Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta pressure. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta pressure. Mostrar todas las entradas

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with leaders of the European Union on Friday, pledging with them to keep pressuring Russia with sanctions in response to its invasion of Ukraine, saying Russia’s aggression is a threat relevant to the entire world.

Following a similar meeting with NATO allies in Brussels, Blinken attended a special EU foreign ministers meeting. Speaking to reporters ahead of the meeting, the top U.S. diplomat said what is at risk with Russia’s invasion — along with the lives of Ukrainians — are fundamental principles of peace and security that the world established during two world wars, which Russian President Vladimir Putin “is egregiously violating every single day.”

Following the ministerial meeting, Blinken and European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen met with reporters.

Von der Leyen ran through a series of sanctions on Russia’s financial system, which she said would cut off Russia’s central bank from a significant share of its reserves to bolster the plummeting ruble, the nation’s currency. As a result, the bank has had to raise interest rates by 20%, driving up inflation.

Action against commercial banks

Meanwhile, the country’s commercial banks have been cut off from global markets and from SWIFT, the worldwide interbank communications system, curtailing their ability to finance the economy.

Unfortunately and tragically, Blinken said, the war in Ukraine is not likely to be over soon, but the measures Von der Leyen announced must be sustained “until it stops, until the war is over, [and] the Russian forces leave.” He said both U.S. and EU officials were committed to doing that.

Blinken said Russia’s actions could not go unanswered.

“If we allow those principles to be violated with impunity, then we’re opening a Pandora’s box in every corner of the world for this to happen again and again and again,” he said.

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.

Amid growing pressure from rights groups, the United Nations high commissioner for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, will update the 49th session of the Human Rights Council on March 7 on her efforts to assess the situation in Xinjiang, a spokesperson from her office told VOA.

In recent weeks, rights activists and U.S. politicians have been pressuring Bachelet to release a report on human rights in Xinjiang, a region in northwest China that is home to Uyghurs who are Muslim and a minority group.

Mainly Western countries, including the United States, and rights organizations accuse China of human rights violations, including forced sterilization of Uyghur women, torture, forced labor and the detention of more than 1 million Uyghurs and other Turkic groups in internment camps in Xinjiang. The U.S. government has described the violations as genocide and crimes against humanity.

The push for the release of the report comes after years of unsuccessful efforts by Bachelet’s office to negotiate the terms of a visit to Xinjiang to assess the human rights situation there.

In a video speech to the 49th United Nations Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva on Monday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said, “The door of Xinjiang is open, and we welcome people from all countries to visit Xinjiang and have exchanges.”

He went on to refute allegations of abuse and said, “The so-called genocide, forced labor and religious repression, are lies that are completely fabricated.”
China says the facilities in Xinjiang are only vocational training centers – and that Beijing’s Xinjiang policies are aimed at fighting extremism, terrorism and separatism.

While discussions between Bachelet’s office and Beijing are ongoing, “the parameters for a visit will have to be such that the High Commissioner has unfettered, meaningful access, including unsupervised interviews with civil society,” the high commissioner’s spokesperson, Liz Throssell, told VOA in an email.

Doubtful Uyghurs

Uyghurs’ rights groups are doubtful there will be changes to the status quo.
“We don’t expect the visit will take place soon, given that the high commissioner has failed to reach an agreement with the government of China for the past three years,” said Zumretay Arkin, program and advocacy manager at the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress.

A Uyghur government official in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, told VOA that for any Uyghur “to be able to speak [freely] and tell what is happening, they [would] have to be out” of China.

“There’s a tragedy in every [Uyghur] family, at least someone has disappeared without a trace. But I can’t tell you in detail,” the Uyghur official who requested anonymity for his safety said. “No one is calm. Every family is weeping over someone.”

Abdulhakim Idris, executive director of the Washington-based Center for Uyghur Studies, accuses Bachelet of being mostly passive on Uyghur human rights since she assumed her position in September 2018.

“These are not only my words; even her official told us that she had been disregarding the reports and documents detailing Uyghur human rights” in China, Idris told VOA.

Idris said that in late 2018, he and other Uyghur rights activists met a Bachelet office staffer in Geneva who was working on the China human rights issue.
“We were told that when reports and documents got into her office, the reports they had submitted would be ignored,” Idris said.

“Every year Uyghurs hoped that on behalf of the U.N., Bachelet would say something about the Uyghurs’ dire human rights situation,” Idris said. “All these years, Bachelet had been careful not to anger China, that’s why she has been delaying this urgent report.”

In an email, Bachelet’s office told VOA the accusations are false and that since allegations of “human rights violations in Xinjiang emerged, the U.N. Human Rights Office has been consistently gathering, documenting and analyzing the information that has come to our attention.” Bachelet’s office also said she has been working on visiting Xinjiang “based on meaningful access” while continuing to monitor the situation and assess the situation there remotely.

Last September, Bachelet expressed regret at not making any progress on her “efforts to seek meaningful access to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region” to probe human rights.

“In the meantime, my office is finalizing its assessment of the available information on allegations of serious human rights violations in that region, with a view to making it public,” Bachelet said at the opening of the Human Rights Council in September in Geneva.

In December, after an unofficial tribunal in London said that China has “committed genocide and crimes against humanity and torture against Uyghurs, Kazakh and other ethnic minority citizens” in Xinjiang, a spokesperson for the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Rupert Colville, said that Bachelet had hoped to publish the report on Xinjiang in the coming weeks.

Adrian Zenz is director and senior fellow of China studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation in Washington. Zenz said the only way to make genuine progress on documenting China’s actions would be to take Uyghurs out of Xinjiang for completely unsupervised conversations with U.N. officials.

However, if it is a visit as suggested by Wang, Beijing will “closely control what people see on the ground, and that’s all the more because actually a fairly substantial number of internment camps have been securitized or closed down,” Zenz told VOA. “People have been shifted into forced labor or sentenced to long-term prisons.”

The Attorney General’s Office opened a preliminary investigation of the mayor of Manizales, Carlos Mario Marín, for alleged pressure on officials and contractors to favor with their vote their cousin, candidate for the House of Representatives for Caldas.

According to the Public Ministry, he received anonymous complaints that speak of the request for votes in favor of the Green Alliance candidate Santiago Osorio.

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“With all due respect, I request your intervention in the elections, since as a public official we are practically being forced to politically accompany the cousin of the mayor, and I see with great concern the active participation of several public servants exercising political proselytism,” the complaint says. which was recorded in the preliminary investigation order.

The president has asked his Municipal Cabinet to act with neutrality

It indicates that the entity will open the corresponding Preliminary Inquiry “in order to verify the occurrence of behaviors with a vocation for disciplinary reproach, identify or individualize the public and/or private servant allegedly compromised and establish if it has acted under the protection of a cause of exclusion of responsibility”.

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The mayor, for his part, reported that he had already filed with the Manizales Provincial Attorney’s Office and the Regional Attorney’s Office the evidence of the actions taken to “avoid conduct related to political proselytism” within the Manizales Mayor’s Office and its decentralized entities.

“Among the documents delivered are the certifications of the General Secretariat, Internal Disciplinary Control, Internal Control and the Office of Transparency, in which it is verified that, to date, there is no formal complaint due to political pressure. However, preventively It has been requested that the necessary actions and investigations be carried out in case of presentation, ”he reported.

From the Mayor’s Office they also pointed out that “the president has asked his Municipal Cabinet to act neutrally”, always oblivious to any project with political ends, in compliance with the Electoral Guarantees Law.

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“This position is supported by the formation of the Electoral Surveillance Committee of the Manizales Mayor’s Office, whose purpose is to apply mandatory sanctions in the event of political proselytism being found within the Administration and its decentralized entities,” adds the press release.

On December 30, China’s state-owned Xinhua News Agency named the Xuzhou “China’s Happiest City” for 2021.

The city in eastern China’s Jiangsu province boasted dramatic economic growth and enlightened city planning, according to Jiangsu.net, resulting in the kind of blossoming that gains nationwide notice in China.

But within days, Xuzhou’s civic pride morphed into mortification when a blogger found a mother of eight chained by the neck to the wall of a hut and exposed to freezing weather. As the Olympic Games progressed in Beijing, the mother’s story went viral, and subsequent missteps by Xuzhou authorities drew local accusations of cover-ups and worldwide outrage.

The mother, Xiao Huamei, appeared in a video on Douyin (Chinese TikTok) shot by a blogger who documents unusual families, in this case, one with eight children, seven of them boys. In the video, behind the alleged father and all the youngsters, Chinese netizens spotted a chained woman.

On January 28, the video went viral. Amid the run-up to Lunar New Year festivities and the Beijing Winter Olympics, shocked netizens demanded answers: Who was this woman? Why was she chained up? How can she have eight kids with her husband given China’s reproductive controls?

Between January 28 and February 10, local authorities issued four reports on the situation. The muddled accounts stirred further public outcry, and many netizens expressed their suspicions that kidnapping and domestic abuse were central to the woman’s case.

Public pressure brought the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to reckoning for a long-hushed-up web of problems, such as the human trafficking resulting from the imbalanced male to female ratio, the result of a cultural preference for boys in a country that restricted families to one child from 1980 to 2013, when the policy began to loosen.

As of Tuesday, China’s social media platform Weibo was censoring the tag “Xiao Huamei,” and while discussion was allowed, the subject has been blocked from the hot topic list.

An official in the CCP Xuzhou Propaganda Unit told VOA Mandarin that authorities were investigating the case.

Understanding of laws banning domestic abuse “is relatively weak in rural parts of China, and there’s a lack of social governance, resulting in human trafficking,” the CCP official, who identified himself only as Mr. Xu, said.

“But we are working on it now. Please give us some space to get a clear picture,” he added.

Four conflicting reports

Xuzhou authorities have issued four contradictory reports since the woman was first seen on video.

County-level authorities issued the first two, which emphasized the woman had been diagnosed as mentally ill and dismissed concerns that she was being trafficked.

In the first report, published January 28, the same day the video went viral in China, authorities said the woman, a local resident, was married to a man named Dong Zhimin. The couple had eight children, said the report, which also stressed she had a serious mental illness.

A January 30 report said the woman was a beggar taken in by Dong’s father in June 1998. Although the local birth planning unit had performed “birth control measures” after the woman bore her first and second child, “both failed due to her physical condition

On February 7, city-level authorities reversed the second report and gave the woman’s name as Xiao Huamei, or “Little Plum Blossom,” which in Chinese sounds more like a nickname than a proper name.

This report, the third, said the woman came from a village in southern China’s Yunnan province, and in 1996, her mother had asked a woman identified only as Ms. Sang to take her daughter to Jiangsu province for treatment of her mental illness. The daughter disappeared, and Ms. Sang failed to inform Xiao’s parents or the local police.

Chinese netizens were not buying what the reports were selling.

“So all the previous investigation reports are lies!” one netizen said.

“How do you explain the chain on her neck?” asked another. “And how did they manage to get married if she’s mentally ill?”

“She went missing and no one cared to tell her family? And this is not human trafficking?” yet another netizen opined.

Facing unrelenting public outcry, the Xuzhou authorities on Thursday released the fourth, and latest, report. In it, they state that Xiao Huamei is a victim of human trafficking, and that three people have been arrested in connection with the case, including her husband, Dong, who has been charged with illegal detention. Ms. Sang and her husband have been charged with human trafficking

Continued pressure

Many netizens praised the latest report as a step closer to the truth. Others were angry that the authorities acted only after public outcry. Some still have questions.

“We need follow-ups. What’s her age? Where’s their marriage license?” one netizen asked.

“We need to see proof other than a report. If this is not the final investigation and the results are wrong again, someone needs to be held accountable,” another commenter wrote.

Xu, with the CCP Xuzhou Propaganda Unit, told VOA Mandarin on Friday that social services have the mother and her eight children in care.

Xu said that because of limited time and resources, the first two reports didn’t provide clear picture of the facts, which led to the conclusion that she wasn’t being trafficked.

“But now we are actively pursuing this case. I hope netizens and media can give us some room to conduct the investigation and not pressure us too hard,” he said.

Yao Cheng, a former lieutenant colonel of the CCP’s Navy Command and a women’s right activist, told VOA Mandarin that a third party needs to conduct the investigation to guarantee transparency.

“If the CCP is really confident in itself, it needs to allow other international organizations to conduct the investigation so people will actually believe the result,” he told VOA. Yao volunteered for the New York-based Women’s Rights in China, a nongovernmental organization, from 2007 to 2016.

Yao also pointed out that China’s longtime one-child policy has resulted in an imbalanced male to female ratio, especially in rural areas, where people value sons over daughters.

The “natural sex ratio” at birth is 105 boys for every 100 girls, according to the World Health Organization, because a few extra males are needed to offset their tendency to die at a younger age than females. But in China, the ratio has sometimes exceeded 120 boys for every 100 girls. The result is that in 2020, there were 34.9 million more males than females in China, making it a challenge for men to find a wife, especially in China’s rural areas, where gender imbalance is even greater, according to the BBC.

“The gender imbalance has resulted in more human trafficking of women in China’s rural areas,” Yao said. “Authorities and police usually turn a blind eye to these activities, and some even profit from it.”

The sixth wave of covid continues its decline and hospital pressure falls sharply day by day, but deaths from the coronavirus remain high, today almost 400

Covid in Spain: hospital pressure continues to fall, but the number of deaths remains high


Image of the SARS-COV-2 coronavirus. Courtesy photo

We start today with the hospital pressure of covid.

The number of patients in health centers stands at 13,623 (10.9%), 817 less than yesterday (14,440).

In the ICUs, today there are 1,633 patients with SARS-CoV-2 (17.4%), while the data yesterday was 1,700. They are 67 less.

Cumulative incidence

The accumulated incidence falls another 126 points and drops to 1,566, maintaining the trend of recent weeks, and the number of cases in the last day is 53,055, up to a total of 10,555,196 infected since the pandemic began.

By region, Cantabria has the highest incidence (2,371) and Andalusia the lowest (591).

By age groups, it is those under 11 years of age who continue with the highest incidence figure (2,531) and people between 60 and 60 years of age the lowest (865).

Deaths

The most negative figure in the evolution of the sixth wave of covid is deaths. On the last day 393, up to an official total since the pandemic began of 95,606.

In the line of the last weeks, the admissions for covid are much less than the discharges.

Admissions are 1,180 and discharges 1,938, including that of actor Antonio Resines, after more than a month and a half admitted, much of that time in the ICU.

PCR positivity continues to decline, although it is still above 30 percent.

From this Thursday, February 10, thanks to the good evolution of the sixth wave, masks are not mandatory on the street.

expensive street masks
Two women walk down the street, with and without masks. EFE/David Aguilar
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