Why the military can use emergency powers to treat service members with trial COVID-19 drugs – The Conversation US

Infectious disease has always been one of the militarys greatest threats. By its own estimates, the U.S. Army lost almost as many soldiers from the 1918 flu as died on the battlefields of the first World War.

Troops are at risk during an outbreak due to the tight quarters in which they live and work. It is therefore not surprising that all branches of the service Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force and Coast Guard have been hit hard by COVID-19. The military has also played an important role in responding to the virus, from evacuating State Department officials from Wuhan in January to its current role building and staffing civilian field hospitals and augmenting civilian research teams.

To mitigate any risk, the Department of Defense has enforced rigorous social distancing policies and a military-wide travel ban halting nonessential deployments.

But in addition to measures aimed at keeping people away from sources of infection, the military is also treating active duty personnel who become infected. Because the COVID-19 virus is new, there are as yet no FDA approved treatments. As a result, military physicians are turning to either treatments approved for other conditions or seeking access to newly developed treatments, such as the antiviral Remdesivir, which to date has received FDA emergency use approval only for COVID-19 patients with severe conditions. That presents a significant legal challenge due to existing laws protecting military personnel by recognizing that their obligation to follow orders reduces their ability to provide informed consent.

As an expert in public health law and human subject research, I study the tension between protecting participants of biomedical research and responding quickly to emerging threats. But I have also had personal experience with the events that led to the passing of the law that allows the military to work with the FDA in order to get emergency authorization to respond quickly to emerging threats.

In 1998, I was working for now U.S. Senator, then Connecticut Attorney General, Richard Blumenthal when I met Russ Dingle and Thomas Buzz Rempfer, two remarkable airmen who filed a whistleblower complaint seeking protection from what they described as forced participation in an unlawful research experiment. Specifically, they asserted that the Department of Defense was mandating that all active duty personnel be vaccinated against anthrax using a product, AVA, not yet approved by the FDA for the purpose the Army was now using it.

The vaccine had been in use since the 1970s to protect wool workers and veterinarians at risk from touching naturally occurring anthrax spores, but had not been approved for protection against inhaling them, a method of spread reportedly developed by Iraqi scientists as a bioweapon. But many in the military were reluctant to be vaccinated because of their concern that it might be a cause of Gulf War Syndrome. To this day, there is no agreement about the specific symptoms, let alone cause, of Gulf War Syndrome.

A 2000 report by the well-respected Institute of Medicine found no conclusive link to the vaccine. But the causal connection seemed plausible to many sufferers, especially given the continuing emergence of long-term harm suffered by veterans of the Vietnam War and their children from exposure to Agent Orange.

The whistleblowers primary claim was that the anthrax vaccination program was research and therefore the army was required to abide by two different protections. The first, called the Common Rule, is a law establishing that all research conducted by the federal government require the informed consent of participants. Their second claim was that even if it was being used as a preventative measure, the Department of Defense was constrained by a 1998 law passed in direct response to concerns over possible links between unapproved drugs and Gulf War Syndrome. It prohibited the administration of investigational new drugs, or drugs unapproved for their intended use, to service members without their informed consent unless consent was waived by the president.

Blumenthal wrote to the secretary of defense warning him that administering an unapproved vaccine risked violating both laws and demanding that the research be stopped. That letter became part of a larger debate over whether the militarys need for force protection exceeded the risks to any individual serviceperson.

In 2003, Colonel Rempfer and six other at first unnamed plaintiffs brought suit in federal court which resulted in a preliminary injunction halting the vaccine program. Responding to the lawsuit, the Department of Defense denied that they were conducting research and claimed the authority to waive consent because it was necessary to prevent infection with weaponized anthrax.

But in winning the battle, those seeking to stop the vaccine program lost the war. The Department of Defense appealed to Congress for a workaround. It resulted in the passing of the BioShield Act in 2004, creating the Emergency Use Authorization. This gave the FDA authority to recharacterize the status of a drug or vaccine from investigational to approved for emergency use. In December of 2005 it issued a final order concluding that [the Anthrax Vaccine] was the best available medical countermeasure to the potential military emergency. Although Col. Rempfer filed a lawsuit to protest the FDAs decision, it was to no avail and shortly afterwards the Department of Defense resumed the vaccine program. Col. Dingle died of cancer in 2008, but Col. Rempfer remained critical of the anthrax vaccine program and still actively advocates on behalf of past and future military personnel.

Since the passage of the BioShield Act, Congress has continued to support the FDAs authority to make unapproved drugs available in response to new threats. In 2017, the Department of Defense sought power to unilaterally authorize use of unapproved drugs in battlefield situations. In the face of FDA objections to this level of autonomy, Congress created a compromise measure memorialized in a Memorandum of Understanding that allows the Department of Defense broad authority to declare the need for emergency use permission and request that the FDA take actions to expedite the development of a medical product. But final authority to issue an emergency use order rests with the president.

It is because of the servicemen committed to the preservation of informed consent that troops today have early access to potential COVID-19 drugs and vaccines while still respecting their vulnerability as patients without the complete ability to give informed consent.

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Why the military can use emergency powers to treat service members with trial COVID-19 drugs - The Conversation US

Top 10 episodes of The Wire – The Indian Express

Written by Kshitij Rawat | New Delhi | Published: May 11, 2020 1:58:01 pm The Wire is often regarded as the best TV drama of all time.

David Simons The Wire is widely regarded as the greatest television drama of all time.

Simon used his journalistic experience to give the HBO show a deadly accuracy in its portrayal of the drug and law enforcement scene in Baltimores streets. The actors in it hardly seemed like actors just normal, real-life people buying and selling drugs and others trying to nab them and their overlords.

This show was often so realistic that it seemed like one was watching a documentary.

Here are the best ten episodes from this crime drama series:

One of the best things about The Wire was nobody, not even the most likable characters, on the show was safe. This episode from season 3 saw the unexpected death of Idris Elbas Stringer Bell, the suave mobster who everybody thought was untouchable. He was killed by Omar Little and Brother Mouzone who cornered him. When Bell, the calm, business-like professional, realised they did not want his money, he resigned himself to his fate. Well, then get on with it, m*****f*****, were his final words.

This episode probably had the biggest death in the series. Michael K Williams Omar Little, one of shows best characters (if not the best), who robbed street-level drug dealers, was dispensed with unceremoniously by a boy drug dealer. His death was so random for such an iconic character that there was outrage among the fans. And yet, the world in The Wire, works just like our world. There are no designs, no patterns to it, just chaos.

The episode that established Omar Little as a figure feared among drug dealers and even high-level mobsters. Two of Barksdales men, Wee-Bey and Stinkum, are ambushed by Omar with his trademark shotgun. It was in this episode he uttered the words of warning seeping with bravado that has become associated with him: Come at the king, you best not miss.

This episode from the first season taught many how versatile the f-word can be. Detectives Jimmy McNulty and Bunk Moreland are investigating the murder of a woman. The masterful thing about this five-minute scene is McNulty and Moreland communicate solely using different iterations of the f-word. It is one of the best scenes in the show and, I daresay, for any drama show, ever.

Before Michael B Jordan gained limelight in Creed series and Black Panther, he played the role of a young drug dealer in The Wire. His character, an innocent boy called Wallace, was killed in a heartbreaking scene in the first season.

A running theme in The Wire is that unless the system is transformed from the ground up, things will go on as depressingly as usual. American prisons will continue to be crowded with small-time drug dealers, and there will be no end to the war on drugs. No episode demonstrates that more than Late Editions, in which a new generation embraces the ways of the older generation.

Simon, who was a journalist before he made The Wire, decided to end the show in the way many journalists in North America end a story: -30-. The episode underlined once again that there has to be systemic changes in the United States. It was a depressing ending, but so is life.

Apart from what goes in a criminal organisation that manufactures or smuggles drugs, The Wire offered insight into the corruption in the police department. There were few episodes in the show that demonstrated that than this episode from the inaugural season.

Once again, an Omar Little episode. And Williams is incredible in the role. The character is in the court for the Bird murder trial. His conversation with a lawyer goes like this: Maurice Maury Levy (the lawyer): You are amoral, are you not? You are feeding off the violence and the despair of the drug trade. You are stealing from those who themselves are stealing the lifeblood from our city. You are a parasite who leeches off Omar cuts in, Just like you, man. Levy continues before stopping, the culture of drugs. Excuse me? What? Omar finishes, I got the shotgun, you got the briefcase. Its all in the game though, right?

Barksdale crew members Wee-Bey Brice and Little Man attack detective Kima Greggs and Orlando when the drug deal turns out to be an ambush. It was a particularly action-heavy episode of the show.

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No, we’re not at war. The dangers of how we talk about the COVID-19 pandemic. – Bangor Daily News

Troy R. Bennett | BDN

Troy R. Bennett | BDN

A workman looks out from an upper floor of the old Maine Medical Center parking garage on Congress Street in Portland on Monday near a homemade sign of encouragement amid the coronavirus pandemic. The garage is in currently being torn down.

Click here for the latest coronavirus news, which the BDN has made free for the public. You can support our critical reporting on the coronavirus by purchasing a digital subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

We are at war. So declared Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, three months into the fight against the novel coronavirus. If nothing else, its a sentiment President Donald Trump and the head of the WHO wholeheartedly agree on. And so do many other world leaders.

Especially when it comes to the mobilization of resources, war may be an appropriate analogy for fighting a pandemic such as COVID-19. But its ultimate defeat will be nothing like a military victory and will require the kind of extensive global cooperation that is more associated with keeping peace than fighting wars.

From Lyndon Johnsons War on Poverty and Richard Nixons War on Cancer to Ronald Reagans War on Drugs and George W. Bushs War on Terror, theres a long history of American presidents resorting to the language of war to mobilize action against major challenges and threats.

Trump was late to use the language of war, but once the extent of COVID-19s destruction became too hard to ignore, he fully embraced it. The world is at war with a hidden enemy, Trump tweeted in mid-March. WE WILL WIN, he reassured Americans. He depicted the foreign virus as an Invisible Enemy, and saw America as being on a wartime footing and himself as the wartime president. He called Americans warriors and urged them to defend against an attack that was worse than Pearl Harbor worse than the World Trade Center attack on 9/11.

Among other world leaders whove cast the fight against the virus as a war, President Xi Jinping called on the Chinese people to mobilize for a peoples war. Beijings propaganda machine touted Xi as the Peoples Leader commanding the decisive battle. And those citizens who had fallen to the disease were described as the wars martyrs.

In Europe, too, leaders have resorted to martial language. President Emmanuel Macron declared France was at war against an enemy that is invisible, elusive. In Britain, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, himself temporarily felled by the disease, has invoked Winston Churchill and the spirit of the Blitz, urging Britons to directly enlist in the fight while reassuring them they would come through it stronger than ever.

The language of war can be used to bring a nation together in common cause, to mobilize resources for the fight, to underscore the need for sacrifice and to force early and effective action. When it comes to dealing with a pandemic, all these efforts are necessary.

But they are not enough. A virus, though deadly, is not like an enemy in war. While it attacks through physical interaction, the attacker is as likely to be a spouse, a child or a parent, as someone unknown to us. It can be countered through physical separation, but it will only be defeated through outside medical intervention.

Finding a treatment or vaccine is nothing like fighting a war. It requires widespread, global cooperation among scientists to research, discover and test possible drugs and then to manufacture, distribute and deliver them all across the globe. And victory comes not from a single battle or even from the viruss defeat in one nation or region. It only comes from its defeat everywhere. When it comes to a pandemic, no one is safe until everyone is safe.

Many understand this need for cooperation. Earlier this week, leaders from around the world connected virtually to pledge their support and more than $8 billion to fund vaccine development and research on diagnosing and treating the disease. The United States was notably absent from the effort, while China, which was represented by its ambassador to the European Union, pledged no funding.

Asked why President Trump did not join his world colleagues and pledge U.S. support for this global effort, a senior State Department official said Washington was doing its part. The United States is riding to the sounds of the gun, boldly heading into the fight to stop this pandemic, Jim Richardson, director of foreign assistance, said in a news briefing. Retreat is simply not an option.

Here lies the deeper danger of seeing the fight against this pandemic as a war. Wars rarely end by vanquishing the enemy. Most often, they end in stalemate, because of exhaustion, or through negotiation. But viruses dont negotiate, and in this pandemic, a stalemate means thousands will continue to die, every single day.

We are in this together, former President George W. Bush said so eloquently last weekend. We are not partisan combatants. We are human beings, equally vulnerable and equally wonderful in the sight of God. We rise or fall together. And we are determined to rise.

Ivo Daalder is president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and a former U.S. ambassador to NATO.

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No, we're not at war. The dangers of how we talk about the COVID-19 pandemic. - Bangor Daily News

Marijuana Prohibition Racism and Real Social Justice From Los Angeles to New York – Riverfront Times

The racist origins of marijuana prohibition were never hidden, and the racial disparity in the enforcement of the laws was generally seen as a feature, not a bug, because law enforcement generally was, and too often still is, racist in its operation.

It is also important to note that this is not just a relic of the past in the Old South. The fact that cannabis-hemp is known by the Mexican slang term marijuana is further evidence of the racist origins.

And then Nixon blamed Jewish Psychiatrists for wanting to legalize marijuana. (Full disclosure: Some of my best friends are Jewish Psychiatrists.)

In Canada, which had almost no blacks or Mexicans in the 1920s, marijuana prohibition was based on anti-Chinese racism preached by the first female judge in the British Empire.

Now we just blame the Chinese for a virus. Progress?

Despite legalization in several states, as of 2018, One commonality among all states legalized, decriminalized, illegal is that Black people are still significantly more likely to be arrested for marijuana than white people. And at the county level, there are places where Black people are more than 20, 30, 40, or even 50 times more likely to be arrested than white people.

Absurdly, outrageously, there are still over 600,000 marijuana arrests nationally and the racial disparities continue even in states with semi-legalized marijuana.

However, one should not think that all of the terrible damage to African Americans caused by marijuana prohibition was the result of white racism. After all, Obama did nothing to stop it.

Lock my people up?

It isnt just white racists who supported, and continue to support, marijuana prohibition. When I was National Director of NORML (1992 to 1995) I joked that it was the whitest organization that I had ever belonged to that didnt have a tennis court. We were attacked by African American leaders because we wanted to stop arresting African Americans??? Yep.

Much of the African American leadership opposed marijuana legalization and some still do now.

(And the Catholic Church, to which most Latinos belong, is strongly prohibitionist.)

"It will devastate the African-American community," Bishop Jethro James of Paradise Baptist Church in Newark told lawmakers at the first Legislative Black Caucus hearing on marijuana, held Wednesday, Feb. 21, in Jersey City. "It will devastate any chance of our children having a future." Yep.

Even today. African American leaders who say they oppose marijuana prohibition block legalization in several states, arguing that social justice requires that the marijuana businesses have to be given to people who have been victimized by prohibition.

(Note: Social Justice is a very broad subject, most of which is not relevant to marijuana legalization.)

In New York state, Crystal Peoples-Stokes, the New York state assemblys democratic majority leader, has pointed out that other states recreational cannabis laws have failed to ensure that communities historically targeted by discriminatory drug-use-enforcement practices benefit economically from legalization.

In Los Angeles, Social Justice is called Social Equity and the Departament of Cannabis Regulation is trying to promote equitable ownership and employment opportunities in the cannabis industry in order to decrease disparities in life outcomes for marginalized communities, and to address the disproportionate impacts of the War on Drugs in those communities.

Meanwhile, in the real world, the reason that there is an argument over who gets these licenses is based on the assumption that there will be a very limited number of them issued and they will be very valuable, so the African American leaders want to be sure that they go to their constituents. Fair enough, but

First, how would making a few African American or Latino entrepreneurs rich help the overwhelming number of poor African Americans and Latinos, et al. who have been victimized by the Drug War?

A small number of white entrepreneurs have gotten rich in the cannabis boom, but that did nothing for most poor whites, who are either paying a premium to licensed retailers or still buying in the black market.

It is even more absurd when one realizes that the poor victims of prohibition, whatever their race, would be charged more and heavily taxed and given limited choices under an oligopolistic system in the name of social justice.

Then I'll get on my knees and pray

We don't get fooled again

Don't get fooled again, no, no

Yeah

Meet the new boss

Same as the old boss

(Peter Townsend, the worlds greatest political philosopher)

First, there are almost no social order problems associated with cannabis use, especially when compared with alcohol, which is sold almost everywhere.

Does marijuana lead to violence? Experts say theres no clear link:

Whereas.Based on published studies, Roizen (3) summarized the percentages of violent offenders who were drinking at the time of the offense as follows: up to 86 percent of homicide offenders, 37 percent of assault offenders, 60 percent of sexual offenders, up to 57 percent of men and 27 percent of women involved in marital violence, and 13 percent of child abusers. These figures are the upper limits of a wide range of estimates. In a community-based study, Pernanen (4) found that 42 percent of violent crimes reported to the police involved alcohol, although 51 percent of the victims interviewed believed that their assailants had been drinking.

And are there really public health concerns about contaminated marijuana?

While medical users might be concerned about mold and other possible contamination, the fact is that Americans, even people with AIDS and other medical conditions, have been using black market (often Mexican Commercial) for many decades and there were few, if any, reports of any resulting health problems.

In Dutch coffeeshops that have been selling cannabis (hashish and wiet weed) with no packaging. labels or testing for decades, there have been no reports of cannabis related health problems. And no violence or public order problems.

So, the way to get social justice for all the victims of prohibition is to get out of the way and fully legalize marijuana and let people in the poor neighborhoods open cannabis cafes with minimal restrictions so they can create jobs without having to spend thousands of dollars on lawyers and politicians.

And in neighborhoods where races mix, these venues can be places where everyone can meet. I have always understood the slogan No Justice. No Peace. But it might be better to say, No Peace. No Justice.

End the war on marijuana and let Peace begin with us!

End Marijuana Prohibition NOW!

- Richard Cowan is a former NORML National Director and founder of RealTestedCBD.com.

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Marijuana Prohibition Racism and Real Social Justice From Los Angeles to New York - Riverfront Times

An action thriller in shades of grey: Taylor Sheridans Sicario – The Hindu

Early on in Sicario, a 2015 action thriller film, we meet Kate Macer (Emily Blunt), a young, by-the-book FBI agent, as she uneasily navigates the war on drugs. Kate questions Alejandro (Benicio del Toro), a shadowy Colombian figure, as she misinterprets their mission. Nothing will make sense to your American ears, he slowly replies, but in the end, you will understand.

Many of us may be locked down, unable to travel freely, but we continue to explore the lives of others. Be it the timely resonance of Contagion or the stranger-than-fiction docuseries, Tiger King, our Netflix queues are depleting, inviting us to revisit films we may have overlooked. As Proust famously said, The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes. Sicario demands exactly this. When I saw it at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival, I knew it would have staying power; I just didnt know why.

Around this time, interest in the war on drugs was at its apex, heightened by the Netflix signature series Narcos, Don Winslows Cartel trilogy, and President Trumps interest in the U.S-Mexico border, a zone of anxiety and often violent transformation, as Los Angeles Times Mark Olsen writes.

Borders are something I am familiar with. My father is a Canadian immigrant medical examiner, and I had heard tales of fear and insecurity growing up, something he confronted when he migrated from India, and my mother from Pakistan. Steeped in our cultural community, I searched for answers on how geography shaped our destiny. The human cost reverberates in Sicario, as the terrain expands from Mexico to Colombia and the American Southwest.

Savvy thriller

With its award-winning cast and direction, the film has drawn comparisons to Michael Mann, the Coen Brothers and, most notably, Steven Soderberghs Traffic, with one journalist calling Sicario arguably the savviest, smartest, and most exhilarating crime thriller to hit American cinemas in years.

But the films greatest strength is not what is present, but what is purposely absent. Characters leave things unspoken, which builds complexity while leaving the viewer unbalanced; that is how Kate and Alejandros dialogue creates the kind of creeping tension that coils around the audience like a snake suffocating its prey, writes Varietys Scott Foundas.

Most American action thriller films champion the great man theory: that direct action and muscular dialogue by individual actors lead to a resolution. But Sicario leaves things uncertain, without moral absolutes, conveying that information and relationships often exist, purposely, in a grey zone. The film portrays the so-called war on drugs not as a battle to be won but as an existential minefield, writes Olsen. Much of this is designed by the films director, Denis Villeneuve, a master of slow-burn thrillers, with characters seeking answers, both in the physical and the interior.

Whereas Kates angst comes from the gap between her idealism of due process and the reality of a shifting landscape, Alejandro is cut from considerably more complicated cloth, writes Foundas. He is a swift, unforgiving man, with a wolfish jowl and the preternatural calm of the predator lying in wait. Yet he also shudders in his sleep, reveals flashes of battered humanity when one least expects it, and even, fleetingly, a Hannibal Lecter-ish lust for the flinty young woman thrust into his path.

Still from Sicario.

If Sicario is a morality play for the astute observer, part of why it has lingered with me is its origin story. I watched the film with my brother, a logical and discerning surgeon, who was left unsatisfied. Our mutual admiration in the thriller genre was undone by his view that this film had just three amazing scenes the action parts and the rest was hella slow and boring, as he texted me. You didnt really know who the enemy was or what exactly they were doing... and youre left feeling unsure what the point of the entire plot and exercise was.

Simmering questions

Maybe that is on purpose.

My job isnt to answer any questions, my job is to ask them, says actor-turned-screenwriter Taylor Sheridan, who reviles the idea that everyone in the audience has got to fully understand whats going on at all times. He prefers leaving things to simmer as long as possible, in allowing characters to be everything that they might be not just good or bad... An audience has to do some of the work.

Sheridans distaste for the familiar is shaped by his own journey. Texas-born and farm-raised, he struggled with loneliness when moving to Hollywood. He sought solace, unsuccessfully at first through the Catholic Church and the Krishna Center, and more fruitfully by reading Cormac McCarthy and later, through his own critically acclaimed American Frontier Trilogy, with Sicario as the lead. I left, and never thought Id go back, he said in an Esquire interview. But then you realise the ghosts werent there. The ghosts are wherever you are.

Sheridans films show men in pain using a rugged individualism to operate outside the rules of engagement, in vast, lawless, disparate lands. Set far from Hollywood, Sheridan shows a portion of this world that they dont know exists... and hopefully it makes people ask questions about themselves.

Still from Sicario.

My own introspection about foreign lands took me to Mumbai, a few months after watching the film. The comforts of an American Beauty-blueprint of a corporate job, mother-subsidised meals and weekend warrior sports, satiated my needs but not my soul. Working in human resources in a developing country for the past four years has been a course in cultural psychology. In one interview, I sat across the broad-shouldered, six-foot-one Kris, who came equipped with a slim-fitting suit, an American accent, all the right answers and, most notably, a steely resolve.

Personal struggles

But only after I began to observe him deeply did I learn of Krishnas precarious background his years in a call centre, his fathers struggle as a rickshaw driver, and his familys residency in Dharavi, one of the worlds biggest slums. I had interviewed hundreds of people sitting just two feet across from me, but how much of their world did I really understand?

Perhaps Sicarios effect is more visceral, more personal for me. Sheridan and his characters evoke memories of my misunderstood youth, with fits of precariousness and rage, hardening my belief in stoicism, moral flexibility and adaptability in uncertain times ever-present in Sicario. In these fragile times, when we see loss of life and find ourselves without answers, maybe the films teaching is on the nature of catharsis and how we move on from tragedy without getting closure, as Sheridan says.

Sicario is a meditation on transporting us, without the physicality. Travel is a leap in the dark. Its like a metaphor for life... you discover a different world and you discover yourself, says famed travel writer Paul Theroux. It brings the unknown. A journey awakens all our old fears of danger and risk.

Yet with limited mobility, isnt Prousts request of us to view the world with new eyes in an age where we are rethinking how we work, think and see the world more timely than ever?

The writer is an HR and Strategy Consultant based in Mumbai, and can be found at rolandm.com.

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An action thriller in shades of grey: Taylor Sheridans Sicario - The Hindu

Joe Bidens Unwelcome Plan to Expand Coerced Treatment and Drug Courts – Filter

Presumed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden released his Plan for Black America on May 4, which discussed some of the drivers of racial inequality and how he proposes to fix them. The plan rightly identifies the criminal justice and prison systems, and drug enforcement, as disproportionately targeting Black Americans. But its proposed solutions either dont go far enough or are likely to create their own harms.

Biden will end, once and for all, the federal crack and powder cocaine disparity, decriminalize the use of cannabis and automatically expunge all prior cannabis use convictions, and end all incarceration for drug use alone and instead divert individuals to drug courts and treatment, the plan reads.

The federal crack disparity refers to a law that Biden himself sponsored and partially wrote: the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986. If someone was caught with 5 grams of crack cocaine, they would be charged and sentenced as if it were 500 grams of powder cocaine. Legislation signed by Presidents Obama and Trump repealed or reformed certain aspects of the law, but today the law still treats each gram of crack as if it were 18 grams of powder.

Biden supports decriminalizing cannabis and expunging prior convictions for use, despite his recent espousal of the dubunked gateway theory. Filter has reported on the massive and, in some places, worsening harms caused to Black and Brown Americans by marijuana enforcement, as documented by the ACLU. But the ACLU report was unequivocal: While marijuana decriminalization is a step forward, legalization is still the best solution for reducing racial disparities in enforcement. Biden refuses to support federal legalization.

So under Bidens plan, what would happen to people who are arrested for crack, powder cocaine, marijuana, or any other drugs? He says he wouldnt send anyone to prison for use alone. (Presumably, therefore, he would still want to lock up people who sell drugs.) But his alternative, [diverting] individuals to drug courts and treatment, can be very harmful in its own way.

How a President Biden would implement this isnt exactly clear. His campaigns opioid crisis plan does say that he would expand substance use treatment access by enhancing the Affordable Care Act, expanding Medicaid, and investing federal funds in local treatment programs.

But setting aside important questions around the efficacy of mainstream, abstinence-based treatment in the US, there is a huge ethical difference between voluntary treatment and forced (or coerced) treatment.

As things stand, Healthline reports that 37 states and the District of Columbia allow law enforcement, families or medical providers to petition to have someone ordered into treatment. Under some laws, people can be involuntarily confined even without a judges order if they are deemed a threat to themselves or others. These short-term civil commitments may last 24 hours to 15 days. In some states like Florida and Massachusetts, commitments have more than doubled in the last 20 years.

Some research on involuntary drug treatment has shown it may be ineffective or even more harmful than helpful. A 2016 study in the International Journal of Drug Policy looked at such programs around the world, and found little evidence they are effective while finding potential harms and human rights abuses. A 2017 report by Physicians for Human Rights found that involuntary drug treatment programs in the US are often overly punitive and harm patients. Some of the programs they examined werent even run by medical professionals, and deny people evidence-based medications like methadone or buprenorphine.

Disturbingly, a 2016 report by Massachusetts public health officials found that people who were involuntarily committed to drug treatment were more than twice as likely to die of an opioid-involved overdose as people who went to treatment voluntarily. (In fact, they were nearly twice as likely to die of any cause.)

When it comes to drug courts, Bidens plan explains that he will require federal courts to divert [arrested people] to drug courts so they receive appropriate treatment and services. Hell incentivize states to put the same requirements in place. And, hell expand funding for federal, state, and local drug courts and other programs that divert individuals who commit crimes as a result of or in furtherance of substance use disorders to treatment rather than incarceration.

Drug policy reform advocates have long objected to the coercive, punitive nature of drug courtsas illustrated, for example, by the influential 2011 Drug Policy Alliance* report, Drug Courts Are Not the Answer.

Filter has reported on the mixed outcomes and ethical dilemmas presented by such courts, as well ason researcher and author Dr. Kerwin Kayes documentation of some of the problems with this modelin which prosecutors and district attorneys play an outsized role. A defendant who goes to drug court is subject to the whim of a judge without medical qualifications. They also forfeit the ability to enter a plea bargain, meaning they might might ultimately be charged with a more serious crime and serve a longer sentence.

As Kaye describes, the meat and bones of drug courts are not the court but the mandated treatment program where the defendant spends most of their time. This could be a 24/7 inpatient therapeutic community, another residential treatment program, or outpatient treatment. The programs often impose severe restrictions on a defendants freedoms and basic rights and dignity.

Though Joe Bidens drug policy and criminal justice plans are an improvement over existing lawsincluding laws, we should remember, that he himself helped passhis plans risk perpetuating the harms of the War on Drugs and mass incarceration through different means.

Image by Gage Skidmore via Flickr/Creative Commons 2.0.

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Mom juice is so 2017: CBD and cannabis brands embrace Mothers Day marketing – Glossy

Moms in the U.S. may not be asking for much fragrance or lipstick to wear in lockdown for Mothers Day this Sunday, so companies that sell cannabis and CBD are getting in on Mothers Day marketing.

Miss Grass, a cannabis e-commerce and lifestyle platform, launched a Mothers Day mom shop with a special gift bag to celebrate the holiday for $130. It features CBD gumdrops, lip butter and a sleep tincture. CBD e-commerce shop Fleur March is also featuring a Mothers Day gift guide that includes its own compilation of gumdrops, truffles, sleep aids and beauty products.

In the lead-up to a Mothers Day in quarantine, CBD gifts associated with stress relief are acting as an alternative to traditional holiday gifting categories. NPD Group found that fragrance, a Mothers Day staple, is the worst-performing beauty category in the lead-up to the holiday this Sunday. In contrast, female-centric cannabis and CBD startups are doing well. Miss Grass has seen its weekly organic e-commerce revenue for 2020 increase 44% since the start of Covid-19 shutdowns in March. Fleur March co-founder and CEO Ashley Lewis said that the e-tailer has seen 65% month-over-month sales growth from February to April.

As hemp-derived CBD beauty products are now mainstream at retailers like Sephora and Ulta, and recreational marijuana is legal in eight states, the stigma around moms using CBD is decreasing.

A lot of moms especially are open to exploring cannabis, said Miss Grass co-founder and CEO Kate Miller.

There is this acceptance, especially with moms, said Jessica Lukas, the svp of commercial development at BDSA, a cannabis industry market research firm. You can have the wine mom, where you can post on social media all these funny memes in quarantine, The kids went to bed and now Im going to open a bottle of wine. But its interesting that cannabis still has such a stigma. A survey by Miss Grass found that 68% of cannabis-using moms felt they had experienced discrimination for using cannabis as a mother.

But the survey also found that cannabis use is replacing wine, with 21% of moms surveyed saying they had completely stopped drinking in favor of THC. Mom juice (aka wine) is so 2017, said one respondent.

Fleur Marchs Mothers Day gift guide followed this trend, saying its products were for the I-cant-drink-any-more-wine-mom.

Companies are promoting CBD at a time when mothers stress is through the roof, as they are taking on an outsized role in homeschooling and child care, often with full-time jobs. A recent poll by Morning Consult for the New York Times found that 45% of fathers believed that they were doing the most homeschooling of their children, but only 3% of mothers believed their husbands were doing so.

Oftentimes, moms are trying to be a full-time mom and teacher, and to maintain the house. That stuff usually falls on women, no matter how far advanced we are as a society, said Lewis. All [moms] want is a few good nights sleep. With a newborn at home, she said she knows this firsthand. She said that managing the household mostly falls on me. I know how to do all the things were supposed to do better. I know where we keep everything. Its easier for me to do. Women are uniquely able to multitask in a way that, with men, I havent seen.

Interest in both CBD and higher-THC-level cannabis products is rising among mothers. According to BDSA, the most commonly used marijuana-derived (as opposed to lower THC hemp-derived) CBD beauty products include creams and lotions, which are used by 47% of over 1,000 moms surveyed. Their most common reason for the higher-THC topicals was pain relief, followed by treating a health problem and sleeping better.

According to Miller, this quarantine period has especially opened consumers minds to both CBD and cannabis. Miss Grass is currently working on its own line of cannabis products to be sold in California in the fall.

The quarantine period has shifted a lot of peoples perceptions that may have previously not been willing, or were indoctrinated by the war on drugs so had a stigma around the plants, said Miller. They were like, No, thats not for me, but I think people are looking for alternative stress-relieving substances.

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Mom juice is so 2017: CBD and cannabis brands embrace Mothers Day marketing - Glossy

Five Things Big PharmaAnd Its InvestorsCould Learn From Synthetic Biology – Forbes

Drug discovery is becoming slower and more expensive over time, despite many advances in technology ... [+] and biology. Will the coronavirus pandemic shake pharma out of its inertia? Here are five learnings from synthetic biology R&D that just might change the game in pharma.

We have a love hate relationship with pharma. We hate them for taking our money, and now we pray to them to cure COVID.

Depending who you ask, it costs a pharma company $1 billion to $4 billion and 10-15 years to bring a new drug to market. Whats worse, fewer than 10% of drugs actually make it to market to help people.

(By comparison, SpaceXs flagship rocket system, Falcon 9, cost about $400 million and took five years.)

The observation that drug discovery is becoming slower and more expensive over time is known as Erooms law, which says the cost of bringing a new drug to market roughly doubles every nine years. This is despite advances at the intersection of technology and biology, including computational drug design, high-throughput automation, and the ability to read, write and edit DNA faster and cheaper every day.

Moores versus Erooms law: the power of computing per unit costs doubles every 18 months under ... [+] Moores Law, yet the unit cost of drug development has increased to the point where drug development has become nearly cost ineffective, following an inverse of Moores law (Erooms law).

Moores versus Erooms law: the power of computing per unit costs doubles every 18 months under Moores Law, yet the unit cost of drug development has increased to the point where drug development has become nearly cost ineffective, following an inverse of Moores law (Erooms law). Minie et al, Drug Discovery Today.

Why is it still so difficult to make new drugs? How are we ever going to bring down health care costs if each new treatment costs as much as putting a person on the moon, with patients ultimately bearing the costs?

There was another industry about 70 years ago that was mired in high costs and failing products: the auto industry.

The automobile industry performed admirably during the world wars, transitioning from making consumer vehicles to producing the trucks, tanks, airplanes, and even helmets, ammunition, bombs and torpedoes needed for the war effort, totalling one-fifth of the nations war production. But in the postwar era, quality engineering took a back seat to the wartime production mindset of build a lot of it now. By the mid-1960s, new-car buyers could expect an average of twenty-four defects per vehicle, many of them safety-related.

Around this time, a small number of nerdy rebels, led by W. Edwards Deming and Genichi Taguchi, offered a new approach to rethinking how we make cars. The more mature US auto industry wouldn't listen, but the fledgling Japanese auto industry emerging from WWII had nothing to lose. It was during this time that Japans well-built and functionally designed cars made that country the worlds leading automobile producera position it has never relinquished.

The product brochure for the 1975 Honda Civic pretty much says it all.

U.S. auto manufacturing eventually caught on and adopted a total quality management approach, which has brought an industry-wide culture and commitment to producing products that meet or exceed customer quality expectations. The result is that now every car you buy, no matter how cheap, works pretty much flawlessly.

Today, big pharma is afflicted by the same kind of widespread failure. Despite the staggering time and cost to make a new drug, nine out of ten drugs still fail in clinical trials. Its like throwing away nine out of ten cars at the end of the production line because they dont work!

How can any company that works like this survive? Could a similar transformation of the pharmaceutical industry repair this broken system?

Hopefully, that transformation may already be unfolding. In this case, the nerdy rebels are from the field of synthetic biology. If youve read my Forbes column before, you may know that synthetic biology combines advances in computation, automation, and our ability to read/write/edit genes to change the way we build things with biology.

Synthetic biology is rooted in academia, industrial biotechnology, and bioengineering, and its early practitioners dreamed that we could rationally engineer cells to solve society's needs more quickly, more effectively and more sustainably than conventional biological and chemical technologies. Perhaps most importantly, these dreamers brought a nave willingness to imagine the unimaginable, to try the impossible, to attempt the wild ideas that everyone else thought were crazy.

Some ideas, like a library of standard biological parts, have been difficult to achieve. Others, like engineering soil bacteria to increase the amount of nitrogen fertilizer delivered to plant roots, have the real potential to slash terrible nitrogen runoffs and help feed the next billion humans on Planet Earth. If we dont dream big, well never achieve many of our most important goals.

This applies to the pharmaceutical industry now more than ever.

One of my favorite nerdy rebels is my friend and colleague Tim Gardner, founder and CEO of Riffyn. As a graduate student at Boston University, he is renowned for having performed some of the early pioneering experiments in synthetic biology. After holding roles in academia and leading industrial R&D groups, Tim founded Riffyn with a mission of helping scientists spend less time sorting through mountains of data and more time asking important questions.

This problem is especially acute in pharma today. Theres more and more data, but a lack of interoperability of that data, leading to data fragmentation and lack of reproducibility which is one of the biggest issues facing scientific research today. In essence, Tim believes we need to re-think R&D altogether.

Talking with Tim really sparked the idea for this column, and many of the ideas I share here are his. So I asked him: What are the five lessons you have learned from your experience in biomanufacturing that pharma needs to hear? Heres what he said.

In the 1960s and 70s, the adoption of kanban and total quality methods helped the Japanese auto industry quadruple its productivity. Eventually, it did the same for US manufacturing. In the 2010s, Tim showed we could apply those same methods to the R&D practices in one of the first synthetic biology companies, doubling the productivity in the R&D organization overnight. More recently, the adoption of such methods and supporting digital technology helped one of the world's oldest biotech companies double its pace of development of a biofuels product with half the normal effort.

Quality methods work, and not just for manufacturing. They can transform R&D. The reason is very simple: when you have poor quality in your R&D, your results are buried in noisy data and you can't discern fact from fiction. Decisions become more like roulette than science. And like roulette, you lose a lot more often than you win. This wastes enormous amounts of time, money, and resources on dead-ends. In the auto industry, it meant throwing away a significant portion of industrial capacity on lemons. In the pharma industry, it contributes to the 90% failure rate of drug candidates.

No one really likes change. Change is unknown, uncomfortable, and arduous. It puts you in awkward and vulnerable positions where you don't always have good answers. It puts you at risk. Oftentimes fundamental change emerges from the young, because they are too nave to realize the risks they face, or have no prior reputation to protect from awkwardness.

When Tim was a 23-year-old graduate student, he stood up at the Office of Naval Research to present his research on engineered bacterial circuits. Sydney Brenner, a soon-to-be Nobel Prize winner, was in the audience. Brenner stood up, walked on stage, pointed at Tims work, and declared thats all wrong." One month later, everything Tim presented was working just as he had described. That work was published a year later and became the founding work for the field of synthetic biology.

Tim still deeply admires the late Brenner (see lesson 5), but we all can be blinded by our confidence and comfort in past beliefs and habits. We have to take care not to believe everything we think when we hear some of the "silly" work that young innovators propose. We need to check our biases and automatic impulses to squash the new.

As scientists, we are obsessed with false positive resultsthe possibility that our discovery isn't true. And that's a good thing. It's what saves us from the tyranny of mystical thinking. It's what separates science from philosophy.

But false positives are not the whole story, and a lopsided obsession with them can be destructive. We see evidence of this from patient groups demanding faster drug development and greater access to experimental medicines, even if it poses risks of failure or even potential harms to health.

The other oft-forgotten side of the false positive story is the false negative. Its the "yin" to the false-positive "yang. A false negative is a missed discovery, a result that might be the next life-saving drug but one that we just don't detect. An R&D engine that recognizes false negatives looks very different than one that only considers false positives. It leads to multi-stage (tiered) statistical testing designs, to statistical design of experiments, to high-powered data analytics, and to implementation of quality practices as early as possible in R&D (see lesson 1).

Attention to false negatives helped Tim and others cut the time to market for new biotech products by more than a year and shave double-digit percentages off the costs of multi-million dollar production runs.

Scientific R&D has a broken relationship with data and software. Both are treated as an afterthought. There is the feeling in the mind of a product scientist that you are creating a new thinga new drug, a new enzyme, a new material.

That is true in theory, but in practice your entire day is spent creating data about a potential new thing, not the thing itself. Why does this matter? Because it's not good enough to make that thing just once. You have to create the designs, methodology, and specifications that allow anyone else to make that thing over and over. That means collecting vast amounts of high-quality data, as if you are manufacturing data itself. Many synthetic biology companies (Zymergen and Ginkgo Bioworks come to mind) have deeply internalized this idea, building their entire R&D architecture around the automated collection and integration of data for machine learning.

When you treat R&D as if you are manufacturing data itself, you get all the good behaviors that come with it: quality, consistency, efficiency, reusability, reliability, continuous improvement, and trust. This would be a welcome antidote to the present troubles of irreproducible scientific research and high failure rates in drug discovery.

Sydney Brenner said this in 2004 in reaction to the explosion of genomics data, most of it of low quality. The lesson absolutely applies today. But what is often misunderstood is that CAP data doesn't start with information technology. It starts by reengineering the processes that generate it. That means a fundamental transformation of how we apply the scientific methodone that shifts from the observational roots of yesterday, where the lone experimenter captures notes in a notebook, to a full-on adoption of an industrialized approach to science. This approach recognizes that science is a set of processes that can be designed, executed, and improved just like any other endeavor of human creativity. Tim describes this is greater detail on Riffyns blog.

The five lessons above add-up to a new pathway to scientific discoverya process-driven, data intensive, quality-oriented, industrialized kind of scientific undertaking. The shift is already underway, and it was driven in part by the nave spirit of creativity and innovation of synthetic biology. When we make this shift to an industrialized science, it will deliver leaps in scientific output akin to the industrial revolution of England in the 1700s. And with those leaps, the 90% failure rates in drug discovery will become a thing of the past. Ultimately, this shift in how we do science may be the greatest contribution of synthetic biology to our society of all.

I have previously written how big pharma has been slow to innovate and adopt the latest synthetic biology tools, which could vastly speed the creation of new treatments and vaccines. At pharma networking events Ive been to, most everyone is secretive and nobody shares what theyre really working on.

I had recently started changing my mind about pharma, with companies like Codexis becoming an engineering powerhouse to the pharma industry. These days, if you can imagine a drug, someone can make it.

And COVID has changed my thoughts about pharma even more. The old barriers have dissolved a little. People and companies are collaborating. I recently interviewed Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel and he agrees: people are collaborating really fast and well right now because they have a common enemy: COVID-19.

One of my colleagues, Molecular Assemblies CEO Mike Kamdar, recently summed it up this way: When youre in the pharma world, there is a lot of secrecy. But here, while we compete, there is a sense of collegiality. Thats just how the synthetic biology industry is.

The story of how the pharma industry responds to COVIDand synthetic biologys role in that responseisnt done being written. Lets hope its the first chapter of a bright new future where the tools and technologies available to us are used to bring people medicines better, faster, and cheaper.

Follow me on twitter at @johncumbers and @synbiobeta. Subscribe to my weekly newsletters in synthetic biology Thank you to Tim Gardner inspiring this article and sharing many of the ideas in it. Thank you to Kevin Costa for additional research and reporting in this article. Im the founder of SynBioBeta, and some of the companies that I write aboutincluding Riffyn, Ginkgo Bioworks, and Codexisare sponsors of the SynBioBeta conference and weekly digest heres the full list of SynBioBeta sponsors.

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Five Things Big PharmaAnd Its InvestorsCould Learn From Synthetic Biology - Forbes

OPINION: Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan – Meat Supply Disruptions Are the Bitter Harvest of the ‘Non-Essential Worker’ Fallacy – HNN…

A central theme of our recent book, Cooperation & Coercion, is that all governments are hamstrung when they attempt to fix problems.

Policymakers suffer from the knowledge problem: they dont know enough to foresee every eventuality that will follow from what they do. Politicians see a problem, speak in sweeping statements, then declare what will happen, assuming their edicts will settle matters. But that is always just the beginning. More often than not, all manner of unintended consequences emerge, often making things worse than they were before their policies went into effect.

Consider the United States three high-profile wars against common nouns over the past half-century. Lyndon Johnson declared a War on Poverty in the 1960s, Richard Nixon a War on Drugs in the 1970s, and George W. Bush declared a War on Terror in the early 2000s.

How are those wars working out? Because a back-of-the-envelope calculation indicates that we have spent somewhere in the neighborhood of $23 trillion in our attempt to eradicate poverty, drugs, and terror. Not only have we not won any of these wars, it is unclear that any of them can be won. These three so-called wars have managed to saddle future generations of taxpayers with unprecedented debt. And, as is the case with all coercive endeavors, policymakers ask us to imagine how bad things would have been had we not spent the trillions we did spend. And then they ask for even more money. So now we have unwinnable wars along with institutionalized boondoggles to support them.

We see the same sort of thing happening now in the face of the COVID-19 threat that has induced the largest panic attack in world history. In the name of safety, policymakers have shut down myriad productive endeavors. And there will be a raft of unintended consequences to follow. We are already seeing them manifest, and they portend potential disaster as supply chains fail.

Read more at FEE Daily.

Dr. Antony Davies is the Milton Friedman Distinguished Fellow at the Foundation for Economic Education, and associate professor of economics at Duquesne University. James R. Harrigan is managing director of the Center for Philosophy of Freedom at the University of Arizona, and the F.A. Hayek Distinguished Fellow at FEE. They co-host the Words & Numberspodcast.

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OPINION: Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan - Meat Supply Disruptions Are the Bitter Harvest of the 'Non-Essential Worker' Fallacy - HNN...

From Modi to Johnson, leaders are using the pandemic to suppress their critics – ThePrint

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Governments around the world say theyre engaged in a war against the coronavirus. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi invoked the legend of the Mahabharata, fought over 18 days, as he declared, with little warning, a devastating national lockdown.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who always seems to be mentally screening a film of Winston Churchill in World War II,saidthat we must act like any wartime government.

Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who has long deployed bellicose language, most notoriously in his violent war on drugs, went further, advising the military and police that if quarantine violators become unruly and they fight you and your lives are endangered, shoot them dead!

This kill-or-die idiom is more than casual rhetorical overkill. Many governments are symbolically but very deliberately calling, in this time of fear and uncertainty, for general conscription along military lines.

This is so they can, while pointing to an insidious foreign enemy, aim their firepower against some of the most valuable institutions of domestic public life. They have been very successful so far. Last week, Dutertes governmentshut downABS-CBN television and radio, his countrys largest broadcasting service.

Things are not much better in countries with sturdier democratic institutions. Johnsons Conservative government accused the British Broadcasting Corporationof bias after its flagship investigative program, Panorama,exposed shortagesof personal protective equipment among healthcare workers.

The public broadcasters critique of the government was stinging in part because Johnson enjoys a high degree of support among Britains privately owned, overwhelmingly pro-Tory press. Nor does Modi, assured of craven public broadcasters, expect much criticism from the Indian media, which has been described, only semi-humorously, as veritably North Korean in its devotion to the supreme leader.

Modi held a virtual meeting with media editors and owners just before imposing his lockdown. According to his website,the attendeescommittedto work on the suggestions of the prime minister to publish inspiring and positive stories about Covid-19.

Also read: UP suspends labour laws: What stays, what goes and why it is a step in right direction

In addition to economic and military mobilization, wartime measures typically encourage a high degree of political, social and intellectual conformity. The general idea is that, in the face of an existential challenge from a vicious enemy, criticism of the government ought to cease.

The media tends to become more patriotic, as do former political partisans. Such was the case in the United States during the early stages of its wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, when most journalists and even Democratic politicians rallied around the Republican George W. Bush administration.

The trouble is that the war against Covid-19 is actually not a war at all. And no one should feel obliged to sign up for it.

The loss of, and separation from, loved ones, and the fear and anxiety that is devastating many lives is not an opportunity to fantasize about heroism in battle. The pandemic is, primarily, a global public health emergency; it is made potentially lethal as much by long neglected and underfunded social welfare systems as by a highly contagious virus.

A plain description like this is not as stirring as a call to arms and doesnt justify the more extreme actions governments have taken against critics during the crisis. It does, however, open up a line of inquiry that journalists ought to pursue, now as well as in the future.

According to the Indian governments own statistics, its public spending on health before the pandemicmeasuredjust 1.17% of GDP, lower than Nepal and nowhere near comparable to South Koreas 8.1%. Duterte no doubt wants his citizens to forget that as late as March 11, he told an audience: Ive been told, You folks are too scared of this coronavirus epidemic and Fools, dont believe it.

Johnson, whose Conservative party presided over harsh cuts to health services, boasted, on the same day in early March that the U.K. governments Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencieswarned against shaking hands, I shook hands with everybody, you will be pleased to know, and I continue to shake hands.

Awakening late to the pandemic, authoritarian or authoritarian-minded leaders have turned it into an opportunity both to shore up their power and to conceal their stunning ineptitude. To fail to see through their manufactured fog of war, as many in the media are doing, can only further endanger the long-term moral and political health of their societies.-Bloomberg

Also read: Information panel wants Modi govt to relax RTI response deadline during lockdown

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From Modi to Johnson, leaders are using the pandemic to suppress their critics - ThePrint

Emergency Powers in the Time of Coronavirusand Beyond – Just Security

There is much we still do not know about COVID-19, but there is also much that we do know. We know we are dealing with a highly transmissible virus that can spread easily from person to person through respiratory droplets.And we know that if you do not want to be 6 feet under (or put someone else there), youd better be 6 feet away.

Both the knowns and the unknowns have led national governments to adopt extraordinary measures to counter the threat of infection and to stop the virus from spreading. When faced with major crisesterrorist attacks, natural disasters, economic turmoil, or biological threatswe, the people, turn to our governments for protection, help, assistance, leadership, and assurance. As such, crises both raise a demand of government to do something to overcome the crisis as well as an opportunity for the government to do something.

With COVID-19, governments have answered the call.

Declaring a State of Emergency

To date, more than half of the worlds democracies have declared a state of emergency in response to the Corona virus. In the United States, the secretary ofHealth and Human Services declared a public health emergency on Jan. 31, under the Public Health Service Act in response to COVID-19, and, on March 13, President Donald Trump, invoking presidential powers under the Constitution and the National Emergencies Act, declared that the COVID-19 outbreak in the U.S. constituted a national emergency. In addition, all 50 U.S. states have declared a state of emergency in response to COVID-19.

In fact, democracies have been more likely to declare a state of emergency than autocracies, with 54 percent of the worlds democratic governments declaring a COVID-related emergency compared with 33 percent of autocratic regimes. This is not surprising when one considers that autocracies already enjoy vast powers and do not need to declare an emergency to aggregate more power.

In the past few months, we have witnessed numerous extraordinary measures adopted by various governments in response to COVID-19.

Many of those extraordinary measures make sense. Few would challenge the justification to limit freedom of assembly or freedom of movement in the face of COVID-19. In several countries the obligation to wear face masks when going outside or, indeed, an order to stay indoors for a period of time, has also gone largely uncontested. Certain limitations on the freedom of religion have been justified on the basis of the pandemic such as preventing the congregation of worshippers in churches, synagogues, and mosques. Other, more controversial measures, such as enhanced surveillance and tracking, involve the right to privacy.

However, this is but one part of a greater picture.

Never Let a Good Crisis Go to Waste

A common rhetorical tool used, perhaps overused, by politicians, business leaders and consultants, motivational speakers, and others is never let a good crisis go to waste. Those who want to impress their listeners even further hasten to add that the Chinese word for crisis is danger plus opportunity. Whether correct or, as some have argued, a widespread public misperception, this idea has been taken up and repeated, over and over again.

The danger and opportunity inherent in crises are, frequently, two sides of the same coin.

The danger presented in such tumultuous times is not confined merely to the obvious risksterrorism attack, hurricanes, an economic meltdown, or a pandemic. It also inheres in the fact that crises present governments, both democratic and authoritarian, with an opportunity to increase and concentrate their powers often at the expense of individual rights, freedoms, and liberties.

The governments ability to act swiftly, decisively (and, where needed, secretly) against major threats frequently becomes superior to limitations on governmental powers and to individual rights. Thus, crises tend to result in the expansion of governmental powers and the concentration of powers in the hands of the executive. They also result in derogations from, limitations imposed on, and contraction of individual freedoms and liberties.

Some governments enthusiastically embrace such opportunities to extend their authorities.

Take the example of Hungary. On March 11, Viktor Orbns government declared a state of danger because of the pandemic. Later that month, the parliament passed theAct on Protecting against the Coronavirus,which gives the government a mandate to rule by decree and to adopt extraordinary measures, including suspending or abrogating statutory provisions, without any need for further parliamentary approval during the crisis. The act imposes further constraints on the already pressured press by criminalizing, inter alia, the publication of false or distorted facts that interfere with the successful protection of the public. This new crime is broadly worded and may well be used to stifle criticism of governmental measures. The Act also cancels elections until the crisis is over. Finally, to further ensure itself against any possible review, the Orbn government, exercising its newly conferred authorities, closed down the ordinary courts.

Other governments may be more reluctant, at least initially, to expand their own powers and authorities, convincing themselves and the citizenry, that such expansions and concentration of powers, when they take place, are merely temporary and necessary evil needed to surgically overcome the particular challenge.

Whatever the case may be, experience teaches us several important lessons that we ignore at our peril. First, when faced with emergencies, governments tend to over-, rather than under-, react. Second, crises and emergencies almost invariably lead to the strengthening of the executive branch at the expense of the other two branches. Parliamentary acquiescence and judicial deference leave a great room for executive action. Finally, and most significantly, counter-crisis measures adopted in response to a particular exigency, regardless of the nature of that exigency, are rarely fully scaled back and terminated once the crisis abates and is over. Rather, remnants of changes to the legal terrain and to institutional structures are left behind, forever changing the nature of our legal and institutional systems, lying like Justice Robert Jacksons loaded weapon, waiting to be discharged come the next crisis or, in fact, to be used throughout the new normal.

This is no less a problem in the U.S. than it is in other countries.

Most modern constitutions around the world contain explicit, frequently detailed, emergency provisions. In many of those, a distinction is made in the constitutional document among a multiplicity of states of emergency, allocating different emergency powers to the government according to the particular type of exigency at hand.

The U.S. Constitution, however, is almost entirely devoid of references to states of emergency and to emergency powers. True, it allocates certain war-related powers both to Congress (declare war, raise armies, provide for a navy) and the executive (commander-in-chief). But where emergencies are concerned, the Constitution is lacking in any detail and, in any event, it does not refer at all to nonviolent, nonwar-related, emergencies.

The absence of explicit constitutional provisions dealing with emergencies was not the result of inadvertent omission or lack of attention but rather of a conscious decision by the Founding Fathers.

On the one hand, Alexander Hamilton noted that it was impossible:

to foresee or to define the extent and variety of national exigencies, and the correspondent extent and variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations are infinite, and for this reason no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed on the power to which the care of it is committed. This power ought to be coextensive with all the possible combinations of such circumstances.

On the other hand, James Madison worried that should emergency powers be explicitly provided for in the constitutional document, attempts to restrain the use of such powers and to check potential abuses may be not only futile but outright dangerous, for

It is in vain to oppose constitutional barriers to the impulse of self-preservation. It is worse than in vain; because it plants in the Constitution itself necessary usurpations of power, every precedent of which is a germ of unnecessary and multiplied repetitions.

Emergencies in Theory: Temporary and Exceptional

Regardless of constitutional provisions and factual circumstances, what underlies the conferring on government of expansive emergency powers is the perception that the expansion and concentration of powers, and the contraction of rights, are likely to be temporally limited.

Emergency powers are designed to respond to a particular exigency and then be removed as soon as, or shortly after, that emergency has been met successfully. The idea that extraordinary, even draconian, measures are to be temporary makes the nature of such measures easier to accept.

At least in constitutional democracies, extraordinary powers are structured around the belief in our ability to separate crises from normalcy, and extraordinary measures from ordinary legal rules and norms, confining the application of the former to extraordinary times, insulating periods of normalcy from the encroachment of vast powers.

For normalcy to be normal, it has to be the general rule, the ordinary state of affairs. Emergency must constitute no more than an exception to that rule it must last only a relatively short time and yield no substantial permanent effects.

Application of emergency powers is designed to be of a temporary nature, to serve as a bridge between pre-crisis and post-crisis normalcy.

The Entrenchment of Emergencies

However, rather than remaining exceptional, emergencies and crises have become entrenched and prolonged resulting in emergency regimes that tend to perpetuate themselves, regardless of the intentions of those who originally invoked them.

Once brought to life, they are not so easily terminable. Emergency powers have become the norm, the ordinary state of affairs.

For example, time-bound emergency legislation is often the subject of future extensions and renewals. It is commonplace to find on the statute books legislative acts that had originally been enacted as temporary emergency measures, but subsequently transformed into permanent legislation.

The same is true also with respect to legislation that, albeit not couched in terms of special emergency legislation, functions in similar ways with the attendant opportunities and dangers involved.

Consider, for example, a relatively benign example. The Defense Production Act (DPA).

Enacted in 1950 to help the Truman administration with the Korean War, it grants the authority to the executive branch to demand that private manufacturers give priority to defense production, to products related to critical infrastructure, homeland security, and stockpiling, so long as doing so is in the interest of the national defense (very broadly defined).

The DPA was used by President Harry Truman to cap wages and impose price controls on the steel industry (after failing to takeover certain steel mills), and has since been routinely used by the DoD to ensure that military-related ordersare given prioritywithin the U.S. supply chain, and by FEMA to prioritize contracts for housing, food, and water in the wake of natural disasters.

After initially refusing to invoke the DPA, President Donald Trump eventually decided to invoke the law and, on March 18, issued an executive order prioritizing and allocating health and medical resources to respond to the spread of COVID-19. On March 27, the president invoked the DPA to require General Motors to produce more ventilators and has later issued similar demands to other companies, including 3M.

Now, demanding that the governments orders for supply of masks and ventilators makes a lot of sense. However, under the DPA, the executive may also waive, for example, antitrust restrictions. A voluntary agreement could be used to coordinate production among several businesses even though such coordination would normally run afoul of antitrust statutes.

Invoking the Act in times of emergency may make sense. Yet, it is part of our regular legal terrain and may be invoked in situations that do not amount to a true emergency in order to bypass the protections incorporated into the anti-trust legislation.

Governmental conduct during a crisis creates a precedent for future exigencies as well as for normalcy. In any future crisis, government will take as its starting point the experience of extraordinary powers and authority granted and exercised during previous emergencies. What might have been seen as sufficient emergency measures in the past may not be deemed enough for further crises as they arise. Much like the need to gradually increase the dosage of a medication in order to experience the same level of relief, so too with respect to emergency powers.

Government and its agents also grow accustomed to the convenience of emergency powers. Once they have experienced the ability to operate with fewer restraints and limitations, they are unlikely to be willing to give up such freedom.

Emergency powers may also be used for purposes other than those for which they were originally granted. The farther we get from the original situation that precipitated its enactment, the greater are the chances that the norms and rules incorporated therein will be applied in contexts not originally intended.

Yet another pernicious effect that states of emergency entail. I refer here to the tranquilizing effect that they have on the general publics critical approach toward extraordinary measures. As John Stuart Mill warns:

Evil for evil, a good despotism, in a country at all advanced in civilization, is more noxious than a bad one; for it is far more relaxing and enervating to the thoughts, feelings, and energies of the people. The despotism of Augustus prepared the Romans for Tiberius. If the whole tone of their character had not first been prostrated by nearly two generations of that mild slavery, they would probably have had spirit enough left to rebel against the more odious one.

Is the Transformation of Emergency Measures into the Regular Legal System a Bad Thing?

But is the transformation of temporary, emergency measures into the regular legal system necessarily a bad thing?

There are those who argue that emergencies offer a unique opportunity to liberate the polity from some state of sclerosis, or entrenched equilibrium, that had held government power in the past at an inadequately low level. In other words, if the status-quo-ante-emergency did not embody an optimal balance between, for example, liberty and security, then the crisis-produced legal rules may be a better calibration of the balance.

However, there are many good reasons to believe that setting the equilibrium between the powers of the state and the rights of individuals is particularly difficult, even with best intentions, in times of crisis.

Exigencies result in the prizing of action over deliberation. The need to respond quickly to major threatsas well as to assure the public that its government is acting decisivelyfrequently results in rushed governmental action and legislation, often without much debate and at times forgoing normal procedures.

Strong emotions such as fear, hysteria, and panic carry a pronounced effect on peoples perceptions of, and reactions to, risk. That effect is further amplified and re-amplified as a result of emotional contagion. Individuals are highly responsive to emotions expressed by others. Some emotions, such as fear, are particularly contagious.

We also perceive risks as more serious, the more dreaded and unknown they are and then we increasingly demand that something be done about them regardless of the probability of their occurrence, the costs of avoiding the risk, or the benefits of declining to avoid the risk. A risk is dreaded if people perceive it to be involuntary and potentially catastrophic, and one over which they lack control. It is unknown if it is new and not well understood.

COVID-19 checks both boxes. It has created a new species of trouble that has made analytical risk assessment extremely difficult and increases our reliance on affective assessments, which are prone to errors.

We also entertain myopic perspectives about the future, in that we tend to undervalue and discount future benefits and costs when comparing them with present benefits and costs. While a strong governmental response against the pandemic may be perceived by the public as socially beneficial and necessary, the longer-term costs to individual rights and liberties tend to be overly discounted. That such future costs seem mostly intangible and abstract, especially in comparison with the very tangible sense of fear for ones person and loved ones, only exacerbate this facet of our risk assessment.

Framing and War Rhetoric

And then there is the matter of rhetoric and framing.

The framing of issues and outcomes significantly shapes choices. The rhetoric of emergency works as rhetoric of investiture, explaining and legitimating the need to concentrate powers in the executive.

War rhetoric leads to greater public acceptance, and even active demand by the public, of the government exercising expansive powers and authorities in order to overcome the threat and restore peace and security.

Studies of presidential war rhetoric in the U.S. have shown that presidents have used dramatic narrative filled with emotionally charged language to identify major threats to the nation that must be immediately and forcefully met.

Presidential war rhetoric often exhorts the audience to unanimity of purpose and total commitment. Emergency, war, and national security, are often invoked as rhetorical absolutes that impart the capacity to demand sacrifice.

The seductive attributes of the war frame have not been lost on presidents even outside the context of armed conflict, invoking the term in the context of the war on poverty, on drugs, on crime, on cancer and HIV-Aids, and more.

Not surprisingly, many politicians and people in the media have adopted war metaphors to describe the challenges we are facing.

Trump has described himself as a war-time president, fighting against an invisible enemy. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo declared that

The soldiers in this fight are our health care professionals. Its the doctors, its the nurses, its the people who are working in the hospitals, its the aids. They are the soldiers who are fighting this battle for us.

Queen Elizabeth IIdelivering a rare speech on April 5declared that we will meet again evoking a World War II song. Italian Prime MinisterGiuseppe Contealso invoked the Second World War when he used Winston Churchills words to talk about Italys darkest hour. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres similarly remarked that, We are at war with a virus and not winning it. This war needs a war-time plan to fight it.

War-time imagery is powerful in that it emphasizes the urgent need for drastic policy decisions and taps into the citizens sense of duty and obligation to serve their country.

But it is also dangerous.

It helps legitimize and justify that which would otherwise be deemed unthinkable and objectionable. Thus, for example, the Coronavirus Emergency Billgives the British government the power to detain and isolate people, ban public gatherings, and shut down ports and airports. The British Health Secretary, Matt Hancock,explained that

Our policy is to fight this virus with everything weve gotThe measuresare unprecedented in peacetimeWe are in a war against an invisible killer and weve got to do everything we can to stop it.

War rhetoric stifles opposition as unpatriotic. It also identifies, as any war imagery must, an enemy, in this case, the virus. Yet several politicians have gone beyond that faceless enemy to suggest a more tangible and concrete enemy. Consider, for example, Trumps frequent reference to the Chinese Virus which he has described as a brilliant and very smart willful enemy.

And with war rhetoric it is also not surprising that arguments have erupted over transnational (and even national) supply of essential medical and protective equipment such as the Trump administrations attempts toprevent 3M from sending face masks to Canada. And in Europe, rather than transnational solidarity, the refusal of northern European members of the EU to shoulder the burden together with the southern states by issuing Eurobonds have soured the relations inside the Union to such a degree that some are, again, asking whether the EU would survive the crisis.

Finally, if this is a war, how long will it last? With the never-ending global war on terrorism as a drop back, one of the things we still do not know is when this crisis will be over with current talks of a possible vaccine available only in 12-18 months and of a second, more lethal wave of infections in the fall, coupled with the flu season.

Nor, for that matter, do we know what the new normal will look like.

Thus, we must be especially vigilant to ensure that the extraordinary, allegedly temporary, measures taken to protect us today, are not turned into measures of repression tomorrow.

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Emergency Powers in the Time of Coronavirusand Beyond - Just Security

The Challenge of Boko Haram Defectors in Chad – War on the Rocks

Last September, I spent two weeks in Chad. Everyone I spoke to government officials, average citizens, religious leaders, former fighters, activists, and aid workers kept bringing up a topic they felt was key to the future of the country: the urgent need to properly manage returning Boko Haram fighters and their families. The issue is fraught, and raises a number of difficult questions about how to approach the problem. What should rehabilitation programs entail? Who will coordinate them, and who gets to participate? And where will the funding come from?

These are all questions that the government of Chad will need to grapple with. But in the context of the most recent attacks across the Lake Chad sub-region in which hundreds of people including soldiers were killed the most important question is how to assure communities that former fighters have been successfully rehabilitated. The issue is increasingly urgent, with residents and local experts expressing concern that the recent upsurge in Boko Haram attacks is due in part to former fighters returning to the group. After an attack in March that killed nearly 100 soldiers, the deadliest terrorist attack in Chads history, concerns about recidivism are likely to grow.

The government of Chad should define a clear policy for rehabilitating and reintegrating former Boko Haram fighters and their families into society. Such a step is crucial to prevent an unending cycle of violence in a country that has already witnessed decades of civil conflicts before Boko Harams violence. Moreover, the mental health needs of former fighters need to be addressed, both for their own merits, but also to protect their children from transgenerational trauma. This must be a part of wider program of community healing, and requires a clear legal framework that outlines the conditions for eligibility and terms of reference for supported programs and devolves responsibility for implementation and funding to the community level.

Chad does not need to start from scratch; there are promising local initiatives for the reintegration of ex-fighters upon which it can build. Often led by Chadians, these projects leverage modest resources to encourage disengagement, manage trauma, and rebuild trust. The Chadian government can also glean certain lessons from around the region including from Nigeria, a neighbor that has been running a program for defectors with similar grievances and experiences for years. Having interviewed defectors from Boko Haram in Nigeria and examined the countrys program to reintegrate them back into society it is clear that the circumstances in Chad, though similar to Nigeria, are unique and require a tailored approach.

Chads Fight Against Boko Haram

Boko Haram formed in 2003 in the northeast Nigerian town of Maiduguri under the leadership of its founder, Muhammad Yusuf. Its goal was to overthrow the Nigerian state and establish an Islamic caliphate. Yusuf used extremist interpretations of Islam to question the legitimacy of Nigerias secular government and Western-style institutions (e.g. schools and universities) and to justify acts of violence against political, military, and civilian targets, including dissenting Muslims. Boko Haram, which literally translates from Hausa as Western-style education is Islamically forbidden, became the deadliest Islamist group in 2015. The groups violence was at first mainly aimed at Nigeria, but expanded from early 2014 to become a regional campaign with attacks on civilian and military positions in northern Cameroon, southern Niger, and western Chad. Since 2009, the groups campaign has killed an estimated 30,000 people, displaced over 2.5 million, and exacerbated a complex humanitarian crisis in the Lake Chad sub-region. Chad became a primary target after it changed its neutral stance on the group in 2015 by accepting Nigerias invitation to join the war against the group.

Nigeria has been fighting Boko Haram since 2009. Chad, Cameroon, Niger, and Benin came actively onboard in 2015 through the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF), a coalition of units, mostly military, headquartered in NDjamena and with a mandate to end Boko Harams insurgency. With technical support from Western countries, the joint task force has had some success against Boko Haram. Between 2015 and 2016, Boko Harams self-declared caliphate, which stretched across Nigerian territory roughly the size of Belgium, was dismantled. In addition, an estimated 5,0007,000 fighters splintered into two factions and were pushed to the fringes of Lake Chad, a vast marshy body of water dotted with islets sitting between Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad.

At the same time, the brutal actions of some MNJTF troops alienated many young people, pushing them into the arms of Boko Haram. A UN Development Programme study on the paths to violent extremism in Africa found that 71 percent of its respondents identified extra-judicial killing of family or friends and illegal arrest and retention by security forces as the tipping point for their joining Boko Haram or al-Shabaab, another violent extremist group operating in East Africa. Boko Haram recently regained momentum and has been launching attacks with increasing sophistication and efficiency.

March 2020 marked a defining moment in Chads war against Boko Haram. Following the deadly Boko Haram attack on March 23, the country launched a military operation codenamed Operation Wrath of Boma Boma being the peninsula where the seven-hour long assault took place. It was the deadliest incident in Chads battle with Boko Haram to date. The offensive was personally coordinated on the ground by President Idriss Dby, Chads military dictator, who came to power in 1990 and is in his fifth term of office. Boko Haram is just another in a long list of problems, including political violence, corruption, and extreme poverty, that threaten Dbys brittle regime, but it is currently the most serious of them all.

On the Ground in Chad

Back in September when I visited Chad, the debate on Boko Haram was focussed on the reintegration of former members. Joblessness and the continued attacks from Boko Haram left Chadian defectors of the group frustrated and on the brink of re-joining the group. That was the mood I picked up on during conversations with six former Boko Haram members men and women in Bol, western Chad. One man, Duna Lamba, joined Boko Haram in 2014 when the group was finding its strength and first proclaimed the establishment of an Islamic state. Along with several thousand other Chadians, he abandoned his home, renounced his Chadian identity, and joined Boko Harams caliphate. Duna had fought for two years when NDjamena announced an amnesty, creating a pathway for fighters to leave the group and return to Chad. The group had suffered a number of setbacks following a campaign by the MNJTF, including having its food and arms supply routes constricted. Along with more than 2,000 others, he seized NDjamenas olive branch and left.

By one estimate, there are currently 2,200 former Boko Haram fighters in Chad. Upon turning themselves in to the authorities, some of these fighters were reportedly first held in an internment camp before they were released following accusations of human rights violations against Chadian authorities.

Former fighters first lived in settlements near the islands of western Chad where Boko Haram continues to wreak havoc, and then moved to a nearby village following a string of attacks against them. Duna and his family, as well as the others I interviewed, now live on the outskirts of Medi Koura in one of the largest enclaves of former fighters, which is home to approximately 1,200 former Boko haram members (including an estimated 300 women, some the widows of killed fighters, and about 500 children). They feel let down by the government. They promised to help us to rebuild our lives but almost two years after our return, no one has done anything to help us, said Duna. Most former fighters lost everything they had when they left to join Boko Haram. They claim that, before joining the group, they used to be farmers in rainy seasons and fished in Lake Chad or engaged in petty trading in dry ones. After defecting, they learned that their villages were amongst those targeted by the group. We now have no businesses to run, no work to do, no farms to cultivate, Modu, a former fighter in his early thirties, complained.

For many former fighters, the only alternative to rebuilding their lives is re-joining Boko Haram. About half of those we came out with have gone back to the bush [referring the territory from where Boko Haram operates] after getting tired of waiting for help, said Abakar who also fought with Boko Haram. We were up to 4,000 three years ago. We are now not more than 2,000, another one added, noting the number of former defectors that have re-joined the group. While this is difficult to verify, it is only logical that some disillusioned defectors may not have too many options. Given the limited opportunities in the area and their low level of education, it is hard, if not impossible, to re-start life without some sort of intervention. Defectors also speak of a lack of basic infrastructure. There are no schools or healthcare facilities for the 500 children of the former fighters. On top of this, they face relentless attacks by Boko Haram who view them as traitors. They were attacked twice in 2018 by suicide bombers in their former settlement. Despite several fatalities and injuries, these incidents did not get media attention, in part because there are no media representatives in the most remote and unstable areas of Lake Chad. These attacks are partly why they relocated to their current commune.

What Drives Boko Haram Recruitment in Chad?

There are perhaps as many reasons and motivations for joining violent extremist movements as there are fighters and no single factor that can account for an individuals decision to join. Chadian fighters are not different, but a warped interpretation of Islam, illiteracy, poverty, and inequality, and a sense grievance, genuine or imagined, appear to be the main reasons why Chadians have joined Boko Haram.

Former fighters say they joined for ideological reasons to help Boko Haram achieve the objectives articulated by Yusuf, and they believe God will reward them for partaking in this cause, However, that is not the only reason, and the Chadian government can take steps to address other drivers such as poverty and a lack of opportunities. Roughly 13 percent of the respondents in the UN Development Programme study referenced above who voluntarily joined Boko Haram or al-Shabaab identified employment opportunities as their reason for joining. This represents the third most frequent response, the first and second were being part of something bigger and religious ideas. The report observed that while poverty alone is not enough to explain violent extremism in Africa, Boko Haram and others piggyback on perceptions of disproportionate economic hardship or exclusion due to religious or ethnic identity to recruit and radicalize young people. If these grievances some of which are real are not tackled, they will continue to be weaponized by violent extremist or criminal groups. African governments and their partners must address these real grievances and provide viable alternative pathways not only for former fighters, but also the society at large.

Although former fighters in Chad live without the threat of violent retaliation from communities, it is still essential to rehabilitate and reintegrate them. Dimouya Souapebe, the Secretary General of the Lake Chad regional government, perhaps articulates it best: We need to change these peoples way of life We need to reset their relationship with government.

Dimouya feels strongly that shortcomings by governments across the Lake Chad region have contributed to making thousands vulnerable to groups like Boko Haram in the first place namely through a lack of educational and employment opportunities. Dimouya is right. Several credible studies show that poverty and ignorance have played a part in Boko Harams recruitment and radicalization. The UN Development Programme found that most of its respondents who voluntarily joined Boko Haram or al-Shabaab had little or no secular education. The study also found that 57 percent of the respondents admitted to not being able to read or understand the Quran, the key religious text exploited by Boko Haram and other self-proclaimed jihadi groups. In Chad, only 50 of the 2,200 former Boko Haram fighters have been to primary school and not all of them can read and write according to the Centre for Development Studies and the Prevention of Extremism.

Improved education and skills training appear to reduce the likelihood of Chadians joining violent groups. For instance, the UN Development Programme discovered that a person who received at least six years of religious schooling is less likely to join an extremist organization by as much as 32 percent. Similarly, researchers from Yale and Princeton, working with Mercy Corps, tested the impact of economic interventions and cash transfers on 1,590 beneficiaries in Afghanistan. They found that while neither vocational training nor the cash transfers alone had lasting effects on attitudes towards violence, the combination of both led to a large reduction in participants willingness to support opposition armed groups.

Duna and his friends questions at the end of my interview were pretty revealing in this respect. Their questions focused on employment opportunities in Europe, the pay, whether they are likely to get jobs, and the possibility of migrating. This is an indication that employment opportunities played a significant role in their recruitment into Boko Haram. It also shows that a rehabilitation program that includes employment skills such as literacy, civic education, and vocational skills, matched with work opportunities, has a fair chance of contributing towards community healing in the Lake Chad region.

Religious ideology is an important pull factor and must be tackled through credible interventions. Alongside poverty and illiteracy, Chad should confront the unique religious narrative upon which Boko Haram thrives. Boko Haram uses elements of Islamic teachings to recruit and radicalize young people and to justify its violence. It rejects secularism, democracy, and western-style education, which it considers to be both incompatible with Islamic values and hostile towards Muslims. The group seeks to supplant these systems with its version of Islamic ones. Former fighters who have rejected Boko Haram do not necessarily reject these views once theyve left the group.

A program to rehabilitate former Boko Haram fighters should include imams to work with former fighters that provide a valid, alternative world view based on mainstream interpretations of Islamic scripture and doctrines. The religious leaders will need to be trained by experts on Boko Haram and other jihadi groups to understand how Boko Haram misuses scripture, the pillars of the groups ideology, and how best to dismantle it. Imams and other experts that have experience deradicalizing extremists in other countries would be a useful source of expertise in designing such a program and training potential Chadian facilitators.

Trauma and Mental Health

Chad should help fighters deal with the trauma they have experienced. A significant percentage of these fighters have become addicted to tramadol, an opioid pain medication that they took in their bid to stay energic to fight. Women members have suffered rape and sexual abuse at the hands male members, and children have witnessed and participated in violence and seen aerial bombardments, leading some to lose limbs. Some have reportedly been subjected to torture and dehumanizing treatment by security forces. Two years after quitting Boko Haram, some former fighters still have flashbacks and nightmares. Having witnessed and participated in large-scale violence, suffered abuses, and/or become addicted to drugs, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health issues are rife and need to be treated. Psychologists, drug experts, social workers and professionals can help with this.

Beyond the former fighters themselves, this treatment will also ensure better life opportunities for their children, which number in the thousands. Experts warn that growing up with parents suffering from PTSD can damage childrens physical and mental health. Given the scale of this issue in Chad, rehabilitation and reintegration go far beyond the family unit and will help community healing and cohesion, which are fundamental to building a sustainable peace. One potential intervention is psychospiritual therapy. This is a method by which imams and psychologists in Nigerias deradicalization program (discussed below) work together to treat individuals with mental health issues that are mixed with elements of religious ideology by drawing on surrounding divine forgiveness and the possibility of redemption.

Lessons from Nigeria

Chad should learn from Nigerias rehabilitation program, but a wholesale importation will not work.

To learn lessons from Nigeria, a Chadian government delegation visited Nigerias Operation Safe Corridor, a government facility that is deradicalizing and reintegrating low risk former Boko Haram fighters. Youssef Mbodou Mbami, Chads former ambassador to Niger and Nigeria and now a traditional leader for the Bol region, was on the delegation. He speaks highly of the Nigerian model and indicates that NDjamena is exploring ways to replicate it.

The rehabilitation program in Nigeria works with an interdisciplinary team of about 180 experts that include imams, psychologists, doctors, teachers, drug experts, social workers, artists, and interpreters. They work to tackle three inter-related aspects of radicalization: countering Boko Harams ideology; mitigating the socio-political grievances that facilitate recruitment; and providing mental health support for ex-fighters. Operation Safe Corridor seeks to do this by highlighting Islamic texts in a way that promotes peaceful coexistence and counters Boko Harams ideology; teaching numeracy, literacy, vocational skills, and sports; and helping with trauma and drug addiction issues. Chad can learn from both Nigerias successes with this program, but also its challenges.

Operation Safe Corridor faces important obstacles. It is run by the Nigerian military, is extremely expensive, some participants have been treated unequally, and it is unclear if there is a legal basis in the Nigerian legal system for rehabilitating former fighters. One of the main limitations of the Operation Safe Corridor is that it is run by the Nigerian military. The armed forces have a negative reputation in Nigeria, and the military kept aspects of the initiative shrouded in secrecy, citing security concerns, some of which may have some legitimacy. As a result, the initiative is struggling to encourage communities to accept former fighters, in part because societies are not convinced about the effectiveness of the scheme. This scepticism was particularly apparent on social media recently following a recent escalation of Boko Haram attacks.

Furthermore, Operation Safe Corridor is also extremely expensive because of the large number of experts and security personnel involved, all of which need accommodation and maintenance allowances in addition to monthly salaries. Thirdly, its scope is limited as it does not treat women and treats teenagers on the same basis as adults. Finally, there are fundamental questions about the armys legal basis to forgive former fighters and run the program. These are pitfalls Chad should carefully consider.

Conditions for Reintegration Are More Promising in Chad Than in Nigeria

Fortunately, former Boko Haram fighters in Chad do not face the level of physical threats as their Nigerian counterparts. Unlike in Nigeria, where deserters suffer stigmas and death threats from the communities they return to, the situation is very different in Chad. In Nigeria, residents have been deeply resistant to accepting former fighters back into communities, including those who have been rehabilitated, with some locals threatening to kill them if released. By contrast, in Chad, defectors live side-by-side with other residents without fear of physical violence.

That Chadian fighters mostly fought in Nigeria and primarily destroyed communities other than their own could be a significant explanation. Nigerian fighters destroyed their own communities, with some killing their acquaintances, family, or friends. Although Boko Haram first attacked Chad in 2012, the country did not become the groups deliberate target until 2015, when NDjamena changed its neutral stance on the group by joining Nigerias campaign. Only then did Chad see the first attacks on its capital and an escalation of violence on its side of the Lake Chad border. Despite that, in the past decade, over 70 percent of attacks and 80 percent of fatalities were in Nigeria. The remaining were distributed between Niger, Cameroon, and Chad, with Chad being the least impacted.

Figure 1: Violent Events and Reported Fatalities Involving Boko Haram by Country and Year (Jan. 1, 2009 May 11, 2019).

Source: Hilary Matfess generated from ACLED.

However, this may not be the only reason behind these differing attitudes. Chads militia fighting Boko Haram, comites de vigilance, is not as strong as Nigerias civilian joint task force, which has been combatting Boko Haram for six years and has lost hundreds of members. It takes the lead in coordinating communal resistance to the reintegration of Boko Haram fighters in Nigeria. Part of the reason for the lack of community resistance in Chad could be the absence of an organized group to carry it out.

Furthermore, unlike large Nigerian cities like Baga, Monguno, and Bama that were completely destroyed by Boko Haram, most of the communities dislodged in Chad are small villages on the fringes of the country. Survivors simply do not have the capacity to mobilize around any resentment felt towards former fighters. Finally, unlike Nigeria where the legal and customary authority of traditional rulers such as emirs has weakened in the past six decades since independence, traditional institutions in Chad under the Chef de Canton still exercise limited governmental powers and command significant respect from communities. In Chad, these leaders have backed the governments call for amnesty and the reintegration of former fighters. In short, while there may be stigma and resentment at former fighters returning to their communities in Chad, there is not currently the will or capacity to mobilize this into violent action.

What Chad Should Do

Chad should adapt Nigerias three-pronged approach and its use of experts from across multiple disciplines. However, rehabilitation programs should be run and managed by civilians, not the military. It is plausible, and could in fact be better, to develop a community-based model to support reintegration. Programs could build community centers to bring ex-fighters, survivors, and community members together. Such a program should have clearly defined objectives and measurement indicators in place and be subject to independent evaluation. It should run transparently while recognizing the real security risks of attacks from Boko Haram. To start, the Chadian government can build on the lessons learned from local initiatives seeking to support reintegration by young Chadians.

In addition, the government should support existing local initiatives that show promise in preventing recidivism and address the emotional trauma of former Boko Haram fighters. There are several initiatives run by young residents in western Chad to facilitate defections, heal trauma, and help reintegration of former fighters. A youth-led local radio station, Kadaye (a traditional canoe in the Buduma language), encourages defection from Boko Haram and promotes peace and social cohesion through talk shows, dramas, news programmes, testimonials, and storytelling in major local languages Buduma, Kanembu, French, and the local dialect of Arabic. The station was so effective that Boko Haram felt threatened by it. According to its director Adam Tchari, it was warned and then targeted by the militia in an intercepted attack in 2014. Similarly, Iyal Hille (Children of the Town in local Arabic), a theater club, produces plays that discourage young people from joining Boko Haram and encourages generosity towards survivors. The theater performs street dramas in markets, village squares, and similar places and produce short films that are shared through social media. Radio and theater have proven their capacity to play a significant role in healing conflict-scarred societies, such as in Liberia, where journalists and artists contributed to the countrys post-civil war recovery. With the right resources, radio stations like Kadaye and theatre clubs like Iyal Hille have the potential to support healing and community cohesion not just in Chad, but across the Lake Chad region. Kadaye and Iyal Hille were previously funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, but funding has now been cut.

A similar approach is used by Taige Ahmed, a professional dancer and choreographer who promotes healing and reintegration through movement and rhythm-based techniques, as part of a bespoke methodology known as Pas ev Avant, developed with his company, Association Ndamsena. Ndamsena has an extensive track record of sensitization and community building work inside refugee camps in Southern Chad, conducted over the last twelve years with support from the U.N. Refugee Agency. Taigue works with survivors and defectors to heal trauma through movement and dance. These types of approaches to trauma healing have been validated through expert studies. Taigue says the aim of his pedagogy is simple: to bring a smile back to refugees who have suffered years of horror. Having participated in and observed one of Taigues sessions, I can see the potential of his method to help people recover from trauma. People who do not speak the same language are able to communicate and laugh using movements and gestures.

Conclusion

In recent years, thousands of Chadians have defected from Boko Haram. What they find in Chad upon their return is not promising. Many defectors cannot find work or a new, positive purpose to their lives. A sense of aimlessness, combined with attacks from their former group, leaves them frustrated and bewildered. Many have likely returned to Boko Haram and more could follow suit if they are not properly reintegrated back into the community. What is more, their children could suffer transgenerational trauma, grow up without an education, and end up with similar choices as their parents, if not worse. The cycle of poverty, radicalization, and crime could continue.

The only viable option for Chad is to implement a scheme to rehabilitate and reintegrate former fighters and their families. This program should adapt Nigerias three-legged approach of working with a diverse collection of experts to counter violent religious ideology, teach skills, and treat mental health and drug issues. Small-scale local initiatives in Chad are a good place from which to build. But to stand a chance, a program for defectors must be a part of a wider community healing and rehabilitation effort. There is an expressed desire on the part of the government to start something, but the devil is in the details. Western countries and partners helping national governments to fight Boko Haram should consider supporting Chad with technical expertise and financial resources to treat and reintegrate Duna and his former colleagues-in-arms. The problem of reintegrating former Boko Haram fighters into society is not going away.

Bulama Bukarti is an analyst specializing on extremist groups in sub-Saharan Africa at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change in London. He has researched Boko Haram in his native Nigeria for a decade and is now pursuing a PhD on the subject at SOAS, University of London. He taught law at Bayero University Kano and practiced as a human rights lawyer and anti-corruption advocate in Nigeria for half a decade.

Where relevant, names have been changed to protect the confidentiality of individuals. Approval of Chadian authorities was obtained before interviews.

Image: U.S. Navy (Photo by Mass Communication Specialist Second Class Evan Parker)

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The Challenge of Boko Haram Defectors in Chad - War on the Rocks

Six stories from the brilliant and angry Don Winslow – The Age

CRIME FICTIONBrokenDon WinslowHarperCollins, $32.99

If you havent read American writer Don Winslow, Broken is all the introduction you need. In six novellas, each different in focus and mood, Winslow showcases his best moves. These stories may worry you the first, Broken, is the most confronting but then, as Winslow makes clear, America itself is indeed broken.

Don Winslow is angry about the failed war on drugs.Credit:Slaven Viasic

Broken will make you laugh and cry, but in the end will explain why The New York Times thinks Winslow is simply the greatest. Not forgetting, of course, his prose. He crafts every sentence until it beats to a rhythm of its own. Take the opening to The San Diego Zoo, a story dedicated to Elmore Leonard: No one knows how the chimp got the revolver. Only that its a problem.

This is a tale about a young cop who loves his job but wants a promotion into the robbery division.

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Six stories from the brilliant and angry Don Winslow - The Age

Sandals Planning to Reopen Most of Its Caribbean Resorts in June – Caribbean Journal

Sandals Resorts is planning to open the vast majority of its Caribbean resorts in June, a company spokesperson confirmed to Caribbean Journal.

We are pleased to announce that all of our resorts (with the exception of our Bahamas resorts) are scheduled to reopen on June 4, 2020, a spokesperson told Caribbean Journal.

That includes Sandals and Beaches resorts in Antigua, Barbados, Grenada, Jamaica, Saint Lucia and Turks and Caicos.

Of course, the reopening will depend on those destinations choosing to reopen their borders by those dates.

There have been several ongoing travel restrictions, airport closures, and increased government protocols, which have caused border closure extensions. These dates are, therefore, subject to change, as they are dependent on those factors, the company said.

In effect, that means the company will be prepared to reopen if borders are open by that date.

As for Sandals pair of branded resorts in The Bahamas (in Nassau and Exuma), the plan is for a scheduled opening date of July 1, 2020. (The Bahamas, too, currently has closed borders).

Its a major step for the all-inclusive brand though much will also depend on how quickly key source markets like the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom begin to send travelers.

The announcement comes after Sandals released a broad list of changes to its operational and hygiene procedures in a nod to the new realities of travel.

For more, visit Sandals.

CJ

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Sandals Planning to Reopen Most of Its Caribbean Resorts in June - Caribbean Journal

Will Attending Medical School In The Caribbean Hurt My Chances Of Becoming A U.S. Doctor? – Forbes

Caribbean medical schools often give students another chance of becoming a doctor in the United ... [+] States

Every year, thousands of students dream of getting into medical school. The chance to pursue this highly sought after career requires students to plan extensively for the application process. Unfortunately, there just arent enough spots to accommodate every applicant.

To put it in perspective, Stanford University was the most competitive undergraduate program in 2019, accepting just 4% of applicants. Stanford has a higher acceptance rate than the ten most competitive medical schools, which accepted an average of 2.5% of all applicants.

Out of the 53,371 applicants in 2019, just 21,869 matriculated into an allopathic medical school. That means roughly 60% of the students were rejected. Many of these students are highly qualified and competitive, but there arent enough seats for everyone.

As these rejected students weigh their options, they might wonder about medical schools outside of the U.S, specifically in the Caribbean. In general, the 80 Caribbean medical schools dont always have the best reputation, but they can provide an opportunity for U.S. students to study medicine.

Typically, these four Caribbean medical schools, known as The Big Four, have a reputation for being the best option for students who will ultimately return to the U.S. for their residency:

For some students, Caribbean medical schools offer a second chance to matriculate into a medical school. But before committing to four years of education, students must do their research first to understand the outcomes of their decision.

In medical school, the attrition rate is calculated by looking at how many students drop out of a program. Overall, six years after matriculating, the average attrition rate for allopathic U.S. medical schools was 4.1%, meaning roughly 96% of matriculating medical students graduated.

If you are considering an international medical school, one of the first things you should look at is the attrition rate. A rate of 50% or above is a major red flag, because a majority of their students leave the school without a degree. A school that wont share its attrition rate is likely hiding something. Many Caribbean medical schools are for-profit institutions, so financially, it is in their best interest to admit more students, without much concern if the students successfully graduate.

The Big Four tend to have a lower attrition rate than other Caribbean schools, but it is often still higher than U.S. medical schools. For example, Ross University reported that in July of 2017, 20% of the students who started in 2013 were no longer students at the university, 46% had graduated and 34% were still enrolled in the school.

Matching into a residency program is one of the biggest hurdles that medical students have to overcome, and it will dictate what type of medical specialty they will pursue. Starting in the fourth year, medical students send applications to hospitals that train in that particular specialty and interview for the position. The match system is extremely complex, with both the hospitals and the applicants ranking each other in order of desirability. Some programs are more selective about whom they will interview, with 68% of programs saying they seldom or never interview international medical graduates who are U.S. citizens.

In 2019, the Match Daywhen the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) releases the decisionswas the biggest ever. More than 38.373 applicants applied for 35,185 positions. For the students who dont match, they must try to match again after the initial process has ended. If they are unable to secure a spot, they will have to wait and reapply the following year.

For U.S. allopathic medical school graduates, 93.9% matched into a program. This number has been relatively consistent in recent years. The NRMP doesnt break the data down by specific country, but for all international medical school graduates, 59% matched into first-year positions (PGY-1). According to SGUthe second largest source of physicians in the U.S.93% of their 2017 eligible U.S. graduates had obtained a PGY-1 position. AUC had a similar match for its graduates at 91% in 2019. From 2013 to 2018, 94% of Saba Universitys graduates attained a residency.

While students from the Big Four are matching into U.S. residency programs, it is important to look at what type of programs they are matching into. For Caribbean medical school graduates, it can be challenging to get matched into some of the most competitive specialties. According to NRMP, in 2019 U.S. allopathic seniors filled more than 90% of the spots in the following specialties:

However, for students who want to pursue a different specialty, like internal or family medicine, a Caribbean medical school might be a good option. In 2020, the majority of graduates from SGU, AUC, Saba University and Ross University matched with an internal medicine or family medicine residency program.

According to NRMP, U.S. allopathic seniors filled less than 45% of the spots in the following specialties:

It Can Be Done!

While these statistics can be daunting, it is possible for international medical graduates to match into a highly-sought after residency program. Here are just a few examples of students who graduated from a Caribbean medical school and have matched into a competitive residency:

In the U.S., 143 allopathic medical colleges are accredited by the Liaison Committee of Medical Education and 38 osteopathic medical colleges are accredited by the American Osteopathic Association Commission on Osteopathic College Accreditation. Graduating from any of these medical schools will allow you to practice medicine, perform surgery and prescribe drugs in all 50 states in the U.S.

For Caribbean schools, it is a little bit different. The Caribbean schools are unofficially ranked into three tiers (top, mid and bottom). The ranking has nothing to do with the quality of education youll receive or the likelihood youll match at a good institution. Instead, it is based on approvals and accreditations.

For students who are considering studying in the Caribbean, the accreditation of the institution is essential to consider if they are planning on practicing medicine in the U.S. The only Caribbean medical school you should consider should be top-tier and have an accreditation recognized by the World Federation for Medical Education/Foundation for Advancement of International Medical Education and Research (WFME/FAIMER).

Some states, like California, Florida, New Jersey and New York, have stricter guidelines, and even if the college has an accreditation recognized by WFME/FAIMER, it might not be enough to practice in that state. For example, California keeps a list of foreign medical schools that have been approved by the Medical Board of California. The Big Four and a few other Caribbean medical schools are approved to practice in California, but the list is limited.

Before enrolling in any international medical school, it is essential to weigh your options carefully. Think about what type of doctor you want to be and where you want to practice medicine. The road to becoming a doctor is long, expensive, and arduous, and the choice of a medical school to get you there should be meticulously researched and planned.

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Will Attending Medical School In The Caribbean Hurt My Chances Of Becoming A U.S. Doctor? - Forbes

The Island of Nevis Says It Is Coronavirus Free Caribbean Journal – Caribbean Journal

In a major milestone for the wider Caribbean region, the island of Nevis says it is free of the coronavirus.

The announcement comes after the island, which has a population of around 12,000 people, launched a series of aggressive measures to prevent the spread of the virus.

Its another strong sign for the region, following a similar revelation by the island of Anguilla at the end of last month.

Indeed, there were no active cases of the virus in Nevis on Sunday night nor were there any tests pending, according to a statement from Nevis Premier Mark Brantley, who has been an active, inspiring presence for locals during the lockdown.

According to Brantley, the island had seen four confirmed cases, all of which had recovered.

Nevis is part of the twin-island federation of St Kitts and Nevis, which continues to keep its borders closed, following a decision by the federation on March 25 one that included requiring nationals and residents overseas to remain offshore.

It was a bold move by the destination that is serious about containing the spread of coronavirus, but it seems to have paid off, the islands tourism authority said in a statement.

Nevis had also launched an app, Nevis Health, designed to help track cases on the island.

For its part, the larger island of St Kitts has been equally aggressive, with just a handful of active cases remaining on that island.

The decision to close our borders did not come without serious consideration as tourism is hugely important to Nevis, however, our highest priority is the health and well-being of our people. This has paid off and we are now Covid free. We wish the best for all those interested in Nevis and we hope to see you when we can finally accept visitors again.

While its not yet clear when Nevis or any other Caribbean country will begin to open their borders to tourists, the move is of course a significant step.

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The Island of Nevis Says It Is Coronavirus Free Caribbean Journal - Caribbean Journal

Caribbean tourism has been decimated by COVID-19. But the private sector can cushion the blow – World Economic Forum

Most Caribbean countries will be exposed to the sudden drop in tourism.

Government will need private-sector help to fill the gap.

A condition of resuming business could be employing furloughed tourist workers as cleaners and temperature-checkers.

We are all in the same COVID-19 storm, but not all countries are in the same boat. Here in the Bahamas, 70% of our GDP is generated from tourism. Tourist-based economies like ours throughout the Caribbean region have limited social safety nets. This means our people, economy and future are far more likely to be wrecked by COVID-19 than nations with more diversified economies. Today, airports and hotels here are shuttered, unemployment throughout the region is soaring, and nobody knows when these tourism sector jobs may come back.

The Caribbean countries of Barbados, Belize and the Bahamas are among the most exposed in the world to the sudden pause in global tourism. This pandemic shock is unlike any shock that these sovereigns have seen in their history, said Julia Smith, an analyst at S&P Global Ratings. S&P expects that tourism in the Caribbean will probably decline by 60-70% from April to December compared with last year. In fact, due to COVID-19, the ratings agency downgraded the Bahamas and Belize this month further to junk status, while lowering the credit outlooks in Aruba, Barbados, the Dominican Republic and Jamaica to negative.

To put the magnitude of the problem into perspective, these countries are accustomed to welcoming three to six cruise ships a day. That is 12,000-20,000 new tourists hitting their shores every day. They have no cruise ships now and havent had any since February. Right now, 95% of the 80,000 hotel rooms in the Cancun Hotel Zone are vacant. Without the Cancun-to-Cozumel tourist sector income, countries as large as Mexico are suffering.

Tourism money is very important for one reason: It pumps cash (dollars) into the economy. Without tourists to pay (with cash) for para-sailing, scuba diving, deep-sea fishing, taxis, groceries, etc. tourism-dependent countries risk running out of US dollars, which they need for the importation of food, fuel and for servicing debt obligations. No tourism, no cash.

These economies need to be diversified, but this cant be done overnight meanwhile, every night, I fear these countries are on the cusp of civil unrest. Tourism-dependent economies are collapsing.

Tourist-dependent economies need to create thousands of jobs for furloughed tourism-sector workers. They need them quickly. Unlike the EU, UK or US, governments in the Caribbean cannot afford to offer wage subsidy furlough schemes. With unemployment levels soaring past post-war peaks in the US, analysts are looking at the Great Depression for guidance. Some commentators say that battling COVID-19 is akin to fighting a war. But this is far from a wartime economy where production runs full tilt, and everyone is needed to work.

What can be done? Here is a plan that would allow the private sector to work with the government in winning the unemployment war without any additional investment. Real jobs are based on real needs. In order to open our economies, even domestically, we will need the equivalent of a small army of workers to carry out health tasks testing, temperature checks, and contact tracing as well as the additional sterilization that will be necessary in businesses and public spaces.

If the private sector in Caribbean countries were asked to share the governments burden of creating employment, thousands of jobs could be created overnight in a mutually beneficial way. Leaders of Caribbean nations might consider mandating that the condition upon which high traffic businesses such as grocery stores, home improvement stores, retail banks, malls, large office buildings, ferry companies, gyms, etc. may reopen is the employment of repurposed tourism sector COVID cleaners and temperature-checkers at a fixed hourly rate during opening hours.

If that were the condition that enabled the private sector to get back in business, it would be the CEOs that were queuing outside the hotel union workers building to hire COVID cleaners and temperature checkers. Governments could make it clear that this is a temporary measure that will be in place until COVID-19 is under control and hotels are reopened.

A new strain of Coronavirus, COVID 19, is spreading around the world, causing deaths and major disruption to the global economy.

Responding to this crisis requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

The Forum has created the COVID Action Platform, a global platform to convene the business community for collective action, protect peoples livelihoods and facilitate business continuity, and mobilize support for the COVID-19 response. The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

Repurposing human potential would give thousands of tourism sector workers dignity and purpose, as well as assisting these fiscally fragile nations. It would allow businesses to reopen sooner. Customers would feel safer going out to spend, which would get the domestic economy moving again. And yes, everyone benefits, even the regions debt ratings.

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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Caribbean tourism has been decimated by COVID-19. But the private sector can cushion the blow - World Economic Forum

Taiwan’s Medical Diplomacy in the Caribbean: A Final Stand Against Beijing? – The Diplomat

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As leaders in Beijing and Washington squandered precious early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic pointing fingers and abdicating responsibility, Taiwan prepared. The small island-nation less than 150 miles off the coast of mainland China appeared to be ripe kindling for a COVID-19 wildfire to take hold. Yet while nations and cities around the world shuttered and economies screeched to a halt, Taiwan has been a model for effective pandemic response, with only six deaths from the new coronavirus thus far.

For decades, Taipei has argued unsuccessfully that disease has no respect for borders or political disputes and that its exclusion from the World Health Organization (WHO) comes to the detriment of global health. Its COVID-19 response bolstered the claim and members of the international community, including the United States, are speaking up in favor of Taipei being granted observer status. Such a decision would rile Beijing, which considers the self-governed island a rightful part of its territory, but would do little to reverse the cascade of diplomatic losses Taiwan has suffered in recent years.

The success of Taiwans medical diplomacy during the COVID-19 outbreak has much starker implications for the self-governing democratic nation. As Beijing cracks down on Hong Kong protests and makes more brazen territorial claims in the South China Sea, diplomatic recognition is critical to Taiwans maintenance of de facto sovereignty. In the Latin America-Caribbean (LAC) region, home to nine of the 15 countries that officially recognize Taiwan, Beijing has used Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) dollars as a carrot and stick to gain a foothold in Americas backyard. However, the COVID-19 crisis has provided an opening for Taipei to push back against Beijing and shore up existing alliances in the region in what might be Taiwans final stand

Taiwans Medical Diplomacy

Taiwan has turned its successful COVID-19 response into a global campaign. Boxes proudly stamped with Made in Taiwan have sent millions of masks around the world to Italy, the United States, and Canada, while leading Taiwanese scientists have offered up their pandemic playbook remotely to the world. The message coming from President Tsai Ing-wen and her government is clear: Taiwan can help; if only more would listen. Taiwans shining moment is unlikely to persuade any country to risk violating Beijings One China policy, though, and too much chatter about Taiwans status could come at a steep price, with Beijing poaching another of its allies.

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Since Tsai took office in 2016, Beijing has taken seven of Taiwans allies, including three from the LAC region Panama, the Dominican Republic, and El Salvador. Tsai has made Taiwans remaining allies in the LAC region a focal part of her foreign policy. She regularly visits nations like Haiti, St. Lucia, and St. Nevis and Kitts making a convenient stopover to the United States and Taiwans International Cooperation and Development Fund (ICDF) is lending money to improve sectors like agriculture, energy, and technology. On the ground, Taiwan is much better able to compete with Beijing in small nations where massive infrastructure projects are less needed. The Trump administrations hard line against China has argued that cozying to Beijing has hidden costs, but much of the region including Taiwans recent allies the Dominican Republic and Panama has signed onto the BRI.

However, more than loyalty or geopolitics, the COVID-19 crisis has made a more forceful case for the value of retaining relations with Taiwan. Many LAC countries are uniquely susceptible to a pandemic. The region depends heavily on a tourist industry that is at a standstill, and many countries suffer from underdeveloped health systems. Taipei has worked hard to show its allies it can help, dispatching aid, advice, and precious personal protective equipment (PPE) to help prepare.

Through its Regional Emergency Fund against COVID-19 Pandemic, Taipei has donated $2 million and tens of thousands of masks to Belize to fill the gaps in badly needed medical equipment. In Saint Lucia, Taiwan has again come in their time of need and donated 40,000 face masks, six thermal imaging body temperature detection systems, and forehead thermometers. When the equipment was handed off to Prime Minister Allen Chastenet, Taiwans ambassador called St. Lucia one of Taiwans most important allies in the world. In St. Vincent and Grenadines, Taiwan provided 40,000 face masks and thermal imaging devices. In late March, Taiwan sent 180,000 face masks, food, and costly X-ray and ultrasound machinery to Guatemala.

However, in the face of a global recession, Taiwans allies in the region particularly Haiti may look to Beijing. In September 2019, still months before news broke of the initial coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, Beijing took the time to make a public overture to Haiti. The head of Chinas commercial office in Haiti told the nations largest newspaper, Le Nouvestille, that China could provide free assistance, interest free loans, and concessional loans, in improving Haitis infrastructure if they would uphold the One China principle. Chinas attention to Haiti coupled with a recent diplomatic disagreement that sent Taiwans ambassador home seemed to be eroding the long partnership. But Taiwan has helped Haiti in crisis before notably during a 2010 cataclysmic earthquake and cholera outbreak and has an opportunity to strengthen ties again.

The Taiwan-Haiti Relationship

In 2018, the Dominican Republic split with Taiwan after a 70-year relationship. Since then, Haiti has watched as its island-mate was rewarded with a litany of new cooperation agreements related to agriculture, tourism, and more. Taiwan promptly responded with a $150 million loan package for Haitis infrastructure and Tsai has since visited to affirm Taiwans commitments.

So far Haiti has had a rare bout of good news and there are less than 100 COVID-19 cases nationwide. But rampant poverty and a woefully unprepared health system require immediate international aid. In March, Haitis Health Ministry estimated they would need between $30 to 35 million to respond to COVID-19 and in a worst case scenario, the country could face 432,000 hospitalizations. Last month, the French Hospital of Haiti closed its doors after 100 years, citing a lack of equipment or medical gear to contain a highly contagious illness. Furthermore, according to some sources, the country has less than 60 ventilators nationwide for a population of 11 million.

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With international organizations like WHO stretched thin, Taiwan has looked to fill the gaps in Haitis preparation. On April 17, Haitian President Jovenel Mose visited Taiwans embassy to discuss strengthening relations in response to COVID-19. Taiwan responded by dispatching 1,000 tons of rice, seven thermal cameras, new ambulances, and over 280,000 face masks. Beyond just material aid, Taiwan has offered its advice; helping set up widespread sanitation and disinfectant campaigns in Haitis most densely populated areas while offering videoconferencing lessons from its best hospitals and doctors.

Moses political viability in Haiti is insecure and the Taiwan-China issue has become a political football for many of Taiwans remaining allies. Beijing could counter Taiwan being granted WHO observer status by offering Haiti a lucrative infrastructure package, putting Mose in an increasingly difficult position at home. However, Taiwans ability to shine on a global stage and help on-the-fence allies will be critical to keep its democracy and sovereignty strong.

Jared Ward, Ph.D., is a lecturer in the history department at the University of Akron in Ohio.

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Taiwan's Medical Diplomacy in the Caribbean: A Final Stand Against Beijing? - The Diplomat

Ralph Jimenez: Corruption and hopelessness in the Caribbean – Concord Monitor

Last month, I wrote about our month-long sojourn in Puerto Rico and how much of the island, though not the resort districts, is alive with the sound of music. Its excruciatingly loud pop music whose metronomic thumping bass notes rattle fillings and forestall thought.

A friend who has spent the past decade immersed in the culture of Central America and the Caribbean explained it this way. Preventing thought is the point of that music because what people would think about is how hopeless their situation is. There seemed, in our travels around the island, to be truth to that.

What follows are impressions and observations made after dozens of conversations, but nothing born of deep knowledge or long experience.

We drove around much of the island. Puerto Rico is, in land area, half the size of New Hampshire, but its landscape is even more varied. Flat farmlands south of San Juan, mountain jungles in the east, dry rolling desert-like terrain and cattle ranches in the south, California-like coastline and surfer beaches on the west.

We traveled west from San Juan through Arecibo, home to the giant radio telescope made famous in the movies GoldenEye (James Bond) and Contact (Jodie Foster) and on to Rincon, with its surf shops and hip bars.

We went east to El Yunque National Forest, swam from Luqillos famous beaches, kayaked in a bioluminescent bay in the dark in Fajardo, ate fresh-caught grilled snapper in El Makito, a bayside restaurant in Naguabo, where diving pelicans provided the entertainment, stayed beachside in Yabucoa, and made it as far as the quake-rattled city of Ponce in the south before cutting back through Caguas in the middle of the island to our $35-a-night home base.

Every person we spoke to, young and old, was revolted by President Trump, his attack on immigrants, and his disdain for their homeland.

But every person, young or old, said Trump was right not to send billions more in aid to Puerto Rico unless it was distributed by mainland agencies, not by Puerto Ricos politicians and public officials. All, or almost all, we were told, are hopelessly corrupt. The aid money would never reach those who needed it most.

Last week the Associated Press reported that most of the $290 million in U.S. aid meant to feed Puerto Rican schoolchildren during the pandemic has gone unspent for more than a month for want of a plan by the island government to distribute it. Hunger is widespread.

The island, like other U.S. territories, is a victim of outdated federal policies seemingly designed to guarantee continued second-class colonial status.

The 1920 Jones Act requires that goods sent to Puerto Rico be conveyed on U.S.-owned, flagged and operated ships, which is one of the reasons why groceries cost roughly 50% more than in mainland stores.

Puerto Ricos residents, though American citizens, cant vote. Their sole representative in Congress is relegated to observer status. The islands standard of living increased dramatically after a 1976 federal tax break made it profitable for manufacturers, especially pharmaceutical companies, to build plants on the island. In 1996 the Clinton administration phased out the tax incentives. Many factories closed and Puerto Rico has been in recession ever since.

The damage from ongoing recession and endemic corruption appears to be even greater than that of earthquakes and hurricanes. Seaside properties have tumbled into ruin. Trees grow out of centuries-old buildings in Arecibo and Ponce, places that would be on the historic register of most communities.

Citizens hope for electoral rescue by native Puerto Ricans like actor Benicio del Toro or children of the islands long diaspora, among them actor Jimmy Smits, singer Jennifer Lopez and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez.

Protests, mostly by the young last summer, led to the ouster of the islands governor and a host of other elected officials, but no one we spoke to had faith in the current government or the possibility of change.

The poverty rate is roughly 45%. The young, educated and enterprising have been leaving the island in droves for want of jobs. The islands population, which peaked at just shy of 3.8 million, has fallen to 3.1 million. Whole blocks of commercial and office buildings just outside San Juans old city are empty and marred by graffiti.

About one-third of the island economy, to escape taxation, is estimated to be off the books. Big-box national chains like Walmart killed off downtown stores and picturesque shops. Fast-food chain restaurants are everywhere.

The Puerto Ricans we met were outgoing and friendly. The islands culture, starting with the indigenous Taino indians enslaved and killed by Christopher Columbus and those who came after him, has always been one of peace. The macho swagger of men and boys was nowhere to be seen. But the hopelessness, fatalism and belief that their second-class status would never change were disheartening.

The United States, in the 21st century, still treats Puerto Rico as a colony undeserving of full democracy. Because they are less, we are lessened. Statehood is the only potential solution to the islands many problems.

(Ralph Jimenez of Concord is a member of the Monitors editorial board.)

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Ralph Jimenez: Corruption and hopelessness in the Caribbean - Concord Monitor

Road to Recovery: Disney Plans, Plus Restored Flights to the Caribbean – TravelPulse Canada

Disney Springs plans to reopen in Orlando on May 20 with limited capacity, parking and operating hours. Under the initial phase, a limited number of shopping and dining experiences owned by third-party operating participants will open.

Walt Disney World Resort also issued an update on its overall reopening strategy last week that stopped short of announcing a reopening date but confirmed that it will limit capacity and encourage social distancing in an effort to slow the spread of coronavirus.

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Upon reopening, theme parks, Disney Resort hotels, restaurants, attractions, experiences and other offerings may be modified and will be limited in capacity and subject to limited availability or closure, based on direction from health experts and government officials to promote physical distancing, the company said.

Southwest Re-starting International Flights

Southwest is resuming a handful of international flights on June 7, 2020, including flights to the Caribbean and Mexico, after halting international routes since March 23, 2020.

Southwest will first fly to five select destinations on various routes. The airline will fly from Houston Hobby, Denver and Baltimore to Cancun; from Houston Hobby and Denver to Los Cabos; from Baltimore and Orlando to Montego Bay; from Baltimore to Nassau; and from Tampa to Havana.

These routes are expected to be operated throughout the summer and fall, and a flight from Phoenix to Los Cabos will resume on October 8, 2020. All other international destinations will continue to be suspended until October 30, 2020, or longer.

Air Canada Vacations last week said it will start flying to various sun destinations and European destinations in June.

BoJo Imposes Quarantine: Airlines Call it a Disaster

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has confirmed that all travellers arriving in the UK will be quarantined for 14 days.

In his address to the nation Sunday evening Mr Johnson said that in order to prevent re-infection from abroad he was serving notice that it will soon be the time with transmission significantly lower to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air," he said.

Government sources told the Mirror it will be for 14 days.

Johnson said its a necessary move to protect Britons, but the countrys aviation industry says its a disastrous move.

Quarantine would not only have a devastating impact on the UK aviation industry, but also on the wider economy, Karen Dee, chief executive of the Airport Operators Association, said in a story in The Guardian. If the government believes quarantine is medically necessary, then it should be applied on a selective basis following the science, there should be a clear exit strategy, and the economic impact on key sectors should be mitigated.

California on the Rebound

The Los Angeles Times has a good story on how California is gradually opening up its businesses. Its good, but theres no road map for this sort of thing. The story reports that Destination Marketing Organizations, hotels or vacation rental companies are wrestling with when they should commence re-imagined marketing campaigns.

Interesting point that holds true for countries around the world, including Italy, France and, of course, Canada.

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Road to Recovery: Disney Plans, Plus Restored Flights to the Caribbean - TravelPulse Canada