America’s Freedom to Protest Is Under Attack – The Nation.

A UN special rapporteur was shocked to find abusive employers, anti-protest bills, and other signs of a weakening of democracy.

Demonstrators protest President Donald Trumps travel ban at Los Angeles International Airport on January 29, 2017. (Reuters / Ted Soqui)

Its no secret that Americas star is fading on the world stage these days, under a president whose authoritarian tactics have outraged allies and enemies alike. But a recent audit by an international human-rights monitor reveals that, even before Trumps buffoonery took over the White House, Washington was failing dramatically to live up to its reputation as a beacon of democracy. UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Assembly Maina Kiais dissection of the nations systematic betrayal of basic human rights centers on Americas shrinking public square.

Based on a year-long observation of the countrys governance and civic life that stretches from mid-2016 through the start of the Trump administration, Kiai, whose post recently ended with the publication of the report, sees a massive erosion of the right to freedom of assembly. The concept encompasses the right to organize and protest and other essential forms of civic and public activism. Though it is formally inscribed in the Bill of Rights, the precept has come under assault under the Trump administration, Kiai says, stoked by the presidents hateful and xenophobic rhetoric during the presidential campaign and blatant flouting of civil liberties in his policies and governing style.

The environment for workers is extremely hostile in the US, and frankly it shocked me.

Kiai concludes that over the past year a growing swath of communities of color, workers and immigrants, and other marginalized groups have felt deterred from engaging in social movements, staging protests and other forms of citizen action, or campaigning to defend community and workplace rights.

One overarching obstacle is the ingrained culture of racism, which has persisted since slavery through Jim Crow and the ongoing struggles with institutionalized discrimination. Citing police-community conflict as a primary illustration of structural oppression, Kiai argues, Racism and the exclusion, persecution and marginalization that come with it affect the environment for exercising association and assembly rights. His report directly denounces government agencies hostility towards the Black Lives Matter movement, contending that The government has an obligation under international law to protect and promote the groups peaceful exercise of the right of free assembly. Similarly, the report describes structural corruption driving the use of perverse incentives in the policing of black communities, with police departments raising revenue through fines and rewarding or sanctioning police officers based on the number of arrests. These patterns of aggressive policing, Kiai says, disempower neighborhoods by deterring dissent.

The report documents increasingly anti-democratic enforcement tactics against immigrant communities who are subject to civil-rights abuses. Kiai cites reports of immigration agents conducting surveillance at assemblies focused on migrant issues, which he argues chills the exercise of assembly rights. As noncitizens who cannot vote and who lack many other legal rights, he adds, protesting is one of the only tools they have to voice their concerns. The government should encourage the exercise of this right by everyone, especially marginalized groups.

Kiai tackles direct restrictions on the right to protest as well, noting an increasingly hostile legal environment for peaceful protesters in some states, particularly trumped-up penalties against spontaneous or unpermitted peaceful public demonstrations. South Dakota and Tennessee recently passed laws against blocking streets during protests. Nationwide, about 29 such anti-protest bills have been proposed or passed since November, coinciding with an unprecedented wave of street demonstrations against Trump.

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Some jurisdictions deter activists by charging organizations hefty fees simply for the right to stage a public demonstration. Burdening the citizenry with onerous fees and red tape, Kiai says, clashes with international guidelines against requiring pre-approval of planned protests. The report recommends instead allowing groups to simply notify officials of, rather than seek prior approval for, planned protests, arguing that giving government extensive control over dissent risks turning the right into a privilege.

Deterioration of free-assembly rights is glaringly apparent in the workplace. Despite the United States historical role as an architect of the International Labour Organization standards on workers rights, the report argues that its foundational labor law, the National Labor Rights Act, legalises practices that severely infringe workers rights to associate and provides few incentives for employers to respect workers rights.

Labor regulation is eviscerated by weak enforcement and underfunding, particularly compared to the massive resources dedicated to other law enforcement functions in the United States. Given the prevalence of endemic violations like wage theft in low-wage industries, Kiai observes an imbalance in government priorities: protecting corporations profits while unraveling basic regulatory protections for workers as well as their right to organize, at a time when traditional unions are shrinking as a political force.

The environment for workers is extremely hostile in the US, and frankly it shocked me. Wheres the outrage? The US had the War on Drugs, so why not a War on Abusive Employers? Its clearly an epidemic that has the potential to deeply damage the economic and social fabric of the country.

Kiais analysis also extends beyond issues surrounding the right to protest and warns of the corrosive impacts of capitalism on democracy. Citing the mass protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline as an illustration of the corporate assault on grassroots activists, he argues that Trumps crackdown on protesters reflects an agenda of market fundamentalism, exploiting natural resources for short-term profits while neglecting the human rights of impacted communities, which undermines indigenous peoples land, territorial and resource rights.

Kiai stresses the irony of America failing to walk the talk as a liberal democratic superpower. The United States has repeatedly supported, and often helped develop, international standards on, for example, the right to free speech under the United Nations framework, yet systematically fails to institute the same principles in domestic law. Nonetheless, he concludes that despite what appears to be a regression in free assembly rights under the new president, civil society remains a vibrant, if embattled, force of resistance:

Trumps rhetoric is often violent and divisive, with a heavy authoritarian streak. He doesnt even pay lip service to fundamental rights. Its not an easy environment in which to exercise your expressive rights, and that environment seems to have become markedly worse since my visit. Yet despite this, weve seen the emergence of a massive and sustained protest movementthats something that is truly encouraging and moving.

Despite, or because of Trumps authoritarianism, a counter-populist movement is building, renewing the meaning of free assembly as a coming together of the dispossessed.

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America's Freedom to Protest Is Under Attack - The Nation.

Pence addresses religious freedom at National Catholic Prayer Breakfast – Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- Vice President Mike Pence and other speakers addressed securing religious liberty and protecting the sanctity of human life both in the United States and worldwide, particularly in the Middle East, at the 13th annual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast in Washington June 6.

Pence spoke about President Donald Trump's commitment to the securing of all religious freedoms to over 1,200 attendees, following speeches by keynote speaker Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, head of the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services, and special guest Mother Olga of the Sacred Heart.

Pence expressed his sorrow over the recent terrorist attacks in Europe, reassuring those in attendance that the president is committed to ending attacks on religious liberty around the world, as well as in America.

"Catholicism has made an indelible mark on the American spirit," Pence said. "Your faith has moved mountains and the Catholic Church, and its millions of parishioners have been a force for good in our communities large and small throughout our land throughout our history. All the great American Catholics gathered here, let me assure you this morning, bright and early, at this prayer breakfast: American Catholics have an ally in President Donald Trump."

The vice president, an evangelical, shared fond memories of growing up in a Catholic family, saying that he was honored to speak at the breakfast and that his mother would be proud.

"This honestly feels like coming home to me," Pence said.

Since 2004, Catholics have gathered in the nation's capital to come together to pray for the country and hear from religious and political leaders. The founding board, with leaders such as former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pennsylvania, intended to answer to St. John Paul II's call to new evangelization for all Catholics.

Carl Anderson, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, spoke of the common ground that the Vatican and the president found in Trump's recent meeting, particularly in their dedication to pro-life and religious freedom issues, as well as the protection of Christians in the Middle East.

Anderson introduced Pence by recalling what Pence said while speaking at the March for Life in Washington back in January. "Let this movement be known for love, not anger, for compassion, not confrontation," Pence said at the March for Life. "To heal our land and restore a culture of life we must continue to be a movement that embraces all and cares for all out of respect for the dignity and worth of every person."

Auxiliary Bishop Mario E. Dorsonville of Washington opened the breakfast calling for solidarity in prayer for the Christians in the Middle East, after he read a special note from Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl of Washington, who was unable to attend.

"Let us also be mindful of so many of our brothers and sisters around the world who continue to face persecution and suffering on account of their faith," Bishop Dorsonville read from Cardinal Wuerl's message. "As our Holy Father, Pope Francis said, 'We must not resign ourselves to thinking of a Middle East without Christians who for 2,000 years have confessed the name of Jesus and have been fully integrated as citizens into the social cultural and religious life of the nations to which they belong.'"

Archbishop Broglio was the keynote speaker at the breakfast. Recalling the spirit of service displayed by so many men and women gone before us, he told the story of a military chaplain, Father Joseph Lafleur of Louisiana, who gave his life while saving others on a prison ship.

"If we were to survey the history of the church, and look at the lives of the saints, we would discover men and women who built on their virtues, to reflect the authenticity of their faith. The same thing has an impact on the nation," Archbishop Broglio said. "To quote a respected cardinal, 'A good Catholic is a good American because the practice of virtue also leads to good citizenship and there is no dichotomy between faith and life if we cultivate and practice virtue.' Each of us has the potential to rebuild our society and our world if we cultivate authentic virtue."

He went on to call Catholics to return to lives of virtue, both acting rightly and giving of themselves to others.

"We build for a new tomorrow when we draw from that wellspring of virtue," Archbishop Broglio said.

Mother Olga of the Sacred Heart, founder of the Daughters of Mary of Nazareth, also spoke as a special guest. Mother Olga spoke of her love for God and her love for others, which drives all that she does, specifically her service in America through missions and her founding of the Daughters of Mary Nazareth back in 2011.

Born and raised in Iraq, Mother Olga's love for America led to her becoming an American citizen.

"Here in America we take pride in our democracy," Mother Olga said. "The true democracy and the strength of our democracy should not only be seen as an expression of the political minds of the people, but also in our embrace of our own identity as Americans and appreciation of the religious roots of our foundation of a nation."

She said that it is out of love that she is committed to the United States and those who serve the country.

"May our gathering today as people who love God and this country be a renewed commitment to renew the spirit of cooperation which has accomplished so much good through the history of our nation," Mother Olga said. "May the fruit of today's prayer for our nation be a grace for our people to experience a new birth of freedom, freedom planted with faith, grounded in hope, nourished by love in the soil of truth."

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Pence addresses religious freedom at National Catholic Prayer Breakfast - Catholic News Service

Freedom High students targeted for wearing hijabs, school district apologizes – FOX 5 DC

WOODBRIDGE, Va. - A northern Virginia school district is doing damage control after their own administrators targeted two Muslim students for wearing their hijabs at school.

The controversy boiled over last week at Freedom High school in Woodbridge, when two students were called into their principals office for wearing their hijabs. The schools administrators were apparently unaware that students are allowed to wear the head coverings at school for religious reasons, without the need for a note.

Prince William County Public Schools posted an apology online, saying they regret the circumstances that led an administrator to question students about wearing a hijab, or ask for proof of their religious reasons.

She said, You guys need to carry around a note at all times because some of the students at the school wear hijabs or headscarves because they didn't lay down their edges, or take out their tracks. That's what she told me, said Haja Bah, one of two Muslim students who say they have been harassed by administrators for wearing their hijabs.

I would wear the hijab to school and administrators would stop me in the hallway, and they would say, Ok you need to take off your hijab. Do you have a note? And I would say no, and they were like, You have to get a note, or else theyre going to send you home, said Fatmata Mansaray, the other student. Both girls are seniors at Freedom High School.

Mansaray says even having a note on file didnt stop the questions from administrators. Instead, they told her she had to have the note with herand not just on fileto wear her hijab.

Bah says the tipping point was Thursday, during Ramadan, when she says the schools assistant principal approached her as she was sitting outside with friends.

She was like, You in the purple hijab, you need to take it off. If you dont take it off, youre going to get sent home, Bah said. She refused, telling the administrator she was fasting and it was her religion.

The next day after school, people started protesting with me. People who are not even Muslim were wearing hijabs as well to protest with us, Bah said. That's when I felt like they apologized because it was getting a lot of attention.

The attention was fueled by this Mansaray's Twitter post that caught the eye of the district's associate superintendent, who immediately scolded Freedom's administration reminding them their actions were inconsistent with the Prince William County Public Schools' commitment to diversity and religious freedom.

The district has since apologized to anyone it may have offended.

In a statement posted online, Prince William County Schools said the following:

We regret the circumstances that led a Freedom High School administrator to question students about wearing a hijab or ask for proof of their religious reasons. The request was inconsistent with the PWCS commitment to diversity and religious freedom, and we apologize to anyone it may have offended.

Prince William County Public Schools believe diversity and self-expression are fundamental to the strength of our community. The individual and a Division administrator are already reaching out to apologize to the students and families involved.

This situation spotlights a regrettable inconsistency between our official policies and beliefs, and the reality of how things are sometimes done. That inconsistency will end. We are committed to using this incident as an opportunity to ensure that respect for diversity, religious freedom and self-expression are practiced and evident every day and at every school.

FOX 5 asked for a response to these specific incidences, but a spokesperson refused to respond, saying, They will not respond, point by point, on the situation.

FOX 5 has learned that both girls families are considering legal action.

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Freedom High students targeted for wearing hijabs, school district apologizes - FOX 5 DC

Freedom of expression under siege in Okinawa – The Japan Times

GENEVA In contrast to several positive developments in part of the region with respect to democracy, rule of law and human rights, Japan is falling back. Despite consistent concerns from the opposition and civil society on the potential impacts on civil rights, such as freedom of expression, assembly and association, the Abe administration is stubbornly pushing for the adoption of the so-called anti-conspiracy bill without seeking consensus in the Diet. The draft legislation is widely criticized for its broad scope, which leaves worrying room for arbitrary use of the legislation against ordinary people.

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy, Joseph Cannataci, recently sent a letter to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to share his serious concerns on the bills possible negative impacts on human rights. Since the draft laws definition of an organized criminal group is too broad, the U.N. rights expert raised specific concerns in his letter on the potential restrictions on non-governmental organizations, especially on those working in areas of national security.

The draft bill could jeopardize the work of many human rights and environmental NGOs if the authorities use it against NGOs critical of the government in order to surveil, or worse, criminalize their work. Yet among Japanese civil society, many feel that Okinawa, the prefecture encompassing the countrys southernmost islands, is particularly threatened, because environmental and rights groups are energetically fighting against the governments project to build a new U.S. military base.

Critics fear that a planned new base in Henoko in the northern part of Okinawa Island will lead to environmental destruction and human rights violations as well as the exposure of the islands as a military target. Many Okinawans carry bitter memories of the Battle of Okinawa, during which a quarter of the local population was lost in the last phase of the Pacific War because the islands were forced to serve as the Japans final line of defense.

Since the local civil society facilitates protests against the Henoko base construction and demands the maximum possible access to information concerning the militarys activities in order to assess impacts on their rights, the work of Okinawan civil society groups can be arbitrary interpreted as threatening Japans national security.

Dozens to hundreds of protesters gather around the Henoko construction site on land and at sea on a daily basis. Among them is Hiroji Yamashiro, the chairperson of the Okinawa Peace Movement Center, who has been a longtime leader of non-violent protests. His personal commitments to peace, human rights and environmental protection for the islands have turned him into a symbol of the resistance in Okinawa. Yet at the same time, he has been targeted by the authorities because of this leadership role.

In late 2016, he was arrested on minor charges multiple times in two months. As requests for bail were repeatedly turned down, he was detained for five months under exceptionally restrictive conditions. He was not allowed to meet anyone except lawyers, supposedly due to the risk of destruction of evidence. His wife finally managed to see him in detention for the first time after four and a half months, shortly before his release in March.

The retroactive arrests and prolonged detention were condemned by civil society as arbitrary measures to spread a chilling effect and discourage the protest movement. However, many say that the Yamashiros case is just the tip of the iceberg.

Under the Abe administration, media freedom has been struggling. Japan ranks 72nd for press freedom among 180 countries, the lowest for a Group of Seven country, representing a dramatic drop from 11th in 2010 at the time of the previous government led by the Democratic Party of Japan. Journalists critically covering the Okinawan issues are often portrayed as anti-Japan by influential figures, leading to undermining of the countrys media freedom. Two local newspapers, the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times, are the most targeted among the Okinawan media. Due to their critical coverage of the Japanese governments policies on U.S. military facilities, the newspapers and their reporters are constantly attacked by conservative lawmakers and their allies.

One of the notorious examples is the so-called Hyakuta incident. Naoki Hyakuta, a best-selling writer and close friend of Abe, was invited to a study session in June 2015 organized by junior politicians in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. The attendees included then-Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato and Koichi Hagiuda, a special adviser to Abe at that time. Though the study session was to discuss the revision of the Constitution, the participants went further to have a heated debate on how to punish media outlets critical of the government. The novelist attacked the two Okinawan newspapers by saying, The two Okinawan newspapers must be destroyed. I believe if some of the islands in Okinawa [Prefecture] were to be invaded by China, although such a thing should not happen, they will awake from their sleep. No lawmaker present at the session questioned the remark; many endorsed it. Although this incident sparked outrage within and outside Okinawa, the regression of freedom of expression did not stop.

Last week, another United Nations human rights expert released a report on Japan, sending a serious alert about the countrys bitter reality when it comes to freedom of expression. While the special rapporteur on the freedom of expression, David Kaye, refrained from touching on the draft anti-conspiracy bill, he identified significant worrying signals that undermine Japans democratic foundations. In addition to his concerns on the lack of political will to ensure media independence and access to information, Kaye specifically pointed out the situation in Okinawa, saying he found the availability of space for dissent and access to information for those throughout Japan about the situation there is restricted. The Japanese government bluntly rejected the U.N. rights experts views.

Whenever questions are raised on the situation of freedom of expression, the Abe administration repeats the claim like a broken record that Japans Constitution guarantees human rights. However, objective observations by human rights experts are shedding light on the different sides of the country. In describing his detention after being released, Yamashiro revealed the countrys bitter reality: I was detained for such a long time baselessly. I believe that was intended to intimidate Okinawans.

In any democratic country, such a high price should not have to be paid for dissent. Pressures within and outside the country are intensifying for the Abe government to make substantial steps to create a society where everyone can embrace the right to freedom of expression without fearing any consequences.

Taisuke Komatsu is a human rights advocate working as the U.N. advocacy coordinator of the International Movement Against All Forms of Discrimination and Racism. 2017, The Diplomat, distributed by Tribune Content Agency

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Freedom of expression under siege in Okinawa - The Japan Times

For America’s European allies, NATO is the frontline of freedom – The Hill (blog)

As the Trump administration returns to business as usual following the presidents first overseas travel, we are left to review the outcomes and mitigate the fallout of his venture. Some foreign policy experts will focus on new possibilities in the Middle East, while others wonder of the impact that President Trump may have on future relations with Europe and NATO. One thing is very clear: despite the growing rift between the U.S. administration and our Western European allies, we need to meet the challenge of a resurgent Russia by re-energizing and expanding critical partnerships along the "front lines of freedom" countries.

These "front lines," comprised of the former Eastern bloc countries and Soviet satellite states such as Latvia, Estonia, Bulgaria and Ukraine, have played an essential role in promoting American interests since the early 1990s. A major influence on these countries' democratization is a program that receives little beltway fanfare: the National Guards State Partnership Program.

The partnerships bring allies to the U.S. for exercises and training and, perhaps most importantly in this day of Russian aggression, place our National Guard side-by-side with our democratic allies on the front lines. In this role, we make it clear that these small democracies - some only the size of Maryland - are not alone as they face the enormity of growing Russian aggression in the region.

It's no surprise, given the president's penchant for Russian favor, that the countries directly facing Moscow and its military head-on might wonder about their future and our commitment to these front lines of freedom. That is why I believe it is critical that the people of the United States reaffirm our commitment to this vital program. We must recommit ourselves to continued U.S. partnership and presence in the region through joint exercises and showing the U.S. flag. We must make the call to ensure that the military equipment of our National Guard and these partner nations is interoperable and compatible. All the commitment in the world would be rendered meaningless if we can't coordinate and maneuver effectively with our allies on the front lines.

What realistic steps can each of us take to help secure our allies and this important front line of freedom? Each of us can thank our National Guard for the important work that they do in this program. You also can support the program by speaking to your governor and congressional representatives and expressing the value that you place in facing Russian aggression. Be sure to tell them that more frequent National Guard exercises in those countries and up-to-date equipment for our National Guard and partner nations is critical.

President Trump is correct in pointing out to our NATO allies that freedom is not free, but we all should remember that it is more than a percentage of GDP for our allies in Europe it is truly the security of their backdoor as they sit on the frontline of freedom.

Todd A.Weileris a former assistant secretary of Defense under the Obama administration and deputy assistant secretary under President Clinton. He is a decorated combat veteran, currently consults on military and civilian personnel issues.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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For America's European allies, NATO is the frontline of freedom - The Hill (blog)

Missouri Chimp Gets Hollywood Help in His Quest for Freedom – Riverfront Times (blog)

The Missouri Primate Foundation in Festus, Missouri, is not new to controversy. Animal advocacy group PETA has been targeting the non-profit for some time now, alleging that it houses chimpanzees in small cages and filthy conditionsand thatowner Connie Braun Casey has "been repeatedly cited by the government for violations of federal animal-welfare regulations."

Now Hollywood is coming to the rescue.

Twenty years ago, actor Alan Cumming starred in a film with one of the chimps currently residing at the Missouri Primate Foundation. Tonka appeared in the 1997 film Buddy, which also features Rene Russo and Robbie Coltrane. And now Cumming, who is also a longtime PETA supporter, has sent a letter to Casey asking her to free the aging chimp and his fellow residents.

"My character had many scenes with him, and we developed a very close camaraderie during the months when we filmed. By the end of the shoot, his trainers let him groom me. It was a special friendship one I'll always treasure," Cummings writes.

He goes on to say that he'd hoped to see Tonka a year later at the movie's premiere but was told Tonka wasn't manageable anymore and had been "retired to Palm Springs." He pictured Tonka living in a sprawling sanctuary and was horrified to learn that wasn't the case.

"I just learned, though, that Tonka didn't end up at a sanctuary in Palm Springs but inside a cage in Festus, where he isn't ableto have complex social relationships with other chimpanzees and doesn't have meaningful outdoor access to run, climb, or play," Cumming writes.

Whether the letter from the famous activist will lead to changes is anyone's guess. But odds don't seem high. When PETA began targeting and threatened to sue the Missouri Primate Foundation in late 2016, the facility countered back by filing a lawsuit against PETA on December 30. That litigation continues in federal court.

You can read Cumming's letter to the Missouri Primate Foundation in its entirety below.

Greetings from New York. I'm writing to you about a mutual friend: Tonka.

I worked closely with him on the 1997 film Buddy. My character had many scenes with him, and we developed a very close camaraderie during the months when we filmed. By the end of the shoot, his trainers let him groom me. It was a special friendshipone I'll always treasure. I hoped to see Tonka the following year at the film's premiere but was told that he was no longer manageable and had been "retired to Palm Springs." Over the past 20 years, I imagined him living out his post-Hollywood years on a sprawling sanctuary.

I just learned, though, that Tonka didn't end up at a sanctuary in Palm Springs but inside a cage in Festus, where he isn't able to have complex social relationships with other chimpanzees and doesn't have meaningful outdoor access to run, climb, or play.

Connie, even though we've never met, I believe in my heart that you feel great affection for Tonka and the other chimpanzees at MPF. But lifetime care for a dozen sophisticated, intelligent chimpanzees requires a teamand terrain where they can roam and socialize. As an old friend of Tonka's, I respectfully ask that you allow him and the chimpanzees at MPF to be sent to accredited sanctuaries where they can enjoy some semblance of the life that nature intended for them.

I hope to hear from you soon.

Kindest regards,

Alan Cumming

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Missouri Chimp Gets Hollywood Help in His Quest for Freedom - Riverfront Times (blog)

Thousands call for Ariana Grande to be given Freedom of Manchester after One Love concert for bombing victims … – The Sun

The petition has since garnered thousands of signatures

THOUSANDS of people have called for Ariana Grande to be honoured by Manchester after the pop star returned to the city in a show of love and defiance.

The singerraised millions of pounds through her charity gigon Sunday night, paying tribute to the 22 victims killed outside her concert barely two weeks ago.

AP:Associated Press

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The City of Manchester has since banded together to recognise the young singers heartfelt response to the terror attack, with a petition springing up, calling for Ariana to be granted a Freedom of the City.

The petition read: Ariana Grande has inspired people up and down the country with her selfless acts of kindness.

She didnt need to return to Manchester (after all she was a victim herself) but tonight she did and brought the nation to tears and for that I feel she should be granted Freedom of the City of Manchester.

Dave Hogan

More than 11,000 people have since signed the petition, which will be delivered to the council and Mayor of the city, Andy Burnham.

One supporter wrote: "Arianna is a inspiration in how we should act against the terrorists.

"We stand up and show love and smile every day! She is only 23 years old and to do what she has done for Manchester, She deserves this honour."

Another wrote: "Ariana put on a show that demonstrated our strength and solidarity."

Joined by fellow stars including Justin Bieber, Katy Perry and Miley Cyrus,Ariana told the crowd of 50,000 fans to not be cowed by the terror attack, and instead to choose love.

A Manchester City Council spokesman said: "We are grateful to Ariana Grande for her tremendous support for the city in the aftermath of the Manchester Arena attack.

"There are thousands of people who have made a significant contribution in the past two weeks, including our emergency services and hospital staff, and the city will want to find a suitable way of recognising them all in due course."

Ariana has even embraced the symbol of Manchester - a worker bee - by having the motif tattooed on her body after her concert.

She took time out to visit her fans in hospital who had been injured in the terror attack outside the Manchester Arena during her time in the UK.

All proceeds from the concert will go towards the victims and their families.

During Sunday night's One Love concert in Manchester, Ariana - who organised the fundraising event - paid an emotional tribute to those who had lost their lives.

BBC

Ariana said: I want to thank you all for being here today. Thank you for being here and being so loving and strong.

I love you guys so much the kind of love and unity you are showing is the medicine the world needs right now. I want to thank you for coming. I love you so much.

We have launched our Together With Manchester appeal to raise money for families of the victims of the Arena bomb. News UK, publisher of The Sun, has made a corporate donation of 100,000 to the appeal.

Here's how you can show your support....

ONLINE: http://www.justgiving.com/TogetherWithManchester

TEXT: Text TWMC50 and amount to 70070 eg TWMC50 5 (you can donate 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 10)

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Thousands call for Ariana Grande to be given Freedom of Manchester after One Love concert for bombing victims ... - The Sun

Juneteenth means freedom all month long – Connect Savannah.com

WHEN President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation that granted freedom to Americas slaves in September of 1862, it was supposed to go into effect January 1, 1863.

Out on the westernmost outposts of the Civil War, however, no one got the memo for another two and a half years.

With sketchy communication channels and not enough Union troops to enforce the order even when it arrived, the slaves of Texas didnt know they were free until Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston to announce the end of the war on June 19, 1965.

The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free, read Gordon from General Order No. 3.

The freedmenare advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages.

Most chose not to heed that advice, tossing aside their tasks and spilling into the streets to sing and rejoice that the cruelty and inhumanity of slavery had finally come to an end. Their joy was so memorable that the date became an annual holiday known as Juneteenth, a new tradition for a people tentatively exercising autonomy for the first time.

Some headed back to the former Confederate states to seek out family members theyd been ripped away from, others headed north to start new lives. In many cases, they were met with difficulty and bigotry, but the memory of Juneteenth served as beacon of hope.

Settling into these new areas as free men and women brought on new realities andthe challenges of establishing a heretofore non-existent status for black people in America, writes Cliff Robertson on Juneteenth.com.

Recounting the memories of that great day in June of 1865 and its festivities would serve as motivation as well as a release from the growing pressures encountered in their new territory.

Juneteenth celebrations waned in the early 1900s as new generations cleaved to Fourth of July to celebrate independence, but the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s brought a renewed fervor in African American communities to commemorate the day their enslaved ancestors claimed their freedom.

Savannahs Juneteenth traditions continue to follow the emphasis to educate about and promote African American culture and history through a variety of events that remind reminders of all that has been accomplished since the shackles fell.

Telfair Museums begins its annual Juneteeth program every year with libations poured on the steps of the Jepson Center to acknowledge those ancestors, followed by an afternoon of storytelling, song and interactive activities that bring history into the hands of all who attend. This years Free Family Day on Saturday, June 10 cedes the stage to the fast feet and rollicking rhythms of the Abeni Cultural Arts Performing Dance Studio, followed by the sonorous reverence of the Men of St. John The Mighty Fortress choir.

To connect Savannahs history to the African diaspora, the Telfair will also welcome a special guest. Jamaican author, attorney and activist Miguel Lorne will deliver a lecture about Rev. George Liele, a former slave freed before the Revolutionary War who went on to become the first American missionary.

In The Journey of Rev. George Liele: From Savannah Baptist to Rastafari, Lorne will discuss how Liele, a gifted preacher, founded the First Bryan Baptist Church and the First African Baptist Churchboth of which still exist downtownbefore moving to Jamaica to do missionary work in 1782, where he helped lay the groundwork of the Rastafari faith. The lecture is free and open to the public. [NOTE: The June 8 lecture has been postponed due to travel issues and will be rescheduled]

The following week on Saturday, June 17, the Juneteenth Festival at 38th Street Park will also link history to present day triumphs. Sponsored by the Daughters of Mary Magdalene, this homegrown celebration brings together local griots to recount the story of Juneteenth along with hip hop artist and actor Torion Sellers, who has under his belt a part in Barbershop 2: The Next Cut and a hit single, Twerk Dont Hurt.

Toots for Books will be collecting good reads to donate at the family-oriented park picnic, and all attendees are encouraged to make a plate and eat for free. The outdoor atmosphere is casual and welcoming, meant to bring Juneteenths inspiring message to one of Savannahs oldest African American neighborhoods.

Our main focus is to always keep the Juneteenth Festival in the urban community because most of our people are living in the underserved community and need cultural events like [this], explains Ivan Cohen, one the event organizers.

We honor local ordinary people who exemplify extraordinary character.

Later that Saturday, some of the local ordinary people who showed extraordinary courage during the Civil Rights era will be back at the beach. In 1960, Savannah icon and activist W.W. Law led a group of African American teenagers to Tybee Island to exercise their right to swim in the ocean. Over the next few years, a series of wade-ins became a hallmark of Savannahs relatively peaceful protest actions, empowering a generation to claim their rights.

Some of those original waders will join the action group Tybee MLK to recreate this act of civil disobedience in honor of Juneteenth, starting from the North Beach Grill at 3pm. Retired Tybee city councilman Mallory Pearce will don his Abraham Lincoln hat and read the Emancipation Proclamation, tying together the end of slavery and the ongoing struggle for equality, dignity and liberty.

[Its] a needed celebration because the Fourth of July doesnt tell the whole story, reminds Julia Pearce, Tybee MLK coordinator.

It took the end of the war to turn the words into law.

While the law of the land guarantees freedom for all, it is easy to forget that it wasnt always so. Commemorating Juneteenth as an essential part of American history teaches us to remember.

cs

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Juneteenth means freedom all month long - Connect Savannah.com

#SaveUnderground: Aisha Hinds on Freedom Dreams and Revolutionary Art – The Root

Aisha Hinds (Manny Carabel/Getty Images)

Last week, WGN America announced that it had canceled the critically acclaimed and riveting historical drama Underground. Allegedly moving in a more conservative, programming direction, the network is leaving behind a show that introduced millions of viewers to the relatively unknown network.

As the cast and crew confirmed and responded to the news, outraged fans#TeamNoalee, #TeamStine and #TeamTubmanimmediately responded with #SaveUnderground.

The push to find a new home for this show is largely due to its dynamism. The show is singular and remarkable in its approach to telling the stories about enslaved and freed black people in the 19th century. From its complex characters, stellar performances, breathtaking soundtrack and rich storytelling, each episode feels like a multitextured journey.

The liberties taken with historical accuracy do not compromise the integrity of truth telling and historical precision as it pertains to slavery and resistance. Pitting the notorious Patty Cannon against the Black Rose and one of the greatest heroines in American history, Harriet Tubman, was an incredible fictionalized remix of true stories of fugitive, formerly enslaved people and the inhumanity of slave catchers and owners. Its hard to imagine Wednesday nights without the resistive spirit and depths of ancestral pain that Underground has provided.

Although our nation is built upon white supremacy, this current era of anti-blackness and racial terror warrants as many sites of radical resistance and freedom dreaming as possible. Undeniably, Undergroundwith its unapologetic commitment to telling the truth about genocide, abolition and revolutionfills and exceeds that role.

In an exclusive conversation with Aisha Hinds, this seasons breakout performer in her role as Tubman, we discussed at length the significance of a television show based on black resistancespecifically against this contemporary sociopolitical landscapeand the centrality of black women to our freedom-fighter past and our futures.

Were still dealing with such oppression, and so I think that its necessary for Harriets spirit to revisit us and to remind us that there are Harriets within us, Hinds told The Root.

Shes come back to sort of give us the playbook on how to strategize, on how to pray, on how to be guided and how to prioritize whats necessary, and how to eventually take those selfless acts and be willing to die for the causes that are important to moving us forward, she continued.

Worth dying for, yes. Tubman believed that black lives, black bodies and black souls were worth fighting forworth dying for and worth living for. The Generals actual practice was #BlackLivesMatter, generations before the radical black women at the core of this movement would proclaim the same.

Underground is clear in its purpose: to expose the reality that when it comes to white supremacyand the ways in which black people have always resisted oppressionpast is often prologue. In many ways, Underground reminds us that the past is not even past. It encourages us to fight unrelentingly for radical black futures.

Over the last few years, I have spent a lot of time thinking, talking and writing about the war on

The shows creative team completed filming the second season prior to the election of Donald Trump. And yet, so many aspects of this season felt timely and passionately responsive to the current rise of fascism and the emergence of a more emboldened and explicit white supremacist political agenda. The battleground has changed, but white supremacy is indeed unrelenting and reinvents itself and its logics through new technologies and systems rooted in anti-blackness.

With the exception of the notable historical figures depicted on Underground, all of the characters are ordinary people who survive the unsurvivable and fight seemingly unwinnable battles. Their visions of freedom shift and expand in differing ways as they experience the breadth and ubiquity of white supremacy. Their ideas about liberation change as they learn more about themselves and about a country indebted to black suffering, labor and death. They are not perfect; nor do they have to be.

One of the first truths that [Harriet] speaks in the Minty episode is when she says, I was born and raised like a neglected weed, Hinds said.

The idea that this woman was an ordinary womanshe wasnt born into the amount of acclaim that she later went on to receive; she was born into circumstances that didnt even consider her humanso the fact that this ordinary woman was able to rise up against insurmountable odds and do this extraordinary thing ... spoke to me and encouraged me and inspired me, that in all of my ordinariness, there is something extraordinary that Ive been planted on this earth to do, Hinds continued.

The imperfections of the characters, coupled with their fluid and still-forming radical imaginations, are profoundly instructive to those of us organizing, mobilizing, teaching, writing, coding and creating in the era of the Movement for Black Lives. Not all will be on board with freedom work. Our visions of freedom work will vary. But an underlying theme of the show and of radical black liberation struggles is that freedom for all of us is nonnegotiable. We dont get to opt out; the stakes have always been too high.

We may have to make some sacrifices and be willing to be uncomfortable if were going to do something that is bigger than us, that goes beyond our own selfish desires, Hinds said. Ultimately, its true that nobody is free until all of us are free. We need to adopt that ideology because where we are right now ... were still very much in radical pursuit of liberty, even as the fullness of our existence remains compromised and in constant jeapardy.

The shows contemporary relevance is both haunting and enlightening, specifically because of its commitment to bearing witness to the horrors of white supremacy as well as the vitality of black resistance. Creative resistance is one of the many tools we have in combating oppression, something that Hinds became increasingly aware of as she moved deeper into her role.

As a person, as an actor, it truly has been transformative for me, Hinds said. It has elevated me as a human being. It has elevated me as an artist. It certainly has revealed to me how important it is that we as artists use our platforms purposefully. That is what our ancestors, our freedom fighters and truth tellers, risked their lives to dolived and loved and fought with purpose again and again.

#SaveUnderground matters because the shows cast and crew were and are unapologetically committed to telling our stories. From an artistic standpoint, Underground is phenomenal. The shows commitment to a radical, black, freedom-fighting imagination, though, is what makes it invaluable.

Underground is the show, the freedom-dreaming experience, the ancestral battle cry, that we didnt know we needed.

Treva B. Lindsey, Ph.D., is an associate professor of womens, gender and sexuality studies at the Ohio State University. She is the inaugural Equity for Women and Girls of Color Fellow at Harvard University. Follow her on Twitter.

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#SaveUnderground: Aisha Hinds on Freedom Dreams and Revolutionary Art - The Root

Polar Photographer Shares His View Of A Ferocious But Fragile Ecosystem – NPR

This leopard seal started getting aggressive and began giving guttural vocalizations, which could have been signs of aggression. "I want to get close, but I also never want to harass an animal," Paul Nicklen says.

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Goran Ehlme/SeaLegacy/Paul Nicklen Gallery

The Nordaustlandet ice cap gushes high volumes of melt water. Even though this photograph was taken just 600 miles from the North Pole, the temperature was in the high 60s Fahrenheit.

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Paul Nicklen/Paul Nicklen Gallery

An adult emperor penguin hovers high above her chick near Antarctica's Ross Sea. Adults will go to sea for days or even weeks at a time to bring back food for their rapidly growing chicks.

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Paul Nicklen/Paul Nicklen Gallery

The slim black figures of northern right whale dolphins break the surface of the ocean as they travel. Unlike most dolphins, this species lacks a dorsal fin and has a well-defined but short beak. This unique body shape allows them to cut through the water like torpedoes.

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Paul Nicklen/Paul Nicklen Gallery

Emperor penguins release millions of micro bubbles from their feathers to reduce friction between their bodies and the water. This allows them to accelerate and reduces the risk of being caught by a leopard seal.

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Paul Nicklen/Paul Nicklen Gallery

A humpback whale flings its tail high in the air as it dives down on a ball of herring near Lofoten, Norway. The winter months in Norway are a critical time of year for these whales to gorge and gain weight.

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Paul Nicklen/Paul Nicklen Gallery

Conservation photographer Paul Nicklen has spent more than two decades documenting the ice and wildlife in some of the most inhospitable places on Earth the Arctic and the Antarctic.

It's a risky business: Nicklen often finds himself immersed in frigid waters, just a camera's length away from deadly predators. Once, in Antarctica, he came face-to-face with a 1,000-pound leopard seal: "She opened up her mouth and her head is twice as big as a grizzly bear, and I am starring down her throat," he says.

Nicklen adds that his utmost concern is for the well-being of the animals he encounters. "I want to get close, but I also never want to harass an animal," he says. "What you learn about these animals is how communicative they are, how intelligent they are, how social they are, how forgiving they are."

On how he's come to ignore his gut in dangerous situations

When it comes to working with these big predators ... your, sort of, innate fear mechanisms are telling you not to do it. So you're always ignoring your gut. And when you ignore your gut all the time, at some point you don't know where that benchmark is anymore. ... You're always stepping into this gray area and you're stepping over the line, and so now I've learned ... when my gut's really screaming at me, to slow down and be smart. I start to back up a little bit and just spend more quality time analyzing, thinking, watching and then ... moving on with it if it seems like the right decision. ...

I think I get so caught up in how important these stories are and how my images have to have that three-dimensional feel to them, to really bring people into the issues I care about, and I think I just get so focused sometimes on getting those images.

I'm not really scared of death, I just want my death to be cool, and I guess being speared by a narwhal would be a pretty cool way to go.

Paul Nicklen, conservation photographer

On not being afraid of dying doing his work

I'm not really scared of death, I just want my death to be cool, and I guess being speared by a narwhal would be a pretty cool way to go. ... I think if I'm out there pushing and trying to push the limits to come back with something amazing to connect the world to what I love, then sure.

On a memorable interaction with a leopard seal

This leopard seal stayed with me for four days straight. And every time I would show up on the water, she'd be there to greet me. She would follow me back to the sailboat at night. Once she established her dominance, she completely relaxed, and then she disappeared and I thought the encounter was over.

Then she showed up a few minutes later with a penguin in her mouth. She had just caught a penguin chick she was holding it by the feet and the penguin is flapping, trying to get away from her. And she would sort of line it up with me, and when it was lined up perfectly with me she would let it go, and it would swim off, she caught it, she did this over and over.

And I realized at that moment that she was trying to feed me a live penguin. And I think she realized quickly in this encounter that I was not capable of catching a live, moving, swimming penguin, and so she brought me another penguin. She did all these different attempts to feed me live penguins. And at one point ... there's a photo of her looking dejected, sort of disappointed in me that I'm so useless that I'm unable to catch or accept one of her gifts, so then she started to bring me dead penguins, and at one point I had five penguins floating around my head. ...

Further on in the encounter ... she got so tired of me being unable to accept one of her penguins that she grabbed it and she flipped it on top of my head.

On falling in love with the leopard seal

I definitely fell in love with this seal. It's embarrassing to admit this to you. ... I'd fall asleep at night with tears coming down my cheeks. ... I was just so grateful, just to spend your life out with animals and to be fighting to get yourself into a situation where you can try and get close, where you can try and even get within 100 meters of something.

And all of a sudden here's a top predator, and not only are you getting to see it, it's interacting with you; it's trying to force-feed you penguins, it's trying to take care of you. It's a very very humbling thing. ... Just to flop yourself into its world and for it to spend that much time and energy trying to figure out who you are and to interact with you. ... I think that's why I get emotional, because we had such a connection.

On what happens to the polar bears when the sea ice melts

In the last 20 years, to have the scientists talking about how we're reaching the lowest extent of ice we've ever had, a place like Svalbard, Norway historically has been covered by sea ice year-round. In the last 20 to 30 years that ice has been just in a few fjords, and then now in the last few years there's been no ice at all around Svalbard. There's been a little strip down on the east side.

And when there's no ice that means bears basically do not have that platform to catch seals, and that's their main food source. They might eat a little bit of seaweed ... they might get the odd bird egg or the odd bird, but that's not giving them any nutritional value.

Essentially, bears are designed to go on land for long periods of time. They can be on land for two months and not eat a meal. But they're not designed to go four or five or six months on land without eating any food, and that's where we're starting to find emaciated bears, dead bears. ...

I've never had a scary moment with a polar bear, and people come to me like, "Isn't that the only animal that actively pursues humans for food?" And I just see this powerful, but very fragile, vulnerable species that is so at the mercy of its ecosystem. And it's sort of the one species that I really use to drive home that connection to how important this icy ecosystem is. I want people to realize that ice is like the soil in the garden without ice the polar regions cannot exist.

Radio producers Amy Salit and Thea Chaloner and Web producers Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey contributed to this story.

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Polar Photographer Shares His View Of A Ferocious But Fragile Ecosystem - NPR

Birds boost the Nebraska ecosystemand the state economy (AUDIO) – Nebraska Radio Network

Sandhill cranes (photo from NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission)

Nebraska Game and Parks officials want Nebraskans to get out and go birding this summer.

Birds play a critical role in Nebraskas ecosystem as well as its economy.

Thousands from throughout the world converge on Nebraska each year to observe the incredible crane migration.

Wildlife Education Specialist Lindsay Rogers with Game and Parks points out a challenge has been issued for the sesquicentennial: get out and see 150 of the 450 bird species in Nebraska.

So, seeing 150 shouldnt be all that hard, but again its a challenge to get people outside, Rogers tells Nebraska Radio Network.

Lindsay Rogers with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission and Gov. Pete Ricketts talk birds with students from Trinity Infant and Child Care Center in Lincoln.

Rogers says bird watching can be an enjoyable family activity; seeing birds and enjoying nature.

May is the official Nebraska Bird Month, linking the month to the annual crane migration.

Though it has passed, Rogers says summer offers great opportunities to see birds.

Now is when birds are really active, either defending their territory or raising their young, according to Rogers. So, youre going to see a lot of birds out and active.

Rogers suggests a family outing of birdwatching at a state park or wildlife management area.

Recently, Gov. Pete Ricketts celebrated Nebraska Bird Month with about 20 5-year-old students at Trinity Infant and Child Care Center, not far from the Capitol in Lincoln.

AUDIO: Brent Martin reports [:45]

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Birds boost the Nebraska ecosystemand the state economy (AUDIO) - Nebraska Radio Network

Biodiversity policy will conserve Ghana’s ecosystem Frimpong Boateng – Citifmonline

The Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation, Professor Frimpong Boateng, has stated that the country cannot achieve its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aimed at ending poverty and protecting the planet if the countrys biodiversity is not achieved.

The Professor, who made this statement while addressing a gathering at this years World Environment Day Celebrations which was held at Kyebi in the Eastern Region on the theme Connecting people to Nature from Cape Three Points to Bawku said Ghana has rich biodiversity that provides the food and water we need, and most of the resources for our industries and health services, we need to recognize the inherent value of natural resources in order to conserve lands and our natural resources.

The Minister also expressed greater worry about the damaging extent of the countrys environment due to the menace of illegal mining, which has destroyed a great portion of the countrys forest and river bodies, he stated

We need to improve our understanding of the links between biodiversity, ecosystems and human beings, and stop the decline of natural resources else failure to act now, would cause more decline in natural resources which we would pay a high price for in the near future, we should be mindful of our individual actions towards preserving natural resources in the country because our actions may have adverse effects on animals that can transfer poison to humans as we consume them.

He stated that government is committed to stopping illegal mining and restoring the countrys lands and water bodies.

In view of this, we are in the process of developing a coherent national biodiversity policy that will help conserve the ecosystem and species in the countrys natural reserves.

The Member of Parliament for Nkawkaw, Hon. Eric Kwakye Daffour, who is also the Eastern Regional Minister, expressed disappointment over the extent of damage caused to the environment through the activities of illegal mining pollution and lumbering, saying it is unfortunate our country is currently being confronted with enormous environmental challenges with respect to its water resources and land. Never in the history of this country have we been confronted with such massive land degradation as a result of illegal mining activities,deforestation among other unhealthy environmental activities.

Most of the time, we have exhibited gross disrespect for nature through our activities, it is high time Ghanaians appreciate nature and demonstrate a strong constant connection with nature through socio-cultural activities, we need a collective responsibility to protect forest resources, lands and water bodies, which promote ecotourism and can also generate employment and wealth creation for our country, he added.

The acting Executive Director of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), John Pwamang, explained that as part of plans to ensure sustainable utilization of the countrys natural resources and preserve the environment, the MESTI through EPA, has started a nationwide tree-growing programme.

About 4,000 trees have been planted in Kyebi, and we are looking forward to plant more in the coming days.

He also revealed a number of programmes the EPA together with other organizations are embarking on.

We are coming up with strategies to help protect the environment and serve a good purpose for communities in future, with the governments planting for food and jobs which will provide employment to millions of Ghanaians, we are reclaiming the lands to prepare most of them for the project.

Okyehene Osaagyefo Amoatia Ofori Panin II, who was the chairman of the celebration, reiterated his commitment to fighting against galamsey.

I will do everything in my power to ensure that the polluted Birim River which is in my area, is to get back to its natural state. I am very confident we will win the fight against illegal mining.

He then called for the autonomy of the EPA, and asked the government to end poverty to enable people to desist from engaging in galamsey.

Several other ministers including the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, John Peter Amewu, Minister of Housing Hon. Atta Kyea, Deputy Minister for Gender Children and Social Protection Mrs Gifty Twum Ampofo, United Nations Resident coordinator, Christine Cloack, and a host of other dignitaries from the Chinese Embassy in Ghana also joined in this years celebration.

By: Neil Nii Amatey Kanarku/citifmonline.com/Ghana

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Biodiversity policy will conserve Ghana's ecosystem Frimpong Boateng - Citifmonline

Coca-Cola, partners to spend $1.7 billion on Indian agri ecosystem … – Economic Times

NEW DELHI: Global beverages major Coca-Cola today said it will contribute, along with its parters, over USD 1.7 billion (Rs 10,943 crore) in next five years to the Indian agriculture ecosystem.

To be contributed by the company, its bottling partners, fruit suppliers and processors, the amount will be for the entire supply chain from "grove to glass through a concept called 'Fruit Circular Economy'," Coca-Cola India said in a statement.

"Close to $800 million (Rs 5,150 crore) of this contribution would be towards procurement of processed fruit pulp and fruit concentrate for the Coca-Cola Company's ever increasing portfolio of juice and juice drinks and carbonated drinks with juice products in India," it said.

The company further said it is also working on a transitional journey focused on creating sustainable agriculture by using a variety of Indian fruits in its beverages under juice and aerated drinks categories.

Through this initiative company's bottling arm Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages, 13 other independent franchise bottlers and fruit processing companies - will invest around $900 million (Rs 5,793 crore) over the next 5 years.

The investments would be on manufacturing lines, juice bottling infrastructure and fruit processing plants and equipment and agriculture interventions to support demand and grow range of the company's non-carbonated drinks portfolio, it added.

Coca-Cola India and Southwest Asia President T Krishnakumar said: "The investments announced today by Coca- Cola will further catalyse economic growth and create new opportunities for farmers and local suppliers."

The company, which today launched a new Minute Maid Pulpy Mosambi, said it would also expand its juice product range.

"We have already expanded our Minute Maid juice range from one variant in 2007 to 11 variants in 2017 and if we are to realise our portfolio ambitions of being a total beverage company, we must invest in the agri ecosystem," he added.

Coca-Cola said an estimated 2 lakh farmers will benefit from its five year roadmap of sourcing fruit pulp and fruit concentrate derived out of 2.10 million tonnes of fruit.

Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages and Jain Irrigation have already invested on Project Orange Unnati and Project Mango Unnati working on technology like Ultra High Density Plantation and Micro Irrigation System for enhanced produce.

Currently, the company procures and exports raw materials and ingredients worth USD 280 million (Rs 1,802 crore) from India to 44 countries.

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Coca-Cola, partners to spend $1.7 billion on Indian agri ecosystem ... - Economic Times

C100’s new director wants organization to scale alongside Canada’s startup ecosystem – BetaKit

When Laura Buhler joined C100 as executive director in February, interim executive director Terry Doyle said the former Gilt director was coming on during a unique time in Canada.

Buhler suggested as much as she explained to BetaKit how the organization is preparing to scale its program alongside Canadas startups.

If you look at where Canada was when C100 started back in 2009, the startup ecosystem in Canada looked very different. All of C100s activities, for the most part, would have been dedicated around really trying to ignite that early-stage entrepreneurship, Buhler said. The area where we get asked to help a lot, in addition to access to capital, is just access to markets what that means is people are talking about scale.

We inspire some of the most promising Canadian entrepreneurs to build the next generation of successful companies in Canada. Laura Buhler, C100 executive director

C100s plan for adjusting to the rise in Canadian growth stage startups is a change to its formal mentorship component run alongside the 48 Hours in the Valley program, which brings founders to the Valley for two days of networking and workshops. Buhler says that many of its Valley-based mentors are founders or executives themselves, and C100 is structuring the program to ensure that the relationship lasts longer than 48 hours. C100 will now connect founders and mentors well in advance, to give mentors an idea of where companies need the most help, and they must meet at least twice before the cohort begins.

It could be anything, from advice on access to markets, or how to recruit the next team right after theyve just raised money, said Buhler, who added that mentors are hand-picked for each company based on need.

I know that a lot of these relationships have lasted a couple of years; that actually is a great way that entrepreneurs back home stay very connected with C100 if they want to.

Recently, the organization announced a partnership with RBC in an attempt to make its program more accessible; for seed stage companies, C100 runs Valley 101 workshops in Silicon Valley, giving founders the chance to ask investors and fellow entrepreneurs for advice and feedback. C100 is working with RBC to launch a content platform featuring stories from successful entrepreneurs, and advice for founders similar to what they would get from a Valley 101 session.

Its an effective medium to inspire and inform people, which is a great opportunity to be able to get to entrepreneurs. Many are our clients and say, we think this is an interesting illustration of what others are doing in the world, and that may inspire them to do things in a different way, said John Stackhouse, SVP at RBC. We know that no organization, big or small, in the world today is going to solve the problems its taking on on its own. Were looking to others, whether theyre big or small, to work together. But more, critically than that, is our belief that we are in a transformative economic age, and Canada is incredibly well-positioned to be a global leader in innovation.

Buhler points to C100s charter members to make the point that there are many experienced Canadian entrepreneurs outside of Canada interested in building the ecosystem at home, and says that C100s mission is to bridge that gap. Theres a lot of best practices, experience, passion, and thought leadership that if we organize, they can really help the folks coming up and building great businesses in Canada, she said. We inspire some of the most promising Canadian entrepreneurs to build the next generation of successful companies in Canada.

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C100's new director wants organization to scale alongside Canada's startup ecosystem - BetaKit

Waves of Good and Bad News for Ocean Ecosystem – Noozhawk

Posted on June 6, 2017 | 9:00 a.m.

Ocean acidification widespread in the California current, but pockets of protection exist

First, the bad news: New data reveals that acidified ocean water is pervasive along the West Coast and is likely to keep spreading.

So whats the good news? Persistent, less-acidic havens in some regions may be sheltering marine life from the harsher, low-pH conditions.

With the first-ever dataset measuring pH in the very nearshore regions of the ocean, a multi-institution research team including UCSB biologist Carol Blanchette found the California current is more susceptible to ocean acidification than previously thought.

The work, published in Nature Scientific Reports, also documents refuges that offer hope.

This is both good and bad news, said Blanchette, director of UCSBs Valentine Eastern Sierra Reserves, who collaborated on the study in her longtime role with research consortium Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans (PISCO).

The hotspots of acidification have very low pH, but the spatial structure is so persistent from year to year that the refuge areas those with better pH, near Cape Mendocino, north of Point Conception and Monterey Bay are likely to be refuges over time, she said.

In a three-year survey of the California Current System along the West Coast, the scientists found persistent, highly acidified water throughout the ecologically critical nearshore habitat.

They found hotspots of pH measurements as low as any oceanic surface waters in the world. The research was conducted at several sites in the region of Cape Mendocino, Bodega Bay, Monterey Bay and the coast just north of Point Conception.

With the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide the prime suspect in ocean acidification low-pH conditions are likely to get worse, according to the scientists.

That reality makes the discovery of safer havens equally important; these more moderate pH environments could be used as a resource for ecosystem management.

This provides an opportunity for research to examine how organisms can adapt through evolutionary change if they have open populations that live in both higher and lower pH areas, Blanchette said.

It also means that the ocean is not homogenous there is a lot of spatial structure.

"And, importantly, it speaks for a network of marine-protected areas as a conservation strategy for climate change, to allow populations to be large enough, in many different places, that organisms have time for evolution to work and provide genetic adaptation to climate impacts, she said.

Said lead author Francis Chan, a marine ecologist at Oregon State University:

The West Coast is very vulnerable. Ten years ago, we were focusing on the tropics with their coral reefs as the place most likely affected by ocean acidification.

"But the California Current System is getting hit with acidification earlier and more drastically than other locations around the world, Chan said.

The researchers developed a network of sensors to measure ocean acidification over a three-year period along more than 600 miles of the West Coast.

They observed near-shore pH levels that fell well below the global mean pH of 8.1 for the surface ocean, and reached as low as 7.4 at the most acidified sites among the lowest recorded values ever observed in surface waters.

The lower the pH level, the higher the acidity. Previous studies have documented a global decrease of 0.11 pH units in surface ocean waters since the start of the Industrial Revolution. That pH decrease represents an acidity increase of about 30 percent.

Highly acidified ocean water is potentially dangerous because many organisms are very sensitive to changes in pH.

According to the scientists, negative impacts already are occurring in the California Current System, where planktonic pteropods or small swimming snails were documented with severe shell dissolution.

This is about more than the loss of small snails, said co-author Richard Feely, a senior scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory.

These pteropods are an important food source for herring, salmon and black cod, among other fish," Feely said.

"They also may be the proverbial canary in the coal mine signifying potential risk for other species, including Dungeness crabs, oysters, mussels, and many organisms that live in tidepools or other near-shore habitats, he said.

The teams observations did not vary significantly over the three years even with different conditions, including a moderate El Nio event according to Chan: The highly acidified water was remarkably persistent over the three years.

Hotspots stayed as hotspots, and refuges stayed as refuges," Chan said. "This highly acidified water is not in the middle of the Pacific Ocean; it is right off our shore.

"Fortunately, there are swaths of water that are more moderate in acidity and those should be our focus for developing adaptation strategies.

UCSB marine scientists Gretchen Hofmann and Libe Washburn were also co-principal investigators on the project.

Shelly Leachman/Andrea Estrada for UCSB.

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Waves of Good and Bad News for Ocean Ecosystem - Noozhawk

Watch this cyborg dragonfly drone take flight – TNW

Scientists at the multidisciplinary research company Draper are using mind controlto make insects power their new miniature drone tech.

The DragonflEye project sets out to create cyborg drones that can be steered by humans. It outfits live dragonflies with backpacks that contain a sensor array and a solar power source and then uses neural networking to control their flight paths.

Watchwhat may be the worlds first cyborg-drone flight in this Draper project video:

In the 36 second clip, Draper shows a live dragonfly being outfitted with the technology. In the video, a gooey substance, likely a binding agent, is applied to the dragonfly before a technician fits it with a tiny sensor bundle.

Once the insect is geared up the technician releases it and we see it fly seemingly unencumbered by the backpack. The clip shows the dragonfly moving in a straight line for a brief moment and then the video ends.

We arent told if the insect, in the video, is being commanded to fly straight or if thats just where it wanted to fly.

In a January press release the company detailed its process: they pipe in light to the dragonflys optical nerve which simulates the insects own natural navigational cues.

Draper engineers had to overcome various obstacles to make the tech work, such as creating an optrode small enough for the dragonflys optic nerve.

The project advances several bleeding-edge technologies, according to the principal investigator on the project, Jesse Wheeler. This system pushes the boundaries of energy harvesting, motion sensing, algorithms, miniaturization and optogenetics, all in a system small enough for an insect to wear.

The process seen in the video appears to be harmless to the insect. The engineers claim the same tech can be applied to other insects as well. Bumblebees, for example, could be directed to pollinate specific fields and then optimized.

There are a lot of applications for tiny, silent, virtually undetectable, drones in the intelligence and military communities. The tech could be useful for more than just flying bugs as well Wheeler predicts Someday these same tools could advance medical treatments in humans.

The technology is still early Draper hasnt released any information concerning the back-end requirements for the technology or when it would be available for adaptation. For now, its a very cool glance at the near future one where I can picture fireflies directing traffic and army ants conducting 3D printing missions.

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Watch this cyborg dragonfly drone take flight - TNW

What Happens When Cyborg Tech Goes Beyond Medicine? – Singularity Hub

The age of the cyborg may be closer than we think. Rapidly improving medical robotics, wearables, and implants means many humans are already part machine, and this trend is only likely to continue.

It is most noticeable in the field of medical prosthetics where high-performance titanium and carbon fiber replacements for limbs have become commonplace. The use of blades by Paralympians has even raised questions over whether they actually offer an advantage over biological limbs.

For decades, myoelectric prostheticspowered artificial limbs that read electrical signals from the muscles to allow the user to control the devicehave provided patients with mechanical replacements for lost hands.

Now, advances in robotics are resulting in prosthetic hands that are getting close to matching the originals in terms of dexterity. The Michelangelo prosthetic hand is fully articulated and precise enough to carry out tasks like cooking and ironing.

Researchers have even demonstrated robotic hands that have a sense of touch and can be controlled using the mind. And just last month another group showed that fitting a standard myoelectric arm with a camera and a computer vision system allowed it to see and grab objects without the user having to move a muscle.

Medical exoskeletons are already commercially availablemost notably, ReWalk and Ekso Bionics devices designed to help those with spinal cord injuries stand and walk. Elsewhere, this technology is being used to rehabilitate people after strokes or other traumatic injuries by guiding their limbs through their full range of motion.

At present, these technologies are aimed solely at those who have been injured or incapacitated, but an editorial in Science Robotics last week warned that may not always be the case.

There needs to be a debate on the future evolution of technologies as the pace of robotics and AI is accelerating, the authors wrote.

It seems certain that future assistive technologies will not only compensate for human disability but also drive human capacities beyond our innate physiological levels. The associated transformative influence will bring on broad social, political, and economic issues.

This can already be seen with the development of military exoskeletons designed to boost soldiers endurance. More bizarrely, Japanese researchers have recently floated the idea of adding to our limbs rather than replacing them. The MetaLimbs project gives users two extra robotic arms that can be controlled using sensors on their legs and feet.

Last weeks issue of Science Robotics actually included a study demonstrating that a soft robotic exosuit was actually more effective at lightening the load on a runner when it didnt follow a humans natural running pattern and instead used computer simulations to decide what forces to apply.

This suggests there is considerable room for machines to not only augment the power of our muscles but even optimize the biomechanics of our movement. And as the authors of the editorial note, biomechanics is only one strand of research where scientists are trying to replicate and ultimately improve our abilities.

Devices like cochlear implants have been used to restore hearing in the deaf for decades and there are a number of experimental efforts to create bionic eyes to help the blind see again. Efforts to augment our intelligence with neural implants have been widely reported on in recent months.

Admittedly, there is still a long way to go before people start demanding to amputate their arm so they can get a shiny, new robotic one. And its likely the companies driving for consumer-grade neural interfaces are overestimating how many people will voluntarily undergo brain surgery.

But weve already taken the first steps towards merging our biological selves with machines.

You can argue smartphones are already essentially a prosthetic designed to boost communication and memory. And more overtly cyborg-like augmentations are likely to appear in many of our lifetimes.

What then does that mean for humankind? Natural evolution has long relied on mutation conferring minute but significant advantages to individuals that gradually spread throughout populations. If new prosthetic technologies start to confer these advantages overnight the effects could be very patchy.

The worry is that the latest augmentations are only available to the few who can afford them and in just a few generations you could end up with an elite who not only dwarf the rest of humanity financially but also physically and cognitively.

At the same time, these technologies hold huge promise to restore a decent standard of living to the countless people incapacitated by injury or disease. And if applied equitably, devices aimed at augmenting our abilities could better equip us to face the many challenges society faces.

But as the authors of the editorial note, the conversation on how best to guide us through this next stage of our evolution needs to start now. Because these devices have so far been focused on restoring functions that have been lost, we have largely missed the fact that they are now reaching the point where they can improve those functions or even enable new ones.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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What Happens When Cyborg Tech Goes Beyond Medicine? - Singularity Hub

Miesha Tate wishes Cris Cyborg hit Angela Magana even harder – FanSided

Jul 24, 2015; Chicago, IL, USA; Miesha Tate during weigh ins for UFC Fight Night at United Center. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

Tony Parker hopeful Spurs offer him one more contract by Nam Tran

P.K. Subban arrives for Game 4 of Stanley Cup Final with endless amount of Listerine (Video) by Michael Whitlow

The UFC retreat was meant to bring the fighters together in a place where they could relax and enjoy some time on the UFCs dime. It turned out to have the opposite effect between some of the fighters.

UFC featherweightcontender Cris Cyborg was involved in an altercation with bantamweight Angela Magana outside the fighter hotel during this UFC retreat. Cyborg hit Magana in the face and has since been charged with misdemeanorassault as a result.

The fight stemmed from a social media post that Magana put on Twitter regarding Cyborg. Cyborg was not pleased by the cyberbullying from Magana and let her know when they met face to face in Las Vegas. The UFC has not issued a punishment for Cyborg to this point in time.

This weekend in Rio de Janerio, Brazil while speaking to media before UFC 212, former bantamweight champion Miesha Tate stated her feelings on this subject.

I wish she would have punched Angela harder. Angela is a bully, you know she is like a child that never grew up, and its not right and I think there should be harsher consequence for people who publicly bully people on the internet or in person so I think she had it coming. I dont blame Cyborg a bit, I hope that the legal system looks at everything because she really had it coming. Im team Cyborg all the way with that.

This altercation with Magana should not effect Cyborg from returning to the octagon. UFC president Dana White recentlystated on the UFC Unfiltered podcast with Matt Serra and Ray Long, that Cyborg is due to fight at UFC 214 in Anaheim, California, although the opponent is not yet determined.

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Miesha Tate wishes Cris Cyborg hit Angela Magana even harder - FanSided

Local veterans recall D-Day battle on beaches in France – Ocala

Dean Vanlandingham, 96, of Fort McCoy, landed on Utah Beach on June 6, 1944; Harold Stephens, 92, of Ocala, landed on Utah Beach four days later. They were among the Allied troops, including American soldiers who stormed the beaches in Normandy in northern France in what has been called the beginning of the end of WW II.

Today marks the 73rd anniversary of D-Day, or the first day of the massive World War II invasion of Normandy, which gained a foothold for Allied forces in France.

Dean Vanlandingham, 96, of Fort McCoy, landed on Utah Beach on June 6, 1944; Harold Stephens, 92, of Ocala, landed on Utah Beach four days later.

According to history.com: "The battle began on June 6, 1944, also known as D-Day, when some 156,000 American, British and Canadian forces landed on five beaches along a 50-mile stretch of the heavily fortified coast of Frances Normandy region. The invasion was one of the largest amphibious military assaults in history and required extensive planning. Prior to D-Day, the Allies conducted a large-scale deception campaign designed to mislead the Germans about the intended invasion target. By late August 1944, all of northern France had been liberated, and by the following spring the Allies had defeated the Germans. The Normandy landings have been called the beginning of the end of war in Europe."

In spite of German fortifications, establishing a beachhead at Normandy was needed to allow Allied forces to march across Europe to Berlin, Germany, to defeat Hitler and the Nazi regime.

According to the article "D-Day" on http://www.history.com, Gen Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Allied Commander during the war, gave the order to start the invasion, known as Operation Overlord, on June 5, 1944, but weather caused a 24-hour delay. He called the Battle of Normandy, which lasted from June to August 1944, the start of a "Great Crusade."

Eisenhower was so concerned about the outcome of the invasion attempt, however, that he wrote a note on June 5, 1944, taking all responsibility if the invasion failed, according to "General Dwight D. Eisenhower launches Operation Overlord," also on History.com

The first amphibious assault on beaches code named Utah, Omaha and Gold, which stretch for about 50 miles in Normandy, began at 6:30 a.m. after paratroopers and glider troops had begun securing locations behind enemy lines, the "D-Day" article states.

By the end of June 6, 1944, more than 4,000 Allied soldiers had died. By June 11, the beachhead was secured and 326,000 soldiers had landed, along with 50,000 vehicles and 100,000 tons of equipment, the article notes.

Dean VanLandingham, 96, a resident of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Veterans Village in Fort McCoy, is a native of Scott, Ohio. He moved to Plymouth, Michigan, as a youth. He earned the Eagle Scout rank at age 17 and was attending college and had worked in a steel mill before he enlisted in the U.S. Army shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, on Dec. 7, 1941.

He was 23 when he went ashore at Utah Beach from an LST (landing ship tank) later in the day June 6, 1944.

"I was scared to beat hell," he said. "Most soldiers were 18 to 25 years old and most of us didn't have any idea what would happen."

When the bullets started flying and guys started dropping, soldiers became scared, except for a few "crazies (that) it didn't bother," he said.

He described the terrain at Utah Beach as "hilly" and opposition when he landed as "moderate," with "machine gun, rifle and some artillery" fire.

VanLandingham said after three days the Allies were able to position some artillery and prior to that the assault had relied on support from the guns on Allied ships offshore.

He said the goal was to crack the German Siegfried Line of defense as his outfit moved forward through Metz, France, and fought in the Battle of the Bulge near Bastogne.

He was awarded the Bronze Star for his actions related to overtaking a large group of German soldiers and knocking out enemy tanks by directing the movement of armored tank destroyers.

He recalled hearing the Nazi V-1s, or "buzz bombs," going overhead with a "putt-putt" sound on their way to crashing and exploding.

According to the Smithsonian Institute website, https://airandspace.si.edu, about 20,000 of the V-1s or "Vengeance Weapon One" pilot-less missiles, which could travel about 150 miles and carried a 1-ton high-explosive warhead, were launched mostly at London and Antwep.

VanLandingham was wounded and knocked unconscious for about a half an hour on Jan., 20, 1945, near the Luxemburg border by shrapnel from an artillery shell that exploded nearby.

During the war, he received three Purple Heart Awards for his wounds and four battle stars.

Following the war, VanLandingham returned to school, married and fathered two sons. He and his wife, Mary, moved to Mount Dora in 1960, where he worked as a consultant for several publishers. Mary died in 2006, after 59 years of marriage.

Gary VanLandingham, 60, a professor at Florida State University in Tallahassee, said his father did not speak much of his involvement in D-Day until the last five years. He said his father likely was minutes behind the initial attack.

"He felt like he was just doing his job and the invasion was something that needed to be done. He may not have been very happy to be there, but he did it for the other guys," Gary Van Landingham said, adding that his father didn't feel his act was "heroism."

Harold Stephens, 92, of Ocala, landed on Utah Beach on June 10, 1944.

Stephens, a native of Jellico, Tennessee, had dropped out of school to work in a grocery store because his father passed away when he was 7 and he was helping his mother support a family of four children. He was drafted in 1943, at age 18.

As D-Day approached, Stephens was stationed at Birmingham, England, "waterproofing vehicles" and then was sent to Torquay, near the English Channel, to board an LST wearing his equipment, canteen and mess kit and carrying his rifle.

On Utah Beach, he said, he had to watch for enemy "bombings, (aircraft) strafing and booby traps."

Stephens said he was assigned to Gen. Omar Bradley's 1st Army and traveled inland to Saint Lo, France, and then was assigned to Gen. George Patton's 3rd Army. He went through Belgium and Luxembourg and eventually "stood where Hitler once spoke" in Nuremberg, Germany.

Stephens said D-Day should be remembered.

Other locals also said that D-Day is a significant part of American history.

Diana Atkins, 42, said she intends to teach her children, Andrew, 10, and Isabel, 8, about D-Day at the appropriate time because it is "very important."

Daniel Brewer, 11, the son of Rick and Carrie Brewer, has been taught about World War II by his parents, who have studied the history of the war. Daniel, who will enter sixth grade next school year, is familiar with the Battle of Normandy and D-Day.

Daniel and fellow students Rishit Shaquib and Joseph Lavdas made a "brief history" of World War II, with graphics and animation, that earned a first place award and "Best of Show 3-5" in the recent 16th annual Marion County Public Schools Student Media Festival.

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Local veterans recall D-Day battle on beaches in France - Ocala