‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Protest. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Protest. إظهار كافة الرسائل

US residents protest 'Fast and Furious' street races in LA

Residents voice anger at planned taping of "Fast X" in Angelino Heights, a historic area near downtown Los Angeles which is home to Vin Diesel's fictional character Dominic Toretto in the long-running film series.

Los Angeles has seen a 30 percent increase in fatalities and a 21 percent increase in serious injuries due to traffic violence over the last year.
Los Angeles has seen a 30 percent increase in fatalities and a 21 percent increase in serious injuries due to traffic violence over the last year. (AFP)
A Los Angeles neighbourhood featured in the "Fast and Furious" movies has held protests against the filming of the franchise's latest installment, claiming the community has been blighted by a spate of illegal and dangerous street racing. Residents on Friday voiced anger at this weekend's planned taping of "Fast X" in Angelino Heights, a historic area near downtown Los Angeles which is home to Vin Diesel's fictional character Dominic Toretto in the wildly popular, long-running film series. The movies depict the underground world of street racing, helping to popularise practices such as "street takeovers" in which crowds gather –– usually at night –– to watch cars rev their engines and screech at high speeds around city streets. Damian Kevitt, a local resident and founder of Streets Are For Everyone (SAFE), said the Hollywood film series "glorifies an illegal activity" and as a result, Angelino Heights had become "a tourist destination for illegal street racing." "Friday, Saturday, Sunday nights, there'll be three, four, five, six cars coming through here, doing burnouts, doing donuts," said Kevitt. "There was not street racing in this community before 'Fast and Furious' was filmed here," he added. Bella, another resident who declined to give her last name, said her children were traumatised from being constantly awoken by the sound of cars outside her home at night and were now too scared to play outside the house. "They've seen when the car spins out of control and practically hits the pedestrian that's standing right on the corner," she said. Universal asked to add disclaimer Los Angeles has seen a 30 percent increase in fatalities and a 21 percent increase in serious injuries due to traffic violence over the last year, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. Bella called for Universal Pictures to move future filming elsewhere, while SAFE has asked the city to install speed humps and implement a zero-tolerance policy on street racing. The group has also asked Universal to add a disclaimer to the "Fast and Furious" movies discouraging street racing. The studio did not immediately respond to an AFP news agency request for comment. The first installment, "The Fast and the Furious," was released by Universal Pictures in 2001, and the franchise has become the eighth-highest-grossing film series in history, taking over $6.6 billion worldwide across ten movies. "Fast X" is due to be released next May. Source: AFP

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Afghan refugees in UAE protest against living facilities, slow resettlement

Afghans shout for freedom at the Abu Dhabi facility and demand quick resettlement to the US or elsewhere.

US officials have said that all those who qualify will be resettled in the United States, while others will be resettled in third nations.
US officials have said that all those who qualify will be resettled in the United States, while others will be resettled in third nations. (Reuters Archive)
Afghan refugees and migrants living in limbo at a United Arab Emirates (UAE) facility for nearly a year since being evacuated from Afghanistan have held fresh protests over what they say is a slow and opaque resettlement process. Hundreds of Afghans carried banners and shouted for freedom on Monday and Tuesday, two Afghans in the facility told the Reuters news agency, estimating that thousands were still awaiting resettlement to the United States or third countries. Images and videos shared with Reuters showed children, women and men protesting inside the facility in Abu Dhabi, known as Emirates Humanitarian City, with temperatures in the Gulf Arab state reaching 38 degrees Celsius. One boy held a small banner that read: "One year is enough!" An Emirati official acknowledged in a written statement to Reuters that there were frustrations and that the process of resettlement has taken longer than the UAE had wanted. The official said the UAE was continuing to work with the US Embassy in Abu Dhabi, the capital, to process the Afghans housed in the facility so that they could be resettled in a "timely manner." "The UAE remains committed to this ongoing cooperation with the US and other international partners to ensure that Afghan evacuees can live in safety, security, and dignity,” the official said. "Nearly one year, we have been here in detention and the camp is like a modern prison. No one is allowed to go out, they don't know when (we) will be settled permanently in any country," one of the Afghans said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Refugees speak of impact on mental health Protests first erupted at the facility in February after the resettlement process appeared to have stalled, prompting a visit by a US State Department senior official who said all Afghans there would be resettled by August. The process resumed shortly after the visit. At the time, there were an estimated 12,000 Afghans at the facility in Abu Dhabi and another site nearby. The United States has since August last year taken in over 85,000 Afghans, including many who were processed in the Middle East and Europe. The two Afghans who spoke to Reuters said the mental health of those in the tightly controlled facility was deteriorating due to the uncertainty over their future. Both said they did not know when they would be resettled. The UAE official said those housed in the facility received "high-quality housing, sanitation, health, clinical, counselling, education and food services to ensure their welfare." [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lo5whd47iWU[/embed] #AfghanEvac, a coalition of volunteer groups advocating on behalf of Afghans to the US government, wrote on Twitter after protests broke out that the process had not stalled and those in the UAE facility would be resettled in the United States or elsewhere. UAE officials have said the country offered to temporarily host thousands of Afghans evacuated on behalf of the United States and other Western nations after Afghanistan's Western-backed government collapsed and the Taliban took over. Others arrived later on chartered flights. The UAE, like other Gulf states, typically does not accept refugees. US officials have said that all those who qualify will be resettled in the United States, while others will be resettled in third nations. No one would be forced to return to Afghanistan, according to US officials, though some in the UAE returned voluntarily after months of waiting. READ MORE: Afghan refugees in India face an uncertain future READ MORE: Foreign Ministry: Türkiye not a refugee camp or border guard for any nation Source: Reuters

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Dozens Moscow Metro Passengers Detained on Russia Flag Day

Moscow police have detained dozens of metro passengers in what appeared to be a raid to prevent mass actions on Russia’s National Flag Day on Monday at a time when anti-war activism has been virtually outlawed, an independent watchdog reported. OVD-Info, a police-monitoring website that runs a legal hotline for those detained, said 33 activists and journalists have been apprehended across the Russian capital’s metro system. Some of them were flagged for detention by the Moscow Metro’s facial recognition technology, according to the watchdog.  One journalist held in a southern Moscow police station said at one point police sirens went off “once a minute” with the detention of another person. Three detained passengers had been previously charged under Russia’s laws that virtually choked off anti-war speech since the country invaded Ukraine in February, according to OVD-Info. At least one activist was detained twice in the morning and evening.
Most of the activists and journalists have been released later without being charged, OVD-Info reported later Monday evening. One was reportedly charged with “discrediting the Russian military” for wearing clothes that said “I’m against war.” Criticizing the war or sharing non-Kremlin-approved information about it are both punishable under new laws passed shortly after the invasion. More than 15,000 anti-war protesters have been detained across Russia since President Vladimir Putin ordered an invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24. Prominent Putin critics Ilya Yashin and Vladimir Kara-Murza were put in pre-trial jail for denouncing Moscow's Ukraine offensive. They are among 212 mostly private citizens facing criminal prosecution for voicing opposition to the war. All of Russia’s independent media has either been blocked or shut down since February, with many journalists fleeing the country to escape prosecution.  Russian authorities have blocked some 138,000 websites and also outlawed Facebook and Instagram as “extremist” organizations, as well as restricted access to Twitter, since the war began. National Flag Day detentions follow similar police actions on Victory Day and Russia Day in Moscow and around the country in May and June. National Flag Day has been celebrated every year on Aug. 22 since then-President Boris Yeltsin re-introduced it in 1994.


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Oklahoma parents protest explicit books in public school libraries

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Oklahoma parents on Tuesday night spoke out against explicit library books at a school board meeting. 

Stillwater Public Schools, which serves more than 8,300 students, says their library is selected by professional Library Media Specialists in a statement released to the media. The district said that there is a process by which parents may call for material to be reviewed, and they have not received any such requests recently.

The parents were summoned to speak as their names were called to address matters on the meeting's agenda. 

"You guys probably are aware that TPS [Tulsa Public Schools] and Mustang Schools are going through some accreditation problems via House Bill 1775," said Riley Flack, a parent that spoke at the podium while holding a book. 

Flack went on to say, "[Stillwater] is going to have the same issue if you don't clean it up. And I'm going to find it and I've got some connections that I've made over the last couple of years battling [Stillwater]. I'll bring that to bear."

Flack called out a book titled "It Feels Good to Be Yourself," which he said was in two elementary schools and is about "gender identity." 

"It teaches the kids whether the doctor is guessing whether it was a boy or a girl," he said.

SOUTHWEST FLORIDA SCHOOL DISTRICT PLACES WARNING LABELS ON OVER 100 BOOKS

Protesters and activists hold signs as they stand outside a Loudoun County Public Schools board meeting in Ashburn, Virginia, on Oct. 12, 2021. 

Protesters and activists hold signs as they stand outside a Loudoun County Public Schools board meeting in Ashburn, Virginia, on Oct. 12, 2021.  (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

Doubling down on the explicit material in the books, a woman named Karen Flack, who lived in the Stillwater community for "35 years," highlighted books at the public library that alarmed her. 

Among the books she flagged at the school board meeting are "The Truth About Alice," a story involving "abortion," and "Perfect," which contains "sexual activities, including sexual assault, profanity, racial commentary, self-harm" and other "high concerns on what the subject matter is."

She said that there is no need for the content in the libraries and compared the books to "video pornography" and criticized it as "not appropriate."

"This is just not appropriate. To me, it's like if you had a section of pornography, video pornography, for kids to check out," said Flack. 

One parent seemed to agree with the inclusion of the controversial material. A woman named Robin, who said she is a former elementary teacher, came to the podium to say that "if we never give our children a broad array of perspectives, we're doing them a disservice and setting them up to struggle when they go out into the wider world."

"But, books that are recommended for the age range that is well reviewed by professionals or award-winning must remain available for our children. I'll quickly add that the addition of new voices doesn't mean the expulsion of others," she said.

"Since books that face challenges are often books that offer diverse perspectives, choosing not to add those voices to our classrooms can perpetuate existing inequities." 

RHODE ISLAND MOM SUES AFTER DISCOVERING ‘SECRET’ ‘ANTIRACIST’ MEETINGS HELD IN DISTRICT

Stillwater Public Schools released a statement in response to the tumultuous school board meeting.

"In every situation, we take parent concerns seriously and hope to partner with them to find a solution that's right for their child. If a child is assigned a book to which the parents object for a class, we ask that they start at that level; alternative texts can be provided for students by their teacher. If there's a book they don't want their child to have access to, we ask that they have a conversation with their school so that their wishes for their child's library access can be honored," Stillwater Public Schools said.

Recently, a southwest Florida school district placed warning labels on over 100 books that related to race or the LGBTQ community, deeming them "unsuitable for students." The district started adding the labels in February based on a "Porn in Schools Report" issued by a conservative group.

Parents all over the country have been speaking out against coronavirus-related mandates in schools and progressive curriculums that have been associated with critical race theory or gender theory. 

Parents and community members attend a Loudoun County School Board meeting, just 40 minutes from Fairfax, Virginia.

Parents and community members attend a Loudoun County School Board meeting, just 40 minutes from Fairfax, Virginia. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)

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Education advocates have highlighted CRT curriculum in schools and opposed COVID-19 related mandates and lockdowns, with these issues leading to protests and recalls of school boards across the nation.

Republican elected officials in several states have sought to ban discussion of gender ideology and critical race theory in classrooms, particularly for young students.


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Thousands in Bosnia protest possible changes to election law

BELGRADE, Serbia

Thousands of people gathered in Bosnia and Herzegovina's capital Sarajevo on Monday to protest possible amendments to the nation’s election law and constitution by the Office of the High Representative (OHR), an international institution that is responsible for implementing the country’s peace agreement.

Several thousand people gathered in front of the OHR’s office to convey the message that solutions based on ethnic discrimination and which are contrary to all democratic and legal standards are completely unacceptable.

Dervo Sejdic, a Bosnian Roma who had in the past appealed to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France after he was blocked from running in elections because he was not Bosniak, Croat or Serb, called for protests over the planned changes to the election law.

Many political parties joined the call, including the Social Democratic Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina (SDP), the Democratic Front (DF), the Democratic Action Movement (PDA), Our Party, the Democratic Action Party (SDA) and the People and Justice (NiP) party.

The protestors carried the national flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina. No incidents were recorded and the gathering was secured by a large number of police officers.

Earlier in the day, SDA leader Bakir Izetbegovic said Bosnia needs the authority of a high representative who would protect the constitution and the 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement.

Izetbegovic's remarks came at a press conference following an extraordinary meeting held at the SDA’s headquarters ahead of the protest in front of the OHR.

According to local media, by Aug. 1, Christian Schmidt, a German politician and the High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, will impose measures for the re-functioning of Bosnia’s Federation (FBiH) entity.

"The high representative in Bosnia Herzegovina is to protect the Constitution and the Dayton Peace Agreement and by no means to impose solutions that we failed to reach through a series of negotiations that stretched throughout the last year, especially changes in the very sensitive sphere of inter-ethnic and party balances and the balance of party influence among the ethnocentric and civic parties,” said Izetbegovic.

Visiting Bosnia Herzegovina, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said it is in Croatia's interest to have a stable and democratic Bosnia Herzegovina in which Croats will be equal.

"The key is inclusion, so isn't it most natural that Croats who voted and fought for the independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina will be able to participate in the government? These reactions are exaggerated. We need to calm down so that the elections can be conducted in the best way," said Plenkovic

Plenkovic's remarks came after meeting with Dragan Covic, the head of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), the main Bosnian Croat party.

For his part, Covic said Bosniaks in the country want to maintain the status quo.

"During the last two years, we tried to implement the agreement in Mostar. We failed. The wish of the Bosniak parties was to maintain the status quo, but they only partially succeeded in that because all the problems surfaced when it came to the majority of the minority people. I am convinced from the talks with the high representative that those decisions will go in the direction of a democratic atmosphere in the campaign phase as well as that immediately after the election, the results will be able to be implemented," he said.

According to local media, Schmidt, who oversees the peace agreement’s implementation in Bosnia Herzegovina and has special powers to impose laws and dismiss officials, would impose a new law regarding how delegates are chosen from the House of Peoples of the Bosniak-Croat Federation entity’s parliament.

Many say the OHR would give the Croat nationalist party HDZ and the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) party a disproportionate degree of political influence and further deepen discriminatory ethnic divisions.

Bosniaks, Croats and Serbs will lose representatives in the House of Peoples if their ethnic population in any federation canton amounts to less than 3% of the same ethnic population in the federation entity.

This would allow HDZ to get more delegates, at least 14 out of 17 seats in the Croat group, as HDZ rules in cantons with larger Croat populations.

With complete control over the Croat groups, a member from the HDZ will now be guaranteed a seat as either the president or as one of the two vice presidents of the federation in a team with a Bosniak and a Serb selected from their respective groups.

Regardless of whether the HDZ has a president or a vice president for the federation, all three ethnic constituencies are required to form the government, making the HDZ indispensable.

Under the current election law, at least one Bosniak, one Croat and one Serb delegate are elected from each canton.

This would be the third time Schmidt uses the so-called “Bonn powers” after assuming office in August 2021.

The first time he did so to annul a law on immovable property in Republika Srpska, a Serb-dominated entity.

The second time, Schmidt used his "Bonn powers" to finance the country’s general elections on Oct. 2, allocating €6.5 million (approximately $6.97 million) for the Central Election Commission.

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