Jordan’s ‘law and order’ status a function of state-society relations – Jordan Times

For the past two decades, Jordanians have been reporting very high levels of satisfaction with safety and security in their neighbourhoods and the country at large in identical percentages. In this sense, they stand out when compared to other countries in the region and beyond. Reported satisfaction with safety at the neighbourhood level is identical to that reported at the countys level in many of the surveys conducted in Jordan such as the Arab Transformation Survey. In all other neighbouring countries there is a gap, and in some of them it is a hugely significant gap.

Empirical data demonstrate much less satisfaction with safety at the country level when compared to that at the neighbourhood level in the conflict-ridden neighbouring countries. For example, Iraqis report nearly four times satisfaction levels with safety in their neighborhoods higher than that at the country level. This means less popular trust in the national security policies and institutions. In countries like Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Tunis, and Libya, it is expected to find such positions.

According to the recently published Law and Order report by Gallup, confidence in the local police in MENA region stood at 72 per cent, compared to 49 per cent in Latin American and the Caribbean, which reported the lowest levels of confidence in the local police, while Western Europe reported the highest levels of confidence in local police at 82 per cent.

In Gallup's Law and Order Index 2020, Jordan ranked 16 worldwide and second among Arab countries after the UAE, which took the second spot globally after Norway. Confidence in the Jordanian police has been in the range of 85-95 per cent since 2000, one of the highest globally as the World Value Survey data demonstrate. For other neighbouring countries, confidence in the police has fluctuated significantly over the years, especially in Iraq, Egypt, Tunis, Libya, Morocco, Algeria, Yemen and Lebanon. Some MENA countries did not allow these surveys to be carried out but allowed a certain survey!

Jordans law and order status is a function of state-society relations. Jordanians cherish their safety and sense of security, not only at the country and neighbourhood levels, but also at home. When asked if they ever felt unsafe from crime in your own home in the past 12 months, 88 per cent reported never or rarely. This compares to 88 per cent in Canada, 92 per cent in Germany, 93 per cent in Hong Kong, 98 per cent in South Korea and 87 per cent in each of the US and Egypt, according to the latest wave of the World Values Survey.

Despite these globally recognised ranks, there are a few measures that have to be taken to fine-tune loose ends and reinforce state monopoly over the use of force. Coercive power must be limited to state organs within the limits of the law and the constitution. Law and order education should be integrated in all public policies in order to ensure the solidification of an incubating value system that appreciates and respect the law and rejects unlawful wrong doing.

The writer is chairman of NAMA Strategic Intelligence Solutions. [emailprotected]

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Jordan's 'law and order' status a function of state-society relations - Jordan Times

Michael B. Jordans mom says its time to end the HIV epidemic in New Jersey | Opinion – nj.com

By Donna Jordan

After many years of advocacy and with the breakthroughs of modern science, the time is NOW to modernize New Jerseys HIV-specific criminal statutes

We know discrimination. Weve been fighting against it our entire lives. And when we learned that there are laws that discriminate against people living with HIV (PLHIV), we couldnt stay silent.

The issue of HIV/AIDS is very personal to me. I lost several friends to the disease during the height of the epidemic in the 1980s and early 90s. Friends who, if diagnosed today, would have had the opportunity to live long, healthy lives thanks to modern medicine. What I didnt realize was that those friends living with HIV today would face prosecution for their status. HIV criminalization laws that were enacted decades ago created initially as misinformed public health tools and guided by a culture of fear have not been updated to meet the latest science.

Criminal justice reform is another issue that is personal to our family. I became intimate with the injustice of our criminal system while my son Michael was preparing for his role as the formidable Bryan Stevenson in Just Mercy. Yes, we already knew that the justice system was racist, but Michaels experience in this film made it even more glaringly obvious.

And now, collectively, we sit at an intersection of race and criminalization issues that hit close to home, quite literally. Our home state of New Jersey is one of the many states with outdated criminal laws that specifically target people living with HIV. When you combine a disease that disproportionately affects Black men and women with a criminal justice system that discriminates against them, you have the perfect storm of racism and inequality.

This is also a problem of public health. These laws make it criminal for anyone with an HIV diagnosis to expose another person through physical contact, including biting or spitting. This means that even if someones conduct poses little to no risk of HIV transmission, they can still be charged with a crime.

Research shows that these laws dont align with current science, but they do perpetuate discrimination. A 2017 study from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found no correlation between HIV diagnosis rates and the effectiveness of criminal exposure laws.

In addition, the Williams Institute found that Black and Latinx people comprise 51% of people living with HIV (PLHIV) in California but make up 67% of those charged under HIV laws. Additionally, Black men and women in Georgia are significantly more likely to be arrested for HIV-related offenses than their white counterparts; Black men are also twice as likely to be convicted.

In New Jersey, the situation is just as dire. New Jerseyans can be convicted of HIV transmission even when there is no transmission or intent to transmit. I stress people living with HIV (PLHIV) can be convicted of a crime that did not happen. New Jersey has also seen cases where people living with HIV (PLHIV) have been charged under both HIV-specific criminal laws and general criminal laws. This treatment has led to individuals pleading guilty for the hope of a lesser sentence.

These antiquated laws dont stop transmission; instead, they discourage people from seeking testing and treatment because a positive test result subjects a person to criminal liability. In many cases, PLHIV are forced to register as sex offenders after conviction, leading to lifelong problems with employment, housing and medical care. As Black people are charged at a disproportionate rate, these laws are just one more way our systems operate against the interest of marginalized communities.

Discriminatory laws are not the solution to our present HIV epidemic. We must modernize the laws, improve access to testing and medication, and erase the stigma.

As of January 2021, two bills that help do just that are on track to be written into New Jersey State Law. S2545 prohibits long-term care facilities from discriminating against LGBTQI individuals due to their gender identity, perceived or actual sexual orientation, HIV status, intersex status, or gender expression. Additionally, A687/S1039 authorizes pharmacists to dispense HIV prophylaxis without individual prescription under certain circumstances and mandates prescription benefits coverage.

We will continue to fight against discrimination. We hope that you will join us. Please contact your elected officials to demand they vote in favor of these two pieces of legislation and against the criminalization of people living with HIV/AIDS. For more information, visit Garden State Equality.

Donna Jordan has been a school counselor at Newark Arts High School, the school that her son, actor Michael B. Jordan, attended.

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Jordan Nwora is still looking for his niche with the Milwaukee Bucks – Behind The Bucks Pass

Jordan Nwora has been among the Milwaukee Bucks under a microscope throughout the teams eventful 12-8 start to the season.

The sophomore forward was expected to see a larger opportunity entering year two, and he has gotten that chance early on. Nwora is currently averaging 19.9 minutes per game, the ninth-most on the 2021-22 roster. He saw a key role for the defending champions to start the season, but his playing time took a massive dip recently to the point where he did not play in two straight games. This inconsistent playing time is part of the growing pains that come with being a 23-year-old on a veteran-oriented team that just won a championship. Still, despite his inexperience, Nwora is a player that could be incredibly valuable for this Bucks team once he finds his groove.

The biggest way for Nwora to carve out a role in the rotation would be with his lethal scoring and prolific outside shot. Both have been on display for the Bucks throughout the season, but Nwora has had a troublesome time doing it on a nightly basis. For reference, check out his stats from the last three games.

Fans just never know what to expect from the forward. One night he could erupt for double-digit points and then struggle mightily during the next. He is working through those issues early as he understands how vital his contributions off the bench will be for the Bucks. To his credit, Nwora is shooting the 3-pointer with the utmost confidence this season, having knocked down 25 triples to this point, the fourth-most on the team after 20 games. That shooting will be his biggest weapon if he can just get a grip on it consistently.

According to NBA.com/stats, the forward is making good on wide-open attempts, having shot an impressive 18-of-38 (47.4 percent) on such shots from behind the arc. His ability to knock down those shots with regularity when sharing the floor with Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jrue Holiday, and others will surely earn him minutes. His ability to catch-and-shoot from the perimeter has been a crucial factor in his success this season, as he has had no issues adopting Milwaukees let it fly mindset. If he keeps shooting it with this much success, there will be time for him in the rotation.

Another area Nwora will have to work on is his turnovers. The forward has 23 of them this year, which is also how many assists he has. The Bucks are not expecting Nwora to be a facilitator for them, but he should aim to take better care of the basketball. For instance, there were multiple plays from Nwora in Milwaukees recent win over the New York Knicks that were frustrating. The first was Nwora getting pickpocketed by Derrick Rose to end the third quarter, which led to a made basket by the Knicks on the other end. Nwora would log another almost costly turnover off a lazy pass to Antetokounmpo, which was stolen and turned into a 3-point basket by New York. He will have to clean this up moving forward.

Overall, Nwora is averaging eight points on .400/.357/.846 shooting splits, 3.7 rebounds, and 1.3 assists per game this year. While those numbers have improved compared to his rookie campaign, there is still room for the 23-year-old to grow. Hopefully he will continue to get a chance to do so for the Bucks. His playing time might continue to be up and down, but when he is fortunate to get the chance out on the floor, he must take advantage. The Bucks have a special player here.

Time will tell if Nwora can cement his role moving forward for the Milwaukee Bucks.

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Jordan Nwora is still looking for his niche with the Milwaukee Bucks - Behind The Bucks Pass

Police officer, suspect injured in South Jordan shooting – ksltv.com

SOUTH JORDAN, Utah A police officer is recovering in the hospital after authorities say he was shot by a man in South Jordan Friday night.

Officials with the South Jordan Police Department said two officers responded to a home in the area of 10450 South and Tarali Court around 8 p.m. to look for a man involved in a recent recovered stolen vehicle case.

They made contact with some people that live at the residence. They allow the officers in to go look for him. We encounter him, I believe, in the basement, and he comes out of a bedroom, firing at officers, said SJPD Lt. Matt Pennington.

One of the officers was struck in the lower leg.

Pennington said officers returned fire, striking the suspect multiple times.

Both the suspect and officer were transported to a local hospital where they underwent surgery.

Police said the officer is currently in stable condition, while the suspect is in stable but critical condition.

You never think that maybe this is going to happen, said Pennington. We try to prepare for it and be safe, which is why multiple officers are here, but as far as tonights events unfolding, I mean, do we anticipate that? No. But are we prepared for it? Hopefully.

The cul-de-sac where the shooting occurred was closed for some time Friday night while authorities investigated the scene.

According to Pennington, those in the area were asked to stay indoors.

Police said the Salt Lake County officer-involved critical incident protocol has been invoked and that Team 2 is investigating the incident.

Per department policy, the officers involved in the shooting will be placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal review of the incident, read a press release from the South Jordan Police Department.

Pennington said the incident hit home for the small department of 70 officers.

Its hard for all of us when you get that call, he said. Thankfully, its not worse. But yeah, nobody wants to get the call we all got tonight.

Dawn Ramsey, the major of South Jordan, posted on social media just after midnight, saying, in part, Praying for our SJPD officer who was shot by a suspect tonight, and sending love and gratitude to our entire SJPD family.

Gov. Spencer Cox also shared a brief statement on Twitter.

Our hearts are with this brave officer and his family as we pray for his full recovery. We are once again filled with gratitude to the brave men and women who daily put themselves in harms way to serve and protect their fellow citizens, read the tweet.

The identities of the suspect and officer have not been released.

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Manuals Jordan Reed wants to create like Ja Morant, score like James Harden, and fly his Thunderbolts to 3A championship. – The Denver Post

Give Jordan Reed a blank canvas, hell fill it from his heart.

Away from basketball, Reeds No. 1 passion right now is his architectural design class. Different forums. Same principle.

You can really build whatever you want, the senior guard from Manual High explained. Once you understand that, your options are never limited. You could build buildings, houses really, anything. Thats what was fun to me.

Whether hes got a basketball or a pencil in his hand, Reed doesnt see limitations. He sees opportunities. Windows. Statements.

As a junior, the 6-foot-4 creator played the point, on the wing and even some at small forward for a Thunderbolts squad that went 12-4 in 2020-21, 8-1 in league play and fell to Lutheran, the eventual Class 3A champs, in the Great Eight.

Along the way, Reed built an incredible season stat line, averaging 18.8 points, 7.1 assists and 6.6 rebounds per game. He posted two triple-doubles and four double-doubles. Over the past two seasons, the Manual star has finished either one board or one assist shy of a double-double in five other games.

We kind of talk about Jason Kidd, Magic Johnson, Oscar Robertson, about being a great rebounding guard, Manual coach Omar Henry said of Reed. Hes kind of big for his size. I always say, Youre bigger than most guys. Just out-jump them.

This winter, hes planning on out-muscling them, too. After playing last season at close to 190 pounds, hes over 200 now. And over the last year, Reeds added almost 100 pounds to his squat its in the 325-ish range along with nearly seven pounds of muscle. He spent five days a week over the summer in the weight room with the football staff, trying to put on bulk without sacrificing the quick-twitch stuff.

Hes always been able to shoot the ball. Henry said. Now hes added being a high-riser to his game. Thats probably going to open up a little bit more of what he does.

Score. Facilitate. Crash. Harass. Fly. Reed, a silky left-hander, is one of those hoops artisans who patterns his game after Ja Morant. James Harden, too. Only with a twist.

Ive got the same step back (jumper) as James Harden. Ive got the same moves as James Harden, Reed said. But I feel Im way more athletic than James Harden.

So no, the kid has been never shy on confidence. Or afraid of the big stage. Reed grew up as one of those classic, tag-along little brothers, following around and playing against his elder sibling, Jaedon, another former Manual stalwart whos now a sophomore forward at Laramie County Community College.

He definitely bullied me all the time, Reed said with a laugh. But he just wanted to see me get better.

Learning how to finish over bigger people made it easier for me when I played with kids my own age which I didnt get to do for a long time. Ive always played up.

Hes stepped up, too. In the Thunderbolts playoff opener against Highland, Reed dropped 15 points and six assists. In the Great Eight loss, he put up 16 points and four dimes against a Lutheran roster that featured big man Baye Fall.

This is a special kid, said Jermaine Mason, the former Denver East and CSU-Pueblo point guard whos now an assistant coach at Manual. Jumps well. Just deceptively quick. Long arms. Gets his hands on a lot of things.

Mason, who grew up playing against the likes of Chauncey Billups, said Reeds game reminds him a bit of former CU Buffs sharpshooter Stevie Wise.

He was another lefty, Mason said. Stevie was a great shooter, and Jordan, he can really light it up.

RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post

While their games are different, Mason noted, his and Reeds demeanors are perfectly matched. And perfectly quiet.

Jordan doesnt talk a lot. Hes kind of like me, Mason said. Its weird we can have a workout and not say that many words. If we had a 30-minute workout, we might get about 20 words out.

And those words stick. Reeds Twitter feed was silent as of last Wednesday morning, but the banner picture on his account spoke volumes. It was a shot of Magic Johnson in Lakers gold, ball in his right hand, guarded by Michael Jordan.

I want to average a triple-double this year, Reed said. I know I was pretty close (last year). Im trying to get 30 (points), 10 (assists) and 10 (boards) a night, yeah.

My goal is to get eight (points) per quarter. And that (will) help me be able to know Im at least close to getting that 30.

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Manuals Jordan Reed wants to create like Ja Morant, score like James Harden, and fly his Thunderbolts to 3A championship. - The Denver Post

In the classroom or in the streets, Jamon Jordan is the peoples historian for Detroit – Detroit Free Press

Courtney Wise Randolph| Special to the Detroit Free Press

This story was originally published by Detour Detroit.

Every time I see Jamon Jordan when it's cold and the wind is blowing, hes geared in a hip-length black leather jacket, zip front and a skull cap emblazoned with the word Detroit. Thats my favorite thing about the citys first official historian, an honor he received from Mayor Mike Duggan last month he looks like he could be one of my cousins. Hes a child of hip hop without having to say so; and even in nameless jeans, a T-shirt and a pair of walking boots, his Detroit swagger is through the roof.

Hes familiar, unlike many prominent historians Ive seen, and his scholarship feels designed for me.

Though a speaker in the upcoming Starz docuseries on Detroit drug trafficking organization Black Mafia Family, a consultant on the 2021 Steven Soderbergh film No Sudden Move starring Don Cheadle, and a professor of foundational Detroit history at the University of Michigan, he still makes time to provide tours to us neighbors from his Detroit before our cookouts and family reunions.

Through his company, Black Scroll Network, History and Tours, he shares the history of Black Detroit in a style that hits every beat, even for audiences who already know whats coming, just like my uncles when they tell stories. Confident but unassuming, when he steps to the stage, its impossible to forget him.

Jordan, in his early 50s, grew up like my cousins and me on the westside of Detroit at the border of Highland Park, in a neighborhood filled with families, on a block where all the kids knew each other.

Every house had a porch, a big porch, too, he said. And so there's adults on porches. Everywhere you walk, people are looking at you, they see you. So you're always being watched whether you know it or not, by the adults in the neighborhood. And all the adults know each other. We didn't know it then, but they really knew each other because of us. It was the children that connected the adults.

Thats a bit how this new role of city historian unfolded for Jordan; the children connected him to adults.

It makes sense: to scores of Detroiters, Jordan is Baba Jamon, the educator who lit up their love of learning, teaching students in elementary and middle school for 16 years. These days, rather than teach from the classroom, he uses his gift as a natural storyteller alongside his built expertise as an educator on the streets of Detroit, sharing a well-rounded narrative of the city with as many as will hear him.

He didnt plan for this new role as official historian for the City of Detroit as much as he naturally prepared for the role nearly his entire life. He paid attention to the environment and world around him. When he entered the field of education, he reached back to what he knew mattered to him as a student, and what he learned from Mrs. Mims, his fifth-grade teacher.

She bought us these books, some of them were fiction, some of them were nonfiction, but they were all about aspects of Black people, history and culture that are not always talked about, he said They were about Black people's spiritual ideas when they were enslaved, about how they held onto their culture. She bought books that talked about African kings and queens. I didn't know (she was going above and beyond)] then, I just thought this was normal school.

Like Mrs. Mims, Jordan gave himself the responsibility of filling the African and African American history gap left untouched by school curriculums. As a social studies teacher at the Wayne County Juvenile Detention Facility, that meant providing general African and African American history where it was always missing. But in the African-centered Nsoroma Institute, where the social studies curriculum covered Black people across the diaspora, he took a different turn.

There, he created lessons about Detroits Black history, so his students could learn of people who once lived where they did.

These Detroit-focused lessons sometimes took place during field trips to locations around the city. Parents who chaperoned began reporting back to him, Hey, I lived here my whole 40 years, and I never knew this, Jordan recalled. In some instances, he said, parents stood alongside their children in places right around the corner from their homes. They began seeing their communities with new eyes. And then the special requests started.

People (started)calling me and saying, I hear you got a field trip with the students on Friday. Can I come? And I'm like, Hold on these are children. You just can't come on field trips with children. That ain't how it works.

But never one to miss an opportunity to teach when a student wants to learn, Jordan opened up his weekends and summers to share lessons with adults who werent already parents of children in his class. That grew into Black Scroll Network, History, and Tours. From there, his profile has increasingly grown. Since 2016, hes been a full-time public historian.

One of his most significant accomplishments is his expansion of the historical narrative about Detroit. Jordans appointment as the citys official historian speaks to a reckoning with how history is told, and by whom it means it is no longer acceptable to begin our tale with the arrival of the French and leave out that the Ojibwe and Odawa were already here for generations. Nor is it fine to talk about the wealth of William Macomb and John R. Williams without referencing that it was built on the backs of enslaved Africans. And it must be known that those Black people who were enslaved resisted slavery at all times. Black people led the Underground Railroad and, according to Jordan, its that resistance to slavery, that fight and that struggle that is the foundation of the Black community in Detroit.

Jordans goal in his new job is to connect our shared histories.

I want to connect the telling of our story. We're talking about Detroit history, but we want to talk about it in a way that does not exclude other people's histories besides white people, he said. I want to work with Indigenous historians, Latinx historians, and Latinx activists who are telling the story of Southwest Detroit and the Indigenous settlements that were in Detroit prior to the French arriving. I want to work with institutions like the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, Second Baptist Church, the Detroit Historical Society, the Motown Museum, and tell those stories with Detroit at the center of the narrative.

Despite taking on a history-making new role, Jordan prefers to teach history rather than make it. But, if history doesn't make you uncomfortable, he said, then it's not really history.

Courtney Wise Randolph, a native Detroiter with a heart for people and their stories, is Detour Detroits culture and community reporter. Follow her on Twitter: @shes_cwise.

This article was produced in partnership with Detour Detroit.

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In the classroom or in the streets, Jamon Jordan is the peoples historian for Detroit - Detroit Free Press

DeMar DeRozan Passed Michael Jordan On This List In The Chicago Bulls Win Over The New York Knicks On Sunday – Sports Illustrated

DeMar DeRozan and the Chicago Bulls beat the New York Knicks 109-103 in Illinois on Sunday night, and DeRozan just broke a franchise record.

He is now the player who has scored the most points in his first 16 games with the Bulls in the team's history.

His 425 points passed Michael Jordan who had 424 points in his first 16 games with the team as a rookie during the 1984-85 season.

DeRozan finished the game with 31 points.

The former USC star began his career with the Toronto Raptors and had spent the last several seasons in San Antonio on the Spurs before signing with the Bulls this past offseason.

So far, the team looks fantastic with him as one of their top scorers.

The four-time All-Star has been fitting in seamlessly with Zach LaVine, Lonzo Ball and the rest of the team.

The Bulls are now the first seed in the Eastern Conference with a 12-5 record in their first 17 games.

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DeMar DeRozan Passed Michael Jordan On This List In The Chicago Bulls Win Over The New York Knicks On Sunday - Sports Illustrated

Jim Jordan reveals he had COVID-19 this summer | TheHill – The Hill

Rep. Jim JordanJames (Jim) Daniel JordanWith extreme gerrymanders locking in, Biden needs to make democracy preservation job one Jim Jordan reveals he had COVID-19 this summer The Memo: Gosar censured, but toxic culture grows MORE (R-Ohio) revealed in arecent interview that he had COVID-19 over the summer, but refused to disclose if he has been vaccinated.

Jordan, while speaking with Spectrum News, said he had the virus in the early part of the summer, recalling that he did not feel well while residing in Ohio. The lawmaker also said he has since taken an antibody test that showed that his levels "were strong.

I've had the virus, I don't talk about my health status with reporters, but I've had the coronavirus and recovered, and actually had my antibodies tested, or had that antibody test done, and it showed that my antibodies were strong, Jordan said during last week's interview.

In fact, the doctor said, 'You're in the strong category, you could donate plasma,' he added.

Ohio's @Jim_Jordan (R), who told me in June he hadn't been vaccinated, now tells me he had #COVID19 this summer.

"I've had the virus. I don't talk about my health status with reporters."

Jordan, who sits on the House Select COVID Subcommittee, won't say if he's been vaccinated. pic.twitter.com/DL2rv68o2k

Pressed on if he knew he had the virus, Jordan said he remembers not feeling well over the summer when he was in Ohio.

I believe it was back early in the summer when, that's when I didn't feel well, was back when I was in Ohio, he said.

Jordan told Spectrum News in June that he had not been inoculated against COVID-19, noting that he was frequently being tested.

#OH4 Rep. @Jim_Jordan (R), who sits on the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, tells me he has not been vaccinated.

"Look, I think we're way past this. I think the country is ready to move on and we're done with this, but you guys just keep wanting to talk about it." pic.twitter.com/1OIOTolXhV

Jordan has been critical of COVID-19 mitigation measures in the past. During a congressional hearing in April,the lawmaker questionedAnthony FauciAnthony FauciSunday shows preview: New COVID-19 variant emerges; supply chain issues and inflation persist NY governor declares state of emergency to prepare for omicron US to restrict travel from eight African nations over new COVID-19 concerns MORE about when the U.S. would be able to stop discussing public health precautions like wearing masks and physical distancing.

When do Americans get their freedom back? Jordan asked. We had 15 days to slow the spread, turned into a year of lost liberties.

He later argued that Americans First Amendment rights had been trampled during the pandemic, pointing to mask orders, curfews and capacity limits for businesses.

Fauci later said comments likeJordan's are quite frustrating.

A number of congressional lawmakers have tested positive for COVID-19, both before and after vaccines were authorized in the U.S.

Jordan announced in October 2020 that he had tested negative for COVID-19 after then-President TrumpDonald TrumpStowaway found in landing gear of plane after flight from Guatemala to Miami Kushner looking to Middle East for investors in new firm: report GOP eyes booting Democrats from seats if House flips MORE revealed that he tested positive for the virus.

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Jim Jordan reveals he had COVID-19 this summer | TheHill - The Hill

"Stephen Jackson, how’s that leather taste in your mouth?": Michael Jordan trash talked and schooled his… – The Sportsrush

Michael Jordan is a legend unto himself a man whose tales seem stranger than fiction. One of those involves Stephen Jackson.

Stephen Jackson was one of the NBAs most unlikely success stories during his time. He won championships with the San Antonio Spurs, but hes also remembered for his time with other teams.

More infamously, hes known as one of the primary aggressors during the Malice in the Palace brawl. However, those days are 17 years and an ESPN 30-for-30 documentary behind us. Though it changed the NBA forever, it ultimately does not define a distinguished veteran career.

Stephen Jackson was a pretty good scorer in the league during the mid-2000s. It was an era where role players and stars had much more similar shot profiles than today. And Jak was pretty good at utilizing his frame and his body fakes to score from the mid-range in bunches.

At his peak, Jackson averaged around 20 points per game a neat return for a role player. However, he had one flaw common to a lot of up-and-coming sportspersons he thinks entirely too much about himself.

This led to him once getting into a rather humbling experience courtesy of His Airness Michael Jordan himself.

Also Read Cade Cunningham has the worst field goal percentage in the NBA! How the Pistons rookie has been struggling to find a groove ahead of matchup with LeBron James and the Lakers.

Stephen Jackson played for the Spurs and the Pacers before his famous spell on the We Believe Warriors. However, once that squad disbanded, he was traded by their front office to Michael Jordans Charlotte Bobcats.

The Bobcats were a mediocre team with no championship aspirations or players of such caliber. Stephen Jackson was their leading scorer during the 2009-10 and 10-11 seasons, averaging over 21 ppg the first year. However, he made the unforgivable mistake of taking on MJ.

Eduardo Najera was a long-time NBA veteran on the last legs of his career in 2010-11. He narrates the story as follows:

Our team wasnt pretty good, and I was a veteran trying to help the team practice. And Michael decided to jump in. And then he and Charles Oakley jumped on the same team as Gerald Wallace and a few others.

Also Read I call Daniel Gafford Wilt Chamberlain because hes blocking shots for no reason! Kyle Kuzma hilariously showers rich praise on his Wizards teammates shotblocking abilities.

Of course, with Stephen Jackson being Stephen Jackson, he started trash-talking. That was the past and this is the future.'

MJ got furious & started trash-talking him, & not only that, he started killing him, telling him How does the leather taste in your mouth every time he hit a shot.

Never trash-talk or challenge Michael Jordan, son. Never, ever.

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"Stephen Jackson, how's that leather taste in your mouth?": Michael Jordan trash talked and schooled his... - The Sportsrush

Lost in the details – Jordan Times

We have so many assets in the country, but we seem to be unable to make the best of them.

One main reason, among others, is that we seem to be lost in the details or in marginal issues, at the expense of macro matters and the overall picture.

Let us count some of our major blessings, first.

We have great weather, among the best in the globe: Lots of sunshine, rain and snow in the winter, a beautiful spring season and a lot of cool evenings in the summer with almost zero humidity. In other words, our weather is an advantage in so many ways, and never a hindrance.

Additionally, even though we are a small country, its geographic and topographic variety clearly stands out: High hills, wide plateaus, and the lowest point on earth; forests bush and desert.

We have so much rich history: Nearly anybody who is anybody throughout human history has been to Jordan: Prophets, saints, emperors, military leaders, historians, etc. The major river we have, the Jordan, means so much to so many people around the world.

So many famous battles, so many empires, so many ancient ruins.

And so many world wonders: Petra, Wadi Rum, Jerash, the Dead Sea, to name a few.

As to natural sources, we have quite a few as well.

And we have great human resources.

Despite all of this, and much more, tourism falls extremely short of our expectations; agriculture is almost primitive; the industry, aside from a handful of products, is nearly non-existent; in commerce, we are largely consumers.

The economy is ailing, and our educational system is still traditional despite attempts at reform.

In sports our performance is average at best, and in the press and media, we are followers rather than leaders.

What is our problem?

Clearly, several problems, not one.

Among them are: Lack of overall vision, lack of planning and focus, lack of good management and lack sustainability.

Additionally, and this is the main point we wish to highlight here, we seem to be thinking at the micro level most of the time, without linking the micro to a macro context.

Nations which made it in the world, in older and in recent times, did so because they think at both the macro and micro at the same time, and because they act promptly and implement skilfully. And they have excellent follow-up and assessment schemes.

The problem in a nutshell for us is: We lack a vision for what we do and are, as a result, lost in the details.

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Lost in the details - Jordan Times

When Michael Jordan Silenced A Court Side Heckler For Making Fun Of His Shoes: "Hey Michael, How’s The Shoe? Go Back To The Old One." -…

Source: BroBible

Michael Jordan's ability to shut down the noise around him was otherworldly. Jordan could hang with the best of the best on the court. But when it came to talking trash and sending a message, he was in a league of his own. MJ almost felt obligated to prove a point when someone tried to get under his skin.

That is exactly what he did to one fan who tried to heckle him over his shoes. In the video below, one fan is audibly heckling Jordan over his shoes, and telling him that they're not good. MJ proceeded to make several shots and hunt down the heckler and talk trash to him, before returning to the bench and gesturing at him to be quiet.

"Hey Michael, how's the shoe? Go back to the old one!"

Jordan wouldn't hesitate from engaging with heckling fans. Once during a game against the Utah Jazz, Jordan dunked on John Stockton. The Jazz owner yelled at Jordan to pick on someone his own size. In response, MJ dunked on the Jazz's center and asked the fan whether he was big enough for him.

Jordan's ability was unparalleled, and there was much excitement over his career, even when he entered the league, as one magazine even dubbed him the next Dr. J. And it's fair to say that Michael lived up to those expectations, and actually surpassed them in his career.

Jordan has credited Larry Bird for him developing his ability to talk trash. And over the years, he had some legendary trash-talking moments in the league. He ended up establishing himself as one of the fiercest competitors in the history of the NBA.

But it appears that MJ has gone 'soft' in his retirement, at least if his daughter Jasmine is to be believed, who said that her son has grandpa MJ wrapped around his little finger. Regardless, MJ's trash-talking was elite during his playing days, and this fan learned the hard way why one should not mess with Jordan.

Continued here:

When Michael Jordan Silenced A Court Side Heckler For Making Fun Of His Shoes: "Hey Michael, How's The Shoe? Go Back To The Old One." -...

What Are the Hariest Iron Bowl Moments at Jordan-Hare? – College and Magnolia

The further and further we get into the 21st century, it gets more difficult to rationalize that Auburn hasnt always had the wonderful backdrop of Jordan-Hare Stadium to help out during the Iron Bowl.

We all know that the first time that the rivalry was played in Auburn, where the Tigers had their first ever true home field advantage, was 1989 after quite the power struggle. Pat Dye eventually used his clout and the death of Bear Bryant several years earlier to move Auburns home game in the series from Legion Field to Jordan-Hare. After one more game with the Tigers hosting the Tide in Birmingham in 1991, every single odd year Iron Bowl has been played inside the hostile confines of Jordan-Hare.

Its difficult to comprehend, but the unjust memories of having to play in front of a decidedly partial and unfavorable crowd for your own home game are dwindling. There are fewer and fewer Auburn fans who remember having to go to Legion Field for what was officially a 50-50 split that never amounted to an orange and blue majority in the stands. Even those who experienced it have 30 years of home Iron Bowls to fall back on now, and those games have produced some of the most memorable moments in series history.

How has the home site impacted the game? Well, Auburn has amassed a 10-5 record against Alabama at Jordan-Hare Stadium since 1989, and those Tide teams averaged 9.6 wins per year.

Whats allowed the Tigers to play so well at home against essentially a double-digit team on average? You could identify perhaps the most tilted home field advantage in college football when an archrival comes to town. When Alabama enters, Jordan-Hare ramps up to a fever pitch and shows maybe the toughest atmosphere in the country.

That kind of a home crowd has kindled some magic, and provided what we like to call the Hariest Moments in the rivalrys history. Lets run those down and see what the biggest ones were throughout the relatively short but impactful time that Alabama has had to pee their way into the Loveliest Village.

1989 - Paper Shakers and Barn Cheatin!

You know sometimes theres just a game that you know one side has absolutely no way of winning? That was the original JHS Iron Bowl, where the Tigers welcomed Alabama to the Plains for the very first time. The Tide were on the hunt for a national title, looking to finish out an undefeated regular season and face off against Miami for the championship in the Sugar Bowl.

Simply put, the entire day set the stage for what was to come over the years, but Auburn saw true home field advantage take hold right off the bat. After a long completion from Reggie Slack to Alexander Wright, the Tigers moved down to a goal-to-go situation, where James Joseph leapt over the pile into the end zone for the first score of the day. ONLY AUBURN HAD 12 MEN ON THE FIELD GAWD BARN CHEATIN!!! The refs didnt notice, and the Tigers won 30-20, ending Bamas perfect season and claiming a share of their third straight SEC championship.

1993 - Nix to Sanders

So, over the years Auburn has had hilarious luck taking on backup quarterbacks. Its become a bit of a meme whenever the Tigers have to face an opponents backup, we expect that kid to light us up for 350 yards and 4 touchdowns. However, maybe were still just reaping the blowback from the original backup quarterback moment.

At 10-0, Auburn entered the Iron Bowl seeking a perfect season in Terry Bowdens first year, and things were looking bleak as the Tigers trailed 14-5 in the third quarter. On a third down in Tide territory, starting quarterback Stan White got buckled up and injured his knee, so backup Patrick Nix had to come off the bench cold on 4th and a mile.

Ill wager a bet that none of that occurs if this game is being played in Birmingham, and the Tigers would grab a field goal shortly thereafter to take a 15-14 lead. In the fourth quarter a James Bostic 70-yard meandering scamper to cap the game would give the Tigers a 22-14 win and the perfect 11-0 season.

1995 - Yes, Yes, Yes, Auburn YES!

First of all, and ignoring any comments from later years, this intro still sticks in my mind and when you add in the absolutely perfect voice of Ron Franklin, it doesnt get any better.

As for the game itself, it was the third time Alabama would play at Jordan-Hare. In a back and forth affair, Auburn found itself leading 31-27 in the final minute. Alabama drove down deep into Auburns end, and with just :35 to play, had a 1st and 10 throwing for the end zone and the win. On first down, Fat Freddie Kitchens threw for the back of the end zone and Curtis Brown, who hauled in the pass but didnt corral it until he was just out of bounds. OR DID HE??

Use this impossibly small image to deduce whether or not Brown actually held onto the ball inbounds. Tuscaloosa bars have plastered this picture over the cash register (looking at you, Egans) as proof that the Tide were swindled. Either way, Barn Cheatin and Jordan-Hare provided the magic with a fantastic Jim Fyffe final call.

1997 - FUMBLING AWAY THE SPOILER ROLE

Freddie Kitchens didnt have the best time at Jordan-Hare Stadium as the Alabama starting quarterback, but 1997 saw the culmination of the stadiums best voodoo to bring down two future NFL head coaches on one cataclysmic moment.

Auburn came into the game at 8-2, and in position for the SEC West title, their first since the divisions split. Alabama was bad under Mike Dubose, yet somehow led Auburn 17-15 late in the fourth quarter. With the ball, the Tide just had to run out the clock with less than a minute to play, but future Super Bowl champion Bruce Arians called a really bizarre screen pass for future Browns head coach Freddie Kitchens, who hit Ed Scissum on the throw. Scissum was clipped by Martavious Houston, and flailed wildly, losing the ball in the process. The Tigers recovered in field goal range and Jarrett Holmes hit the game-winner to send the Tigers to Atlanta moments later.

2003 - GO CRAZY, CADILLAC!

Look, these days Tommy Tuberville may enjoy being under the thumb of bank presidents and money men, but back then if you were going to take a private jet to supplant him, it would result in a rivalry win for Auburn. Super JHS energy with this play, Rods first great call and his best until the Miracle at Jordan-Hare.

2005 - HONK IF YOU SACKED BRODIE

This was just so representative of the entirety of the early 2000s for Alabama football. They had a kicker who won them two games earlier that year with extra point length kicks, so they nicknamed him Money, and theyd completed a pass on the opening play of every game that year as well. Naturally, Auburn would figure out theyd need to play the pass, and it worked to perfection. In one of the more dominating displays, the Tigers sacked Tide quarterback Brodie Croyle 11 times and built a 28-7 halftime lead. When your victory spawns bumper stickers, you know that it was fantastic.

Alabama was ranked as high as third in the country before they lost to LSU the week before this game, and Auburn just dropped them even further in the rankings with this embarrassment. It was the kind of performance that only a frothy Jordan-Hare Stadium can work up, and the defense just compounded sack after sack after sack in this one-sided victory.

2011 - FLASHBACKS

The final score doesnt indicate this at all, and the fact that it didnt come to fruition has erased it from everyones mind, but Bama fans were puckered for a few minutes during this game.

After giving up the 24-0 lead in Tuscaloosa the year before, Alabama started the 2011 Iron Bowl in similar fashion. Auburns only success in the first half came on a strip sack and fumble recovery in the end zone for a touchdown. At halftime, it was 24-7 Alabama, just like 2010. And out of the intermission, Auburn struck immediately with a kickoff return touchdown from Onterrio McCalebb to cut the lead to 24-14. That was the exact blueprint from the Camback with the touchdown in the first minute of the second half, and I can guarantee you that every single Bama fan in the stadium thought here we go again.

It didnt happen, but for a moment we were giving them the true fear of God with a decidedly terrible team.

2013 - YOU ALREADY KNOW WHAT IT IS, IF YOU DONT YOU SHOULD BY NOW

First of all, Barn Cheatin. Weve covered this game ad nauseum, but the back and forth nature of what I personally call the greatest game in college football history only led up to the wild finish. On the game-tying drive for Auburn, the Tigers just didnt seem hurried, even though the drive started with just two minutes flat left on the clock. Instead of going to the air, Gus Malzahn called run after run, and Tre Mason carried the ball six consecutive times before the pop pass from Nick Marshall to Sammie Coates. AUBURN HAD AN OFFENSIVE LINEMAN DOWNFIELD

but nobody cared, and the Tigers tied the game up before ultimate karma got Nick Saban. He asked for it. He literally asked for that extra second, and lost everything on one play. In the end, what may have actually been the true start of #AlabamaKickers was truly Jordan-Hare magic reaching into a Polish orphanage to set in motion a long line of hilarity.

2015 - A BRIEF THRILL

If we didnt have to play Jeremy Johnson in this game, we might have a shot, but Jason Smith tried his hardest to get the Tigers even against a Derrick Henry battering ram offense.

We didnt win, but Will Muschamp did a pretty good job until his defense just wore down.

2017 - YOU GOT ROLLED BY GUS

I look back at this game and I cant even really find a singular moment to highlight other than the entire game. Everyone in that stadium knew that Alabama was going to lose, and that Auburn was unbeatable that day. After what happened to Georgia two weeks prior, Bama came in and didnt stand a chance. From the Kerryon Johnson jump pass touchdown to the way that the Tiger defense just dominated all day, this game might have been the most similar to 1989 that weve seen yet. Just a wild cathartic day on the Plains.

2019 - YOU GOT TRICKED BY A PUNTER. A PUNTER.

Before we dive into the very end, where Gus Malzahn tricked Nick Saban with a punter, we have to recount the entirety of the wildness that encompassed the 2019 Iron Bowl. There were like 19 wild moments in this game, and they were all fantastic.

What will happen tomorrow? Well find out. War Eagle!

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What Are the Hariest Iron Bowl Moments at Jordan-Hare? - College and Magnolia

Opinion: Jim Jordan thinks he’s attacking Biden, but he’s really attacking our democracy – Fall River Herald News

Raymond Jussaume| The Herald News

The Herald News on Monday, Nov. 22,ran an opinion piece by Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio which was pure propaganda.

The title of the essay, Parents spoke up for their kids. Then the Feds stepped in,told us immediately what the tone would be: conflict between parents and the Federal government. As though the government were some alien power at odds with parents. As though parents in a democratic society were not part of the government. Instead of referring to the government,we might better say we the people.It is our government, established in accordance with our Constitution.

Jordan writes, The U.S. Attorney General has weaponized the enormous might of the federal government against parents exercising their constitutional rights.This is completely false. The government is concerned only with violence and threats of violence at school board meetings. In this wonderful country of ours, just as Jordan is free to express his opinions, so are parents free to express theirs, at school board meetings or elsewhere.

Jordan also writes,Parents have an undisputed right to direct the upbringing and education of their children.This observation was made preliminary to bringing up critical race theory curricula, COVID restrictions on children, transgender bathroom access, etc. These are all serious issues. But they are not the basic and overriding problem which we face today.

Democracy requires that people be willing to work out differences peacefully, without malice or violence. But increasingly we hear of public officials, particularly poll workers, being threatened, told you should be shot,and we know where you live.Volunteers are leaving public service out of fear for their safety, and that of their families. This must change if we want to preserve our democracy. The tone of Jordans article is entirely at odds with this need.

Phrases like the Feds stepped in,school board bureaucrats believe they know whats best for childrenand the A.G. has weaponized the might of the government against parents all suggest division, conflictand failure of democratic methods. They are the very opposite of what is needed. They can only be understood as part of a partisan attack against the Biden administration, using current school board issues around the country as a handy topic.

A political attack against Joe Biden is acceptable. But Jordans article is an attack against democracy, and is not acceptable.

Raymond Jussaume

Somerset

Originally posted here:

Opinion: Jim Jordan thinks he's attacking Biden, but he's really attacking our democracy - Fall River Herald News

What has led to migrant crisis around world? – WION

Migrant crisis has been worsening in different parts of the world. Be it the US-Mexico border, English Channel or Mediterranean Sea, many migrants belonging to different countries travel dangerously to reach their destination every year.

Several people have drowned in the Mediterranean Sea, English Channel and other waterways after their boat capsized while many have been sent back after reaching the border.

Many countries like Greece have also build walls to stop the movement of the migrants. The United States have also built several camps to keep a check on migrant crisis.

Also Read:Fresh violence in Darfur adds to Sudans crises

In the Americas, people from various poor countries like El Savador, Colombia, Mexico, etc travel on foot, buses, etc to reach US border while in Africa, many of the migrants, who have been fighting hunger, common coups, violent conflicts and others, make attempts to reach the Mediterranean Sea through various land routes and then hitch a ride on a boat to reach Europe.

Many people also try to reach Australia or Canada from various regions.

But not everybody is lucky. Some people drown while others are caught. The people, who somehow reach these countries, live in fear of getting caught and deported someday. Many are forced to take up petty jobs or end up getting exploited.

At the end, very few of these people get to live their dream or even get a fair outcome of the trouble undertaken to travel long distances in inhumane conditions.

The million-dollar question is what drives them to do this and why the so-called wealthy nations not doing anything to solve this crisis.

Also Read:France, Britain agree to step up efforts to limit channel crossings

The answer to the first question is simple, in several nations in the South America and Africa, there is poverty, violence, hunger and less opportunities to live a life with dignity.

The wealthy nations are just the opposite. They have everything one can dream of. But just lack the will to help.

Instead of making the world a better place to live, several countries have been making concerted efforts to ensure there is turmoil in different parts of many continents so that they are pursuing their agenda or fulfill their vested interests.

In 2015, Europe was moved after immense criticism over the migrant issue after a dead body of a three-year-old Syrian child washed ashore. The images of the dead body of Alan Kurdi on the beach forced Europe to open its doors for the refugees of the Syrian war.

Are the wealthy nations or the world as a whole waiting for more such bodies or will take action before its too late. Only time can solve this riddle.

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What has led to migrant crisis around world? - WION

Migrant Crisis at Polands Border Eases Pressure on Its Government – The New York Times

BRUZGI, Belarus Thousands of freezing, desperate migrants retreated last week from a sprawling encampment along Belaruss border with Poland but Polish security forces are still mobilized for battle along the frontier, backed by a water cannon, its turret aimed at a threat that has mostly vanished, at least from view.

Polands readiness to repel attack highlights the political calculations of a government in Warsaw that, with its support threatened by rising inflation, a lethal new surge in Covid infections and a host of other problems, is reluctant to let go of a border crisis that has boosted the nationalist governing party, Law and Justice.

This crisis suits Law and Justice and allows it to consolidate citizens around the government, as is usually the case in times of danger, said Antoni Dudek, a political science professor at Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw. Letting the crisis calm, he added, would reverse this because voters would begin to remember all the bad things Law and Justice would like them to forget.

Scenes of migrants trying to storm the border and being repelled by blasts of icy water from Poland, as happened early last week here at Bruzgi, reinforced the Polish governing partys message that only it can defend the country against what it portrays as invading foreign hordes, and they also help it to defuse a crisis with the European Union. Poland joined the bloc in 2004 but has been at loggerheads with it for months over issues like the treatment of the L.G.B.T.Q. community, womens rights and the rule of law.

Last week, Belarus shut down the huge and increasingly squalid migrant settlement flush against the Polish border, removing a key flash point and shifting the main focus of the crisis to the repatriation of asylum seekers. The European Commission estimated on Tuesday that there were up to 15,000 migrants still in Belarus, with about 2,000 near the borders with Poland, Lithuania and Latvia.

Instead of declaring victory, Warsaw is insisting that the struggle rages on, with Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki declaring on Sunday that at this very moment, a hybrid war is taking place on the Polish-Belarusian border.

ReadMore onthe Belarus-Poland Border Crisis

After months of denouncing the European Union as a bully whose insistence on L.G.B.T.Q. rights and judicial independence posed a threat to Polish sovereignty and Christian values, Poland now presents itself as the blocs indispensable guardian, promoting a new government slogan with its own hashtag: #WeDefendEurope.

This message, embraced by fellow members of the European Union, has largely eclipsed Polands previous image as an inveterate troublemaker whose hostility to sexual minorities and refusal to abide by the rulings of Europes top court raised questions about the countrys future E.U. membership.

At home, the Law and Justice party has used the rhetoric of war to bolster its waning popularity, with headlines like Attack on Poland and Another mass assault on the Polish border appearing in the state media. And the national bank plans to issue commemorative coins and notes to honor the defense of the Polish eastern border.

Those efforts appear to have gained traction among many Poles.

The situation of migrants makes me sad, but it is not Polands fault, said Elzbieta Kabac, 57, who owns a guesthouse in Narewka, near the border. We should praise the soldiers and the police for protecting our borders, because we are not ready to take those migrants in. She added: The European Union doesnt need any more migrants.

In one recent opinion poll, 54 percent of Poles surveyed said that the governments response to the crisis was very good or fairly good, with 34 percent saying it was very bad or fairly bad.

Opinion polls also indicate that the border crisis has slowed what had been a steady decline in the governing partys popularity, but that it could still lose power in an election. An opinion poll published Monday in Gazeta Wyborcza, a liberal newspaper, showed Law and Justice as Polands most popular party, with around 30 percent of those surveyed supporting it, but gave opposition parties a good chance of winning a majority in Parliament if they formed a united front. The next parliamentary elections are scheduled for 2023.

Until the border crisis hit with full force this fall, Law and Justice was stumbling badly, shaken by internal quarrels and the withholding of tens of billions of euros from the European Union in aid that the party was relying on to deliver its Polish deal, a package of handouts to the poor and tax hikes for the rich.

With economic and other problems blunting the power of its promise to defend family values, the governing party seized on the border crisis to consolidate support, denouncing as traitors critics of its hard-line policy of pushing back all migrants, even legitimate asylum seekers, pregnant women and the gravely ill.

Many Poles have rallied behind the government. Soldiers of Christ, a group that supports the governments tough line on migrants, organized a mass prayer in the town of Koden on Sunday, saying they intended to defend the nearby border. And in Bialystok, the capital of the region near the Belarus border, a far-right youth organization, Mlodziez Wszechpolska, marched in support of the policy.

There have also been ugly scenes near the border in recent weeks with right-wing vigilantes attacking Polish aid workers trying to help migrants who have made it across.

Poles opposed to the hard-line policy on migrants have also taken to the streets, however, and some have been helping the few who make it into Poland. In the border town of Hajnowka on Saturday, protesters called for the opening of a humanitarian corridor for migrants, and accused border guards of having blood on their hands.

There have been numerous reports of Polish armed services pushing asylum seekers back into Belarus, most recently by Human Rights Watch. The Polish government passed a special law last month to authorize pushbacks, which are against international law.

On Thursday, The Times saw a group of asylum seekers being loaded on a military truck and being driven to the border guards office.

When asked about the group, Katarzyna Zdanowicz, the spokeswoman for the Polish border guards, responded: Eleven people did not seek asylum in Poland. They wanted to go to France or Ireland. They received an order to leave Poland. They were escorted to the border line.

Polish aid groups working in the forests that straddle the frontier have reported a sharp drop in the number of migrants crossing the border in recent days. But Polish authorities say that Belarus has merely changed its tactics and is now sending small groups to try and breach the border at night. With the Polish side of the border off limits to all news media, however, this claim is impossible to verify.

Even as European figures show the crisis peaked months ago, the Polish government has insisted it is only getting worse. The European bloc border agency, Frontex, reported this week that the number of migrants entering the bloc through Belarus rose to an all-time high of 3,200 in July but has fallen steadily since, dropping to around only 600 in October.

While the Polish governments tough stance has clearly energized its base, it is unclear whether the tactic will conjure up new support.

The jury is still out on what lies ahead for Law and Justice, said Piotr Buras, the head of the Warsaw office of the European Council on Foreign Relations. The migration crisis helped to consolidate the core electorate, but not necessarily boost its popularity outside it. And there are other problems that Poles care about, mainly inflation and the worsening Covid-19 situation.

The European Commission has held up the disbursement to Poland of $42 billion from a coronavirus recovery fund over rule-of-law violations. But if the commission freed up the funds, Mr. Buras said, it would re-establish trust of those that were drifting away from the government in recent months.

He added: In the end, it is a trap. The party is getting more and more radicalized in their policies. They are becoming hostage to their most radical voters.

Andrew Higgins reported from Bruzgi, Belarus, and Monika Pronczuk from Hajnowka, Poland. Anatol Magdziarz contributed reporting from Warsaw and James Hill from Bruzgi.

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Migrant Crisis at Polands Border Eases Pressure on Its Government - The New York Times

How has Brexit affected the migrant crisis? – independent.co.uk

The issue of people crossing the channel in small boats is back in the headlines.

Dozens of people died on Wednesday making the perilous journey across the sea, following UK government attempts to make the crossings more difficult.

So far this year more than 25,700 people have managed to complete the perilous crossing.

The government says it wants to make the journey unviable to deter people from making it but is refusing to create safe alternative routes for people trying to claim asylum.

While dangerous, making the journey appears to pay off for the vast majority who complete it.

Of the 25,700 to have made it safely to the UK, just five have been returned to Europe, ministers say.

What is less realised is that this is partly down to Britain's departure from the European Union.

Despite rhetoric about borders and immigration playing a major role in the Leave vote, EU cooperation played a significant role in border policing before Brexit.

The figure of five returnees is significantly down on the 294 people who were returned last year in 2020. In that year, the UK was still covered by EU rules because of the transition period.

In 2020 the UK was still party to the EU's "Dublin" regulations. These rules allowed the government to ask other European countries to take people back if it could be proved they passed through safe European countries on their way to the UK.

The government has failed to negotiate direct replacements for the Dublin regulations.

Migrants are helped ashore from a RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) lifeboat at a beach in Dungeness, on the south-east coast of England, on November 24, 2021, after being rescued while crossing the English Channel.

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The coffin of Sir David Amess is carried past politicians, including former Prime Ministers Sir John Major, David Cameron and Theresa May, Speaker of the House of Commons Sir Lindsay Hoyle, Home Secretary Priti Patel and Prime Minister Boris Johnson during the requiem mass for the MP at Westminster Cathedral, central London

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The scene in Dragon Rise, Norton Fitzwarren, Somerset where police have launched a murder probe after two people were found dead

Tom Wren/SWNS

London-based midwife Sarah Muggleton, 27, takes part in a 'March with Midwives' in central London to highlight the crisis in maternity services

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Police officers monitor as climate change activists sit down and block traffic during a protest action in solidarity with activists from the Insulate Britain group who received prison terms for blocking roads, on Lambeth Bridge in central London

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A giant installation of Prime Minister Boris Johnson made from recycled clothing goes on display at Manchester Central, as part of Manchester Art Fair, in a 'wake-up call for the Prime Minister to tackle textile waste'

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The scene at a recycling centre in Stert, near Devizes in Wiltshire after a large blaze was brought under control. The fire broke out on Wednesday night the fire service has said and local residents were advised to keep windows and doors shut due to large amounts of smoke

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The sun rises over South Shields Lighthouse, on the North East coast of England

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ancer Maithili Vijayakumar at the launch of 2021 Diwali celebrations at St Andrew Square in Edinburgh

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Forensic officers work outside Liverpool Women's Hospital, following a car blast, in Liverpool

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Wreaths by the Cenotaph after the Remembrance Sunday service in Whitehall, London

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Richard Ratcliffe, the husband of detainee Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, is ending his hunger strike in central London after almost three weeks. Ratcliffe has spent 21 days camped outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in London without food. He began his demonstration on 24 October after his wife lost her latest appeal in Iran, saying his family was caught in a dispute between two states

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Peter Green protesting outside the Cop26 gates during the official final day of the Cop26 summit in Glasgow.

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Seagulls fly around the statue entitled 'Tommy', a first World War soldier by artist Ray Lonsdale at dawn in Seaham, Britain

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Climate activists dressed as characters inspired by the Netflix series Squid Game protest as they ask Samsung to go 100% renewable energy, outside the venue for COP26 in Glasgow

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A deer statue silhouetted at Loch Faskally in Pitlochry, Scotland

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Sunrise over St Mary's Lighthouse at Whitley Bay on the North East coast of England

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Activists from Friends of the Earth during a demonstration calling for an end to all new oil and gas projects in the North Sea outside the UK Government's Cop26 hub during the Cop26 summit in Glasgow

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Protesters take part in a rally organised by the Cop26 Coalition in Glasgow demanding global climate justice

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Final touches are made to a life sized Sir David Attenborough cake surrounded by animals as part of a display created by a group of cake artists during Cake International at NEC Birmingham

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A spectacular display of the Northern Lights seen over Derwentwater, near Keswick in the Lake District

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Police and demonstrators at a Extinction Rebellion protest on Buchanan Street, during the Cop26 summit in Glasgow

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A person walks along the Basingstoke canal near to Dogmersfield in Hampshire

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Sir David Attenborough delivers a speech during Cop26 in Glasgow

Reuters

Extinction Rebellion activists protest in Edinburgh as the Cop26 conference begins in Glasgow

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First Minister Nicola Sturgeon with Mapuche leader and Minga Indigena Lead Coordinator Claflin Lafkenche (right) alongside indigenous delegates at a ceremonial gathering at the Tramway in Glasgow in a symbolic gesture to mark a unified demand for climate justice

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Ocean Rebellion put on a display of puking oil heads ahead of climate change conference COP26 in Glasgow

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A man dressed as Santa Claus outside Selfridges in London as the department store unveils its Christmas windows on Oxford Street

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Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak during a visit to Fourpure Brewery in Bermondsey, London, after the chancellor announced a cut to beer taxes in his budget

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Activist Steve Bray demonstrates with a toilet outside the gates of Downing Street, after MPs voted in Parliament against the Environment Bill, allowing companies to pump raw sewage into UK rivers and seas, in London

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Second World War veteran James White, 96, at the opening of the Edinburgh Garden of Remembrance, marking the start of the remembrance period

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Richard Ratcliffe holds up a photo of his wife Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe as he protests outside the Foreign Office while on hunger strike, part of an effort to lobby the UK foreign secretary to bring his wife home from detention in Iran

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Partner of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, Stella Morris and Editor in Chief of WikiLeaks Kristinn Hrafnsson attend a protest ahead of the appeal hearing over Assange's extradition, in London

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Palace Gardener Justine Howlett adds the finishing touches to pumpkins bearing the face of Henry VIII and his wives, at Hampton Court Palace.

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Flooded fields near Lingfield in Surrey, after southern England was hit overnight by heavy rain and strong winds from Storm Aurore moving in from France

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A wing surfer enjoys the strong winds as they surf in the sea off of Hayling Island in Hampshire

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Actor Jude Law holds hands with Little Amal, a 3.5-metre-tall puppet of a nine-year-old Syrian girl, as it arrives in Folkestone, Kent, as part of the Handspring Puppet Company's 'The Walk'

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A view over Southend-on-Sea in Essex, which is set to become a city in tribute to Sir David Amess MP, who spent years campaigning for the change

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Members of the Essex Bangladeshi Welfare Association pay their respects by floral tributes laid at the scene where Sir David Amess MP was killed at Belfairs Methodist Church, in Leigh-on-Sea

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Boris Johnson, Sir Keir Starmer, Priti Patel and Lindsay Hoyle pay respects to Sir David Amess at Belfairs Methodist Church, in Leigh-on-Sea, the site of his death

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A person lays flowers at the scene near the Belfairs Methodist Church in Eastwood Road North, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, where Conservative MP Sir David Amess has died after he was stabbed several times at a constituency surgery. A man has been arrested and officers are not looking for anyone else

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A red deer stag during rutting season in Bushy Park, Richmond, south west London, which is home to over 300 red and fallow deer

PA

Police officers detain a man as Insulate Britain activists block a roundabout at a junction on the M25 motorway during a protest in Thurrock

Reuters

The aerial climate installation by Swiss artivist Dan Acher 'We Are Watching' is unveiled at Our Dynamic Earth in Edinburgh

PA

A young girl is helped by a Border Force officer as a group of people thought to be migrants are brought in to Dover, Kent, following a small boat incident in the Channel.

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How has Brexit affected the migrant crisis? - independent.co.uk

Merkel, Zelensky discuss situation in eastern Ukraine, migrant crisis – Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

Acting German Chancellor Angela Merkel has called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to discuss the situation in eastern Ukraine.

German government spokesperson Steffen Seibert said this at a press conference on Thursday, November 25, Ukrinform reports.

"The Chancellor and the President of Ukraine discussed the security situation on the Ukrainian-Russian border and in eastern Ukraine. Chancellor Merkel underlined her support for Ukraine's independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity and stressed that undermining them would not be left without consequences," Seibert said.

Merkel and Zelensky agreed to advance efforts in the Normandy format to implement the Minsk agreements to reach a peaceful solution to the conflict.

The politicians also exchanged their views on the situation on the border between Belarus and the European Union and between Belarus and Ukraine, Seibert added.

Earlier on November 25, Merkel said at a press conference with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki that Berlin saw it as its task to do everything possible to prevent a new wave of Russian aggression against Ukraine.

Kyrylo Budanov, head of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, predicted on November 21 that Russia could resort to a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in January or February next year.

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Merkel, Zelensky discuss situation in eastern Ukraine, migrant crisis - Ukrinform. Ukraine and world news

The Secretive Prisons That Keep Migrants Out of Europe – The New Yorker

At 3 a.m. on February 5, 2021, Aliou Cand, a sturdy, shy twenty-eight-year-old migrant from Guinea-Bissau, arrived at the prison. He had left home a year and a half earlier, because his familys farm was failing, and had set out to join two brothers in Europe. But, as he attempted to cross the Mediterranean Sea on a rubber dinghy, with more than a hundred other migrants, the Libyan Coast Guard intercepted them and took them to Al Mabani. They were pushed inside Cell No. 4, where some two hundred others were being held. There was hardly anywhere to sit in the crush of bodies, and those on the floor slid over to avoid being trampled. Overhead were fluorescent lights that stayed on all night. A small grille in the door, about a foot wide, was the only source of natural light. Birds nested in the rafters, their feathers and droppings falling from above. On the walls, migrants had scrawled notes of determination: A soldier never retreats, and With our eyes closed, we advance. Cand crowded into a far corner and began to panic. What should we do? he asked a cellmate.

No one in the world beyond Al Mabanis walls knew that Cand had been captured. He hadnt been charged with a crime or allowed to speak to a lawyer, and he was given no indication of how long hed be detained. In his first days there, he kept mostly to himself, submitting to the grim routines of the place. The prison is controlled by a militia that euphemistically calls itself the Public Security Agency, and its gunmen patrolled the hallways. About fifteen hundred migrants were held there, in eight cells, segregated by gender. There was only one toilet for every hundred people, and Cand often had to urinate in a water bottle or defecate in the shower. Migrants slept on thin floor pads; there werent enough to go around, so people took turnsone lay down during the day, the other at night. Detainees fought over who got to sleep in the shower, which had better ventilation. Twice a day, they were marched, single file, into the courtyard, where they were forbidden to look up at the sky or talk. Guards, like zookeepers, put communal bowls of food on the ground, and migrants gathered in circles to eat.

The guards struck prisoners who disobeyed orders with whatever was handy: a shovel, a hose, a cable, a tree branch. They would beat anyone for no reason at all, Tokam Martin Luther, an older Cameroonian man who slept on a mat next to Cands, told me. Detainees speculated that, when someone died, the body was dumped behind one of the compounds outer walls, near a pile of brick and plaster rubble. The guards offered migrants their freedom for a fee of twenty-five hundred Libyan dinarsabout five hundred dollars. During meals, the guards walked around with cell phones, allowing detainees to call relatives who could pay. But Cands family couldnt afford such a ransom. Luther told me, If you dont have anybody to call, you just sit down.

In the past six years, the European Union, weary of the financial and political costs of receiving migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, has created a shadow immigration system that stops them before they reach Europe. It has equipped and trained the Libyan Coast Guard, a quasi-military organization linked to militias in the country, to patrol the Mediterranean, sabotaging humanitarian rescue operations and capturing migrants. The migrants are then detained indefinitely in a network of profit-making prisons run by the militias. In September of this year, around six thousand migrants were being held, many of them in Al Mabani. International aid agencies have documented an array of abuses: detainees tortured with electric shocks, children raped by guards, families extorted for ransom, men and women sold into forced labor. The E.U. did something they carefully considered and planned for many years, Salah Marghani, Libyas Minister of Justice from 2012 to 2014, told me. Create a hellhole in Libya, with the idea of deterring people from heading to Europe.

Three weeks after Cand arrived at Al Mabani, a group of detainees devised an escape plan. Moussa Karouma, a migrant from Ivory Coast, and several others defecated into a waste bin and left it in their cell for two days, until the stench became overpowering. It was my first time in prison, Karouma told me. I was terrified. When guards opened the cell door, nineteen migrants burst past them. They climbed on top of a bathroom roof, dropped fifteen feet over an outer wall, and disappeared into a warren of alleys near the prison. For those who remained, the consequences were bloody. The guards called in reinforcements, who sprayed bullets into the cells, then beat the inmates. There was one guy in my ward that they beat with a gun on his head, until he fainted and started shaking, a migrant later told Amnesty International. They didnt call an ambulance to come get him that night.... He was still breathing but he was not able to talk.... I dont know what happened to him.... I dont knowwhat he had done.

In the weeks that followed, Cand tried to stay out of trouble and clung to a hopeful rumor: the guards planned to release the migrants in his cell in honor of Ramadan, two months away. The lord is miraculous, Luther wrote in a journal he kept. May his grace continue to protect all migrants around the world and especially those in Libya.

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The Secretive Prisons That Keep Migrants Out of Europe - The New Yorker

Without reform of the Human Rights Act, the migrant crisis will continue – Telegraph.co.uk

Our law is a main cause of the crisis in the Channel. It makes preventing further crossings effectively impossible. Attempting to resolve the crisis without changing the law is likely to prove futile. The Nationality and Borders Bill now before Parliament will not do what is needed.

The Refugee Convention 1951 is not the central problem. It obliges states to protect refugees in their territory, which requires our authorities to consider whether those within the UK who claim asylum are refugees under the meaning of the convention. That is, are they fleeing persecution? Not everyone fleeing hard times at home is a refugee in this strict legal sense.

The convention does not require the UK, or any other member state, to permit asylum seekers to enter its territory. It carefully preserves the states right to deny entry to asylum seekers and even to expel refugees from its territory if they pose a danger. In any case, no refugee has a legal right to reside in a safe country of his choice. The UK would be entirely free, so far as the Refugee Convention is concerned, to refuse entry from France.

The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) is a much more serious problem, not because of what the UK and other states actually agreed in 1950, but because of how the European Court of Human Rights has remade it over time. As John Finnis QC (Hon) and Simon Murray explain in a recent Policy Exchange paper, the Strasbourg court has deployed the idea that the ECHR is a living instrument to invent a new European law of immigration, frustrating states from effective border control or from removing unlawful migrants, including failed asylum seekers.

The small boats will not stop coming until it is clear that one cannot enter and remain in the UK by crossing the Channel. If small boats were intercepted at sea and returned to France before they entered the UK, the people smugglers business model would collapse. But returning boats, and their passengers, to French waters or French soil requires French agreement. The moral case for such an agreement is obvious, but, alas, that does not make it likely.

What about simply denying entry to UK waters? The UK would be within its rights, in international law, to do exactly this. Mugged by reality, the Strasbourg court last year upheld the lawfulness of Spanish pushback operations in conditions of mass entry (across land borders), conditions in which the UK now surely finds itself (though with maritime borders). In any case, nothing in the ECHR, properly interpreted, prevents the UK, or any other member state, denying entry at the border of its land territory to a person who seeks to enter. The UK should categorically maintain that it retains this legal right.

However, turning boats around in the Channel is not straightforward. It is likely that they would be scuttled within sight of British craft, forcing a rescue operation to take place. And the risks of fatal accidents in this exceptionally busy shipping strait are all too obvious. In addition, the UK does not enjoy Australias relative advantage in terms of distance from neighbouring countries: small boats turned back into French waters might well turn around and try again.

The solution is legislation specifying that anyone crossing the Channel without permission to enter the UK will not be allowed to remain in the country or even to enter the UK and there argue in court for a right to remain. Without an agreement with the French, this means interception at sea and processing of asylum claims at a location offshore, seeking agreements with some countries to accept genuine refugees and with other countries to accept return of failed asylum seekers.

Without legislative change, each and every step in such an operation would be challenged in the courts. The Human Rights Act 1998 would be deployed to prevent removal of many of those intercepted, or rescued, at sea to an offshore location and to require some to be admitted into the UK, whether to join family or, in line with recent decisions of the Strasbourg court, to prevent removal to a location that lacks first-world medical care or has a high crime rate.

Intercepting boats and processing asylum claims offshore promises to wreck the people traffickers business model and end the crisis, saving lives and restoring the UKs borders.

But unless legislation addresses the Human Rights Act, this solution will rapidly become mired in litigation and is highly unlikely to succeed. The UK will also have to be willing to face down the Strasbourg court. Until then, the traffickers will continue to ply their deadly trade.

Richard Ekins is the Head of Policy Exchanges Judicial Power Project and Professor of Law and Constitutional Government at the University of Oxford

Continued here:

Without reform of the Human Rights Act, the migrant crisis will continue - Telegraph.co.uk

Why the language we use to talk about the refugee crisis matters – New Statesman

To see how far we have come and, spoiler, it is not far at all in the way we talk about refugees, one only has to play a fun game of: who said it, Tory leader or Edwardian priest?

You have got a swarm of people coming across the Mediterranean, seeking a better life, wanting to come to Britain People are really rather afraid that this country might be swamped by people with a different culture In some districts every vestige of comfort had been absolutely wiped out, the foreigners coming in like an army of locusts

The first, of course, was David Camerons controversial comment to ITV News at the height of the refugee crisis in July 2015 (comments from which even Nigel Farage attempted to distance himself). The second isMargaret Thatcher speaking in 1978. The third is courtesy ofCosmo Gordon Lang, the bishop of Stepney, writing about the Jewish diaspora in 1902.

Langs choice of (slightly mixed) metaphors army and locusts continue to be the most common way refugees are written about today: either asmilitary invasion (theNew York Timescarried a picture caption, for example, that described Greek authorities using tear gas, batons, stun grenades and rubber bullets to repel the hordes, and last year the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, appointed a Clandestine Channel Threat Commander to tackle crossings); or as a natural force a flood, an influx, a tsunami, a swarm. Both are, obviously, negative images, but they are problematic for different reasons. The first suggests not only that migration happens in some strategised, organised way, but that refugees have a choice about leaving; it is active and deliberate. The second suggests that migration is uncontrollable; it removes the agency of governments to do anything about it for good or ill.

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[See also: How much does the UK government really care about fixing the migrant crisis?]

The word migrant (often used interchangeably with immigrant, though they mean subtly different things) encompasses refugees, but also those who leave their countries of birth for other reasons, such as economic opportunities or education. Refugees, by contrast, are those who flee because of war, persecution or natural disaster. The former indicates choice, which those risking their lives to cross the English Channel in desperation do not have. Moreover, both migrant and immigrant are examples of nominalisation, or nouns that are formed from verbs. This shift implies identity rather than action; people who migrate are no longer people, but migrants.

Such language conveniently helps shift the responsibility from governments, as it implies that citizens are moving of their own volition, rather than because the circumstances in their home countries leave them no alternative. Using the word refugee, by contrast, acknowledges and calls out conflict, human rights abuses and corruption.

The word illegal is often found alongside immigrant, but this is also wrong as was Boris Johnsons assertion last yearthat crossing the Channel is always criminal, much as he might like it to be. For a start, a person cannot be illegal, even if their actions are. For refugees, the action of crossing borders is not illegal: the 1951 Refugee Convention affords them a legal status and states that host governments are responsible for their protection.

[See also: Twenty-seven people have drowned in the English Channel. This is a predictable and ongoing tragedy]

There is also something distinctly racist about the double standards with which we apply the word migrant. Consider, for example, theTelegraphheadline: Angela Merkel says nein to Theresa Mays calls for early deal on rights of EU migrants and British ex-pats. When British people migrate (and they do in 2019 there were994,000 British nationalsliving in other EU countries alone), they are described as expats, but those who seek refuge or a better life in Britain are migrants. The word expat, an abbreviation of expatriate, originates in the Latin ex meaning out of and patria meaning country or homeland. An expat is literally anyone who has temporarily or permanently left the place they were born, regardless of ethnicity or class. And yet those moving from Africa or Asia are classified as immigrants.

These observations are not academic: the way we talk about the refugee crisis matters. There is a clear link between humanising language and empathy. A study by the University of Sheffield found that after the image of Alan Kurdi, a three-year-old Syrian boy, lying dead on a beach went viral in 2015, refugee became more commonly used on social media than migrant. And it is surely no coincidence that the greatly exaggerated language in the media and politicians speeches is mirrored by a greatly exaggerated public belief of the scale of the problem. Most Britonsoverestimatethe number of non-British nationals in the UK, believing that around a third of the population are migrants; the real figure is more like14 per cent.

We should take care to avoid the easy metaphors of war or disaster, the stigmatising (and incorrect) descriptor illegal, and the generic use of migrant when what we really mean is refugee. Better yet, call them people.

[See also: Leader: A fractured continent]

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Why the language we use to talk about the refugee crisis matters - New Statesman