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These artists and activists want the EU to speed forced labour ban

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These artists and activists want the EU to speed forced labour ban

Artists and human rights activists this week referred to as on the European Union to hurry up laws towards compelled labour. 

In response to the Worldwide Labour Organisation (ILO), a UN company, this type of fashionable slavery affected round 27 million individuals globally in 2021.

Style is likely one of the industries most reliant on these employees.

Designer Louise Xin highlighted the difficulty with a trend present for members of the European Parliament. 

“I believe that artwork can transfer individuals in a means that politics cannot. It’s a very direct, heart-to-heart, efficiency that I all the time attempt to do. I actually consider that the easiest way to get change is to vary ourselves,” she instructed Euronews after the occasion on Tuesday.

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The anti-forced labour campaigner and Sakharov Prize fellow — the EU’s highest distinction for human proper work — is likely one of the civil society voices that the legislators wished to listen to, now that they’re starting to analyse the proposal by the European Fee on prohibiting merchandise made with compelled labour on the EU market, offered final September.

The legislative work and public opinion consciousness campaigns ought to go hand in hand, Xin stated.

“If we need to change the world, we’ve got to start out with ourselves first, by being extra acutely aware about the best way we behave, the best way we work, the best way we use our platform, and likewise our skill to take duty.”

The Asia-Pacific area has the best variety of individuals in compelled labour (15.1 million), in accordance with the ILO. Though nearly all of compelled labour takes place within the personal economic system, some is imposed by states.

Some of the debated instances is in China’s western Xinjiang area. Pressured labour in cotton fields and textile factories are a part of the measures imposed by the Chinese language authorities on members of minority teams, particularly Muslim Uyghurs.

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“The Chinese language authorities deliberately put a couple of million individuals, yearly, into so-called vocational trainings and calls it poverty alleviation programmes,” researcher and activist Jewher Ilham, the daughter of imprisoned Uyghur economist Ilham Tohti, the 2019 Sakharov Prize laureate, instructed Euronews.

The United Nations Particular Rapporteur on up to date types of slavery, Tomoya Obokata, confirmed in a report final August, that “it’s cheap to conclude that compelled labour amongst Uyghur, Kazakh and different ethnic minorities in sectors comparable to agriculture and manufacturing has been occurring within the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Area of China.”

As Pressured Labor Undertaking Coordinator at Employee Rights Consortium, Jewher Ilham has been engaged on information that features interviews with those who witnessed the circumstances of the employees.

“I’ve discovered that they work greater than 12 hours, don’t receives a commission a penny and undergo all varieties of abuses, from gender-based sexual harassment to fixed surveillance, separation from their relations and even the essential proper to get a meal was a luxurious for them, oftentimes all day they’d get a half glass of water,” she stated.

Garments factories in Bangladesh, Vietnam, Pakistan and Turkey have additionally been accused of this follow. Mining, agriculture and providers are different industries by which abuses are reported.

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Underneath the EU’s proposed laws, corporations that need to promote merchandise on the bloc’s market should perform due diligence to make sure no compelled labour was used at any level within the manufacturing course of. The Fee in the meantime plans to help them with a brand new database of compelled labour dangers primarily based on civil society investigations.

Contemplating the human rights affect that compelled labour has world wide, these two activists hope that members of the European Parliament will strengthen the deliberate laws’s provisions.

“I’m very hopeful, if the regulation is enforced very rigorously, and (that) the phrases launched within the laws are efficient and robust. For instance, it wants to incorporate transparency on import information and calls for for high-level diligence,” Jewher Ilham stated.

In response to the Fee’s proposal, member states’ authorities should “order the withdrawal of the merchandise already positioned available on the market, and prohibit to put the merchandise available on the market, and to export them” if compelled labour is discovered to have been used. Corporations may even be required to get rid of the products.

For Louise Xin, regardless of what’s out right here out there, customers have to revise their behaviour.

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“People have been carrying garments endlessly, we’ve got been producing it in completely other ways and we’ve got proven completely different ranges of respect for the supplies and the stuff we’ve got in our lives. I believe it is a matter of adjusting our hearts and our values as nicely”.

The proposal has been referred to the Committee on the Inside Market and Client Safety, and the rapporteur appointed is the Portuguese Maria-Manuel Leitão-Marques, from the S&D political group.

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Minnesota unfurls new state flag atop the capitol for the first time Saturday

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Minnesota unfurls new state flag atop the capitol for the first time Saturday

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (AP) — Minnesota officially unfurled its new state flag atop the capitol for the first time Saturday on statehood day.

The new flag and accompanying state seal were adopted to replace an old design that Native Americans said reminded them of painful memories of conquest and displacement.

The new symbols eliminate an old state seal that featured the image of a Native American riding off into the sunset while a white settler plows his field with a rifle at the ready. The seal was a key feature of the old flag. That’s why there was pressure to change both.

Officials didn’t pick any of the most popular designs submitted online that included options like a loon — the state bird — with lasers for eyes.

Instead, the new design adopted in December features a dark blue shape resembling Minnesota on the left, with a white, eight-pointed North Star on it. On the right is a light blue field that to those involved in the selection process symbolizes the abundant waters that help define the Land of 10,000 Lakes.

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The new state seal features a loon amid wild rice.

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2 ISIS militants suspected in 2014 massacre of Iraqi soldiers turned over to Baghdad

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2 ISIS militants suspected in 2014 massacre of Iraqi soldiers turned over to Baghdad

Syria’s U.S.-backed Kurdish-led force has handed over to Baghdad two Islamic State group militants suspected of involvement in mass killings of Iraqi soldiers in 2014, a war monitor said Friday.

The report by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights came a day after the Iraqi National Intelligence Service said it had brought back to the country three IS members from outside Iraq. The intelligence service did not provide more details.

The Islamic State group captured an estimated 1,700 Iraqi soldiers after seizing Saddam Hussein’s hometown of Tikrit in 2014. The soldiers were trying to flee from nearby Camp Speicher, a former U.S. base.

ISIS CLAIMS RESPONSIBILITY FOR BOMBING THAT KILLED A DOZEN POLICE OFFICERS IN AFGHANISTAN

Shortly after taking Tikrit, IS posted graphic images of IS militants shooting and killing the soldiers.

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Farhad Shami, a spokesman for the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, said the U.S.-backed force handed over two IS members to Iraq. It was not immediately clear where Iraqi authorities brought the third suspect from.

A masked Islamic State soldier poses holding the ISIS flag in 2015. (Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The 2014 killings, known as the Speicher massacre, sparked outrage across Iraq and partially fueled the mobilization of Shiite militias in the fight against IS, a Sunni extremist group.

Iraq has over the past several years put on trial and later executed dozens of IS members over their involvement in the Speicher massacre.

The Observatory said the two IS members were among 20 captured recently in a joint operation with the U.S.-led coalition in the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, once the capital of the Islamic State group’s self-declared caliphate.

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Despite their defeat in Iraq in 2017 and in Syria in March 2019, the extremists sleeper cells are still active and have been carrying out deadly attacks against SDF and Syrian government forces.

Shami said a car rigged with explosives and driven by a suicide attacker tried Friday night to storm a military checkpoint for the Deir el-Zour Military Council, an Arab majority faction that is part of the SDF, in the eastern Syrian village of Shuheil. Shami said that when the guards tried to stop the car, the attacker blew himself up killing three U.S.-backed fighters.

No one immediately claimed responsibility but the attack but it was similar to previous such explosions carried out by IS militants.

The SDF is holding over 10,000 captured IS fighters in around two dozen detention facilities, including 2,000 foreigners whose home countries have refused to repatriate them. The force says fighters of about 60 nationalities had entered Syria years ago and were captured in battle.

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Kurdish authorities in northeastern Syria have said they will put on trial IS detainees, though it is not clear when such trials would begin.

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Hamas says a captive has died of wounds sustained in Israeli air strike

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Hamas says a captive has died of wounds sustained in Israeli air strike

British-Israeli Nadav Popplewell was taken captive from Nirim kibbutz by Palestinian group Hamas on October 7.

Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, has said British-Israeli captive Nadav Popplewell died of wounds sustained in an Israeli air strike a month ago.

The group’s announcement on Saturday came just hours after the Palestinian group released an 11-second video showing Popplewell with a bruised eye.

In the video republished on social media and cited by Israeli news outlets, a man is seen wearing a white T-shirt and he introduces himself as 51-year-old Nadav Popplewell from the Nirim kibbutz in southern Israel.

Superimposed text in Arabic and Hebrew reads: “Time is running out. Your government is lying.”

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Popplewell was taken captive in Nirim during the Hamas-led attack on October 7, according to Israel’s Ynet news site. His mother was also taken as a captive but later released during the exchange of captives and prisoners by Hamas and Israel last year. Popplewell’s brother was killed in the attack, Ynet reported.

The video posted on Saturday on the Telegram channel of Hamas’s armed wing is the third time in less than a month the group has released footage of captives held in Gaza.

On April 27, Hamas released a video showing two captives alive – Keith Siegel and Omri Miran. Three days earlier it also broadcast another video showing captive Hersh Goldberg-Polin alive.

The videos come amid growing domestic pressure on the Israeli government to secure the release of the remaining captives.

Reporting from Amman, Al Jazeera’s Stefanie Dekker, said this tactic of releasing videos of captives on a Saturday, when protests take place in Tel Aviv, is a way of pressurising the Israeli government.

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“This is what’s been a drip-feed if you will from Hamas. Where, by releasing videos, at times showing hostages dead, they are trying to put pressure on the Israeli government,” she said.

“But this hasn’t really changed the policies of [the Israeli] government.”

On Saturday, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum in Israel released a statement calling on the Israeli government to strike a deal with Hamas in order to secure the release of captives.

“Every sign of life received from the hostages held by Hamas is another cry of distress to the Israeli government and its leaders,” the families’ group said in its statement.

“We don’t have a moment to spare! You must strive to implement a deal that will bring them all back today.”

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Relatives of the captives also accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of not caring about those being held in Gaza and called on Netanyahu to resign.

“There is no victory and can be no victory without the return of the hostages,” a spokesperson said at a press conference in Tel Aviv on Saturday afternoon.

Despite the immense pressure, Netanyahu and his government have so far failed to strike a deal with Hamas.

Some 1,139 people were killed on October 7 when Hamas and allied fighters attacked southern Israel, and 250 captives were also taken to the Gaza Strip. Israeli officials say 128 of them are still being held in the Palestinian territory, including 36 who are dead.

Israel’s seven-month military campaign in Gaza has so far killed at least 34,971 people and wounded 78,641 others.

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