Archbishop of Canterbury hopes for social care inquiry after coronavirus

The Archbishop of Canterbury has said he hopes for a Royal Commission into social care after the coronavirus pandemic.

Speaking to BBC News, Justin Welby said he hoped there would be lessons learned after this crisis, mentioning a Royal Commission, a rarely used form of public inquiry.

The archbishop said: “What I hope and pray that we learn is first of all that we cannot base our society on the idolatry of wealth, even of health.

“Secondly, that we build a vision of the society we want. We have a commission of inquiry into what we learned from this, not to blame but to learn.

“We have Royal Commission on how we look after social care.”

When asked whether austerity measures should be put in place after the pandemic, he said it would be “catastrophic”, particularly for already disadvantaged people.

The archbishop also spoke about mental health in the pandemic, stressing that there is reasonable anxiety which may be difficult to talk about.

He said: “When I talk to the doctor who I talk to from time to time he says the point about anxiety and depression is they’re there to tell you something.

“Loss, grief, anxiety are traumas and trauma has to be gone through and you can’t do it just with the stiff upper lip.”

Last month the archbishop delivered the first assembly for the newly-formed virtual Oak National Academy, telling pupils “patience, positivity, and keeping going under pressure” will sustain hope.

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Categories: Archbishop of Canterbury, Coronavirus, News, Social Care Inquiry

The Preacher Hustle

As the COVID-19 lockdown has progressed, Mosques and other religious venues have been eerily empty. Ramadan has started and the COVID-19 induced disruption of the rituals that Ramadan usually consists of, has given Muslims a unique opportunity to examine the religious status quo.

Religion is like marmite; there are those who love it, those who hate it and those who feel everything in between. It is extremely personal. One thing I can say for certain is that in most cases religion creates a glass ceiling that inhibits true human unity because there is the inevitable othering of the non-believer. When this othering becomes absolute, it is often the first step for many of those who I have worked with on the other side of a terrorist conviction.

I learned the term “preacher hustle” from Ismael when he questioned me after one of the informal talks I gave at Cafe Sara off Edgware road. Cafe Sara was a fashionable sheesha venue that was a second home for middle eastern professional criminals. I later found out Ismael was a former PKK assassin who was now selling his trade on the street. His question was whether what I was doing, speaking to them about connecting to a higher consciousness beyond imagination and appetite, was a “Preacher Hustle”; he was puzzled by my continued talks and regular support for this community without the presence of a charity bucket.

The evangelical vigour of the 90’s Dawaah movement was a powerful force pre-9/11 and the Islam that it propagated had less of the political top down ambition and more of a relational understanding that emphasised brotherhood and community. Something attractive to those coming from a underclass background like myself. Perhaps it was the fact that my early experience was idealistic and I was surrounded by  converts whose  experiences echoed Malcolm X’s words;

“I have eaten from the same plate, drank from the same glass, slept on the same bed or rug, while praying to the same God— with fellow‐Muslims whose skin was the whitest of white, whose eyes were the bluest of blue, and whose hair was the blondest of blond—yet it was the first time in my life that I didn’t see them as ‘white’ men. I could look into their faces and see that these didn’t regard themselves as ‘white’”.

However, this entry level romantic humanism was soon hi-jacked by the religious paradigm. Religion as a concept in the west relates to a set of beliefs that is held by a group of people reflected in a world view and often expressed with some form of ritual. The divine laws dictated within these belief systems are based on texts. This creates a transactional system where the religious observer abstains from sin to be awarded with a divinely authorised version of the same thing in the next life.  This reward system fits perfectly into a consumer system that also relies upon imagination but never liberates the individual from his lower consciousness or reptilian mind. So in other words, anticipate and dream over buying that expensive leather coat, restrict yourself by not spending on anything else then you will be rewarded with the leather coat. And see yourselves as part of the cooler group and look down upon those without.

This text based simplistic understanding and its validation through proselytising was something that I saw a lot of when I first discovered Islam with the Malcolm X craze in the nineties. I had grown up  in a single parent family on a white underclass estate in Farnborough just outside of the army town of Aldershot. The area was also one of the drugs hubs for the south of England.  We had moved there when I was 8 from East London and my father left shortly afterwards leaving my mother to care for three children through being made homeless and living in a hostel to the daily racism and violence of a xenophobic community where we were the only asians.

Ben, who was one of the elders in our gang initially started looking into Islam. I recall watching Ahmed Deedat debate Christian preachers on video tape.  Each of the debaters would be grasping his text book whether Quran or Bible and trying to prove the other wrong by referring to the text.

In the 90’s the concept of atheism was not within mainstream thought and schools still sung hymns but the paradigm that Islam was taking was distinctly western. Ahmed Deedat’s methodology of debate was something formalised in Europe during the reformation.

This was in contrast to what had happened in the 60’s when Europeans were travelling to the East to study Islam as an Eastern Philosophy and bringing back the teachings of Maulana Rumi and Ibn Arabi  but in between we had the re-contextualisation of the term Jihad in order to propagate recruitment to the Afghan conflict and Saudi sponsored Mosques with £20000 pound sponsorships.

As someone who has spent over a decade in the rehabilitation of the some of the toughest Terrorists and most recently IS members, I cannot help but raise my head above the pulpit and ask “Is anyone looking at the BS that these guys are following?” As the late great Robert Anton Wilson said “Your always following someones belief system, someones b s!”

Let me be clear that I am not attacking the ritualistic practice or an individual searching for spiritual awakening within a collective through moral symbolisms of systems like Islam, Hinduism, Judaism etc. I am simply asking all of us who proscribe ourselves to a particular group to consider the possibility of stepping back from own imagined allegiances to a more universal perspective. To consider the fact that everyone is searching for tranquility and that if someone is aggressive towards you, it is a veil borne of their own vulnerability. To consider we approach each other without ego and with compassion and truly understand and practice the othering does not separate us from the one true community of this earth; the community of humanity. I do not claim any enlightenment but I do bask in the reward of love and stillness that such an approach delivers and it is this that compels me to invite you to join me.

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Categories: Community, mosques, Opinions, Preacher Hustle

Italian woman returns home after 18 months as hostage in eastern Africa

A young Italian woman returned to her homeland on Sunday after 18 months as a hostage in eastern Africa.

Silvia Romano lowered her face mask briefly to display a broad smile after she stepped off an Italian government plane at Rome-Ciampino International Airport.

She hugged her mother and other family members, and touched elbows instead of shaking hands with Italian foreign minister Luigi Di Maio.

Ms Romano, 24, was working as a volunteer with an Italian humanitarian group when she was abducted in November 2018 during an attack by gunman in Kenya.

Italian premier Giuseppe Conte has thanked the Italian intelligence agents who worked for her release, which took place on Friday in Somalia.

Ms Romano was taken to the Italian Embassy in Mogadishu after she was freed.

Rome-based prosecutors investigate crimes committed abroad against Italian citizens, and they are expected to question her about the kidnapping.

Italian news reports said the abductors eventually passed her into the hands of militants linked to Somalia’s al-Shabab Islamic extremists. Al-Shabab has been blamed for a series of kidnappings of foreigners along Kenya’s coast.

Friends and acquaintances in the Milan neighbourhood where Ms Romano’s family lives applauded from windows, balconies and on the streets when the plane carrying Ms Romano home landed in Rome.

Italian media also have reported that she converted to Islam while in captivity.

Neither her family nor Italian officials have commented on the assertion.

When she got off the plane, Ms Romano wore a loose-fitting garment over her hair and African outfit while she also sported a surgical mask, disposable gloves and booties to guard against Covid-19.

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Categories: Africa, Al Shabab, Kidnapping, News, Somalia

GCHQ reveals last message from German Second World War network

The last recorded message to be intercepted from a German military communications network at the end of the Second World War has been revealed to the public for the first time.

It shows that Britain’s Bletchley Park code breakers carried on working in the dying days of the war to ensure there would be no final stand by the Nazis, according to GCHQ historian Tony Comer.

Mr Comer added the message, released to mark the 75th anniversary of VE Day, gives “a small insight into the real people behind the machinery of war”.

With the Allies closing in and the network having retreated to the German town of Cuxhaven, a messenger who is identified only as Lieutenant Kunkel sent out a statement.

The intercepted message, which was sent as he signed off on 7 May 1945 at 7.35am, said: “British troops entered Cuxhaven at 1400 on 6 May – from now on all radio traffic will cease – wishing you all the best. Lt Kunkel”.

This was immediately followed by: “Closing down for ever – all the best – goodbye”.

Bletchley Park code breakers were collecting communications from the German Brown network.

By 1944, the network’s outstations had spanned across Europe from western Germany to the Baltic coast and was sending reports about the development of German experimental weapons.

Mr Comer said: “These transcripts give us a small insight into the real people behind the machinery of war.

“While most of the UK was preparing to celebrate the war ending, and the last of the German military communicators surrendered, Bletchley staff – like today’s GCHQ workers – carried on working to help keep the country safe.”

It is among the release of a number of never-before-seen messages which give an insight into the final hours of a German communications network, according to GCHQ.

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Categories: bletchley park code, Bletchley Park Code Breakers, Last Message from the Nazis, Nazis, News

VE-Day showed writing was on wall for fight against Japan, veteran remembers

A Second World War veteran has told of the “wonderful” moment he learned about victory in Europe, while he was still in action in China.

Bill Ramage was called to service in August 1942, before being deployed as an RAF wireless operator in the China and India.

It took him six weeks from leaving docks in Glasgow to reach Mumbai, and he spent some time in the country before being told he would be moved to China in the fight against the Japanese.

The 96-year-old, of Grangemouth near Falkirk, recalled being raided by soldiers of a “Chinese warlord” and having breakfast with Lady Mountbatten during his time there.

He was in the British 14th Army, which was a multinational force comprising of units from Commonwealth countries.

When victory in Europe was declared, the servicemen spent the day celebrating, believing that it meant Japan would surrender soon.

He told the PA news agency: “VE Day was wonderful. We only had one vehicle and it took all 15 of us through the streets of Kunming – by that time we had a few drinks.

“We got on the Jeep and the commanding officer drove all through the towns while we were singing at the top of our voices and waving Union Jack flags.

“By that time we realised that if the war in Europe was about to terminate, it was on the wall that the Japanese would not be long behind.”

Japan surrendered in August, which brought the Second World War to its close.

Mr Ramage then spent eight months in India as his repatriation was held up due to riots at the beginning of the country’s independence campaign.

He was awarded the Burma Star for his service.

VE-Day is being commemorated on Friday to mark 75 years since the war in Europe ended.

Mr Ramage has Union Jack flags in his garden and plans to follow the coverage of tributes to those who fought in the war.

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Categories: Japan, News, Second World War, VE, Victory in Europe

Israeli billionaire conjures water out of thin air in parched Gaza

A Georgian-Israeli billionaire has found an innovative solution to the Gaza Strip’s chronic water crisis.

Michael Mirilashvili wants to deliver hundreds of generators that produce drinking water out of thin air.

His company, Watergen, sent a machine to a Gaza hospital last week in a rare case of Israeli-Palestinian co-operation in the Hamas-ruled enclave.

Gaza’s water situation is dire. Since the 2007 Hamas takeover of the crowded Palestinian territory, Gaza’s 2 million people have endured a crippling border blockade by Israel and Egypt that froze virtually all trade and most travel.

The 13-year-old lockdown, along with three Israel-Hamas wars, has produced chronic power cuts and damaged Gaza’s infrastructure, contributing to water contamination.

Gaza relies on an aquifer as its main source of potable water. But over-extraction has allowed sea water to seep in, rendering 97% of the area’s water undrinkable.

Mr Mirilashvili told the AP news agency he wants to send more water generators to Gaza “because they are our neighbours and it’s a great pity to look at them suffering from such severe water shortages”.

He spoke days after one of his machines was installed on the roof of the Al-Rantisi Medical Centre in Gaza City.

Just a day after delivery, the generator, a large blue cube roughly the size of a vending machine, began producing cold, clean water for the hospital’s paediatric cancer ward.

Functioning like a dehumidifier, the machine extracts moisture from the air and converts it into drinking water.

The machine sent to the Gaza hospital is a medium-sized model and generates about 800 litres a day.

Watergen says its largest generators can provide clean drinking water to thousands of people. The company has also developed a new consumer version for home use.

Watergen’s technology was initially developed for military use in 2009, but it shifted gears to civilian markets after Mr Mirilashvili bought the company in 2017.

Mr Mirilashvili, who was born in Georgia, controls a vast business empire that has included casinos, hotels, oil, real estate and Russia’s largest social network.

He donated the generator to the hospital after he was approached by Jerusalem-based Palestinian businessman Fayez Husseini, a former chief executive of Palestinian mobile phone company Wataniya.

Mr Husseini said for this project, Israeli authorities gave quick approval to move the generator across the border. Although there were no dealings with Hamas authorities in Gaza, he said he did not expect any trouble there either.

“I think both sides need to take electricity and drinking water off the table,” he said. “This should not be part of politics.”

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Categories: Gaza, Gaza Hospital, Israeli, News, Water

Police in New York interrupt Jewish funeral amid coronavirus concerns

Tensions between police and members of New York City’s Hasidic Jewish community have flared up again after a crowded funeral procession was interrupted by officers.

Video posted on social media showed officers in protective masks chasing a minivan through Brooklyn’s Borough Park neighbourhood as it carried the body of a deceased rabbi.

The officers can be heard shouting at dozens of people marching behind the van to get out of the street and onto the pavement.

A 17-year-old boy was taken into custody and issued a summons for disorderly conduct after he was accused of pushing a police official, according to a police spokeswoman.

The confrontation came two days after Mayor Bill de Blasio stoked divisions with a series of tweets after he went to Brooklyn to oversee the dispersal of thousands of people who crowded the streets of Williamsburg for the funeral of another rabbi.

New York has banned any gatherings, of any size, for any purpose as the coronavirus has been linked to at least 18,000 deaths in the city in just a few weeks.

Mr De Blasio called the large gathering “absolutely unacceptable” in one tweet.

In another, he said: “My message to the Jewish community, and all communities, is this simple: the time for warnings has passed.”

Republican senator Ted Cruz has sent a letter to Attorney General Bill Barr urging the Justice Department “to closely monitor New York City” for potential religious discrimination in the wake of Mr de Blasio’s tweets.

State Senator Simcha Felder, who represents Borough Park, posted a tweet after Thursday’s confrontation saying “terrorising people by sending in armies of cops during such stressful times is not helpful at all. @NYCMayor – we need real leadership. Stop the chaos now.”

Dov Hikind, a former state assembly member who is the founder of a group fighting anti-Semitism, said people violating social distancing rules in Brooklyn are relatively small in number and are behaving in ways that goes against Judaism’s central tenant of preserving life.

He said: “I’ve begged and pleaded with the minority that exists within our community that don’t give a darn – don’t give a damn – about themselves, their families or the community.

“You can’t have funerals with hundreds of people. You can’t have people praying in synagogues. You can’t do those things when people’s lives are on the line. It violates everything in Judaism.”

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Categories: COVID, De Blasio, Jewish Community, Jewish funeral, New York, News, Police

Islamic State supporters jailed for sending money for fighters

Two “committed” supporters of the so-called Islamic State group have been handed substantial jail sentences for sending thousands of pounds to help fighters in Iraq.

Ayub Nurhussein, 29, and Said Mohammed, 30, admitted funding terrorism by transferring £2,700 in three instalments via Denmark between April and July last year.

Chicken shop delivery worker Nurhussein, of Urlwin Road, south-west London, also pleaded guilty to four charges of having terrorist bomb-making manuals and three of sharing grisly IS propaganda by WhatsApp to his landlord.

He was handed an extended sentence of 13 years – nine and a half years in prison with a further three and a half-years on extended licence – for possessing the terror documents.

He was also jailed for seven years and three months for terror funding and four years and six months for the dissemination charges, with all the sentences to run concurrently.

Mohammed, from Longsight, Manchester, whose contact in Iraq was said to be connected with the IS hierarchy, was jailed for five years and three months.

The Old Bailey heard that both defendants were Eritreans who had sought asylum in Britain.

Nurhussein had succeeded but Mohammed, who came into Britain via a refugee camp in Calais in 2008, was refused leave to remain and lived in the UK illegally.

In 2012, Nurhussein was jailed for 42 months for robbery with an imitation handgun.

Prosecutor Alistair Richardson said the defendants became “deeply radical” and had supported IS in whatever ways they could.

He said: “They wished to travel to Islamic State territory to join them. From the United Kingdom, the two of them, together, offered their support financially.

“They arranged for the provision of, and provided funds for, their Mujahideen, or fighter, brothers, who remained in Iraq fighting for that organisation.”

The pair hatched a plan to send money, after Mohammed’s contact in Iraq, named only as Wassim, urged him to help raise funds from “brothers from abroad” to support IS efforts.

Wassim told him: “The situation is bad, my brother. The situation is bad at all levels in Iraq.

“If there are brothers… that would still give support, tell them this is a time of seriousness and this is a time when the Mujahideen (fighters) really need you.”

Mr Richardson said Wassim arranged for a go-between in Denmark to enable money to be sent to IS with “no problems”.

On April 20 last year, a transaction of £1,300 was made from an account in Manchester to a Western Union bank branch in Copenhagen.

A second transaction of £599.19 was made by Nurhussein on June 5 to the same bank.

On July 2 the process was repeated, with Nurhussein transferring £800 to the Danish bank.

Sentencing on Friday, Judge Rebecca Poulet QC said: “Based on all the material I have seen, I conclude that both men have deeply held radicalised beliefs and that they were and possibly still are committed to the cause of the proscribed organisation Islamic State.

“It is quite clear that both men were wholehearted supporters of this terrorist cause and that both wished the funds to go to support the fighters of that organisation.”

The “most grave and alarming” aspect of Nurhussein’s case was his possession of documents setting out how to make explosive devices, the judge said, adding: “This is particularly so when I view it in the context of his other activity and his beliefs.”

The IS propaganda videos he shared were professionally produced and showed the beheading and execution of enemies of IS, encouraging people to the terror group’s cause, she said.

The judge said Wassim appeared to be associated with “central figures” within IS and the money was intended to assist activities to endanger life.

Even though a psychologist had found Mohammed to be “easily compliant”, the judge found he was “committed to the cause of IS and seeking to widen the group of financial supporters for the organisation at the behest of his contact Wassim”.

Detective Superintendent Will Chatterton, head of investigations at Counter Terrorism Police North West, said: “Today’s result demonstrates the strength of being part of a Counter Terrorism network that spans the UK. The joint work during this investigation ensured a terrorist cell was disrupted and that those involved faced justice.”

Commander Richard Smith, head of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: “I am very pleased with today’s sentences.

“The Met works with other police forces and security services to provide a counter terrorism network, both at home and abroad, whose strength and effect is continually felt by those who conspire to commit acts of violence and terror.

“Today’s result was a direct consequence of that network. Working with our counter terrorism network colleagues in Manchester, we quickly identified the activity of these two individuals, who contrived to get money to Daesh, and have brought them to justice.”

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Categories: Ayub Nurhussein, counter-terrorism network, Islamic State, News, Said Mohammed

Women who ‘travelled to Syria to join IS’ fighting removal of UK citizenship

Two British-born women who allegedly travelled to Syria to join the so-called Islamic State group are mounting an appeal against the Government’s decision to revoke their citizenship.

The women – who are of British-Bangladeshi heritage, and known as C3 and C4 for legal reasons – are being held with their young children in “appalling conditions” in refugee camps in Syria.

C3 is in the al-Roj camp with her children, the youngest of whom is just two, while C4 is being held with her children in the al-Hawl camp, where conditions have been described by the International Committee of the Red Cross as “apocalyptic”.

Both women had their British citizenship revoked last November on the grounds of national security.

They are challenging that decision at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC), a specialist tribunal which hears challenges to decisions to remove someone’s British citizenship on national security grounds.

Their lawyers say neither woman is entitled to Bangladeshi citizenship and the decision to remove their British citizenship was therefore unlawful as it rendered them “stateless”.

The court also heard that Shamima Begum – one of three east London schoolgirls who travelled to Syria to join IS in February 2015 – is set to have the latest round of her legal challenge to the decision to revoke her British citizenship heard by the High Court in June.

At a preliminary hearing conducted remotely on Monday, Dan Squires QC, representing C3 and C4, said the conditions in which they were being held were “horrendous”, with C4 held in “a camp for 5,000 people which is housing 74,000”.

He said the effect of the decision to deprive them of their British citizenship meant that, even if they were able to leave the camp with their children, they have “no country to return to”, leaving them both “essentially trapped”.

He said this meant both women faced “the awful choice of either remaining with their children or… sending their children back to England, not knowing when, or indeed whether, they will see them again”.

Mr Squires said their appeals needed to be determined as quickly as possible as, the longer the case took, “the greater the risk of serious and irremediable harm” to the women and their children.

In addition to challenging the decision on the grounds it made them stateless, C3 and C4 argue that Home Secretary Priti Patel failed to give due regard to the “equality implications” of how the decisions “might impact on Muslim communities”.

Mr Squires said in written submissions that the Home Office should disclose whether Ms Patel considered “whether her approach to deprivation has a disproportionate impact on Muslims and/or those of south Asian ethnic origin” and whether she considered “the impact on good relations in the UK between members of those groups and others caused by measures that are (or are perceived to be) used disproportionately on Muslims and/or those of south Asian ethnic origin”.

Mr Squires further argued on behalf of C4 that she was “the victim of trafficking when she travelled to Syria”, which he said also rendered the decision to deprive her of her British citizenship unlawful.

Lisa Giovannetti QC, for the Home Office, agreed that the issues of statelessness should be dealt with as a preliminary issue before a full trial of C3 and C4’s case, but argued that it would not be appropriate for the other issues to be ruled on before a full hearing.

Mrs Justice Steyn ruled that a further preliminary hearing to determine whether the decision to deprive C3 and C4 of their British citizenship rendered them stateless should be heard in November.

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Categories: British born women, Islamic State, Joined IS, News, revoke citizenship, Travelled to Syria, Travelled to Syria to join

Key workers remembered in silent tributes across Northern Ireland

Silences in memory of key workers who have lost their lives in the coronavirus pandemic have been held across Northern Ireland.

The acts of tribute were particularly poignant in hospitals where health workers thought of fallen colleagues.

More than 100 healthcare staff have died with Covid-19, including Pat McManus, 60, a nurse from Co Tyrone who had been working in a Staffordshire hospital.

From the Assembly chamber at Stormont to hospitals across the region, the minute of silence was observed.

Socially distanced staff lined the roads at Craigavon Area Hospital in Co Armagh and Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry while there were gatherings outside the Belfast City Hospital, which houses the region’s Nightingale facility.

At the Mater Infirmorum Hospital in Belfast, doctors, nurses and support staff gathered briefly in the atrium to pay tribute to fallen frontline workers.

There was a burst of spontaneous applause as the minute ended before staff swiftly returned to their posts.

Across the city at the Ulster Hospital, senior nurse Roisin Devlin was among those who took part in the tribute, and described it as “very poignant”.

She said staff gathered in a communal area of the ward to allow everyone to show their respect and patients to join to “remember the dead and highlight that they will never just be a number, but a much-loved member of staff”.

“In healthcare, teamwork is so important and when you lose a member of that team, it is like losing a family member,” she told the PA news agency.

“My thoughts will be with the families of those who died, but also with their work colleagues who need to continue working, knowing a member of their team is no longer there.

“Staff feel very strongly that we should all honour those who lost their lives by carrying out the minute’s silence so we will be forming a guard of honour in the ED (emergency department) along the corridor to show solidarity with our colleagues.”

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Categories: COVID, Lost their lives, News, Northern Ireland, Tributes