Re: Politics
1576WORLD NEWS
Putin Signs ‘Fake News’ Law Punishing Russian Media For Criticizing Him
The set of laws cracks down on “fake news” and any content that criticizes Russian authorities.
By Lydia O’Connor
03/18/2019 04:52 pm ET
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a set of laws Monday allowing the Kremlin to punish online media and individuals for spreading insulting information about government officials or other content deemed to be “fake news.”
The controversial move by the censorship-friendly president allows him to punish anyone who spreads information that “exhibits blatant disrespect for the society, government, official government symbols, constitution or governmental bodies of Russia,” according to The Moscow Times, an English-language newspaper based in the Russian capital.
The punishments include fines of up to 1.5 million rubles ― approximately $22,900 ― for news outlets that repeatedly spread “fake news,” and fines of up to 300,000 rubles ― about $4,700 ― and 15 days in jail for insulting state symbols or Russian authorities.
Throughout the bills’ swift passage through Russian parliament, thousands of demonstrators protested against the legislation on Moscow’s streets, and the country’s Presidential Human Rights Council raised concern that the measures could be used to unfairly silence critics ― something critics have been on high alert over, as so many of Putin’s opponents have turned up poisoned or mysteriously dead in recent years.
Though Putin firmly denies any connection to those attacks, the Kremlin has a longstanding policy of cracking down on critics. During nationwide protests against the government in 2017, police arrested hundreds of young critics en masse in what human rights groups called a major violation.
The looming threats to the media from the Kremlin mirror the attitude of U.S. President Donald Trump, with whom Putin has maintained a close but secretive political relationship despite evidence of Russia meddling in the 2016 U.S. election. Throughout his campaign and presidency, Trump has railed against most mainstream media as “fake news,” particularly in any reports that criticize him.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/putin-ru ... 0544fe84ce
<2
POLITICS
Muslims Praise New Zealand Prime Minister For Her Empathy, Actions After Attack
Within days of the attack, Jacinda Ardern has visited mosques, promised to reform gun laws and pledged solidarity.
By Carol Kuruvilla
03/18/2019 05:56 pm ET
American Muslims are praising New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s response to last week’s mosque massacre ― and pointing out how Ardern’s words and actions sharply contrast with the way President Donald Trump has responded to white supremacists in the past.
It’s been about four days since a gunman opened fire on two Christchurch mosques during Friday prayers, killing 50 worshippers and injuring dozens more. Since the attack, Ardern has visited and listened to the bereaved community, pledged to make reforms to gun laws, and repeatedly emphasized that Muslims are a vital part of New Zealand’s community.
“They were loved ones and they were New Zealanders,” Ardern said about the victims during a press conference Sunday.
Ardern wasted no time in condemning the shootings as “terrorist attack” on Friday. She visited Christchurch’s Muslim and refugee community the next day, wearing a black headscarf over her hair and conveying a message of “love and support” on behalf of her country.
Photos of Ardern hugging and consoling community members spread quickly online.
Ardern listened to families’ concerns that some loved ones’ bodies have not yet been released by authorities ― even though Islamic tradition compels bodies to be buried within 24 hours of death. On Sunday, Ardern pledged that all victims’ bodies will be returned to families by Wednesday.
Ardern also made it clear that Christchurch survivors will be able to take advantage of government programs that provide funeral grants to citizens and visitors who are injured in an accident in the country. Since many of the victims of the shooting were their families’ breadwinners, she said the government would provide financial assistance to survivors left without income, according to The New York Times.
Even though these benefit programs were already in place, it’s encouraging that Ardern’s government is actively working to make sure Christchurch survivors get the help they need, Robert McCaw, director of government affairs for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, told HuffPost.
“You can see the compassion and openness of the New Zealand government in how it treats its Muslim citizens,” McCaw told HuffPost.
During a press conference on Monday, Ardern promised to announce reforms to New Zealand’s gun laws within 10 days of the attack, although she hasn’t provided details of these reforms.
Ardern’s actions during a time of crisis in her country has elicited admiration from U.S. Muslims.
Hoda Hawa, a Washington, D.C. director for the Muslim Public Affairs Council, told HuffPost that Ardern has done an “exceptional job” and is demonstrating how a politician should lead a country after such a horrific attack.
“She has not only remained religiously sensitive when dealing with the aftermath of the attacks, she’s also remained compassionate and aware of the role that extreme rhetoric manifests itself into hate-motivated violence,” Hawa said. “She’s continued to emphasize that New Zealander Muslims are New Zealanders, and that they are one of many communities that make up the nation.”
Ardern, 38, is New Zealand’s youngest leader in 150 years. Since becoming prime minister in 2017, Ardern has been celebrated as a progressive voice in international politics. She was the second world leader to give birth while in office. In 2018, she became the first world leader to attend the United Nations’ general assembly meeting with her baby.
Ardern has faced some criticism on home turf, however. She pledged to address the country’s affordable housing crisis by helping build 100,000 new homes within a decade. But her government had to scrap the ambitious plan this year after failing to meet its initial targets. Some critics have claimed Ardern is all style and no substance, The Washington Post reports.
Still, Ardern’s response to Friday’s massacre has earned her fans in the U.S. Farhana Khera, executive director of the civil rights group Muslim Advocates, told HuffPost that her organization commends Ardern for demonstrating an “honest, compassionate, and strong response” to the tragedy.
Khera also pointed out that Ardern has ordered a review of the country’s intelligence and security services, to determine what these agencies may have missed in the leadup to the massacre. The man charged with the murders did not come to the attention of New Zealand’s country’s intelligence or law enforcement communities before the attack.
“She’s willing to ask the hard question: Why have her country’s intelligence and security services resources predominantly been focused on Muslim communities, neglecting the white nationalist threat?” Khera told HuffPost. “This is a conversation that desperately needs to happen in our nation by our president, Congress, and intelligence and law enforcement agencies.”
Khera said Ardern’s performance has illustrated the “night and day” differences between the prime minister and Trump.
Trump, who was mentioned in the gunman’s white supremacist, anti-immigrant manifesto, has condemned the shootings as a “horrible, disgraceful thing.” But when a reporter asked if he thought white nationalism was a rising threat around the world, the president responded, “I don’t really. I think it’s a small group of people that have very, very serious problems, I guess.”
Shortly afterwards, the president echoed the racist rhetoric of “invasion” that the New Zealand shooter used to describe immigration.
“People hate the word invasion, but that’s what it is,” Trump said Friday, referring to “crimes of all kinds coming through our southern border.”
“Not only has Trump failed to acknowledge the threat of white nationalist violence, he is actively stoking it,” Khera said.
Hawa also suggested there’s a “stark contrast” between Trump and Ardern.
“When these situations occur, leaders should use the power of their bully pulpit to emphasize unity rather than continue to sow discord and marginalize communities; which is exactly what Trump continues to do,” Hawa said.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/jacinda- ... 7da9f608d9
<3
New Zealand eyes gun reforms in the wake of massacre
By Steve Benen
03/18/19 12:48 PM
The day after a massacre in two mosques left dozens dead and dozens more injured, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern understandably turned her attention to gun laws.
Ardern said at a news conference that she was advised that the gunman had five firearms – two semi-automatic weapons, two shotguns and a lever-action firearm – and that he had acquired a gun license in November 2017.
“While work is being done as to the chain of events that led to both the holding of this gun license and the possession of these weapons, I can tell you one thing right now: Our gun laws will change,” Ardern said.
She noted that there have been attempts to change the nation’s gun laws in the past, most recently in 2017, but said “now is the time for change.” She suggested she was looking at the issues around ownership of semi-automatic weapons.
The New York Times reported this morning that the prime minister and her cabinet had agreed “in principle” to an overhaul of the country’s gun laws, though there are some details to iron out.
“Within 10 days of this horrific act of terrorism, we will have announced reforms that I believe will have made our community safer,” Ardern said.
The “within 10 days” phrase stood out for me: in the wake of a brutal crime, officials are wasting no time exploring new ways to keep their citizens safe from gun violence. The authorities in New Zealand, where there is nothing comparable to the Second Amendment that exists in the United States, are acting as if new gun laws are simply a common-sense reaction to a tragic mass shooting.
“New Zealand has to have this debate,” said Alexander Gillespie, a law professor at the University of Waikato, told the Times. “This is a place where your car has to be registered, your dog has to be registered. But your gun doesn’t.”
It all sounds a bit familiar, doesn’t it?
On the other side of the planet, the Donald Trump of South America has a very different kind of debate in mind. The Wall Street Journal reported the other day:
[A]s Brazil reels from one of its worst-ever school shootings, the response from President Jair Bolsonaro’s right-wing administration and his supporters this week has been the opposite: What Brazil needs, they say, is more guns.
In a Columbine-style massacre near São Paulo on Wednesday, two young men killed eight people, mostly students at their former school, shocking a nation already accustomed to endemic and barbaric violence.
“The logic of the left is always the same: If a crazy guy uses guns to kill people, the solution is to take guns away from people who have nothing to do with what happened,” said Rogério Mendonça, deputy leader of the governing bloc in the lower house of Congress. “Now imagine if a decent person had been armed at that school. They could have stopped the attack from ending in the bloody way it did.”
Sen. Sérgio Olímpio Gomes, another close ally of the president and one of many former police officers to join the new administration’s ranks, has advocated arming teachers in response to the tragedy.
Oddly enough, this sounds familiar, too.
Postscript: To learn more about existing gun laws in New Zealand and Brazil, the New York Times put together a helpful summary.
http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show ... e-massacre
<4
WORLD
NEW ZEALAND GUN OWNERS ARE VOLUNTARILY HANDING OVER SEMIAUTOMATIC RIFLES TO POLICE: 'WE DON'T NEED THESE IN OUR COUNTRY'
BY CHANTAL DA SILVA
ON 3/18/19 AT 6:59 AM EDT
WORLD
Since Friday's deadly attack at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, gun owners have been turning up at local police stations seeking to have their own semiautomatic rifles—the weapon believed to have been used in the shootings—destroyed.
In the days since the attacks, which saw 50 people killed and dozens more injured, a number of gun owners in New Zealand have gone on social media to encourage others to follow in their footsteps. They want them to hand over their weapons and prevent another attack like Friday's from happening again.
"Until today, I was one of the New Zealanders who owned a semiautomatic rifle," one gun owner, farmer John Hart, wrote on Twitter. "On the farm they are a useful tool in some circumstances, but my convenience doesn't outweigh the risk of misuse.
"We don't need these in our country," he added, sharing an image of a police form registering his weapon for "destruction." "We have make sure it's #NeverAgain."
Hart said he had turned over his weapon to police with "no questions asked" and was told that the semiautomatic rifle would be destroyed.
He said he had been using the rifle for pest control on his farm but said that there were other ways to do the job that do not require owning such a deadly weapon.
"It's not a big deal not having it anymore. I couldn't, in good conscience, say they shouldn't be around if I still had one," he said. "Once you accept that these things can be harmful, in the wrong hands, the trade-off is a small inconvenience."
Hart said in a separate post that he was "overwhelmed by the positive responses" he had received and that the negative reactions had been few.
Hart said he had mostly blocked those sending him negative comments, writing: "The devil doesn't need any more advocates" and that he hoped that more gun owners would follow suit in turning over their weapons.
In a separate Twitter post, another New Zealander, posting under the name Fey Hag, said she too had turned over her family's weapons following Friday's attacks, writing: "When my husband died his guns were handed to family holding the requisite license. Daughter of crack-shot food hunting parents, I have used guns from the age of 9.
"Today I requested that those guns be handed in for destruction," Hag wrote.
A third Twitter user, posting under the name Blackstone, shared an image of the "arms surrender" police form on Monday, writing that after owning a firearm for 31 years, turning over the rifle was "one of the easiest decisions I have ever made."
"Since I first heard about the atrocity on Friday afternoon, I have reflected and reserved my thoughts," the social media user wrote. "Monday morning—this is one of the easiest decisions I have ever made."
The attack on the mosques marked New Zealand's first mass shooting in nearly 30 years, New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has vowed to introduce new gun laws.
Ardern said that new reforms would be announced within 10 days of the attacks, which she called a "horrific act of terrorism."
https://www.newsweek.com/after-new-zeal ... es-1365988
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