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Thursday, 13 August 2015

Health: Study Reveals How Cannabis Is 100 Times Safer Than Alcohol [Must Read]


You are 114 times more likely to die from overdosing on alcohol than you are from cannabis, a recent study has found.

The report, published in Scientific Reports journal, compared the risks associated with 10 substances using the margin of exposure approach.


This method compares a lethal dose of the drug with the dosage typically taken by recreational users. Substances tested included alcohol and nicotine, as well as illicit drugs including cocaine, heroin, ecstasy (MDMA) and methamphetamines.

It found that the mortality risk to individuals posed by cannabis was approximately 114 times less than that of alcohol. In fact, cannabis was the only substance to be classified as ‘low risk’. In contrast, alcohol posed the highest risk to individuals and was ranked alongside nicotine, cocaine and heroin as ‘high risk’.

In terms of risk posed to a population, alcohol was the only substance classified as ‘high risk’. However, the researchers noted that this was partly due to its wide availability and a lack of data on other illicit drugs.


The report said that many European governments adopted restrictive policies towards cannabis and other illicit drugs due to the perception that they are more harmful than alcohol and tobacco.

“Specifically, the results confirm that the risk of cannabis may have been overestimated in the past,” the report said. “In contrast, the risk of alcohol may have been commonly underestimated.”

Professor David Nutt, chair of neuropsychopharmacology at Imperial College London and former chair of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, said: “The results make perfect sense. The ultra-low mortality of cannabis has long been recognised with health harms greatly exaggerated.I would recommend that cannabis be reinstated as a medicine as recognised by the House of Lords report in 2001, as the clear harms are well outweighed by the health benefits.”

The study concluded by suggesting that alcohol and tobacco should be prioritised in terms of risk management. It also suggested that governments legalise and regulate the distribution and use of cannabis, as opposed to the widespread current practice of prohibition.

However, the report cautioned that regular use of hard drugs was not safer than moderate drinking due to the environmental hazards associated with these drugs, such as dirty needles.

The Washington Post pointed out that the study merely reaffirmed drug-safety rankings developed in the past decade. However, the timing of the study’s publication was rather apt as today Alaska became the third U.S. state to legalise recreational use of marijuana.

Despite widespread decriminalisation, cannabis is still classed as illegal in most European countries. Even in the Netherlands, famous for its liberal stance towards the drug, cannabis can only be purchased from licensed coffee shops. In 2001, Portugal decriminalised all drugs meaning that certain cases of personal use would not lead to prosecution.

Source: Newsweek

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Environment: Despite some success in cleaning up its rivers, the US is still suffering from years of environmental negligence

Kayakers paddle on the Animas river in Colorado after three million gallons of effluent escaped in last week’s accident

Animas pollution: The toxic orange river that America cannot ignore

By DAVID USBORNE

Wednesday 12 August 2015

You may not want to dive in, but as it wends its lazy way just west of downtown Cleveland into Lake Eerie, the Cuyahoga river looks, well, sparkling. Rowers take double-sculls on to its waters. Upstream some whitewater stretches have become a destination for kayakers.

This is the river that used to catch fire, so extreme was the pollution that clogged it. The worst blaze, in 1952, caused $1m in damage to boats, bridges and even riverside buildings. When Time magazine wrote up a smaller fire in 1969, an appalled government took heed, passing the Clean Water Act and the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, which now enforces pollutant standards on industry.

That the United States woke up finally was duly celebrated by President Barack Obama late last month when he unveiled his plans to force deep cuts in omissions of carbon dioxide from America’s power stations, many still burning dirty coal. He specifically mentioned the improved air in Los Angeles, where as an 18-year-old he once choked trying to go for a run, and the resurrection of the Cuyahoga.

CO2 emissions: a growing concern


Supported by climate change deniers in the Republican Party, fossil fuel interests will do their utmost to block Mr Obama’s CO2 regulations in the courts. With luck, they will eventually fail, but that does not mean that America can yet say it has redeemed itself after decades of environmental negligence.

New sales figures show Americans rushing to buy bigger cars and SUVs again as petrol prices plummet. And the negligence of the past is not always easy to remedy. I spend my weekends on another once-vandalised river, the Hudson. Because of PCB dumping decades ago by General Electric we still can’t eat the fish that swim in it.

Two time zones away from the Cuyahoga, a tragedy is unfolding in the Colorado Rockies. And it’s the EPA that’s responsible. Waste water from an abandoned gold mine near Silverton, Colorado, is spilling into a small tributary called Cement Creek; this runs into the Animas river, which eventually joins the San Juan river. The spill happened when a crew working at the site on behalf of the EPA accidentally knocked a hole through a dam that was holding the toxic stew in place.

An environmental protection worker takes a sample from the polluted Animas river (AP)

Nothing caught fire this time, but as three million gallons of contaminated effluent escaped at a rate of 550 gallons a minute, the Animas was turned a horrifying orange. In the past few days, the noxious plume, containing a cocktail of heavy metals, including arsenic, lead and cadmium, has entered the San Juan as it leaves Colorado for New Mexico and Utah.

The long-term impact has yet to be fully calculated, but it has been a scary week for those along the rivers. Disaster declarations remain in place in Colorado and New Mexico. Even though the orange hue had mostly dissipated, the Animas remained closed. People living close to either of the rivers were forbidden from using water from their wells, even for showers or baths.

The crisis may be especially grave for the Navajo Nation, for which the San Juan river is not just sacred but also feeds its agriculture industry. This week, ranchers and farmers on the huge Navajo reservation scrambled to stop drawing from the San Juan to water their livestock and their crops.

The Navajo declared it will take legal action against the EPA. “They are not going to get away with this,” Russell Begaye, president of the Nation, said. “The EPA was right in the middle of the disaster, and we intend to make sure the Navajo Nation recovers every dollar it spends cleaning up this mess and every dollar it loses as a result of injuries to our precious Navajo natural resources.”

Gina McCarthy, the EPA administrator, was due to meet state and tribal officials in Durango, south-west Colorado. On Thursday she will visit spots along the San Juan in New Mexico. “It is really a tragic and very unfortunate incident, and EPA is taking responsibility to ensure that the spill is cleaned up,” she said leaving Washington. “I am absolutely, deeply sorry that this ever happened.”

So far there is no sign of riverine wildlife dying off. But what happens next is unclear as some of the metals sink to the river beds. “It is really good news that we know that the initial plume has passed,” Dan Olson of the San Juan Citizens Alliance said. “However, as a community we still have so many questions that have not been answered. Namely, what was the deposition left behind? And what are the potential health ramifications?”

The Denver Post, meanwhile, notes that hundreds of gallons of toxic water are still leaking every minute from other abandoned mines in the mountains. “These mines are draining as we speak,” Bruce Stover, director of Colorado’s abandoned mines reclamation programme, told the paper. “We had a disaster last week – a surging amount of water coming out. That same amount of water is coming out over six months and harming the Animas. That water is coming out 24/7.”

Flames over the Cuyahoga became a catalyst for a new era of environmental awareness in the United States, celebrated in the REM song named after it. “Let’s put our heads together and start a new country up/Underneath the river bed we burned the river down.”


There are no songs yet for the orange Animas and fouled San Juan. But both rivers are reminding America that it still has a lot of cleaning up to do before it can call itself environment proud.
The Independent
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Nigeria: IGR: Kwara directs tertiary institutions to open Single Treasury Accounts in pilot scheme


Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed

The Kwara State Government has directed all nine state-owned tertiary institutions in the state to open single treasury accounts for fees and other payments in a pilot exercise that will eventually extend to all revenue generating agencies in the state. They have also been directed to close all other revenue accounts maintained in commercial banks across the state.

The State Governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, who gave the directive during a meeting with heads of tertiary institutions and banks operating in the state, said the directive is to enable the government get a clear picture of the institutions’ finances as a prelude to the debut of the newly established Kwara State Internal Revenue Service (KSIRS), which is the sole body responsible for revenue collection and management in the state.

Alhaji Ahmed said the new directive also bars the institutions from receiving fees and other revenues in cash or maintaining any other bank accounst other than those approved by the state Accountant-General. According to him the move was designed to ensure efficiency in revenue collection and disbursement. The Governor assured that the institutions will continue to received budgeted funds from the state government as due and stressed that the government’s only desire was to ensure efficiency in revenue generation and management.

The state governor identified enhanced Internally generated revenue as the only way the state can survive the current economic crises in the country, adding that even if the Federal Government stops crude oil theft, Federal allocations are unlikely to return to previous levels as the sustained drop in global oil prices is likely to continue.

Continuing, he said the heads of tertiary institutions in the state have an opportunity to demonstrate their managerial skills as they migrate from inefficiency in revenue generation to levels of sufficiency, adding that all ministries, departments and agencies are also barred from opening bank accounts or obtaining bank loans without authorization from the Office of the Accountant General.

Governor Ahmed called on banks to key into the government’s new revenue drive and avoid any actions capable of contravening the new revenue law as the government will not hesitate to review its relationship with any commercial bank that attempts to sabotage the law.

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Crime: Member of infamous 'San Quentin 6' killed by fellow inmate




SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — An inmate involved in a bloody 1971 San Quentin escape attempt that left six dead has been killed by a fellow prisoner, corrections officials said Wednesday.


The slaying of Hugo Pinell, 71, triggered a riot Wednesday that grew to involve about 70 inmates at a maximum security prison east of Sacramento, said California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokeswoman Dana Simas.

"He was definitely the target," Simas said. She would not give more information about the alleged attacker for his own protection.

Once Pinell was attacked in a California State Prison, Sacramento, exercise yard by his fellow inmate, "everyone else joined in," Simas said, including members of multiple prison gangs.

Eleven other inmates were taken to an outside hospital to be treated for stab wounds, while other injured inmates were treated at the prison. No employees were harmed. Guards fired three shots and used pepper spray to break up the brawl.

Officials initially said about 100 inmates were involved and five hospitalized.

Forty-four years ago, Pinell helped slit the throats of San Quentin prison guards during an escape attempt that led to the deaths of three guards, two inmate trustees and escape ringleader George Jackson, who was fatally shot as he ran toward an outside prison wall, according to Associated Press stories.

Jackson was a Black Panther leader, founder of the Black Guerrilla Family prison gang, and author of the 1970 book "Soledad Brother," written after he and other inmates were accused in the slaying of a Soledad prison guard in January 1970.

Guards testified that Jackson started the escape attempt when he pulled a smuggled 9-mm pistol from under his six-inch-high Afro hairdo and fatally shot two correctional officers.

Correctional Officer Urbano Rubiaco Jr. survived to later testify that Pinell used a knife made of razor blades embedded in a toothbrush handle to slash Rubiaco's neck.

"He said 'I love you pigs' and then he cut my throat," Rubiaco said. He was one of two guards taken hostage by 25 inmates who were released from their cells during the escape attempt.

Correctional Sgt. Frank McCray testified that he and other guards were blindfolded, bound and piled into a cell, where McCray said his throat also was cut while other guards were shot and strangled.

A jury eventually acquitted Jackson's lawyer, Stephen Bingham, a grandson of former Connecticut Gov. Hiram Bingham, of smuggling in the gun.

Pinell and five other inmates became known as the San Quentin Six. Only one, 61-year-old William "Willie" Tate, remains in prison, at the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad.

The others were freed years ago: Fleeta Drumgo and Luis Talamantez in 1976, Johnny Larry Spain in 1991 and David Johnson in 1993.

Pinell was initially sent to prison in 1965 to serve a life sentence for a San Francisco rape. He was given a second life sentence for killing Correctional Officer R.J. McCarthey in 1971 at the Soledad prison.

He was given a third life sentence, all with the possibility of parole, for the San Quentin escape attempt after he was convicted of assaulting two correctional officers.

Prisoners remained locked in their cells as officers investigated Wednesday's disturbance.

The prison commonly called New Folsom houses more than 2,300 maximum-security inmates in Folsom, a suburb about 25 miles east of the state capital.
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Sport: Jordan's $6.4m suit begins


Michael Jordan leaving the courthouse in Chicago on Wednesday

Michael Jordan: Basketball legend brings $10m lawsuit over misuse of image rights by supermarket chain in 2009

The former Chicago Bulls ace has meticulously guarded his image since retiring from the sport in 2003

Only two customers ever bothered to redeem the $2 coupons for Rancher’s Reserve Steak from Dominick’s, a now defunct grocery chain in Chicago. Michael Jordan probably wasn’t one of them.

Still, the one-time Chicago Bulls basketball demi-God and first “billion dollar athlete” was displeased by the store’s promotion in a limited-edition issue of Sports Illustrated magazine commemorating his elevation to the basketball hall of fame six years ago. So displeased, in fact, that he decide to sue.

Safeway, the conglomerate that owned Dominick’s, accepted free advertising space in the Sports Illustrated special. Its crime? Congratulating Jordan, using his name, number (23), and declaring: “You are a cut above.” Jordan, or “His Airness”, who led the city’s Bulls to six championships with a ill-fated break to play professional baseball in the middle, was in a Chicago court as part of a $10m (£6.4m) lawsuit over Dominick’s promotion.

Michael Jordan’s name was misused in these 2009 adverts

A federal jury is this week due to answer the question: how much should Safeway, Dominick’s owner, pay for the ill-fated promotion? Sitting through five hours of jury selection in District Judge John Blakey’s court appeared to interest Jordan little on Tuesday. Only one potential juror raised a hand when asked whether they considered Jordan an “idol or personal hero”. The Chicago Tribunereported that one mother, a 31-year-old from Evanston, Illinois, told Jordan: “I’m not a basketball fan, sorry.”

However, many in Chicago and America still view Jordan, now a 53-year-old who spends much of his time on the golf course, as a hero. So many, in fact, that Jordan has earned far more in retirement than he did at the pinnacle of his basketball career.
Read more: 

Since retirement, Jordan has meticulously guarded his image. Increasingly litigious, the latest suit is viewed as an attempt to thwart companies that employ praise to slip references to him into their advertising. Opening statements are due in the case, which is viewed as a test of the market value of Jordan’s identity.

Michael Jordan is widely considered to be the greatest basketball player of all time (Getty)

US District Judge Milton Shadur ruled in 2012 that Safeway violated the Illinois Right of Publicity Act. Jordan himself is expected to testify about why he so carefully controls his brand this week.

But questions are also expected to arise about Jordan’s lucrative endorsement deals with multiple companies, including Nike, as the sides seek to establish the value of his image.

Jordan also sued the supermarket group Jewel-Osco for a similar ad congratulating him on his Hall of Fame induction. A lower court judge ruled in 2012 that the congratulatory message was constitutionally protected free speech and not a commercial, though an appellate court overturned that finding. That case is scheduled for trial in Chicago later this year.

Last month, another lawsuit filed against Qiaodan Sports in China failed to find the company had used names and images similar to Jordan’s. The Beijing Higher People’s Court, ruled against Jordan’s claim, the AFP reported.

He may be retired, but Jordan is keeping busy.
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Politics: Mixed reactions as El-Rufai sacks Balarabe Musa’s son


Nasir El-Rufai

MIXED reactions followed the sudden retirement of the eldest son of former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Ibrahim Balarabe Musa from Kaduna State Civil Service yesterday, when Governor Nasir El-Rufai ordered the sack of three permanent secretaries in the state.

Ibrahim, Balarabe Musa’s son, was the Permanent Secretary, Youth, Sports and Culture before his retirement, while the other two permanent secretaries also affected were that of Local Government, Adamu Makadi and the Accountant General, Ishaku Shekari.

The statement signed by the Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the Governor, Malam Samuel Aruwan, said that the state government has directed “the retirement of Adamu Makadi (permanent secretary, Local Government), Ibrahim Balarabe Musa (permanent secretary, Youth, Sports and Culture) and Ishaku K. Shekari (accountant-general).

“They were directed to hand over to the most senior director in their ministries. The governor has expressed the appreciation of the state for the services of the retired officials.”

When The Guardian contacted him for reaction, Ibrahim Balarabe Musa, who expressed shock and disbelief on the decision said, “see, I am just hearing about my retirement from you. I have not been contacted about it and I just left my office some few minutes ago.”

According to him, “I am now 33 years in service and the retirement age is 35 years. You can see what I am saying. That apart, the governor was in my office yesterday (Monday) and I took him round. He never expressed dissatisfaction and we related well all through. I cannot believe this story about my retirement, I will cross check please.”

However, the governor’s Media Aide, Aruwan, said that as part of the ongoing reorganisation of the public service for greater effectiveness, the Kaduna State Government has announced the appointment of a new Accountant-General, Alhaji Umar Hassan Waziri.

Aruwan added that, “The new accountant-general is a fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN). He studied Accounting at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, and graduated in 1995. Born in Zaria in 1971, Waziri has worked with Shell Petroleum Development Company as internal auditor.”

The Guardian NGR
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Terrorism: ISIL Egyptian affiliate ‘beheads Croatian hostage’ - The Guardian


Islamic State militants, killing a group of captured Ethiopian Christians in Libya.THE Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group’s Egypt affiliate, the Sinai Province, has published a still photo of the beheaded body of a Croatian hostage it had threatened to kill last week, the SITE monitoring service reported.

The photo included a caption that said “killing of the Croatian hostage, due to his country’s participation in the war against Islamic State, after the deadline expired”.

SITE said the photo was distributed on Twitter yesterday.

A spokesman from the Egyptian interior ministry’s press office said: “We have seen this news online but are currently making our own checks.

“If we confirm that it is indeed true, we will inform the media through a statement,” he told Reuters.

Last week, an online video purportedly from Sinai Province showed a man who identified himself as Tomislav Salopek who said the group would kill him in 48 hours if Muslim women in Egyptian jails were not freed.

Ardiseis Egypt, a unit of French firm CGG, which specialises in oil and gas geology, said last week one of its staff had been abducted on July 22 while travelling to Cairo.

Croatia’s foreign ministry said it could not confirm Salopek’s death. But the country’s prime minister, Zoran Milanovic, was due to address the nation later yesterday.

There has been no official confirmation of the death of Tomislav Salopek.

The photo circulated online yesterday shows a decapitated body in what appears to be desert, beside a knife driven into the sand and the black banner used by IS.

The caption says the Croatian, aged about 30, was killed “for his country’s participation in the war against Islamic State”.

Croatia’s foreign ministry said it could not confirm Mr Salopek’s death, but Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic will hold a news conferene at 17:00 (15:00 GMT). President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic also said she cancelled all her pre-arranged activities yesterday.
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Economy: Here’s What China’s Currency Devaluation Really Means

Everything you need to know in 1 graphic

In a surprise move, China announced this week devalued its currency, the yuan, relative to the dollar.

The move, done by adding supply of yuan to the global marketplace, is a step towards giving market forces more influence over China’s tightly-controlled currency. It will help Chinese businesses who do business in foreign countries like the United States by making their goods less expensive here. And a more free-floating yuan is also more likely to gain the elite status of global reserve currency, a goal Beijing badly wants to achieve.

But it’s unclear exactly how much control China is willing to cede over its currency. That uncertainty is taking a toll on global stock markets this week, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping more than 200 points Tuesday before partially recovering Wednesday.

For more on China’s currency devaluation and what it means, see TIME’s infographic below:

TIME
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Politics: Imo lawmakers plot speaker’s impeachment over ties with Okorocha

Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha

Members of the Imo State House of Assembly are at the verge of removing the Speaker, Hon. Acho Ihim, following Governor Rochas Okorocha’s alleged non-payment of the welfare packages of lawmakers since their inauguration in June.

The Speaking is being accused by the lawmakers of not concentrating on his duties, which include their welfare and that of the workers, but rather pursues a closer personal relationship with the executive arm.

No fewer than 16 of the 27-member House have, according to reports, indicated readiness to ensure the speaker is removed, if he continues to hobnob with the governor at the expense of members’ welfare even as such relationship could greatly threaten the independence of the legislature.

The speaker and the state governor allegedly travelled to the United States a few days ago for yet-to-be disclosed reasons.

Ihim is an All Progressives Congress (APC) second term member.

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APC: Party members will smile soon - Odigie-Oyegun


President Muhammadu Buhari

In spite of several official statements in the last few weeks by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) that Nigerians would not regret voting President Muhammadu Buhari in the last general election, THISDAY has gathered that some party leaders are actually running out of patience with the president.

A member of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the APC told THISDAY that even though Buhari’s policy statements and actions in the last 70 days may look appealing to some Nigerians and a segment of the international community, those who invested their huge financial resources and energy in the campaign that gave Buhari victory are not happy with him.

“Yes, President Buhari and our party want to fight corruption; we want to do things differently from the previous government led by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) but we must not forget that many well-meaning Nigerians and their friends put their money down for our elections. They want to be appreciated by one way or the other,’’ a member of NWC from the South-west who pleaded anonymity told THISDAY in Abuja.

He added that: “The president may have good intentions for our country going by his current efforts to reposition our nation, but good politics goes beyond fighting corruption. There are other things he can start doing that will benefit our party members and Nigerians as a whole, along with fighting corruption.”

The APC leader stated that the “growing impatience” against the APC-led federal government, in spite of Buhari’s efforts to right the wrongs of the past, is a “strong indication” that Nigerians want to see economic programmes that will directly better their lives along with the fight against corruption.

The APC leader said: “Look, two governorship elections are coming up in Bayelsa and Kogi States, and with APC controlling the centre, we thought the elections would be a walk-over for us. But that is not the case, as many of our leaders and their followers are not happy with us.

“As the president continues to preach the gospel against corruption, there is mounting fear that those who invested hugely in our last general election might not get anything. For many of us, this is not good politics at all.’’

However, the National Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, said it was legitimate and common for people to expect appointments and get rewarded with board positions after elections, but denied any resentment or growing impatience within the party leadership.

“There is nothing like resentment within the party leadership; there is nothing like that at all. Yes, people want appointments and other things. And those appointments will come in the next one month or so. Those complaining are doing so for their selfish interests,” Oyegun added.

He said the party and Buhari are unfolding ongoing policies and programmes that would benefit the nation in the long run.

THIS DAY
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Former President Carter says he has cancer


(Reuters) - Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said on Wednesday that recent liver surgery revealed he had cancer that had spread to other parts of his body.

"I will be rearranging my schedule as necessary so I can undergo treatment by physicians at Emory Healthcare," Carter, 90, said in a statement. "A more complete public statement will be made when facts are known, possibly next week."

Carter, a Democrat, served as the 39th president from 1977 to 1981 after defeating Republican incumbent Gerald Ford. He was defeated for re-election in 1980 by Republican Ronald Reagan.

The Carter family has a history of pancreatic cancer, including his parents, two sisters and younger brother Billy Carter who all died from the disease.

Carter told the New York Times in 2007 that he and other relatives had given blood for genetic studies seeking to help doctors diagnose the disease.

Asked why he has escaped the disease for so long while it devastated the rest of his family he blamed smoking. "The only difference between me and my father and my siblings was that I never smoked a cigarette," said Carter, former governor of Georgia and a state senator. "My daddy smoked regularly. All of them smoked."

Carter's health became a matter of concern in recent months after he cut short a trip to Guyana in May to observe national elections. At the time, the Carter Center in Atlanta said only that he had returned to his home state of Georgia after "not feeling well."

The Carter Center said last week that he had undergone elective surgery at Atlanta's Emory University Hospital to remove a small mass in his liver and his prognosis was excellent.

Democratic President Barack Obama, who is vacationing on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, spoke with Carter on Wednesday "to wish him a full and speedy recovery," White House spokesman Eric Schultz said.

"Jimmy, you're as resilient as they come, and along with the rest of America, we are rooting for you," Obama said in a statement issued by the White House.

Republican Georgia Governor Nathan Deal and his wife issued a statement saying Carter was "in their prayers as he goes through treatment."

Carter also received words of sympathy and encouragement via Twitter from former CNN host Larry King: "We go back many years. Stay strong Mr. President."

A Nobel Peace Prize winner and activist on a range of issues from global democracy to women and children's rights, as well as affordable housing, Carter published his latest book last month, titled "A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety."

In July, he gave a wide-ranging interview to Reuters Editor-at-Large Sir Harold Evans on his life from his childhood on a Georgia peanut farm to his presidency. (http://tmsnrt.rs/1f8BND2)

Carter recalled growing up in a home without running water or electricity, at a time when he said the daily wage was $1 for a man and 75 cents for a woman, and a loaf of bread cost 5 cents.

He said the civil rights movement led to important progress toward racial equality in the United States, but lamented "there’s still a great prejudice in police forces against black people and obviously some remnants of extreme racism.”

(Reporting by Letitia Stein in Tampa and David Adams in Miami; Additional reporting by David Beasley in Atlanta; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Mohammad Zargham)
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Opinion: Before this ‘Change’ is become a problem - by Clem Aguiyi


Kaduna Gov. Nasir El-Rufai

An email was posted to me last week by someone who wanted to know my honest thoughts on Gov. Nasir El-rufai of Kaduna State, Mr. Nnamdi Kalu of Radio Biafra and PMB’s promise of ‘Change’. El Rufai, in my personal view is a sane radical and statesman, he isn’t perfect and no one is perfect especially in politics.

I have had cause to disagree with his politics and some of his anti- Semitic rhetoric, and I believe it’s within my right to do so but I concede at any given time that he is clever, cerebral, forthright, sincere and generally a good man. He is one of the few politicians that I believe understand purposeful leadership and is prepared to take the risk of leadership.

As Governor, I believe he is a blessing to Kaduna State. The state is lucky to have him replace Yero as Governor because Ramalan Yero was simply clueless. I will be disappointed and shocked if Kaduna did not reclaim her lost glory as the epicenter of Northern civilization under his guide and watch. I honestly think he has a future in politics and will be one of the biggest revelations of this era.

On Nnamdi Kalu of Radio Biafra: Several people before now had called my attention to the Radio, requesting that I listen to the station. I regret that I never had the opportunity to be a fan of the station before the Federal Government jammed its signals, an action I believe is an inflammatory and provocative assault on free speech, an assault on the right of the people to petition there government for a redress of grievances and more about the hypocrisy of the state as jamming the signals of the radio did not address the root of the people’s grievances.

The email I received last week prompted me to download and listen to some of Kalu’s interviews and radio talks. I find Nnamdi as a young man that is amiable but fiery who does not pretend to come with peace. He has credible facts and figures and tells the truth that the State will want to suppress. I support his protest against a system that targets a section of the country, now characterized as the 5 per cent who must live with the political reality of not being fairly accommodated in the Nigerian project.

The current government despite the promise of Change has carried on as if the lives, interests and future of the people of South- South and South East do not matter.

So far the President has observed the principle of Federal Character in breach. He has continued to appoint mostly people of his ethnic region or religion into positions of trust on the pretext that he has the executive leeway to choose only people from his village to move Nigeria forward as if the constitution he swore to uphold does not matter.

To be born a Southerner in Nigeria means you must live and suffer injustice and it doesn’t matter your age. How will a deprived teenager refused admission into Federal Colleges because of the accident of his birth grow to love, fight and die for Nigeria.

For many years, the Federal Government has promulgated and implemented cut off marks for all candidates seeking admission into Federal Government colleges – a policy that tends to promote mediocrity at the expense of merit. Under the cut-off mark policy Igbo students from Anambra and Imo are deliberately targeted and have continued to suffer the negative impacts of the sponsored cut off marks and quota system. They were discriminated against without reservations by assigning to them high cut off marks when compared to others.

For instance to be admitted into Federal Colleges Igbo students from Anambra and Imo were assigned as high as 139 and 138 cut off points respectively for both male and female whereas Zamfara and Taraba are assigned as low as 4 and 3 points respectively. It is this type of inequality and injustice that is breeding thousands of Nnamdi Kalu who sees Nigeria as a zoo.

The Federal Government has no business suppressing voices in Biafra whereas it is ready to negotiate with Boko Haram and give them anything they ask for.

Nnamdi Kalu like every average Southerner that has suffered genocide, pogrom and marginalization demands for nothing but, freedom, justice , fairness and equality as enshrined and guaranteed by the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria which has continued to elude them.

Should I meet this proud owner of Radio Biafra today, I will decorate him with roses for his courage to speak the truth to power on behalf of the oppressed people even though I disagree with his rhetoric on violence which I consider counterproductive and not a way to solve any problem.

I don’t accept his assertion that there is no alternative to Biafra or that if we don’t get Biafra, no human being will remain alive in Nigeria ; I don’t agree that we shall turn everybody into corpses; or that we shall go and buy our coffins or that everything shall die because of Biafra. Biafra is not a grave yard and we cannot forge a nation with skulls and bones; I don’t accept that everything will die if there is no Biafra; I don’t also accept that there is no compromise to Biafra; the alternative to Biafra is peace, love, justice, fairness and equity. Kalu’s violent rhetoric distracts from the real issue.

We have wasted enough human blood for the sake of Nigeria and we cannot allow violence and violent behaviors to silence the voices of peace, justice and equity which is the main purpose of our struggle for freedom. I don’t accept that either the blood of the Igbo, Hausa or Yoruba should be wasted for the pretentious unity of Nigeria or for its dismemberment.

Anytime the different components of the country are tired of living together and can no longer co-exist in peace, one option I will readily support is peaceful dissolution of the inconvenient marriage. On the wing of Buhari’s promise of ‘Change’; I am sorry to say that this ‘Change’ is fast becoming a problem.


Written by Clem Aguiyi
Posted by Unknown at Thursday, August 13, 2015 No comments:
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U.S. military helicopter crashes off Japan’s Okinawa, seven hurt

A UNITED STATES (U.S.) military helicopter crashed in waters off the Japanese southern island of Okinawa during a training mission yesterday, injuring seven people and prompting Japan’s government to demand a probe and steps to prevent a recurrence.

The U.S. Army H-60 helicopter was damaged during a “hard deck landing” aboard the USNS Red Cloud about 20 miles east of Okinawa, the U.S. Forces, Japan said.

The helicopter is currently on the deck of the USNS Red Cloud and the injured were transported to the U.S. Naval Hospital at Camp Foster, it said in a statement.

The accident comes as Japan’s central government begins talks with Okinawa’s governor over contentious plans to relocate a U.S. Marines air base to a less crowded part of the island, host to the bulk of U.S. military forces in Japan.

Residents of Okinawa, the site of bloody battles between U.S. and Japanese forces near the end of World War Two, have long objected to tens of thousands of U.S. troops and U.S. military installations on 18 per cent of their island.

Many residents associate the U.S. bases with accidents, crime and pollution.

Japan’s central government earlier this month suspended construction of a replacement facility for the U.S. Marines’ Futenma air base for a month to give time for talks between Tokyo and island authorities opposed to the base.

The island’s governor, Takeshi Onaga, won office last year largely on his stand against U.S. bases, and has accused Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of looking down on the island’s people.

Chief Cabinet Secretary, Yoshihide Suga, met Onaga to discuss the issue. Onaga repeated his call for a reduction of the base-hosting burden, saying “it is hard for people living near the bases.”

“This accident is extremely regrettable,” Suga told reporters after a meeting with the governor. “The government has strongly requested the U.S. to swiftly provide information, look into causes and prevent a recurrence.”

The suspension of construction had been intended to take the emotive issue off the table while the government pushes sensitive security bills through parliament.

The legislation, which could allow Japanese troops to fight overseas for the first time since World War Two, has passed parliament’s lower house and is being debated in the upper chamber, but it has dragged down Abe’s support rate to less than 40 per cent because of public concerns over the policy shift.
Posted by Unknown at Thursday, August 13, 2015 No comments:
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Business: China yuan guiding rate set lower for third day

The lower yuan is likely to help Chinese exports
China has set the guiding rate for its yuan currency lower for third consecutive day.

Thursday's rate was set 1% down against the dollar, a smaller margin than the shock cuts earlier in the week.

The bank had on Tuesday announced it would start setting the daily rate based partly on the previous day's trading, bringing the yuan closer to a free-floating currency.

The move triggered concerns over a currency war to boost China's exports.

Recent economic data had seen a decline in exports, adding to the worries that the world's second largest economy was headed for a prolonged slowing of economic growth.

A weaker yen will make products cheaper abroad, making the country's companies more competitive on international markets.

The Thursday midpoint rate set by the People's Bank of China was 6.4010 yuan for $1, a 1.1% rise from the previous day's 6.3306.

The midpoint is a guiding rate, from which trade can rise or fall 2% during the day.
Posted by Unknown at Thursday, August 13, 2015 No comments:
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Opinion: Who will federate Nigeria? - By Reno Omokri

It has been proven time and again that if your body language conflicts with your words, people subliminally believe the body language not the words.

What then are Nigeria’s body language and what are her words.

Nigeria’s words, especially from the government at the center, are that we are a Federal Republic of Nigeria with a Federal Government. From that pedestal, the Federal Government rightly advocates for unity amongst the multiple ethnic nationalities in Nigeria.

Right from the cradle, the official word communication we get from the government is that we are one people and it does not matter where you come from.

As impressionable children, we believe those words and it works fine until we start formal education and that is when the words begin to conflict with the behavior.

At the Local Education District’s primary school, the first thing the officials and their paper work want to find out is not whether you know your ABCs or your 123s, no! They want to know where you come from. Are you an indigene or a settler?

If you are an indigene you have easier access to primary schools and your school fees are likely to be free, but if you are not an indigene of the state, your parents may have to consider enrolling you in a private school as you might be faced with several obstacles in your bid to enroll in a public school.

But then, some may still believe the words that where you come from does not matter as long as you are a citizen of Nigeria. In your formative years, you really want to believe that.

And then it is time for secondary school and your parents enroll you for the Common Entrance Examinations. You take it and wait for the results to come out and when they do you rush to your best friends house. ‘Guess what, I scored 98 in my exams’. What did you score’? He responds, ‘I scored 59′.

Then, it gets interesting. You cannot get admission into the Secondary School of your choice though you scored 98 points, however, your friend who scores 59 gets in.

‘Daddy, how could this have happened’ you asked your dad, who does his best to explain but ends up stammering, unable to find the words to explain the manufactured reality where 2 + 2 = sometimes 5 and sometimes 7 but never 4.

Your young mind tries to reconcile the reality you are faced with with what you have been told all your life up to that point.

Slowly but surely, the incongruence between Nigeria’s words and her body language begins to take its toll on your psyche.

Well, you end up going to a school that was not your first, second or even third choice.

And then you finish secondary school and apply for a place at any of the public universities through the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board’s University Matriculation Examination (UME) and it is the same old story.

Your cut off mark is specific to your state and not specific to your intelligence.

By this time, you are no longer surprised at Nigeria. Your cynicism is gradually reaching the point of no return. But then the best is yet to come.

After spending six years studying a four year course (ASUU strikes are more common than thunder strikes in Nigeria) you graduate, serve your country for the mandatory one year National Youth Service Corp and then try your luck with the civil service.

You go to your commissioner at the Federal Civil Service Commission’s Head Office in Abuja where you find out that your state has no more quotas.

At this point your understanding of Nigeria is complete. You know where you fit. You know the cards Nigeria has handed to you. From that point on when you hear the current set of leaders mouthing out the platitudes that ‘it does not matter where you come from in Nigeria’ you roll your eyes and mutter a barely audible puh-leeze!

You are now wise to the fact that their moral compass does not always point in the same direction.

This is the reality of Nigeria. I can say this because I am not angling for any political position. I am content with where God has put me. If anybody is foolhardy enough to investigate me for financial misappropriation I will open all my accounts to them.

Many others know that this is the truth, but because it is not politically expedient, they will never say it.

We keep on deceiving ourselves that Nigeria is a genuine Federation and that where you come from does not matter but we all know that is not true.

A friend of mine had a case with the police and he would go to his local police station only to be told they were waiting for Abuja.

That same scenario plays out itself in multiple government agencies be it the Corporate Affairs Commission, or the Nigerian Immigration Service.

Governors are deceived into believing they are some sort of Chief Security Officers of their state when they cannot even command the least police officer in their domain.

The central Government does not even trust the states with vehicle registration.


The Senate

Even the term states is a misnomer when applied to Nigerian states because how can you call an area a state when its financial dependence and literally its existence is tied to the central government?

A state that does not have the power to exploit minerals within its domain is no state. Nigeria’s states are little more than liaison offices of the Central government if truth be told.

States that do not have any ability to enforce their state laws beyond an appeal to a central police are no states. They are completely at the mercy of the center.

Go through our federal constitution and search out where a state governor is entitled to police protection. It will surprise you that there is no such provision in Nigeria’s constitution!

State governors merely enjoy the protection they do at the mercy and pleasure of the President.

If the President chooses, he can legally withhold police protection from a governor and no court of law can compel him to restore it. It’s his privilege and not the governor’s right.

Even a unitary system like the United Kingdom does not function in this manner. Local boroughs in the UK have more powers and authority than a Nigerian state not to talk of towns in the United States of America.

Yes, it might surprise you that every American town has its own police!

And it did not always use to be this way in Nigeria.

Most Nigerians do not have a sense of history and are surprised to learn that before the military struck in 1966, the regions enjoyed many of the freedoms that today’s states have not even began to dream of.

Yes!

The regions also had their own police. They were known as Native Authority police. It was not until the 1960s that these police formations were first regionalised and then nationalized.

But most surprising to modern day Nigerians is the fact that until the military coup of 1966, it was the regions that gave money to the Central government not vice versa!

As a matter of fact, each region kept 50% of its revenue and paid 25% to the Central government then paid the last 25% to a common account which was then shared amongst the three regions (four after the creation of the Midwest Region in August of 1963).

Our Founding Fathers knew what a truly Federal Government should look like and bequeathed that to us at independence. It is no mistake that Nigeria made her most visible economic progress during the years between 1957 when two of the regions attained self government and 1966 when the military struck and introduced a unitary system which they later Christened a Federal Government while leaving the unitary structures in place till today.

I am sure Sir Ahmadu Bello, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Owelle Nnamdi Azikiwe would be turning in their grave every time they hear this system of governance being called a Federal Government.

Alas, we prefer to keep pretending rather than look ourselves in the face and say the truth to each other.

We import food because our population exploded after the discovery of oil. Now that a world without oil is becoming more than a possibility, do we have the courage to ask ourselves what would happen to us?

The United States has reached a deal with Iran and it is only a matter of time before Iran would be allowed to sell its oil to the West without restrictions.

What does this mean for Nigeria? What does this mean for the Organization Of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC?

Reverend Thomas Malthus in his magnum opus, An Essay on the Principle of Population, warned of what would happen in a nation where population growth grew faster than her resources. Even worse is what could happen when those resources face a sudden loss of value rather than a gradual one.

But we keep pretending that all is well without considering that if the mould is not reshaped it will keep producing the same vessel no matter whose hand pours the fillers into the mould.

Yet we keep pretending.

How long will that last? Your guess is as good as mine.
Reno Omokri is the founder of the Mind of Christ Christian Center. Formerly Special Assistant on New Media to President Jonathan of Nigeria, he is author of Shunpiking: No Shortcuts to God, and the new book Why Jesus Wept.
Posted by Unknown at Thursday, August 13, 2015 No comments:
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ISIS Enshrines a Theology of Rape - NT Report


Claiming the Quran’s support, the Islamic State codifies sex slavery in conquered regions of Iraq and Syria and uses the practice as a recruiting tool.

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI
AUGUST 13, 2015


QADIYA, Iraq — In the moments before he raped the 12-year-old girl, the Islamic State fighter took the time to explain that what he was about to do was not a sin. Because the preteen girl practiced a religion other than Islam, the Quran not only gave him the right to rape her — it condoned and encouraged it, he insisted.


He bound her hands and gagged her. Then he knelt beside the bed and prostrated himself in prayer before getting on top of her.

When it was over, he knelt to pray again, bookending the rape with acts of religious devotion.

“I kept telling him it hurts — please stop,” said the girl, whose body is so small an adult could circle her waist with two hands. “He told me that according to Islam he is allowed to rape an unbeliever. He said that by raping me, he is drawing closer to God,” she said in an interview alongside her family in a refugee camp here, to which she escaped after 11 months of captivity.

The systematic rape of women and girls from the Yazidi religious minority has become deeply enmeshed in the organization and the radical theology of the Islamic State in the year since the group announced it was reviving slavery as an institution. Interviews with 21 women and girls who recently escaped the Islamic State, as well as an examination of the group’s official communications, illuminate how the practice has been enshrined in the group’s core tenets.

The trade in Yazidi women and girls has created a persistent infrastructure, with a network of warehouses where the victims are held, viewing rooms where they are inspected and marketed, and a dedicated fleet of buses used to transport them.

A total of 5,270 Yazidis were abducted last year, and at least 3,144 are still being held, according to community leaders. To handle them, the Islamic State has developed a detailed bureaucracy of sex slavery, including sales contracts notarized by the ISIS-run Islamic courts. And the practice has become an established recruiting tool to lure men from deeply conservative Muslim societies, where casual sex is taboo and dating is forbidden.

A growing body of internal policy memos and theological discussions has established guidelines for slavery, including a lengthy how-to manual issued by the Islamic State Research and Fatwa Department just last month. Repeatedly, the ISIS leadership has emphasized a narrow and selective reading of the Quran and other religious rulings to not only justify violence, but also to elevate and celebrate each sexual assault as spiritually beneficial, even virtuous.

“Every time that he came to rape me, he would pray,” said F, a 15-year-old girl who was captured on the shoulder of Mount Sinjar one year ago and was sold to an Iraqi fighter in his 20s. Like some others interviewed by The New York Times, she wanted to be identified only by her first initial because of the shame associated with rape.

“He kept telling me this is ibadah,” she said, using a term from Islamic scripture meaning worship.

“He said that raping me is his prayer to God. I said to him, ‘What you’re doing to me is wrong, and it will not bring you closer to God.’ And he said, ‘No, it’s allowed. It’s halal,’” said the teenager, who escaped in April with the help of smugglers after being enslaved for nearly nine months.
Calculated Conquest

The Islamic State’s formal introduction of systematic sexual slavery dates to Aug. 3, 2014, when their fighters invaded the villages on the southern flank of Mount Sinjar, a craggy massif of dun-colored rock in northern Iraq.

Its valleys and ravines are home to the Yazidis, a tiny religious minority who represent less than 1.5 percent of Iraq’s estimated population of 34 million.

The offensive on the mountain came just two months after the fall of Mosul, the second-largest city in Iraq. At first, it appeared that the subsequent advance on the mountain was just another attempt to extend the territory controlled by Islamic State fighters.

Almost immediately, there were signs that their aim this time was different.

Survivors say that men and women were separated within the first hour of their capture. Adolescent boys were told to lift up their shirts, and if they had armpit hair, they were directed to join their older brothers and fathers. In village after village, the men and older boys were driven or marched to nearby fields, where they were forced to lie down in the dirt and sprayed with automatic fire.

The women, girls and children, however, were hauled off in open-bed trucks.

“The offensive on the mountain was as much a sexual conquest as it was for territorial gain,” said Matthew Barber, a University of Chicago expert on the Yazidi minority. He was in Sinjar when the onslaught began last summer and helped create a foundation that provides psychological support for the escapees, who number more than 2,000, according to community activists.

Fifteen-year-old F says her family of nine was trying to escape, speeding up mountain switchbacks, when their aging Opel overheated. She, her mother, and her sisters — 14, 7, and 4 years old — were helplessly standing by their stalled car when a convoy of heavily armed Islamic State fighters encircled them.

“Right away, the fighters separated the men from the women,” she said. She, her mother and sisters were first taken in trucks to the nearest town on Mount Sinjar. “There, they separated me from my mom. The young, unmarried girls were forced to get into buses.”

The buses were white, with a painted stripe next to the word “Hajj,” suggesting that the Islamic State had commandeered Iraqi government buses used to transport pilgrims for the annual pilgrimage to Mecca. So many Yazidi women and girls were loaded inside F’s bus that they were forced to sit on each other’s laps, she said.

Once the bus headed out, they noticed that the windows were blocked with curtains, an accouterment that appeared to have been added because the fighters planned to transport large numbers of women who were not covered in burqas or head scarves.

F’s account, including the physical description of the bus, the placement of the curtains and the manner in which the women were transported, is echoed by a dozen other female victims interviewed for this article. They described a similar set of circumstances even though they were kidnapped on different days and in locations miles apart.


Sunset over Dohuk, in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq. Islamic State militants have conquered large areas of Iraq, and the systematic rape of women and girls from the Yazidi religious minority has become deeply enmeshed in the group's organization and theology.

F says she was driven to the Iraqi city of Mosul some six hours away, where they herded them into the Galaxy Wedding Hall. Other groups of women and girls were taken to a palace from the Saddam Hussein era, the Badoosh prison compound and the Directory of Youth building in Mosul, recent escapees said. And in addition to Mosul, women were herded into elementary schools and municipal buildings in the Iraqi towns of Tal Afar, Solah, Ba’aj and Sinjar City.

They would be held in confinement, some for days, some for months. Then, inevitably, they were loaded into the same fleet of buses again before being sent in smaller groups to Syria or to other locations inside Iraq, where they were bought and sold for sex.

“It was 100 percent preplanned,” said Khider Domle, a Yazidi community activist who maintains a detailed database of the victims. “I spoke by telephone to the first family who arrived at the Directory of Youth in Mosul, and the hall was already prepared for them. They had mattresses, plates and utensils, food and water for hundreds of people.”

Detailed reports by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International reach the same conclusion about the organized nature of the sex trade.

In each location, survivors say Islamic State fighters first conducted a census of their female captives.

Inside the voluminous Galaxy banquet hall, F sat on the marble floor, squeezed between other adolescent girls. In all she estimates there were over 1,300 Yazidi girls sitting, crouching, splayed out and leaning against the walls of the ballroom, a number that is confirmed by several other women held in the same location.

They each described how three Islamic State fighters walked in, holding a register. They told the girls to stand. Each one was instructed to state her first, middle and last name, her age, her hometown, whether she was married, and if she had children.

For two months, F was held inside the Galaxy hall. Then one day, they came and began removing young women. Those who refused were dragged out by their hair, she said.

In the parking lot the same fleet of Hajj buses was waiting to take them to their next destination, said F. Along with 24 other girls and young women, the 15-year-old was driven to an army base in Iraq. It was there in the parking lot that she heard the word “sabaya” for the first time.

“They laughed and jeered at us, saying ‘You are our sabaya.’ I didn’t know what that word meant,” she said. Later on, the local Islamic State leader explained it meant slave.

“He told us that Taus Malik” — one of seven angels to whom the Yazidis pray — “is not God. He said that Taus Malik is the devil and that because you worship the devil, you belong to us. We can sell you and use you as we see fit.”

The Islamic State’s sex trade appears to be based solely on enslaving women and girls from the Yazidi minority. As yet, there has been no widespread campaign aimed at enslaving women from other religious minorities, said Samer Muscati, the author of the recent Human Rights Watch report. That assertion was echoed by community leaders, government officials and other human rights workers.

Mr. Barber, of the University of Chicago, said that the focus on Yazidis was likely because they are polytheists, with an oral tradition rather than a written scripture. In the Islamic State’s eyes that puts them on the fringe of despised unbelievers, even more than Christians and Jews, who are considered to have some limited protections under the Quran as fellow “People of the Book.”

In Kojo, one of the southernmost villages on Mount Sinjar and among the farthest away from escape, residents decided to stay, believing they would be treated as the Christians of Mosul had months earlier. On Aug. 15, 2014, the Islamic State ordered the residents to report to a school in the center of town.

When she got there, 40-year-old Aishan Ali Saleh found a community elder negotiating with the Islamic State, asking if they could be allowed to hand over their money and gold in return for safe passage.

The fighters initially agreed and laid out a blanket, where Ms. Saleh placed her heart-shaped pendant and her gold rings, while the men left crumpled bills.


Aishan Ali Saleh, 40, at a refugee camp on the outskirts of Dohuk. She had lived in Kojo, one of the southernmost villages on Mount Sinjar, which was overrun by Islamic State fighters.

Instead of letting them go, the fighters began shoving the men outside, bound for death.

Sometime later, a fleet of cars arrived and the women, girls and children were driven away.
The Market

Months later, the Islamic State made clear in their online magazine that their campaign of enslaving Yazidi women and girls had been extensively preplanned.

“Prior to the taking of Sinjar, Shariahstudents in the Islamic State were tasked to research the Yazidis,” said the English-language article, headlined “The Revival of Slavery Before the Hour,” which appeared in the October issue of Dabiq.

The article made clear that for the Yazidis, there was no chance to pay a tax known as jizya to be set free, “unlike the Jews and Christians.”

“After capture, the Yazidi women and children were then divided according to the Shariah amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated in the Sinjar operations, after one fifth of the slaves were transferred to the Islamic State’s authority to be divided” as spoils, the article said.

In much the same way as specific Bible passages were used centuries later to support the slave trade in the United States, the Islamic State cites specific verses or stories in the Quran or else in the Sunna, the traditions based on the sayings and deeds of the Prophet Muhammad, to justify their human trafficking, experts say.

Scholars of Islamic theology disagree, however, on the proper interpretation of these verses, and on the divisive question of whether Islam truly sanctions slavery.

Many argue that slavery figures in Islamic scripture in much the same way that it figures in the Bible — as a reflection of the period in antiquity in which the religion was born.

“In the milieu in which the Quran arose, there was a widespread practice of men having sexual relationships with unfree women,” said Kecia Ali, an associate professor of religion at Boston University and the author of a book on slavery in early Islam. “It wasn’t a particular religious institution. It was just how people did things.”

Cole Bunzel, a scholar of Islamic theology at Princeton University, disagrees, pointing to the numerous references to the phrase “Those your right hand possesses” in the Quran, which for centuries has been interpreted to mean female slaves. He also points to the corpus of Islamic jurisprudence, which continues into the modern era and which he says includes detailed rules for the treatment of slaves.

“There is a great deal of scripture that sanctions slavery,” said Mr. Bunzel, the author of a research paper published by the Brookings Institution on the ideology of the Islamic State. “You can argue that it is no longer relevant and has fallen into abeyance. ISIS would argue that these institutions need to be revived, because that is what the Prophet and his companions did.”

The youngest, prettiest women and girls were bought in the first weeks after their capture. Others — especially older, married women — described how they were transported from location to location, spending months in the equivalent of human holding pens, until a prospective buyer bid on them.

Their captors appeared to have a system in place, replete with its own methodology of inventorying the women, as well as their own lexicon. Women and girls were referred to as “Sabaya,” followed by their name. Some were bought by wholesalers, who photographed and gave them numbers, to advertise them to potential buyers.

Osman Hassan Ali, a Yazidi businessman who has successfully smuggled out numerous Yazidi women, said he posed as a buyer in order to be sent the photographs. He shared a dozen images, each one showing a Yazidi woman sitting in a bare room on a couch, facing the camera with a blank, unsmiling expression. On the edge of the photograph is written in Arabic, “Sabaya No. 1,” “Sabaya No. 2,” and so on.

Buildings where the women were collected and held sometimes included a viewing room.

“When they put us in the building, they said we had arrived at the ‘Sabaya Market,’” said one 19-year-old victim, whose first initial is I. “I understood we were now in a slave market.”


A woman, who said she was raped by Islamic State militants, in a refugee camp in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq.

She estimated there were at least 500 other unmarried women and girls in the multistory building, with the youngest among them being 11 years old. When the buyers arrived, the girls were taken one by one into a separate room.

“The emirs sat against the wall and called us by name. We had to sit in a chair facing them. You had to look at them, and before you went in, they took away our scarves and anything we could have used to cover ourselves,” she said.

“When it was my turn, they made me stand four times. They made me turn around.”

The captives were also forced to answer intimate questions, including reporting the exact date of their last menstrual cycle. They realized that the fighters were trying to determine whether they were pregnant, in keeping with a Shariah rule stating that a man cannot have intercourse with his female slave if she is pregnant.
Property of ISIS

The use of sex slavery by the Islamic State initially surprised even the group’s most ardent supporters, many of whom sparred with journalists online after the first reports of systematic rape.

The Islamic State’s leadership has repeatedly sought to justify the practice to its internal audience.

After the initial article in Dabiq in October, the issue came up in the publication again this year, in an editorial in May that expressed the writer’s hurt and dismay at the fact that some of the group’s own sympathizers had questioned the institution of slavery.

“What really alarmed me was that some of the Islamic State’s supporters started denying the matter as if the soldiers of the Khilafah had committed a mistake or evil,” the author wrote. “I write this while the letters drip of pride,’’ he said. “We have indeed raided and captured the kafirahwomen and drove them like sheep by the edge of the sword.” Kafirah refers to infidels.

In a pamphlet published online in December, the Research and Fatwa Department of the Islamic State detailed best practices, including explaining that slaves belong to the estate of the fighter who bought them and therefore can be willed to another man and disposed of just like any other property after his death.

Recent escapees describe an intricate bureaucracy surrounding their captivity, with their status as a slave registered in a contract. When their owner would sell them to another buyer, a new contract would be drafted, like transferring a property deed. At the same time, slaves can also be set free, and fighters are promised a heavenly reward for doing so.

Though rare, this has created one avenue of escape for victims.

A 25-year-old victim who escaped last month, identified by her first initial, A, described how one day her Libyan master handed her a laminated piece of paper. He explained that he had finished his training as a suicide bomber and was planning to blow himself up, and was therefore setting her free.


A woman from the village of Tojo washing dishes in a refugee camp in Kurdistan. She was held by the Islamic State from last August until June and says she was sexually abused.

Labeled a “Certificate of Emancipation,” the document was signed by the judge of the western province of the Islamic State. The Yazidi woman presented it at security checkpoints as she left Syria to return to Iraq, where she rejoined her family in July.

The Islamic State recently made clear that sex with Christian and Jewish women captured in battle is also permissible, according to a new 34-page manual issued this summer by the terror group’s Research and Fatwa Department.

Just about the only prohibition is having sex with a pregnant slave, and the manual describes how an owner must wait for a female captive to have her menstruating cycle, in order to “make sure there is nothing in her womb,” before having intercourse with her. Of the 21 women and girls interviewed for this article, among the only ones who had not been raped were the women who were already pregnant at the moment of their capture, as well as those who were past menopause.

Beyond that, there appears to be no bounds to what is sexually permissible. Child rape is explicitly condoned: “It is permissible to have intercourse with the female slave who hasn’t reached puberty, if she is fit for intercourse,” according to a translation by the Middle East Media Research Institute of a pamphlet published on Twitter last December.



A 25-year-old Yazidi woman showed a “Certificate of Emancipation” given to her by a Libyan who had enslaved her. He explained that he had finished his training as a suicide bomber and was planning to blow himself up, and was therefore setting her free.

One 34-year-old Yazidi woman, who was bought and repeatedly raped by a Saudi fighter in the Syrian city of Shadadi, described how she fared better than the second slave in the household — a 12-year-old girl who was raped for days on end despite heavy bleeding.

“He destroyed her body. She was badly infected. The fighter kept coming and asking me, ‘Why does she smell so bad?’ And I said, she has an infection on the inside, you need to take care of her,” the woman said.

Unmoved, he ignored the girl’s agony, continuing the ritual of praying before and after raping the child.

“I said to him, ‘She’s just a little girl,’ ” the older woman recalled. “And he answered: ‘No. She’s not a little girl. She’s a slave. And she knows exactly how to have sex.’ ’’

“And having sex with her pleases God,” he said.

New York Times
Posted by Unknown at Thursday, August 13, 2015 No comments:
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