidence has been produced to link the opium poppy with a base-ring juglet, despite many previous attempts by researchers over the years.

Dr Rebecca Stacey, Senior Scientist in the Department of Scientific Research at the British Museum, said: “It is important to remember that this is just one vessel, so the result raises lots of questions about the contents of the juglet and its purpose. The presence of the alkaloids here is unequivocal and lends a new perspective to the debate about their significance.”


Global Warming Increases Wildfire Potential Damages In Mediterranean Europe

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A study published in Nature Communications, led by researchers of the University of Barcelona in collaboration with other research institutions, shows that anthropogenic warming will increase the burned areas due fires in Mediterranean Europe, and the increase of the burned area could be reduced by limiting global warming to 1.5 ºC. The higher the warming level is, the larger the increase of the burned area is.

“To draw this conclusion we combined regional climate projections with several empirical models linking the summer burned area to key climatic drivers”, notes Marco Turco, UB researcher and first author of the study. “These results support the statement of the Paris Agreement (2015) that reports that limiting the temperature increase to 1.5 ºC would “significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change”, says the researcher.

Fire seasons in 2017 and 2018 have been unusually high in several regions in Europe, with large wildfires in Greece, Portugal and Sweden, associated with intense droughts and heatwaves. These fires caused economic and ecological losses, and even human casualties.

Marco Turco and his team used a series of regional climate models to project burned area in Mediterranean Europe, taking into account how the climate-vegetation-fire relationship will change under different scenarios due other factors such as droughts. The authors find that, with a 1.5 º C global warming, the burned area could increase by 40 % compared the projections that do not take into account future warming (mainly in the Iberian Peninsula). If warming is at 3 ºC, it would increase by 100 %.

“These results, combined with the increase in societal exposure to large wildfires in recent years, call for a rethinking of current management strategies. Climate change effects could overcome fire prevention efforts, implying that more fire management efforts must be planned in the near future”, says Marco Turco, researcher in the Group of Analysis of Adverse Weather Situations (GAMA) of the University of Barcelona, led by Carme Llasat, lecturer at the Department of Applied Physics of the UB. In this sense, the development of climate-fire models is crucial to identify key actions in adaptation strategies. In particular, combined with seasonal climate forecasts, these offer an under-exploited opportunity to prevent and reduce the fire impact of climate adverse conditions.

CPEC Debts: China Concerned After Change In Government? – Analysis

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The best bet for China is to keep the Pakistan army happy.

By Harsha Kakar

The recent visit by the Pakistan army chief, General Bajwa, to Beijing and his comments there indicate a desperate attempt by both countries convincing the other that all is well in the continuation of the CPEC. This comes after multiple statements in the Pakistani media about the present government seeking to revisit the terms and conditions of the CPEC considering the debt burden which Pakistan has begun to face. The Pakistan commerce minister had even suggested suspending all projects for a year, thus enabling the government to regain fiscal control. Simultaneously, Pakistan is seeking options for a bailout but is hesitating to approach China as it is already in deep debt.

General Bajwa’s visit is the first after the new government, supported by the army, assumed office. His visit came concurrent to the visit of Prime Minister Imran Khan to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, where he was seeking a bailout package. Imran did manage something as Saudi Arabia agreed to join the CPEC and invest in Pakistan. How would this play out with the Chinese and on ground is yet to be seen. Another reason for the visit could be to convey to the Chinese that the PM’s first visit abroad to Saudi Arabia and not China is not aimed at stating that China is not Pakistan’s number one ally.

With the US hinting on controlling terms and conditions of any International Monetary Package (IMF) package, Pakistan has limited options. No matter from where they take the loans, the money would have to flow to China. During the recent visit of the Chinese foreign minister to Pakistan, there were some comments on the concentration of CPEC projects in Punjab. China is now planning to extend the project into western Pakistan.

Despite all its statements during the electioneering, there has been no step taken by the Imran Khan’s government to make public the terms and conditions of the CPEC and the debt which Pakistan owes to China. Like all earlier governments, investments remain shrouded in mystery. As earlier, the army has ensured that even if financial wizards know that this investment would take Pakistan downhill in the coming years, it would neither be slowed down or impacted.

Bajwa commented in China that “the Pakistan military and its new government are consistent in their policy towards China.” The words ‘military and new government’ were aimed at conveying that since the military supports the project and the government, it would have no choice but to toe the line. He also added that the Belt Road Initiative (BRI) with the CPEC as its flagship project is destined to succeed despite all odds and the Pakistan army shall ensure security of the CPEC at all costs. This is largely because the Pakistan army is dependent on China to counter the growing Indian conventional superiority since US support has all but ceased to provide aid and military equipment.

Pakistani and Chinese media reported that the Chinese consider the Pakistan army support as the backbone to the success of the CPEC. It is more than true as the Pakistan army has deployed 15,000 troops involving 9,000 of the army and the balance paramilitary to protect 10,000 Chinese workers employed in the project. With India turning down joining the CPEC, it remains an isolated project providing Pakistan with no additional source of revenue.

In every meeting which General Bajwa had in China, including with General Zhang, the vice chairman of China’s Central Military Commission, and President Xi Jinping, the one issue which was continuously mentioned multiple times was the CPEC. Thus, the visit was more about convincing the other on the stability of the CPEC, rather than military cooperation. Xi Jinping even added, “Those who oppose the BRI or CPEC would never succeed as this is an initiative of peace and development.” He went on to state that China shall continue to support Pakistan as a strategic partner. Both sides took elaborate efforts to reiterate on multiple occasions that Chinese investments in the CPEC would be protected.

The best way for China to secure its investments has been to boost the capabilities of the Pakistan military to act as a deterrent to India. This has multiple benefits to China. First, Indian concentration and focus would remain divided between two formidable nuclear-powered adversaries, one on each front. Second, it would give the Pakistan army an upper hand internally, freedom to push forth its agenda of bleeding India with a thousand cuts and force any government at the centre into inactivity. Thus, post comments on the CPEC came other comments which included, “China-Pakistan military ties are an important backbone of relations between the two countries.”

Every single Chinese statement on the CPEC stated that it is aimed at bringing more benefits and prosperity to the people of both countries. Internal reports flowing from Pakistan are in the reverse. The Pakistan business community has stated that cheap Chinese imports are impacting local industry. Added to this are the concessions offered by the government to Chinese companies and high tariffs for power produced by Chinese companies.

Simultaneously, China remains in a bind. This is its flagship project and hence cannot be allowed to fail. It has realised that its investments have been high, yet it can neither stop nor slow down. It has no option but to push ahead, no matter whom it must approach for support. If this project fails, then the balance of the BRI is in grave danger as other countries may follow suit. Further, it would impinge on the power and authority of Xi Jinping, as it has been his personal project.

Hence, the best bet for China is to keep the Pakistan army happy. All China needs to do is keep supplying the Pakistan army with the capability it desires to counter India, thus winning it over, and despite any economic slowdown or internal objections, the CPEC would continue. If the Pakistan army could raise a force of 15,000 to ensure protection to 10,000 Chinese, then it would be willing to do much more.

Clearly in Pakistan, a situation has arisen when the army which controls the country stops thinking about the country, but itself. Simultaneously, political leaders are running from pillar to post desperately seeking funds to prevent the country’s economy from going into a spiral. China on the other hand has gained a nation which would never be able to repay its debt and remain beholden for a long time. Clearly, Bajwa was only there to convince the Chinese that Imran Khan has no choice but to toe their line and the CPEC would remain secure as long as Pakistan continues to get military support.

Exploiting Sino-Russian Nuclear Divergence – Analysis

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While Russia stocks up on nuclear weapons, China stays put — the United States could exploit the difference.

By Richard Weitz

Russia and China have surprisingly diverged in their reactions to the US nuclear weapons modernization program. After having sustained its legacy Cold War–era nuclear delivery vehicles for several decades, the United States has begun acquiring its next-generation of strategic submarines, bombers, and ballistic and cruise missiles. The Nuclear Posture Review released in February 2018 also announced the development of new US limited nuclear employment options as well as reinvestment in the nuclear weapons production and sustainment architecture and the supporting strategic command-and-control architecture.

Moscow’s leaders meanwhile have responded to this revival of US nuclear power by highlighting their own strategic buildup as well as pressing for renewed Russian-US nuclear arms control, expanded to include other countries, to maintain bilateral parity and prevent international instability. Whereas Moscow seeks to shock Washington into making arms-control concessions, Beijing seemingly takes President Donald Trump’s nuclear rhetoric and policies in stride, focusing instead on building conventional forces while waging its global influence campaign. China has a weaker nuclear force than either country. Its leaders have generally downplayed their nuclear weapons and reiterated longstanding but predictably ineffective calls for multilateral nuclear disarmament.

The United States could exploit this Sino-Russian divergence by calling for multilateral nuclear arms-control talks.

Russia has a larger nuclear arsenal than China, yet a lower nuclear use threshold. Almost all of Russia’s nuclear forces are being upgraded. Earlier his year, President Vladimir Putin himself showcased revolutionary strategic delivery systems including a massive intercontinental ballistic missile, the Poseidon nuclear-armed torpedo, a nuclear-powered cruise missile of unlimited flight, and several hypersonic delivery systems whose non-ballistic paths should make it easier to circumvent existing missile defenses. Although some of the newly announced Russian weapons will take years to develop, the Pentagon has likely known about others for years – what was unexpected was that Putin exposed these covert programs in public.

Besides building new nuclear capabilities, the Russian government relishes brandishing its existing ones. For the past decade, Russian political and military leaders have threatened to make nuclear targets of any country hosting US missile defense systems, contesting Moscow’s control of Crimea, or taking other actions displeasing to Moscow such as membership enlargement of NATO. Although Russia’s military doctrine affirms that Moscow would consider using nuclear weapons only if the state’s existence was threatened, the casual rhetoric of nuclear threats imply that Russian leaders could use them for more general deterrence and warfighting.

Experts have anticipated that the US nuclear modernization program would induce Beijing to “rethink its relatively small nuclear arsenal and defensive-oriented nuclear doctrine,” including by making its absolute “no first use” declaratory policy more ambiguous, expanding the number and types of strategic delivery systems, and becoming more assertive in its military policies. In this scenario, China would follow Russia’s path away from nuclear restraint. To avoid this, arms-control advocates have urged the United States to pursue multilateral and bilateral nuclear reduction negotiations with Beijing as well as unilateral US restraint.

None of these ominous predictions have yet come to past. In its August 28 news conference, the Chinese Foreign Ministry reaffirmed that “China remains committed to this pledge” of not first using nuclear weapons and to follow a &ldquostrategy that is defensive in nature and always keep our nuclear strength at the lowest level required by maintenance of national security.” In a position paper released at the same time, the ministry also declared its goal “to reduce the operational status of nuclear weapons, [and to oppose]… research and development of low-yield nuclear weapons and other negative measures that may lower the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons.”

These remarks should not be dismissed as pure rhetoric. In the latest version of its China Military Power report released in August, the Pentagon confirmed that, despite Beijing’s comprehensive conventional buildup, its nuclear modernization remains constrained, with China’s “prioritize[ing] the maintenance of a nuclear force able to survive a first strike and to respond with sufficient strength to inflict unacceptable damage on an enemy.” For example, the People’s Liberation Army has not increased its number of ICBM launchers since 2011. Its qualitative gains have focused on making its retaliatory force more mobile, difficult to detect, and responsive for quick counterattack.

Toward this end, the report concludes, China has been building deeply buried tunnels, providing for rapid dispersibility, enhancing early warning to include space-based as well as ground-based radar, placing more than one warhead on each missile, deploying missile defense penetration aides, advancing command and control of nuclear and supporting capabilities through a new Strategic Support Force and other initiatives, and developing hypersonic delivery vehicles as well as better strategic bombers and submarines to achieve, “for the first time [a] ‘triad’ of delivery systems dispersed across land, sea, and air.”

Several possible reasons explain these contrasting responses. First, Russian leaders are preoccupied with nuclear capabilities because Moscow relies on them to maintain great power status. Without nuclear weapons, Russians rightly fear their country would become a regional power of limited international influence – the dread of Russian strategists.

In contrast, Chinese officials renounce superpower aspirations and deny that their country is, or wants to become, a peer rival of the United States. Beijing wields a considerably more robust power portfolio, including military but especially economic and increasingly formidable soft power. Not only does Beijing have more tools of influence than Moscow, but Chinese leaders are more adept at employing them. For example, Beijing has proved remarkably successful at expanding its regional influence and won over, or bought out, many of the countries, including Russia, that according to geopolitical logic should resist China’s rise.

Another factor likely restraining China’s nuclear rhetoric and buildup is that Beijing’s leaders worry more than their Russian counterparts about further nuclear weapons proliferation on their periphery. North Korea’s nuclear weapons program has reinforced interest in Japan and other Asian countries about developing their own strategic deterrents. Whatever other problems it would bring, Tokyo’s acquisition of nuclear weapons would present a tremendous barrier to Beijing’s aspirations for regional hegemony.

Russian leaders are naturally concerned over China’s rise, even if they don’t dare acknowledge such anxieties in public. President Xi Jinping traveled to Vladivostok for the fourth Eastern Economic Forum, September 11 and 12, at Putin’s invitation, to inject new impetus into the bilateral ties. As with Beijing’s other potential adversaries, the conventional military balance between Russia and China is shifting in Beijing’s favor. In determining the size of their nuclear arsenal, Russian policymakers employ an expansive force-sizing principle – they presume that their nuclear forces must match all the other nuclear weapons states combined. Russian leaders do not publicize that this calculus includes China.

Skillful US diplomacy can exploit these differences. Moscow’s interest in maintaining nuclear parity with Washington has made it more eager than China to engage in strategic arms-control talks with the United States. This stance builds on the decades-long history of such negotiations, which have always been on a bilateral basis. Yet, Moscow insists that future strategic arms-control treaties encompass additional countries besides Russia and the United States, including China. Beijing has ignored Moscow’s demands, as well as other calls for legally binding nuclear constraints, comfortably insisting that Russia and the United States disarm first.

The Trump administration should consider following Moscow and call on Beijing to join future rounds of nuclear arms-control talks to make these Sino-Russian differences more salient. Although accepting the Russian argument that China needs to be included in future nuclear arms-control talks would decrease the prospects of a near-term agreement on strategic arms reductions, perhaps the trade-off would be worthwhile if it leads to greater Russian pressure on China not to expand its offensive nuclear weapons capabilities and other Sino-Russian frictions.

*Richard Weitz is senior fellow and director of the Center for Political-Military Analysis at the Hudson Institute. His current research includes regional security developments relating to Europe, Eurasia and East Asia as well as US foreign, defense and homeland-security policies. He would like to thank the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation for supporting his research and writing on nuclear non-proliferation issues.

Medicaid Expansion Improved Immigrants’ Access To Health Care, But Disparities Persist

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Though Medicaid expansion has helped to improve insurance coverage for immigrant populations in the United States, uninsurance rates still remain high for those in the U.S. who are not yet citizens, according to a new study by Drexel University and University of Nebraska Medical Center researchers published in the October issue of Health Affairs.

A key provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was that states could choose to expand Medicaid eligibility – to nearly every adult under 138 percent of the federal poverty level – in 2014. To date, 33 states have expanded Medicaid, and 18 states have not.

Prior research has shown that access to health care for immigrants is shaped by federal law and variations in state eligibility for Medicaid, often resulting in disparities in access to care. Researchers at Drexel’s Dornsife School of Public Health and the College of Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center were interested in finding out how state variation in the adoption of Medicaid expansion affected access to health insurance for immigrants compared to U.S. natives.

Using data from the American Community Survey, the researchers identified differences in health insurance coverage between U.S. natives, naturalized citizens and noncitizen immigrants. They found that the percentage of uninsured noncitizens decreased after the ACA went into effect, from 70 percent in 2010 to 54 percent in 2015.

However, when compared to other populations, uninsurance rates for noncitizens remained high, and in fact, the disparity between noncitizens and native citizens grew over the study period. In states that expanded access to Medicaid in 2010, noncitizens had been nearly twice as likely to be uninsured (70 percent vs. 34 percent), compared to 2015, when noncitizens were nearly three times more likely to be uninsured (45 percent vs. just 16 percent).

Study lead author Jim P. Stimpson, PhD, a professor in Drexel’s Dornsife School of Public Health, said the implications are twofold: While the study’s results highlight the great benefits of Medicaid expansion, they also suggest that policymakers must do more to ensure access to health care insurance for noncitizens.

“Even if a policy has an overall beneficial effect, it’s important for policymakers to attend to the differential impact a policy might have on a population,” Stimpson said. “Consequently, for example, the uninsurance rate is roughly double for persons living in non-expansion states compared to persons living in expansion states.”

Currently, immigrants must reside legally in the United States for at least five years to be eligible to receive Medicaid, although some states waive the requirement. Stimpson said that a federal policy that would shorten or eliminate this policy would increase access to care for the more than 44 million immigrants living in the U.S.

“A change in federal policy will have the greatest impact on improving the health insurance rate and reducing disparities in coverage,” Stimpson said. “However, state policies should also be carefully considered, given the significant variation in the adoption of Medicaid expansion and state eligibility requirements.”

Second Age Of Arms Race In Indian Ocean: India’s Test Of K-15 SRBM – OpEd

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In late August 2018, according to Indian Defence officials, local and international media sources, three short range ballistic missiles were fired from INS Arihant for the first time. Before that, India had never exhibited the capacity of INS Arihant. Indian newspapers stated that all three-short range K-15 missiles followed their trajectory with high accuracy from the 20-meter-deepsubmerged position about 10 km off the coast of Vizag with close to zero circular error probability.

K-15 is a short range ballistic missile, which before 2018 was last tested in November 2015. K-15 Sagarika is solid fueled two stage sea launched ballistic missile that can carry payload of about 1000 kg and weighs almost 10 tons. K-15 missile was fired from India’s most treasured and closely guarded secret INS Arihant, which is the first of five SSBNs (Submersible Ship Ballistic Missile Nuclear).

Arihant also made it to the international news and local Indian media during the Doklam crisis when news broke that the SSBN is decommissioned because the hatch was left open in the submarine that caused serious damages to it. The news of hatch was took up by India’s national newspapers maintaining that as INS Arihant is based on Russian design with nuclear reactor sealed in a double hull, hence under normal circumstances water could just not enter into the submarine, also because of the warning systems. However the question still remains that if the water entered into the SSBN due to opened hatch, why did the warning systems fail and why are the sailors and officers of the Indian navy not properly trained to handle nuclear armed, nuclear powered submarines?

Such incidents raise serious alarm as they challenge the mechanisms and measures that ensure safety and security of nuclear materials and facilities.

India has always claimed that command and control of its nuclear weapons and arsenals is in the hands of its civilian leadership. But this one incident reveals that reality is otherwise. Even when the civilian leadership enquired whether Arihant could be used against China, they were told that second strike capability would not work as INS Arihant was decommissioned. This revelation explicitly challenges the notion well appraised around the globe that India’s nuclear program is under the control of civilian leadership because reality is contrary to it.

Significant aspect with second strike capability and sea based nuclear weapons is that they cannot be kept in de-mated form till the last moment and hence are mostly in cannisterized form. Two factors which are considered as the requisites for handling cannisterized weapons are professional expertise and safe launching pad. Indian Navy yet has to master these requisites for safety and security of nuclear weapons in the sea.

Moreover, states must adopt pragmatic approach in the command and control of nuclear assets in sea because it is difficult to exercise complete civilian control on nuclear submarine which has to remain submerged in sea for at least 6 months. Thus, although civilian control of nuclear assets looks more promising but is not pragmatic and realistic when it comes to handling sea based weapons and assets. Hence, in the light of afore mentioned reasons clarity in command and control systems would ensure stability in an arena where miscalculation and ambiguity is highly likely.

Another significant aspect in this development is not the test of K-15 itself but the classical action-reaction chain, which is becoming more of a syndrome in case of South Asia. India being larger state with better economy to spend on its defence, mostly initiates technological developments, which are countered by Pakistan to maintain deterrence equilibrium. But, this time India tested its sea launched short range ballistic missile from submerged platform after Pakistan announced second successful test of Babur-3 (SLCM) from submerged platform through horizontal launch.

The Indian test of SRBMs is not considered as threat by international media and analysts because they cannot reach Islamabad with the range of 700-750 km. However, purpose of nuclear weapons is to create terror, which these small range naval ballistic missiles have the capacity to create in the Indian Ocean. Moreover, these tests will enable India to develop and successfully test the intermediate and long-range sea launched ballistic missile from submerged platforms, thus igniting the arms race in Indian Ocean.

In all this fiasco of nuclearizing the Indian Ocean littoral to South Asia, it is high time that both parties realize that there is no end to this arms race. One after another technology is coming and one after another arena is militarized and nuclearized to have an escalation dominance, which is eliminating the chances of stability for South Asia. Arms build-up according to the security needs is right of every state but larger goal must be to acquire stability in the region, which largely depends upon the will to not use the common goods for bolstering military capabilities. It is time where both countries must realize that not every sphere should be turned into conflict and CBMs should be signed for the arenas like sea, glaciers, cyber and outer space to contain the arms race from spreading into zones which are beneficial for all human kind.

*Ahyousha Khan, Research Associate, Strategic Vision Institute,Islamabad

Political Stability In South Asia: Solih-Led Opposition Brings Democratic Transition To Maldives – OpEd

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The 2018 Maldivian Presidential Election and the run up to it was closely watched not only by the neighbouring South Asian nations, but also the international community. The overwhelming victory of opposition presidential candidate Ibrahim Mohamed Solih a close aide of former President Mohamed Nasheed defeating the incumbent President Yameen Abdul Gayoom will alter the political direction of the Indian Ocean archipelago.

Solih’s victory gaining 134,616 votes with 58.33 % of total votes cast appears to bring new hopes to the island nation ending the authoritarian regime of Yameen who obtained 96,132 votes or 41.7 % of total votes. A few hours after the historic election victory Solih announced on television “I call on Yameen to respect the will of the people and bring about a peaceful, smooth transfer of power”.

Over the past years the discontent in Yameen’s Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) aided in the emergence of several splinter parties. The opposition parties came together in a coalition when there appeared to be no other solution in sight to bring back democratic processes to an ailing nation. In this context Ibrahim Solih of Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) was nominated as the Joint opposition Presidential candidate for the 2018 Presidential election.

Some of the factors that led to the formation of the opposition coalition are the arrest of former President Maumoon Gayoom and top court judges in February this year. The international community had requested the release of all political prisoners and those in exile including Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Mohamed Nasheed and Qasim Ibrahim.

Furthermore, during the turbulent tenure of Yameen, the Indian Ocean island nation saw journalists routinely facing harassment and intimidation while the regime practiced a high degree of censorship on privately run media channels. State run media monopolized on election propaganda favouring the incumbent Yameen. Maldivian based public interest groups, civil society, journalist and activists played a key role under trying circumstances risking their own lives for the protection and promotion of civil liberties of this nation.

The policies of the west and India’s foreign policy towards Maldives during this period had been one of constructive engagement and noninterference towards the Island nation. Once Maldives had declared the dates for the election, it was back on the international agenda with renewed hopes of facilitating the island nation to transition back to democratic processes.

Closer to the elections, the role played by the Qasim Ibrahim of the Jumhooree Party, Nasreena Ibrahim wife of jailed former President Maumoon Gayoom and Dunya Maumoon former Minister of Foreign Affairs were significant in the current election victory of the MDP.

The electoral behavior of the 26 Atolls had changed considerably between the 2013 and 2018 Presidential elections. In the recently concluded election the Maldivian voters were more divided than they had been in 2013 with reduced dominance of the ruling PPM. A large proportion of voters of the PPM’s Gayoom faction had transferred their votes to the Joint Opposition candidate. In addition supporters of Qasim Ibrahim’s Jumhooree Party( JP ) and the Adhaalath Party voters had shifted their electoral support to the MDP. This pattern was particularly noticeable in Male’, Hulumale islands and especially the Addu Atoll. However, the ruling PPM tended to be strong in some Atolls outside Male’.

Compared to other South Asian nations, political modernization came late to Maldives. It was not until 2008, that Maldives held its first democratic elections with a multiparty system. The 90 % voter turnout and the election victory of the recently concluded Maldivian election sends a clear message that there is still hope to rekindle democratic process while ending monopolized schemes of autocratic rule. There is great confidence that constructive democratic reforms will take place in the coming months with the victory of Ibrahim Solih refashioning the previous multi party democratic system while steering the Indian Ocean Island nation in the right direction for progress in the future.

*Srimal Fernando is a research scholar at Jindal School of International Affairs, (JSIA ) India and an Global editor of Diplomatic Society for South Africa. Mizly Nizar is a foreign policy analyst and a former visiting lecture at The Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies (BCIS) and the Open University of Sri Lanka.

 

Journalist’s Disappearance Challenges Fragile Middle Eastern Pragmatism – Analysis

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Saudi Arabia and Turkey, despite being on opposite sides of Middle Eastern divides, are cooperating in Syria to enable youth and women to acquire skills that would either allow them to compete in the job market or turn them into entrepreneurs.

The Saudi-funded, Turkish-executed projects potentially highlight a newly found degree of pragmatism and fluidity among seemingly entrenched alliances in the Middle East that largely pitch Turkey, Iran and Qatar against Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Saudi Arabia and Turkey differ on some of the Middle East’s most important divides. Turkey backs Qatar in its 15-month-old dispute with a Saudi-United Arab Emirates-led alliance that is boycotting the Gulf state economically and diplomatically and is competing with Saudi Arabia, and even more so with its closest ally, the UAE, for influence in the Horn of Africa.

While Turkey and Saudi Arabia are closer in their approach towards Syria, Turkey hosts members of the Muslim Brotherhood, a group that has been banned in the kingdom and is at the centre of its conflict with Qatar. It also opposes US sanctioning of Iran that has been embraced by Saudi Arabia.

Turkey further has exploited Saudi reluctance to aggressively oppose US President Donald J. Trump’s pro-Israel policy to position itself as the leader of the Islamic world in supporting the Palestinians. Turkish officials have suggested that the UAE had funded a failed 2016 military coup.

The projects are but one indication of the seeming emergence of a degree of pragmatism on the part of parties on all sides of the Middle Eastern divide. Other indications include differences between Turkey, Russia and Iran over how to handle Idlib, the last rebel-held stronghold in Syria; Bahraini trial balloons suggesting a softening of the boycott of Qatar; and Turkish-German efforts to mend fences with one another.

The signs of flexibility are as fragile as the alliances themselves. They are being put to a test with the disappearance in Istanbul of prominent Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a critic of the kingdom’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, who disappeared this week during a visit to the Saudi consulate.

Mr. Khashoggi, known for his close ties to the ruling family, went a year ago into self-exile in Washington, after being banned from publishing, which he feared was a prelude to arrest.

Neither Saudi Arabia nor Turkey have so far commented on Mr. Khashoggi’s disappearance. A Saudi Press Agency report said an unidentified Saudi national accused of having signed cheques that bounced had been deported to the kingdom on the basis of an arrest warrant issued by Interpol. The agency gave no further details.

While it is unknown whether the agency was referring to Mr. Khashoggi, many fear that he may have been kidnapped. It would not be the first time that Saudi Arabia has forcibly repatriated its critics.

A Saudi detention or nabbing of Mr. Khashoggi in Istanbul without at least tacit Turkish cooperation would embarrass Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and likely spark a further deterioration of Turkish-Saudi relations. If Turkey was complicit, it would bear testimony to increasing pragmatism.

Meanwhile, Saudi-Turkish cooperation in Syria goes beyond relief and development aid. It helps Turkey create a sphere of influence in areas of Syria near Turkey’s border that are controlled by Turkish troops and administered by Turkey.

In a bid to compliment Turkish hard power in Syria with soft power and counter Kurdish influence, Mr. Erdogan’s Religious Affairs Directorate or Diyanet has trained Syrian religious personnel, according to a 104-page report published by the directorate.

The report said that the directorate had spent a total of US$34.1 million dollars in Syria on thing like repairing mosques, distributing Kurdish-language Qur’ans, and educating 11,250 students.

Journalist Amed Dicle said that Diyanet had recruited 5,686 teachers from the ranks of rebels opposed to the regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad whose curriculum emphasized Turkey’s synthesis between Islam and nationalism and included anti-Kurdish teachings. “Kurds are portrayed as atheists, and the PKK, YPG and other Kurdish fighters are infidels,” Mr. Dicle said, referring to the outlawed Kurdish Workers Party and its Syrian offshoot, the People’s Protection Units.

A Syrian imam told Al-Monitor that “we’re getting paid by the Turkish government. We’re grateful to them and we see that the local population here are happy to be under Turkish rule. For Turkey, religious and national allegiance are one and the same. But our interpretation of Islam may not always be the same. Turkey keeps Kurds under control and that’s good for us. Plus, one day Syrians in Turkey may come and settle in these areas.”

Saudi cooperation with Turkey and its anti-Kurdish agenda in Syria has not prevented the kingdom from establishing ties to Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region that borders on Iran with the opening of a consulate in Erbil, initiation of Saudia flights from Jeddah to Erbil, and a visit by Saudi businessmen.

Bahrain reportedly hinted last month that the Gulf states boycotting Qatar may re-open airspace to flights bound from and to Doha. The continued closure has forced Qatar Airways to fly longer routes to circumvent Saudi, UAE and Bahraini airspace at considerable cost to the airline. The report was widely seen as a trial balloon.

Similarly, Mr. Erdogan travelled last week to Germany with which it has had strained relations in a bid to increase his options following a summit with Vladimir Putin and Hassan Rouhani, the presidents of Russia and Iran, in which he for now delayed a Syrian-Russian assault on Idlib that would have sent hundreds of thousands, if not millions fleeing towards the Turkish border.

The limitations of the notion, apparently shared by German chancellor Angela Merkel and Mr. Erdogan, that deep differences can easily be put aside to pragmatically focus on issues of common interest, a key pillar of Middle Eastern alliances, were on display with the European Parliament this week voting to withhold 70 million euros in pre-accession funding because Turkey had failed to reverse its moves towards authoritarianism.


Public School Teachers Are Not Underpaid – OpEd

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By Zachary Garris*

It seems like the media will never stop promoting the myth that public school teachers are “underpaid.” The most recent example is the front-page story in Time, “This Is What It’s Like to Be a Teacher in America.”

Time tells of a woman who makes $55,000 per year teaching but works two other jobs in order to “pay the bills.” The article includes complaints about a teacher making almost $70,000 per year and even suggests that sexism is partly to blame for deficient pay because there are more women teachers than men.

It is no surprise that the media promotes these sorts of stories. They want public elementary and secondary school teachers to make more money. Unfortunately, it is probably not for the reason they want us to think. For if the media cared about teachers as a class, they would also advocate for private school teachers (who make far less than public school teachers on average). There is something about public education that concerns them.

The likely explanation for why the media constantly tell us that public school teachers should be paid more is that teachers unions and the media are political allies. It is no secret that the teachers unions have strong ties to the Democratic Party . And the mainstream media, including publications like Time, leans to the political left.

What About Private School Teachers?

Of course, the media can successfully push for greater pay for public school teachers because they are paid through taxation, while private school teacher pay is dictated by consumer demands. This is the difference between taxation and voluntary exchange. The amount of money raised by taxation can be almost unlimited regardless of the utility provided, while the government’s subsequent expenditure is arbitrary in both quality and quantity, without any connection to consumer valuation.

This is the great irony of the claim that public school teachers are underpaid. By socializing education, state governments have removed the very market forces that determine wages. So there is no way to measure what a teacher actually “should” be paid.

There are private schools in America, but these schools are an imperfect measure of teacher pay because the government’s quasi-monopoly on education decreases demand for private education. Parents are much less likely to pay for private schools when “free” public schools are readily available. Those who send their children to private schools effectively pay double tuition, as they must continue to pay property taxes for public schools that they do not use.

Public School Teachers Are Overpaid

However, a comparison between public and private schools suggests the opposite of what the media claims. It is not that public school teachers are paid too little. Rather, public school teachers are paid too much. It is quite certain that few kindergarten teachers would be making anywhere near $70,000 per year in a free market of education. Yet wealthy school districts can pay this much because the revenue from property taxes is so high.

We can know that public school teachers on average make too much money because government employees in general make more than their private-employee counterparts . Government employees, including public school teachers, receive hefty pensions and insurance packages as part of their compensation. These benefits, as well as the favorable hours and extensive vacations, are often left out of discussions of teacher pay.

The wage premium of public school teachers is primarily due to the government’s quasi-monopoly of education and the high revenue brought in by taxation. In addition, teachers unions have decreased competition and driven up wages by lobbying for unreasonable state certification standards (usually requiring a degree through a university’s college of education rather than mere proficiency in the subject taught).

Of course, some teachers would be paid a high wage in a free market. However, this would be the best and most skilled teachers, not just those who teach for many years and receive automatic annual pay increases (a practice that was negotiated by unions). The current public school system actually discourages teacher development by rewarding the number of years worked instead of the individual’s performance.

Only the Free Market Can Determine Wages

The central point is that a school system that is exempt from market forces is unable to calculate the market value of schooling and the wages of the teachers who provide their services. Instead, teacher salaries are determined by government bureaucrats, and these vary widely by state and district.

Public school teachers are not “underpaid.” No one knows what they should be paid because there is no free market to address this question. However, we can be sure that many public school teachers are earning far more than they would be if exposed to market demands, where schools seek to provide the best education for the lowest cost. Free choice in education would link a teacher’s pay to the value of his or her services, in contrast to the current coercive system that pays many teachers more than their productivity justifies.

About the author:
*Zachary Garris
is a student at Wayne State University School of Law. He holds a Master of Divinity from Reformed Theological Seminary (Jackson, MS) and writes at TeachDiligently.com, a Christian education site with resources for teachers and homeschool families.

Source:
This article was published by the MISES Institute

Iran Fails In Court Bid To Overturn US Sanctions

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Iran failed on Wednesday to persuade the UN’s highest court to overturn punishing US economic sanctions that have brought the country’s economy to its knees.  The court ordered the US to lift only those measures that affect imports of medicine, food and civilian aircraft parts, leaving most of the new sanctions regime in place.

Further penalties aimed at Iran’s energy sector, including the crucial oil trade, come into effect on Nov. 4.

US President Donald Trump reimposed the sanctions in May after withdrawing from Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Iran had challenged the move in a case filed in July at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague.

The US described the court’s ruling on Wednesday as a defeat for Tehran. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pointed out that the court had not ruled more broadly against US sanctions, and in any case the US already exempted humanitarian goods.

“The court’s ruling today was a defeat for Iran. It rightly rejected all of Iran’s baseless requests,” he said.

Pompeo accused Iran of “abusing the ICJ for political and propaganda purposes,” and announced that the US was ending a friendship treaty with Iran signed more than 60 years ago.

“This is a decision, frankly, that is 39 years overdue,” he said. “Given Iran’s history of terrorism, ballistic missile activity and other malign behavior, its claims under the treaty are absurd.”

The ICJ unanimously ruled that Washington “shall remove by means of its choosing any impediments arising from the measures announced on May 8 to the free exportation to Iran of medicines and medical devices, food and agricultural commodities” as well as airplane parts, judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf said.

The court said sanctions on goods “required for humanitarian needs… may have a serious detrimental impact on the health and lives of individuals on the territory of Iran.

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US sanctions on aircraft spare parts also had the “potential to endanger civil aviation safety in Iran and the lives of its users,” the ruling said.

The ICJ rules on disputes between United Nations member states. Its decisions are binding and cannot be appealed, but it has no mechanism to enforce them.

The Treaty of Amity with Iran, signed in 1955 and ratified by the US Senate a year later, lays out practicalities for unlimited economic relations and consular rights between the two countries.

The US withdrawal will have no practical effect, since the two countries no longer have diplomatic relations.

However, Iran has repeatedly quoted the treaty in previous attempts to press other claims against the US, and used it to justify its appeal to the ICJ. Oubai Shahbandar, a Syrian-American analyst and fellow at the New America Foundation’s International Security Program, told Arab News the UN “perhaps ought to focus more on enforcing Security Council resolutions on the proliferation of Iranian ballistic missiles throughout the region.”

Shahbandar said: “Once President Trump’s directed sanctions take full effect on the Iranian oil sector by November, Tehran is going to face the specter of economic calamity. “The International Court of Justice should also take Tehran to task for the continued illegal detainment of US hostages like Robert Levinson, whose family has been waiting 11 long years to gain his freedom.”

‘Islamic State Recruiter’ Allegedly Runs Free School In Sweden

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Sweden’s Security Police, SÄPO, reportedly identified the activities of the president of the so-called Science School in Gothenburg as one of the reasons why Sweden’s second-largest city stands out in the number of jihadists that it produces, Sputnik International says.

Abdel Nasser El Nadi, the president and principal of the Gothenburg-based Science School, is a long-time recruiter for Muslim extremism and is present on SÄPO’s list of Islamist extremists, which numbers roughly 2,000 people, Swedish terrorism watchdog Doku revealed.

While no formal charges have been brought against him, El Nadi (53) is considered one of the reasons for the rise of Islamist extremism in Gothenburg, which produced about a third of Sweden’s roughly 300 jihadists (or “foreign fighters,” to use the official parlance), Doku reported.

The Science School has previously been reported for having ties with Islamism and employees who have expressed sympathies for Daesh (Islamic State). Abdel Nasser El Nadi rejected the accusations of Islamism, stressing that he has five children born in Sweden and claimed to be striving to protect its society.

According to Doku, El Nadi has been running groups for Islamic studies and has appeared in various conferences within the radical Islamic environment in Sweden. Doku also referred to El Nadi’s posts from autumn of 2014, when he campaigned for a “strong, Sunni Muslim state” amid Daesh’s onslaught in Syria and Iran, where it managed to create a short-lived, self-proclaimed “caliphate.”

Meanwhile, the Science School has been a target of harsh criticism for years. In 2012, the municipality of Gothenburg reported that the school had received unlawfully collected fees and was forced to pay back SEK 200,000.

The same year, it triggered the ire of the Swedish School Inspectorate for failure to meet Swedish educational standards, as only one third of the school’s staff had proper qualifications. Furthermore, low-grade pupils had lessons in religion, even though the subject was conspicuously absent from the timetable. The teaching revolved solely around Islam and the Muslim worldview, the School Inspectorate stressed.

Despite years of warnings, the Science School has been allowed to continue and is even expanding. Abdel Nasser El Nadi started a new school in the city of Gävle and has been granted permission to open yet another one in Halmstad next year. His application for another school in Gothenburg was rejected, but only because it was filed too late.

Following this revelation, the Swedish daily newspaper Expressen ran an opinion piece called “Daesh recruiter runs free school. Who is surprised?”

According to Expressen, this story highlighted two grotesque systemic failures in Sweden’s school market, which it described as a “Wild West.” Firstly, virtually anyone can open a free school, whereas closing one seems to be a more cumbersome task than travelling to the moon. Secondly, children receive scarce knowledge and poor skills, while also becoming indoctrinated.

Starting from 2019, tightened requirements will come into force, making it easier for the authorities to withdraw permits. According to Expressen, though, the efficacy of the new measures remains to be seen. As long as the Science School and its likes continue to operate, something is still very wrong, it concluded.

Unrest In Basra, Khuzestan Symptoms Of A Troubled Region – Analysis

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The US State Department last week temporarily closed the US consulate in Basra and evacuated all diplomats stationed there following a rocket attack launched by Iranian-backed forces. In addition, Basra’s airport has faced mortar fire. The consulate closure is symptomatic of the larger issues of upheaval along the northern Arabian Gulf, where there is an ongoing shift in the landscape.

Beginning in July, hundreds of protesters appeared on the streets of Basra demanding much-needed government services and lambasting the rampant corruption in the city. Basra is one of the top two sources of petroleum revenues for Baghdad — second only to Kirkuk in Northern Iraq — with the port city shipping three million barrels of Iraqi oil to global markets on a daily basis. Upheaval is not conducive to Basra’s oil production.

In an attempt to quell the violence and restore order in Basra and the surrounding areas, such as Amarah, Nasiriyah and Najaf, Prime Minister Haider Abadi ordered units from the Iraqi Army 9th Division and its counterterrorism forces into the region. Abadi also made the controversial decision to cut all internet access to keep protest organizers from rallying more followers to their cause.

From the US perspective, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blames Iran’s elite Quds Force and militias under the control of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani for the upheaval and closure of the consulate. Basra’s residents also blame Iranian meddling in the city’s affairs. Last month, protesters turned their rage on neighboring Iran, blaming its outsized influence on Iraq’s political affairs for their misery. They stormed the Iranian consulate and set it on fire, causing significant damage. Buildings belonging to powerful Iran-backed militias have also been burned, while videos have shown banners depicting Iranian spiritual and political leaders being set aflame.

Meanwhile, the attack on an Iranian military parade in Ahvaz on Sept. 22, which left 25 dead, marked the latest sign of instability in Iran’s oil-rich southwestern province of Khuzestan. Regardless of whether Daesh or an anti-government Arab faction carried out the attack, Arab separatist groups, including the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz, have for years targeted regime forces, government buildings and energy infrastructure in the province. Iran’s Khuzestan is often referred to Arabistan.

These armed separatists draw support from Ahwazi Arabs, largely due to grievances stemming from unemployment, poverty, water shortages, power outages, and environmental hazards. Iranian Arabs in Khuzestan have deep cultural links with Arabs in Iraq and especially in Basra. Indeed, the northern Gulf is in deep trouble geopolitically.

Strategically located on the Shatt Al-Arab, next to Iraq’s Basra, and possessing 90 percent of Iran’s oil reserves, Khuzestan is vitally important for Iran’s economy, just as Basra is for Iraq. Iran’s leadership blames the US and more than one Arab Gulf state for the Ahvaz attack, which American officials deny. But the tension is building for a response and Iran has fired missiles toward groups in Syria that it blames for the attack.

What does all of this mean? The destabilization of the northern Gulf between Iraq and Iran is likely to continue to grow as geopolitics affects the composition and landscape of this geographically significant oil-producing area. As tensions build in this area, the security and safety of the northern Gulf will become more relevant to the regional players, especially those that protect its maritime security.

The US is already actively training with the Iraqi and Kuwaiti navies for additional maritime security duties. A recent exercise focused on improving collective proficiency in maritime security tactics between the three nations and ensuring the freedom of navigation throughout the US Fifth Fleet’s area of operations. To make the point clear, an impressive array of naval craft — including US guided-missile destroyer USS The Sullivans, coastal patrol ships USS Tempest and USS Chinook, US Coast Guard Island-class patrol boat USCGC Monomoy, Iraqi navy patrol boat P-303, and Kuwaiti navy patrol boat KNS Al-Garoh — took part. The Sullivans led command and control of each event throughout the exercise.

The training included live-fire gunnery exercises, visit, board, search and seizure team training, maritime infrastructure protection drills, search and rescue training, and high-value unit protection operations. Clearly, this trilateral training is part of creating the necessary maritime protection force while Basra and Ahvaz undergo dramatic change.

Overall, the temporary closure of the Basra consulate is tied to bigger issues in the region and particularly the role of the Iranian government in Iraq’s south. But Tehran’s problems with Khuzestan must be added to the mix and thus a collision point is emerging in this strategic area of the northern Gulf.

Positive And Negative Developments For Women In Science – OpEd

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By Nidhal Guessoum*

The events of the last few days have brought discussions about the participation of women in science back to the fore. First, on Tuesday, a woman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2018 (along with two men), the first such recognition in 55 years and only the third in physics in Nobel Prize history. Then, on Wednesday, a woman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2018 (also along with two men), only the second such recognition in over 50 years. However, a few days before that, an Italian scientist gave a lecture in Geneva where he presented “data” and concluded that, not only are women preferentially treated — not being discriminated against — in the scientific community, but their contributions are less than those of their male colleagues.

Needless to say, the reaction to both events has been strong. Most commentators have hailed the Nobel Prize award for Donna Strickland, deeming that long overdue; though a few expressed surprise (she didn’t have a Wikipedia page until the prize was awarded, and she had not even been promoted to “full professor” at her university in Canada).

As for the Italian scientist’s lecture, the reactions were extremely strong. Dr. Alessandro Strumia, a physicist from the University of Pisa, gave a presentation in a workshop on gender and physics that was organized by CERN, the big European center for nuclear and particle physics. The three-day conference was attended by 90 participants. For his talk, Strumia collected bibliographical data from thousands of scientists and their papers, looking at the percentage of female researchers in different fields and various countries, citation numbers (how many times a given paper is cited in literature after its publication — a generally agreed upon measure of the quality of the work), invitations to conferences, hiring to academic positions, etc. He concluded that there seems to be discrimination in favor of women and against men, and this is detrimental to physics and science.

CERN quickly condemned the talk, which it described as “unacceptable,” “highly offensive,” and “contrary to the CERN code of conduct.” It removed it from its website and suspended Strumia from conducting any research on its premises “pending an investigation.”

It was not enough that Strumia drew hasty conclusions from the data he collected, his talk — the slides for which could be found elsewhere on the web — used sarcasm, inflammatory language, and rather offensive cartoons. For example, he stated that “physics (was) invented and built by men, it’s not by invitation.” He sarcastically described the views of those who insist that there is definite discrimination against women in science and academia: “You don’t see? You have (unconscious) bias and steal credit (for) women. Evaluators tend to favor men.”

One cartoon he used showed two hiring booths, one for STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) and one for gender studies. Three women show up and all go to the latter booth, and some years later they are holding signs that say “more women in STEM,” “science is sexist,” and “STEM is a boys’ club.” Strumia also presented data showing men and women by fields: Women dominating education, psychology, humanities and medicine, and men dominating STEM, construction and such. He referred to humanities as “where right/wrong, good/bad distinctions (are) less clear.” 

Despite all the shocking statements and the huge outrage that his presentation produced, Strumia remained defiant, telling various media outlets that people must look at his data and discuss it objectively, not fall back on “ideological,” politically correct positions. It is true that some reactions were less than objective and refused to discuss his data, focusing instead on the fact that he mentioned being overlooked for a job when the woman who was hired had only one-tenth of the number of citations that he had, thus seeing in this a personal reaction. 

I think people should engage with Strumia objectively and not censor him just because he says things that are unacceptable in 2018. For example, his citation numbers are inflated by the fact that his papers tend to have dozens of co-authors, as is the norm in big experiments such as CERN’s. Moreover, there are other indicators of quality when evaluating researchers: Diversity of contribution, being first author on many papers, making truly novel and valuable contributions, not just producing good and useful data from experiments, etc. And women’s family lives tend to reduce their research time.

What we should ask ourselves is: Are girls at various stages of their lives being equally encouraged and supported to go into STEM fields, or to choose any career they wish? If yes (and that is doubtful, considering various sociocultural pressures), then there is no problem. If not, then we need to determine the reasons for that and help women with “affirmative action.”

UNESCO has a webpage on gender and science. It says: “Currently, there is a large imbalance in the participation of women in STEM, compared with the participation of men, in particular at the more advanced career levels.” It quickly adds, however: “There are various possible explanations for this gender imbalance, and a large amount of anecdotal evidence, but solid information is still lacking.” It concludes: “Effective STEM policies need to be evidence-based and hence supported by relevant statistics and indicators. There is an urgent need to develop new indicators and methods to collect and analyze sex-disaggregated data on women’s participation in STEM around the world, in order to elaborate and implement appropriate solutions.” It then mentions a few projects that UNESCO is conducting to address this complex issue.

This is exactly what we need: A careful study and assessment of how and why girls and women end up choosing various fields and careers, and how to make sure society (all societies) treat girls and women fairly, from kindergarten to Nobel prizes.

*Nidhal Guessoum is a professor of physics and astronomy at the American University of Sharjah. Twitter: @NidhalGuessoum

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