NASAs Hubble telescope successor delayed again by virus, other issues – WSPA 7News

by: MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer

In this 2017 photo made available by NASA, technicians lift the mirror assembly of the James Webb Space Telescope using a crane inside a clean room at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. On Thursday, July 16, 2020, officials announced that the telescope is now scheduled to launch on Oct. 31, 2021. The previous target date was March 2021. (Desiree Stover/NASA via AP)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) The launch of NASAs successor to the Hubble Space Telescope faces seven more months of delay, this time because of the pandemic and technical issues.

Officials announced Thursday that the James Webb Space Telescope the space agencys top science priority is now scheduled to launch on Oct. 31, 2021. The previous target date was March 2021.

This next-generation observatory designed to peer farther into space and further back into time than any other spacecraft originally was supposed to fly more than a decade ago. The previous two-year-plus delay, announced in 2018, was due to worker error and hardware problems. Until COVID-19 struck, everything was finally going well, officials said.

Mission success is critical, but team safety is our highest priority, said NASA Associate Administrator Steve Jurczyk.

NASA stressed that the costs stemming from the latest postponement will not exceed the $8.8 billion spending cap for development set by Congress. Budget reserves set aside two years ago during the last major assessment will cover any additional expenses, said Thomas Zurbuchen, the space agencys science mission chief.

Nearly half the delay, about three months, is attributed to COVID-19. The outbreak has slowed work on the telescope by prime contractor Northrop Grumman in Southern California.

Another four months of padding was needed in the schedule to meet the new launch date, officials said, and lessons learned in spacecraft testing made clear just how much more time was needed. A critical acoustic and vibration test, for instance, is planned on the fully assembled telescope next month. Technicians also want to reopen and refold Webbs massive sun shield the size of a tennis court once more. The sun shield is needed to keep the infrared telescope cold once in space.

NASA plans to ship Webb next summer to its European launch site in French Guiana Europes contribution to the mission.

Of course, its hard to predict a year plus from now how things will be here and there, said program director Gregory Robinson.

Set to soar on an European Ariane rocket, Webb is destined for a point 1 million miles (1.6 million kilometers) from Earth, well beyond astronauts reach. The orbiting Hubble, by contrast, was repeatedly serviced by shuttle astronauts following its 1990 launch. Its expected to continue working into the 2030s, officials said Thursday.

NASA wants an overlap in operations between Hubble and Webb. The new telescope, once launched, will look at many of the same things Hubble has and will.

For me, it will be seeing old friends with completely new eyes, said program scientist Eric Smith.

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NASAs Hubble telescope successor delayed again by virus, other issues - WSPA 7News

Tewksbury Library To Host Virtual Talks On Outer Space From July 21-23 – Patch.com

Tewksbury Public Library

Library Notes (Week of July 19)

Headline: Library To Host Virtual Talks On Outer Space, July 21-23

Event Registration

Please register online using our Calendar of Events at http://www.tewksburypl.org or by calling 978- 640-4490. We strongly recommend registration for programs that are marked *RR. Thank you to the Friends of the Library for generously sponsoring our programs.

Adult Events

TEWKSBURY JOB SEEKERS NETWORK Jump Start Your Job Search ON ZOOM (*RR)

Are you spending more time avoiding than advancing your job search? If so, you are not alone. In this presentation, you will learn ten simple but effective strategies to get you on track and on the path to your next job. Topics addressed include: the importance of planning ahead; dealing with distractions; conquering procrastination and avoidance; creating structures where there are none; and finding accountability. Job hunting is a full-time job. It requires a solid plan and effective strategies. Led by Linda King, a certified life coach and author of "Jump-Start That Job Search." King has created and facilitated workshops for job seekers at Massachusetts career centers and is a popular speaker at employment networking groups. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library.

The Truth About Roswell ON ZOOM (*RR)

Tuesday, July 21, 7pm

It's been over 70 years since the Roswell Daily Record first blared the viral headline "RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region" on July 8th, 1947. Join five-time Boston/New England Emmy Award-winning folklorist John Horrigan as he presents a new chronology of the events that lead to speculation of an alleged UFO crash. John will reveal previously undisclosed details of the fantastic tale along with refuted testimonies, culled from his own exploration trips to the region in 1995, 1996 and 1997. John Horrigan is the host and co-creator of "The Folklorist" television series, which offers a captivating look at some of the lesser-known occurrences in history. John has won five Boston/New England Emmy Awards for his role on the show. He is also a prolific professional sports announcer, narrator, historical researcher and lecturer who has performed in over 2,500 venues across North America. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Tewksbury Cultural Council, a local agency, which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Explore The Solar System with NASA ON ZOOM (*RR)

Wednesday, July 22, 10:30am

Amanda Thompson, a NASA Ambassador, will discuss recent discoveries from two of NASA's biggest missions -- the Curiosity rover (Mars) and the New Horizons spacecraft (Pluto). Thompson will talk about the challenges of venturing into deep space and the successes we've been able to celebrate in this popular multimedia presentation. Amanda Thompson is a part of the Solar System Ambassador program through NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She is also a high school Earth Science teacher and a lover of all things space. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Tewksbury Cultural Council, a local agency, which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Hubble Scape Telescope & Astronomy ON ZOOM (*RR)

Thursday, July 23, 7pm

Robert A. Gonsalves, Emeritus Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Tufts University, will discuss the history of the telescope . Learn about Galileo's two-lens telescope; Newton's curved mirror design; earth-bound telescopes which remove the star-twinkling distortion of the earth's atmosphere; the Hubble Space Telescope; and the James Webb Space telescope. See some breathtaking photos of the universe as seen through the eyes of the Hubble telescope. Robert Gonsalves, Ph.D., is a nationally renowned expert in the field of image processing. In 1990, Gonsalves helped NASA fix the Hubble Telescope by calculating a prescription to correct an optics flaw. He more recently served as an optics advisor to NASA for the James Webb Space Telescope. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Tewksbury Cultural Council, a local agency, which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Teen Events

Escape Room ON ZOOM (*RR)

Wednesday, July 22, 6pm

Join Puzzle Break Newton for "The Grimm Escape", a virtual escape room. Work with your team to find clues and solve the puzzles before time runs out! This event is for grades 6-12. This is an online event via Zoom. An invite will be sent at least an hour prior to the start of the program to the email given at registration. Please do not use a school email address. Be sure to check your clutter/junk/spam boxes if the invite does not appear in your inbox. Please have Zoom downloaded prior to the start of the event. This event will start promptly at 6 pm.

Children's Events

Summer Sprouts Story Time ON FACEBOOK

Monday, July 20, 10:30am

Story time for infants and toddlers with Miss Heather! Join her for stories, songs, movement and more! This program will run live on the library's Facebook page (www.facebook.com/TewksburyLib).

Pajamarama Story Time on FACEBOOK

Monday, July 20, 7pm

Join us live on our Facebook page for Pajamarama Storytime! Have early literacy fun with stories, songs, movement and more at this early evening story time. Pajamas are optional but encouraged. This program will run live on the library's Facebook page (www.facebook.com/TewksburyLib).

Story Time ON FACEBOOK

Tuesday, July 21, 11am

Join Miss Kat for songs, movement, and a story or two! This program will run live on the library's Facebook page (www.facebook.com/TewksburyLib).

Summer Science: Pretty Pennies ON FACEBOOK & YOUTUBE

Wednesday, July 22, 2pm

Miss Kat will be posting four cool science projects this summer that you can do at home! This week, we will be learning how metal can react with oxygen and change color, and we will be learning how to clean up old pennies to make them shine! View the video on the library's Facebook page (www.Facebook.com/TewksburyLib) and YouTube page (www.youtube.com/TewksburyLibrary). Materials and instructions will be outside the library at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, July 22. This week, we will be supplying oxidized (green) pennies. You will need to supply: white vinegar, ketchup, lemon juice, dish soap, and water.

Jungle Jim! ON ZOOM (*RR)

Thursday, July 23, 2pm

Jungle Jim has moved his high-energy balloon program online! We will be watching it on Zoom, and we hope that you can join us. Please register one attendee for the one device that will be streaming this program. You can have as many people as you like watching with you! If you can't make it or the program is full, don't worry! A recording of this performance will be available for two weeks. This program is funded by the Friends of the Tewksbury Public Library.

Virtual Maker Craft: Hang-Around Bats ON FACEBOOK & YOUTUBE

Friday, July 24, noon

Watch a video to show you how to make some really cool crafts! Every week we will post a new fun tutorial. Visit the library's Facebook page (www.facebook.com/TewksburyLib) or YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/TewksburyLibrary) to view the video. This week, we will be learning how to make Hang-Around Bats! Suggested materials: Cardboard tube; Paint or markers; Construction paper; Pipe cleaners; Scissors; Hole punch; Glue; and Googly eyes. Bags of supplies (tube, construction paper, pipe cleaners, eyes) will be outside the library on Friday, 7/24 at 10AM, and are first come, first served. If you aren't able to get a bag, don't worry! We try to use materials that you already have or can easily get.

This press release was produced by the Town of Tewksbury. The views expressed here are the author's own.

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Tewksbury Library To Host Virtual Talks On Outer Space From July 21-23 - Patch.com

Debbie Peterson: How to focus your career on the future – GoErie.com

If what you are currently experiencing in your career isnt what you want, then the solution isnt in the past.

Do you ever feel that your career and life are beyond your control? That there are outside forces at work that move you from uncertainty to even more uncertainty?

Yeah, me too.

What I have discovered with my clients is that uncertainty about the future is usually rooted in the past.

We are, after all, creatures of habit. We tend to wake up each morning and perform the same routine.

Coffee.

Check your phone.

Shower.

Maybe you have a morning run or yoga in there.

The point is that the brain is efficient, and when you find ways of doing things that work for you, the mind says, "Great! This will make a lovely habit," and gets to work at making it become one. Then it becomes unconscious, and youre not even aware of what youre doing or why.

It means that you are working from and focusing on your past. The problem is that if what you are currently experiencing in your career isnt what you want, then the solution isnt in the past, its in the future.

So how do you make the shift to future-facing? It starts with intention.

Intention is defined as a thing intended; an aim or plan.

Every time you set an intention, you put your attention on the future and what you want, instead of what you dont. When you make this your new habit, you create influence and start generating momentum, which feels so much better than the rut you may be experiencing.

So lets start your new intention habit.

Here are five easy ways to incorporate intention in your career and start getting the career results you deserve.

1. Intention for your career. "When my career is ideal, I am " Finish this sentence with as many things as you can think of that resonate with what you want. You might say, "I am helping others," "doing meaningful work," "living a flexible lifestyle." What are the guideposts that lead you toward the career you want?

2. Intention for a 30-, 60-, or 90-day sprint. Whether you own a business or work for an organization, there is always more than one thing to juggle. You have competing priorities with clients, projects, departments, not to mention your personal life. Set an intention for a specific period so that you know what you want to accomplish within that time. You will have created a specific focus and goal, instead of focusing on everything and accomplishing little.

3. Intention for your week. I am an advocate of planning your week in advance. Ideally, you plan for the next week at the end of the prior week so that you know exactly what youre getting into when you return on Monday. At the very least, plan your week out on Monday, so you know what is ahead of you. What is your intention for this week? If it were an ideal outcome, what will make you feel best to have accomplished this week? This means you have a guide to focus on the right things for you.

4. Intention for your day. This intention is identical to the intention for the week except that you are breaking it down to focus on just your day and what you ideally want to accomplish. Now, it doesnt mean this will happen exactly as you want, but it increases your odds of getting the outcome that you want. Pick three things that you can easily do within the time you have allotted within your day. They can be small things, but pick those that specifically move you toward the intention you have set.

5. Intention for your interactions. Although this came last, it is certainly not the least. This is an overarching intention. How do you want to "be" when interacting with others? How do you want to come across? What attributes and characteristics do you want to embody? Is it having patience? Being a good listener? Being supportive? Think of who you want to be, how you want to act and what you want to achieve before you pick up the phone, hop on Zoom, run a meeting or even have a conversation.

Be curious and open and discover how you can create thoughtful intentions throughout your career and life. Remember also, that just like knowledge, intention has to have action behind it. Otherwise, its just a wish. Oh, and speaking of wishes, heres wishing you the clarity you deserve.

Be good to yourself.

Debbie Peterson is a speaker, author and professional mentor supporting women and emerging leaders to create career success on their terms.

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Debbie Peterson: How to focus your career on the future - GoErie.com

Elite bulls cloned at CIRB – The Tribune India

Tribune News Service

Hisar, July 19

The Central Institute for Research on Buffalo (CIRB) has made a significant breakthrough in buffalo cloning by producing seven cloned copies of an elite breeding buffalo bull, M-29, besides re-cloning the calf of an earlier cloned bull, Hisar Gaurav. Officials said all eight cloned calves as well as offspring sired by cloned bulls had normal growth.

Dr SS Dahiya, Director, CIRB, stated that it was a huge success and they aim to develop and propagate high-yielding elite buffalo germplasm across the country. India holds 109 million buffaloes, which accounts for over 56 per cent of the worlds buffalo population. To increase milk productivity of buffalo, the CIRB has been exploiting advanced scientific methods and produced a record 10 cloned elite bulls, he stated.

Dr PS Yadav, head of the cloning project, maintained that they had aimed at producing genetic copies of elite stock. We are working to make stakeholders aware of this technology before wider application. Bulls are selected on the basis of pedigree and progeny record. Cloned bulls can be used to upgrade population of nondescript buffaloes, he said.

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Elite bulls cloned at CIRB - The Tribune India

AweClone for Mac 2.9 Becomes the Most Preferred Disk Cloning Software – Press Release – Digital Journal

Known for its powerful performance when it comes to backing up data, disk, and system, this can clone hard drive on macOS Catalina and help people create a disk Image of their hard drive/device.

Shen Zhen, China - July 20, 2020 - The world is living in a time where everything happens virtually. From photos to documents to relationships to shopping - the internet is filled with endless possibilities. Storing important items in their physical forms in a tangible space is not something that happens anymore. This brings to the point that data and information is everything. When the greatest entrepreneurs say that data is king then theres no denying of the fact that people are extremely attached to their data.

Gone are those when one would have documents just in their hard drive and be at peace. What about unforeseen circumstances when a disk might get corrupted - does that mean bidding farewell to the years of data collection? Not at all - because now everybody has a solution to the problem of data loss. All that one needs is the AweClone for Mac 2.9. In no time, this software has become a huge rage among people.

In order to be on the safer side, its always recommended to make a copy of the disk drive as that is the best way to backup any important data. AweClone for Mac can help everybody quickly and securely copy their data and clone hard disk drive under Mac OS.

It has the ability to clone hard drive on macOS Catalina and help users easily and securely back up their data, disk, and system. This efficient disk copy and disk cloning software for Mac also helps users create a disk Image of their hard drive/device. So, what makes this software one of the most coveted ones in the industry?

Not only is it a powerful and safe disk copy and cloning software for Mac, it is 100% secure ensuring no complications with regards to data loss in the process. Along with this, its simplicity gives this software a few extra brownie points.

Easy to use

It just takes three clicks to copy data or clone disk on Mac. The user just needs to select the resource and destination and then copy/clone. The software is extremely user-friendly and intuitive.

Flexible

Users can copy or clone any hard drive or device to any other hard drive or device on their Mac. AweClone for Mac offers options to define how, what, and where to backup the disk/data.

100% safe

AweClone for Mac is 100% safe disk cloning software for Mac. It will never cause any data loss, also will never cause any damage to a users hard drive or system.

From migrating data to backing up files to duplicating disk to cloning disk in no time, AweClone for Mac has slowly become the most indispensable software for all Mac users. Currently they are also offering free trial to all users.

For more information, please visit https://www.magoshare.com/disk-clone/mac-disk-clone.html

Media ContactCompany Name: MagoshareContact Person: Media RelationsEmail: Send EmailCountry: ChinaWebsite: https://www.magoshare.com/

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AweClone for Mac 2.9 Becomes the Most Preferred Disk Cloning Software - Press Release - Digital Journal

Cyber cell warns against downloading cloned apps – The Tribune India

Shimla, July 19

Amid reports of cloning of apps similar to those banned by the government, the cyber crime cell of the state police has warned users against downloading any such app as these are malware and fake apps that facilitate hacking.

After a ban on TikTok, messages are pouring that it is now available in India in the name of TikTok Pro. It is a malware and fake app and it is advised that such messages should be ignored and no personal information or bank details be shared without verification, said Additional SP, cyber crime, Narvir Singh Rathore.

A link - http: //tiny.cciTiktokPro- was sent along with the message to download TikTok Pro App, but it was fake and not available in Google Play Store or App Store for downloading, he added.

The cyber cell has also identified some more domain names such as coronavirusstatus.space, coronavirus-map.com, blogcoronacl.canalcero.digital, coronavirus.zone, coronavirus-realtime.com, coronavieus.app and bgvfr.coronavirusaware.xyz functioning in the name of Covid. TNS

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Cyber cell warns against downloading cloned apps - The Tribune India

Nosy Ballito resident busts card cloning syndicate – The Citizen

A tip-off led to the arrest of two men suspected of operating a card-cloning operation in Ballito, KwaZulu-Natal.

Vice-chairman of the Ballito neighbourhood watch and community policing forum (CPF), Morne Steffens, said a resident called them who suspected criminal activity at a local guesthouse.

IPSS Electronic Security operations director, Brennon Knott, said a plan was formed with the police to ambush the suspects.

When their vehicle left the guesthouse the next morning, 10July, it was pulled over on Ballito Drive, he said.

The alleged criminals being pulled over in Ballito Drive last week. Image: IPSS Electronic Security

The suspects were arrested after a large number of cloned bank cards, identification documents and cellphones were found and seized.

The men were identified as a syndicate which has been cloning credit cards for some time and proved to be quite a catch, he said.

Steffens said the arrests highlighted how important it was for the community to report suspicious activity. He thanked the alert residents, IPSS Electronic Security and Umhlali South African Police Service (SAPS) for their actions.

The South African Banking Risk Information Centre (Sabric) released its annual crime stats for 2019on behalf of the banking industry which revealed that credit card and debit card fraud increased by 20.5% between 2018 and 2019.

Sabric CEO Nischal Mewalall said in a statement: The increase in credit card fraud must be viewed against the growth of the credit card payment ecosystem which has seen a rise in the number of credit card transactions processed by banks, coupled with increases in the number of cardholders and merchants. This would have contributed to more incidents.

66.6% of all fraud on South Africa issued credit cards took place on merchant devices in a foreign country while the counterfeiting of cards decreased by 44.8% for credit cards and by 34.8% for debit cards.

This article first appeared on North Coast Courierand was republished with permission.

For more news your way, download The Citizens app foriOSandAndroid.

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Nosy Ballito resident busts card cloning syndicate - The Citizen

Chingari Bets On Cloning TikTok And Indias Nationalist Sentiment To Drive Its Growth – Inc42 Media

With a UI that closely mirrors TikTok, Chingari is looking to position itself as a direct replacement to the Chinese app

Chingari has adjusted its focus after the TikTok ban to sideline its gaming and news aggregation sections

It claims to be organically adding 1Mn users daily but competition from Instagram Reels, Mitron, Bolo Indya, ShareChat and others is growing by the day

Given the choice between two apps which are exactly the same, but one is made in China and the other one is made in India which one will you choose? Chingari cofounder Sumit Ghosh.

The growing anti-China sentiment in India and the government ban on 59 Chinese apps has brought intense focus on Indian apps and alternatives to Chinese products. On June 29, 2020, around 8 pm, MeitYs released the list of 59 banned Chinese apps including popular short-video platform TikTok.

As Chingaris Ghosh describes the frenzy, Right after the ban announcement, the platform experienced 500K 600K new downloads for the whole next day. The servers started cracking, the backend infra was going crazy, we had to shut a lot of APIs down, Even at the time of our conversation (past week), Ghosh claimed to be witnessing 1 lakh downloads per hour.

Besides Chingari, short-video sharing platforms like Mitron, Bolo Indya, ShareChats Moj, Gaana HotShots and Trell have also reported a steep rise in the number of user traction after the ban. Even Instagram has launched its TikTok-like Reels. So what exactly differentiates Chingari from these platforms?

The difference is that Chingari is the closest to TikTok, in terms of UI and Ghosh claims that Chingari is also looking to solve one gap that none of its competitors have the creator tools that made TikTok popular. Other players think that people will just upload videos from the camera or their gallery, and the videos will go viral. But it is not like that, it is the creation tools that made TikTok what it is today, he said.

Chingari claims to have perfected all TikTok-like creation tools except the AR filters, which are currently under work. Chingaris UI is indeed a close replica of TikTok app to the extent that even the arrangement of buttons and the profile page look like mirror images.

For a company whose unique selling point is that it is an Indian company with TikTok-like features, copying the UI seems like an intended move. And this also allows Chingari to be in a safer position to compete with TikTok if it returns to India.

Clearly, Chingari is betting on the growing nationalist sentiment in the country. But will the platform be able to provide the similar global reach and revenue opportunities that TikTok once offered? And if not, why would an Indian consumer stick to Chingari once the nationalist sentiments die down. SlideShare cofounder Amit Ranjan pointed out recently, tailwinds like nationalist sentiments and the app vacuum wont last forever.

Like any other content platforms that thrive on the passion of creators, the success of Chingari depends on the quality of the content and the variety of creators it attracts. For instance, if there are 1000 creators on the platform, not only will more users join up, but it will also attract more creators to tap the rising user base. Its a cycle of growth that each content platform needs to thrive. And once that happens, it will become difficult for creators to abandon their acquired social following and reach.

To achieve this, Chingari is running a rewards campaign for creators. Every content creator on the platform gets paid depending on how viral their videos get. For every video that one uploads on the Chingari app, you get points (per view) which can be redeemed for money, according to a company statement.

Chingari is also onboarding influencer managers and agencies to onboard more creators on the platform. Till now, the platform has tied up with 200 such agencies and plans to scale these partnerships to 10K after its Series A funding round, which is expected to be announced by the end of July 2020.

Chingari is also working with a few brands that are willing to pay about 20%-30% of what they were paying to TikTok, in return for some influencer marketing on the platform. These brands primarily include fashion and ecommerce companies, noted Ghosh. The company is not focused on monetisation at this point of time, but once the user base is established, Chingari plans to monetise through advertisements like Facebook and Twitter.

Given that there is no monetisation model currently, Ghosh claims that Chingari does not store any sensitive user data at the moment. But once it launches ad-led monetisation, the company will be collecting user data including the age and gender to target them with the right ads. Currently, the login process uses a Google account to onboard users.

Started in 2018, the development of Chingari app was led by cofounder Biswatma Nayak along with Siddharth Gautam and other team members of Globussoft which includes Ghosh. Chingari was incubated at Ghoshs IT consultancy firm Globussoft. Following the growth in user base, it is now being registered as a separate entity and Ghosh will exit Globussoft to join this new entity.

In a recent UI update, Chingari has moved the position of the games sections to a side menu. According to Ghosh, gaming was acting as a friction for new users who are looking for a TikTok replacement and the company does not want to distract them from the core offering which is short-form videos.

Further, the news aggregation section has also been moved to the sidelines. It primarily attracts the audience over the age of 35 who come to the platform and consume news. However, Chingari plans to introduce a one-minute news bulletin video clip instead of the text format in the near future to boost its reach. This is similar to what Dailyhunt and Inshorts offer in terms of news.

Since the ban, Chingaris downloads have jumped to 22 Mn downloads from 3.5 Mn, and it is also seeing 5 Mn daily active users (DAUs) and 124 Mn video views per day. Going forward, Ghosh is aiming to reach 100 Mn users over the next three months. This is based on the companys current growth rate, which is 1 Mn users added per day. At this rate, it will cumulate to 90 Mn in the next three months, but Chingari is hopeful of a boost in the next month or so to get there sooner.

But in an earlier conversation, Chingaris competitor Bolo Indya Founder Varun Saxena told Inc42, The race for Indian video apps is not to acquire users, it is going to be for retaining these users two weeks from now, he added. Chingari claims to have a 10%-12% retention rate currently, and how well it is able to keep the new users around will determine whether it can really turn the spark into a roaring fire.

With inputs from Kritti Bhalla.

Correction Note | 16:25, July 17, 2020

The original version of this article erroneously mentioned that Chingari had to turn down a lot VCs after time of Chinese app ban. We have updated the article to reflect that the company had to shut down a lot of APIs after the Chinese app ban. We apologise for the mistake.

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Chingari Bets On Cloning TikTok And Indias Nationalist Sentiment To Drive Its Growth - Inc42 Media

Value of Fosmid Cloning Market Predicted to Surpass US$ by the of 2017 2025 – 3rd Watch News

According to the latest report published by PMR, the Fosmid Cloning market is anticipated to grow at a steady pace over the forecast period (2019-2029). The report sheds light on the various trends and restraining factors that are expected to shape the growth of the Fosmid Cloning in the upcoming years. The report ponders over the various parameters that are expected to impact revenue generation, sales, and demand for the Fosmid Cloning in the various regional markets.

According to the study, the Fosmid Cloning market is likely to attain a market value of ~US$ XX by 2019 and grow at a CAGR of ~XX% during the assessment period. The market study introspects the competition landscape of the Fosmid Cloning market and highlights the key developments and technological innovations witnessed in the current Fosmid Cloning market landscape.

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Value of Fosmid Cloning Market Predicted to Surpass US$ by the of 2017 2025 - 3rd Watch News

COVID-19 Update: Global Voice Cloning Market is Expected to Grow at a Healthy CAGR with top players IBM, Google, Lyrebird, Nuance Communications, etc…

Note: Due to the pandemic, we have included a special section on the Impact of COVID 19 on the Voice CloningMarket which would mention How the Covid-19 is Affecting the Industry, Market Trends and Potential Opportunities in the COVID-19 Landscape, Key Regions and Proposal for Voice Cloning Market Players to battle Covid-19 Impact.

The Voice CloningMarket report is compilation of intelligent, broad research studies that will help players and stakeholders to make informed business decisions in future. It offers detailed research and analysis of key aspects of the Voice Cloning market. Readers will be able to gain deeper understanding of the competitive landscape and its future scenarios, crucial dynamics, and leading segments of the global Voice Cloning market. Buyers of the report will have access to accurate PESTLE, SWOT and other types of analysis on the global Voice Cloning market. Moreover, it offers highly accurate estimations on the CAGR, market share, and market size of key regions and countries. Players can use this study to explore untapped Voice Cloning markets to extend their reach and create sales opportunities.

The study encompasses profiles of major Companies/Manufacturers operating in the global Voice Cloning Market.Key players profiled in the report include:IBM, Google, Lyrebird, Nuance Communications, Baidu, Microsoft, AWS, AT&T, NeoSpeech, Smartbox Assistive Technology, exClone, LumenVox, Kata.Ai, Alt.Ai, CereProc, Acapela Group, VocaliD, Voicery, Aristech, Cepstral, Ispeech, VivoText, Voctro Labs, rSpeak, CandyVoice and More

Get PDF Sample Copy of the Report to understand the structure of the complete report (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart):https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/Request-Sample/121642

Market Segment By Type:CloudOn-premises

Market Segment By Application:Healthcare and life sciencesEducationMedia and entertainmentTelecomTravel and hospitality

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The authors of the report have analyzed both developing and developed regions considered for the research and analysis of the global Voice Cloning market. The regional analysis section of the report provides an extensive research study on different regional and country-wise Voice Cloning industry to help players plan effective expansion strategies.

Regions Covered in the Global Voice Cloning Market: The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt) North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada) South America (Brazil etc.) Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.) Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

Years Considered to Estimate the Market Size:History Year: 2015-2019Base Year: 2019Estimated Year: 2020Forecast Year: 2020-2025

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COVID-19 Update: Global Voice Cloning Market is Expected to Grow at a Healthy CAGR with top players IBM, Google, Lyrebird, Nuance Communications, etc...

Will We Ever Be Able to Upload a Mind to a New Body?

In Altered Carbon, the body no longer matters. As one character quipped: You shed it like a snake sheds its skin. Thats because the human consciousness has been digitized, and can be moved between bodiesboth real and synthetic.

The Netflix series takes place hundreds of years in the future, but references versions of technology that have been in development for years, like brain mapping, human and AI neural links, and mind uploading to computers. Millions of dollars has been bumped into technological ideas that promise, one day, our brains will be turned digital. That said, there are those who believe the human mind is too complex, and our consciousness too nuanced, to be recreated in a digital product. And none of that even goes into what would happen if someones digitized mind was placed into real human flesh.

Will we ever be able to upload our minds into other bodies? Furthermore, should we? And honestly, if we ever achieved such a feat, could we even call ourselves human anymore? On this weeks Giz Asks, we reached out to experts in neuroscience, philosophy and futurism.

Department of Philosophy and Cognitive Science Program, The University of Connecticut

An upload would not be a homo sapien, so, strictly speaking, it wouldnt be human, but it may have traits that we think of as human in a loose sense, such as rationality and humanlike concerns and emotions. It could be human-like. It might, over time, morph into something far less humanlike, as it becomes immersed in its new environment.

This may strike one as incredibly cool, and science fiction-like. So, could you even upload your mind into another body? Im skeptical for several reasons.

1. Suppose you go to a brain uploading center, Mindsculpt. Youve just learned you have a terminal illness, and you are eager to upload. There, at Mindsculpt, they aim to measure every feature of your brain that is relevant to your personality, sensory experiences, memories, and so on.

Is this truly feasible, at least at some point in the future? At this point,we do not have a remotely complete picture of what features of the brain give rise to thinking, personality, sensations, etc. If the features involve microscopic, quantum phenomena, then a precise upload of you cannot be created, as there is a fundamental limit on what we can know about a quantum system. (See Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle). This would mean we you cant really upload your mind. Sorry.

2. But suppose a computational duplicate of your brain can be created. And suppose uploading technology was perfected. Should you go to Mindsculpt? No.

Suppose, while at Mindsculpt, the uploading process does not involve destroying your biological brain. Wouldnt you still be there, on the table, after your brain was scanned and transfered to a program? Why would your mind shift from your brain to the computer, leaving your still working biological brain there? This seems magical to me. A more reasonable hypothesis is that you are still on the table, and a program is created that specifies the workings of your brain. (I discuss this in more detail here.)

If this seems at least plausible to you, you definitely shouldnt sign away your legal rights to an upload, or sign up for the kind of uploading that is likely to be developed (destructive uploading)! Destructive uploading destroys the biological brain in effort to measure its computational features. And nondestructive uploading may simply be a total waste of money, or worse. If the program was downloaded, maybe it creates a duplicate of you that lives in a computer simulation, or in a body like yours, trying to take your job or date your partner. After all, it will be convinced it is you. And you might have legal obligations to take care of it!

3. Finally, we have little sense of whether AI can be conscious. The jury is out. So if you aim to transfer your mind, it may be that your upload isnt consciousit doesnt feel like anything to be them. This again suggests that the upload isnt really you. (See David Chalmers.) (See: Can a Machine Feel?)

And we havent even delved into the question: what is a mind? To know whether you survive uploading, it would be important to have a sense of what a mind is. If the mind is just the brain, then, you do not survive. Some say the mind is a program. But a program, like an equation, is an abstract entity. An equation doesnt exist anywhere, although inscriptions of it do. Presumably, your mind is a concrete thing, having a location. Perhaps you are a program instantiation some thing, running a program (akin to a computer, in some sense). But what is that thing? This just brings us back to my original question: what is a mind?

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Research Fellow at the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University

There are two problems with uploading our minds into another body, one philosophical and one technical.

The philosophical problem is whether this is a transfer of personal identity, some kind of cloning/copying making a new person with the same or different identity, or something else entirely. Many people think the answer is intuitively obvious and get very annoyed when others strongly disagree. Myself, I agree with the philosopher Derek Parfit who famously analyzed similar cases (often involving Star Trek-like teleporters) in his book Reasons and Persons (1984): there is no true fact of the matter about who is the real continuation of the original person, what matters is at most psychological connectedness.

The technical problem is of course how to actually do it. Currently our minds emerge from or are our brain activity. We need some way of creating a brain that does the same. I have written a fair bit on whole brain emulation, the hypothetical future simulation of entire brains in software. That would involve scanning a brain (possibly destructively), reconstructing the neural network from the scan, and running the simulation on a suitable computer. In Altered Carbon this is achieved by having a cortical stack implanted, presumably constantly scanning the brain neural network using some form of nanotechnological fiber network.

There is a lot of information in a brain: about 100 billion neurons, each with about 8000 synaptic connections to other neurons we need to keep track of, and quite likely a several pieces of information for each synapse. To scan that you would need a 3D resolution of a few nanometers: actually doable with current microscope technology, albeit only for small (a few micrometers) and frozen/plastinated brain tissue. The connectivity and synapse information may run into maybe 10 petabyte; the actual 3D scan is far bigger. This, and running all the relevant electrochemical processes, may sound like an extremely tall order. Today, it is impossible. But it is relevant to remember that Moores law (in various forms) and science marches onif things continue for a few decades this may not be too hard.

Scanning a living brain is likely much harder than scanning a neatly frozen brain since everything is moving about, there is an active immune system that tries to interfere, and the scanning method better not interfere with function. I think it is physically possible but likely much harder. We need not just great nanotechnology but also a fine understanding of how to interface brains to electronics on a truly vast scale: it is going to take much longer than getting the first uploads to work from frozen scans.

There is an extra issue in Altered Carbon, and that is the recipient bodies. These are either grown clone bodies or donor bodies, nearly totally organic. I can easily imagine (given the above assumptions of technology) how a computer running the brain software could control a biological body, but I have a far harder time imagine how to download a brain network into a recipient brain. Somehow we need to rearrange all the connections to correspond to the downloaded person. That is an extremely tricky thing even with mature nanotechnology, since many neurons stretch across much of the entire brain and now need to be re-routed. This is the part I definitely doesnt believe can be realistic.

There is an obvious ethical issue when using donor bodieswhat do you do with homeless minds? And many other issues easily come to mind: can you lose your right to have a body? Can you sell it? Rent it? Is it a bad thing that you can treat it as disposable? (The roleplaying game Eclipse Phase plays with many of these issues, from refugees who had to flee a disaster by uploading and now are software, over the clanking masses who cannot afford organic bodies and have to make do with shoddy robot bodies, to fancy designer-bodies for those who can afford them). But this does not really say anything about whether it is a moral thing to move between bodies, just that there are a lot of social context that matters. It is like discussing healthcare: how it is provided, to whom, what practice is allowed, mandatory and banned, all these things have huge ethical implications but doesnt really tell us whether medicine itself is moral.

Some people would say the whole idea is wrong because it is against nature: humans are not meant to be immortal body-hoppers. But that something is natural does not mean it is moral or acceptable: we do fight cancer and cruelty, despite both being parts of natural life. A slightly more sophisticated version argues that human life is shaped by its mortality and other features, so a change would make us something not-human and hence it is not good for humans to aspire to it. But this by this argument monkeys should not seek to become humans enjoying art, science, religion, sport etc. since such higher pleasures are not monkey pleasures. This seems backwards to me: we can enjoy monkey pleasures too, and we have removed many of the limitations of being a monkey. Similarly being a potentially immortal body-hopper removes some pretty big limitations in life yet still allows us to limit ourselves if we so chooses. It is possible to turn off ones stack.

Many like to say that it is the human limitations that make us human. But the world of Altered Carbon is full of limitationsjust because people are potentially immortal doesnt mean heartbreak, cruelty, oppression, faulty technologies and all the other bad things worth fighting against have disappeared. I suspect that no matter how advanced we become we will always bump into limitations that we will struggle with.

Some thinkers worry that if we enhance ourselves we will try to control everything in our lives. Everything of ourselves will be a potential object of design and engineering, and this both will make it less authentic and make us frustrated as we constantly tinker with it. There is some truth to this: we are suffering from a fair bit of first world problems today with our free and flexible lives (compared to our ancestors). But that just seem to mean we should culture the virtue of enhancing ourselves wisely and responsibly rather than not being able to enhance oneself.

Would it make sense to call oneself human if one is actually moving from cortical stack to cortical stack? I think so. Being human is about a particular perspective on the world, a human-style mind with its peculiar biases, motivation system, ways of thinking and feeling, and so on. A working mind transfer will transfer our human minds to whatever substrate can run thempure software, a robot, a biological bodyand that means that it will now at the very least house a human mind.

We can hope that this allow us to extend and improve our minds so we can properly call ourselves transhuman and maybe one day even posthuman, but I have a suspicion that even far-future superintelligences may still use the word human to denote what they are.

Neuroscientist and founder of Carboncopies Foundation

Probably, yes. For most scientists the default hypothesis is that everything about our mind and conscious awareness is an emergent consequence of the operations carried out by the biological machinery of the brain. That hypothesis has withstood every test so far. In principle, if we can understand those operations and implement them, then that new implementation will again produce the mind and conscious awareness.

The principal operators in the brain are called neurons. Those tiny processors know nothing except that incoming excitation or inhibition changes their membrane potential. At some threshold they respond with an electric discharge of their own. Together, the orchestration of billions of neurons is the information processor that plays the symphony that is our experience of being.

Uploading a mind involves recording enough data about a persons working brain to replicate its cognitive functions mathematically, then to implement those mathematical functions in another device that will produce the same mind when it is active. Because you can then move a mind from brain to brain (device), we say you have achieved substrate-independence. The neural engineering used to do that is called whole brain emulation.

The biggest challenge is to access the brains relevant data. In neural engineering today, the first steps towards whole brain emulation are efforts to build neural prostheses - replacement parts for small parts of the brain. Examples are retinal prostheses and the ambitious hippocampal neural prosthesis project at the Berger Lab of the University of Southern California, which should enable patients with a malfunctioning hippocampus to regain the ability to create new memories. If you can replace each part of the brain with an equivalent neural prosthetic device that is in essence the same as whole brain emulation. At a later stage, when we know how to recover dynamic function from 3D structure scans as well, there may be wholesale methods for whole brain emulation from such scans, yet another path to mind uploading.

Yes, at Carboncopies we think its very important that we do. Its already pretty easy to see why medical neural prostheses are useful and desirable to cure a patients brain dysfunction. Beyond that, neural prosthesis holds the promise of enhanced abilities. Imagine, for example, that you can explicitly choose which things to remember and which ones to forget when you have a hippocampal neural prosthesis. Its also pretty easy to see why mapping and modeling brain functions is important to science, medicine, and to learn what could be implemented in artificial intelligence.

When our skills at building neural prosthesis reach the point where whole brain emulation is possible we reach a very special milestone. Up to that point, the need to interact with the remaining biological parts of a brain mean that there are hard limits to the sort of cognitive functions that are possible. For example, biological neurons will never be able to react fast enough to be aware of or to respond to events that happen at the microsecond scale, a dynamic part of our universe that only our machines can presently experience. Overcoming these and other limitations is the human thriving argument for mind uploading. It means that we gain the choice to expand our range of possible experience and capabilities, to participate in more, instead of ceding the bigger picture to our machines as we remain constrained to a narrow subset of what the universe has to offer.

The is also an important survival argument for mind uploading. If we cannot modify our mental abilities then we are constrained to an evolutionary niche. If the history of evolution has shown anything, it has shown that those niches tend to disappear. Present developments, for example in artificial intelligence, suggest that human thought might soon play an ever-decreasing and minor role in the future society of intelligences. Adapting to change may well be a survival requirement.

I cant say that Ive ever thought of a human who uploads as anything other than human. When a person has prosthetic limbs or a cochlear implant we dont call them anything other than human. So, I imagine that we can still call ourselves human, even if we had prosthetic bodies. If anything, augmenting our abilities through technology has always been a uniquely human characteristic.

Professor of Neurobiology, Biomedical Engineering and Psychology, and Neuroscience, Duke University

No, because our minds are not digital at all. It depends on information embedded in the brain tissue that cannot be extracted by digital means.

It will never happen. This is just an urban scifi myth that has no scientific merit or backing. It only diminishes the unique nature of our human conditionby comparing it to digital machinesand instills fear on people who do not know better.

Do you have a burning question for Giz Asks? Email us at tipbox@gizmodo.com.

Clarification: Susan Schneiders first name was incorrectly listed as Sarah. This has been fixed.

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Will We Ever Be Able to Upload a Mind to a New Body?

Inside Citizen, the App That Asks You to Report on Crimes – WIRED

There is some sort of a thrill going out and doing it, says Logan Williams, a former contractor who filmed videos for Citizen in Los Angeles. Its a rush, it releases endorphins.

In March, Citizen suspended its street team program and stopped all payments to its contractors, citing pandemic-related safety concerns. A Citizen spokesperson said the company hasnt made any decisions about when the program might resume.

Thrilling and Chilling

Hobbyists and hyper-concerned civilians have monitored police radio chatter for decades. There are whole internet forums and communities on YouTube dedicated to following the communications of law enforcement, fire departments, and other first-response agencies. Its an activity that attracts a certain personality type, curious and discerning. Citizen isnt the first app to give these enthusiasts the ability to livestream, but it is the one thats completely dedicated to it. Its no wonder amateur stringers flock to it.

Everybody wants to be the hero, or the source, or a key player in a situation, says Andy Frakes, a former Citizen employee responsible for sending out incident alerts. For better or worseunfortunately, its usually for worsepeople want to be involved, or to just get that catharsis that for whatever reason they need more than anyone else.

For someone like Anthony, its a kick just to get a look at the action.

Seeing the lights and sirens just brings out the little kid inside of me, Anthony says. I don't know. I just kind of like that stuff.

Its not all motivated by childlike wonder. Anthonys time responding to hundreds of emergency calls has molded his aspirations. When he grows up, he wants to be a cop.

This obviously is not a good time to be in law enforcement with everything going on, Hope admits. But my heart goes out for the majority of law enforcement officers. So I feel like, if this is what he really wants to do when he gets older I mean, he's 12, so it could change. He could change his mind 10 times, but as of now, I think you let your kids follow their passion if it's something they like to do.

Thin Blue Line

The relationship between Citizen and law enforcement has always been uneven. When Citizen first launched in New York City, NYPD officials were overwhelmingly against it, frustrated by the idea that the app might encourage aspiring crime fighters. Bill Bratton, the former NYPD commissioner and co-architect of New Yorks controversial stop-and-frisk policy, staunchly opposed the app when he was in office. In an unexpected turn of events, Bratton has now become an adviser on Citizens board.

It has the potential to be a techy breakthrough in community engagement for emergency agencies. But for those not inclined to trust law enforcement, Citizen feels like yet another tool of mass policing.

What the Citizen app is doing is empowering people as law enforcement, and we already know that's a problem, says Nicol Turner Lee, the tech policy advocate. Not everybody can be a vigilante in a country that is already skewed when it comes to race relations. We don't need people, particularly in this highly partisan, highly polarized environment, to have additional means to be able to further discriminate against vulnerable populations."

In March, Citizen added features that have become staples of any standard social media platform: activity notifications, private messaging, the ability to add friends. Around the same time, Citizen reintroduced a feature that lets users create their own incident alerts, instead of waiting for the incident to show up after it's been broadcast on a scanner and added to the app by Citizen's employees.

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Inside Citizen, the App That Asks You to Report on Crimes - WIRED

The Business of Drugs: inside the economics of America’s longest war – The Guardian

As a CIA analyst in Shanghai and Pakistan during Americas war on terror, Amaryllis Fox was familiar with drawn-out, intractable conflict. Shed studied the compounding effects of redoubling on failed policies, of redundant good versus evil arguments peddled into a quagmire, costing billions and an incalculable loss of life. But the situation in Americas longest military war, now nearing two decades, paled in comparison to the subject of Foxs post-CIA project for Netflix: Americas costly, decades-longer engagement known as the war on drugs.

The Business of Drugs, a six-part series Fox hosts on Netflix, takes a clear-eyed approach to the futility of drug enforcement: what are the incentives, economic and personal, that keeps the market flow of narcotics churning despite a generational trail of violence and waste? Declared in 1971 by Richard Nixon, the war on drugs refers broadly to the federal governments campaign to control psychoactive substances through draconian legislation, expansion of enforcement agencies, and military aid and intervention to other countries. Drug enforcement policies have long served as cudgels against minority groups the first anti-opium laws, in the 1870s, targeted Chinese immigrants; anti-cannabis measures in the 1910s and 20s aimed for Mexican workers and the current iteration grows from these roots; from mandatory minimum sentences to no-knock warrants, the war on drugs has fueled, in part, the mass incarceration of Americans, especially people of color. Nearly 50 years and $1tn in, the business of drug prohibition has not only not worked, but the problem is worse than it was when the policy began, Fox told the Guardian.

The Business of Drugs plays like a condensed, updated version of the popular National Geographic series Drugs, Inc (also on Netflix), moving from Americas voracious consumption of illicit substances to the global network of supply evading, or dwarfing, interlocking attempts at enforcement. The series six segments are delineated by substance cocaine, synthetics (such as MDMA, also known as ecstasy), heroin, meth, cannabis and opioids and explore substances of wildly varying levels of addictiveness, use and geography. Together, the chapters form a loose condemnation of prohibition as both policy and moralistic stance.

The series is not a matter of admitting defeat in the war on drugs, Fox said. Instead it demands looking at the policies themselves rather than the fight to enforce them, and asking ourselves if in fact prohibition has any logical hope of working, or whether its a residue of a moralistic stance that I think is no longer relevant in our society.

Like its title, The Business of Drugs aims to be straightforward, or as clear as possible on the economics dollars by gram, price increases by mile of transport in shadowy systems for which transparency is a risk. Each episode visits a different hotspot epitomizing the challenges, market and opportunity for positive change for each substance. For cocaine, Fox traces the bloody trail of the wests habit from the plants cultivation in Colombia (a no-brainer for farmers, given the yield and influence of cartels), through Mexican smuggling routes, over the border to Americas draconian incarceration system for possession. Synthetics presents the therapy potential of MDMA, particularly for PTSD, if declassification from schedule 1, the highest classification for drugs of allegedly no medical benefit, would permit serious research. For heroin, Fox visits the ports of Kenya, where the route for smuggling the drug produced largely from opium poppies in Afghanistan has proliferated into an economic boon for some and devastating addiction epidemic for others.

In the installments on heroin (in Kenya) and meth (in Myanmar), Fox meets with government or military officials propagating the line of drugs as good versus evil, themselves firmly aligned with good, despite evidence to the contrary. The cost of prohibition inverts to the cost of unwieldy and haphazard legalization in the case of marijuana in some US states, especially California, where above-board business is cutthroat, onerously regulated, and ripe for consolidation by big business interests. And in an episode on opioids, Fox explores a familiar and devastating story of an American epidemic fueled by big pharmaceutical companies and the inertia of inadequate regulation.

According to Fox, everyone from individual coca plant growers in Colombia to worldly United Nations economists agreed that there were two ways to stop the exhaustive and unending war on drugs: end demand, or legalize and regulate with fair competition. Demand, largely from the US and western Europe, wont be going away, which leaves policy. We think that we can go in and stop it at the point of supply, said Fox, but as long as that demand continues, the reward is high enough that the economic reality is that this is going to continue.

The reality of those economics that for many, the choice to participate in the black market drug economy outweighs the cost of abstaining (if there is a choice to abstain at all) is critical in understanding how to bring an end to this war.

Fox and her team, including partner Zero Point Zero Productions, the company behind Anthony Bourdains Parts Unknown, worked for over a year in pre-production to establish sources willing to speak about participation in illicit, violent networks. The interviews, often anonymous a man who swallowed heroin packets in Kenya to cross into Tanzania, the small-batch cocaine dealer following his fathers footsteps in California, the masked dealer who sees a spate of zombie overdoses on a bad batch of synthetic marijuana as a business opportunity were built on both the desire to effect change through lived experience and, said Fox, the human impulse to share your life, to be meaningful and have the data that youve learned and the expertise that you have spent your professional life gathering be relevant. Maybe its in a criminal industry, but each of the people we spoke to from the smallest grower down the line each of them is a substantive expert in their field.

There is the tendency in the media and in everyday life to think of the drug trade as being driven by the low-level growers and dealers and others who are caught up in it, Fox said. But these testimonies revealed rational calculations of risk versus economic and social security. Many of us, if we found ourselves in the same position, would make the same choices for our family and for our own economic wellbeing, she said.

That realization was, to her, hopeful the continuance of a fight against controlled substances remains frustratingly futile, but an assessment of choices on the ground in favor of drug dealing, growing and trafficking also known, for many, as economic survival demonstrated that its not a good versus evil battle that is going to go on forever, its actually a matter of economics and policy. If we make changes to those things, we can see a different outcome.

The only way for us to tackle this is to have a very logical, adult conversation as a nation about whether theres any possibility of demand going away, Fox said. And if not, what do we need to do in terms of legalization and regulation to bring an end to the violence and mass incarceration that this policy has created?

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The Business of Drugs: inside the economics of America's longest war - The Guardian

Gretchen Burns Bergman: My two kids survived the war on drugs. Others haven’t. – The San Diego Union-Tribune

In the middle of dual crises caused by COVID-19 and opioid overdoses, the systemic racism of our criminal justice system raised its ugly head with the police killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd, the latest in a long line of violent and unjust law enforcement incidents. To remain silent was simply no longer an option, so people have taken to the streets to condemn racism and demand justice.

Mothers across the cultural spectrum mourn the loss of their children to an overarching and punitive criminal justice system and incarceration, but dramatically more so in Black communities, where it has become infuriatingly normalized to have a father in prison. African Americans are incarcerated at more than 5 times the rate of whites.

My two sons struggled for decades with addiction to heroin, although they were born to White privilege. My older son was arrested for possession of marijuana when he was 20 years old, and spent 11 years cycling in and out of prison for nonviolent drug offenses and relapse. He is a survivor of both incarceration and accidental overdose. My younger son was also damaged by criminal justice involvement, which created significant roadblocks to recovery. Both were stigmatized and criminalized, and our family struggled with societal shame, mounting financial pressures and emotional pain.

The drug war is a war on people and it was designed to control and harm people of color. It has cost over $1 trillion over the past four decades, and created a system of mass arrest and incarceration, disproportionately affecting Black and Brown communities.

Moms who have gone through immense hardships to migrate to another country so that their children have a chance to live and prosper are having their sons and daughters torn from them when they arrive in the United States. We have a humanitarian crisis at our border.

Mothers who were found to be using drugs, despite no evidence of child neglect or abuse, have had their children taken away by Child Protective Services and placed in foster care, a flawed system that during the coronavirus pandemic can affect a parents ability to even visit a child. Besides the trauma of separation, removing a child can be a missed opportunity to provide a treatment incentive for the parent. These policies have had a deeply harmful effect on communities of color and poverty.

Moms are deeply grieving the loss of loved ones to overdoses. A person dies every 11 minutes of an opioid overdose in the U.S. This is particularly frustrating and enraging as many of these overdose deaths could have been prevented with harm reduction strategies and naloxone, a safe drug that can quickly reverse an opioid overdose.

And although our country has endured decades of blatant prejudice and injustice to communities of color by the criminal justice complex, most recently and vividly we heard George Floyd call out for his mama as he was being slowly killed by a police officer who held him down with a knee on his neck for almost 9 minutes.

My sons are now in their 40s, and both are in long-term recovery, working as drug and alcohol counselors. Together we advocate for harm reduction strategies and an end to the failed war on drugs. They came through my body and will forever be connected to my spirit and soul. We all are human beings and we share the fact that we all have a mother who brought us into this world.

So its time to listen to moms. We see, feel, smell and taste when our children are harmed. We hope, we fear, we experience sadness and joy as our children go through their life experiences.

We understand the intersection of racism, the war on poverty, immigrant and LGBTQ prejudicial policies and the drug war. Silence creates a form of acceptance, so we must speak out for tolerance and equality, particularly when times are tough and we fear we no longer have a voice. If we hesitate and fail to protect the rights of others and look away in a self-protective stance, we will have lost our humanity, and in the process evil will have won over good. Now more than ever, we need to work in coalition and with respect for one another.

We must all raise our voices for change together because we are losing far too many precious lives. Moms must be vigilant in promoting and protecting humane and life-affirming policies, and in resisting all forms of hatred and bigotry. Too many moms are mourning.

Burns Bergman is co-founder and executive director of A New PATH (Parents for Addiction Treatment & Healing) and lead organizer of Moms United to End the War on Drugs. She lives in Rancho Santa Fe.

Read more from the original source:

Gretchen Burns Bergman: My two kids survived the war on drugs. Others haven't. - The San Diego Union-Tribune

20 charged as part of sheriff’s ‘War on Drugs’ – ABC 36 News – WTVQ

LAUREL COUNTY, Ky. (WTVQ) Another 20 people have been charged with drug offenses as part of Laurel County Sheriff John Roots War on Drugs.

According to the sheriff, detectives, deputies, and the departments K-9 teams were part of the round up.

While conducting unrelated drug investigations, answering complaints and at traffic stops, investigators found subjects with meth, heroin, Xanax, hydrocodone, gabapentin, assorted pills, scales, hypodermic needles, glass pipes with white residue, cut straws with residue and other paraphernalia, and U.S. currency,. the sheriff said.

Some subjects were also found with outstanding warrants and outstanding warrants for failure to appear on drug charges.According to the departments Facebook page, those arrested and the charges against them are:1. Lee Merritt Sr., Age 55 arrested off Hawk Creek Road charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; possession of drug paraphernalia; public intoxication controlled substances.2. Justin Mullins age 27 of Old County Road, McKee, Ky arrested on Hal Rogers Parkway in London charged with trafficking in a controlled substance first-degree first offense; trafficking in a controlled substance third-degree first offense; possession of a controlled substance third-degree; prescription controlled substances not in proper container first offense; resisting arrest.3. Destiny Hobbs age 19 of Mildred Road, McKee, Ky arrested off Wendell Way in London charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine.4. Steven Wayne Helton age 35 of Hanes Baker Rd., Corbin arrested off West Cumberland Gap Pkwy. charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; possession of a controlled substance second-degree; prescription controlled substances not in proper container first offense; possession of drug paraphernalia.5. Kenny Blake Wagers, Jr age 21 of McWhorter Road, London arrested off McWhorter Road charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense heroin; possession of drug paraphernalia.6. Charles Nantz age 30 of Clancy Ln., Lily arrested off Clancy Lane charged with trafficking in a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; wanton endangerment degree; three counts of possession of a controlled substance third-degree; possession of drug paraphernalia.7. Ricky Lee Miracle age 33 of Cecil Wyatt Rd., Corbin arrested off West Cumberland Gap Pkwy. charged on a Whitley Circuit Court bench warrant of arrest charging court order violation regarding charges of possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; possession of drug paraphernalia.8. Kimberly Ann Hubbard age 33 of Blake Dr., London arrested off Miracle Lane in London charged with public intoxication controlled substances stated had been using meth; disorderly conduct second-degree; an outstanding Laurel District Court bench warrant charging failure to appear in court.9. Ashley R. Smith age 24 of Barr Creek Rd., Oneida, KY arrested off East Laurel Rd. charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine; possession of drug paraphernalia; possession of marijuana.10. Christopher Adam Cole age 32 of Runnels Branch Road, Littcarr, KY arrested on KY 490 charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence first offense; possession of drug paraphernalia with meth residue; operating on suspended or revoked operators license.11. Rebecca Caudill age 32 of Runnels Branch Road, Littcarr, KY arrested on KY 490 charged with public intoxication controlled substances; possession of drug paraphernalia with meth residue.12. Joseph Chad Curry age 45 of Curry Rd., London arrested off Curry Road charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.13. James Marcum age 46 of East Laurel Rd., London arrested off East Laurel Rd. charged on a failure to appear warrant.14. Mary Melissa Roark age 36 of Fire House Rd., East Bernstadt charged with possession of a controlled substance first-degree first offense methamphetamine.15. Landon Collins age 32 of Locust Grove Rd., London arrested off East 4th Street in London charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.16. Irvin Johnson age 34 of Taylor Subdivision Rd., London arrested off Tobacco Road in London charged with possession of drug paraphernalia; wanton endangerment second-degree police officer is victim.17. Angela Shepherd age 43 of Sallys Branch Rd., London arrested off Slate Lick Road charged with trafficking in a controlled substance first-degree second offense methamphetamine; trafficking in a controlled substance third-degree second offense.18. Linda Jane Wallace age 50 of Van Hollow Road, McKee, KY arrested off Slate Lick Road charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence second offense; driving on DUI suspended license first offense; trafficking in a controlled substance first-degree second offense methamphetamine; trafficking in a controlled substance third-degree second offense; prescription controlled substances not in proper container first offense; driving on DUI suspended license first offense.19. Johnny Gregory age 51 of Highway 472, Manchester arrested off Slate Lick Rd. charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.20. Marsha Denny age 41 of Sallys Branch Rd., London arrested off Slate Lick Rd. charged with public intoxication controlled substances; possession of drug paraphernalia.

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20 charged as part of sheriff's 'War on Drugs' - ABC 36 News - WTVQ

Here’s What Netflix’s ‘The Business of Drugs’ Host, Amaryllis Fox, Did for the CIA – Men’s Health

Longer than the nearly two-decades long War on Terror, notes Amaryllis Foxhost of Netflix's newest documentary series, The Business of Drugsis the War on Drugs (declared by Richard Nixon in 1971).

And whats been profitable for syndicates and cartels is also profitable for television and Netflix, which has an almost-unending queue of narcotics-based documentaries: Dope, Drug Lords, Inside the Real Narcos, the practically celebratory Have a Good Trip, the list goes on.

Helping us navigate this series of drug investigations is Fox, who introduces herself and her career:

Fox worked primarily on weapons. That algorithm she described used a variety of metrics to identify hotbeds for terrorist activitya ratio of hookah bars to madrassas and percentage beneath livable wage a border guard gets paid, Fox told the New York Times in an interview for her novel, Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA. She was recruited by the agency at 22.

Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA

For eight years, Fox posed as an art dealer abroad, recruiting assets for the CIA and helping prevent terror groups from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. (For a separate operation in Shanghai, Fox writes, she and her husband allowed themselves to be surveilled by the Chinese government while the CIA also watched; the CIA was spying on the spies.)

Fox left the agency in 2010. She now lives in Los Angeles with her daughter from a previous marriage; her now-husband is Robert F. Kennedy III, son of Robert Kennedy Jr. (the two met at Burning Man).

Foxs book is currently being adopted into a an Apple TV series starring Brie Larson. There is no release date yet.

The book met some criticism, however, when former intelligence officers questioned some of Foxs accounts (of course, Fox had to change details to protect sensitive information, an editorial decision she says accounts for any discrepancies.)

Since leaving the agency, Fox has covered current events, appearing on news outlets like CNN, Al Jazeera, and the BBC. She also co-hosted American Ripper on the History Channel.

Fox said she shot most of the Netflix series while in her third trimester of pregnancy; she gave birth in January 2019.

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Here's What Netflix's 'The Business of Drugs' Host, Amaryllis Fox, Did for the CIA - Men's Health

The drug war is a real war, and Iowa’s death row inmate was fighting in it – The Gazette

One of Iowas most notorious murderers and meth dealers is scheduled to die this week.

While Iowa outlawed capital punishment more than 50 years ago, the federal government is pressing forward with executions of four federal inmates, part of the Trump administrations tough-on-crime posture. The U.S. Supreme Court decided against the convicts legal challenge last month, allowing the first executions since 2003 to proceed.

One of them Dustin Honken, called an Iowa drug kingpin by the media and police was convicted in federal court in the 1993 killings of five people in Northern Iowa, including two children.

When Honken dies, there will be one fewer criminal in the world. But if the goal of our justice system is to prevent another criminal from taking other innocent lives, we have to take a sober look at the conditions precipitating his crimes.

Honken did not just go out killing indiscriminately. After he was first charged with federal drug crimes, he targeted two former drug trade associates who became government informants, along with one of their girlfriends and her two children.

In other words, Honken killed to protect his illegal business. The killings he committed are despicable and wholly inexcusable, so this is not an excuse, but it is one explanation.

The drug war is an actual war, and Honken was fighting in it.

If the drug war were effective at stifling the drug trade, maybe we could calculate a macabre yet acceptable trade-off a little more violent crime in exchange for less drug-related harm. But thats not how it works in practice the prevailing prohibition and enforcement regime has proved impotent at anything besides wrecking peoples lives.

Over the past 20 years, Iowa officials have waged a war against methamphetamine, led with concerted enforcement efforts by local, state and federal authorities, and new laws restricting access to meth manufacturing ingredients. We appear to be worse off for their efforts.

Meth: Iowas on it, too, more than ever before

Iowas annual report on drug control last year showed indicators of methamphetamine harm and trafficking are rising in the state deaths from meth and other psychostimulants, the portion of patients entering treatment who list meth as their primary substance, the number of people imprisoned for meth-related charges and the volume of meth seized by authorities.

A key figure is the price of methamphetamine the average price per gram dropped about 20 percent between 2010 and 2018, while the average purity grew by 20 percent, according to the Iowa Counterdrug Task Force. That suggests more potent methamphetamine is more easily available than ever before. Its clear Iowa is losing the war on meth.

Sometimes drugs make people more violent, but that effect is overstated. And, as we have seen, prohibition has a poor record of mitigating risky drug use anyway. The other cause of drug-related violence and the one we can meaningfully address through public policy is prohibition itself.

Maybe you have noticed that bootleggers of the U.S. alcohol prohibition era and marijuana smugglers this century have used violence to protect their supplies. But modern beer distributors and medical marijuana dispensaries dont do that. The difference is the legality.

Its a radical idea, but if people with methamphetamine use disorder had easy access to safe and legal substances, maybe people like Honken would be put out of business peacefully. Maybe if we ended the federalized and militarized response to drugs, people like that would have less reason to use lethal force.

Honken does not have many sympathizers. Iowa Catholic bishops are calling on President Donald Trump to commute Honkens execution sentence, but there is no mass outpouring to save his life. The killings are too grisly and the facts are too solid to elicit that kind of response.

But this isnt about Iowas meth kingpin. Its about his five victims, and countless others who have been killed or had their lives torn apart, chalked up to collateral damage in the war on drugs.

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Honken will pay for his crimes. But who pays for the system that helped create this unthinkable tragedy? Thats on us.

adam.sullivan@thegazette.com; (319) 339-3156

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The drug war is a real war, and Iowa's death row inmate was fighting in it - The Gazette

Whats on TV Tuesday: Dirty John and The Business of Drugs – The New York Times

DIRTY JOHN: THE BETTY BRODERICK STORY 10 p.m. on USA. Following the success of its first season, which adapted the hit podcast Dirty John for television, this anthology series tracks the very public unraveling of a marriage. It stars Amanda Peet as Betty Broderick, and Christian Slater as her husband, Dan, who seemed to lead an idyllic life in Southern California in the 80s until Dan, a successful medical-malpractice lawyer, hired a new legal assistant named Linda Kolkena (Rachel Keller). Dan and Bettys marriage spats and divorce played out in La Jolla for more than five years, until Betty shot and killed Dan and Linda, who had married, while they slept. The season finale wraps up Bettys case, which, as The New York Times reported in 1991, divided this normally placid city and has drawn attention to the issue of domestic psychological abuse.

SHOWBIZ KIDS (2020) 9 p.m. on HBO. With Instagram, YouTube and TikTok, it seems easier than ever for young people to achieve viral fame and to use that celebrity to break into the entertainment industry. Still, there are young aspiring actors, singers and dancers trekking to auditions and spending their days practicing or attending classes, all in the hopes of becoming the next big thing. But at what cost? This documentary, which was written and directed by the former child actor Alex Winter, looks at the history of young stardom, at a time when there are those in Hollywood who are trying to make the industry safer and more inclusive for everyone. It features interviews with Evan Rachel Wood, Jada Pinkett Smith and Mara Wilson who share what it was like to grow up or raise their children in Hollywood. The documentary follows up-and-coming entertainers and examines the sacrifices their families are making to help them achieve their dreams.

HOT ONES 10 p.m. on TruTV. What started out as a highly entertaining (and cringe-worthy, if youre hot sauce-averse) way to conduct a celebrity interview has been transformed into a TV game show. On its midseason premiere, the host Sean Evans challenges two best friends on their trivia knowledge and threshold for spicy chicken wings.

THE BUSINESS OF DRUGS Stream on Netflix. In the trailer for this new series, its host, the former C.I.A. analyst Amaryllis Fox, says that the only way to bring the war on drugs to an end, is to understand the economics that drive it. Over six episodes, Fox travels the world to understand the lucrative and often deadly global drug trade, from a new heroin route in Kenya to Californias legal marijuana market.

MARJOUN AND THE FLYING HEADSCARF (2019) Stream on Eventive. Its been five years since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and 17-year-old Marjoun (Veracity Butcher), the protagonist of this film, is trying to get her father out of jail. Hes been arrested on charges stemming from his alleged connections to Hezbollah. In her quest to clear his name, Marjoun confronts her relationship with god and her identity as a Muslim American in her hometown, Little Rock, Ark.

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Whats on TV Tuesday: Dirty John and The Business of Drugs - The New York Times

Reuters appoints Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia and Brunei bureau chiefs and editing roles in Southeast Asia – Reuters

Reuters has appointed key editorial roles in bureaus across Asia:

Soccer Football - Zlatan Ibrahimovic in Milan ahead of signing for AC Milan - Milan, Italy - January 2, 2020 AC Milan fans hold up mobile phones with the media outside Casa Milan as they wait to see Zlatan Ibrahimovic ahead of him signing for AC Milan REUTERS/Daniele Mascolo

Angie Teo has been appointed Indonesia Bureau Chief and will lead Reuters coverage across the worlds fourth most populous country. Angie joined Reuters in 2010 reporting on palm oil pricing in Malaysia before joining Reuters Video News and in 2014 moved to Jakarta to run Reuters video operation. Angie has anchored various major stories in Asia including the disappearance of Malaysian Airlines MH370, the assassination of Kim Jong Nam and the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka.

Karen Lema has been appointed Bureau Chief, Philippines. Karen joined Reuters in 2006 as a contractor before becoming a staff treasury correspondent in 2008. As acting bureau chief previously, Karen led the team during a period that saw the fallout from the $81 million Bangladesh Bank cyber heist and the meteoric rise of Rodrigo Duterte to the presidency in the 2016 election. Karen has also been central to the bureaus coverage that won a Pulitzer Prize for its reporting on Dutertes bloody war on drugs.

A.Ananthalakshmi becomes Bureau Chief of Malaysia and Brunei after moving to Kuala Lumpur as deputy bureau chief in 2016. Anantha distinguished herself in reporting on everything from the assassination of Kim Jong Nam to investigations of migrant deaths in detention and the palm oil industry to the surprise fall of Najib Razaks government and the return of Mahathir Muhammad in 2018 elections and then Mahathirs own fall earlier this year. Anantha joined Reuters in Bangalore, where she covered U.S. companies in the industrial, aerospace and auto sectors and previously anchored coverage of gold and other precious metals in Asia.

Ed Davies moves to one of two new positions of News Editor, Southeast Asia, responsible for helping shape the day-to-day coverage from the region. In his previous role of Indonesia Bureau Chief, Ed led the team reporting on a series of natural and transport disasters, the turbulent 2019 presidential election and a period that saw a growing tussle over the influence of Islamic groups in the worlds biggest Muslim majority country. Ed joined Reuters in 1996 in Hong Kong before moving with the Asia Desk to Singapore, and then headed to Seoul as an editor for South Korea. As deputy bureau chief in Indonesia, he reported on the country as it became one of the hottest emerging market investment destinations.

Martin Petty also becomes News Editor, Southeast Editor, moving from his former position as Bureau Chief, Philippines. While Martin led the Philippines team, he also reported from Mindanao on the five-month battle for Marawi, during which he broke news of President Dutertes secret backchanneling with insurgents and gained exclusive access to the abandoned hideout of Islamic States Southeast Asian leader. Martin also joined a Reuters team on an old fishing boat to the disputed Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea to become the first foreign media there since it was seized by Beijing. Martin joined Reuters in Bangkok, initially as a sports reporter, before becoming a senior correspondent.

[Reuters PR blog post]

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Reuters appoints Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia and Brunei bureau chiefs and editing roles in Southeast Asia - Reuters

Standing up to vested interests – The Statesman

The cat is finally out of the bag in Manipurs war on drugs. Decorated police officer Thounaojam Brinda Devi MPS has stated in a sworn affidavit before the Manipur High Court that she came under tremendous pressure from chief minister N Biren Singh and a close acquaintance of his to not press charges against politician-cum-drug lord Lhukhosei Zou.

Brinda had arrested him two years ago along with 4.595 kilograms of No 4 heroin powder estimated to be worth about Rs 30 crore in the international market; 280, 200 world is yours party drug tablets worth about Rs 28 crore, and more than Rs 57 lakh in cash.

She is now facing contempt proceedings for her tirades against the Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Court, which she posted on social media after the judge agreed to release Zou on bail for medical reasons.

Brinda stated in her affidavit that on the intervening night of 19 June 2018, a team from the Narcotics and Affairs of Border department of Manipur Police arrested Zou along with seven others.

The operation, which started around 4.30 pm that day and lasted till well past midnight, was led by her as she was the additional superintendent.

Once the crackdown began, some of the arrested persons revealed that drugs were hidden in different places including the quarter of an Autonomous District Council member at Lamphel.

When the police team was about to enter the quarter, a WhatsApp call came from one Moirangthem Asnikumar, a Bharatiya Janata Party state unit vice-president, who enquired about any developments in drugs-busting operations. Brinda told him that she was in the middle of an operation then.

The BJP leader then made her speak to the chief minister who had been briefed about the situation. Biren Singh told her to go ahead and arrest the ADC member if drugs were found there. The last cordon and search was conducted at the quarter along with a team of Lamphel Police (Imphal West Police) led by then SP (lmphal West) Themthing Mashnngva.

He, however, did not enter the premises of the ADC quarter, Brinda said in the affidavit. Before and after the drugs were found, the ADC member, who turned out to be Zou (chairman of the ADC, Chandel district), repeatedly requested the lady officer to settle the issue. Brinda refused to do so. After the drugs were seized, Zou asked her to allow him to call the director general of police and the chief minister.

She refused to do so as well. On the morning of 20 June, Asnikumar went to Brindas residence at Yaiskul Janmasthan. She spoke to him in the presence of her husband in the bedroom, according to the affidavit.

During the conversation, Brinda has stated, the BJP leader told her that the arrested ADC member was the right hand man of one Olice, a close acquaintance of Biren Singh. Asnikumar informed her that the CM had ordered Zou to be exchanged with his wife or son, which Brinda refused as the drugs were seized from him and not his wife or son.

Helpless, Asnikumar left but he went back a second time. He said that the CM and Olice were extremely unhappy with Brindas defiance of their order. He again asked her to release Zou.

Brinda told the BJP leader that the culpability of the ADC chairman should be left to the court. Informing him that there were over 150 personnel present in the entire operation along with independent witnesses, she asked what she would tell the team and the public when asked how the ADC chairman vanished after arrest. Asnikumar left the scene.

Then around 11 am on the same day, Brinda stated that Asnikumar came back for a third time and told her that the CM and Olice were adamant that she release Zou under any condition.

According to the affidavit, she replied, I do not need this job. I came back to this service at the request of New Delhi on the promise that I would be supported in the work I do and can leave the job anytime if I am not satisfied. This attempt of the CM is to finish my career by destroying my credibility. I will not release the man.

In the meantime, Mashnngva also went to her residence. Along with him, Asnikumar and Brinda discussed the matter. She told both of them that it was not possible to release Zou.

She warned about the danger of the CM involving himself in a narcotics case of such magnitude, especially since the BJP government in Manipur was young at the time.

On 14 December 2018, SP of the NAB informed Brinda that the DG had called for a meeting at 11 am that day. The DGP enquired about the whereabouts of the charge sheet of the ADC case.

Brinda informed him that it had reached the court but the DGP said the CM wanted it removed from there. She replied that it was not possible as the charge sheet had already been submitted.

Later, that evening, SP NAB informed her that he had just come back from meeting the CM and the latter was infuriated that the charge sheet had still not been removed. On 11 January 2019, Yumkham Rather, Special Judge NDPS Manipur, wrote a letter to the DGP and secretary of the Bar Council of Manipur describing a grave development that had taken place in the Zou case. In that letter, the judge stated that on 14 December 2018, Imphal West SP Jogesh Chandra Haobijam IPS and H Chandmjit Sharma, senior advocate, reportedly came and met T Bipinchandra, the special public prosecutor, at his office.

They asked the investigating officer to withdraw the charge sheet against Zou, the affidavit stated. Brinda further said on 31 March 2019, an Imphal-based daily published the news about how Sharma and Chandra tried to meddle in the trial. Around 8.30 am that day, SP NAB told her to come to office.

When she asked why, he replied that an order had come from the DGP that the NAB make a written public clarification that there was no pressure to remove the charge sheet. Upon her refusal to do so, the SP (NAB) issued a press statement to that effect.

After Brindas revelation became public through local media and went viral online, Biren Singh issued a statement that nobody would be spared, even if they were family or BJP members, in the fight against the drug menace as well as the ongoing case.

The Opposition went hammer and tongs with state Congress Party president M Oken saying that a Cabinet meeting of the government should be urgently called, and the case of Zous arrest along with the seizure of drugs handed over to an independent body like the Central Bureau of Investigation. In yet another turn of events, Mashnngva, now DIG, filed a criminal contempt case against the publisher and editor of an Imphal-based English daily for carrying portions of Brindas affidavit in their newspaper.

The lady officer was also named by him and the matter has been listed for hearing by the Manipur High Court. Manipur Polices public relations officer, W Basu Singh has also released a press statement saying that there were no political interferences in the investigation being carried out in the Zou case. Brinda, who is the daughter-inlaw of former United National Liberation Front supremo RK Meghen, entered Manipur Police Service only after she had moved the High Court over the refusal of the then Congress government to induct her, given her family ties with the UNLF chief.

Then she resigned from service after reporting that her Commanding Officer was withdrawing money in her name for petrol expenses.

Her protests elicited no response from both the government and police authorities. Only after pressure was mounted on the state government by the Union ministry of home affairs through the Intelligence Bureau, she rejoined service. A no-nonsense officer with grit and determination, Brinda has said on record that she doesnt mind being sent to jail for her convictions. But observers feel that the High Court should exercise judicial activism and help curb the drug menace in Manipur.

The writer is the Imphal-based Special Representative of The Statesman.

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Standing up to vested interests - The Statesman