, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/headlines/society/20210512STO04005/
Thursday, May 20, 2021
Friday, May 14, 2021
Chinese persecutors of Falun Gong get sanctions by the U.S.
Falun Dafa reports that “U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has announced sanctions against a Chinese official who perpetrated human rights abuses against Falun Gong practitioners in Chengdu City, Sichuan Province in China.“
“Today I am announcing the designation of Yu Hui… for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely the arbitrary detention of Falun Gong practitioners for their spiritual beliefs,” said Secretary Blinken at a press briefing.
Yu and his immediate family are therefor now banned from traveling to the United States.
Mr. Erping Zhang, Falun Dafa Information Center spokesperson stated that they “applaud the US Government and “Secretary Blinken” for issuing these sanctions on this official who “drove tremendous human suffering in Chengu against people who practice or support Falun Gong,”.
“This will surely send a potent message across China that the world is watching and there will be real-world consequences for persecuting Falun Gong practitioners,” Zhang added. “As the news spreads among the CCP’s security apparatus, it will very likely make some think twice about perpetrating further abuses.”
The sanctions were announced as the State Department transmitted its 2020 Annual Report on International Religious Freedom to the U.S. Congress. The report cites illegal arrests, detention, and forced organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners.
Last year, the U.S. Government sanctioned Huang Yuanxiong, chief of China’s Xiamen Public Security Bureau Wucun police station in Fujian Province for his involvement in gross human rights violations against Falun Gong practitioners.
Yu’s Chengdu City: A Hotbed of Suppression
Chengdu is known as having been particularly harsh in recent years in its crackdown against Falun Gong believers in the city.
Among those victimized in Chengdu during Yu’s tenure as a key official was Ms. Liu Guiying an engineer who was detained for over 20 months without trial and then sentenced illegally in 2018 to three years in prison for practicing Falun Gong and filing a complaint over previous torture and abuse. She subsequently suffered deliberate malnourishment and torture at Chengdu’s Women’s Prison.
Yu’s name was included in a database of 9,000 6-10 officials submitted by Falun Gong human rights workers to the State Department earlier this year.
Former Official of “China’s Gestapo”
Yu is the former director of the CCP’s notorious 6-10 office. Referred to by rights activists as the CCP’s “Gestapo for Falun Gong,” the 6-10 office was an extralegal police task force responsible for carrying out the mission of eliminating Falun Gong.
Established by former CCP leader Jiang Zemin and announced in a speech to elite cadres a month before the campaign against Falun Gong was announced in 1999, the organization has long existed outside China’s legal framework. Jiang granted it wide-ranging powers to use “every means necessary” to wipe out Falun Gong.
In his book A China More Just, human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng describes being shocked by the extent of the 6-10’s operations. “The immoral act that has shaken my soul most is the 6-10 Office and policeman’s regular practice of assaulting women’s genitals,” Gao wrote after his 2005 investigation. “Of those persecuted, almost every woman’s genitals and breasts and every man’s private parts have been sexually assaulted in a most vulgar fashion.”
In addition to torture and sexual abuse, 6-10 Office agents also administratively sentence Falun Gong practitioners to labor camps and abducted adherents straight from their homes to brainwashing classes. As noted in a 2011 article on the 6-10 Office in the Jamestown Foundation’s China Brief, “transformation” and coercive thought reform are a central aspect of the agency’s activities.
In addition to direct involvement in rights abuses, the 6-10 Office has possessed significant power to force the hands of other Party and government bodies.
“The 6-10 office is just like Hitler’s Gestapo,” says Guo Guoting, a Chinese human rights lawyer in exile. “They are powerful and they got enough financial support from the government so… they secretly control all the Falun Gong practitioners in their local areas.”
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
In Europe, 24 million of 15-34 young people are using psychoactive drugs
Popularized in the 1960’s by artists and mass media such as : “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” (LSD) by the Beatles, “Cocaine” by J.J. Cale, “Purple Haze” (cannabis) by Jimmy Hendrix, etc., drugs use have extensively developed to become part of our culture since the middle of the last century with the psychedelic musics, the Beat Generation (Kerouac, Ginsberg, Cassady, etc.), the psychologist Timothy Leary “pope of the LSD” and the counter-cultural hippie movement. Drugs invaded all the aspects of society, becoming a symbol of rebellion among the youth, a political, cultural and social dissent and a new style of life. On the last 2020 European Drug Report of EMCDDA mentioned that in Europe, 24 million young people are using psychoactive drugs, of which 18 million use cannabis.
The problem
The main drug used in Europe is the cannabis with marijuana and hashish as joint, bong (smoked), the bhang (a drink) and used in Space cakes. For the youth, cannabis is the entrance door to the world of drugs. If initially it was used as a “soft drug” or “recreative drug” with a 0,2% of THC (the liposoluble psychoactive substance), rapidly with genetic engineering technics it reached a 20-30 % THC range with a toxicity level interfering with many vital functions of the body and worse for children.
Despite the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of the UNODC classifying cannabis on Schedule IV, decades of lobbying and challenges by vested interests, with WHO Recommendations, acting to declassify cannabis and related cannabinoids, it was agreed on December 2, 2020, thanks to some wise government representatives, UNODC, INCB and experts to only re-reclassify cannabis in Schedule I, so, still under control and only accessible for scientific and medical purpose.
The last 2020 European Drug Report of EMCDDA mentioned that in Europe, 24 million of 15-34 young people are using psychoactive drugs (with 18 million of cannabis users) and it is estimated that at least 9,000 overdose deaths occurred, the mean age being 42 but starting at 15 years old.
This report also put the stress on the overall high social costs of drugs supported by the society, going far beyond the use of the drugs themselves:
- for the public health with healthcare and treatment: 135 000 people entered treatment related to cannabis use,
- for the public safety: traffic accidents, gangs, crimes, terrorism,
- for the lost in labor productivity, money laundering,
- for undermining states governance by corruption of officials,
- for the degradation of environment due to waste toxic chemicals, deforestation, soil degradation and water issues .
Moreover, the drug market in Europe is increasing. It represents a minimum of 30 billion Euros per year shared as: some 12 billion for cannabis (39% of the EU drug market ) coming from Morocco and EU; 9 billion for cocaine (31%) from Central and South America; 7,5 billion for heroin/opioids (25%) from Afghanistan; 1 billion for amphetamine and methamphetamine and 0,5 billion for MDMA (5%) from the EU, Middle East (captagon) and Africa.
In addition currently, some 730 new psychoactive substances (NPS) are found on the European retail market, gathering the synthetic cannabinoids, synthetic opioids and benzodiazepines.
And more, the drug market is linked with criminal activities such as human trafficking (sexual exploitation, forced labor, organ harvesting), child exploitation and migrant smuggling.
The solution
A lot has been discussed about the drug problem, Conventions were written and signed by governments, including on the drug protection of the most vulnerable: the children (CRC article 33, 1989).
What is missing is a basic Education on the drug subject: what they are and what they do. This should be set up as an early primary prevention education, before the youth are contacted by the dealers boasting of the illusory quality of their products in order to better trap the ignorant and by omitting to talk about the following disastrous use consequences. This education is first under the responsibility of the parents, then the surrounding civil society and above all implemented by the government, when not serving special interests.
Leonardo da Vinci said already in the 15th century: It is ignorance that blinds us and misleads us and Will Durant in the 20th century added: Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance.
To educate the youth and empower them against the harmful effects of drug use are the main priorities of the Foundation for a Drug Free Europe and its hundred associations and groups across twenty European countries, through the Drug Education Prevention Program The Truth About Drugs which are cooperating with more and more countries in the world to put an end to the production by putting and end to the demand. More information about the organization at: www.fdfe.eu
- UNODC: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
- WHO: World Health Organization
- INCB: International Narcotics Control Board
- EMCDDA: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction
- CRC: Convention on the Rights of the Child
Saturday, May 8, 2021
Rachel Zoll, much-admired AP religion writer, dead at 55
Rachel Zoll, who for 17 years as religion writer for The Associated Press endeared herself to colleagues, competitors and sources with her warm heart and world-class reporting skills, died Friday in Amherst, Massachusetts, after a three-year bout with brain cancer. She was 55.
Zoll covered religion in all its aspects, from the spiritual to the political, and her stories reached a global audience. But her influence was far greater than that. Other publications often followed her lead, and AP staffers around the world depended on her generosity and guidance.
“Rachel was one of the most universally beloved colleagues we had,” said AP’s managing editor, Brian Carovillano. “She was also one of the best reporters, on any beat. … She had a knack for finding the story or angle that no one else considered but is packed with insight and surprises.”
“Most importantly,” he added, “she was always the best kind of colleague, always available for help or consultation. … She always had time for everyone.”
Zoll was at the forefront of coverage of two papal transitions, the clergy sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, and tensions within many denominations over race, same-sex marriage and the role of women.
She often broke news, as in 2014, when she was the first to report Pope Francis’ appointment of Blase Cupich to become the new archbishop of Chicago.
But she also told stories in depth: a 2016 election-year piece examining how conservative Christians felt under siege in a changing nation. A series about Christian missionaries from Africa launching initiatives in the United States. A feature about two churches in Georgia — one black, one white — trying to bridge build a connection by confronting racism.
Not all of her stories were so heavy. In 2005, she reported from Tullahoma, Tennessee, on a Bible study class called “Finding the Way Back to Mayberry” developed by two men who believed watching “The Andy Griffith Show” could lead to spiritual enlightenment.
“Mayberry may be fictitious, but its lessons are not,” preacher Pat Allison told Zoll.
Her work was honored repeatedly by the Religion News Association; it gave her a Special Recognition Award in September 2018, saluting her work over the years and her collegiality.
“She was one of the great personalities in the profession –- or really anywhere,” said RNA contest chairman Jeff Diamant at the awards banquet. “This makes it really hard to get mad at Rachel Zoll, even when she beats you on a story in your hometown.”
Frank Baker, who was Zoll’s editor when she joined the AP’s Providence office in 1996, nominated her for the AP’s most prestigious in-house honor -– a Gramling Award, which she won in 2018
“I’ve worked with countless outstanding journalists. None is better than Rachel,” wrote Baker, now AP’s news editor for California. “She never gets outworked. She never gets intimidated by a subject. And she never loses her sense of humor.”
Zoll, who earned a bachelor’s degree from Tufts University and a master’s from the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs, worked in her hometown at The Salem (Mass.) Evening News before joining the AP in Boston in 1995.
She moved on to Providence for a short stay before being appointed correspondent in Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1998. She returned to Providence as correspondent the next year, and became a New York-based religion writer in May 2001.
Laurie Goodstein, The New York Times’ religion writer from 1997 to 2019, said Zoll was revered by her competitors on the beat.
“Rachel mastered the art of interrogating powerful religious leaders and holding them to account without being confrontational or disrespectful,” said Goodstein, now the Times’ deputy international editor.
“She would go to the microphone at a press conference, face a panel of Catholic bishops peering down from a dais, and ask the pivotal question that cut right to the heart of the matter,” Goodstein said via email. “Then amidst the hubbub in the press room, she would hammer out a clear, even-handed, compelling story on the religious controversy of the day.”
One of Zoll’s frequent sources was the Rev. James Martin, a Catholic priest who is editor-at-large of the Jesuit publication America. He recalled her laughter, staccato-like and frequent.
“Rachel was not only an amazing reporter, who was dogged in her pursuit of a story, but a wonderful person: warm, smart, funny,” Martin told the AP. “Sometimes when she called me for a story, we spent more time laughing than talking about the story.”
Zoll became ill in January 2018 as she was helping negotiate a major expansion of AP’s religion coverage via a grant from the Lilly Endowment. A few weeks later, she was diagnosed with the incurable cancer glioblastoma.
Even after that diagnosis, her years of source-building and intricate preparation ensured that AP was first to receive the news of the death of renowned evangelist Billy Graham on Feb. 21, 2018.
Zoll was born in Salem, where her father, Samuel Zoll, served as city councilor and mayor before embarking on a judicial career that included 28 years as chief justice of the Massachusetts District Courts. He died in 2011.
She is survived by her mother, Marjorie Aronow Waldman; three older siblings and their spouses — Barry Zoll and his wife, Susan; Cheryl Zoll and Eric Sawyer, and Risa Zoll and Tim Williams; and five nieces.
Cheryl said her sister had other talents, beyond journalism — she was a gifted musician. Over the years, she played piano, French horn and trumpet.
She even joined an all-woman accordion orchestra — the Main Squeeze. In 2006, she recalled a performance at a New York venue when one band member took a sledgehammer to a squeezebox.
“There were times in the first year or so when I wanted to quit. I felt humiliated onstage,” she wrote. “But then I realized that no matter how many times we bombed, it was always great to step outside the dead-seriousness of adulthood and do something ridiculous like playing James Brown with 14 other accordionists while a friend smashed an instrument into pulp in front of a crowd.
“That night at Irving Plaza, I realized how lucky I am: I’m with the band.”
Friday, May 7, 2021
Iceland’s ring road: Europe’s most sustainable road trip
Depending on the time of year, Iceland can be cloaked in an ethereal palette of green or white, as it experiences the lightest of nights or the darkest of days. And either landscape makes for an idyllic backdrop to a road trip that puts sustainability front and centre.
The capital of Reykjavik embodies traditional Scandinavian design and is home to only 200,000 inhabitants (including legendary artist Björk for half of the year), yet innovation is the driving force behind the bright facades. These principles extend throughout Iceland’s countryside – the island nation is mostly powered by geothermal energy combined with other renewable sources that make it close to 100 per cent green.
Travellers seeking to explore the home of the elves – or huldufólk – take to the ring road. This highway that borders the island was carefully built around the residences of these spirits, in order not to disturb them. And tourists can create even less disturbance by renting a whisper-quiet electric car in the capital; it won’t run low on power as there are plenty of high-speed chargers available to use along the route.
Opportunities to be a part of the rural environment abound on this classic Icelandic road trip, with wild camping allowed on uncultivated land (as long as it’s for one night only) and free campsites available for those looking to pitch up for longer. For those who prefer two wheels to four, the route is used by so many cyclists that drivers happily share the quiet roads. All journeys turn up something unexpected: multiple waterfalls carve their way through the basalt; lagoons hide among the jagged rock formations; pearlescent glaciers and tiny churches built miles from civilisation appear when you least expect them.
Recommended
The ring road also provides access to the famed geothermal blue lagoon and spa retreat – another example of sustainability, powered by the landscape. It’s built using durable, camouflaging materials to make the structure a continuation of the moss-covered volcanic rock that encircles it, plus has its own sustainable skincare line made from the silica, algae and minerals found here, as well as serving local, organic food in its restaurants.
Locally sourced food is easy to come by in Iceland. Everything from tomatoes and cucumbers to bananas – cultivated in geothermal and solar-powered greenhouses outside Reykjavík – is grown here. The abundance of energy and water means that Friðheimar, one of the oldest greenhouses that’s a half-hour drive inland from the ring road, is able to supply 70 per cent of the country’s tomatoes. Dessert sauce, mixers, juice, chutney and pickles all come from their bumper crop. In the restaurant, tourists can enjoy the novelty of a cheesecake made from green tomato, cinnamon and lime followed by a coffee or beer infused with this surprisingly versatile ingredient.
As green as the road trip itself might be, what about the journey to get there? Carbon offsetting is often seen as an abstract, nebulous concept, but not here: Iceland leads the way on carbon capture by dissolving carbon dioxide in water and turning it into rock. It may sound like science fiction, but Carbfix is happy to bring tourists behind the curtain for a guided tour of this ground-breaking facility.
Silja Y Eyþórsdóttir from Carbfix offers an insight into Iceland’s sustainable approach, which started much earlier than other countries. “In the 1950s, Iceland decided to move away from fossil fuels for their district heating system and switched to geothermal heat, perceived as an expensive and bold move at the time. The transition came with a lot of investment in new infrastructure, and it wasn‘t easy, but it paid off in the end.”
It’s why they’ve just started building the Coda Terminal facility in west Iceland, where CO2 emissions from Northern Europe will be transported by boat to be turned to stone, providing storage for three million tonnes per year when it’s complete.
Perhaps the huldufólk are sharing their wisdom with their fellow islanders; not only is a trip around Iceland’s ring road beautiful, it could also provide a vision for the sustainable future of travel.
After 8 years, India and European Union to resume free trade pact talks
After eight years, India and the European Union are set to resume negotiations for an ambitious and comprehensive free trade agreement. An announcement on the formal resumption is expected to be made at a virtual summit between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and top leadership of the 27-nation grouping on Saturday.
Official sources in the EU also said the free trade agreement package will include an investment protection pact as well as a framework on geographical indication.
Launched in June 2007, the FTA talks between India and the EU hit a roadblock in May 2013 when the two sides failed to bridge substantial gaps on crucial issues, including tariff, data security status for the IT sector and market access.
India and the EU will agree to resume the negotiations at the virtual summit between Prime Minister Modi and top leadership of the bloc, sources said Thursday.
The two sides are also likely to announce a connectivity partnership at the summit that is aimed at boosting cooperation in sectors like railway, maritime and aviation as well as in the digital domain to bring people of the two sides closer to each other, sources said.
Prime Minister Modi was scheduled to visit Portugal for the India-EU summit but it was called off because of the coronavirus crisis. Both sides then decided to hold the deliberations virtually.
A strategically important grouping for India, the EU as a whole was country’s largest trading partner in 2018. India’s bilateral trade with the EU in 2018-19 stood at $15.6 billion with exports valued at $57.17 billion and imports worth $58.42 billion.
Wednesday, May 5, 2021
Madrid Popular Party doubles strenght and wins elections
Isabel Díaz Ayuso, a complete unknown without much trajectory only two years ago, is consolidating her position as a political phenomenon. The Madrid president and PP candidate is the big winner of the elections in the Community of Madrid, where she has swept to the point of winning more seats than the three left-wing parties combined, which will allow her to govern comfortably and without needing Vox for every law. The right-wing bloc has clearly strengthened and won 78 seats (65 for the PP and 13 for Vox) compared to 58 for the left (24 for Más Madrid, 24 for the PSOE and 10 for Podemos). Just two years ago, the difference between the two blocs was four MPs. Madrid thus swings even further to the right, but thanks to the spectacular increase of the PP, because Vox is left with a result very similar to that of two years ago.
The hard blow to the left has an immediate consequence: Pablo Iglesias leaves all his positions in Podemos and will not stay in the regional Assembly: “I will not be a stopper for a new leadership. I don’t know what destiny is, walking I was what I was”, he said as a farewell quoting Silvio Rodríguez after pointing to Yolanda Díaz as his successor.
A historic turnout, 11 points higher than in 2019, has not only not lifted the left, but has sunk it much further, especially due to the collapse of the PSOE, which has just won the elections in Catalonia, but has hit a bump in Madrid with a fall of more than 10 points that lead it to have the worst result in its history, and to tie in seats with a formation with hardly any means such as Más Madrid, which at the last moment of the count achieved a historic first place on the left by just over 4,000 votes.
Díaz Ayuso has not achieved an absolute majority – she is just four seats short – but the abstention of Vox would be enough for her to be invested. It now remains to be seen whether or not this group will want to enter the Madrid government, although the results make that possibility unlikely.
The left has failed in its attempt to seek a turnaround by mobilising the southern vote. The key to this fiasco is the PSOE’s collapse, which in less than two years has lost a good part of its support, despite having the same candidate who in 2019 amply won the elections in the community, Ángel Gabilondo, although he was unable to govern because the right-wing bloc had more seats than the left-wing bloc.
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Young people key to transforming world’s food systems
The online discussions, which centred around topics such as agriculture, education and climate change, will serve as direct input to a landmark UN Food Systems Summit, due to be held in September.
More than a plateful
Transforming food systems is critical to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said in a video message for the event.
She highlighted how “food is much bigger than what is on your plate”, noting key connections with health, environment and culture.
“This is a complex challenge, but only together will we transform our food systems to be more equitable, inclusive and sustainable and deliver the SDGs by 2030”, she said.
Profit over purpose
Henrietta Fore, Executive Director of the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF, explained why food systems much change on a planet where half of all children do not have access to healthy diets, amid a “worrying increase” in overweight and obesity.
“Too often, food systems put profit over purpose. This places the most nutritious foods often out of reach for many households”, she said.
“Families are forced to turn to heavily marketed and unhealthy alternatives. These may be cheaper and more available. But they also lead to poor nutritional outcomes, threatening children’s development and growth and — in the worst cases — survival itself.”
COVID-19 and rising hunger
The UN Food Systems Summit is organized around five “Action Tracks” to foster initiatives on issues such as boosting “nature-positive” food production and shifting to sustainable consumption patterns.
Janya Green from the United States is a youth co-chair on Action Track 1, which covers ensuring access to safe and nutritious food for all. She has been working on community food gardens since she was 12.
“As you all know, hunger worldwide is a huge problem. The number of undernourished people continued to increase in 2019. Even before taking COVID-19 into account, hunger was predicted to rise. If we do not reverse these current trends, the SDG zero-hunger target will not be met,” she warned.
‘The future is youth’
The pandemic has exposed deep-rooted inequities, including in food systems, the UN Deputy Secretary-General observed. While young people are among those hit hard by the aftershocks, Ms. Mohammed said they have also been resilient, converting challenges into opportunities.
Agnes Kalibata, the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy to the Food Systems Summit, stressed that it would be impossible to hold the event without engaging with youth.
Ms. Kalibata, who is from Rwanda, recalled that young people make up 77 per cent of the total population in Africa, and around 50 per cent of the global population.
“This is about the future”, she said. “The future is youth. The future of our world is our youth.”
UN forum examines how to make science and technology work better for all
The Multi-Stakeholder Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation for the Sustainable Development Goals (STI Forum) aims to identify gaps and promote partnerships in efforts to achieve a greener world by 2030.
In remarks to the forum, the UN Secretary-General emphasized how the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the importance of science, technology and innovation for human well-being and survival, as well as the need for greater global cooperation.
His statement was delivered by Maria Francesca Spatolisano, Assistant Secretary-General in the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.
Pandemic sparks innovations
Addressing the pandemic, the UN chief said not only was a vaccine developed in record time, but the crisis has also increased innovation in medicines and digital communications technologies.
At the same time, scientific discovery and collaborations have accelerated and new ways of delivering services have proliferated.
The Secretary-General said these advances hold promise for collective challenges beyond the pandemic, including in limiting climate disruption, reducing inequalities and “ending our war on nature”.
Billions still excluded
However, he noted that billions of people worldwide still remain largely excluded from the benefits of the information and technology revolution, and the pandemic has only exacerbated existing technology divides.
“It is essential that we work together — across borders, sectors and disciplines — to make science and technology work for everyone”, his statement said.
“Multi-stakeholder cooperation will continue to be the key, helping us to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, address climate change, end the biodiversity and pollution crises and rise to our other common challenges.”
Technology for development
The STI Forum, now in its sixth year, is part of the UN Technology Facilitation Mechanism, an online platform which supports countries in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by their 2030 deadline.
Through the platform, UN entities, Member States, civil society, the private sector, the scientific community and other stakeholders share information, experiences, best practices and policy advice.
Last June, the Secretary-General also launched a Roadmap for Digital Cooperation. Its eight objectives include achieving universal connectivity by 2030 as roughly half the world’s population, or three billion people, most of them women, do not have access to the Internet.
Thursday, April 29, 2021
László Pesty reports on the campaign "EU Minority Lives Matter"
Friday 30 of April, the Press Club Brussels Europe will be hosting in their premises, a press conference organized by László Pesty, who is the head of the campaign for the European Citizens Initiative SIGNITEUROPE.COM., also known as “EU Minority Lives Matter”.
According to their statements, “In the European Union, there are about 50 million people who belong to a national minority. Their lands are the national regions we, the civil organizers of the initiative stand for“.
The campaign has collected so far more than 1.150.000 online signatures, reaching the needed thresholds in 10 member states, making it “one of the most successful of its kind, ten days before the deadline of May 7th”.
The EU has seen 76 such citizens’ initiatives but only 6 of them have successfully met the conditions: one million signatures and 7 countries, and SIGNITEUROPE.COM, making it the 3rd most succesful of this type of initiatives.
László Pesty, a well known Hungarian filmmaker, is head of campaign, and he will be present in the Brussels Press Club. It will be a report on the current status of the petition, and to answer all questions. László Pesty takes the floor in Brussels deliberately at the same moment the plenary session of the European Parliament is taking place in Brussels.
Moreover, just a few days before the deadline of the petition, he also wants to be present himself in the heart of Europe, for a final effort in collecting the required threshold of signatures in Belgium.
Where will the conference be?
The press conference will take place at 11:00 at the premises of the Press Club Brussels Europe, and can be followed from their conference room where Pesty will answer questions, or via the Press Club TV youtube channel.
Join the press conference on line via https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFWBDOElTrmVotVrnlsI5fw
For more informarion: Yvonne Mester +36 306990938
Friday, April 16, 2021
Yet another legal win for Scientology in Germany
State of Baden-Württemberg loses in court against a Scientologist
EUToday has just reported about this new legal defeat of a German state when discriminating a Scientologist at the workplace for his beliefs. The EuToday newsportal published that “The State Administrative Court of Appeal for Baden-Württemberg dismissed the State´s appeal against a positive judgement won by a Scientologist before the Stuttgart Administrative Court”.
As reported, the statements in the headlines follow from two court decisions in Baden-Württemberg: “a judgement by the Administrative Court Stuttgart of 02.06.2020 (file no. 3 K 6690/19) and a recent decision of the State Administrative Court of Appeal for Baden-Württemberg of 04.03.2021 (file no. VGH 8 S 1886/20) which had dismissed the application of the state to grant their motion for leave to appeal”.
The state, represented by the State Air Traffic Security Agency, had been tipped off by the State Office for Protection of the Constitution about the Scientology membership of the plaintiff. The agency subsequently adjudicated the Scientologist “unreliable” basing this solely on his long-term religious membership, insinuating that he would thereby pursue illegitimate purposes. Consequently, despite his impeccable conduct, the Scientologist was prohibited from entering the security areas of any German airport. The exercise of his profession in his specialist airport related activities as an electrical engineer had factually become impossible, even though because of his professional skills, he had contributed to the security of airports across Germany and Europe in a very responsible fashion for decades.
SCIENTOLOGY MEMBERSHIP DOES NOT FORWARD ANTI-CONSTITUTIONAL ENDEAVOURS – SCIENTOLOGISTS FOLLOW THE LAW.
Pointing to the Supreme Administrative Court case law on the security of air traffic, the first instance Administrative Court in Stuttgart had already confirmed the following to be factual with regards to the Scientologist: “That the individual conduct of the plaintiff was directed in any way towards the use of violence or that the result of his conduct was directed … to materially damage the protection of the free and democratic basic order, the existence and the security of the Federation and the States, is not evident.”
The Stuttgart Admin, in a crushing blow to what the German OPC offten infers, stated that, “no factual indicators are evident that the plaintiff pursues or supports or has pursued or supported any anti-constitutional endeavours in the meaning of … the Federal Law on the Office for Protection of the Constitution during the last ten years.”
EUToday continues to report that “That the Church of Scientology and their members respect the fundamental principles of the liberal-democracy as protected in the above law, not only follows from the legal obligations in the corporate statutes of the Church but also, inter alia, from the Church´s and its members´ worldwide commitment to human rights as has been evident throughout the past decades”.
The State Administrative Court of Appeal has now confirmed the above judgement as final. The blanket insinuation in the agency´s appeal that the plaintiff, by reason of his Scientology membership, would “not constantly be willing to respect the legal order” was rightfully rejected by the Appeal Court with the words: “That this can generally be presumed for members of Scientology, is not evident.” As required by the Church of Scientology from all its members, the plaintiff had always respected the law as evident from his impeccable conduct. The Appeal Court also came to the same conclusion as the first instance court with regards to the agency´s second absurd insinuation against the plaintiff and the Church alleging there was “willingness to use violence”. The Appeal Court also set the record straight on this point stating there is “nothing evident” to that effect, “neither for the plaintiff himself nor for the Scientology Organisation.”
Eric Roux, Vice President of the European Office of the Church of Scientology for Public Affairs and Human Rights, commented: “The above court findings have rightfully confirmed that the Church and its members are law abiding. They show that the past discriminatory pillorying against the Church and its membership in Germany by certain state security agencies are nothing but blatant human rights violations. The time is well past that such agencies must be subject to international human rights law standards as provided for in guarantees of international treaties of the UN, the OSCE and the EU Human Rights Convention so that they act to protect what they were established for and not to make a Swiss cheese out of the human rights principles that they were meant to protect in the first place.”
Source of the information: https://eutoday.net/news/security-defence/2021/state-of-baden-wurttemberg-loses-in-court-against-a-scientologist
MEP Hilde Vautmans actively supports the recognition Sikhs in Belgium By Newsdesk Discover the need for Belgium and the EU to recognize Sikh...
-
Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands By Juan Sanchez Gil Discover how the education system in the Netherla...
-
Concerns Raised by Former Polish Prime Minister about Detention of Politicians and Threats to Democracy in Poland By Newsdesk Former Polish ...
Search This Blog
Pages
Blog Archive
- January 2024 (25)
- December 2023 (30)
- November 2023 (20)
- October 2023 (55)
- September 2023 (37)
- August 2023 (61)
- July 2023 (55)
- June 2023 (54)
- May 2023 (73)
- April 2023 (75)
- August 2022 (1)
- July 2022 (11)
- June 2022 (8)
- May 2022 (10)
- April 2022 (12)
- March 2022 (7)
- February 2022 (7)
- January 2022 (14)
- December 2021 (33)
- November 2021 (50)
- October 2021 (7)
- September 2021 (9)
- August 2021 (6)
- July 2021 (3)
- June 2021 (12)
- May 2021 (19)
- April 2021 (2)
- February 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (19)
- November 2020 (7)
- October 2020 (8)
- September 2020 (3)
- August 2020 (2)
Links
Labels
- #US (1)
- 2021-2022 (1)
- AFGHANISTAN (1)
- Africa (6)
- Africa Fight (1)
- after life (2)
- Ahmadiyya (1)
- Aivo (1)
- ALexander Dvorkin (1)
- Alexander Kuzmin (1)
- Algeria (1)
- America (8)
- Anticult (1)
- Archeology (2)
- Art (1)
- Artic Ocean (1)
- Asia (4)
- attacks (1)
- Avengers (1)
- babies (1)
- Bahai (1)
- BE (1)
- Bear (1)
- beeple (1)
- Belgium (1)
- Benin (1)
- best wishes (1)
- Biodiversity (1)
- birth (1)
- Black (1)
- book (1)
- Books (6)
- BREAKING NEWS (1)
- Buddhism (3)
- Bulgaria (1)
- Bursa (1)
- Catalonia (1)
- CDS (1)
- CDU (1)
- Champions League (1)
- cherry (1)
- Chick Corea (1)
- China (4)
- Christianity (17)
- Cienciologia (9)
- Civil protection (1)
- Civil Society (1)
- coercive measures in psychiatry (1)
- coertion (1)
- Colombia (1)
- Commission (1)
- Constitution (1)
- Constitutional affairs (1)
- cook (1)
- Council of Europe (2)
- covid-19 (1)
- covid19 (2)
- CRPD (1)
- cults (2)
- culture (7)
- Culture (1)
- Czech (1)
- DAFOH (1)
- defense (1)
- Defense (1)
- development (1)
- digital art (1)
- Diplomacy (1)
- disabilities (1)
- disability (1)
- discrimination (3)
- Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting (1)
- DODs (1)
- Drug Prevention (1)
- drugs (1)
- ECHR (1)
- Eckanckar (1)
- Economy (3)
- ECtHR (1)
- Edelman (1)
- Editor's choice (169)
- education (1)
- Education (7)
- Egypt (1)
- electroshock (1)
- ENTERTAINMENT (4)
- Environment (7)
- ethnics (1)
- EU (1)
- EU-Africa (1)
- EUAUSummit (1)
- Europe (68)
- European (3)
- European Parliament (2)
- European Union (2)
- Evangelical (1)
- Events (3)
- exclusive (3)
- External relations (1)
- External/international trade (1)
- extremism (3)
- face masks (1)
- face to face (1)
- Falun Dafa (1)
- Falun Gong (2)
- fanatism (1)
- farmer (1)
- Featured (2)
- FECRIS (1)
- Fiona Bruce (1)
- flag (1)
- Food (3)
- FORB (35)
- FoRB Ministerial (2)
- Forced Organ Harvesting (1)
- forum (1)
- france (5)
- freedom of belief (1)
- Freedom of Religion (1)
- freedoms (1)
- Fundamental rights (1)
- Fundamental Rights (1)
- gay (1)
- gemstones (1)
- genocide (1)
- Georgi (1)
- Germany (1)
- hacker (1)
- Head of True-Orthodox Church (1)
- Health (16)
- Henry Smith (1)
- Hindu Atheist (1)
- Hinduism (1)
- home schooling (1)
- Housing (1)
- Human Rights (31)
- Human Rights Council (1)
- Human Rights Whatch (1)
- Humanist (1)
- Hungary (3)
- Immigration (1)
- Institutions (7)
- intelectual property (1)
- Interfaith (1)
- Interfaith at UK Parliament (1)
- International (46)
- International Criminal Court (1)
- interview (1)
- Interview (2)
- involuntary commitment (1)
- Iron (1)
- islam (5)
- Islam (4)
- Israel (1)
- Israeli Palestinian Conflict (1)
- Italian Constitution (1)
- Jaswant Singh Khalra (1)
- jazz (1)
- Jehovah’s Witnesses (1)
- jewish (1)
- Jordan (1)
- Judaism (3)
- Justice and citizenship (1)
- jw (1)
- Kazakhstan (1)
- KGB (1)
- Kirill (2)
- Kremlin (1)
- Kusserow (1)
- laicity (2)
- Language (1)
- law (1)
- LGBT (1)
- Liberia (3)
- life (3)
- Liverpool (1)
- Livre (1)
- London (1)
- Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (1)
- love (1)
- Macron (2)
- Madougou (1)
- Madrid elections (1)
- martial arts (1)
- Media (1)
- medicalization of life (1)
- memory (1)
- Mental Health (3)
- mental health abuse (1)
- mental health services (1)
- metaphysical (1)
- millionaire (1)
- Ministerial (2)
- moral integrity (1)
- Moscow (1)
- Music (2)
- Nature (5)
- Nazism (1)
- new religious movements (1)
- News (141)
- next generation (1)
- nextgen (1)
- Niels Kjeldsen (1)
- no discrimination (1)
- ocean (1)
- ocean conservation (1)
- Office for the Middle East Peace Process (1)
- okupa (1)
- okupacion (1)
- Old Believers (2)
- opera (1)
- Opinion (5)
- opposition (1)
- organ harvesting (1)
- Original content (4)
- Orthodoxy (1)
- OSCE (2)
- out of body (1)
- over prescription (1)
- overfishing (1)
- Palestine (1)
- PAN (1)
- Panther (1)
- Paris (1)
- Parliament (1)
- past lives (1)
- PCP (1)
- Peace (4)
- peaceful (1)
- PEV (1)
- piracy (1)
- Poland (1)
- Politics (19)
- pollution (1)
- Pope (1)
- Pope Francis (3)
- Porto (1)
- Portugal (3)
- Prague (1)
- pregnancies (1)
- Press release (2)
- propaganda (1)
- PS (1)
- PSD (1)
- psych abuse (1)
- Psychiatry (1)
- psychs (1)
- Public health (1)
- purple jade (1)
- purple stones (1)
- Putin (1)
- Quijong (1)
- radicalism (1)
- refugees (1)
- Regional policy (1)
- reincarnation (2)
- Religion (52)
- Religious freedom (5)
- religious minorities (1)
- right to property (1)
- round table (1)
- rule of law (1)
- Russia (11)
- Russia Sanctions (1)
- Russian idea (1)
- Russian Orthodox Church (2)
- sanitizing (1)
- say no to drugs (1)
- saynotodrugs (2)
- sci-fi (1)
- science (1)
- Science&Technology (4)
- Scientologie (9)
- Scientology (8)
- SDGs (8)
- sects (1)
- secularism (2)
- security (1)
- separatism (2)
- sexual abuse (1)
- sickhism (1)
- Sikh (1)
- soccer (1)
- social (1)
- Society (21)
- soprano (1)
- Southern Ocean (1)
- Space (1)
- Spain (2)
- speculative fiction (1)
- SpiderMan (1)
- spiegel (1)
- spiritual (1)
- SPONSORED (1)
- sports (1)
- Sports (4)
- squating (1)
- statehood (1)
- Statement (1)
- Stephen Timms (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Taiwan (1)
- Talon (1)
- taxes (1)
- Tech (1)
- terror (1)
- terrorism (1)
- Theodosia (1)
- TOP NEWS (1)
- tourism (1)
- Travel (1)
- trust (1)
- Turkey (2)
- UK (3)
- Ukraine (8)
- UN (1)
- unesco (1)
- United Nations (14)
- United Sikhs (1)
- United States (3)
- UNODC (4)
- USA (1)
- USCIRF (1)
- Valdimir Poutine (1)
- Vatican (2)
- video (2)
- violence (1)
- Vladimir Putin (1)
- Von der Layen (1)
- war (4)
- Watch Tower Society (1)
- WEA (1)
- West Bank (1)
- world (1)
- WorldDayAgainstDeathPenalty (1)
- WTO (1)
- Youth (1)