Chelsea (Bradley) Manning | Americans Who Tell The Truth

USArmy intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning (born Bradley Edward Manning) had access to classified information that deeply disturbedher conscience. When she released it to the online organization WikiLeaks, she was arrested, subjected to treatment widely considered to be torture, and facedlife in prison if found guilty of "aiding the enemy," the most serious of the 34 charges against her.

Included in the leaked information is a video that has been dubbed "Collateral Murder,"which shows USmilitary personnel killing suspected but apparently unarmed insurgents, as well as two Reuters journalists.

Also included are thousands of classified documents detailing American actions around the globe: "Crazy, almost criminal political backdealings ... the non-PR-versions of world events and crises ... all kinds of stuff, like everything from the buildup to the Iraq War to what the actual content of 'aid packages' is ... There's so much ... it affects everybody on earth ... Everywhere there's a US post ... there's a diplomatic scandal," wrote Manning in an online chat.

Manning was held for several weeks after herMay 2010 arrest without being charged with a crime. Without a trial or conviction, she was placed in "Maximum Custody," the military's most restrictive form of detention. Allowed only one hour of free movement per day, Manning was held at a Marine base in Quantico, Virginia, in what amounted to solitary confinementwithout a pillow, blanket or clothing at nightfor 10 months. She wrote in a letter to herattorney that she was also subjected to humiliating forced nudity for morning inspection and was harassed by herguards. Manning was not fully charged until March of 2011.

Manning's treatment at Quantico spurred protest worldwide, including a request by a United Nations torture investigator to meet privately with Manning to determine hercondition. The request was denied, but she was transferred to a military prison in Leavenworth, Kansas, where conditions wereless restrictive.

Many, including USCongressman Dennis Kucinich, consider Manning's solitary confinement a violation of the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution, which forbids cruel and unusual punishment.

Though much of the media coverage of Manning's act paints heras an unstable misfit, she can perhaps more accurately be seen as an ordinary young personin extraordinary circumstances.

Like many young people, growing up was difficult for Manning. She was small compared to other children herage and gender non-conforming,and she faced challenges both inside and outside herhome.

Manning excelled at school andscience fairs, preferred computers to sports. She was teased and bullied in public school and later picked on and assaulted in the Army.

Before joining the military, Manning had tried to further hereducation in community college but had to work several jobs at the same time and wound up dropping out. Manning joined the Army at herfather's urging and intended to use herveteran's benefits to go to college someday. She wrote in an online chat that she hoped to get a doctorate if she was "smart enough."

Manning's closest childhood friend described heras someone who "loved America." Before all this happened to her, Manning wrote online: " Maybe I'm just young, naive, and stupid ... [but] I want people to see the truth ... regardless of who they are."

November 2020 update:

In 2013, Manning pleaded guilty to some of the charges against her and was convicted of others but was acquitted of aiding the enemy.

The day after her sentencing, Manning's attorney publicly announced that Manning identified as female and chose to be called Chelsea.

In 2017, President Obama commuted Manning's sentence to her past seven years of confinement and she was released.

In 2018, Manning launched an unsuccessful challenge to incumbent Senator Ben Cardin for the Democratic nomination for United States Senatein her home state of Maryland.

In March 2019, Manning was jailed for contempt and accrued a civil fineof $256,000 for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. She was released about a year later, and a crowdfunding effort raised the money to satisfy her fine.

Since her 2017 release, Manning has continued to receive awards for her work, including: the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer Award in recognition of her actions as a whistleblowerand for her work as an advocate for government transparency and transgender rights (September 2017) Foreign Policy's 2017 Global Thinkers designation "for forcing the United States to question who is a traitor andwho is a hero." European United LeftNordic Green Left (GUE/NGL) prize for Journalists, Whistleblowers and Defenders of the Right toInformation (October 2020).

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Chelsea (Bradley) Manning | Americans Who Tell The Truth

Grimes dating leaker Chelsea Manning after Elon Musk breakup

Grimes is dating infamous leaker Chelsea Manning after her relationship with Elon Musk ended for the second time, Page Six can exclusively reveal.

Theyre getting serious. They U-Hauled it, a source tells us of the fast-paced nature of their relationship. Theyve been living together in Austin.

Our source also says Manning still has her apartment in Brooklyn.

Neither Manning nor reps for Grimes immediately returned Page Sixs requests for comment.

The pair have been interacting on Twitter in recent months, with certain messages hinting at their relationship.

In one exchange, Grimes, 33, explained why she had not yet appeared on a users Twitch stream, tweeting that she had not been in LA but felt bad for postponing like 10 times. In response, Manning tweeted, vouch.

And in December, Grimes tweeted, Celebrity culture is suffocating a f. Im not quitting music, but def changing my main day job after BOOK 1. Music industry feels old and tired, reliant on archaic systems. When Manning once again replied, vouch, Grimes responded to her, Since I seem to be taking ur word as final these days.

Manning, 34, also has liked multiple tweets having to do with Grimes, including the announcement of the singers Vanity Fair cover story, in which she revealed she secretly welcomed a second child via surrogate, a girl named Exa Dark Siderl, with the Tesla founder, 50, in December.

Although the story said she and Musk were in a fluid relationship, she clarified Thursday that they had since broken up again.

The former US soldier, for her part, made headlines in the early 2010s for leaking hundreds of thousands of documents to WikiLeaks. She was sentenced to 35 years in prison after being found guilty of 20 crimes, including six violations of the Espionage Act.

In January 2017, President Barack Obama commuted Mannings remaining prison sentence after she had served seven years and attempted suicide multiple times.

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Grimes dating leaker Chelsea Manning after Elon Musk breakup

Grimes and hacker Chelsea Manning are reportedly dating

Hours after it was revealed Grimes and Elon Musk secretly welcomed their second child together, the singer had a new update for fans: the couple broke up again. And if a new report is to be believed, she has already moved on.

According to Page Six, Grimes (real name: Claire Boucher) is dating whistleblower and activist Chelsea Manning and "they're getting serious."

"They U-Hauled it," a source claimed of the relationship. "They've been living together in Austin."

The women have been interacting on Twitter since at least December.

While Grimes hasn't commented on her possible new relationship, she did tweet that she and Musk "have broken up," but called Tesla founder "my best friend and the love of my life."

The 33-year-old singer, who covers April's Vanity Fair, accidentally revealed during the interview she and Musk welcomed a baby girl together via surrogate in December. Naturally, their little one doesn't have a run-of-the-mill name.

"Her full name is Exa Dark Siderl Musk," Grimes told the magazine, noting they call the baby Y. Musk, 50, and the singer are parents to son X A-12 (pronounced "X A.I. Archangel") or "X" for short and it wasn't an easy pregnancy.

Grimes told Vanity Fair she "kept collapsing" while carrying X, who turns 2 in May, and that she thought she could die.

"He was pressing on my nerves," she says. "I took a few steps and collapsed. It was kind of scary, because you don't want to fall a lot when you're eight months pregnant. So I would just crawl to the bathroom and crawl back or whatever... I hemorrhaged. It was scary."

As for her relationship status with Musk, at the time of the interview, Grimes called him her "boyfriend."

"There's no real word for it," she said, noting they are "very fluid."

"We live in separate houses. We're best friends. We see each other all the time. We just have our own thing going on, and I don't expect other people to understand it," she explained, saying they are happy. "This is the best it's ever been.... We just need to be free."

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Grimes and hacker Chelsea Manning are reportedly dating

The Socialist Equality Party candidates for the May 21 election – WSWS

The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) is standing six candidates for the Senate in the May 21 Australian federal election. Our candidates will be listed as groups, but without the SEPs name, on the top line of the Senate ballot papers in three states: New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland.

Max Boddy, 33, is the Assistant National Secretary of the SEP and a member of the national committee. He writes for the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) on the issues facing asylum seekers and their inhumane treatment at the hands of Australian governments, whether Coalition or Labor. He has completed a Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Newcastle, majoring in Aboriginal Studies.

In 2019 Boddy stood as the SEP candidate for the seat of Hunter in NSW against Joel Fitzgibbon, the Labor incumbent. Fitzgibbons family had held the seat since 1984, the period during which the area was devastated by the shutdown of manufacturing in Australia and the slowdown of mining production, resulting in the loss of thousands of jobs and intensified attacks on working conditions.

Oscar Grenfell, 30, is the national convenor of the International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE), a member of the SEPs national committee and a regular correspondent for the WSWS. He has written extensively on key political and industrial issues, including in defence of Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning, the political and social crisis confronting young people, and exposures of the pro-capitalist policies of the Greens and of the pseudo-lefts divisive identity politics.

Grenfell was born and raised in Sydneys inner-west and joined the SEP whilst at high school. He completed a Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Sydney, majoring in English literature. In 2015, he stood as the SEP candidate for Bankstown in the NSW state election, for Grayndler in the federal election in 2016 and in Parramatta, running against the sitting Labor Party member Julie Owens, in 2019.

Peter Byrne, 63, is an architect and the son of a car worker. He joined the Socialist Labour League, the forerunner of the SEP, in 1983. For more than three decades, Byrne has played a leading role in the partys work in the Melbourne area, including in campaigns to defend the jobs and basic rights of car workers, building workers, pilots and teachers.

He has represented the SEP in Victorian elections and by-elections and stood for the seat of Calwell in 2019. There he ran against the candidates of the Greens, Labor and the pseudo-left Victorian Socialists, all of which sought to divert the immense hostility among workers and young people to the official establishment, back behind the moribund parliamentary system.

Jason Wardle, 30, is president of the IYSSE at Victoria University. Wardle, whose father and uncles were merchant seaman, grew up in Perth, and worked there as a casual construction labourer. He represented the SEP in the 2019 elections.

Wardle became politically active as a result of his opposition to militarism and war, including the US-led interventions in Libya and Syria, and Australias integration into Washingtons confrontation with China in the Asia-Pacific. He turned to the SEP after growing disillusioned with the militarist and pro-business program of the Labor Party. Wardle moved to Melbourne and joined the SEP in 2017.

Mike Head, 69, is an SEP national committee member, WSWS correspondent, Western Sydney University law lecturer and secretary of the partys Brisbane branch. A member of the party for more than 40 years, he is married with three adult children. In recent years, he has conducted political work regularly in the Brisbane area, building the influence of the SEP among workers and young people.

Head writes regularly for the WSWS on the bipartisan assault against democratic rights, as well as on other political, economic and social issues. He has represented the party in several elections and stood in 2019 as the SEP candidate for the seat of Oxley in Brisbane, Queensland.

John Davis, 28, joined the Socialist Equality Party in 2013, based on his support of the struggle for socialism and internationalism against the drive to militarism and war. He is an SEP national committee member and the president of the IYSSE club at the University of Newcastle.

Davis has played a leading role in the fight to build the IYSSE in Newcastle and on the NSW Central Coast amongst working-class youth and students, who face ongoing cuts to tertiary education and are forced to make the choice between working in low-wage, casual jobs or suffering permanent unemployment. He stood for the party in both the 2016 and 2019 elections and writes regularly for the WSWS.

How to vote 1 Socialist Equality Party for the Senate in NSW

How to vote 1 Socialist Equality Party for the Senate in Victoria

How to vote 1 Socialist Equality Party for the Senate in Queensland

Contact the SEP:Phone:(02) 8218 3222Email:sep@sep.org.auFacebook:SocialistEqualityPartyAustraliaTwitter:@SEP_AustraliaInstagram:socialistequalityparty_auTikTok:@SEP_Australia

Authorised by Cheryl Crisp for the Socialist Equality Party, Suite 906, 185 Elizabeth Street, Sydney, NSW, 2000.

Join the SEP campaign against anti-democratic electoral laws!

The working class must have a political voice, which the Australian ruling class is seeking to stifle with this legislation.

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The Socialist Equality Party candidates for the May 21 election - WSWS

Inside Elon Musks bizarre life from fluid relationship with Grimes to dumping worldly goods & living i… – The US Sun

HES the richest man on Earth, with an estimated fortune of 210billion, and has now taken charge of the global chatroom that is Twitter.

But Elon Musk - who has splashed out 33billion on his latest acquisition - recently revealed the secret heartache behind his eye-watering fortune.

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Speaking in a Ted Talk interview, he gave a rare glimpse into his past when he admitted he was bullied as a child over his Aspergers Syndrome.

I did not have a happy childhood to be frank, he said. It was quite rough.

The tech mogul added that the condition, which means sufferers struggle to understand social cues and have ordered, rigid thinking patterns, was a gift because it led him to a career in computing.

I think most people don't enjoy typing strange symbols into a computer by themselves all night, he said.

They think that's not fun, but I thought it was. I really liked it. I would just program all night by myself and I found that be quite enjoyable. But I think that is not normal.

Since then very little has been normal in Musks life - from his "fluid" relationship with rapper Grimes, with a secret surrogate child and separate houses, to his plan to colonise Mars.

Relishing in the unconventional the 50-year-old mogul, who once smoked weed on a web show - claims to have sold or given away all his houses and possessions and moving into a 50,000 house owned by his company, SpaceX.

He has also been plagued by tragedy - losing his first child to sudden infant death syndrome before turning to IVF to have twins and then triplets with first wife Justine.

His determination to take over Twitter comes from his position as a self-declared free speech absolutist and a passionate anti-woke agenda.

But the Tesla boss - who recently declared his new work title as Techno-king - seems to have a desire for world domination which may stem from a lonely childhood.

Bizarrely, it was his love of Twitter that sparked his romance with musician Grimes - real name Claire Elise Bucher - who is 16 years his junior.

The couple hit it off when he messaged her in response to a tweet she wrote about the thought experiment Rokos Basilisk.

In May 2020, they welcomed their first son but instantly caused controversy with the choice of name - X A-12 - and were forced to change it to X AE A-XII by Californian authorities because it contained symbols not included in the alphabet.

A year later, Musk said the pair had semi-separated but still love each other, see each other frequently, and are on great terms.

Despite living apart, the couple then used a surrogate to give birth to their baby daughter, Exa Dark Siderael - also known as Y - who was born in December.

They kept her birth a secret, only admitting she existed when a journalist heard a baby crying upstairs at their home in March.

When pressed, she admitted she had a daughter and explained that serious complications in her first pregnancy meant they didnt want to risk a second.

Explaining their on-off relationship, Grimes added: Theres no real word for it.

I would probably refer to him as my boyfriend, but were very fluid. We live in separate houses. Were best friends. We see each other all the time. We just have our own thing going on, and I dont expect other people to understand it.

I would probably refer to him as my boyfriend, but were very fluid.

This is the best its ever been. We just need to be free.She also revealed the couple wanted to have at least three or fourkids together.

But later that month it was rumoured Grimes was dating activist Chelsea Manning.

The relationship has always been unconventional, with the pair often communicating - and fighting - over Twitter.

In May 2020, when Musk vowed to give away all his worldly possessions, he tweeted My gf is mad at me.

The mogul claimed he wanted to rid himself of stuff because people attacked him for his luxury lifestyle adding: I think possessions kind of weigh you down.

He flogged a property portfolio worth 100m including a 24m Bel Air mansion, four other LA properties worth 50m and a ranch house which once belonged to comic Gene Wilder.

He claimed he was living in a 50,000 house in Texas owned by his company, Space X.

But last year, Forbes claimed he was actually living in a 10million luxury mansion in Austin owned by wealthy friend and Paypal co-founder Ken Howery, and had been viewing other mansions in the area.

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Musk, who was born and raised in Pretoria, South Africa, admitted he felt socially isolated growing up, adding: For me, the social cues were not intuitive.

I would just tend to take things very literally, just the words as spoken were exactly what they meant.

It took me a while to figure that out. I was bullied quite a lot.

I read lots and lots of books. Gradually I understood more from the books that I was reading and watched a lot of movies. It took me a while to understand things that most people intuitively understand.

The bullying and social isolation led to Elon selling his first computer programme at 12 and going on to found Paypal, which he sold for 138million in 2002.

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His relationship with dad Errol, who he lived with after his parents split when he was eight, was also a source of pain.

He was such a terrible human being," Musk told Rolling Stone. "Almost every crime you can possibly think of, he has done. Almost every evil thing you could possibly think of, he has done."

When he left home at 17 to make a new life in Canada, his dad told him hed be back with his tail between his legs and called him an idiot.

Musk met first wife, Justine Wilson, at University and they wed in 2000. Two years later they welcomed their first son, Nevada, but the tot tragically passed away at just 10 weeks.

In a rare glimpse into his pain, in 2018, he told a grieving father whose son died in Tesla crash, that theres nothing worse than losing a child.

My firstborn son died in my arms. I felt his last heartbeat, he added.

The couple then used IVF to have five more sons - Griffin and Xavier, now 18, and 17-year-old triplets, Kai, Saxon and Damian - before splitting in 2008.

My firstborn son died in my arms. I felt his last heartbeat.

Justine later accused him of trying to turn her into a trophy wife, and said she sucked at it.

"I wasn't interested in Botox or makeup or reducing the appearance of the scars from my C-sections, she told Marie Claire.

"And no matter how many highlights I got, Elon pushed me to be blonder. 'Go platinum,' he kept saying, and I kept refusing."

Musk went on to marry British actress Talulah Riley - twice.

Musk married his actress girlfriend in 2010 but two years later they divorced. "It was an amazing four years. I will love you forever. You will make someone very happy one day," he tweeted.

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Though they remarried in 2013, Musk filed for and subsequently withdrew the second divorce petition in 2014.

However, Riley filed for divorce in 2016, which was finalized later that year.

She told People magazine: "We still see each other all the time and take care of each other."

Musk dated actress Amber Heard for a year, and split in 2017, leaving the billionaire businessman heartbroken.

I was really in love, and it hurt bad, he told Rolling Stone. He was later accused of having an affair with her during her stormy marriage to Johnny Depp, a charge they have both denied.

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Musk's latest business move is perhaps a natural progression for a man who has caused many a controversy on Twitter - tweeting mainly from his toilet.

In August 2018, hepostedthat he had funding to take Tesla private at 330 per share but he was fined 15m after the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) concluded the tweets had no basis in fact and hurt investors.

A year later he was sued by defamation after branding British cave diver Vernon Unsworth, who helped rescue 12 Thai students from a cave, "pedo guy". Unsworth lost the case.

He also brooked criticism during the pandemic for playing down the severity of Covid-19 and railing against lockdowns.

His ownership of the platform has now raised theories that "cancelled" users like Donald Trump and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones will be allowed back onto Twitter.

Whatever direction Musk decides to take, there are bound to be a few surprises up his sleeve.

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Inside Elon Musks bizarre life from fluid relationship with Grimes to dumping worldly goods & living i... - The US Sun

Rights Activist Nandita Haksar on Seeing India through the Eyes of its Refugees – NewsClick

Refugees in India do not get to speak for themselves. That is why author and human rights activist Nandita Haksar, who as a lawyer won significant court battles for refugees, has given two youngsters from Iraq their own voice in her latest book, Forgotten Refugees: Two Iraqi Brothers in India. The brothers call themselves Babil and Akkad from fear of reprisals on their family members in Iraq. They recount their anxieties in both countries through engaging stories and charming anecdotes, but the complex and troubling position of refugees in the world, and the role of the UNHCR in India, are never far from the narrative. Edited excerpts from an interview with Haksar.

You tell the story of refugees in India through the story of two Iraqi brothers, Babil and the younger one, Akkad. Why have you chosen to tell it in their words?

In India, refugees are invisible. Sometimes, the mainstream media talks about a refugee struggling to survive. But each refugee has a whole back storywho are they, what have they suffered, why are they herenone of this has ever come out. The refugees do not speak for themselves in the media. We do not see them as human beings who have each had to face multiple tragedies. For instance, I saw a person from Darfur sitting outside the UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees] office, who, in a very soft-spoken style told me he has seen five brothers murdered before his eyes. He said his mother and sister are still in a camp.

Back home?

Yes, I asked him, do you talk to them. He said, I do, but what has happened [to us] is so sad that we keep crying, so we just dont talk any more. Now, if you just pass this man from Darfur by, you dont see this story. I would have liked to see him and ask him his story and also how he sees India. He told me that in Sudan, he saw Bollywood films because of which he came to India, thinking it would be full of songs and people dancing around. He said, I did not realise what I would face.

What did he face?

As a Muslim and an African, he faced prejudice. He had no rights here. He is like an illegal alien. He could not work, which is a very precarious situation. For a person coming with tremendous trauma, of five brothers shot one by one, not to share, not to have counselling, to live with it year after year, not to have certainty You could be put in jail, you may be deported, you have no future... It is a huge tragedy unfolding in the world and our country, so it had to be told from the point of view of refugees. Not only that they are here but their storywhy they have come.

In your book, someone in Iraq says they were one of the optimists, who joined the pessimists, and ended up in exile, where they wondered if they were one of the idiots. Could you explain this?

That is a quote by a woman who called herself Riverside, a 24-year-old Iraqi woman blogger. Her accounts of Iraq were so important that a lot of people read her. She wrote that some people in Iraqespecially the young like Babil, born in 1988were optimistic. They were not political at all and saw how oppressive Saddam Hussains regime had become. They had not seen or known Saddams previous history, but saw probably his worst side. By then, Saddam was weaponising religion to fight the American and imperialist forces. People like Babil thought Saddam has been president since 1979, so the only way to liberate themselves is if the Americans come and get rid of Saddamas the Americans were saying. These were the optimists. They had this image of America from the media that it is free, democratic, while Iraq is tremendously oppressive. Iraq was known to be a secular country and for liberal ideas, but when these youngsters were growing up, they saw Saddam as a Sunni leader.

How did this transition happen?

In the 1970s, Iraq was one of the most modern states with the best medical system, free education, and, influenced by socialist ideas, it was one of the most progressive states in the Middle East. Americans launched a systematic attack on Arab nationalism. Arab nationalism was part of the Non Aligned Movement, but for Babils generation of 1988, it was just a memory. They dont have memories of the Soviet Union, which had supported Iraq.

Then who were the pessimists?

The pessimists, who were much more political, were the older generation. They didnt think America was just going to leave Iraq. They knew the exposs of Abu Ghraib and Chelsea Manning. But Babel didnt know who Julian Assange or Chelsea are.

How is it possible to grow up in a country and not know what is going on, but others do, like Abu Ghraib?

Well, they knew Abu Ghraibthey used to pass by it and read the expos, but they could not put it within a political context. They thought Americans will come, and that may be terrible, but Abu Ghraib was also a prison where Saddam was torturing people. These are just ordinary people, they are kids, and Shias, so they have already been displaced by the so-called Iraqi resistance to imperialism

Which they see as Sunni resistance, and which, in turn, sees them as the enemy?

Which sees them as the enemy because they are Shia. There is an older history which these young people dont know, and it is that the very strong communist party in Iraq had Shia members. They were not part of that history and grew up without that context.

Is yours a cautionary tale? From Babil and Akkad, do we learn how we ignore history in India?

The Indian middle class have taken in the whole western narrative of the Soviet Union has collapsed. Today, luckily, India and the Indian government have not supported NATO [in the Russia-Ukraine war]. But the corporate media supported NATO and joined the vilification of Russia and demonisation of [Russian President] Vladimir Putin. No Indian journalists association passed a resolution about the ban on Russia Today [RT though a study of RT by Manchester University shows RT is not spreading disinformation.

This reflects people forgetting and not caring to learn?

It is the way in which the west, America and Europe, have managed to control the narrative. There is a cancel culture, which is what Putin said. Why are they boycotting Russian musicians from the 19th century? Why are our musicians not passing a resolution on that? How can you cancel a culture, how can you ban Russian music and literature and history?

Because of the war is bad narrative on Indian TV?

Yes, but I am not saying the war is a good thing, and for that matter, neither is Putin. Since 2014, Russia has tried to have a resolution against fascism, and the UN Assembly and west dont allow it. Why? RT points this outit has another viewpoint, which the west doesnt want to hear.

Did Babil and Akkad go through something similar to what is happening in India?

Well, they say so. They say, we can see whats happening in India is very similar to what was happening in Iraq, where every group, every person, was being made to fight with each other. Hindu-Muslim, Shia-Sunni They dont understand it necessarily, but they see it and they are victims of it.

So your book is also about an occupation of public views through the media.

It is, and it is about people growing up without knowing their history. When Babil and Akkad chose their names for the book, they thought of taking on a western name, Nils, after a character from a Swedish comic. I said, you are Iraqi refugees, coming from an ancient land, and taking a western name? They know they were Mesopotamian, they were taught in school and are proud of it. What they dont know is how their history fits into what is happening around. Only now, after this war in Ukraine, suddenly, they became political, when they heard people say the Ukrainians are white Europeans and not Afghan or Iraqi. Those kinds of remarks made them very political.

As it was a direct attack

On their identity, and then they were being told they are uncivilised.

What is the status of Babil and Akkad here in India?

They came to India in 2014 and are recognised UNHCR refugees. Initially, India did not recognise the UNHCR, but once it did, refugees who got its certification would go to the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO), which gave them residential permits. When I took on the first Burmese refugee cases in 1990, once they got UNHCR recognition, FRRO gave them a residential permit. With it, they opened a bank account and could work and do whatever foreigners can do legally in India. Many refugees, such as the Afghans, also got long-term visas to stay here. But suddenly, the FRRO is not giving residential permits and long-term visas. Not only the BJP government. Even before, the Indian government was denying refugees these.

When did this start?

We dont know. ND Pancholi filed an RTI for our small organisation, Indian Friends of Refugees, asking the government since when and why refugees are not getting residential permits. The government said it cannot reply. We appealed and they said they cannot reveal this information. We are going in appeal again.

But long before 2014, refugees were prevented from staying in India?

I think the situation is complicated for many reasons. The UNHCR protects refugees but also plays a role which may not go along with Indias policy. Refugees are used in geopolitical games. That is why Indiamost of Asiawas not a signatory to the UN refugees convention in 1951. There is humanitarian law, and there is a politics of it. It is more complicated than it seems just by looking at the policy.

Why does India need a refugee policy?

Today, if you get a UNHCR identity card recognising you as a refugee, it gets you nowhere. The UNHCR has also stopped giving monthly stipends. So these two Iraqi brothers had no financial help except Rs. 5,000 last year. Almost no refugees got any financial assistance through Covid-19 and the lockdowns.

Though the world never saw more refugees than now.

That is why the UNHCR is not giving [financial assistance], because it has a financial strain. The West is not giving money, so UNHCR is unable to raise money. There is no transparency in how it provides and withdraws stipends. It is a horrendous situation, where refugees just get an identity card. Amazingly, Babil and Akkad did not even ask for this aid, saying they are young and can work. Akkad had a saloon in Iraq, but ISIS came and said cutting hair is haram. He was under threat there, so in India, he started cutting hair again, earning Rs. 40,000-50,000 a month. One day, the police came, called him illegal and asked for his visa. The police threw his UNHCR card in his face, beat him, and threw him out. He could not even recover his things, and there is no remedy. UNHCR says, what can we do, you should not have been working. But if you dont work, how do you earn? Through UNHCR, the older brother, Babil, got a job as a waiter. But he says he is a graduate, why cant he work elsewhere? Well, he is not allowed, because he does not have an Aadhaar card or residential permit. This does not make sense!

After the second coup in Myanmar, when I got the first seven from Mizzima Media, we took them to the Vikas Puri police station to say we have brought them. The police said, Dont think just because you got a court order or UNHCR card that we cannot arrest you.

Why are they so keen to arrest?

They were trying to say that the UNHCR cannot protect them and that they were not arresting the Mizzima team from Burma, but they were arresting Rohingyas, a lot of whom were UNHCR refugees.

So there is a religious angle to how India deals with refugees?

Yes. In 1998, two Iraqis, Hazim and Anwar, stowed away from Iran to India. Their father had been executed in Iraq by Saddam, so they came to Bandar Abbas and boarded the ship Vasco da Gama, thinking it was going to Europe, but landed in Goa. In India, UNHCR asked me to handle their case and they told me that one day, in jail, the Hindu and Christian prisoners asked them why they are not celebrating Eid. Hazim said he had no idea that it was Eid that day, so the prisoners provided a prayer mat and an entirely non-Muslim congregation joined while the two prayed.

In 1998. Can you imagine such a thing happening today?

Yesin jail they would do it, but it would not happen outside. But look, where are the refugees, Muslims, staying in India but in Hindu homes? My firm belief is that even today, ordinary people are not communal though they are being communalised. Not all two lakh refugees in India are facing prejudice. Even Babil and Akkad are not facing prejudice every day. This fact shows how systematically our people are being communalised. I emphasise: it is not true that this is us, just as it was not true that it was Iraq. I am not saying Hindu-Muslim relations were perfect in India, but for years they lived in South Asia. So why did the Partition suddenly happen in 1947? Why is everyone is fighting with everyone? Not only Hindu-Muslim, the Sikhs and Hindus are fighting, in the north-east, tribes which had lived together are fighting, castes are fighting. Why these ethnic, religious, sectarian fights suddenly? Something is happening, and it is being used. Even human rights are being used to make people fight.

You have said human rights have been weaponised.

Yes.

And the way the war is bad theory was floated in the Indian media in the Russia-Ukraine context reflects this weaponisation?

Yes, nobody wants war, neither did Russia, but today a whole people, community, culture and people are demonised. You have to read history to understand it, but history is being wiped out because nowadays we have social media and nobody reads books.

Do you want to talk about the no one is illegal movement in the west? Could India benefit from it?

Well, Indians could. This movement is saying how can a human being be illegal because today there are more people in the world who do not belong to a countrywho are migrants, refugees or undocumentedthan there are citizens. So, citizenship does not offer protection to people the way it used to. All the migrants caused by climate change, war, conflict, become people who are looked at as illegal. In India, we do not have solidarity, nor fight for rights of refugees. We have been told there are many problems, so why take on refugees?

Do they take resources away?

Most refugees are in the informal sector so they do not compete with Indians. An Iraqi restaurant does not compete with Indian restaurants. Nor do refugees compete in any major economic sector. More importantly, the west is putting the entire burden of refugees on poor countries. The largest number of refugees is in the third world. They are produced by the third world and they are in camps in the third world.

Produced by the third world?

Meaning that the west bombs our countries, say, Iraq, and nine million refugees are created, some inside Iraq, the rest in the Middle East, and very few elsewhere. Or the Syrian refugees are told to remain in Turkey, and the west will pay to keep them there. Sudanese refugees are in next-door countries. The west bombed Somalia, divided it up, and the Somalian refugees are in Kenya, itself a poor country. The west and UNHCR take a minute number of refugees. The largest number of refugees in India are not looked after by the UNHCR. Even those, they cannotor do notlook after. Refugee protection and humanitarian law is a product of the Cold War. Their hearts were not bleeding for the refugees. It was used as a weapon against the Soviet Union and communist countries.

Why does India need a law for refugees?

In India, foreigners either come legally with a passport, visa etc., or are illegal. The latter category has illegal migrants or refugees, but the law does not distinguish the two. There is no category of foreigners either called migrants or refugees. A refugee is someone forced to leave his country because of persecution; political, social, racial, etc. He shelters in another country and wants asylum. Refugee law gives the protection that it will not deport him just because he is illegal. 99% of refugees who seek shelter elsewhere are without documents as they cannot run away with documents that would identify them as member of one community or another. Under refugee law, they come in and cannot be deported. Technically, this is the right of non-refoulement, which courts in India have recognised.

How have they recognised it?

When I did that first case in 1990, I said our Constitution gives every foreigner the right to life and a right against arbitrary procedure. Thus, non-refoulement should be read as part of the rights under Articles 14 and 21. It set the precedent, and many courtsJammu and Kashmir, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Guwahati, Manipurupheld right to non-refoulement. But it has not prevented the police and FRRO from deporting even refugees recognised by the UNHCR, in total violation of non-refoulement recognised by Indian courts. Refugees have been deported and arrested, suffering terrible consequences. It is like an international scandal that you recognise UNHCR, it works here, yet you deport UNHCR refugees.

What explains this situation?

I think the police are not trained on refugees and non-refoulement, the UNHCR has lawyers who dont make enough effort and, sometimes refugees are just deported without telling UNHCR or lawyers.

Do you buy the national security argument against accepting refugees?

There is a national security anglebut what is our solution? When there is no legal framework to deal with refugees, they may seek help from someone who takes advantage of their situation. They may not even know who they are taking help from. There must be a rigorous domestic process for refugees, and we must work with UNHCR and train our people to determine who is and isnt a refugee. Arbitrarily [excluding] a particular religion creates more national security [risks]. Look at their angst, desperation, and not being given any means of sustenance... They are human beings who need a system in which they can settle. You can define its limits, but there must be a system.

There are early discussions among various bodies for an Indian refugee law.

The UNHCR has been campaigning for a refugee law in India. A group called Ara Trust helped draft an asylum law at the instance of [Congress MP] Shashi Tharoor, which I have not studied. The NHRC has also said it wishes to draft a refugee law. At this juncture, I thought my book would make people aware of what refugees are and what protection they need. When you see two human beingsBabil and Akkaddeal with the system, it makes you aware of their problems and how the law should be drafted.

Being Muslims, and from a certain part of the world, has left Babil and Akkad somewhat disappointed with their experiences in India. The Africans, too, face horrifying racism An African woman said her daughter was raped but she cannot go to the police because they are illegal. They were sleeping in the park as nobody gave them a house. If we look at life, or our country, through the eyes of refugees then it looks like a prison and that is not nice for us. It is a very deep dehumanisation of our country that we are not even aware of.

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Rights Activist Nandita Haksar on Seeing India through the Eyes of its Refugees - NewsClick

Is Grimes dating whistleblower Chelsea Manning after …

After billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk and musician Grimes stole the limelight with the news of their second baby, the couple announced their separation on social media. According to Vanity Fair, the musician had revealed that the two had welcomed their second child through surrogacy. Grimes who had announced the separation through a post on Twitter is now reportedly dating controversial whistleblower Chelsea Manning.

According to reports by Vanity Fair, the duo had a daughter and named her Exa Dark Siderl Musk, whose nickname is Y. Grimes later in the evening on March 11, took to Twitter and announced the news of breaking up with Musk after the news of the birth of their daughter came out on March 10.

"Me and E have broken up *again* since the writing of this article, haha, but hes my best friend and the love of my life, and my life and art are forever dedicated to The Mission now, I think Devin wrote that part of the story really well.Sique - peace out (sic)," she had tweeted.

Now, according to Page Six, the musician is dating 34-year-old ex-US Army soldier Chelsea who famously leaked classified documents to WikiLeaks in 2010 leading her to be jailed after pleading guilty to her crimes. According to the International outlet, the two are quite serious and have been living together in Austin. The outlet also claims that Chelsea still has her apartment in Brooklyn hinting that the pair may be spending time together in the Big Apple too.

Speculation had already arisen that Grimes and Chelsea who hails from Oklahoma and is also one of Americas most high profile transgender women as well as being a high profile criminal may have grown close over the years.

Meanwhile, on the other hand, according to reports by People, Grimes and Elon had first made their relationship public in May 2018 and made their public appearance for the first time at the Met Gala. In August that same year, the duo sparked breakup rumours as they unfollowed each other on social networking sites, but was later spotted together again in October 2018. They then made headlines in 2019 after they attended the royal Kardashian-Jenner Christmas party together.

Get the latest entertainment news from India & around the world. Now follow your favourite television celebs and telly updates. Republic World is your one-stop destination for trending Bollywood news. Tune in today to stay updated with all the latest news and headlines from the world of entertainment.

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Is Grimes dating whistleblower Chelsea Manning after ...

Glenn Greenwald Sorry for Gross Remark About Chelsea Manning

Glenn Greenwald apologized Friday for gross comments he made in his public spat with Chelsea Manning.

Manning, a former U.S. Army intel analyst who was imprisoned for giving classified information to Wikileaks, called out her former friend and tweeted Thursday, Glenn Greenwald, I dont have $10,000 right now but if I get it I want to send it back to you from a donation you once did. I cant deal with this anymore. Im terrified of you and everything you do. Youre greedy, unprincipled, and Im embarrassed for ever considering you a friend.

Greenwald responded with a Twitter thread that included this line: When she was in prison trying repeatedly to kill herself, I was one of the only one who visited, spent hours on the phone, raising money for her.

Bringing up someones past suicide attempts that way in an internet argument was a pretty appalling move. When someone brought that up Thursday, Greenwald defended himself:

The next day Greenwald ended up apologizing.

When I read Chelseas tweets, I felt it as betrayal from a friend, he tweeted Friday. My reference to helping her through her (publicly reported) suicide attempts was to express why I was hurt, but I see how it was viewed & apologize. I stand by everything else I said & thats my last word on this.

Hes standing by the rest of his comments responding to Manning, accusing her of gross innuendo and even publishing all of their Twitter DMs Thursday night.

According to the images he shared on Substack, Manning messaged Greenwald after he tweeted about a push to boycott companies that advertise on Tucker Carlsons show.

At that time, a number of advertisers dropped Carlsons show after he said on air mass immigration makes the United States poorer and dirtier.

The messages Greenwald posted shows Manning saying, Glenn this Tucker Carlson thing is really really off mark TC is basically organizing as a nazbol demagogue. She asked, Whos side are you on?

He responded, in part, by saying, Its extremely disappointing that after studiously ignoring all of my messages for almost two full years you finally decided to speak to me in this aggressive tone that relies on an utter distortion of everything I think and said.

The last messages Manning apparently sent Greenwald early this year said, Youre causing actual material harm embracing this mad nazbol eat the left stuff I mean this not as an attack but because its really hurting Im just tired.

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Glenn Greenwald Sorry for Gross Remark About Chelsea Manning

This week in Oakland: Black music fest at the Continental, Alena Museum, more – The Oaklandside

Its Easter weekend, and weve included one event in our roundup for those looking to celebrate the holiday with small children. Were also highlighting two opportunities to check out and support the work of local Black artists (musical and visual), an exciting live talk at Mills featuring a big-name guest, and a workshop where aspiring podcasters can learn from one of Oaklands favorite local radio talents.

As always, keep a mask handy (some places require them, others dont) and continue carrying hand sanitizer. Also remember to bring a paper or digital copy of your vaccination card, as the city of Oakland is still requiring proof of vaccination for many indoor establishments.

Know of an event that should be featured? Email me at: azucena@oaklandside.org

Educator, author, and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Susan Stryker will be in conversation with activist and whistleblower Chelsea Manning as part of the Trans Studies Speaker Series at Mills College. During the in-person event (which will also be streamed), the two will discuss topics ranging from national security and surveillance to artificial intelligence, trans rights, critiques of the carceral complex, and prison abolitionism.

Wednesday, April 13, 7 p.m., register to attend in person or obtain the link to stream, Mills College at the Marilyn McArthur Holland Theater, Lisser Hall, 5000 MacArthur Blvd.

Comedian Donald Lacy, founder of the Love Life Foundation, an Oakland nonprofit that partners with agencies supporting at-risk youth, is hosting a free event this weekend at the Continental Club in West Oakland to celebrate local Black artists and their contributions to music. The evening will include performances by jazz, R&B, blues, and hip-hop artists including The Dynamic Miss Faye Carol, Jesse Mr. Soul James & The Dynamic 4, Chester Thompson, Derick Hughes, Martin Luther, Kev Choice, Valerie Troutt, Luqman Frank, and B. DeVeaux.

Saturday, April 16, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., free to attend, register online, The Continental Club, 1658 12th St.

In the several years since Alena Museum was displaced from its West Oakland space on Magnolia Street, the cultural nonprofitits mission is to provide safe spaces for people from the African diasporahas sprawled out into East Oakland and continued its work of fomenting art and activism in the Town. This weekend, community members will have an opportunity to check out the organizations new creative studio and idea incubator in North Oakland. Come find out what the group is planning for Juneteenth and the rest of this year, learn about job opportunities at the organization, and connect with other members of the community.

Saturday, April 16, 3 p.m to 7 p.m., free to attend, register online, Alena Museum, 935 61st Street, Suite #1

Hella Artsy, a community-based and Black-owned collective is hosting an Easter egg hunt this weekend. The event is sponsored by Lotus Bloom family resource centers and the nonprofit Youth Uprising. If you have little ones and are still looking for a place to take them to see the Easter bunny, this is the place to be. The event is happening at Youth Uprisings headquarters next to Castlemont High School. The organizers ask that each kid comes with their own basket or bag to collect their eggs. The hunt will start at 12:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 16, 12 p.m. to 3 p.m., Youth Uprising, 8711 MacArthur Blvd.

The team behind the podcasts Charmanes World and Surviving Adulthood are hosting this event for current and aspiring podcasters to mingle and network. Their aim is to build up a robust community of local podcasters here in the Bay Area by creating a space where local audio creators can connect and share their stories, resources, and tips. Participants will learn all about what it takes to be successful in the podcasting world, what equipment is necessary to get going, and more. One of the guest speakers is none other than Emmy winner, Oakland local, and host of KQEDs Rightnowish, Pendarvis Harshaw. Dont miss your chance to hear directly from Pen about his work and how he made it into the media industry.

Saturday, April 16, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., $20-$30, Oakstop, 1714 Telegraph Ave. Studio 17

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This week in Oakland: Black music fest at the Continental, Alena Museum, more - The Oaklandside

NY Public Radio Appoints Kristina Newman-Scott as Executive Director of The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space – Broadway World

New York Public Radio (NYPR), home of WNYC, WQXR, Gothamist, WNYC Studios, The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, and New Jersey Public Radio, announced today that Kristina Newman-Scott has been appointed the newly created position of Executive Director of The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space.

Newman-Scott brings strong leadership experience, a vast network in the New York City cultural world, and experience running a leading arts and media enterprise. As the President of Brooklyn-based arts institution BRIC, she led efforts to secure new sources of institutional funding, expanded marquee community programming, launched historic visual arts exhibits, and significantly increased its media exposure. This includes transforming the BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival into a completely virtual festival in the early days of the COVID-19 epidemic. Previously, she served as the Director of Culture for the State of Connecticut where she oversaw all arts, preservation and cultural initiatives. In both positions she made significant strides in advancing systemic and impactful change for diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

The Greene Space is the street-level broadcast studio and performance venue of WNYC and WQXR, channeling their collective talent to create forward-looking live events as well as original programming that fulfills the mission of New York Public Radio: to make the mind more curious, the heart more open, and the spirit more joyful through programming that is deeply rooted in New York. Since 2009, The Greene Space has hosted musicians including Janelle Mone and The National, actors Frances McDormand and the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, writers Nikki Giovanni and Roxane Gay, newsmakers Mayor Bill de Blasio and Chelsea Manning, among many others.

As Executive Director, Newman-Scott will be responsible for setting the overall direction for The Greene Space, including the oversight and strategy for all of The Greene Space's curatorial, operational, audience and financial growth. This new role provides The Greene Space team expanded capacity to grow digital and in-person audiences and to build a distinct brand in the New York City community of arts and ideas. The Greene Space remains committed to original programming aligned with New York Public Radio's strategy and mission, and to working with teams across WNYC, WNYC Studios and WQXR to support and leverage their content and talented teams.

"I'm thrilled to welcome a talented and experienced cultural figure like Kristina as we begin a new chapter for The Greene Space and invest more deeply in our live events strategy," said Ed Yim, Senior Vice President at NYPR and WQXR's Chief Content Officer. "We're excited for her to continue her groundbreaking work, bringing exciting artists and journalists together with appreciative audiences, as we move The Greene Space into the future."

"As someone who has long enjoyed the dynamic work of WNYC and WQXR , I am thrilled to be the inaugural Executive Director at this pivotal moment for The Greene Space," said Newman-Scott. "I look forward to working alongside the team at NYPR to build upon Greene Space's extraordinary legacy, especially at this moment in our lives, when the opportunities to connect with one another, both virtually and in person, are more important than ever."

Newman-Scott has over 20 years of leadership experience in arts and culture and was named one of the 2020 Observer NYC Arts Power 50 and 2021 City and State NY Power 50 helping to shape New York's digital future. She was appointed to the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs Advisory Commission in 2020 and currently serves on the Boards of National Arts Strategies, New Yorkers for Culture and Arts and the Brooklyn Arts Council. Newman-Scott was born and raised in Kingston, Jamaica where she received a Bachelors in Fine Arts in Painting from the Edna Manley College of Visual Arts. She worked as a practicing artist and TV/radio host in her home country before moving to the US in 2005.

Leadership support for The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space is provided by The Jerome L. Greene Foundation. Additional support is provided by the MetLife Foundation, the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation, and public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Further information about programs, podcasts, and stations may be found at http://www.nypublicradio.org.

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NY Public Radio Appoints Kristina Newman-Scott as Executive Director of The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space - Broadway World