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You are here: Home / 2015 / Archives for September 2015

Archives for September 2015

Can one terrible image change the direction of a humanitarian crisis?

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Newspapers report the death of Aylan Kurdi. EPA/Andy Rain

Newspapers report the death of Aylan Kurdi. EPA/Andy Rain

by Gabriel Moreno Esparza, The Conversation

The harrowing picture of a man carrying the corpse of a drowned boy on Bodrum beach published by numerous news organisations could be the defining image of a globally significant event.

As a piece of photojournalism it has already made an impact in a way Daniel Etter’s moving picture of a crying father holding his children after landing on Kos beach did not. Etter’s piece was said to have “brought the world to tears” and has been used for fundraising . It was certainly example of how photojournalism is “at its best when it embodies our ability to benefit the issues and people with whom we connect“.

But the images of the little boy, taken by Nilüfer Demir, a photographer for the Turkish news agency Doğan, seem to have touched a deeper nerve.

We’ve since been told that the boy’s name was Aylan Kurdi and that his mother and brother also died trying to get to Europe, while his father survived.

The Huffington Post reports that this image in particular has prompted several British opposition politicians to call for action. “Bodrum” quickly became a top trending topic on Facebook, while the hashtags #refugeeswelcome and #SyriaCrisis were the centre of attention on Twitter.

Why it’s different

It remains to be seen whether the image coincides with a shift in attitudes toward what is being labelled as the worst humanitarian crisis since World War II or whether it will become as imprinted in our minds as the three great images of the Vietnam War: Huỳnh Công Út’s “Napalm girl”, Eddie Adams’ 1968 “Murder of a Vietcong by Saigon Police Chief”, or Malcolm Browne’s 1963 “Burning Monk”.

These images are recognised for their ability to communicate human suffering, letting the viewer know they are witnessing evidence of a reality that cannot just be captured in words. They convey the sense that the scene in the frame is part of something much bigger than what any observer can make of it.

The picture of the small boy is of course part of an individual and a collective tragedy. It is a scene from a humanitarian crisis that has forced millions to flee their war torn hometowns in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. Bodies have been washing ashore in southern Europe for some time, and my guess is we’ll be witnessing more of these images before long.

But pictures like “Napalm girl” or “Burning Monk” were part of national narratives that told the world of the horrors of war experienced in distant countries. “Drowned boy’s corpse”, on the other hand, makes us confront a reality too close to look away.

This one image carries the echo of millions of men and women who are too scared of the nightmare they are living to think twice before putting their little boys and girls onto rafts, hoping they’ll make it to a better place.

Perhaps Lee Miller’s 1945 Dead Prisoners in Buchewald concentration camp communicated some of the same collective horror – but again, there is something different in the more recent image. It’s tragic at face value, but horrific for what it doesn’t show – the bloody realities of millions of people who aren’t in the picture.

Changing the narrative

We could stop for a minute to ponder the conflict between the ethical and journalistic dimensions in imagery of violence and tragedy. One could also remark on the hypocrisy of many conservative newspapers that have run this image to suit their sensationalist agendas after months of using others to stoke anti-immigrant sentiment.

British tabloids should be ashamed of their hypocrisy on the drowned Syrian boy http://t.co/GJlPTwjOSB pic.twitter.com/TY2jUq276V

— Vox (@voxdotcom) September 3, 2015

Personally, I would prefer to stick with the momentum of favourable media attention that the photograph is generating. It has been used by campaign groups to galvanise citizen action. The hope is that it could finally tip world leaders into softening their stance on this issue.

Gabriel Moreno Esparza is a Lecturer in Journalism at Northumbria University, Newcastle.

The Conversation

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Abdullah Kurdi, Aylan Kurdi, Children, European Union, Human rights, Refugees, Syria, Syrian refugees

Movie Review: ‘She’s Funny That Way’ is not so funny after all

September 5, 2015 by Shaheen Raaj

She Is Funny That Way

Producer: Wes Anderson, Noah Baumbach, George Drakoulis, Logan Levy & Holly Wiersma
Director: Peter Bogdanovich
Star Cast: Owen Wilson, Imogen Poots, Kathryn Hahn, Will Forte, Rhys Ifans, Jennifer Aniston et al
Genre: Comedy
Verdict: Average

The latest offering by Peter Bagdanovich’s latest offering She Is Funny That way traces the experience of an ex – call girl cum escort in a Broadway play albeit in a funny & satirical way. But the way he has tackled the subject is hardly convincing.

Plot: The film depicts the interconnected personal lives of the cast & crew of a Broadway production. When established director Arnold Albertson (Owen Wilson) casts his call girl – turned – actress Isabella “Izzy” Patterson (Imogen Poots) in a new play to star alongside his wife Delta (Kathryn Hahn) & her ex – lover Seth Gilbert (Rhys Ifans), a zany love tangle forms with hilarious twists. Jennifer Aniston plays Izzy’s therapist Jane, who is consumed with her own failing relationship with Arnold’s playwright Joshua Fleet (Will Forte), who is also developing a crush on Izzy.

Aces: It’s really the performances of the principal actor’s that are noteworthy and keeps the viewers interest in the proceedings alive.

Minuses: The fault lies mainly with the script & the directorial treatment.

Last Word: Go watch it if you have nothing better to do on this weekend.

Filed Under: Film Tagged With: Film, Hollywood, Imogen Poots, Kathryn Hahn, Movie, Movie Review, Owen Wilson, She Is Funny That Way

Saudi coalition airstrike hits Sana’a orphanage

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

sanaa_yemen

by dpa GmbH

An airstrike launched by the Saudi-led alliance in Yemen appears to have struck an orphanage Saturday morning in Sana’a’s al-Nahda neighbourhood, killing and injuring an unknown number of people, local medical sources told dpa.

There have been contradicting reports about the casualties, and whether they include children or not. No further details were immediately available.

Separately, a residential building was bombarded by an airstrike earlier in the day in the Hadda area, also in Sana’a, killing three and injuring five civilians, local sources said.

Meanwhile, sources at the Health Ministry said a state of emergency was announced due to the rising number of casualties from mistaken strikes upon civilian sites since Friday.

“Due to the ongoing airstrikes, there is no way to make an exact estimation of the number of the dead and injured at this stage, but they are dozens,” a source at the ministry told dpa.

Airstrikes against Houthi-held military sites in Sana’a and other parts of Yemen have intensified since Friday, but that has increased the possibility of them mistakenly targeting civilian areas.

Saudi Arabia and fellow Sunni partners have mounted since March an air campaign in Yemen against Shiite Houthi rebels, who still control large parts of the country.

Filed Under: Muslim World Tagged With: Sanaa, Saudi Arabia, Yemen

Four suspected smugglers tried in Turkey for organizing Syrian toddler’s boat trip

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

A Turkish police officer escorted suspect Hassan Ali Salih to court in Bodrum. He was charged with "conscious negligence" for allegedly organizing the trip that killed Syrian toddler Aylan al-Kurdi. (Courtesy of eshopmall.co.uk/Roland Hoskins)

A Turkish police officer escorted suspect Hassan Ali Salih to court in Bodrum. He was charged with “conscious negligence” for allegedly organizing the trip that killed Syrian toddler Aylan al-Kurdi. (Courtesy of eshopmall.co.uk/Roland Hoskins)

by Euronews

Four Syrians have been remanded in custody by a Turkish court, after being charged in connection with the drowning of refugees including tragic toddler Aylan Kurdi.

Mothers of the suspects were there to support their sons who were charged with smuggling migrants and causing multiple deaths by “conscious negligence”.

The mother of one of the men, Meliha Recep, insisted her son was not a smuggler but himself a migrant.

“They did nothing, they were just trying to escape. Our children are also victims. They were just on the same boat, that’s all,” Recep, dressed in a grey headscarf, told reporters.

The hearing took place at the Turkish resort of Bodrum, near the spot where three-year-old Aylan’s body was washed up in scenes that shocked the world.

In Syria’s border town of Kobani, Aylan was buried on Friday with his five-year-old brother Ghalib and their mother.

His father Abdullah, who had hoped for a new, safe life for his family now wants to stay in the war-ravaged town beside their graves.

He wept as his sons and wife were laid to rest, and also called on Arab governments to do more to alleviate the refugee crisis

Abdullah Kurdi survived the perilous crossing from Turkey that killed his family and at least nine other people packed onto two small boats headed to the Greek island of Kos just a few kilometres away.

Harrowing images showing Aylan’s tiny body have put a human face on this crisis – and forced European governments to accept that this is a refugee emergency that cannot be ignored.

Filed Under: Muslim World Tagged With: Abdullah Kurdi, Aylan Kurdi, Children, European Union, Hassan Ali Salih, Human rights, Refugees, Syria, Syrian refugees

Millions at risk as severe drought hits Ethiopia

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Ethiopia says it is managing crisis though UN says number in need has increased by more than 55 percent this year.

sécheresse-afrique

by Al Jazeera

Around 4.5 million Ethiopians could be in need of food aid because of a drought in the country, the UN has said.

Hardest-hit areas are Ethiopia’s eastern Afar and southern Somali regions, while pastures and water resources are also unusually low in central and eastern Oromo region, and northern Tigray and Amhara districts.

Reacting to the UN’s claims that the number in need had increased by more than 55 percent this year, Alemayew Berhanu, spokesman for Ministry of Agriculture, told Al Jazeera that Ethiopia had “enough surplus food at emergency depots and we’re distributing it”.

“When we were informed about the problem, the federal government and the regional state authorities started an outreach programme for the affected people,” he said.

In August, the Ethiopian government said that it had allocated $35m to deal with the crisis that has been blamed on El Niño, a warm ocean current that develops between Indonesia and Peru. The UN says it needs $230m by the end of the year to attend to the crisis.

“The absence of rains means that the crops don’t grow, the grass doesn’t grow and people can’t feed their animals,” David Del Conte, UNOCHA’S chief in Ethiopia, said.

One farmer in the town of Zway told Al Jazeera that he was selling personal belongings to stay alive.

“There is nothing we can do. We don’t have enough crops to provide for our families. We are having to sell our cattle to buy food but the cattle are sick because they don’t have enough to eat,” Balcha, who has a family of nine, and grows corn and wheat, said.

The onset of El Niño means the spatial distribution of rainfall from June to September has being very low. According to the UN children’s agency (UNICEF), the El Niño weather pattern in 2015 is being seen as the strongest of the last 20 years.

Experts say it could be a major problem for the country’s economy, as agriculture generates about half of the country’s income.

Climate shocks are common in Ethiopia and often lead to poor or failed harvests which result in high levels of acute food insecurity.

Approximately 44 percent of children under 5 years of age in Ethiopia are severely chronically malnourished, or stunted, and nearly 28 percent are underweight, according to the CIA World Factbook.

UNICEF says that about 264,515 children will require treatment for acute severe malnutrition in 2015 while 111,076 children were treated for severe acute malnutrition between January and May 2015.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Africa, Drought, Ethiopia

Paes, Sania lose in US Open doubles

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Paes-Sania

New Delhi: The Indians had a disappointing outing in the US Open with both Leander Paes and Sania Mirza losing their doubles matches with their respective partners here.

Mixed doubles defending champions Sania and Bruno Soares lost 3-6, 3-6 to Czech Republic’s Andrea Hlavackova-Lukasz Kubot in a first round contest lasting 65 minutes.

Earlier in the day yesterday, Leander Paes and Fernando Verdasco lost their second round match 5-7, 6-4, 3-6 to unseeded American giant-killing pair of Steve Johnson and Sam Querrey.

Paes and his Spanish partner Verdasco got the better of Germans Florian Mayer and Frank Moder 6-2 6-3 in the opening round of the men’s doubles competition.

In women’s doubles, the top-seeded Indo-Swiss pair of Sania and Martina Hingis is scheduled to take on Swiss Timea Bacsinszky and her Taipei partner Chia-Jung Chuang in the second round.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: Leander Paes, Sania Mirza, US Open

Farmers call for Karnataka bandh today

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Farmers-bandh

Bengaluru: The Karnataka farmers called for a state-wide bandh today on Saturday, September 5, agitating over the Central and the State government’s alleged indifference towards the rising cases of farmer suicides in the state.

Several protest rallies are held across Karnataka, especially in Bengaluru. This is the second bandh in the State in less than a week and this time the bandh call has been given by the Karnataka State Sugarcane Growers Association and the Karnataka Rajya Raitha Sangha and Hasiru Sene.

Farmers, social organisations and pro-Kannada organisations are expected to take an active part in the bandh. However, it has not created much impact like the recent Bharat Bandh, which was observed on Sept 2.

In order to end the crisis of farmers’ suicide, the association has demanded that the Centre and State government waive off crop loans taken by farmers from nationalized and cooperative banks as the drought situation in the state has adversely affected production, the farmers demanded.

Earlier, KSSGA president Kurubur Shanthakumar had also said that in order to put pressure on the authorities, the association will observe a bandh and also be part of the agitation till the demand is met.

Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) has also extended its support to the protest. KSCA, headed by its secretary Brijesh Patel, has submitted a memorandum to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Siddaramaiah.

The state-wide bandh is unlikely to disrupt normal life in Bengaluru, state capital. Buses and autos are also expected to ply in the city as usual.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Farmer Suicide, Farmers, Karnataka

SC judge recuses from hearing PIL on Malegaon blast probe

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Supreme Court

New Delhi: The hearing on the PIL seeking to bring back Rohini Salian as special prosecutor to lead the CBI’s case in Malegaon bomb blast case and seeking probe into allegations that she was pressurised to go slow in the case was put off as Justice Uday Umesh Lalit recused himself from hearing the matter.

As the matter was called for hearing before the bench of Justice Fakkir Mohamed Ibrahim Kalifulla and Justice Lalit, the latter recused himself from hearing the matter saying that he had appeared for some of the accused earlier as a lawyer before he was elevated as a judge.

Former bureaucrat-turned-social activist Harsh Mander has moved the apex court seeking that Salian who had stepped down as special prosecutor in Malegaon case involving right wing Hindu groups be brought back to lead the Central Bureau of Investigation’s case.

He has also sought probe into the allegations that Salian was asked by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) to go slow in the case, an allegation denied by the agency.

Mander, in his PIL, referring to an interview by Salian wherein she had alleged that she was pressured by the NIA to go soft in the Malegaon case, has sought the court’s intervention for a fair trial.

The PIL has alleged that NIA was acting under the instructions of its political masters.

Malegaon in 2008 was rocked by blasts which claimed six lives and left more than 100 injured.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Malegaon Blast, Rohini Salian

Music-composer Aadesh Shrivastava dies of cancer

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

Aadesh Shrivastava

Mumbai: Bollywood singer-composer Aadesh Shrivastava, who was battling a relapsed cancer, passed away post midnight in Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani hospital here. He was 51.

Shrivastava had been undergoing cancer treatment at the hospital in Andheri for over 40 days.

“Mr Aadesh Shrivastava (51) expired at 12.30 am on September 5, 2015 in Kokilaben Hospital due to cancer,” Dr Ram Narain of the hospital told PTI.

Shrivastava is survived by his wife, Vijeta Pandit, a former Bollywood actress and sister of music-composer duo Jatin- Lalit, and their two sons — Anivesh and Avitesh.

Last evening Shrivastava’s brother-in-law and composer Lalit Pandit had told PTI, “He has been undergoing chemotherapy but he is not responding to it. So, the doctors have stopped giving him chemotherapy. They have an alternate theory. The doctors are trying to do their best and Aadesh is fighting it bravely.”

Shrivastava, who battled cancer five years ago, was diagnosed with the same disease again. He was said to be in a critical condition when he was admitted to the hospital.

“Terrible. Terrible. Terrible News. Too young to Go Aadesh Shrivastava,” film director Anubhav Sinha said on Twitter.

Over the course of his career, Shrivastava had composed music for over 100 Hindi films, including “Chalte Chalte”, “Baabul”, “Baghban”, “Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham”, “Rajneeti” and others.

He got his first big break with film “Kanyadaan” in 1993.

However, the film could not be released and its songs went unnoticed.

Shrivastava delivered chart busters like “Kya ada kya jalwe tere Paro”, “Haathon mein aa gaya jo kal”, “Sona sona”, “Shava shava”, “Gustakhiyaan”, “Gur nalon ishq mitha”, “Mora Piya” among others.

He was a judge on the talent hunt show “Sa Re Ga Ma Pa” Challenge in 2005 and 2009.

Shrivastava took to direction with his short film on child prostitution, “Sanaa”.

His colleagues from the industry, including Amitabh Bachchan and superstar Shah Rukh Khan, were keeping a check on his health.

“Amit ji (Amitabh Bachchan) has been keeping a check on his health regularly over phone. He has been very helpful.

Besides, Shah Rukh Khan had come to visit him too. Tina Ambani has visited him twice and she is also taking special care,” Lalit had said.

“People from the music industry like Shaan, Sonu Nigam, Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik and Udit Narayan also have been visiting him regularly. Shekar Kapur, Govind Nihalani, Poonam Dhillon and others had come to see him too,” he had said.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Aadesh Shrivastava, Bollywood, Cancer

OROP implemented, says Manohar Parrikar; veterans reject govt offer

September 5, 2015 by Nasheman

OROP

New Delhi: In a bid to break the deadlock, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on Saturday announced that the government has agreed to implement ‘One Rank, One Pension’ scheme, but with riders.

Addressing a press conference, Parrikar said the government was proud of its servicemen’s devotion, duty, and bravery.

Pension will be re-fixed for all pensioners retiring in the same rank and same length of service, announced Parrikar.

Insisting that the issue has been pending for nearly four decades, the Defence Minister added that the OROP will be implemented from July 1, 2014 and the base year would be 2013.

PM Narendra Modi has fulfilled his commitment and approved OROP for the armed forces personnel, said Parrikar, adding the Ministry of Defence will give the detailed order soon.

Parrikar made the announcement after holding talks with the agitating ex-servicemen and Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah.

BJP MP Meenakshi Lekhi, who was present at the party chief’s house, had told reporters that the government is close to announcing a solution that will cost the exchequer at least Rs 10,000 crore.

Addressing a press conference after holding talks with Parrikar, Major General Satbir Singh (retired), who is spearheading the campaign for the scheme’s implementation, had said the government is considering appointing a committee under a judge to go into the issue of equalisation of pension.

The chairman of Indian Ex-Servicemen said the government while accepting the concept of the OROP, was still insisting on pension revision every five years and that is why it was thinking of constituting a committee.

In that case a representative of the veterans and one from the services should also be in the committee, Singh said, adding the committee should decide on the issue within 15-30 months.

It is understood that a draft proposal on OROP was circulated at a RSS meeting yesterday which envisaged commencement of the scheme from July 2014, besides revision of pension every five years.

According to the draft, the basis for the implementation of the scheme would be 2013 and arrears would be paid in four instalments.

Close to 26 lakh retired servicemen and over six lakh war widows stand to be immediate beneficiaries of the scheme, which envisages a uniform pension for the defence personnel who retire in the same rank with the same length of service, irrespective of their date of retirement.

Currently, the pension for retired personnel is based on the Pay Commission recommendations of the time when he or she retired. So, a Major General who retired in 1996 draws less pension than a Lt Colonel who retired after 1996.

(Agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Manohar Parrikar, OROP

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