Canadian battle rapper fatally stabbed in Nova Scotia

Canadian battle rapper Pat Stay was fatally stabbed just past midnight on Sunday in the province of Nova Scotia, the Halifax Police Department said in a news release.

Police said Stay, 36, was stabbed around 12:35 a.m. in downtown Halifax. He was transported to the hospital, where he later died.

The Nova Scotia Medical Examiner Service ruled his death a homicide. Police are continuing to investigate the incident.

Stay, from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, was known for his skill in rap battles, in which rappers use rhyme and wordplay to competitively diss and outperform the other. Stay was hailed for his freestyle rap form.

The music world mourned his death following the news. Famous rapper and musician Eminem tweeted Sunday night that “hiphop lost one of the best battlers of all time … RIP @patstay .. KINGS NEVER DIE!!”

Stay had recently defended Eminem from rival hip-hop artist The Game, who released a diss song “The Black Slim Shady” attacking Marshall Mathers. Stay dropped a song on his prolific Youtube channel that dissed The Game in return.

Other rappers expressed their condolences for the Canadian battle rapper. Drake made a post about the freestyle rapper on Instagram, and both Immortal Technique and Royce Da 5’9 paid their respects on Twitter.

A fundraiser for Stay has reached more than $100,000 on GoFundMe, hitting the target goal for the musician’s loved ones.

The news came on the same day as a series of stabbings in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, although the provinces are on opposite sides of the country.

Source: TEST FEED1

How long COVID is impacting the nationwide labor shortage

Persistent COVID-19 symptoms could be keeping millions of Americans out of the workforce. 

Economists and policymakers have struggled to figure out why a much lower percentage of working-age adults are in the labor force than before the pandemic.  

The number of Americans either employed or looking for work eclipsed its pre-pandemic level in August, according to Labor Department data released Friday. But the labor force participation rate remains 1 percentage point below its February 2020 level, a gap roughly equivalent to 1.6 million people. 

A smaller labor force hasn’t kept the U.S. from adding jobs at a rapid rate since mid-2020. The U.S. has replaced all 21 million jobs lost to the pandemic, with nearly 3 million jobs added this year alone, and brought the jobless rate down near pre-pandemic levels. 

Even so, thousands — if not millions — of Americans could be on the sidelines of the rapid recovery because they’re still too sick from prolonged COVID-19 symptoms to work.  

“We don’t know what proportion of people are having very debilitating symptoms with a lot of certainty,” said Julia Raifman, an assistant professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health. 

“But we know that it is happening to some people and we know that each infection seems to increase the chances of it happening,” she continued. 

Experts say it’s tough to know for sure how many Americans suffer from “long COVID,” a general term for symptoms of COVID-19 that last weeks or even months after an infection.  

Common symptoms of long COVID include persistent shortness of breath, dizziness, fatigue and difficulty concentrating — all of which can make work difficult in most fields and impossible in some. 

Roughly 16 million working-age Americans said they had long COVID in a June survey conducted by the Census Bureau, but it’s unclear how many of them are still too sick to work. 

Kathryn Bach, a nonresident senior fellow at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution think tank, analyzed the data and estimated anywhere from 2 to 4 million long COVID sufferers could be sidelined by their symptoms. 

“I don’t think anyone who’s seriously looking at this thinks that long COVID is not a big problem,” Bach said in a Thursday interview. 

“But when it comes to the labor market impact, the specific numbers do matter and we don’t have the data right now to get to those numbers,” she continued.  

Bach is one of several experts who say the U.S. needs to collect better data about the prevalence and severity of long COVID. She said it’s important to differentiate between long COVID sufferers with frustrating symptoms and those with symptoms so severe, they’re unable to rejoin the labor force. 

A study published by the Federal Reserve of Minneapolis in July found that roughly 25 percent of those who get COVID-19 experience long-term symptoms, and one-fourth of those long-haulers reported symptoms severe enough to limit their work hours. While a majority of long-haulers remained employed, they were 10 percentage points less likely to be employed. 

“We’re about 1 percentage point overall below where the trend would suggest we are,” Bach said. “If half of that were long COVID, and I’m not saying it is, that is absolutely impacting people’s ability to hire.” 

Long COVID may not be the only factor keeping labor force participation below pre-pandemic levels. Many older workers who retired during the pandemic may be well-off enough to stay out of the workforce, while others with health conditions may be wary of coming back while the pandemic still poses a threat. 

But experts say the U.S. must contend with a long-term increase in the number of Americans unable to work because of their COVID-19 symptoms. 

“We know enough to know it’s a problem, right? We know enough to know that we have an historically tight labor market. Let’s talk about what we can do about it,” Bach said. 

She pointed to ways that could make workplaces more accessible for anyone with a disability, which includes reducing stigma over asking for accommodations and expanding telework options. 

Raifman added that reducing COVID-19 infections is also essential to reducing long COVID cases and making workplaces more accessible to those who aren’t infectious but are still dealing with symptoms.  

“It’s a moment for leaders to invest in people and those investments have a huge return,” Raifman said. 

“A lot of people when they miss work due to COVID do not have enough food to eat. A lot of businesses don’t have enough employees to keep the business running, so a lot of essential services ended up having high school students and National Guard members stepping in and substitutes when they didn’t have enough people to run.” 

Source: TEST FEED1

Ongoing nuclear gamble in Ukraine

We recently marked six months since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; U.S. and Russia tensions are their greatest since the Cold War, and we are closer today to the brink of nuclear war than at any time in the nuclear age.

This has been real potential on two fronts for nuclear disaster in Ukraine: There have been overt threats from Russia of the potential of use of nuclear weapons as well as close-calls and attacks on the world’s largest nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia.

The Zaporizhzhia plant has been shelled by Russian forces and recently was disconnected from the power grid, which is critical to maintaining the cooling of the reactor core and spent fuel rods storage. The disconnection caused the Soviet-era diesel-powered generators to activate for the first time in history. Under normal circumstances these generators have fuel to last two weeks, though it is feared that the fuel supplies may have been reduced during the war. In the absence of cooling there’s a real possibility of a meltdown releasing radiation which could then spread over the region and potentially much of Europe. Thankfully, the power was restored, but there is significant risk of this happening again as long as there is war in the region.

Out of fear and to “prepare” for potential radioactive release, the Ukrainian government is distributing millions of potassium iodide (KI), “anti-radiation” tablets to prevent thyroid cancer from inhaled or ingested radioactive iodine. Thyroid cancer is a common cancer, along with many others, resulting from radionuclide exposure that can happen many years after exposure particularly in infants, children and young adults.

Representatives of the International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA) arrived at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant Thursday. After initial touring, IAEA director Rafael Mariano Grossi stated, “It is obvious that the plant and the physical integrity of the plant has been violated several times.”

Any attack on — or near — a nuclear power plant is an act of terrorism.

We are closer to the brink today than ever before. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists’ nuclear Doomsday Clock was at 100 seconds till midnight (representing civilization apocalypse) before the invasion occurred, and the risk has only heightened.

There are roughly 12,700 nuclear weapons in the world, of which the United States and Russia hold 90 percent. Hardly a day goes by without a nuclear threat or a reminder of the nuclear capabilities of the superpowers. This is coupled with the threat and targeting of attacks on Ukrainian nuclear power plants. Such an attack would be catastrophic in the region.

Recent scientific studies have confirmed that the long-feared dangers of nuclear war are actually much greater due to the catastrophic climate effects that would follow even a regional nuclear war, potentially causing global famine. The report, “Global food insecurity and famine from reduced crop, marine fishery and livestock production due to climate disruption from nuclear war soot injection,” published Aug. 15, outlines the effects of various nuclear war scenarios, from a regional war between India and Pakistan using roughly 100 Hiroshima size weapons — half of one percent of the global nuclear arsenals — to a nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia using 4,400 weapons. In these models, global surface temperatures would drop between 1 and 16 degrees Celsius. This would initiate massive crop loss and a global average calorie drop of 7 percent to 90 percent depending on the scenario, lasting for years to decades. Ultimately, this would result in the death of some 5 billion people and could potentially lead to the extinction of our species.

This is a situation that does not have to be. We know how to build — and we know how to dismantle nuclear weapons.

Each of us can and must play a part in demanding an end to the nuclear threat.

There is a growing national coalition called Back from the Brink comprised of individuals and 416 health, environmental, religious and scientific organizations, 329 U.S. elected officials, 61 municipalities and seven state legislative bodies calling for the United States to lead a global effort to prevent nuclear war by pursuing a verifiable, time-bound agreement among nuclear nations to eliminate their nuclear weapons while simultaneously advocating for common sense policies to secure a safer more just future.

Those policies include:

  • Renouncing the option of using nuclear weapons first
  • Ending the sole, unchecked authority of any U.S. president to launch a nuclear attack
  • Taking U.S. nuclear weapons off hair-trigger alert
  • Canceling the plan to replace the entire U.S. nuclear arsenal with enhanced weapons

There is also a global Avaaz petition calling on all parties to the U.N. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) to urge the 10th NPT Review Conference happening right now to call for a ban on all fighting near any nuclear reactor, demilitarizing them, and creating a ‘safe zone’ of at least 30 km.

I encourage everyone endorse and support these efforts.

The fact that the world has not seen another use of nuclear weapons since Nagasaki — either intentionally, by accident or miscalculation — is not a result of superior knowledge, technology, nuclear control policies or skill. Rather, it has been by sheer luck, as noted by former Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara. Sooner or later, our luck will run out, and the present Ukraine conflict is increasing the odds.

The only way to avoid nuclear war is by the complete abolition of such weapons. If we survive, our children’s children will ask what did you do when the world was threatened? What will be your response?

Robert Dodge, M.D., is a family physician practicing in Ventura, Calif. He is the President of Physicians for Social Responsibility Los Angeles (www.psr-la.org), and sits on the National Board serving as the Co-Chair of the Committee to Abolish Nuclear Weapons of National Physicians for Social Responsibility (www.psr.org). Physicians for Social Responsibility received the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize and is a partner organization of ICAN, recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Price. Dodge also sits on the Steering Committee of Back from the Brink.

Source: TEST FEED1

New World Bank pandemic fund must prioritize prevention

COVID-19 has been a cruel teacher. And the harsh lessons we’ve learned will be wasted unless we can apply them to the next disease crisis. Sadly, it’s already upon us. 

The ongoing monkeypox epidemic — now a pandemic by some definitions — has shown yet again the critical importance of investing in global public goods such as disease surveillance, diagnostic technologies and vaccine research. 

But one message that hasn’t stuck is that emerging infectious diseases can pack surprises for which no amount of preparation is sufficient.

We were arguably more ready for monkeypox virus than for any other virus. Scientists have over 50 years of experience with it. Numerous countries have been preparing for it since the threat of bioterrorism was realized with the 2001 anthrax attacks, and we now have a monkeypox vaccine and treatment. The United States, the country with the most recorded cases in 2022, has direct experience controlling monkeypox on its own soil since 2003. Dr. Dimie Ogoina, an expert in Nigeria, even warned about the possibility of monkeypox transmission through sexual contact back in 2019.

Nevertheless, we find ourselves at a point where public health experts (including one of us, who worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionbranch that deals with monkeypox) are concerned that the virus will establish itself in the human population for many years to come. 

All this underscores the limitations of the current paradigm favored by the public health sector to address infectious diseases after they’ve emerged rather than preventing them in the first place.

Fortunately, earlier this year, the World Bank announced it would create a new fund for pandemics. While its scope is still being decided, it will likely support aspects of prevention alongside initiatives to prepare for and respond to pandemics. 

The bad news is that influential voices don’t seem that interested in preventing the root causes behind the rise in epidemics and pandemics. Billionaire and philanthropist Bill Gates, for example, completely overlooks this in his recent TED talk and other writings on pandemics.

Some, such as the World Health Organization (WHO) Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, have even cautioned against it. In June, the panel advised the World Bank that investing in prevention could “sap resources from achieving the goals of rapid identification and containment of pandemic threats that will remain inevitable despite vast resources spent in pursuit of prevention.” 

In making this argument, the panel ignores the science. Most pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases (including SARS-CoV-2 and monkeypox virus) originate in animals and then spill over into people. Pandemics, and the outbreaks that lead to them, however, can be prevented through actions to reduce risk of spillover such as stopping deforestation and regulating wildlife trade. 

Furthermore, focusing only on containing pathogen spread after spillover has occurred is inherently unjust because the tools of containment are simply not accessible to so many people. COVID-19 vaccines have been available since early 2021, yet only 26 percent of Africans have gotten a dose compared to 80 percent among Americans and Canadians (a similar story is playing out with monkeypox). It’s also unfortunately common for emerging infectious diseases to be ignored when they don’t greatly impact socioeconomically privileged groups, as we’ve seen with HIV and monkeypox.

In the coming months, the World Bank will be defining the scope of its new fund. To achieve the fund’s goals, it is critical that this fund invest in actions to reduce risk of spillover. This will require that the Bank pursue three actions.

1) It must explicitly state that a key goal of this fund is to address spillover. There are currently no major global efforts focused on spillover prevention. This is a huge gap in the global commons that carries lethal consequences. The World Bank can fix this easily while the fund is in its infancy.

2) It must ensure that the animal health and environmental sectors are included as equal stakeholders alongside the public health sector. While the World Bank has made clear that the WHO will be heavily involved in the fund, there are no such commitments for other multilateral agencies (e.g., the UN Environment Programme, the World Organisation for Animal Health) that have as much a role in pandemic prevention and preparedness.

3) It must work with countries and organizations to increase donations to the fund. So far, less than $2 billion has been committed globally, far short of the recommended $20 billion annual minimum. While that sounds pricey, it is expected that the United States will need $7 billion just to control monkeypox virus for the foreseeable future and has spent over $3.5 trillion to address COVID-19.

What Gates and the WHO Independent panel don’t seem to get, the World Bank can get right. We need to reduce risk of spillover to prevent outbreaks before they begin alongside efforts to contain pathogen spread after spillover. This is akin to medical thinking that has broadened from a focus on treating symptoms to its current acceptance of the importance of preventative health care. Pandemics are no different — traditional public health thinking needs to evolve quickly to prevent more pandemic catastrophes.

Neil M. Vora, MD is the pandemic prevention fellow at Conservation International and a practicing physician working in pandemic response.

Nigel Sizer, Ph.D. is a tropical forest ecologist and the executive director of Preventing Pandemics at the Source.

Source: TEST FEED1

Judge grants Trump’s request to appoint special master to review Mar-a-Lago documents

A federal judge on Monday granted former President Trump’s request to appoint an independent special master to review materials the FBI seized from his Mar-a-Lago residence last month.

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed objections from the Department of Justice (DOJ), blocking prosecutors from further reviewing or using the seized documents in their investigation until the special master completes their review.

Cannon asked DOJ and Trump’s attorneys to submit a joint filing by Friday that includes a proposed special master candidate list.

Trump has accused the FBI and DOJ of executing the search for political purposes, also claiming that some of the documents were protected by attorney-client privilege and executive privilege.

DOJ had argued in court that a special master appointment would stall its investigation of Trump and that he did not have the authority to claim executive privilege from his time in the White House since he is no longer in office.

“With respect to the Government’s ongoing criminal investigation, the Court does not find that a temporary special master review under the present circumstances would cause undue delay,” Cannon wrote in the ruling.

DEVELOPING

Source: TEST FEED1

Watch live: Biden speaks at Labor Day event in Milwaukee

President Biden will make the first of two Labor Day appearances Monday, delivering remarks at Milwaukee’s Laborfest.

The appearance is slated to begin at 12:15 p.m. ET.

Watch the live video above.

Source: TEST FEED1

Youngkin to travel to Maine to campaign for GOP gubernatorial candidate LePage

Rising GOP star Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) will travel to Maine this week to campaign for Republican gubernatorial candidate Paul LePage, a controversial former governor seeking a third term.

Youngkin, who has been rumored as a potential 2024 presidential candidate, is traveling to several states this year to boost GOP candidates. He will make a stop for a fundraiser in Lewiston, Maine, on Wednesday, The Washington Post reported.

The Virginia leader’s pit stop to support LePage has drawn some scrutiny because of controversial comments made by the Maine candidate, including self-anointing himself as the “Donald Trump before Donald Trump.”

LePage served as Maine’s governor from 2011 to 2019 but is allowed to seek a third term under state law after sitting one term out. He was officially approved in February.

LePage is taking on Gov. Janet Mills (D) in November in what is expected to be a highly competitive race. According to a May poll from Pan Atlantic Research, Mills is slightly leading LePage, 46 percent to 42 percent.

LePage’s governorship was known for cutting taxes, making state welfare reductions and paying off Medicare debt to hospitals. When his term finished, he said he was retiring in Florida and would not return, before changing his mind and seeking a third term.

LePage is also known for making controversial comments — including racially charged ones about Blacks and Hispanics as well as suggesting that drug dealers are impregnating White girls.

The former governor has since tried to distance himself from his past, telling News Center Maine in February that he has had a “big change” since leaving office and wishes to bridge the divide between political parties.

“We need to find a path to have civil discourse so we can talk both sides of the argument,” he told the local outlet.

Youngkin won the Virginia governor’s race last year in a surprise win for the Republican party last year that established him as an up-and-coming star.

In the coming weeks, Youngkin is also making additional stops in Georgia, Kansas, New Mexico, Nevada and Oregon to support Republican candidates ahead of the midterm elections.

The Virginia Democratic Party has submitted public records requests to view the governor’s travel records, expressing frustration that Youngkin is spending taxpayer money on out-of-state races.

Youngkin’s office told the party the governor pays for his own political travel.

According to The Post, Youngkin also defended his decision to travel to Maine to stump for LePage, telling reporters last week that he doesn’t know of any “racially inflammatory statements and, therefore, I’m not sure that that’s accurate.”

Virginia Democrats, who are also outraged over the LePage scandal, tweeted Sunday that Youngkin is acting “disgraceful” by supporting the candidate.

Source: TEST FEED1

Honoring the fundamentals of fairness on Labor Day

As Americans close out our summer with a relaxing Labor Day, it is time to reflect on why fairness always matters, why wage equity is important and how greater fairness and equity can positively impact our society’s wellbeing, productivity and economic growth.  

Let us start with fairness. 

Fairness is understood and valued even by non-human species. This was confirmed by Sarah Brosnan, a professor of psychology, philosophy and neuroscience at Georgia State University who performs a now famous experiment. 

She presents two capuchin monkeys with a task: hand the researcher a rock when signaled to do so. If the monkey performs, they are rewarded with a piece of cucumber. Good news for the monkey. The researcher then differentiates between the two monkeys, rewarding one with the cucumber and the second with a grape, a preferred treat. When the monkey getting the cucumber sees this unfair practice, they are enraged — they throw the cucumber down, rattle their cage and bang the floor. There is no mistaking their anger over the clear unfairness for the same task. 

Since this demonstration, an understanding of fairness and cooperation has been shown in other species, including dogsravens and chimpanzees.  Fairness predates humanity: It has “deep biological roots.” 

Research shows our own children understand fairness from an early age, and what academics call distributive justice. 

Children are surprised and upset when seeing resources distributed unequally for no reason and, by age three, will state they want equality in distribution. Children will also make sacrifices to be fair and to punish those who are unfair. This is seen in experiments when kids reject unequal distribution of rewards even though doing so means they get no reward as a result. Kids will also act to correct an unfairness they have witnessed even if they are unaffected by it, which researchers call third-party punishment. Instead of viewing kids as selfish, miniature versions of the “homo economicus,” we ought to recognize them as young moral actors with quite clear views of what is and is not fair. 

On Labor Day, we would do well to remember and recognize that fairness matters when we are children and when we become adults and workers. 

In 2022, I see a change in perspective, an equity reawakening post-pandemic, with millions of poorly paid waiters and service workers responding to the dangers they faced in the pandemic by demanding better pay for hard work that has historically been underpaid (particularly in America).  

Unionization and industrial action are on the rise. These workers’ reasonable demands for fairness are finally being addressed by employers competing for workers in a tight market. In July, there were 11.2 million job openings. If firms and we as consumers want people to do hard essential work, then they must be compensated fairly and appropriately. Greater transparency and fairness in wages — rebalancing in favor of labor and away from capital — is long past due. 

This readjustment in favor of labor will pay economic dividends. Janet Yellen, the U.S. Treasury Secretary, understands as much. 

Decades ago, Yellen, writing alongside her Nobel Prize-winning husband George Ackerlof,  proposed a ‘fair wage effort hypothesis’ to explain workers’ commitment and productivity in the workforce. Yellen posited that “workers have a conception of a fair wage; insofar as the actual wage is less than the fair wage, workers supply a corresponding fraction of normal effort.” People will come to work, but if they believe they are being undervalued and not being paid a fair wage for their labor, the firm’s performance will suffer.

The last decades in America have been tough for most, with more and more revenue taken by executives and firms and less going to the workers. As the Economic Policy Institute notes, productivity went up 62 percent from 1979-2020, but wages only went up 17.5 percent. Employees are not stupid. They can see what’s happening. 

A disgruntled workforce will not deliver for companies and the wider economy. This dynamic may have been unfolding in the U.S. for many years, with persistently low wages leading to dissatisfied workers who are undervalued, who then underperform.  

A partial answer to the productivity puzzle seen in stagnant low-wage advanced economies like the United Kingdom may be that post-pandemic wage rises and worker anger can slowly begin to address the fairness gap. By demanding more and solving the fairness gap, those employees will also likely become more motivated and dedicated. Employers, who are paying more for labor, will have an incentive to invest to further lift labor productivity.  

We can see this cycle play out in Germany: higher wages for employees; much shorter work weekssolid productivity; strong, more equitably distributed economic growth. 

This Labor Day, perhaps the outlook for wage fairness and greater equity is better than it has been for many a year. If successful, worker demands can help lift many or most boats, rather than only the super yachts of the plutocrat class. It’s about time.

Stuart P. M. Mackintosh is executive director of the Group of Thirty. 

Source: TEST FEED1

Country singer Maren Morris uses Tucker Carlson insult to raise $100K for trans youth

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) – Just days after being insulted on television by Fox News host Tucker Carlson, country music star Maren Morris has managed to turn the insult into some big bucks for transgender organizations. 

The clash began after Morris criticized commentsmade by country singer Jason Aldean’s wife, Brittany Kerr Aldean, regarding gender-affirming care for trans children. 

Days after his wife’s comments, the country singer was dropped by his longtime PR firm, although the firm declined to specify why Aldean was dropped. 

While discussing the exchange on his television show “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” the Fox News host labeled Morris as a “lunatic country music person.” 

Morris made light of the situation on her social media, and shortly after announced that she would be selling T-shirts with Carlson’s quote on the front, alongside the Peer Support and Crisis Hotline for trans youth, to give back to the transgender community. 

“All proceeds will be split between TransLifeline and the GLAAD Transgender Media Program,” said Morris in a tweet

Just 24 hours after announcing that the shirts were on sale, Morris posted that over $100,000 worth of the T-shirts had been purchased. 

“Over $100K raised,” said Morris in a tweet, “Have a great Labor Day weekend, lunatics.” 

Source: TEST FEED1

China’s cost-free gulag for Muslims

China’s prolonged detention of more than 1 million Muslims in Xinjiang represents the largest mass incarceration of people on religious grounds since the Nazi era. Yet, disturbingly, China has incurred no international costs.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, the brain behind the scheme, and his inner circle have faced no consequences for sustaining the Muslim gulag since at least March 2017. Despite two successive U.S. administrations describing the unparalleled repression in Xinjiang as “genocide” and “crimes against humanity,” Western actions against China have largely been symbolic.

The just-released report on Xinjiang by the United Nations’ human rights office cites serious human-rights violations there and recommends that Beijing take “prompt steps to release all individuals arbitrarily deprived of their liberty” in that sprawling ethnic-minority homeland.

Yet this report, paradoxically, is a fresh reminder that China has escaped scot-free, with little prospect that it will be held to account for its mass internment of Muslim minorities, including expanding detention sites in Xinjiang since 2019. The Xinjiang repression also includes forced sterilization and abortion, torture of detainees, slave labor and draconian curbs on freedom of religion and movement.

The report’s release came after nearly a yearlong delay and just minutes before the four-year term of Michelle Bachelet, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, ended. U.N. investigators had compiled the Xinjiang report almost a year ago, but Bachelet kept stalling its release, despite growing pressure from Western countries.

In May, after lengthy discussions with Beijing on arrangements, Bachelet undertook a controversial official visit to China, the first by a U.N. high commissioner for human rights since 2005. During her tenure, Bachelet – a former Chilean president and political detainee under dictator Augusto Pinochet – stayed mum on the Chinese repression in Xinjiang (and Tibet). She said nothing on the crackdown in Xinjiang even when she briefly visited that region during her restrictive China tour, which glossed over abuses by Xi’s regime.

Bachelet had earlier acknowledged that she was under “tremendous pressure” over the report, with China asking her to bury it. The eventual release of the report, minutes before Bachelet’s retirement at midnight on Aug. 31, indicated that she did not want her successor or temporary replacement to take credit for publishing it. Failing to release the report would have left a glaring black mark on her tenure.

Days before her retirement, Bachelet sent a copy of the report to Beijing because, as she explained in a Sept. 1 statement, she “wanted to take the greatest care to deal with the responses and inputs received from the (Chinese) government last week.” In response to the 48-page U.N. assessment, China wrote a 131-page rebuttal, with its foreign ministry calling the report a “farce.”

China has been emboldened by the international community’s indifference and indulgence. It successfully hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics, probably the most divisive games since the 1936 Berlin Summer Olympics, which helped strengthen the hands of Germany’s Adolf Hitler.

Underscoring China’s growing economic power and geopolitical clout, even Muslim countries, by and large, have remained shockingly silent on the Xinjiang repression. As if that weren’t bad enough, the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation in March honored Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi as a speaker at its foreign ministers’ forum in Pakistan.

Xi’s Muslim gulag has made a mockery of the 1948 Genocide Convention, to which China acceded in 1983 (with the rider that it does not consider itself bound by Article IX, the clause allowing any party in a dispute to lodge a complaint with the International Court of Justice). The Genocide Convention requires its parties, which include the United States, to “prevent and punish” acts of genocide.

Chinese authorities have subjected Uyghur and other Muslim groups in Xinjiang, including ethnic Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, to Orwellian levels of surveillance and control over many details of life. As Secretary of Commerce Gina M. Raimondo warned, China is weaponizing biotechnology to “pursue control over its people and its repression of members of ethnic and religious minority groups.”

The Xinjiang repression is aimed at indoctrinating not just political dissidents and religious zealots but entire Muslim communities by imposing large-scale deprogramming of Islamic identities. A gulag archipelago of 380 internment camps (or “reeducation hospitals,” as Beijing calls them) has become integral to this larger assault on Islam.

It is against this background that the carefully worded U.N. report warns that, “The extent of arbitrary and discriminatory detention of members of Uyghur and other predominantly Muslim groups … and deprivation more generally of fundamental rights enjoyed individually and collectively, may constitute international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.” The report cited “patterns of torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment” in the detention centers, including “credible” allegations of sexual violence.

The U.N. report may carry the imprimatur of the world’s only truly universal organization and its member states, yet China was quick to pour scorn on it. Just as it rubbished a 2016 international arbitral tribunal ruling that invalidated its territorial claims in the South China Sea, China ridiculed the U.N. report, calling it a pack of “disinformation and lies.”

The 1945-46 Nuremberg Military Tribunal, set up after Germany’s surrender in World War II, prosecuted those involved in crimes against humanity, the same crimes now being perpetrated in Xinjiang. Yet, with China a rising power, there seems little prospect that Chinese officials behind the Muslim gulag will face similar justice.

Indeed, just as China responded to the tribunal’s ruling by accelerating its expansionism in the South China Sea, including militarizing the region, it could step up its repression in Xinjiang until it manages to fully Sinicize and tame Muslim groups.

Brahma Chellaney is a geostrategist and the author of nine books, including the award-winning “Water: Asia’s New Battleground” (Georgetown University Press). Follow him on Twitter @Chellaney.

Source: TEST FEED1