Category: Global

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  • ‘I don’t wash hands’: Defence Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth’s 2019 comment goes viral

    ‘I don’t wash hands’: Defence Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth’s 2019 comment goes viral

    An old clip of Fox News host Pete Hegseth, who claimed he hadn’t washed his hands in a decade, resurfaced and went viral on social media after US President-elect Donald Trump nominated him for the Secretary of Defence last Tuesday.

    The clip from 2019 has been reshared on X, formerly known as Twitter, after the recent nomination, with one post reaching over 1.2 million people. 

    “I don’t really wash my hands ever and inoculate myself. Germs aren’t a real thing. I can’t see them; therefore, they are not real,” Hegseth was quoted as having said in the clip. His Fox and Friends co-host Jedediah Bila appeared shocked, saying: “Someone, help me!” Hegseth later posted on Twitter that the comment was a joke. 

    The renowned host previously served in Afghanistan and Iraq, receiving the Combat Infantryman Badge. During his time with Fox News, he developed a friendship with Trump, who has made regular appearances on Hegseth’s show on the weekends.

    Trump announced Hegseth’s selection as the Secretary of Defence in a social media post on Tuesday evening. “Pete has spent his entire life as a Warrior for the Troops, and for the Country. Pete is tough, smart and a true believer in America First,” the president-elect said.

    On the one hand, Hegseth’s nomination received a mixed reaction from those in the military and the Republican Party, but on the other social media users used the viral clip to doubt that he isn’t qualified to run such a complex government department.

    According to an X user, “Why is he not nominated for Health Secretary?” Another said, “I just hope the Generals at the Pentagon have someone to talk to tonight.”

    However, some said the host was clearly joking in a clip that was nearly six years ago.

  • Trump names vaccine skeptic RFK Jr. to head health dept

    Trump names vaccine skeptic RFK Jr. to head health dept

    Donald Trump on Thursday tapped anti-vaccine activist and conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as his secretary of health in the latest provocative nomination from the incoming Republican president.

    “We want you to come up with things and ideas and what you’ve been talking about for a long time and I think you’re going to do some unbelievable things,” Trump told Kennedy Jr. during an event at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Thursday evening.

    Moving quickly since his election last week, Trump has embarked on a campaign of political shock and awe as he rolls out an administration designed to upend — and in some cases literally dismantle — the US government.

    Several of Trump’s choices for top jobs — including a TV news anchor at the helm of the Pentagon and an ally embroiled in sexual misconduct allegations for attorney general — have unnerved the Washington establishment.

    Trump also announced Thursday that his personal attorneys, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, who defended him at trial this year over hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels, would serve as deputy attorneys general.

    Kennedy, a scion of the famous political family who is popularly known as RFK Jr., is a longtime environmental campaigner who abandoned a fringe bid for the presidency to endorse Trump against Democratic candidate Kamala Harris.

    Trump had said previously he wanted Kennedy to “go wild” in changing health care, and the two campaigned together, promising to “Make America Healthy Again.”

    Vaccine scepticism 

    If approved by the Senate, which Trump’s Republican Party controls, 70-year-old Kennedy will take over the Health and Human Services Department, a mammoth institution with a budget of close to $2 trillion.

    In a statement explaining his choice, Trump echoed many of Kennedy’s talking points, saying, “Americans have been crushed by the industrial food complex and drug companies who have engaged in deception, misinformation, and disinformation.”

    The nomination could meet opposition, given Kennedy’s history of promoting medical conspiracy theories  — including the disproven claim that childhood vaccines cause autism — and saying that the COVID-19 vaccine was deadly.

    He is also burdened by a string of colourful and even bizarre stories from his personal life.

    These include his statement that a parasitic worm once entered his “brain and ate a portion of it and then died.”

    An admission this year that he was behind the long unsolved mystery of a dead bear dumped in New York’s Central Park a decade ago raised eyebrows.

    Energy 

    Trump has yet to select treasury and commerce chiefs, or an education secretary, whose department he wants to abolish.

    During the event in Mar-a-Lago on Thursday evening, he said that wealthy North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum would be appointed secretary of the interior, putting him in charge of national parks which could be opened to more oil exploration.

    “We’re going to slash energy costs,” Trump told the event organized by the America First Policy Institute, where he was introduced by libertarian Argentinian President Javier Milei and Hollywood A-lister Sylvester Stallone.

    “Rocky” star Stallone told the audience, which included ever-present Tesla CEO Elon Musk, that Trump was a “mythical character.”

    Trump joked that he couldn’t get Musk out of his Mar-a-Lago resort.

    “He likes this place, I can’t get him out of here,” he said. “I like having him here as well. He’s done a fantastic job, an incredible mind.”

    Trump’s first recruitments — including secretary of state pick Marco Rubio, a traditional conservative on foreign policy — were seen as relatively mainstream choices.

    But then he caused concern even among some in the Republican Party as he appeared to put preference for personal loyalty above expertise or suitability.

    – Personal lawyers –

    A major shock was naming Matt Gaetz — a firebrand Republican far-right figure in Congress who was drawn into a years-long criminal probe into sex trafficking — as future attorney general.

    Gaetz denies wrongdoing and has never faced charges but was still being investigated by the House Ethics Committee.

    That decision followed Trump’s nomination of former Democratic congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard — who met Syria’s president Bashar al-Assad and echoes Russian President Vladimir Putin’s talking points — to take charge of the nation’s most sensitive secrets as director of national intelligence.

    Trump recruited Pete Hegseth — a combat veteran who has no experience running large organizations but is a host on Trump’s favorite Fox News network — as defense secretary.

    Trump and his aides have vowed that much of his second term will be about clearing the deck of federal officials who acted as a restraining influence on his populist, right-wing agenda during his first term.

    Gaetz’s appointment would hand Trump, whose election likely means being freed from a string of serious criminal investigations, the advantage of a fierce partisan at the top of the Justice Department.

     

    He intends to place a third personal attorney at the department by nominating John Sauer as solicitor general, which represents the US government at the Supreme Court.

    Trump has repeatedly threatened to go after a variety of political opponents.

  • Trump names Senator Marco Rubio to be US secretary of state

    Trump names Senator Marco Rubio to be US secretary of state

    President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday named adversary-turned-ally Senator Marco Rubio to be secretary of state in his incoming administration. Rubio is expected to push for a harder line on relations with China, Cuba and Iran.

    President-elect Donald Trump named Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida as his nominee for secretary of state on Wednesday, setting up a onetime critic who evolved into one of the president-elect’s fiercest defenders to become the nation’s top diplomat.

    The conservative lawmaker is a noted hawk on China, Cuba and Iran, and was a finalist to be Trump’s running mate this summer. 

    On Capitol Hill, Rubio is the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He has pushed for taking a harder line against China and has targeted social media app TikTok because its parent company is Chinese. He and other lawmakers contend that Beijing could demand access to the data of users whenever it wants.

    “He will be a strong Advocate for our Nation, a true friend to our Allies, and a fearless Warrior who will never back down to our adversaries,” Trump said of Rubio in a statement.

    Trump made the announcement while flying back back to Florida from Washington after meeting with President Joe Biden.

    The selection is the culmination of a long, complicated history between the two men. During their tense competition for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016, Rubio was especially blunt in his criticism of Trump, calling him a “con artist” and “the most vulgar person to ever aspire to the presidency.” 

     

    He tried to match Trump’s often-crude attacks by joking about the size of Trump’s hands in a reference to his manhood. Trump responded by branding Rubio as “little Marco,” a nickname that stuck with the senator for years.

    But like many Republicans who sought to maintain their relevance in the Trump era, Rubio shifted his rhetoric. As speculation intensified that Trump might pick him as his running mate, Rubio sought to play down the tension from 2016, suggesting the heated tone simply reflected the intensity of a campaign.

    “That is like asking a boxer why they punched somebody in the face in the third round,” Rubio told CNN when asked about his previous comments. “It’s because they were boxing.”

    Rubio was first elected to the Senate in 2010 as part of the tea party wave of Republicans who swept into Washington. He quickly gained a reputation as someone who could embody a more diverse, welcoming Republican Party. He was a key member of a group that worked on a 2013 immigration bill that included a path to citizenship for millions of people in the country illegally. 

    But that legislation stalled in the House, where more conservative Republicans were in control, signaling the sharp turn to the right that the party — and Rubio — would soon embrace. Now, Rubio says he supports Trump’s plan to deploy the U.S. military to deport those in the country illegally.

    “We are going to have to do something, unfortunately, we’re going to have to do something dramatic,” Rubio said in a May interview with NBC.

     

    He also echoes many of Trump’s attacks on his opponents as well as his false or unproven theories about voter fraud. After Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts in what New York prosecutors charged was a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election, Rubio wrote a column for Newsweek saying Trump had “been held hostage” in court for “a sham political show trial like the ones Communists used against their political opponents in Cuba and the Soviet Union.”

    Trump, meanwhile, has backed off his insistence while president that TikTok be banned in the United States, and he recently opened his own account on the platform. 

    A bill that would require the Chinese company ByteDance to sell TikTok or face a ban in the United States was supported by Rubio even as Trump voiced opposition to the effort.

    Rubio’s Democratic counterpart on the Senate Intelligence Committee, Chairman Mark Warner of Virginia, praised the pick.

    “I have worked with Marco Rubio for more than a decade on the Intelligence Committee, particularly closely in the last couple of years in his role as Vice Chairman, and while we don’t always agree, he is smart, talented, and will be a strong voice for American interests around the globe,” Warner said in a statement.

    Earlier Wednesday, Trump announced that longtime aide Dan Scavino will serve as a deputy without giving a specific portfolio, campaign political director James Blair as deputy for legislative, political and public affairs, and Taylor Budowich as deputy chief of staff for communications and personnel. All will have the rank of assistant to the president.

     

    Trump also formally announced Stephen Miller, an immigration hard-liner, will be deputy chief of staff for policy and homeland security adviser. That had previously been confirmed by Vice President-elect JD Vance on Monday.

    Blair was the political director for Trump’s campaign and, once Trump became the presumptive GOP nominee, the political director for the Republican National Committee. He previously worked on Trump’s 2020 campaign in Florida and was a top aide for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. 

    Scavino was a senior adviser on Trump’s campaign and, in his first term in the White House, he worked as a social media director. 

    He began working for Trump as a caddy at one of Trump’s golf courses, and was part of the small group of staffers who traveled with the president across the country for the entirety of the campaign. He frequently posts memes and videos of Trump’s campaign travel online, cataloguing the campaign from the inside on social media.

    Before joining the campaign, Budowich worked for the pro-Trump Super PAC, Maga Inc., and after Trump left office, Budowich served as his spokesman while working for Trump’s political action committee, Save America. 

    “Dan, Stephen, James, and Taylor were ‘best in class’ advisors on my winning campaign, and I know they will honorably serve the American people in the White House,” Trump said in a statement. “They will continue to work hard to Make America Great Again in their respective new roles.”

    Miller is one of Trump’s longest-serving aides, dating back to his first campaign for the White House. He was a senior adviser in Trump’s first term and has been a central figure in many of his policy decisions, particularly on immigration, including Trump’s move to separate thousands of immigrant families as a deterrence program in 2018. 

  • Murder suspect linked to prominent Khalistan activist netted in Canada

    Murder suspect linked to prominent Khalistan activist netted in Canada

    A man wanted for murder in India, who is also an alleged associate of a prominent Canadian Khalistan activist, has been arrested in Canada on gun charges, a local broadcaster said on Wednesday.

     

    Arshdeep Singh Gill, 28, was one of two men arrested in late October in Milton, Ontario and charged with the illegal discharging of a firearm after showing up at a local hospital, CTV News said.

     

    One of the two suspects was treated for a non-life-threatening gunshot wound during an apparent shooting in the area, which local police are now investigating, according to a police statement.

     

    CTV said Gill and the other suspect, Gurjant Singh, remain in custody pending a bail hearing that has yet to be scheduled.

     

    According to a January 2023 Indian Ministry of Home Affairs notice, Gill is wanted on suspicion of murder, extortion, the smuggling of large quantities of drugs and weapons, and terror financing.

     

    He is also described in the document cited by CTV and seen by AFP as having been “very close” to Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a naturalized Canadian citizen and prominent Khalistan campaigner who was killed in Vancouver in 2023.

     

    Ottawa has accused India of orchestrating Nijjar’s murder, and linked a broader campaign targeting Canadian Sikh activists to the highest levels of India’s government.

     

    India has dismissed the allegations, which have sent diplomatic relations into freefall, with both nations last month each expelling the other’s ambassador and other senior diplomats.

     

    Canada is home to the largest Sikh community outside of India, and includes activists for “Khalistan,” a fringe separatist movement seeking an independent state for the religious minority carved out of Indian territory.

     

    Any support for the Khalistan movement within India today, which dates back to the country’s 1947 independence, faces a swift crackdown.

  • Trump, Biden shake hands in White House, vow smooth transfer

    Trump, Biden shake hands in White House, vow smooth transfer

    US President-elect Donald Trump thanked President Joe Biden for pledging a smooth transfer of power as the victorious Republican made a historic return visit to the White House on Wednesday.

    “Politics is tough, and in many cases, it’s not a very nice world. It is a nice world today and I appreciate it very much,” Trump said after the two men shook hands in the Oval Office.

    Trump, 78, added that the transition would be “smooth as you can get.” Biden greeted Trump in front of a roaring fire, offering him congratulations and saying: “Welcome back.”

    The 81-year-old Biden invited his sworn rival to the White House — despite the fact that Trump, who refused to admit his 2020 election loss, never afforded Biden the same courtesy.

    Biden, who dropped out of the election in July but saw his successor Kamala Harris lose to Trump last week, said he was “looking forward to having a smooth transition.”

    “We’ll do everything we can to make sure you’re accommodated, [have] what you need,” he told Trump.

    Triumphant Trump

    Their talks after the public handshake may have been a bitter pill to swallow for Biden, who branded Trump a threat to democracy.

    Biden was expected to push during the meeting for Trump to continue US support for Ukraine’s fight against Russia, which the Republican has called into question.

    Ahead of the White House visit, Trump addressed Republicans from the House of Representatives at a Washington hotel near the Capitol, which a mob of his supporters stormed in 2021 to try to reverse his election loss. An ebullient Trump suggested that he could even be open to a third term in office — which would violate the US Constitution.

    “I suspect I won’t be running again unless you say, ‘He’s good, we got to figure something else,’” he said, drawing some laughter.

    Trump’s party looks set to take both chambers of Congress and consolidate his extraordinary comeback.

    He was accompanied at the meeting with Republicans by the world’s richest man Elon Musk, whom he named on Tuesday as head of a new group aimed at slashing government spending. Trump has launched a flurry of nominations as he moves swiftly to name his administration.

    Picking his team

    Biden’s Oval Office invitation restored a presidential transition tradition that Trump tore up when he lost the 2020 election, refusing to sit down with Biden or even attend the inauguration.

    Then-president Barack Obama had welcomed Trump to the White House when the tycoon won the 2016 election.

    But by the time Trump took his last Marine One flight from the White House lawn on January 20, 2021, he had also been repudiated by many in his own party for having stoked the assault on the Capitol.

    That period of disgrace soon evaporated, however, as Republicans returned to Trump’s side, recognizing his unique electoral power at the head of his right-wing movement.

    Trump enters his second term with a near-total grip on his party and the Democrats in disarray. He has spent the week since the election at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida assembling his top team, as the world watches to see how closely he sticks to his pledges of isolationism, mass deportations and sweeping tariffs.

    Trump named Space X, Tesla and X boss Musk, and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, to lead a “Department of Government Efficiency (‘DOGE’)” — a tongue-in-cheek reference to an internet meme and cryptocurrency.

    Trump is moving quickly to fill out his administration, picking a host of ultra-loyalists.

    Trump nominated Fox News host and army veteran Pete Hegseth as his incoming defence secretary. An outspoken opponent of so-called “woke” ideology in the armed forces, Hegseth has little experience similar to managing the mammoth US military budget and bureaucracy.

    Trump named South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem — an ally who famously wrote about shooting her dog because it did not respond to training — as head of the Department of Homeland Security.

  • UK’s The Guardian stops posting on ‘toxic media platform’ X

    UK’s The Guardian stops posting on ‘toxic media platform’ X

    Britain’s The Guardian newspaper announced Wednesday it would no longer post content from its official accounts on Elon Musk’s X, branding it a “toxic media platform” home to “often disturbing content”.

    “We think that the benefits of being on X are now outweighed by the negatives,” the left-leaning newspaper, which has nearly 11 million followers on X, said in a statement on its website.

    It added that its “resources could be better used promoting our journalism elsewhere”.

    “This is something we have been considering for a while given the often disturbing content promoted or found on the platform, including far-right conspiracy theories and racism,” the statement noted.

    “The US presidential election campaign served only to underline what we have considered for a long time: that X is a toxic media platform and that its owner, Elon Musk, has been able to use its influence to shape political discourse.”

    The paper’s main X handle — @guardian — was still accessible Wednesday but a message on it advised “this account has been archived” while redirecting visitors to its website.

    The Guardian noted that X users would still be able to share its articles, and that it would still “occasionally embed content from X” within its articles given “the nature of live news reporting”.

    It also said its reporters would still be able to use the site and other social networks on which the paper does not have an account.

    “Social media can be an important tool for news organisations and help us to reach new audiences but, at this point, X now plays a diminished role in promoting our work,” The Guardian added.

    Musk purchased X, formerly known as Twitter, for $44 billion in 2022 and has consistently courted controversy with his use of the platform, particularly during the recent US presidential election.

    Musk endorsed Donald Trump and used his personal account boasting nearly 205 million followers to sway voters in favour of the Republican, with a slew of incendiary, misleading posts criticised for cranking up the political temperature.

    Trump on Tuesday announced that the Tesla and SpaceX billionaire would lead a so-called Department of Government Efficiency in his incoming administration, alongside the entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy.

  • WhatsApp group admins will need licenses

    WhatsApp group admins will need licenses

     

    Zimbabwe has taken the lead in controlling misinformation spread through WhatsApp, with the African nation gearing up to ask group admins to acquire a licence.

    Group admins will now have to register with the Post and Telecommunication Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ), which will then issue a licence to administer the group. 


    The Zimbabwean Minister of Information, Publicity, and Broadcasting Services, Monica Mutsvangwa, said that the licensing would assist in tracking sources of false information which incite violence and unrest.


    Group admins will be required to provide personal information for the licensing process, which will cost at least 50 dollars.


    The government has defended the move, which could raise privacy issues, by saying that it is necessary for maintaining law and order in the country.


    The Zimbabwean government argued that the imposition of licensing for group admins will help authorities to identify and hold accountable those responsible for disseminating misleading information that may lead to social unrest.


    This requirement aligns with WhatsApp’s encryption policy and efforts to enhance user experience and security. However, it is intended to align with the country’s Data Protection Act (DPA) as well, which allows the authorities to have access to personal information that can be used to identify a person directly or indirectly. WhatsApp group admins will then come under DPA. 


    In October 2024, WhatsApp introduced new features, including a ‘Search on Web’ tool for users to verify shared images, an improved chat widget for iPhone users, expanded chat themes, and a new call link feature for easier video and voice calls. 


    Critics of the new regulation have reservations on privacy concerns, data breaches, curbing freedom of speech and government surveillance. 


    Notably, the new rules came amid a growing global concern about the role of social media apps in spreading misinformation and disinformation. Recently, Canada asked TikTok to pack up its operation in the country.

  • 11m children under five exposed to hazardous smog in Punjab: Unicef

    11m children under five exposed to hazardous smog in Punjab: Unicef


    The toxic smog has reached alarming levels and almost engulfed entire north and central Punjab, including the provincial capital, and some parts of south Punjab in the last few weeks, more than 11 million children under the age of five are currently exposed to toxic air across the province. 


    “The worse air quality will affect young children and pregnant women the most,” United Nations Children Emergency Fund (UNICEF) country representative Abdullah Fadil cautioned the other day. 


    The intensity of smog could be gauged from the fact that it peaked in Multan a couple of days ago after Lahore despite ‘so-called’ anti-smog measures adopted by the Punjab government.


    The smog-related diseases have also prevailed as a good number of people, especially children, are being admitted to hospitals in different cities.


    Realising the gravity of the situation, the provincial authorities restricted all outdoor activities in Lahore, including school closures, a ban on entry in parks and open eateries and closure of shops at 8pm last week.


    On Monday, the provincial government also banned all outdoor activities in Multan, Gujranwala, and Faisalabad, the most affected districts after Lahore, till November 17. 


    “Approximately 12% of deaths in children under five in Pakistan were due to air pollution but the impact of this year’s extraordinary smog [on children and pregnant women’ will take time to assess,” UNICEF’s Fadil said. 


    “Young children are most affected because of smaller lungs and lack of immunities. They also breathe twice as fast as adults and consume more air, often through the mouth, along with pollutants, leading to life-threatening respiratory diseases,” he noted.


    The Unicef representative further said that the potential impact of air pollutants could be extreme on babies’ developing lungs and brains, as breathing in particulate air pollution could damage brain tissue and undermine cognitive development, with lifelong implications and setbacks.


    “When pregnant women are exposed to polluted air, they are more likely to give birth prematurely, face respiratory issues, and their babies may have a low birth weight.” 


    The Unicef, Fadil added, was supporting awareness measures as part of the Punjab government’s official plan to reduce the smog. “The global body is also advocating and working with government departments to reduce emissions with the help of strategies like transitioning to renewable energy,” he maintained.

  • Short cut to feminism: How an assault changed Korean woman’s outlook

    Short cut to feminism: How an assault changed Korean woman’s outlook

    Aspiring South Korean writer On Ji-goo never considered herself a feminist but changed her mind after being physically attacked by a man for having short hair.

    “I know you are a feminist,” her attacker yelled as he beat her up at the convenience store where she worked part-time.

    Her assailant, in his 20s, also severely assaulted an older man who tried to intervene, telling him: “Why aren’t you supporting a fellow man?”

    On was left with hearing loss and severe trauma but insisted on pressing charges—resulting in a landmark ruling last month where, for the first time in South Korea, a court recognised misogyny as a motive for a hate crime.

    “I now think I’m a feminist,” On, who wanted to use her pen name for security reasons, told AFP in an interview.

    The Changwon District Court ruling “has historical significance, but it seems to hold even greater meaning for me personally”, she said.

    The attack generated outrage in South Korea, and On became an inadvertent heroine for the country’s women’s rights movements.

    Short hair has been very loosely associated with feminism in South Korea, which remains socially conservative despite its booming economy and the global popularity of its K-pop and K-drama content.

    Same-sex marriage is not recognised, and among advanced economies it has relatively low rates of female workforce participation and one of the worst gender pay gaps.

    Militant moments

    As part of the global #MeToo movement that emerged around 2017, South Korean women held enormous rights demonstrations and won victories on issues from abortion access to harsher punishment for spycam crimes.

    In their most militant moments, some campaigners went viral by destroying makeup products or cutting their hair short on camera to protest against the country’s demanding beauty standards.

    It also saw the emergence of the extreme 4B movement, which rejects dating, sex, marriage, or childbearing with men.

    The movement, which means “Four Nos” in Korean, has been trending since Donald Trump won the US presidential election.

    But South Korea has also seen a recent anti-feminism backlash, with President Yoon Suk Yeol courting young men on the campaign trail with denials of institutional discrimination against women and promises to abolish the Ministry of Gender Equality, which his supporters claimed was “outdated”.

    The backlash previously ensnared unsuspecting victims such as triple Olympic archery champion An San, who was bullied online during the 2021 Tokyo Games for her short hair.

    Writer On said she followed the furore at the time, even reporting online abuse she saw.

    “When I first heard that having short hair meant you were a feminist, I found it absurd,” On said.

    “Athletes often find it more convenient to have short hair when they are training,” she added, noting she had cut her own hair short before being assaulted last year because of the hot weather.

    Archer An never officially commented on the online abuse, and her “pride and confidence, along with her ability to simply ignore negativity, were truly impressive,” said On.

    “Over time, I found myself (inspired by) her sense of dignity and confidence… thinking: ‘Is there really anything that I should be ashamed of?’”

    Getting worse?

    A spate of high-profile deepfake pornography cases were uncovered this summer, targeting female students and staff at the country’s schools and universities.

    A Seoul court jailed one perpetrator for 10 years last month for assaulting women who attended the nation’s top Seoul National University, saying his actions stemmed from “hatred toward socially successful women”.

    One victim, whose campaign name is Ruma, told AFP that her assailant “wanted to emphasise that no matter how accomplished a woman is, she can be trampled on and treated like a prank by men.”

    Activists such as Jung Yun-jung, who supported On through her trial, say the situation could worsen as inequality and competition for jobs increase.

    South Korea has one of the world’s lowest birthrates as well as a falling marriage rate, with experts pointing to intense competition over jobs and housing a factor, leaving young people despondent for their futures.

    On is still on medication to treat the mental and physical wounds of her attack, but she has found purpose in supporting other women who may find themselves victimised in similar circumstances.

    Feminism, in the end, is about believing that “women’s rights are equally as important”, she said.

    “In that sense, I had indeed been a feminist even before the incident.”

  • ‘Not sending pollution through missiles,’ says Indian climate expert

    ‘Not sending pollution through missiles,’ says Indian climate expert

    Punjab’s Air Quality Index, on both sides of the border between India and Pakistan, has become one of the biggest causes of concern, not just in South Asia but globally as well.


    A BBC Urdu report about the hazardous conditions of smog in Lahore and Delhi, with the former being particularly in a bad spot with AQI at 1000 plus points, Indian Punjabi correspondent Harmandeep Singh quoted Punjab Agricultural University’s Department of Climate Change and Punjab Pollution Control Authority’s study about the air pollution in the area. 


    “There is no scientific study that can prove that the fires in the villages of Indian Punjab after harvesting the crops cause air pollution in Lahore and Delhi,” says the university’s report.
    Experts say that there are scientific arguments which prove that the air pollutants created by burning the residue of harvested crops are not reaching the borders of Lahore and Delhi.


    However, on both sides of the border, stubble burning is considered to be the main cause of smog, whereas farmers claim that fire is set only to prepare the land for the next harvest. 


    Contrary to the claims of experts from Indian Punjab, experts from the country’s central educational institutions also blame the fires as the cause of Delhi’s pollution while maintaining that the contribution of this fire to pollution is very minor.


    Notably, smoke from post-harvest fires in any state, including Punjab, contributed only 4.44 percent to Delhi’s pollution this year, as per Indian research institutes.


    Satellite data of the US space agency NASA showed more fires seen on the Indian side than on the Pakistan side. Pakistani side concluded that because Lahore is close to the Indian border, so it can easily be affected by cross-border smog.


    Additionally, the Pakistani Punjab’s Environment Department claimed the reason behind the hazardous conditions of smog in Lahore is because of the “Eastern Corridor of winds” while talking to The Current a week ago. 


    Meanwhile, talking to BBC Urdu, the Department of Climate Change and Agricultural Meteorology at Punjab Agricultural University, India, said that it is natural that light and moderate winds prevail in Punjab in October and November. “For the polluted particles to move from one place to another, the speed of the air must be more than six kilometres per hour,” the department said in their defence, implying the wind is not the reason for pollution in Delhi and Lahore. 


    Puneet Kaur Dhingra, Head of the Meteorological Department, says, “Wind speed should be more than six kilometres per hour for particulate matter and smoke to move in any direction. Since October, there is light wind in eastern Punjab. Only twice the wind speed was more than four kilometres per hour.”


    Adding on, he said, “For the first time on October 5, the wind speed was recorded at 4.4 km per hour and for the second time on October 24, the wind speed was recorded at 4.1 km per hour. Therefore, the pollution created by the fires set after harvesting the crops in Punjab cannot travel in any direction.”


    University’s Department of Climate Change further asserted that the concentration of pollution and smog in a particular place during the months of October and November is associated with a drop in temperature.


    When the temperature gets warmer, the air expands and the pollutant particles disperses easily. Meanwhile, when the temperature drops like it is happening with the start if winters, the pollutant particles stay in one place and smog is created. 


    “Therefore, if there is smoke and pollution in Lahore and Delhi, there are self-generated reasons behind it.”


    Adarsh Pal Vij, the chairman of the Pollution Control Board of Indian Punjab, emphasised that the PM 10 and PM 2.5 polluting particles released from the gases produced by the stubble fires in Punjab don’t have the potential to travel much. “There is no such research which proves that the pollution of Punjab plays a role in the pollution of Delhi and Lahore. PM 10 and PM 2.5 particles do not fly as far,” he said categorically. 


    Punjab Pollution Control Board’s Environmental Scientist Avatar Singh rationalizes his claim by saying, “After harvesting, the land is set on fire in Indian as well as Pakistani Punjab, so Lahore is itself responsible for the polluted air.”


    “Even under these conditions, PM 10 particles can travel a maximum distance of 25 km, while PM 2.5 can travel a maximum distance of 50 km,” emphasised another expert as quoted by BBC Urdu. 


    Former Chairman of the Indian Punjab Pollution Control Board SS Marwaha strongly criticised the ongoing claims as he asserted, “Punjab can play an important role in the pollution of Lahore and Delhi if it sends its pollution towards these two cities through missiles.”


    Notably, Professor Vinayak Sinha of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research admitted that the impact of Punjab’s pollution on Delhi’s pollution is negligible.


    “The effect of pollution in Punjab is only in Punjab. Incidents of post-harvest fires in Uttar Pradesh or other neighboring states have a greater impact on pollution in Delhi than in Punjab,” he noted. 
    Indian Institute of Science Education and Research is a government research institute located in New Delhi and their finding say that pre-Diwali and winter analysis in Delhi found that the main cause of pollution is vehicle smoke rather than farm fires.


    Talking to The Current, Environment Department’s Secretary Raja Jahangir also highlighted the other factors contributing to the pollution.  “Lahore is a city of 15 million, with 4.5 million bikes and 1.3 million cars on roads. There are 6,800 industrial units because it is the fastest growing city in the country and has the most construction sites, as well as more than 1,200 brick kilns,” Jahangir highlighted.


    For a city spread over 1,757 square kilometres, the green cover is not enough.


    “Ideally, it needs to be more than 30 per cent, but unfortunately, it is not more than four per cent,” he said, further that the smoke emitted from harvesting of 6.6 million of rice given a boost by air pressure is disturbing the air of Lahore while it doesn’t have enough to combat.


    “Ideally, it needs to be more than 30 per cent, but unfortunately, it is not above four per cent,” he said, adding that the smoke emitted from the harvesting of 6.6 million tons of rice, combined with air pressure, is contributing to the air pollution in Lahore, which lacks sufficient resources to combat it.

    Read more: Why is Lahore more polluted than Delhi?