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Daily Archives: September 27, 2021
SpaceXs Starlink satellites could be a stronger, more secure alternative to GPS, new research suggests – The Independent
Posted: September 27, 2021 at 5:49 pm
SpaceXs Starlink satellites may be used for navigation and GPS in the future, a new study suggests.
Engineers from Ohio State University have developed a means to use signals broadcast by Starlink to locate a position on Earth.
It is the first time the system has been used by scientists outside of SpaceX, and the researchers say they only used data related to the satellites movement and location not the actual data being sent through the satellites.
We eavesdropped on the signal, and then we designed sophisticated algorithms to pinpoint our location, and we showed that it works with great accuracy, said Zak Kassas, director of the Center for Automated Vehicles Research with Multimodal Assured Navigation (CARMEN) at Ohio State.
Even though Starlink wasnt designed for navigation purposes, we showed that it was possible to learn parts of the system well enough to use it for navigation.
The important catch here is that we are not listening in on what is being sent over these satellites. We learned the signals just well enough to harness them for navigation purposes.
Using their algorithm, they were able to identify an antenna at the campus of University of California, Irvine, within approximately 7.7 metres although this is still significantly less accurate than GPS, which identifies areas with an accuracy of between 0.3 and five metres. Using other low Earth orbit (LEO) systems, the researchers could pinpoint an area with an accuracy of 23 metres.
SpaceX currently has under 2,000 satellites in orbit but intends to launch over 40,000 more. The researchers say that as the constellation grows the accuracy of the system will increase.
Eventually, it is believed this research could be used as an alternative and more secure version of GPS, since global positioning systems are weaker than the signals given off by LEO constellations, due to their distance.
In addition, GPS uses well-known signals, and while this is a benefit to companies making equipment that use those signals, it makes it vulnerable to spoofing or jamming attacks which, in some situations, can even put malicious individuals in control of military drones or maritime vessels.
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An alarm went off during SpaceX’s all-tourist space flight. The problem was the toilet – WCVB Boston
Posted: at 5:49 pm
As Jared Isaacman and his three fellow crewmates were free-flying through Earth's orbit, shielded from the unforgiving vacuum of space by nothing but a 13-foot-wide carbon-fiber capsule, an alarm started blaring.The SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft's systems were warning the crew of a "significant" issue, Isaacman said. They'd spent months poring over SpaceX manuals and training to respond to in-space emergencies, so they leaped into action, working with SpaceX ground controllers to pinpoint the cause of the error.As it turned out, the Crew Dragon wasn't in jeopardy. But the on-board toilet was.Nothing in space is easy, including going to the bathroom. In a healthy human on Earth, making sure everything ends up in the toilet is usually a matter of simple aim. But in space, there is no feeling of gravity. There's no guarantee that what comes out will go where it's supposed to. Waste can and does go in every possible direction.To solve that problem, space toilets have fans inside them, which are used to create suction. Essentially they pull waste out of the human body and keep it stored away.And the Crew Dragon's "waste management system" fans were experiencing mechanical problems. That is what tripped the alarm the crew heard.Scott "Kidd" Poteet, an Inspiration4 mission director who helped oversee the mission from the ground, tipped reporters off about the issue in an interview with CBS. Poteet and SpaceX's director of crew mission management later confirmed there were "issues" with the waste management system at a press conference but didn't go into detail, setting off an immediate wave of speculation that the error could've created a disastrous mess.When asked directly about that on Thursday, however, Isaacman said "I want to be 100% clear: There were no issues in the cabin at all as it relates to that."But Isaacman and his fellow travelers on the Inspiration4 mission did have to work with SpaceX to respond to the problem during their three-day stay in orbit, during which they experienced numerous communications blackouts, highlighting the importance of the crew's thorough training regimen."I would say probably somewhere around 10% of our time on orbit we had no , and we were a very calm, cool crew during that," he said, adding that "mental toughness and a good frame of mind and a good attitude" were crucial to the mission."The psychological aspect is one area where you can't compromise because...there were obviously circumstances that happened up there where if you had somebody that didn't have that mental toughness and started to react poorly, that really could've brought down the whole mission," Isaacman said.SpaceX did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.The toilet anecdote also highlights a fundamental truth about humanity and its extraterrestrial ambitions no matter how polished and glitzy we may imagine our space-faring future, biological realities remain.Excreta in space, a historyIsaacman was as numerous astronauts before him bashful when it came to discussing the "toilet situation.""Nobody really wants to get into the gory details," Isaacman said. But when the Inspiration4 crew talked to some NASA astronauts, they said "using the bathroom in space is hard, and you've got to be very what was the word? very kind to one another."He added that, despite the on-board toilet issues, nobody suffered any accidents or indignities."I don't know who was training them, but we were able to work through it and get going even with what was initially challenging circumstances, so there was nothing ever like, you know, in the cabin or anything like that," he said.Figuring out how to safely relieve oneself in space was, however, was a fundamental question posed at the dawn of human spaceflight half a century ago, and the path to answers was not error-free.During the 1969 Apollo 10 mission the one that saw Thomas Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan circumnavigate the moon Stafford reported back to mission control on Day Six of the mission that a piece of waste was floating through the cabin, according to once-confidential government documents."Give me a napkin, quick," Stafford is recorded as saying a few minutes before Cernan spots another one: "Here's another goddamn turd."The feces collection process at the time, a NASA report later revealed, was an "extremely basic" plastic bag that was "taped to the buttocks.""The fecal bag system was marginally functional and was described as very 'distasteful' by the crew," an official NASA report from 2007 later revealed. "The bags provided no odor control in the small capsule and the odor was prominent."In-space toilets have evolved since then, thanks to strenuous efforts from NASA scientists, as journalist Mary Roach, author of "Packing for Mars," told NPR in 2010."The problem here is you've got this very elaborate space toilet, and you need to test it. Well, you've got to, you know, haul it over to Ellington Field, board it onto a zero-gravity simulator a plane that does these elaborate up-and-down arcs and then you've got to find some poor volunteer from the Waste System Management Office to test it. And I don't know about you, but, I mean, to do it on demand in 20 seconds, now that is asking a lot of your colon. So it's very elaborate and tricky."And, Roach writes in "Packing for Mars," astronaut potty training is no laughing matter."The simple act of urination can, without gravity, become a medical emergency requiring catheterization and embarrassing radio consults with flight surgeons," she wrote. And because urine behaves differently inside the bladder in space, it can be very difficult to tell when one needs to go.
As Jared Isaacman and his three fellow crewmates were free-flying through Earth's orbit, shielded from the unforgiving vacuum of space by nothing but a 13-foot-wide carbon-fiber capsule, an alarm started blaring.
The SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft's systems were warning the crew of a "significant" issue, Isaacman said. They'd spent months poring over SpaceX manuals and training to respond to in-space emergencies, so they leaped into action, working with SpaceX ground controllers to pinpoint the cause of the error.
As it turned out, the Crew Dragon wasn't in jeopardy. But the on-board toilet was.
Nothing in space is easy, including going to the bathroom. In a healthy human on Earth, making sure everything ends up in the toilet is usually a matter of simple aim. But in space, there is no feeling of gravity. There's no guarantee that what comes out will go where it's supposed to. Waste can and does go in every possible direction.
To solve that problem, space toilets have fans inside them, which are used to create suction. Essentially they pull waste out of the human body and keep it stored away.
And the Crew Dragon's "waste management system" fans were experiencing mechanical problems. That is what tripped the alarm the crew heard.
Scott "Kidd" Poteet, an Inspiration4 mission director who helped oversee the mission from the ground, tipped reporters off about the issue in an interview with CBS. Poteet and SpaceX's director of crew mission management later confirmed there were "issues" with the waste management system at a press conference but didn't go into detail, setting off an immediate wave of speculation that the error could've created a disastrous mess.
When asked directly about that on Thursday, however, Isaacman said "I want to be 100% clear: There were no issues in the cabin at all as it relates to that."
But Isaacman and his fellow travelers on the Inspiration4 mission did have to work with SpaceX to respond to the problem during their three-day stay in orbit, during which they experienced numerous communications blackouts, highlighting the importance of the crew's thorough training regimen.
"I would say probably somewhere around 10% of our time on orbit we had no [communication with the ground], and we were a very calm, cool crew during that," he said, adding that "mental toughness and a good frame of mind and a good attitude" were crucial to the mission.
"The psychological aspect is one area where you can't compromise because...there were obviously circumstances that happened up there where if you had somebody that didn't have that mental toughness and started to react poorly, that really could've brought down the whole mission," Isaacman said.
SpaceX did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.
The toilet anecdote also highlights a fundamental truth about humanity and its extraterrestrial ambitions no matter how polished and glitzy we may imagine our space-faring future, biological realities remain.
Isaacman was as numerous astronauts before him bashful when it came to discussing the "toilet situation."
"Nobody really wants to get into the gory details," Isaacman said. But when the Inspiration4 crew talked to some NASA astronauts, they said "using the bathroom in space is hard, and you've got to be very what was the word? very kind to one another."
He added that, despite the on-board toilet issues, nobody suffered any accidents or indignities.
"I don't know who was training them, but we were able to work through it and get [the toilet] going even with what was initially challenging circumstances, so there was nothing ever like, you know, in the cabin or anything like that," he said.
Figuring out how to safely relieve oneself in space was, however, was a fundamental question posed at the dawn of human spaceflight half a century ago, and the path to answers was not error-free.
During the 1969 Apollo 10 mission the one that saw Thomas Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan circumnavigate the moon Stafford reported back to mission control on Day Six of the mission that a piece of waste was floating through the cabin, according to once-confidential government documents.
"Give me a napkin, quick," Stafford is recorded as saying a few minutes before Cernan spots another one: "Here's another goddamn turd."
The feces collection process at the time, a NASA report later revealed, was an "extremely basic" plastic bag that was "taped to the buttocks."
"The fecal bag system was marginally functional and was described as very 'distasteful' by the crew," an official NASA report from 2007 later revealed. "The bags provided no odor control in the small capsule and the odor was prominent."
In-space toilets have evolved since then, thanks to strenuous efforts from NASA scientists, as journalist Mary Roach, author of "Packing for Mars," told NPR in 2010.
"The problem here is you've got this very elaborate space toilet, and you need to test it. Well, you've got to, you know, haul it over to Ellington Field, board it onto a zero-gravity simulator a plane that does these elaborate up-and-down arcs and then you've got to find some poor volunteer from the Waste System Management Office to test it. And I don't know about you, but, I mean, to do it on demand in 20 seconds, now that is asking a lot of your colon. So it's very elaborate and tricky."
And, Roach writes in "Packing for Mars," astronaut potty training is no laughing matter.
"The simple act of urination can, without gravity, become a medical emergency requiring catheterization and embarrassing radio consults with flight surgeons," she wrote. And because urine behaves differently inside the bladder in space, it can be very difficult to tell when one needs to go.
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An alarm went off during SpaceX's all-tourist space flight. The problem was the toilet - WCVB Boston
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Elon Musk says Tesla, SpaceX commitments in Texas a reason for split with Grimes – austin360
Posted: at 5:49 pm
Elon Musk, Grimes' baby name 'X A-12' broken down
Entrepreneur Elon Musk and musical artist Grimes welcomed a baby boy, "X A-12," to the world. Here's a possible explanation of the name.
USA TODAY
EntrepreneurElon Musk and musician Grimes, otherwise known as Claire Boucher, are "semi-separated."In a exclusive interview with Page Six, Musk said the two remain on good terms.
Musk said a reason for the breakup was due to his work with SpaceX and Tesla requiring him to be in Texas whereas Grimes work as a recording artists is mostlyin Los Angeles.
It's electric: With Tesla leading the way, Austin revs up as a key electric vehicle hub
Musk made the move to Texas last year, reportedly buying a multi-million dollar home in Austin and a tiny home in Boca Chica near SpaceX's operational center, too.
We are semi-separated but still love each other, see each other frequently and are on great terms, Musk told Page Six.
The two began dating in 2018. Grimes gave birth to the couple's son in 2020. A boy, the two named him "X A-Xii." Musk told Page Six the two will continue to co-parent their son.
Elon Musk has five other children with his ex-wifeJustine Musk.
In a 2010interview with Marie Claire just two years after their divorce, Justine said she was estranged from her ex-husband. She said they shared custody of the children but deals with his assistant on those matters.
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Elon Musk says Tesla, SpaceX commitments in Texas a reason for split with Grimes - austin360
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Do space tourists really understand the risk they’re taking? – Space.com
Posted: at 5:49 pm
Space tourism vehicles just might be the only transportation technology out there with the potential to kill humans that doesn't need to undergo independent safety certification. For now, aspiring space travelers seem okay with that, but is the fledgling industry playing a dangerous game?
The four private astronauts of SpaceX's Inspiration4 mission the first-ever all-civilian flight to orbit seemed relaxed a day before their Sept. 15 launch as they pondered the prospect of blasting off into nothingness sealed inside a space capsule, atop a rocket filled with explosive fuel.
Jared Isaacman, the tech entrepreneur who funded the mission and also served as its commander, claimed the crew was probably at a higher risk of an accident during the fighter jet flights they had taken during their training.
"Over the past couple of days, we've been tearing up the sky in fighter jets, which I put at a relatively higher risk than this mission," Isaacman said. "So we are nice and comfortable as we get strapped into [the Dragon Crew capsule]."
Related: Humanity needs a space-rescue capability, report stresses
But how high exactly is the risk of dying during a space mission? Phil McAlister, director of commercial spaceflight for NASA, told the NBC's Today show on Sept. 15 that a ride on SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule is about three times safer than a ride on NASA's space shuttle was in the final years of its operation, a time when shuttle flights were at their safest due to increases in inspections and awareness.
"We were able to incorporate some additional technologies. The Dragon system has an abort capability that we didn't have," McAlister told the Today show. "That has all increased the likelihood that you will have a successful mission."
But what exactly does that mean? Teri Hamlin, the technical lead of space shuttle probabilistic risk assessment at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, told National Public Radio in 2011 that, in the early days, the risk of a space shuttle flight ending in a disaster was a scary 1-in-9 flights.
By the time the shuttle retired in 2011, the fleet having lost two of its vehicles in catastrophic accidents, the risk had dropped tenfold, to about 1in 90. If that number and McAlister's extrapolation are correct, the probability of a catastrophic failure on Inspiration4 were about 1-in-300. (In practice, NASA suffered two fatal accidents in 135 shuttle flights, with the 1986 Challenger accident and 2003 Columbia tragedy killing seven astronauts each.)
Compare that with the 1-in-205,552 lifetime risk of an average American dying in an aircraft accident, according to data from the National Safety Council. On the other hand, the lifetime risk of dying in a car accident in the U.S. is 1 in 107, according to the same source.
Yet many experts warn that something unprecedented is going on in the space tourism industry that might increase the odds of aspiring space tourists dying in a crash.
"The problem is that the current space tourism industry neither has government [safety] regulation nor their own regulation," Tommaso Sgobba, executive director at the International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety (IAASS) and former head of flight safety at the European Space Agency (ESA), told Space.com. "Neither do they have any historical record to prove that their technology is safe."
No modern appliance or device from hair dryers and microwaves to cars, aircraft and rollercoasters can enter the market without first receiving a certification from an independent body that its design meets independently set safety standards. These certifications are there to ensure that effort has been made to minimize the risk that these technologies will injure their users and that someone independent from the company thinks they are safe.
But a U.S. Congress moratorium on safety regulations established in 2004 means that space tourism companies are less accountable than you might think.
"The moratorium was put in place to let the industry learn and progress following some very successful lobbying from the industry," Josef Koller, systems director at the center for space policy and strategy at The Aerospace Corporation, told Space.com. "The law specifies that emphasis should be placed on developing best practices and voluntary standards that could eventually lead to the implementation of regulation. But so far there is not much to go around really."
Currently, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requires commercial space companies to demonstrate that their operations present no risk to the public on the ground (or in the air space). The agency, however, has no oversight over the safety of the flight participants, nor does it certify the launch and entry vehicles as safe for humans, an FAA spokesperson told Space.com in an email.
"Under federal law, the FAAs commercial space transportation oversight responsibilities are designed to protect the safety of the public on the ground and other members of the public using the national airspace system not the individuals in the space vehicle," Steve Kulm, FAA public affairs specialist, said in the email. "In fact, Congress has prohibited the FAA from regulating the safety of the crew or spaceflight participants. Further, Congress has not authorized the FAA to certify the launch or reentry vehicle as safe for carrying humans."
Companies, however, have to prove that their technology worked safely during a test flight to gain FAA license approval to carry humans, Kulm added.
Karina Drees, the president of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, which represents space tourism companies, told Space.com that early regulation could stifle innovation in the fledgling sector and prevent the best technologies from being developed.
"That's the concern I think a lot of folks have," she said. "If we see regulation a little too soon, then there's a real potential for the best technologies to not come forward. The vehicles that have been designed today are quite different from each other. And so if regulation had been written on any one style, then that would have really prevented some of these designs from coming to the market."
Today's space tourists therefore sign informed consent in which they accept whatever might happen during the mission.
"That's one of the things that makes this country [the U.S.] great: the ability to make your own choices," Drees said. "Americans can choose whether to go scuba diving, which isn't heavily regulated, they can choose to go skydiving, they can choose to have elective surgeries. All of these things are under the same type of informed-consent requirements."
Danielle Bernstein, principal director for federal programs at The Aerospace Corporation, told Space.com that the situation in the commercial human spaceflight sector is similar to that of the early decades of aviation.
"When the Wright brothers finally figured out flying and into the 1910s and 1920s, we didn't have much commercial flight," Bernstein said. "It was more military and exploratory. But then you move later into the century and there was more of it. But still, there wasn't a lot of regulations. And so there were accidents."
The approach taken by the early aviation pioneers is sometimes described as fly-fix-fly or, as Sgobba says, "tombstone technology."
"They would build the machine, fly it, wait for an accident to happen, investigate it, and if they found a problem with the technology, they would learn from it and fix it," said Sgobba.
He added that, unlike the early aviators, space tourism companies are not building a technology from scratch. Government-funded agencies such as NASA or Russia's space agency Roscosmos have accumulated decades of experience managing the risk associated with flying things (and people) to space.
"The approach that has been in place in the space industry for the last maybe 40 years is focused on performance requirements and fault tolerance," Sgobba said. "For example, your design should never allow a single human error to cause a disaster. But if you look at the 2014 Virgin Galactic crash, that's exactly what happened."
On Oct. 31, 2014, Virgin Galactic suffered a fatal test flight crash when its first SpaceShipTwo vehicle, called Enterprise, broke apart during a rocket-powered test flight. One pilot was killed and another seriously injured.
In a subsequent investigation, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board found that the Virgin Galactic crash was caused by the early release of SpaceShipTwo's feathering tail, which is designed to slow down and stabilize the craft during its descent through Earth's atmosphere.
During Virgin Galactic's triumphant first fully crewed spaceflight this past July, which carried billionaire owner Richard Branson on board, the company's VSS Unity space plane deviated from its approved trajectory into the surrounding air space, where it could potentially have jeopardized civilians flying on commercial aircraft.
The incident led the FAA to essentially ground Virgin Galactic until an investigation is completed. The company therefore had to suspend its planned second fully crewed flight, which was supposed to take place in late September or early October. The company is now selling tickets for its flights to suborbital space for $450,000 per seat.
Sgobba questions whether the excitement of a space trip would be enough for enthusiasts (and a lot of bored rich people) if some of these "ordinary citizens" were to perish during their adventure.
"I think that once civilians start dying, the market for space tourism will evaporate," Sgobba said. "Just like it evaporated for Concorde. Concorde was a luxurious version for going from Paris to New York. But once it had an accident, people lost interest. The companies fixed the problem, but the interest was no longer there."
Virgin Galactic's space plane is, according to Sgobba, inherently more dangerous than a capsule such as Blue Origin's New Shepard or SpaceX's Crew Dragon. The reliance on the human factor is higher, and it is impossible to perform tests without human pilots inside.
"Virgin Galactic is more problematic, because there is always a problem when there are safety-critical mechanisms in place," Sgobba said. "It could be a helicopter or another aircraft concept; there is always a higher risk when there are large moving parts that you rely on to accomplish your mission to be safe. That doesn't mean that you cannot operate something like the Virgin Galactic feathering tail safely, but there definitely needs to be extra effort to make this safe."
Blue Origin shares information about its approach to safety in a video on its website. The company stresses a multiply redundant approach that should ensure that no critical system can break down without a backup being available, Blue Origin representatives said.
SpaceX benefited during the development of its crewed system from cooperation with NASA. The company has a contract to fly NASA astronauts to and from the International Space Station, so it has to meet the space agency's rigorous safety standards.
Still, Sgobba questions some of SpaceX's practices.
"For the Inspiration4 mission, they replaced a docking port on the Dragon crew capsule with this beautiful cupola," Sgobba said. "But my question is, who, independent from the project, reviewed this change to make sure it's safe?"
Before NASA, ESA or the other space agencies launch anything into space, they conduct flight readiness reviews, Sgobba explained. The independence of the panel conducting the review is a key requirement to making its findings valid. During such a review, every part is scrutinized to minimize the chance that problems will occur.
"But who was in charge of reviewing the changes they made for the Inspiration4 mission?" said Sgobba. "Was it just Elon Musk giving his approval? That would be the first case in the history of technologically advanced industries when a single person, the owner, has the final word on an activity like this."
Again, in the current regulatory environment, there is no one to ask questions about such procedures.
The 2004 U.S. Congress moratorium on the safety regulation of space tourism is set to expire in 2023. But what exactly will happen next is still unclear.
The Commercial Spaceflight Federation has been cooperating with standards organization ASTM International on guidelines and has already published recommendations on fault tolerance, data exchange to support the integration of space operations into air traffic management and classification of safety events, said Drees.
When asked whether the industry would be ready for more stringent regulations after 2023, she said she doesn't think so. It's still the early days, and regulation would impede innovation, she said.
For the foreseeable future, aspiring space tourists, or spaceflight participants, will have to trust the companies that they want to fly with. To help the customers make the decision whether to sign the informed consent waiver, the companies are obliged to disclose their safety record, and Drees believes everybody is ready to do so.
"It's really in the company's best interest to make sure they're disclosing in pretty clear terms the track record of the vehicle, because they want their companies to be ongoing for years to come," Drees said. "There's really no incentive for the companies to not disclose any of that information. And there's no incentive for the companies to take shortcuts to not practice safely."
Some might question how justified such trust in those companies really is. Bank of America, which covers Virgin Galactic's publicly traded stock, last week criticized the company's failure to disclose that VSS Unity veered off course during the July flight, the incident that led to the grounding by the FAA.
Sgobba, in the meantime, calls for a more "mature" approach and, together with other industry veterans like Koller and Bernstein, proposes the creation of a new independent body overseeing the safety of commercial spaceflight operations, the Space Safety Institute.
"The Space Safety Institute would serve as an independent reviewer," Sgobba said. "It would also focus on education and research in critical areas of space systems' safety."
Koller added: "The Space Safety Institute would provide a platform where people and entities could come together and discuss ways of accomplishing their goals. If a company has a new idea, it's important to provide support and technical analysis on whether the system can actually achieve that goal and be safe."
Drees said the commercial spaceflight industry might be supportive of such an idea, as long as it doesn't inhibit its ability to innovate.
"That's going to be really critical to the future of the industry that we don't write standards and regulations before we have that opportunity to innovate and design new vehicles," she said. "So, as long as we still have that opportunity to design and build and fly the vehicles without being subject to stringent regulations right from the start, then I think industry is generally supportive of that idea."
Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
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Do space tourists really understand the risk they're taking? - Space.com
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Will Bangladesh Recognize the Taliban Regime? The Diplomat – The Diplomat
Posted: at 5:49 pm
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A meeting of foreign ministers of member-states of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), which was scheduled to be held on September 26 on the sidelines of the 76th Session of the United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York, was called off over the question of the participation of the Taliban regime in the meeting. With most SAARC member states opposed to the Talibans participation and Pakistan unwilling to go ahead with the event sans the Taliban, the meeting was called off.
The question of extending recognition to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan is one that many countries across the world are grappling with.
In an interview with BBC Bangla, Bangladeshs Foreign Minister Dr. A.K. Abdul Momen laid out the principles that would determine Bangladeshs decision. A peoples government that comes through a political and democratic process where the peoples will and desires are reflected will have Dhakas full support, Momen said.
Bangladesh always decides its foreign policy independently and according to its interests, he added.
Historically, Bangladesh has sided with countries where political groups galvanized mass support for independence and freedom from oppression. For instance, Bangladeshi leaders have often reiterated support for Vietnams struggle for emancipation from the clutches of imperialist powers.
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Academic literature suggests that democratic states feel some kind of solidarity toward other democratic states. For instance, democratic countries might find themselves drawn to support and ally with Taiwan. Even though the Peoples Republic of China was recognized and secured U.N. membership in 1971, Taiwans allies see it as a flag-bearer of democracy in the region, as a counter to Chinese hegemony. Another study finds post-colonial solidarity to be a significant factor in diplomatic recognition.
Often states fear that recognizing a regime that came out of an armed struggle or an independence movement, even if in in another part of the world, might leave them vulnerable to similar demands at home. Following Kosovos call for independence in 2008, for instance, Spain, Armenia, and Indonesia were among several countries that refused to recognize the new state. Spains decision stemmed from concerns regarding its problem with domestic independence movements in Galicia, Basque, and Catalonia. Indonesia was one of 51 countries that voted against Kosovos bid to join Interpol. The archipelago has long struggled with problems of secession, the most notable case being the independence of Timor-Leste in 2002.
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On the contrary, countries whose independence was preceded by protracted struggles for freedom have usually received recognition from Bangladesh. Dhaka was among the first to recognize South Sudan. Although it had good relations with Sudan Bangladesh was part of U.N. peacekeeping missions there it did not hesitate to support South Sudans emergence as an independent state. Bangladesh saw South Sudans arduous and protracted struggle for freedom as an important commonality between the two countries.
In the Middle East, the Palestinian struggle for an independent state is the main driver behind Bangladeshs longstanding relationship with the Palestinians and its international lobbying for Palestinian statehood. Their strong bond is based on their shared struggle against oppression, so much so that Dhaka is yet to extend recognition to the state of Israel.
In 1991, Bangladesh became the 13th country in the world to recognize Azerbaijan after it declared independence in October that year. Since then, Bangladesh has staunchly supported Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh war against the Armenians. When then-Foreign Minister of Bangladesh Dipu Moni visited Nabiyev in 2013, Bangladesh went so far as to stand by Azerbaijans position on the Khojaly massacre.
In all these instances, Bangladeshs support for independence movements fighting against tyranny and for inclusive freedom is strikingly clear. According diplomatic recognition to a country then boils down to whether or not a peoples government followed that protracted struggle whether the upheaval galvanized an inclusive government popularly backed by the nation.
What does this mean for the Taliban regime?
Wars of liberation and struggles for freedom open up space for the setting up new democratic governments, granting hard-fought rights, and consolidating support and recognition for a liberal democratic order. However, the Taliban, given their undemocratic outlook and ideology, are increasingly moving in the opposite direction.
The Taliban regime has not met the criteria laid out by the international community for diplomatic recognition. In fact, it has pushed back against global demands for the setting up of an inclusive government.
On September 17, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a resolution calling on the Taliban to establish an inclusive government that has the full, equal, and meaningful participation of women and upholds human rights. Taliban spokesperson and Deputy Minister for Information Zabiullah Mujahid categorically rejected the calls. No other country has the right to ask the Islamic Emirate to form an inclusive government, Mujahid said.
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In the context of the Talibans non-inclusive interim set-up and its continued use of violence to shut down expression, protest, and a free press, statements like the one issued by Mujahid will only make it more difficult for the Taliban regime to get international recognition.
Divisions between the political-moderates and military-hardliners in the Taliban have erupted to the fore. Apparently the political elements led by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar are in favor of establishing an inclusive government. It is apparent that the Taliban are still a long way from forming an inclusive, encompassing peoples government in Afghanistan.
Does this mean Bangladesh has closed the gates of diplomatic recognition on the Taliban? It is still too early to tell.
On August 17, the top European Union (EU) diplomat, Josep Borrell, called for dialogue with the Taliban to prevent crises. While clarifying that the EU isnt going to recognize the Taliban as yet, Borrell pointed out to a news conference after a meeting of EU foreign ministers that engaging the Taliban was inevitable. We have to talk with them for everything, even to try to protect women and girls. Even for that, you have to get in touch with them.
Talks with the Taliban have been initiated by the U.N. and the EU, and Bangladesh is joining in. The UN and EU have asked us if we want to be a part to the dialogue. We have agreed to it, Shahriar Alam, deputy minister for foreign affairs told reporters recently.
It does seem that Dhakas criteria for according diplomatic recognition are poised to expand. It can be expected to mirror the EUs definition of inclusivity.
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Pakistan has highest inflation rate in the world, says Shehbaz Sharif – Yahoo Singapore News
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PML-N President Shahbaz Sharif (File Photo)
Islamabad [Pakistan], September 26 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) President Shahbaz Sharif on Saturday lashed out at Prime Minister Imran Khan-led PTI government over hike in gas prices and said the country has the "highest inflation rate and lowest income in the world."
Demanding to withdraw a proposed hike in gas prices, the Opposition leader said that rising gas prices are "unjustified" and "another foolish act" by the government, Geo News reported.
Terming the last financial budget as "the International Monetary Fund (IMF) budget", Sharif wrote on Twitter: "The government is only fulfiling the conditions set by the IMF." He said that the government lied to the nation about a "tax-free budget".
"People cannot bear more inflation; this oppression after oppression must be stopped," Geo News quoted Sharif as saying.
He said that gas and electricity prices have witnessed "historic" surges and censured PM Imran Khan for giving rise to "civil war-like conditions" with "one foolish decision after another".
"Rising electricity and gas prices will make people's lives more miserable while an increase in gas prices will make bread more expensive and consumer's monthly bills will go up further," the PML-N leader said.
Sharif stated that Imran Khan "should resign instead of pressuring the people with soaring inflation," Geo News reported.
"How long will Pakistanis suffer the consequences of Imran Khan's incompetence?" he questioned.
The government has already increased the price of gas by 141 per cent, he said, adding that gas companies have been destroyed "due to Imran Khan's incompetence".
The opposition leader said that Pakistan is buying the most expensive LNG in the world, while electricity and gas prices in Pakistan are also the most expensive in South Asia, Geo News reported.
"Pakistan has the highest inflation rate and lowest income in the world," Sharif added. (ANI)
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What are the Bahraini authorities waiting for to release Abduljalil Al-Singace? | Reporters without borders – Reporters sans frontires
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Aged 59 and serving a life sentence, Al-Singace has been on hunger strike since 8 July and has lost more than 20 kilos. His health in now in great danger.
RSF has learned that he is currently consuming only water and milk powder dissolved in water. As a result, his blood sugar level is dangerously low, and his blood pressure and white blood cell count have also dropped drastically. He was transferred to the Kanoo medical centre on 30 July.
Al-Singace is protesting against constant harassment by his prison guards, who eavesdrop on his phone calls with his family, often disconnect his phone line without any warning, keep him under constant surveillance in his cell, and prevent him from sleeping.
The research work he had been doing in prison was also confiscated from him without any justification. In 2015, he went on hunger strike for more than 300 days in protest against the way he was being mistreated.
In March, on the tenth anniversary of his arrest, RSF called on the authorities to release him because his health has worsened steadily in prison. He is not getting appropriate medical care for muscular problems that are the result of a polio attack in his youth, and he has difficulty walking because the rubber cushions on his crutches have worn down.
In a written response to RSF, the Bahraini government claimed that Al-Singace was receiving all necessary healthcare and treatment, and that it was proud of its human rights record.
We call on the Bahraini authorities to urgently release Abduljalil Al-Singace for the sake of the human rights that the kingdom claims to protect, said Sabrina Bennoui, the head of RSFs Middle East desk. It is deplorable and unacceptable that, to denounce his prison conditions. this blogger is being forced to resort to this extreme method that is putting his health in great danger.
ADHRB executive director Husain Abdulla urged the international community, especially allies of Bahrain such as France and the United Kingdom, to to apply serious pressure on the Bahraini regime to unconditionally release Dr. Al-Singace. He added that being detained for over 10 years shows the depth of oppression in Bahrain.
Five British MPs wrote to their government in July calling on it to intervene urgently.
Bahrain is ranked 169th out of 180 countries in RSF's 2021 World Press Freedom Index.
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Covid deaths are highest in Mississippi but Gov. Tate Reeves does nothing – MSNBC
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Though hes the fifth post-Reconstruction Republican to lead Mississippi, Gov. Tate Reeves is the first governor of either party to have been born (as I was) in the newness of the states post-civil rights era.
But despite his status as one of the Souths (and one of the countrys) youngest governors, Reeves is tearing the very first page out of the playbook drafted by old Southern Democrats and today's Southern Republicans: When your people are suffering unnecessarily, rile them with a sermon about the federal governments evil.
When your people are suffering unnecessarily, rile them with a sermon about the federal governments evil.
Mississippi has proved to be as fertile ground for the novel coronavirus as its black Delta soil has been for cotton. But the same state that mounted an aggressive response when the boll weevil threatened to chew through its cash crop is now standing idly by as Covid-19 tears through its population. Meanwhile, its governor calls it tyrannical that President Joe Biden is aggressively push for lifesaving vaccines.
If you look back through history, every single time tyrants have tried to place an emphasis on their individuals in their country, theyve always said, Oh, Im doing it because its in the best interest of our citizens, Reeves told a Jackson television station. If you look back in history, this is nothing but a tyrannical-type move by the president.
An NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll from 2019 found that a full quarter of Mississippians almost never trust the federal government to do whats right. Thats not surprising given that so many white Mississippians largely because of the federal governments enforcement of civil rights laws have been raised to see the federal government as a threat. The pervasive anti-Washington animus in Mississippi means Reeves decision to dial up the demagoguery will likely extend his political life even as it cuts short the actual lives of Mississippians. The state leads the nation in Covid-19 deaths per capita; if it were its own country, it would have one of the worlds worst death rates.
Biden, who leads a country where Covid-19 has killed 1 in every 500 residents, has responded with a muscular policy that requires businesses of a certain size to mandate vaccines or regular Covid-19 tests for their employees. Reeves, who leads a state where the same disease has killed about 1 of every 320 Mississippians, is responding with empty expressions about how tore up he is that so many have died on his watch.
Over 9,000 Mississippians have passed away with Covid, and every single one of them breaks my heart, Reeves told CNNs Jake Tapper during a Sept. 19 segment. The August death of 13-year-old MKayla Robinson, whose school started the year without a mask mandate after Reeves left the decision to individual school district, broke his heart so much that even as he claimed he was praying for her family and all Mississippians who're suffering, he referred to her only as the young kid in Smith County.
You can pray until you faint, Mississippis Fannie Lou Hamer famously said, but unless you get up and try to do something, God is not going to put it in your lap.
A full quarter of Mississippians almost never trust the federal government to do whats right.
Yet there Reeves sits: not only not doing anything but also refusing to consider doing anything.
Tapper appeared to have only one goal during his interview with Reeves: to get him to say Mississippis disproportionate death toll requires some action from the state.
But Reeves said that the question here is not about what we do in Mississippi. It's what this president is trying to impose upon the American worker. He called Bidens policy an attack by the president on hardworking Americans and hardworking Mississippians.
As Tapper kept asking if he or Mississippis lawmakers would do anything, Reeves said, In Mississippi, our Legislature is a part-time Legislature. Sometimes I wonder if in America, if our Congress was part-time, we wouldn't be in a better position.
Better position than what? Tapper asked.
Reeves: Mississippi and where we are with the virus.
Tapper: Your state is second worst, second worst in the world.
People unfamiliar with Mississippi or the South may have watched that exchange and believed Reeves made a poor showing. They may have laughed at his assertion that the U.S. should be looking to Mississippi for guidance and that counting the dead is the wrong way to judge the states response to the pandemic.
But I watched with the disgust of someone who knows that Reeves appearance wont hurt his standing with the states conservatives and that it is more likely to bolster it. I watched with anger and with a sick feeling in my stomach that Reeves policy of standing back and impugning the feds imperils the lives of people I love.
Is this what youthful leadership is going to bring to the South?
Is this what youthful leadership is going to bring to the South? The same state-vs.-feds nonsense that has never paid dividends for anybody but those politicians? Is it just going to be more of the same cynical orations that praise backward thinking and vilify progress as oppression?
Apparently. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is leading the South in anti-government antipathy, and hes four years younger than Reeves.
Attacking the feds may be good politics, but what counts as good politics in Mississippi also counts as good business for the undertakers. Residents are falling down dead around Reeves, and all he will promise is to feel sad.
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Universal peace is a fundamental human right – The Sunday Guardian Live – The Sunday Guardian
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It is no accident that countries that have relatively peaceful societies make far more progress than those that are roiled in conflict.
September 21, the International Day of Peace, passed without any pause in the tensions and conflicts taking place across the world. The day that is intended to emphasise the importance of peace seems to have gone unnoticed. In contrast, the attack on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon on 11 September 2001 is remembered by billions of people whenever that date comes up. Conflict and tension seem to have a far greater magnetic hold on the attention of people than calls for their elimination. This may be because peace is not regarded as the natural order of society, nor even as an aspiration to be sought. That goal is regarded as a fantasy that exists only in words rather than in real life. This when universal peace is a fundamental human right. There remains much debate about concepts such as universal human rights, with some governments arguing in favour of this broad-brush term, while others claim that each government has the right to decide which rights are universal and should be safeguarded, and which not. This is a standard that can vary widely. Even in India, a country where universal suffrage was introduced at the beginning of independence from colonial rule, even the right to life was not for two years considered a fundamental right. The 20th century saw both debilitating wars during 1914-19 and 1939-45, as well as the subsequent liberation of several countries from colonial oppression. After the wars, there was a weakening of the repressive sinews of the colonial states caused by the Germans treating other European powers in much the same way as these powers themselves were treating colonies in Asia and Africa. The freedom movements to ensure freedom from colonial oppression grew in scale sufficiently after 1945 to lead to the withdrawal of the colonial power. In India, the first major colony to gain its freedom, the huge proportion of Indian soldiers, sailors and air personnel increasingly began to question their loyalty to a foreign flag, an emotion key to the setting up of the first free government of India and the Indian National Army by Subhas Chandra Bose during the 1939-45 war. The role of the tide of mutiny that swept over the armed forces in India after the 1939-45 war ended in 1945 has been largely ignored by historians, who prefer to remain embedded in a sanitised narrative that almost completely excludes the role of this factor in persuading even Winston Churchill that holding on to India by force of arms was no longer a viable option. The British divided and quit, convinced that in Pakistan it would have a reliable partner. Such an expectation was based on the vocal support expressed by M.A. Jinnah for the Allied cause, in contrast to senior Congress leaders, who preferred to be non-aligned. In 1942, during the peak of the tide of victory by Germany and Japan against the US-UK alliance, the Congress Party gave a call for the British to quit India. In contrast, Jinnah expressed no similar sentiment, thereby draining support for the Congress in the dovecotes of power in London and ensuring a substantial rise in the support given to the Muslim League and its plan to vivisect India into two states. For Mahatma Gandhi, a saint, the results of an action were not what mattered but the action itself. Which is why the Mahatma consented to Partition in 1947 after campaigning tirelessly for two decades against the irrational view of the Muslim League that Hindus and Muslims formed two separate nations. In fact, the DNA of both, whether cultural or biological, is the same, a fact that has recently been emphasised by RSS Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat to the consternation of several of his detractors in India and elsewhere.Had the British and other European powers the wisdom to partner with, rather than seek to dominate, people in Africa, Asia and South America that they overran, both they as well as the rest of the world would have benefited. An India that was prospering would have been an attractive market for British goods, just as a vibrant Indonesia would have been for the Netherlands or Vietnam for the French. The quicksand of notions of racial supremacy (that showed itself to the European powers in the form of Nazi Germany during 1933-45) led to oppression and the consequent lowering of the possibilities for mutual benefit, the only kind that is both just and long-lasting. Hitlers genocide denuded Germany of some of that countrys best brains, and among other events ensured that the US developed the atom bomb before the tyrants own country did. Apart from universal suffrage, India also pioneered in ways of ensuring justice to long-suppressed communities, giving them opportunities in public education and government that they did not have until then. The way in which some of Indias best doctors, engineers and scientists have come from so-called backward classes highlights the truth of human society being horizontal (different but equal) rather than vertical (higher and lower). Had the European powers absorbed some of the lessons in traditional teachings in the countries they plundered, and transferred some of their own skills to the populations there, the results would have been much more beneficial than the way in which the enslavement of countries actually took place. There is much talk among military personnel in the PRC about a kinetic reversal of the independent nature of Taiwan. Even were such a forced union to take place, those Taiwanese who have been and would have in future been most helpful to the further development of the PRC itself would leave for more hospitable shores, and strengthen those countries against China, much the way those who took refuge from Nazi Germany ensured a scaling up of the capabilities of the UK and the US during the 1939-45 war. In the knowledge economy, progress comes through willing consent and not through fiat. To seek to enforce through police action the creativity and intellectual excellence needed to scale up Artificial Intelligence and other capabilities is to indulge in futility. Given the expansion in the military capabilities of Taiwan that has taken place under President Tsais watch, a forced union with the PRC, the kinetic solution being pushed by elements in the Central Military Commission seems impossible without an unbearable impact on Chinas own east coast. Which would be a blessing for the PRC, for any union created by the PLA would damage the PRC as much or more as it would Taiwan itself. In Indias case, border tensions since 2017 have finally resulted in a de-linking of trade with PLA moves to nibble away at Indias territory. It is no accident that countries that have relatively peaceful societies make far more progress than those that are roiled in conflict. The greater an appreciation of the utility of universal peace (and the mutual empowerment and sharing of capabilities that this denotes), the better for the world. Unfortunately, not just between countries, but between regions in a country, within groups in a nation, and even inside individual families, tensions and the conflict these create are commonplace. Recently some opined that a marriage certificate gave the right to the husband to violate the modesty of his spouse. Nothing should give such a right. The attainment of a situation where harmony and peace rather than conflict and force are omnipresent may seem distant. Alas, even more so than was air travel was in the past, or the debut this year of space travel with passengers but without an astronaut on board.
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Uganda opposition supporters protest at UN offices over rights abuses – The East African
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By DAILY MONITOR
Ugandanopposition party supporters basedin the US at the weekend staged a peaceful demonstration outside the United Nations headquarters in New York, urging the international community to check on the excesses of President Yoweri Musevenis administration.
In Kampala, the government dismissed the protestors as busybodies, with visa issues, and justifying their stay abroad, and said they are not the first because we have had many people who pose as economic refugees in a way of mocking Uganda and they have never had any fruit from their actions.
Donning red T-shirts and berets, which are outlawed in Uganda as exclusive for use by military police, theNational Unity Platform (NUP)protestors shouted slogans and held placards with messages denouncing the government.
Masaka lives matter, Museveni must be investigated for crimes against humanity, read one placard, as another was written a government of dictatorship,.
The Leader of Opposition in Parliament, Mr Mathias Mpuuga, who was present at the protests, said: We want the whole world to see the level of injustice, oppression, and intimidation currently going on in Uganda.
The protests coincided with the 76th session of the UN General Assembly and were held a day after President Museveni addressed the Assembly.
Uganda reaffirms its commitment to implementing the 2030 agenda for sustainable development in its entirety and to achieving the sustainable development goals as we commence a decade of action and deliverable development, Mr Museveni told global leaders.
The 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) sets out a vision for global progress grounded in international human rights standards and equality centred around economic and social rights as well as civil, political, and cultural rights.
The protestors accused Musevenis administration of democratic and human rights abuses.
We want to show the world the injustices going on in Uganda. The world must know that blatant human rights abuses are being committed in Uganda by the regime and its security agencies, Mr Joel Semakula, the NUP coordinator in California, said.
The protestors were from NUP, a party led by Robert Kyagulanyi, alias Bobi Wine. Mr Kyagulanyis brother Fred Nyanzi Ssentamu, better known as Chairman Nyanzi, as well as Mityana Municipality Member of Parliament Francis Zaake were in New York.
Some of the demonstrators flew to New York from California and Seattle Washington.
In a rejoinder, Uganda Media Centre executive director Ofwono Opondo said: We do not need to be told by anybody outside that abusing rights is something wrong. It is the [ruling] National Resistance Movement (NRM) group that made a Constitution and the laws.
[In August] President Museveni himself, without being forced by anyone, came out and condemned the human rights violation within security agencies and made an undertaking to punish anyone who involves themselves in the acts, he said.
The demonstrators, according to Mr Opondo, are lazy, idle people in the diaspora who have failed to come back and develop their country.
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