Home Blog Page 520

Manchin deals DC statehood — and fellow Dems — another blow

0

The Democrats’ quest to make Washington, D.C., the 51st state hit a big roadblock this week in the form of a fellow Democrat.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said he opposed Congress alone creating the new state and he believes, like Republicans have argued, that statehood for the nation’s capital needs to be done through a constitutional amendment.

“If Congress wants to make D.C. a state, it should propose a constitutional amendment,” Manchin said in an interview with the West Virginia MetroNews radio network, according to The Associated Press. “It should propose a constitutional amendment and let the people of America vote.”

In a 50-50 split Senate, D.C. statehood already had a tough shot of becoming a reality: as long as the legislative filibuster is in place the proposal would require 60 votes to advance.

Republicans have been squarely opposed to elevating the federal district to statehood status arguing it’s an unconstitutional powerplay by Democrats to add two more liberal senators to the upper chamber.

Manchin, a moderate member from a red state, has been outspoken in his opposition to eliminating the legislative filibuster too. His siding with Republicans on various issues has frustrated liberals who want to use the slim Democratic majority in the House and Senate to pass major priorities like federal voting rights legislation, police reform, D.C. statehood and raising the minimum wage to $15.

The House earlier this month passed legislation to make Washington, D.C., the 51st state and to grant its roughly 700,000 residents full representation in Congress. The strictly party-line vote in the House was 216 to 208, with all Republicans rejecting the statehood bill, dubbed H.R. 51. The legislation has support from President Biden.

D.C.’s lone non-voting delegate in Congress, Eleanor Holmes Norton, has argued that the district should be no different than the 37 others states that Congress admitted to the union without a constitutional amendment.

She put out a new statement on Friday, not mentioning Manchin by name, saying the 23rd Amendment does not need to be repealed before Congress grants statehood.

“Those who make such an assertion are conflating a policy choice and a constitutional requirement,” Norton said.

(Fox News).

Netanyahu declares national day of mourning as tragedy strikes during Lag B’Omer in Meron

0

 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared a national day of mourning for Sunday over the disaster that took place at a massive Lag B’Omer gathering at the foot of Mount Meron on Friday morning.

Dozens of people were crushed to death in a stampede that broke out in the early hours on Friday, where more than 100,000 worshippers, mostly ultra-Orthodox Jews, had gathered to honor Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, a second-century sage and mystic who is buried nearby. At least 45 people were confirmed dead and 150 injured, with dozens in serious condition, several critically.

Visiting the scene on Friday morning, Netanyahu said, “The disaster at Mount Meron is one of the most difficult tragedy’s to strike Israel. We will conduct a thorough investigation to make sure this type of tragedy never happens again.

“Sunday will be a national day of mourning. Let us all come together and pray for the victims and their families and for the wounded’s speedy recovery,” he said.

It remains unclear the specific cause of the disaster, Magen David Adom said the tragedy was likely caused by overcrowding at a narrow pass at the prayer compound. A police official said dozens taking part in the service had “slipped” on a metal floor, falling on those around them and causing a crushing domino effect.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits the scene in Meron, in northern Israel on April 30, 2021. Photo by David Cohen/Flash90.

Organizers said by late Thursday, more than 100,000 people were at the site, and another 100,000 had been expected to arrive by Friday morning.

Police were deployed at the compound by the thousands and shut down the event, and were evacuating all the participants. Roadblocks were also set up to prevent people from arriving at the scene.

“Were emergency exits marked? Was the scene under control? All of this has to be reviewed.”

Magen David Adom rescue service director-general Eli Bin said the wounded were rushed to the Ziv Hospital in Safed, the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya, Rambam Medical Center in Haifa, Poriya Hospital in Tiberias and Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem.

The event was one of the first major religious gatherings to be held after the coronavirus restrictions were lifted. Last year’s gathering had been canceled due to the pandemic.

Northern Police District Commander Maj. Gen. Shimon Lavie told local media that “as district chief, I bear full responsibility, for better or for worse. We are currently gathering information and evidence to get to the truth about what happened. I’m willing to face any investigation,” reported Israel Hayom.

Still, criticism grew in the immediate aftermath, with some saying the tragedy could have been prevented as the narrow, metal-floored walkway has for years been known a potential bottleneck on the compound.

Senior police officers told Israel Hayom the Mount Meron disaster was “a fiasco, start to finish.”

“When it comes to an event in a specific area; when every police officer in the district knows every inch of the place, and there are specific orders on how to handle things, this cannot be the result,” said an officer.

A former top Northern District officer refused to absolve rabbis from partial responsibility for the events.

“The real bosses on the ground at Mount Meron are the Haredi leaders. They have the final say on who gets in or not. That’s insane. The power of each Hassidic dynasty is reflected in how things take place on the ground and the police tend to seek compromises with them.

“This is a case of failed management,” he continued. “They [the police] should never have allowed so many people into the compound. There are things that have to be verified: Were the plans for this event approved [by police brass]? What was the expected capacity? You have to stop letting people in when it’s met. Were emergency exits marked? Was the scene under control? All of this has to be reviewed,” he said.

On Friday, Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit ordered the Police Internal Investigations Department to review the incident for any criminal negligence on part of police officers at the scene. The decision followed eyewitness accounts that accused police of blocking a key exit route at the bottom of a walkway that had become a death trap.

Israel Hayom contributed to this report. 

Yamina demands Justice Ministry for Ayelet Shaked

0

Bennett is reportedly demanding the Justice portfolio for Ayelet
Shaked in “bloc of change’s” government, causing delays in negotiations between the two sides.

The Yamina party is demanding that the “bloc of change” hand the Justice Ministry to Ayelet Shaked, a request that will most likely cause Gideon Sa’ar to demand the Defense and Finance Ministries.

The demand, according to a report by Channel 12 News’ political commentator Amit Segal, is causing delays in negotiations between the two sides. At present, according to the report, negotiations for the formation of a Lapid-Bennett government are moving slowly.

The report also says that the “bloc of change” is suspecting that the Likud and Yamina chairman Naftali Bennett are planning a trick. Thereby the Likud would recommend Bennett, he would be the first in a rotation as Prime Minister, and the Knesset Arrangements Committee will not be in hands that are hostile to the Likud.

This would preserve the possibility of approving a law for the direct election of a Prime Minister.

(Arutz 7).

Israeli family on way to pray nearly killed by Arab mob in Jerusalem, saved by ‘miracle’

0

Jews again attacked in their own country: a family on way to pray at
the Western Wall was surrounded by an Arab mob that smashed their
car windows with bricks.

A Jerusalem family escaped by a miracle after their car was surrounded in an Arab neighborhood and pelted with bricks that smashed out all of the windows, narrowly
missing them, Channel 20 reported Wednesday.

Rivka Stern said she and her husband were driving to the Old City of Jerusalem Tuesday from their home in Ra’anana in central Israel with their daughter Maki when they were attacked.

“We were traveling to pray at the Kotel and WAZE took us via At-Tur by way of Mt. Scopus,” Stern told Channel 20, referring to the Arab neighborhood on the Mount of Olives across from the Old City.

She said her husband called to check with security before they traveled to ensure the route was okay, and were told it was safe to travel there, just not at night.

Maki said that as they were on the main street of At-Tur heading towards the Old City,
they suddenly heard shouting and the back of their car came under a barrage of rocks.

“Tens of youths surrounded the car and my husband locked the doors,” Stern said. “We knew that something terrible was happening behind us. From in front a lot of bricks were thrown at us and the Holy One blessed be He saved us.”

The windows were smashed and the Arabs tried to open the doors but failed.

“My husband tried to get out of there, but we were stuck in a traffic jam from both sides,” she said, adding that “nobody came” to help them.

“There was serious panic because we thought it was the end,” she added.

Stern called the police who arrived within 10 minutes, and in the meantime the Arab driver of a minibus in front of them was able to help by moving his vehicle enough to let them pass.

Stern said another Israeli car with a young ultra-Orthodox couple arrived a few minutes later, also with its windows smashed out.

She showed one of the paving bricks that was thrown through the windows.

“When they say on the news a ‘stone attack,’ you imagine small stones,” Maki said. “These were bricks … you can only imagine if one hit you, you would be dead.”

Police said the incident was caught on security cameras, and the family went to a police station afterwards to give evidence.

The attack occurred the same day that Israeli police announced that “calm” had been restored and removed a ban on Arabs congregating at the Damascus Gate of the Old City, where evening riots have been taking place for the past week.

Only two Hebrew news agencies reported on the attack, with the Sterns saying they also were invited to talk about the incident on Channel 12’s morning talk show the following day.

(World Israel News).

 

Pfizer CEO: Pill for treating COVID could be available by end of 2021

0

Oral treatment seeks to block the enzyme the coronavirus needs
in order to replicate in human cells.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Tuesday that the US pharma firm’s planned take-at-home pill for treating COVID-19 could be available by the end of 2021.

“If all goes well and we implement the same speed that we did so far, and if regulators do the same, and they are, I hope that by the end of the year,” he told CNBC of his projected timeline.

Bourla also told the network that he was optimistic that the US FDA (Food and Drug Administration) would approve Pfizer’s vaccine for children 15 and under in the near future.

Thus far, the only oral COVID-19 treatment granted full approval by the FDA has been Remdesivir, an antiviral agent.

Pfizer’s pill is a protease inhibitor that seeks to block an enzyme that the coronavirus needs in order to replicate in human cells. Last week, The Daily Telegraph reported that dozens of volunteers have begun participation in initial trials for the pill.

The trial is being held at two Pfizer locations, one in the US and the other in Belgium, and will involve up to 60 volunteers age 18-60.

The trial will be split into three phases spread over 145 days, with an extra 28 days tacked on the end for “screening and dosing,” according to the report, and will include several overnight stays for the participants.

Pfizer, together with its partner BioNTech, has already produced a COVID-19 vaccine that has proved to be over 95 percent effective and has been at the center of Israel’s mass inoculation drive.

So far, over half of Israel’s population has received both required doses of the vaccine, making the Jewish state a world leader in per capita inoculations.

(Times of Israel).

 

Abbas delays first Palestinian elections in 15 years, blaming (of course) Israel

PA head says election won’t be held until Israel lets East Jerusalemites vote; cancellation had been expected for days; Hamas calls it ‘a breach of national consensus’ and ‘a coup’.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday night announced that the first Palestinian national elections in 15 years would be indefinitely delayed.

The vote would be postponed until Israel agreed to allow East Jerusalem Palestinians to participate, Abbas told a conference of senior Palestinian officials. The decision was widely interpreted to mean the elections will not be held at all in the foreseeable future.

“We have decided to delay the legislative elections until the participation of Jerusalem [residents] is ensured,” Abbas said in a statement following the meeting.

The Palestinians had been scheduled to vote for the Palestinian Legislative Council on May 22, for the first time since 2006. A presidential election was set to follow on July 31, for the first time since 2005.

Many Palestinians had hoped that the elections would allow for a new series of leaders to emerge in Palestinian politics, which is dominated by aging veterans.

Small, scattered demonstrations took place in Gaza and in Ramallah just before the decision was announced. In downtown Ramallah’s al-Manara Square, a few dozen Palestinians called for “their right to the ballot box.”

“No one will believe that this is just a delay. It also makes calling for another election during [Abbas’s] reign nearly impossible,” said former PA adviser Ghaith al-Omari, a senior research fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“The genie’s out of the bottle. It’s not like all these people are going to go back to sleep. We could easily see a revolt or an even deeper split,” al-Omari warned. “No one really knows where this might lead.”

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas speaks during a leadership meeting at his headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, on September 3, 2020. (Alaa Badarneh/Pool Photo via AP)

Abbas pledged to create a “government of national unity” in the interregnum. But major Palestinian factions, including the terror groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad, boycotted Thursday’s gathering in anticipation of the decision to delay the vote.

Hamas condemned the anticipated decision to delay the vote, which it deemed a “coup.” The terror group controls the Gaza Strip, having violently ousted Fatah from Gaza in 2007. Abbas’s Fatah movement and its allies have limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank.

“The decision to delay the elections is opposed to our national consensus and popular opinion. It is a coup against our agreements,” Hamas said.

As justification, Abbas claimed Israeli authorities had not responded to a Palestinian request to conduct the elections in East Jerusalem, making the vote impossible. The Palestinians seek East Jerusalem and the Old City, captured by Israel from Jordan in 1967, as the capital of their future state, and have said they will not hold elections without it.

The Oslo Accords, a series of bilateral agreements between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, obligate Israel to allow a symbolic number of Palestinians to vote in East Jerusalem at designated post offices.

Israel never formally told the Palestinians whether it would permit the vote to take place in Jerusalem, but it has arrested Fatah candidates when they sought to hold election events in the capital.

Nonetheless, technical solutions exist to the participation of East Jerusalem Palestinians. The Palestinian elections commission noted last week that the vast majority of East Jerusalemites — around 150,000 voters — would head to ballot boxes in the West Bank on election day.

In the 2006 national legislative vote, Palestinians elected a parliament dominated by Hamas. The vote yielded a bloody civil war between the two factions, which ended with Hamas expelling Fatah from Gaza.

Supporters of the Palestinian Fatah movement take part in a rally marking the 55th foundation anniversary of the political party, in Gaza City on January 1, 2020. (MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)

Abbas, who has held the presidency since 2005, is over 15 years into his four-year term. He now postpones the elections with his own Fatah movement deeply divided, its internal power struggles having been thrown into relief by the aborted vote.

Many in the PA leadership opposed heading to the ballot box from the start, seeing little benefit to holding an election, diplomatic sources said.

The United States was lukewarm on the vote as well, fearful that a divided Fatah could lead to a Hamas parliamentary victory similar to its 2006 landslide.

At the start, Ramallah seemed to believe it could control the results of the vote. But Palestinian politics shook dramatically after enormously popular Palestinian security prisoner Marwan Barghouti backed his own slate of candidates mere hours before the deadline.

Former Fatah official Nasser al-Kidwa, center left, and Marwan Barghouti’s wife, Fadwa, center right, leave the Palestinian Central Election Commission office after registering their joint list for the upcoming parliamentary election in May, in Ramallah, Wednesday, March 31, 2021. (AP/Nasser Nasser)

Convicted by an Israeli court of direct involvement in five murders during the Second Intifada, Barghouti, a senior Fatah member, is currently serving five life sentences. Many Palestinians still view him as a steadfast symbol of resistance — a sharp contrast to the unpopular Abbas, whom many Palestinians believe is corrupt.

Senior officials in Ramallah made several attempts to keep Barghouti and his ally Nasser al-Kidwa from challenging Abbas by putting together a rival slate in the parliamentary vote. Senior Abbas advisor Hussein al-Sheikh paid visits to Barghouti in prison, reportedly in an attempt to dissuade him.

“If Barghouti were elected, these guys would be out,” a diplomatic source told The Times of Israel earlier this week, referring to Abbas’s inner circle.

The threat emanating from Barghouti sent the elections into a tailspin, as senior officials in Abbas’s inner circle began to sense a real possibility of defeat. With most in the Palestinian president’s inner circle already opposed to the vote, the pressure to wriggle out of the impending election grew.

A banner with a picture of convicted terrorist and jailed Palestinianleader Marwan Barghouti and some fellow inmates, in the West Bank city of Ramallah, May 1, 2017. (Nasser Nasser/AP)

Abbas defended his decision to postpone the elections as a patriotic stance — anything else, he said, would entail abandoning Jerusalem.

“Now, Israel is saying, ‘this isn’t yours, no matter what.’ What happened in 1996, 2005 and 2006, is one thing, and now is totally different,” Abbas said, referring to previous Palestinian elections.

Over the past week, Palestinian officials launched a campaign to show their public that they were making every possible effort to force Israel to allow an East Jerusalem vote. Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki shuttled between European capitals to press them on the matter.

But it is unclear how much the Palestinian public — most of whom, a recent survey showed, support holding the elections on time — believe their leaders’ justification.

Anticipation for the vote had been building across the West Bank and Gaza for months. Thirty-six lists were prepared to run in the parliamentary elections, and the campaign was set to officially begin this Friday.

Analysts warn that Abbas could face popular opposition following the vote’s delay.

“There could be popular protest, given that most of the lists in the elections oppose delaying the vote,” allowed Ramallah-based analyst Jihad Harb.

Hamas, meanwhile, could stand to gain in popularity. The terror group has sought to portray itself as the defender of Palestinian democracy in the face of attempts to delay the elections.

“Hamas is sitting back and enjoying the show with popcorn. They benefit from anything that shows that Fatah is weak. Since their goal is to lead the Palestinian national movement, once Fatah goes, they’d be the last man standing,” al-Omari said.

(Times of Israel).

Tragedy in Meron: 44 people killed in mass stampede during Lag Ba’Omer celebrations

0

At least 44 killed and dozens more seriously injured in a mass stampede during Lag Ba’Omer celebrations in Meron. Air Force helicopters evacuate injured to hospitals.

Paramedics from Magen David Adom and United Hatzalah provided treatment to the victims, including several who were unconscious, and evacuated them to Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem, Rambam Hospital in Haifa, Ziv Hospital in Tzfat, Poriya Hospital in Tiberias and the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya.

Fighters from the Home Front Command’s rescue brigade, medical forces from the Northern Command and a number of Air Force helicopters with medical teams are assisting in treating the large number of victims in Meron.

Hundreds of thousands of people who were at the scene celebrating were evacuated with the help of police forces, ZAKA and volunteers. The roads leading to the area have been blocked to traffic.

Police called on the public at the scene to arrive at the bus stops and parking lots so that all visitors can be evacuated. “We ask all visitors on their way to Mount Meron to retrace their steps, the entrances to the site have been closed and visitors will not be allowed to enter.”

United Hatzalah medical personnel performed CPR on a number of critically injured individuals following the mass casualty incident in Meron that took place near the Toldot Aharon bonfire. In addition, medical volunteers from the organization treated dozens more who suffered serious, moderate, and light injuries.

CEO of United Hatzalah Eli Pollack, who was called in to manage the on-site dispatch, said: “This was a very tragic incident, and resulted in the loss of life. Dozens of United Hatzalah volunteers participated in performing CPR and providing medical treatment to dozens of people in varying states of injury. Some of the injured were transported to Ziv hospital in Tzefat and to the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya by United Hatzalah ambulance teams.”

Chief Paramedic Avi Marcus said: “This was a terrible incident and is one that was very difficult for our responders. Dozens of people were injured, and sadly, numerous people were killed due to the severity of the injuries which they suffered. After the injured were all treated and transported to the hospital, members of United Hatzalah’s Psychotrauma and Crisis Response Unit provided emotional and psychological stabilization to the many people who were suffering from shock after witnessing the event. This was a mass casualty incident on many levels.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, “Tragedy on Mount Meron. We all pray for the healing of the injured. I want to strengthen the rescue forces operating in the area.”

President Reuven Rivlin said, “I am following the reports from Meron with great anxiety and praying for the healing of the wounded.”

Photo:????? ????

Photo:????? ????

Photo:????? ????

Photo:?????: ???? ????????/TPS

Photo:?????: ???? ????????/TPS

Photo:?????: ???? ????????/TPS
(Arutz 7)

 

Rabbi Jonathan Gewirtz – Miss Information Please

0

Operation Inspiration

Even if you’re familiar with the expression, “Can I get the 411?” slang for, “Can you please give me information?” you may not be familiar with the actual 411 service. A good tipoff would be if you understand things like electric Segway scooters, designer sneakers, and Instagram. If so, you probably never experienced 411.

For years, at least since the 1930s, callers could pick up a phone and dial 4-1-1. An operator would pick up and say, “Information.” You would ask for, say, the number for R’ Moshe Feinstein in New York City. The operator would check her system and give you the number if it was listed. If you were a prankster, you might dial 4-1-1 and when asked what your query was, respond with, “Can you tell me how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich?” Usually, the operator would not find this as humorous as you did.

Though the calls used to be free, at a certain point phone companies began charging for the service. It could cost you a dollar or more to access this system (if it even still exists.) But, in recent years, the importance of Directory Assistance has waned with the advent of technology.

With the age of internet, and being able to “ask the Google,” people bypass the need for the operator and find the answer themselves. But this is not limited to phone numbers. Instead of asking a teacher for help with a math problem, people use fancy calculators and online courses. Then there’s YouTube which provides videos on how to do everything from changing a tire to building a house to making that peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

Need some information for a project? Simply present your query to Google or another search engine and you’ll be privy to roughly 3,562,839 different sites or postings in regard to what you’ve asked. You don’t need to make a personal connection with anyone because they’ve already posted it for you. And that’s when the big pitfall of all this technological advancement comes in: misinformation.

You see, though people share their information with you for free (most of the time, though most sites for finding someone’s phone number end up trying to sell you background searches when all you want to do is call the person,) you’re at the whim of the poster in terms of its accuracy.

For example, someone was interested in the kosher status of a certain beverage. He searched for it by name with the word “kosher” and up popped a site happily approving said drink. Of course, the Kashrus agencies who deal with the issues of stam yeinam and other manufacturing challenges had multiple pages explaining why the drink was NOT kosher. But, damage done, this fellow purchased the item and shared it with others, proudly informing them that he’d done his research.

Sadly, too, there is much misinformation on Halacha, hashkafa, and so many other things out there which people unwittingly fall victim to. It behooves us to be warned and consider that not everything we read is true. Did not Abraham Lincoln himself say, “I do not believe we actually landed a man on the moon!”?

This message was driven home to me in a fabulous and uplifting way. My daughter has a commute to work of about an hour. She has Waze to guide her and the GPS will often make tweaks to her normal directions. But she doesn’t follow it blindly. She will call me and say, “Dad, Waze is telling me to take exit 7Q and go on the Streamline Highway. Then I switch over to the Cross-Township freeway and the Bottombell bridge. Does that make sense?”

Often she’s asking me as if I know every backroad and shortcut in New York, though I never actually lived in NYC. Sometimes I’ll pause knowingly, as I consider it, and tell her, “Yes, that should be fine.” Other times I’ll tell her, “You’re better off sticking to your regular route, even if it takes a few minutes extra.” Rarely will I admit the truth: “I have absolutely no clue, so just follow the GPS,” though I have phrased it a little differently sometimes.

What struck me this time, though, was the trusting innocence of Little Miss Information Please, as she reached out to someone she trusted to make sure that what she’s being told is accurate. Instead of simply believing what a machine, even one as advanced as a GPS, said to her, she wanted to fact check.

The world around us doesn’t even wait for us to ask. We are showered and bombarded with information and opinions from every angle. Posters and letters, Whatsapps and emails, even phone calls yelling at us in foreign languages, try to make us think like whoever is putting forth the spew of data.

We need to be hesitant to accept things at face value and fact check with a person we trust to know what the right thing is according to the Torah.

If everyone is talking about a certain topic, we must nevertheless ask whether the consensus opinion is valid. We must wonder if we’re getting misinformation and may get lost. We should have someone knowledgeable and trustworthy to help guide us. By retaining that need for reassurance that we’re on the right path, we’ll be able to save ourselves a lot of trouble on the road of life.

 

© 2021 – All Rights Reserved

Did you enjoy this column? Feedback is welcome and appreciated. E-mail info@JewishSpeechWriter.com to share your thoughts. You never know when you may be the lamp that enlightens someone else.

Report: Anti-Semitic acts in Canada increase for fifth year, some prompted by COVID

0

They were not limited to a particular geographic location, though the majority occurred in Ontario and Quebec.

 Anti-Semitic incidents in Canada rose for the fifth consecutive year in 2020, marking an 18.3 percent jump in the number of offenses in 2019, according to B’nai Brith Canada’s Annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents.

A record 2,610 acts were recorded in 2020 for an average of seven acts per day and 50 incidents per week.

“Each represents an individual affront to the fraternity, humanity and decency expected of all Canadians,” wrote Ran Ukashi, special adviser to the League of Human Rights, an agency of B’nai Brith Canada in an introduction to the report. “Jews remain the most-targeted religious community for hatred in Canada.”

According to the report, there were 2,483 incidents of harassment, 118 cases of vandalism and nine acts of violence.

Annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents 2020. Source: Screenshot.

They were not limited to a particular geographic location, though the majority occurred in Ontario and Quebec, which have large Jewish populations.

Several regions did report a decrease in the number of anti-Semitic incidents from 2019.

However, that was not enough to offset the 226 percent rise in incidents in Atlantic Canada, including Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island, going from 61 acts in 2019 to 199 in 2020. All of the incidents were classified as either harassment or vandalism.

According to the audit, it was the first time since recording began in 1982 that “such a high number of incidents were recorded out of Atlantic Canada,” adding that it is a “trend that will be monitored in the future in search of casual factors.”

As in the United States, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories tied to the global coronavirus pandemic made a significant impact in the rise of Jew-hatred. The report noted that one in 10 incidents in Canada were related to either the “peddling of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, vandalism or violence associated with the pandemic.”

The report also noted some encouraging moves with a number of municipalities adopting the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of anti-Semitism, as well as the federal government appointing its first-ever special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combating anti-Semitism.

Russian FM: US-Russia Ties Worse Than During Cold War

0

Russia’s top diplomat said Wednesday that relations with the United States are now even worse than during the Cold War times because of a lack of mutual respect.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that Moscow stands ready to normalize ties with Washington, but warned that the U.S. should stop posturing like a “sovereign” rallying its allies against Russia and China.

He warned that if the U.S. shuns a mutually respectful dialogue on the basis of a balance of interests, “we would live in conditions of a ‘Cold War’ or worse.”

“During the Cold War, the tensions were flying high and risky crisis situations often emerged, but there was also a mutual respect,” Lavrov said in an interview with the Russian state television. “It seems to me there is a deficit of it now.”

Earlier this month, the Biden administration slapped Russia with sanctions for interfering in the 2020 U.S. presidential election and for involvement in the SolarWind hack of federal agencies — activities Moscow has denied.

The U.S. ordered 10 Russian diplomats expelled, targeted dozens of companies and people and imposed new curbs on Russia’s ability to borrow money. Russia quickly retaliated by ordering 10 U.S. diplomats to leave, blacklisting eight current and former U.S. officials and tightening requirements for the U.S. Embassy operations.

While ordering the sanctions, Biden also called for de-escalating tensions and held the door open for cooperation with Russia in certain areas.

Speaking in an interview with Russian state television, Lavrov noted that Moscow has had a “positive” attitude to U.S. President Joe Biden’s proposal to hold a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, but added that Russia still needs to analyze all aspects of the initiative.

Lavrov said he would attend a meeting of top diplomats of the Arctic nations in Iceland set for next month and would be ready to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken if he also joins the meeting.

(AP)

WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com