Daily Archives: February 1, 2022

CDS Bipin Rawats death was Allahs work, Muslims should be prepared to kill or die: Maulana Usmanis videos show how he openly called for violence -…

Posted: February 1, 2022 at 2:46 am

Maulana Qamar Gani Usmani was arrested by the Gujarat ATS on January 30 in connection to the brutal murder of a Hindu man named Kishan Bharwad in Gujarats Ahmedabad. Usmani has been accused of aiding and abetting Shabbir, the person who had killed Bharwad over alleged blasphemy.

Several videos have surfaced on social media where Usmani is seen instigating Muslims for violence and even murder if someone insults Prophet Muhammad.

More videos of the Islamic hardliner Maulana Usmani have surfaced where he is seen openly instigating the Muslim community for violence and armed offensive over alleged oppression.

In a video available on Facebook, uploaded on January 3 this year, Usmani is seen addressing a gathering of followers. He is seen saying, Our main enemy is the RSS. RSS is so powerful that at first glance it would seem it is foolish to face them. But we (Muslims) have the blessings and courage given by Allah. If we have faith in Allah, we can face even 10 such powers like RSS. They put me in jail for 19 days. They can jail one Qamar Usmani and one Salman Azhari. Because the world will see our love for our religion. The media should record this statement. If one faithful Muslim gives a call for Jihad, all your missiles and all your Armies will be powerless to face the force of Islam.

He further says, It was our mistake that we kept silent when ISIS, with its terrorist actions, made the world believe that jihad is a bad thing. We should have corrected them. We should have told everyone that Jihad is not terrorism but standing upright and doing justice. The day when a real martyr of Islam stands up to inspire Muslims, no forces, no commander can keep Muslims oppressed any longer. They (the Indian government) had appointed one commander for all the three armed forces (CDS Bipin Rawat). See what Allah did to him. All your efforts will fail before the will of Allah.

Usmani further says that Muslims should not just sit and keep praying, they should act and fight.

In another video, Usmani is asking Muslim political leaders and lawmakers to make Islam their priority. He says that all the power and positions are useless if the political leaders do not use that for Islam. He adds that political power should only be used to serve Allah and his cause.

He further says that there are some Muslims who fear police arrests and lathi charges. He adds that the cause of Islam does not need followers who are so calculative about their own safety, but it needs fanatics who forget about themselves for the cause.

Usmani says that during the Delhi protests, he had told Muslims that they should forget about personal safety. We need people who come to the ground with the mentality of sacrifice. Wapas aye to Ghazi, naa aye toh Shaheed (if we return, we are Ghazi and if we fail to return we are martyrs (of Islam).

Ghazi is an Islamic word that means a warrior who kills for Islam.

He further instigates his Muslim followers to be prepared to sacrifice themselves for the Islamic cause. In this video, Usmani effectively admits that he had instigated the violence during the anti-CAA protests and Delhi riots.

While the central government and most state governments take calls to violence seriously, for some reason, open calls given to behead people over alleged instances of blasphemy, frequently done by one particular community, are often ignored by the authorities. The open calls to kill anyone who mocks or criticises Muhammad, or even shares a social media cartoon, have resulted in the Bengaluru riots, and several murders over the years.

Maulana Usmani was seen not just instigating Muslims to take law in their hands and indulge in violence, he had been endorsing the Sar Tan Se Juda slogans. In a video from August 2021 that was shared on Twitter by journalist Swati Goel Sharma, the Delhi police personnel were seen desperately trying to stop Maulana Usmani from holding anti-blasphemy protests. We will go anyhow (to protest) since we have made a call to the public, he was seen announcing.

In February 2021, Usmani had justified themurder of Kamlesh Tiwari. He had said, There is a conspiracy to ruin the lives of Muslims. There is an attempt to make India just like Spain. To achieve it, they are testing how much Muslims in India love their Prophet.

Kishan Bharwad had in the past shared a social media post that was seen as an insult to Prophet Muhammad by some Islamists.

Usmani was earlier arrested for instigating violence over the fake news of mosque vandalism in Tripura. The murderer Shabbir has reportedly told the police that Usmani had told him that it was his right to kill someone whom he sees as anti-Islamic. Usmani is associated with Tahreek Farogh-e-Islami or TFI. Reports say that ATS suspects Usmanis organisation is associated with Pakistans Tehreek-e-Labbaik.

In the murder case of Kishan Bharwad, the Gujarat ATS has so far arrested the killers named Shabbir and Imtiyaz, a Maulvi from Ahmedabad named Ayyub, Maulana Uslamni from TFI, and another few suspects for helping the killers.

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CDS Bipin Rawats death was Allahs work, Muslims should be prepared to kill or die: Maulana Usmanis videos show how he openly called for violence -...

Posted in Government Oppression | Comments Off on CDS Bipin Rawats death was Allahs work, Muslims should be prepared to kill or die: Maulana Usmanis videos show how he openly called for violence -…

‘I remember the feeling of insult’: when Britain imprisoned its wartime refugees – The Guardian

Posted: at 2:46 am

Hilde Marchant, star reporter for the Daily Express, heard the story from a sailor. At first she didnt believe it. Two nights earlier, the sailor explained, he had been standing on the deck of a ship loaded with British nationals headed to England, and watched as a confetti of parachutes drifted into Rotterdam harbour. Dangling from each silhouetted disc, the sailor insisted, were German soldiers dressed, not in Nazi uniforms, but skirts and blouses. Each carried a submachine gun. When the disguised paratroopers landed, another witness claimed, men and women working as cleaners and servants emerged from basements and back doors wearing German uniforms. These traitorous individuals, the witness said, had come to Holland claiming to be refugees from Nazi oppression, sleeper agents posing as asylum seekers.

On 13 May 1940, three days after the invasion of the Netherlands began, the Daily Express published Marchants story under the headline Germans dropped women parachutists as decoys. Peppered throughout Marchants story was the term fifth columnist one that, a short time before, would have been unrecognisable to most readers. Marchant was one of the first people to adopt the phrase, coined during the 1936 Spanish civil war as shorthand for traitors poised to support an enemy invasion from within. British newspapers had begun to refer to fifth columnists after the German invasion of Norway in early April 1940, when reports circulated that spies had been installed in the country to aid the German invasion. By the time Marchants story ran, there wasnt a reader in Britain unaware of the term, or the notion that a similar network of duplicitous immigrants might lurk in their own towns and villages.

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The storys claims of treachery were, it would later transpire, exaggerated. But the image of the double-crossing immigrant proved indelible, and not only among the readers of newspapers. The British envoy to the Dutch government, Sir Nevile Bland, had also witnessed the landings of the German paratroopers just before he escaped via ship. When Bland reached London the day after the Express story ran, he drafted an eyewitness report. The account, titled Fifth Column Menace, was vivid and fearful. No matter how superficially charming and devoted they appear, Bland wrote, every German or Austrian in Britain is a real and grave menace. When the signal is given to invade Britain, Bland continued, there will be satellites of the monster all over the country who will at once embark on widespread sabotage and attacks on civilians. Britain, Bland concluded, cannot afford to take this risk. ALL Germans and Austrians, at least, ought to be interned at once.

Blands feverish report was widely distributed in Whitehall. A copy reached King George VI, who summoned the home secretary, Sir John Anderson, for a meeting at Buckingham Palace. You must take immediate action against political fifth columnists and other enemies of the state, he told Anderson. Men and women. When the reports claims were broadcast by the BBC, they had an immediate and transformative effect on the British publics attitude towards refugees, and Jews in particular, which until now had been broadly characterised by fragile tolerance.

Before May 1940, not a single person interviewed by the polling group Mass Observation suspected refugees to Britain of espionage, or suggested that they should be interned. Up until then, only 569 individuals had been interned, either through MI5s initial roundups or as the result of mandatory tribunals where senior judges had tested the loyalties of tens of thousands of asylum seekers. Some critics had always maintained that the home secretarys policy had been too feeble. In April 1940, after the German occupation of Norway made an invasion of Britain seem possible, Col Henry Burton, Conservative member for Sudbury, asked members of the House of Commons if it would not be far better to intern all the lot and then pick out the good ones. This view had spread through the Conservative back benches and now, with the news from the Netherlands, the newspapers carried the clarion call for mass internment.

Act! Act! Act! Do It Now! blared a Daily Mail article by G Ward Price, on 24 May. All refugees should be drafted without delay to a remote part of the country and kept under strict supervision. You fail to realise, Price wrote, that every German is an agent. A widespread ignorance of the true numbers of foreigners to whom Britain had offered asylum hastened the change in public attitudes. A poll asked British citizens to estimate the number of refugees who had come to Britain from Nazi Germany in the previous six years. Respondents put the number at anywhere between 2 and 4 million. The true figure was just 73,500.

Hysteria had overcome logic. Most refugees spoke thickly accented English, were unaccustomed to British social norms and would make ineffectual spies. Fifth columnists, if they existed, were far likelier to come from the ranks of British fascists. (On 23 May police arrested Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, and about 35 of his followers, individuals who would have likely supported Hitlers invasion of Britain from within.) As the Labour politician Herbert Delaunay Hughes wrote, pseudonymously, at the time: It is lamentable how quickly people seem to have forgotten who exactly the refugees are and how it is that they came to this country. Most British citizens acknowledged the injustice inherent in mass internment, but felt that it was nevertheless an appropriate, justifiable measure. You cant say which is good and which bad, said one respondent to a May poll in which half of those interviewed favoured the internment of all enemy aliens. Some of them is very nice people, but its safest to pull them all in.

In the early hours of 5 July 1940, the British police came for Peter Fleischmann, a young German Jewish refugee. He had narrowly avoided the Gestapos moonlit roundups in Berlin two years earlier. At that time a kindly police officer had knocked on the gates of the orphanage that was Fleischmanns home, and warned that the Nazis were coming for him. When he was three, Fleischmanns parents had drowned in an accident while driving by the Wannsee lake. The couple had been writers for an anti-fascist newspaper. Fleischmann later learned the cars steering had been tampered with their deaths apparently an act of political sabotage.

Now it seemed the Gestapo wanted to wipe him out, too. Fleischmann fled to the south of the city and hid in the basement of his familys former housekeeper. When the first Kindertransport was arranged to bring children out of Germany, Fleischmann a few weeks shy of his 17th birthday just qualified for rescue. On 1 December 1938, alongside a brood of the citys Jewish orphans, he embarked the train at the Anhalter Bahnhof railway station, watched by orphanage staff and a few Gestapo officers, who had come to observe the children, with their unpatriotic dark hair and brown eyes, making their pioneering journey.

In Britain, Fleischmann, who dreamed of becoming a professional artist, was taken in by the owners of a Manchester business that specialised in colouring old photographs of young soldiers who had died in the first world war. They provided him with employment and a room in their home in Prestwich. The hours were long, and the conditions a basement filled with rats and shadows insalubrious. But the work might, he reasoned, provide the experience he needed to return to art school.

In Whitehall, however, ongoing discussions soon derailed Fleischmanns humble plans. Starting in November 1939, the government had established nationwide tribunals to test the loyalties of foreign passport-holders living in Britain. More than 50,000 individuals, including Fleischmann, had been classified, as a result, as refugees from Nazi oppression. After the invasion of Holland, however, the state began to debate whether these displaced men and women, many of whom had lost their livelihoods, homes and possessions, should be imprisoned anyway, without trial.

Winston Churchill, during his first cabinet meeting as prime minister, agreed to the internment of all male enemy aliens between the ages of 16 and 60 currently living in coastal counties in Britain. This protected area was where, in the event of Nazi invasion, a spy could cause most harm. Men were to be interned regardless of the refugee status bestowed on them several months earlier. The following day, on Sunday 12 May 1940, Scotland Yards fleet of motorcars roared out of police headquarters. Many of the officers dispatched to make the days arrests had been unaware of their task until they arrived at work that morning. By the end of this first mass roundup, around 2,000 refugees had been taken into custody and handed to the military authorities for internment.

Anderson, the home secretary, was opposed to mass internment, a position that he hoped to hold unless the war begins to go badly. Earlier in the year he wrote to his father of the danger posed to justice by national paranoia: In wartime people are easily worked up; a spy scare can be started at any time as a stunt. Now with German troops in France, the threat of enemy invasion looming, and newspapers stewing with reports of fifth columnists (even the Manchester Guardian had added its voice to the chorus calling for mass internment, stating: No half measures will do), he was forced to concede that there were various bodies and groups of persons in this country against whom action would need to be taken, including refugees. Throughout May, the protected area expanded from coastal counties inland, until no one in Britain was safe from the threat of immediate arrest and indefinite internment based on their nationality, ethnicity, religion or political beliefs.

Internment was in the best interest of the internee, Churchill argued, since public temper in this country would be such that such persons would be in great danger if left at liberty. This argument precisely echoed that made by the Nazi officials to justify the arrest of the partys political opponents. In a speech delivered in March 1933, shortly after the opening of Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, Heinrich Himmler reasoned: I felt compelled [to make these arrests] because in many parts of the city there has been so much agitation that it has been impossible for me to guarantee the safety of those particular individuals who have provoked it. The Nazis used a euphemism for this category of arrest Schutzhaft, or protective custody a term that could now be applied to Britains own policy towards Jews. For those individuals who had survived and fled the Nazi concentration camps at Dachau and Buchenwald, now interned by their supposed liberators, it was a befuddling injustice. When Hitler learned of Churchills internment policy, he reportedly gloated: The enemies of Germany are now the enemies of Britain, too. Where are those much-vaunted democratic liberties of which the English boast?

Having allowed the popular press to whip up jingoism and hatred, instead of taking an enlightened lead, the government now used public opinion as justification for strict measures. Among Londoners some sort of neurosis had taken grip, the art historian Klaus Hinrichsen noted. Anyone who was German was considered a Nazi. On Sunday 4 June 1940, Churchill, who had been prime minister for less than a month, addressed the House of Commons to announce the governments new powers of arrest the powers to put down fifth column activities with a strong hand. Churchill acknowledged that the orders would affect a great many people who are the passionate enemies of Nazi Germany. There was, he said, nothing to be done. I am very sorry for them, he added, but we cannot draw all the distinctions which we should like to do.

Status and class, those twin armaments of privilege, provided no protection. Nazism had pushed a wave of luminaries toward Britain. Now these Oxbridge dons, surgeons, dentists, lawyers and celebrated artists were taken into custody. The police arrested Emil Goldmann, a 67-year-old professor from the University of Vienna, in the grounds of Eton College, Britains most elite school. At Cambridge University, dozens of staff and students were detained in the Guildhall, including Friedrich Hohenzollern, also known as Prince Frederick of Prussia, a grandson of Queen Victoria (who, while interned, received food packages from Fortnum & Mason allegedly paid for by the royal family). That years Cambridge law finals nearly had to be cancelled because one of the interned professors had locked away the exam papers, and taken the key.

In the early hours of 5 July, a black mariah pulled up at the Prestwich home of Albert and Gertrude Ripkin, who had taken in Peter Fleischmann and given him work. Fleischmann awoke to the sound of knocking. Albert was not yet up, so Fleischmann opened the door. The officers instruction was curt and urgent. Get your clothes. Come with us. Neither soldier nor criminal, Fleischmann, one of 90 aliens and refugees arrested by Salford police that morning, was denied the civil rights that even convicts enjoy: no charge, no trial, no bail.

None of his story mattered: not the fact he had been orphaned and made homeless by the Nazi regime, nor the fact that he had been brought to England as a destitute child, nor that he had been carefully interviewed by one of the most senior judges in the land and deemed to pose no security risk to his adoptive country. In this new reality, subject to the British governments panicked measures, only Fleischmanns nationality the same nationality that the Nazis hoped to strip from all German and Austrian Jews mattered. Buffeted along a twisted road by the winds of history, Fleischmann was, once again, rootless, unwelcome, homeless.

Across the country, internees were sent to various transit camps to await dispatch to more permanent camps. Fleischmann, like most of those arrested in north-west England, was sent to Warth Mills, a massive, decaying, derelict cotton mill that cast a brutish silhouette on the Lancashire horizon. Its proprietors had been forced by recession to abandon the premises a few years earlier. The site had been abandoned in haste: the floor, a mixture of cobbles and wood, was viscid and slippery with old machine oil, the smell of which mixed with the acrid stench of the canal that ran alongside the building, and stuck in the throat. Transmission belts hung like nooses from rafters. Crankshafts, partly dismounted, dangled at Damoclean angles. Clumps of rotting, mouldy cotton decorated the floor. Spiders ruled the shadows. A series of cast-iron columns crowned with intricate Corinthian capitals, high up in the vaulted murk, supported a glass roof, the sole source of light inside the building, which was pocked with broken panes that let the drizzle in.

The building, three storeys tall at one section, had sat empty and dampening until the British army moved in on 5 June 1940. The first internees arrived seven days later. Theyd had ample time to take in their new homes thuggish frontage. From Bury station they had been marched the four miles or so along Manchester Road towards the mill. It was a walk of shame; hostile onlookers watched as they were paraded in front of the public as prisoners.

To be marched like a bloody prisoner of war, with people watching that really hurt, recalled Peter Katz, a pastor in his mid-50s, who had been one of the first arrivals. I felt degraded. By the time Fleischmann arrived, the place was packed. Inside, a phalanx of British soldiers under the command of a retired officer, Maj Alfred Braybrook, sat behind a row of tables, ready to check the mens belongings. The internees lined up behind ropes. Each man smelled the stench of disinfectant and listened to the sounds of captive men while he waited to be called forward. When Fleischmanns turn came, he approached, and a private grabbed his bag and tipped the contents on to a table. As the soldier sifted Fleischmanns belongings, a seated officer thumbed through his wallet. Fleischmann assumed the men were searching for any items that might be used as weapons, but it soon became clear that anything of value was in danger of confiscation. Just as the Nazis had systematically robbed many of these men of their valuables, so the British officers now took chocolate, cigarettes, writing paper and typewriters, distributing these items among themselves in full view of their prisoners.

The confiscation of razor blades was justifiable, and a case could possibly be made for the seizure of gold sovereigns to preclude black-market trading. Other choices seemed indefensible: watches, books, medicine. One soldier took insulin from a diabetic. For some internees, this was a familiar experience. Many had passed through holding camps at Ascot and Kempton Park, also overseen by Braybrook. At Kempton Park, a young tailor, Kurt Treitel, lost his watch and all his money to larcenous soldiers.

The breach of privacy revealed not only what each internee had considered sufficiently important to bring with him during the harried moments of his arrest, but also the range of vocations represented among the captives. Doctors watched, bewildered, as the soldiers pocketed their stethoscopes. Academics argued that they should be allowed to keep their textbooks. Artists pleaded to keep their drawing paper. For many of the men, this ransacking crowned a brief period that had devastatingly transformed their view of Britain, and their place within it. [We] went around breathing injustice and feeling very sore about all kinds of things, wrote Hirsch Uri, who was arrested alongside a number of other young Orthodox Jews, most of whom had come to England via the Kindertransport. Since gloom only serves to increase ones loquacity, [we] soon became unbearable to ourselves.

Some men at Warth Mills had already experienced great drama in their escapes to England. Two days after the outbreak of war, Gotfried Huelsmann had successfully crossed the Germany-Netherlands border disguised as a greengrocer, driving a van filled with vegetables. To be interned by the country he considered an ally, after such acts of derring-do, was hurtful; to be robbed by those in whom these men had staked their trust, unthinkable. I remember very clearly and this was the dominating thought the feeling of insult, noted Claus Moser, who later became chair of the Royal Opera House. The whole operation was panicky and cruel.

In Warth Mills, 2,000 internees shared a single bath, and 18 water taps a limitation that quickly forced almost every man to give up on shaving, and encouraged some to rise as early as 4am to avoid the mass hustle for the facilities. Laundry could be washed in an empty room, but, without soap or drying facilities, clothes and blankets often emerged as dirty as before. There was no sewerage system, and the lavatories amounted to 60 buckets housed outside, beneath an oblong tent. As the day progressed, the stench became unbearable. The latrines became so choked that, towards the end of the day, men would simply relieve themselves in a quiet corner.

Conditions in the camp were considered, by the numerous German doctors among the inmates, to be a liability for the spread of disease. They wrote and co-signed a memorandum of complaint to Braybrook. Simon Isaac, a former professor at the University of Frankfurt who had overseen makeshift hospitals on the Russian Front, wrote that he had never seen a place less fit for the accommodation of human beings. To be imprisoned in a building not even fit for beasts, as another internee wrote, had a profound effect on the mens view of the country that had offered them sanctuary. Many [have] ceased to believe in the British spirit of humanity which before they had acclaimed, he continued.

The indignities of isolation from friends and relatives, meagre food rations, wet straw mattresses, lice and inadequate sanitary arrangements led many internees to draw parallels between the mill and the Nazi concentration camps from which they had fled. A former member of the German Foreign Office, held in the mill, claimed conditions were much worse than those of the notorious French prisoner of war reprisal camps he had seen in the first world war, where captured men were kept in cold, brutal conditions and subject to epidemics of typhoid and cholera. According to an official Ministry of Information report, two men, both of whom had previously been incarcerated in Nazi concentration camps, died by suicide.

After a week spent at Warth Mills, Fleischmann was transported to one of the more permanent camps, 10 of which were situated on the Isle of Man, where women and children were also interned. When he reached the island, Fleischmanns home was P Camp, or Hutchinson, where about 1,200 internees were billeted in requisitioned boarding houses that bordered a picturesque square, with views leading down to Douglas harbour. After the indignities of Warth Mills, Hutchinson had a bucolic quality, which, depending on an individuals temperament, at times felt like something akin to a holiday camp.

Rather than squander their time in detention, the men worked to turn the camp into a cultural centre. Professional actors staged productions of A Midsummer Nights Dream and Of Mice and Men. Feted musicians performed concerts on the lawn. Oxbridge academics delivered lectures on a vast range of subjects, while the many celebrated artists in the camp produced and exhibited works of art in various disciplines. The journalists and editors published a fortnightly camp newspaper, featuring news, articles, fiction and illustrations. Thanks to the efforts of campaigners such as the MP Eleanor Rathbone, and the Quaker Bertha Bracey, chair of the Central Department for Interned Refugees, the internees were provided with books to open an impromptu library (Lewis Carrolls Alices Adventures in Wonderland and Daphne du Mauriers Rebecca proved to be the most borrowed titles), a table tennis table, and, in time, a shop where they could buy supplies, and even alcohol.

Their captors allowed the internees to establish a hierarchy of governance, a trick developed by the British army to facilitate the colonisation of indigenous groups. Still, Hutchinsons commandant, a former advertising executive named Hubert Daniel, was a benevolent overseer. At the urging of his wife, a frustrated artist, Daniel provided materials and studio space for the artists in the camp, and even hired a grand piano for an outdoor matinee performance by the interned musician Marjan Rawicz. The artists soon established a semi-exclusive artists cafe, housed in a laundry room extension, with food provided by an interned Austrian pastry chef. With its whitewashed walls and bubbling paint, water taps and washboards, the venue lacked the sophistication of the continental cafes the men were used to, but the room was sizable and, when some trellis tables, chairs and stools had been arranged inside, provided a relatively comfortable space for afternoon meetings, conversation and performances by, among others, the famed Kurt Schwitters, the most famous of Hutchinsons artist internees, who recited his dadaist poetry.

For Fleischmann, who had no ties to the outside world, Hutchinson provided the artistic education that had been cut short by the Nazis. Schwitters taught him life-drawing and how to mix paint from ground brick powder. The sculptors Paul Hamann and Georg Ehrlich showed him how to dig clay while out on an escorted walk in the local hills and smuggle it back into the camp. The sculptor Ernst Muller-Blensdorf showed Fleischmann how to carve blocks of firewood.

In later years, everything of which Fleischmann had dreamed since he was a young aspiring artist at the orphanage would come true. Under his adopted name, Peter Midgley, he would be accepted into the Royal College of Art. He would graduate with first-class honours, the top fine art student in his year, rewarded with the RCAs prestigious Rome scholarship. He would become a professional artist, securing commissions to create works for a number of British government departments, universities and the Royal Navy. Nothing bettered the training he received at Hutchinson, however. Everything thereafter, he later said, was just a recap.

Despite the cultural experience, depression was rife throughout the camp, as the men waited for news of their loved ones, worried about their businesses and obsessed over freedom. Lest this all sounds too rosy a situation, Klaus Hinrichsen, the art historian, who was secretary of the Hutchinson Camp University, later noted, let me assure you that all these frantic activities were entered into as a means of distraction from the ever-present anger at the injustice of being interned the constant worry about wives and children left without a provider and under almost nightly bombardment in London and other towns from the lack of communication and, of course suffering from the cramped living conditions and the lack of freedom of movement.

In the autumn of 1940, the British government released a white paper outlining several categories under which internees could apply for release. Those who were too young or too old, too infirm, or who already had permits to work in positions of national importance could apply to be freed. Artists, writers and musicians were not included until later revisions, and had to prove they had achieved distinction in their chosen field. (As Helen Roeder, secretary of the Artists Refugee Committee, put it to the director of the National Gallery: Do you think [the criteria could] be stretched to include the poor souls who have been too busy being hunted to achieve distinction in the arts?)

With hindsight, many internees recognised that they had been relatively comfortable and safe and, apart from the criminal abuse experienced at Warth Mills, their treatment was fair. For most, internment was a near-constant misery that, as the Oxford academic Paul Jacobsthal wrote, caused a trauma. At least 56 internees died in internment on the Isle of Man, many to suicide. And while Peter Midgleys life was transformed by the people he met during internment, the episode also triggered feelings of rejection and abandonment that haunted his dreams. Once or twice a year he would experience the same recurring nightmare: he was back in the camp; everyone around him was released until, finally, he was the last one there, permanently forsaken.

Every government must balance its humanitarian obligations with the need to uphold national security. To categorise refugees from Nazi oppression as enemy aliens, however, was to invite populist scorn and hatred upon those in most need of compassion in wartime, and represented a moral failing on a national scale. Few went as far as Tristan Busch, a former internee who described the British policy as a war crime in his memoir, but it is indisputable that the hasty measures heaped unhappiness and anguish upon thousands of people already enduring the ordeal of fleeing their previous lives. Only a single sentence spoken by John Anderson in the House of Commons on 22 August 1940, months before most of Hutchinsons internees were freed, provided something approaching an apology: Regrettable and deplorable things have happened, he said, as if the cruelties of internment had been the result of natural phenomena, and not a series of deliberate choices.

In May 2021, the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, issued a formal apology to the more than 30,000 Italian Canadians declared enemy aliens during the second world war 600 of whom were sent to internment camps. There has been no equivalent attempt to repair the damage by the British authorities in failing to distinguish between refugees and enemy aliens a dehumanising term that, in 2021, the US government pledged never again to use. The battle between a nations responsibility to help those in need and to maintain national security persists in every age, every generation. The notion of the refugee who is not who he or she claims to be is an enduring story that can be easily used to justify institutional cruelty or overreach. While the context and detail shifts, the debate remains the same, as does the potential for history to repeat itself. Each successive generation must answer the same question: how far can we go in the rightful defence of our values without abandoning them along the way?

This is an edited extract from The Island of Extraordinary Captives by Simon Parkin, published by Sceptre on 3 February and available from guardianbookshop.com

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'I remember the feeling of insult': when Britain imprisoned its wartime refugees - The Guardian

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Sport, politics and Covid collide at the Beijing Winter Olympics – The Guardian

Posted: at 2:46 am

Hosting the Winter Olympics during a pandemic was always going to test the Chinese government, by putting its ever-growing ability to exercise political control and virus containment on a collision course with its enthusiasm for international prestige and status.

The 2022 Winter Games, which open on Friday, are being held at a time of particularly intense western criticism of China over human rights abuses, from the mass persecution of Uyghurs in far western Xinjiang labelled a genocide by the United States and other groups including Tibetans, to the crushing of Hong Kongs freedoms.

China denies human rights abuses, but activists have dubbed the gathering in Beijing the Genocide Games, and western powers from the US to the UK have announced a diplomatic boycott of the opening ceremony. The exiled campaign group World Uyghur Congress urged: No one should want another Olympics like this.

There is so little trust of the host nation that many countries have told their athletes to take burner phones, and cyber security experts warned a health app for Olympians could spy on them and steal health and other personal data.

Further censure has come from environmentalists who have warned for years about the negative impact of hosting the Games which need a lot of water for snow and ice in an area of intense water scarcity.

Yet Beijing weathered the controversy when it hosted the Summer Olympics, in 2008, said Susan Brownell of University of Missouri-St Louis, an expert on Chinese sports who was in China for those Games.

Then, high-profile protests dogged the global torch relay, violent suppression of protests in Tibet put Chinese oppression there on the news agenda, there was pressure on leaders to skip the opening ceremony and environmentalists warned about the intense pollution that shrouded Beijing.

But, once the competition began, the focus shifted to the athletes. Beijings calculation is, no doubt, that the same thing will happen this year. Right now, the political and investigative journalists have the front page, but once the Games start, it will be the sports journalists, Brownell said.

Covid has conveniently spared Beijing any worries about protests from the stands, which would have been the most likely arena for political activism in a country where public demonstrations by citizens are in effect banned.

Competitors and the few other foreigners given permission to come to Beijing, including coaches, support staff and journalists, will fly into a sealed-off Olympic world, a closed loop of venues and hotels in just three locations, connected by their own transport vehicles, travelling in their own lanes.

It is staffed by Chinese workers who are not allowed to return to their own homes without a long period of quarantine.

Authorities are so bent on total separation that they have warned Beijing residents against helping Olympians if a loop vehicle crashes.

For Victor Cha, senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington DC, these rules seem like a metaphor for how Chinas communist leadership wants the Games to play out overall in a closed system fully under their control.

Covid has really given them the excuse to completely lock down everything. They want to have complete control over the picture of the Olympics and that helps, he said.

There will be an official international protest, in the form of a diplomatic boycott by western governments including the US and the UK, but their absence is unlikely to be a major headache for officials in Beijing, or feature prominently in news coverage through the Games.

They shrug off the diplomatic boycotts. It feeds the domestic narrative that the west is trying to steal Chinas moment in sun, and they can say leaders are not coming anyway because of Covid.

The shutdown of international participation in the Games has put particular political pressure on the athletes, now the only people with a platform to make a statement.

It is impossible to separate sports from business and politics. More than a big sporting occasion, this is also a political event, said Mark Dreyer, author of Sporting Superpower: An Insiders View on Chinas Quest to Be the Best.

The human cost of Chinas political controls has been thrown into the spotlight in a very personal way for athletes by the treatment of one of the countrys best-known, most successful Olympians, tennis star Peng Shuai.

Last year, she vanished from public view after accusing a former senior Communist party official of coercing her into a sexual relationship, and her allegations were scrubbed from the internet.

After international outrage, she made a series of stage-managed public appearances inside China, including with Olympic officials, which have done little to assuage concern about whether she is acting with free will.

Her treatment was highlighted by protesters at this months Australian Open, who wore T-shirts saying simply Where is Peng Shuai?. Organisers banned them, then backtracked on the ban.

Perhaps concerned by the swell of support for Peng, China has taken the unusual step of going beyond the International Olympic Committee bans on athletes taking political stands.

If they break Chinese laws, with behaviour or speech that is against the Olympic spirit, athletes will face certain punishment, Yang Shu, a member of the Beijing Organising Committee, told a news conference this month.This rhetoric may be intended mostly as deterrent, analysts say. An athletes arrest over a political protest would be shocking, and likely to become an enduring image of an event that Beijing wants remembered as a sporting and logistical triumph.

Rob Koehler of Global Athlete, an advocacy group for sportspeople, said they have reluctantly advised competitors to save protests or criticism of China for when they have finished competing and returned home. That is the hardest and most outrageous thing we have had to say, given how hard we pushed for them to have the right to basic freedom of expression, he said.

Even if China manages to side-step an inflammatory protest or an inflammatory response at the Games, the virus that might once have looked like a gift to a government bent on control has become more of a threat to a successful Olympics, with the highly contagious Omicron circulating widely.

If an outbreak knocks out high-profile athletes, or significantly diminishes the number of competitors, it could start to undermine the events.

Beijing announced on Saturday that, even before the Games had begun, the number of cases in the Olympic village had jumped from two to 19. Cases among athletes and team officials exceeded those among media and other stakeholders for the first time. There has already been disruption to qualifying competitions after athletes tested positive. At the US figure skating championships, Brownell said some athletes developed Covid between competitions, and despite taking extreme precautions.

They had been masking, observing social distancing; the pairs team had only private lessons in the rink with their coach and didnt know where they had got it. It created quite a panic at the championships themselves, Brownell said.

Ironically, Chinas success with controlling earlier variants of Covid has left it particularly vulnerable, public health experts say. Its domestic vaccines are ineffective against Omicron, and because there have still been only a few cases in a country of more than 1.4 billion people, there is almost no natural immunity.

A vulnerable population and an unevenly distributed healthcare system makes the potential of a Covid outbreak terrifying. The devastation that ripped through Wuhan in the earliest days of the pandemic could still be unleashed on the rest of China, and fear of this has almost certainly contributed to the intense testing and quarantine rules.

These factors have affected how the rest of the world, or at least audiences in markets such as the US, will experience the Games. The broadcaster NBC is keeping its commentators at home, covering Beijing from thousands of miles away.

Restrictions on media coverage of the last Games, the Summer Olympics in Japan held last year after a years delay, diminished the viewing experience for many of the millions of people who wanted to follow from home.

My personal feeling was that coverage of the Tokyo Games really lost something. It was pretty clear they didnt invest the same amount of money, the coverage was not as glossy and aesthetically pleasing, said Brownell.

Now, with commentators not actually being in Beijing, thats going to be even more marked. I think the pandemic restrictions could have an impact on how the TV and social media audiences see these Olympics.

There may also be less promotion. In a sign perhaps of how these Olympics are among the most controversial in recent decades, sponsors who pay eye-watering sums to be connected with the Games have not been flaunting those links in the west as they have done in the run-up to previous iterations of the competition.

For years China has forced heavy penalties on sports personalities, companies and managers who risked the slightest public criticism of its politics.

A 2019 tweet by Daryl Morey, then general manager of the Houston Rockets, supporting pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong was estimated to have cost the National Basketball Association hundreds of millions of dollars after he was allowed to stay in his job.

But sponsors in the west are wary of being accused of pandering to China. Perhaps because they are caught between Beijing and Washington, there has been no pre-Games campaign to spur excitement in the US from the card payment giant Visa, Coca-Cola or Procter & Gamble, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The framing in China of the Beijing Winter Games, however, is drastically different from that outside the country focused on igniting national pride, and using the Games to boost participation in sport and expand the domestic winter sports industry.

Chinese citizens participation in sport has been on the rise since the 2008 Games, said Shushu Chen, a lecturer in sport policy and management at the University of Birmingham, who has been tracking the impact of the Summer Games in Beijing and London.

Chen noted that compared with London, residents in Beijing were ostensibly more positive about the inspirational effects of the Olympic Games, which can perhaps be explained by sociocultural contextual differences between the two cases.

Dreyer, who has lived in Beijing since 2007, observed that the wave of enthusiasm in China for winter sports began in 2015, when the country won the hosting rights. China will not top the medals table this year, but it will probably do better than it has ever done before. And it will have many more athletes competing in the Winter Games than previously.

Inside China, the Games are already being hailed as a triumph for Beijing and its ability to rally against the virus, and against western criticism. Internationally, these Games may be remembered very differently.

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Hungary: Victims of alleged Pegasus spyware attack to take legal action against Govt – Republic World

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The journalists, politicians, students, and other human rights activists,who were spied on by the Hungarian government are now mulling to take legal action against their government. According to a report by The Guardian, they were allegedly targeted by the Hungarian government in order to keep an eye on their work through Israeli spyware called Pegasus. This came nearly seven months after a consortium of news outlets called-- The Pegasus Project revealed the names of several top journalists, human rights activists, and opposition leaders of Hungary, who were allegedly targetted by the Israeli company NSO. The media report said they had tested devices of several people in a lab and found the devices possibly were infected with the Pegasus spyware.

Quoting the analysis found by Security Lab, The Guardian said the devices had been infected with Pegasus through a zero-click exploit. As per the Guardian, the zero-click exploit enables operators of the spyware to contaminate a phone by clicking on a dubious link. The Hungarian Civil Liberties Union (HCLU) told the British English daily that it will launch legal action on behalf of six clients: Brigitta Csikasz, David Dercsenyi, Daniel Nemeth and Szabolcs Panyi, all journalists; Adrien Beauduin, a Belgian-Canadian PhD student and activist; and a sixth person who requested anonymity.

"It is improper that the procedures of the national security services, which are necessarily carried out in secret, has become a tool of oppression rather than a means of protecting citizens," The Guardian quoted Adam Remport, an official of HCLU as saying.

"What we would like is for our clients to have direct proof of their being surveilled and the disclosure of the data gathered on them. If we can get good rulings it would mean that a new avenue for redress would open for anyone who has been secretly surveilled," added Remport.

When the news agency AP asked the NSO group over the allegations, the spyware said it does not identify its customers for contractual and national security reasons. Further, in a statement, the group reiterated that they sell their products only to government agencies for use against "serious crime and terror.' It is worth mentioning that US President Joe Biden blacklisted the NSO Group and a lesser-known Israeli competitor last week after several reports red-flagged the use of spyware in several people including top defence officials.

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Pakistan reaffirms its solidarity with people of Indian Occupied Kashmir – DND

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: As Kashmiris on both sides of the Line of Control (LoC) and the world over are observing the Indian Republic Day as Black Day on Wednesday, Pakistan has reaffirmed its solidarity with the people of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

In response to media queries, the Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Asim Iftikhar Ahmad said that today, when the Kashmiris in IIOJK and around the world mark January 26 as a black day against Indias oppression, the government and people of Pakistan reaffirm their unshakable resolve to continue to raise their voice and extend all possible support for the right of self-determination of the people of IIOJK.

The Spokesperson said that it is deplorable that in the past few days, the Indian occupation forces have further intensified the military siege already in place in the occupied territory for more than seven decades.

Coercing innocent Kashmiris to hoist Indian flags on the Republic Day is typical of Indias high-handedness to project a false sense of normalcy and a hopeless attempt at masking its systematic and widespread oppression, he said.

Asim Iftikhar said that the Indian governments decision to award so-called gallantry awards to the personnel of its occupation forces is yet another afront to the dignity of the countless victims of Indias state-terrorism characterized by gross human rights violations, extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, suspension of fundamental freedoms, rapes, and the use of draconian laws such as Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and Public Safety Act with complete impunity.

The Spokesperson said that on different occasions, Pakistan has presented to the UN and the international community evidence of crimes against humanity being perpetrated by the Indian occupation forces in IIOJK.

The Spokesperson reiterated that the international community must hold India to account for its oppression, and play its due role in enabling the Kashmiris to exercise their inalienable right to self-determination as pledged to them under the relevant UN Security Council resolutions, without any further delay.

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Opinion: Northern Ireland’s peace faces new Brexit threats – DW (English)

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Nationalists in Northern Ireland remember the 1972 Bloody Sunday asan assault by elite British soldiers on unarmed Catholics. The mass shooting, which ultimately led to 14 deaths, has often been instrumentalized to justify killings by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and other groups held responsible for about two-thirds of the more than 3,500 deaths including more than 1,000 members of the British security forces in the three-decadeconflict.

The events of January 30, 1972, in Northern Ireland's second largest city, Londonderry, were a turning point, however: In an already politically charged atmosphere, British soldiers shot two dozen unarmed people at a protest. We know now that the commanders' aim was to show toughness and demonstrate the state's monopoly on the use of force. The result, however, was that the conflict between the Irish Catholic nationalists and the mostly Protestant unionists spiraled further. The IRA registered a large number of new members and continued to stoke the violence: 1972 became the bloodiest year in the entire conflict, with almost 500 deaths.

Bloody Sunday is the only event in British history that has been investigated by two judicial commissions.

DW's David Ehl

The first report, hastily written in April 1972, seemed tomostly serve the purpose of exonerating the soldiers. But the Saville Report,presented 38 years later, meticulously reconstructedthe course of events of the massacre and leaves no doubt about the interpretation: The paratroopers fired on civilians, none of whom posed a threat, and 14 British citizens were ultimately murdered in an operation commissioned bythe state.

In 2010, after the report was completed, Prime Minister David Cameron asked for forgiveness. For the bereaved families, who had fought for so long against the prejudiced portrayal of the first report, this was an importantvictory. But today, 50 years after the fateful day, it is more uncertain than ever whether even one of the shooters will ever be prosecuted.

The greatest threat for the further investigation of Bloody Sunday and all other atrocities of the Northern Ireland conflict comes from the British government: Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who admittedly has quite different concerns right now, wants to put the conflict in the past. In 2021, the government published key points for a statute of limitations to end all prosecutions. That would prohibit furtherinvestigations into state actors, and even ongoing proceedings would be abandoned. Northern Ireland's civil society erupted in outrage against this proposed blanket ban on Troubles-related prosecution.

Johnson's government has proposed ending prosecutions related to the Troubles

It is unclear whether these far-reaching plans will ever become law. But the proposal itself shows once again that Johnson is using the sledgehammer method in Northern Ireland.

The unionists have already been dealt a heavy blow, especially the right-wing Democratic Unionist Party, which leads the Northern Ireland regional government with its Irish nationalist coalition partner, Sinn Fein. The DUP had campaigned for Brexit in 2016, hoping that the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU would bring Northern Ireland more closely to London economically and politically. Johnson promised the same thing when he took office before dropping Northern Ireland like a hot potato to appease Brexit hard-liners on the mainland.

Today, thanks to an additional protocol in the withdrawal agreement, Northern Ireland is de facto still part of the European Union's single market, while trade with the rest of Britain is more difficult. For Northern Ireland, this has certainly paid off in the first Brexit year think of the numerous supply bottlenecks in the United Kingdom.

But it is a severe betrayal for the unionists. Their camp is politically divided, and it is conceivable that Sinn Fein will triumph in regional elections in May. In other words, the Irish nationalist camp now sees itself in a position of strength after decades of oppression and is now confidently calling for Northern Ireland to unite with the Republic of Ireland.

All this is causing new frustration in a society still largely split between nationalists and unionists. Since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, there has been relative peace in Northern Ireland, but the 50-year anniversary of Bloody Sunday is a reminder that there is still plenty of mutual mistrust.

It is primarily Brexit and the renewed discussion of Irish reunification, as well as reckless proposals such as Johnson's de facto amnesty plans, that have added fuel to the fire.

The overwhelming majority of people in Northern Ireland do not want new violence or instability. Peace will be put to the test. Northern Ireland will have to prove that ithas learned the lessons of history.

This commentary was translated from German.

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The Russia-Ukraine crisis reminds us that the absence of war is not always peace – EUROPP – European Politics and Policy

Posted: at 2:44 am

A Russian invasion of Ukraine would have devastating consequences for the Ukrainian people. Marnie Howlett argues that while the priority is to deescalate the immediate tensions, it cannot be forgotten that Ukraine has now been living under the threat of conflict and instability for much of its history. Rather than the mere avoidance of war, the country requires a lasting solution that can bring genuine peace and security to its citizens.

As Russia continues to increase its military presence along Ukraines borders in preparation for a potential attack, growing support for Ukraines independence and territorial sovereignty can be seen across the globe. Numerous state governments, including NATO allies and former Soviet states (for example, Georgia), non-governmental organisations, such as the Ukrainian World Congress, and influential leaders like Pope Francis have all expressed their concerns over the rising tensions, stating that they stand shoulder to shoulder with the Ukrainian people.

In calling on Putin to step back from the brink, the international community has stated that an invasion by Russia would be met with a swift, severe and united response, particularly by the United States and its European allies. Moreover, the possibility of massive and rapid sanctions imposed on Russia by the EU, coupled with the recent actions of several administrations to send defensive military personnel, equipment, and aid to Ukraine, materially and symbolically demonstrates widespread support for the post-Soviet state. While the outpouring support in response to the escalating tensions may fundamentally be motivated by fears regarding the regional and economic stability of the European continent and a potential third World War, rather than purely by concerns over Ukraines domestic peace and security, it will nonetheless be ordinary Ukrainian citizens who will be most directly impacted should Russia invade the states territory.

Yet, lost somewhere in the headlines and discussions about the threat of invasion is the reality of what Russias increased military presence along the shared border means for Ukrainians. Though the international community has outwardly stated that Putin is using Ukraine as a hostage to renegotiate a settled Cold War outcome and prevent the state from further integrating into the EU and NATO, found less often in policy briefings, political discussions, and even popular discourses is a consideration of what such an attack means for Ukraines citizens.

Beyond demonstrating Russias continued efforts at re-asserting its dominance in the states administration, as well as the larger post-Soviet space, an invasion would result in significant civilian causalities, material and infrastructural destruction, and economic decimation for Ukraine. As with any war, active combat would likewise drastically disrupt the established social, political, and economic processes and structures at the grassroots; motivate feelings of distress, anxiety, and fear amongst citizens; and culminate in mass mobilisation and displacement. In this way, the global community stating that they #standwithUkraine indeed demonstrates incredible international unity in the face of growing Russian hostility, but also misses the psychological, emotional, and tangible effects that this threat poses to the everyday lives of Ukrainian people.

Moreover, war is not a new reality for Ukrainians. Since the annexation of Crimea in early 2014, which immediately followed the societal upheaval of the Euromaidan protests on Kyivs Independence Square from November 2013, citizens of Ukraine have been living under a state of ambiguity due the simultaneous and competing forces of war and peace. Although the occupation of the countrys eastern regions by Russian separatist forces in 2014 did result in a ceasefire and peace agreement in 2015, hostility and tensions did not quickly dissipate.

Still, Ukraine experienced other internal clashes which were mostly nonviolent long before the events of eight years ago as its citizens fought for democracy, freedom, and justice, such as during the Orange Revolution of 2004. Even without considering the socio-economic and political crisis which led to the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the challenges of corruption and cronyism faced by the state in the years immediately following its independence, conflict (or at least, the threat of conflict) has evidently been a constant part of Ukraines and thus Ukrainians narrative for much of its history.

The current threat of war between Ukraine and Russia therefore encourages us to consider how we understand the peace that the international community appears so committed to defending. Whereas peace can certainly be understood as a state of harmony and serenity, the same term is likewise used to describe the periods both immediately prior to and following a conflict.

Yet, the Ukraine case shows us that the absence of war does not necessarily, nor always, equate to the tranquil order also recognised as peace. Both pre- and post-conflict times have still been marked by considerable volatility, anxieties (about both preceding and impending conflict), and feelings of uncertainty and fear at the grassroots. In this way, periods without conflict, although technically more peaceful than the violence and strife of an active battle, paradoxically, see similar grassroots dynamics and comparable psycho-emotive responses as periods of conflict due to the existentialism instigated by the mere threat of war.

Accordingly, it may indeed be both the harmony of, and absence of war in, Europe and the global order that national leaders are currently seeking to protect by preventing active conflict between Ukraine and Russia. But doing so only ensures one type of peace in Ukraine the absence of war as a tranquil order does not exist to be defended, nor has one arguably ever truly been realised in the states thirty years of independence, especially not within the last decade. Hence, while there is very much an urgent need to defend the peace of the Ukrainian state, as well as the entire European continent, the necessity of fundamentally establishing and also defending peace within the Ukrainian state has perhaps never been clearer.

Note: This article gives the views of theauthor, not the position of EUROPP European Politics and Policy or the London School of Economics. Featured image credit: Viktor Talashuk on Unsplash

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The 100 Coolest Cloud Computing Companies Of 2022 – CRN

Posted: at 2:43 am

The momentum for cloud computing adoption continued to intensify in 2021 as more organizations turned to cloud providers, solution providers and SaaS companies to help them navigate a second year of the coronavirus pandemic.

Citing a golden age for the technology sector, Wedbush Securities called the growth prospects around cloudand cybersecurity unparalleled to any period since it started covering technology stocks in 2000. It forecasts $1 trillion of cloud spending in the coming years with huge investments also focused on big data analytics, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and 5G.

Customers have been moving past lift-and-shift migrations from on-premises to the cloud simply to keep their organizations running. A wave of enterprise digital transformation spending fueled double-digit revenue growth for cloud leaders Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud and a host of other providers. Theyre building what Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella refers to as tech intensity by leveraging the latest cloud technologies to innovate. Theyre also using more cloud-based collaboration and productivity tools for their hybrid workforces including Microsoft 365 and its mega-popular Teams and Google Workspaceto prepare for what those workforces and their offices will look like in a post-pandemic world.

CRNs Cloud 100 list recognizes the coolest cloud computing companies in cloud infrastructure, monitoring and management, security, software and storage, highlighting 20 in each category.

Joining AWS, Microsoft and Google Cloud on the cloud infrastructure list are familiar legacy tech names making cloud plays such as Dell, IBM and Oracle, a startup offering cloud-native infrastructure services powered by Kubernetes and a division of telecommunications provider Verizon.

CRNs selections for cloud monitoring and management include a cloud-native logging and security analytics company, the creator of a software delivery platform that uses AI to simplify DevOps processes, and the provider of a SaaS platform for modern commerce.

Cloud security companies making the Cloud 100 this year help address customers needs as the type and number of cybersecurity attacks continue to escalate. Cloud companies and their partners and customers last year were plagued by cybersecurity vulnerabilities, threats and attacks, including the ongoing damage stemming from the attack on the SolarWinds Orion network monitoring platform; ransomware attacks against technology supplier Kaseya and IT consulting giant Accenture, among others; the compromise of Microsoft Exchange on-premises servers; and the discovery of critical vulnerabilities in the Java logging utility Apache Log4j to end the year. Those challenges came as regulatory and other compliance requirements also increased. New entrants on the Cloud 100 for security include iboss, a zero-trust cloud security provider that uses a containerized cloud architecture, and Illumio, which specializes in zero-trust segmentation.

Cloud providers have been ramping up their partner programs with independent software vendors whose technology offerings integrate with their platforms and are sold through their online marketplaces. The Cloud 100 software list runs from Adobe to Zoho, with new entrants ranging from a data observability pipeline company to the provider of an open-source, distributed SQL database for building cloud-native applications.

The coolest cloud storage companies, meanwhile, demonstrate the breadth of technologies in the evolving sector, from legacy storage hardware vendors NetApp and Pure Storage to a storageless data startup that developed a global file system technology that delivers software-defined storage services for data on any infrastructure or cloud.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Security Companies Of The 2022 Cloud 100

Heres a look at 20 cloud security vendors that have taken on todays wide-ranging management, segmentation, compliance and governance challenges.

The 20 Coolest Cloud Infrastructure Companies Of The 2022 Cloud 100

These 20 companies worked to meet new demand from a world that not only adapted the cloud to survive the pandemic, but now expects it as how we do business

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Trends in the Cloud Computing Job Market 2022 – Datamation

Posted: at 2:43 am

The cloud computing job market is growing rapidly, but its not keeping pace with global cloud innovation.

Cloud vendors continue to grow their product offerings and expand their engagement with advanced technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT). Cloud users continue to increase their cloud usage or migrate their workloads to the cloud for the first time. In all of these cases, more cloud professionals are needed to manage cloud solutions, but the supply of these skilled workers continues to fall short of the demand.

Whether youre looking to hire a cloud computing professional or get hired for a cloud role, its important to know the conversations that are happening in this market and how expectations for cloud work are changing. Read on to learn about five of the trends experts are seeing in the cloud computing job market today.

Also read: Top Trends in Cloud Computing

As more companies move their legacy applications and infrastructure to the cloud, it becomes crucial to assess and refresh security for the new environment.

Many cloud platforms offer software-as-a-service (SaaS) and third-party security solutions, but companies are increasingly hiring cloud professionals with security skills as well.

Dan Lohrmann, field CISO at Presidio, a cloud infrastructure and security company, said cybersecurity and zero-trust knowledge are fundamental skill sets for cloud candidates to possess.

Cloud architects, specialists, and analysts with experience in cloud security, identity management, and data backups are crucial, Lohrmann said.

Zero-trust edicts in the public sector and desires to move in this zero-trust direction in the private sector are driving a demand for skills to configure various toolsets securely.

Learn more about cloud security: Top Trends in Cloud Security

Cloud professionals are expected to gain additional technical strengths they can bring to the company.

Mattias Andersson, senior community training architect and instructor for A Cloud Guru, a Pluralsight education company, believes additional skill sets in security and data are helpful for a cloud computing professional looking for a secure career path forward.

Because cloud is becoming more integrated into systems, more positions are becoming cloud plus and requiring experience with both cloud and some other part of IT, Andersson said. Some examples include cloud plus development, cloud plus data, cloud plus operations, and cloud plus security.

Software developers who can leverage cloud services without the help of architects or operations teams are particularly valuable. Because cloud services are becoming even more efficient and accessible as they trend toward higher abstractions, any experience with serverless anything is quite valuable.

Andersson explained the value of getting experience with multiple major cloud platforms and experience with setting up and running a multicloud environment.

Companies are looking for people with multicloud skills, if they can find them, Andersson said. Even if theyre not already using multiple clouds right now, many companies are looking toward that multicloud possibility and want to onboard multicloud expertise.

Sometimes, companies have concrete plans around various clouds, but even if multicloud skills are not written into the job posting, multicloud skills are on many hiring managers minds. And they would love to gain an in-house resource they could consult on multicloud ideas theyre considering.

Expand your data knowledge: 10 Top Data Science Certifications

Cloud computing professionals are looking for a company that will help them advance their cloud learning and try new skills.

Paul Haverstock, VP of engineering at Cloudways, a managed cloud hosting platform, explained how some cloud specialists want to hone their skills with a particular cloud platform, while others want to expand their reach into other major platforms. All of them, he said, want the opportunity to continue their learning on the job.

Often developers have in-depth knowledge and understanding of one of the cloud platforms AWS being the most prevalent by far, Haverstock said. Many developers who have developed expertise in a given cloud platform want to continue to work in that environment. They want to maintain and increase their investment in the platform they know best. as this increases their value in the market.

A smaller percentage of developers want to branch out from the platform they know the best to learn another.

In all cases, candidates want the chance to learn more and take advantage of training to increase their cloud computing expertise. They want to learn and use the latest services, so their pace of learning and experience matches the pace of innovation of cloud services.

Leon Godwin, principal cloud evangelist at Sungard AS, a digital transformation and infrastructure company, explained why cloud employees are most drawn to companies that give them hands-on opportunities to lead and learn through projects that contribute to the business.

Cloud talent knows the supply and demand paradigm that exists in the marketplace, Godwin said. This enables them to be more selective.

Salary is always going to be a key driver, but beyond that, talent is looking for organizations where they can make a meaningful contribution, while also growing their career. This requires giving them both authority and responsibilities.

Empowering your talent is the foundational building block of a cloud culture. Additionally, they are looking for their contribution to be valued and for their voice to be both sought and heard.

Also read: 5 Cloud Networking Trends

Especially because cloud specialists are in such short supply, those with in-depth cloud knowledge are expected to share cloud products, progress, and needs with a wider business audience.

Knowing how the cloud works and explaining it to others are two different skill sets, but candidates who can do both will have the biggest opportunities for career growth.

Godwin from Sungard AS believes the right mixture of skilled cloud expertise and wider administrative and sales proficiency in cloud talent is the key to getting hired for top-level cloud positions.

Delivering and managing cloud outcomes requires an understanding of the target platforms, systems administration, and infrastructure as code, Godwin said.

Experience is a significant advantage. However, this specific mix of skills is hard to come by, as third-line people may have the administration skills but often lack coding or platform knowledge. Likewise, people with a programming background often lack an understanding of systems administration or the nuances of a cloud platform. Modern cloud talent should have a deep breadth of knowledge and should be comfortable liaising with customers and communicating complex challenges in easily understandable terms.

Learn more about the greater cloud market: Cloud Computing Market

Cloud infrastructure already makes it possible for companies and their workforces to be more globally distributed, and more companies are expanding their cloud recruiting efforts to new global markets.

Amitabh Sinha, CEO of Workspot, an enterprise SaaS and desktop cloud platform, said companies are looking in new places for full-time and contract talent to fill cloud team gaps.

To address the talent scarcity, many are extending their hiring searches to a global scale, creating global collaboration platforms and augmenting teams with contract resources, Sinha said.

As the phenomenon continues, we can expect to see more global collaboration, with companies increasingly hiring talent from South America and Eastern Europe, for example.

Read next: Top 50 Companies Hiring for Cloud Computing Roles

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Cities Adopt Cloud Computing and IoT for Smarter Transportation – StateTech Magazine

Posted: at 2:43 am

The initiative will collect data from independent systems, all of which have management interfaces that use standard web technologies and will publish to a publish-subscribe bus thats streamed into a data lake.

That architecture allows you to do things like put rules engines or artificial intelligence at the bus level without having to worry about integration with hundreds of pieces that make up a smart city, Santos says.

RELATED:How will 5G networks enhance smart city solutions?

Across the country, in Oregon, the city of Portland is also embarking on a data lake initiative aimed at integrating and presenting data in a way that city analysts can use to better understand the problems theyre trying to solve and evaluate their solutions.

The initiative has its roots in a 2018 pilot project in which Portland partnered with AT&T to install Intel-powered General Electric sensors on streetlights along three city corridors. The goal was to advance the citys Vision Zero program to eliminate traffic deaths and serious injuries on its streets.

City officials decided not to continue with the pilot, but they did want to make use of the 18 months worth of data collected. We had 200 sensors generating data every 15 seconds, says Portland Smart City PDX Manager Kevin Martin. Its got to go someplace.

The citys existing data systems cant manage that volume or structure of data, so it recently launched a three-year cloud-based data lake initiative, with plans to expand it to meet ongoing, real-time mobility data needs.

The data streams from the citys traffic signals are being upgraded to generate additional data. In the past, they were utilized solely by traffic engineers in the operational context of the signals. Theyve been walled off, Martin says, but they could inform conversations among planners about the safety of pedestrians.

Thats the kind of integration and breaking down of data silos that is going to allow folks to have more information at their fingertips about whats actually happening at these places where were experiencing safety issues, Martin says.

DIVE DEEPER: How can smart mobility tech meet citizens needs?

The RTA Metrics and Statistics platform, which runs on Amazon Web Services, measures everything from ridership and citizens comfort returning to public transportation to statistical data about engines, cars and other assets to inform purchasing decisions.

We can use those metrics to help improve ridership among our service boards, says George W. Coleman Jr., the RTAs IT director.

The modernization project got its start in 2019, when the agency launched a down-to-the-studs remodel of the 15th floor of its Chicago headquarters. In addition to accommodating remote workers during construction and giving all employees a work-from-home option in the future the infrastructure upgrade provided an opportunity to move many systems to the cloud and offload the responsibility of hosting, managing and administering the RTAs legacy system.

Moving to the cloud offers government agencies the resiliency and the capabilities that theyre looking for without the headaches, Tumbali says.

The RTA upgraded its network with Cisco Firepower 2130 firewalls, Meraki switches, Windows 2019 virtual domain controllers and NetApp network storage prior to adopting Webex.

Now that weve got many of our systems moved to the cloud, weve seen much higher levels of reliability and functionality, Coleman says.

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Cities Adopt Cloud Computing and IoT for Smarter Transportation - StateTech Magazine

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