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Photos: Snapshots of Martin Luther King Day Across the United States

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People across the United States, from schoolchildren to the President, marked Martin Luther King Jr. Day Monday by participating as volunteers, demonstrators, protesters and organizers.

Some marched to commemorate the iconic civil rights movement leader who would have turned 86 this year, while others gathered to protest police brutality and the loss of lives in incidents that brought long-simmering racial tensions to the surface over the last few months. 

Some individuals and groups devoted Monday to volunteer as part of a "Day of Service" in honor of King, while others took the opportunity to celebrate his achievements through cultural and educational events.

Here are snapshots of the myriad ways the U.S. marked MLK Day:

Across the country, people participated in protests against excessive use of police force they feel is targeted disproportionately towards minorities. Demonstraters used slogans such as "Black Lives Matter," which emerged after the August fatal shooting by a policeman of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson Mo., and "I Can't Breathe," the words uttered by Eric Garner, who died after being placed in a chokehold by a policeman in Staten Island in July. In Cleveland, protesters gathered at the site where 12-year-old Tamir Rice was fatally shot by Ohio police in November. 

1-19-15 MLK Day 7People attend a Martin Luther King day rally in the Harlem section of New York January 19, 2015. Tributes to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. were held around the United States on Monday as protests over the treatment of minorities by law enforcement rolled on across the country. Observers of Martin Luther King Jr. Day have this year linked the federal holiday to a rallying cry in recent months during demonstrations over police brutality: "Black lives matter."

1-19-15 MLK Day 2T-shirts with the image of Martin Luther King and with the words "I can't breathe" are pictured for sale during a Martin Luther King day rally in the Harlem section of New York January 19, 2015.

1-19-15 MLK Day 6Civil rights activist Reverend Al Sharpton speaks during a Martin Luther King day rally at his National Action Network in the Harlem section of New York January 19, 2015.

President Barack Obama called for Americans to volunteer in tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. in a video posted on YouTube Monday. "Today, we come together in a National Day of Service, because as Dr. King once said, 'Life's most persistent and urgent question is: What are you doing for others?'" he said. Obama, along with the First Lady Michelle Obama and their daughter Malia, visited a Boys & Girls club to help paint murals and put together literacy kits. Elsewhere, people marked the day with other volunteer events, performances and services.

1-19-15 MLK Day 3U.S. President Barack Obama works on a literacy project with children during a day of service at the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Washington, in celebration of the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday in Washington January 19, 2015.

1-19-15 MLK Day 4bRandall Toussaint and his son Ethan visit the crypt of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife Coretta Scott King prior to The King Center's 47th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Service in Atlanta January 19, 2015.

1-19-15 MLK Day 5People sing "We Shall Overcome" at the conclusion of The King Center's 47th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Service in Atlanta January 19, 2015.

1-19-15 MLK Day 8Actor and activist David Oyelowo, who portrays Martin Luther King Jr. in the movie "Selma", takes a moment while addressing the audience during The King Center's 47th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Service in Atlanta January 19, 2015.

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Lindsey Graham Threatens Aid Cut to Palestine Over ICC Move

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JERUSALEM (Reuters) - The Palestinians could lose annual U.S. aid if they file a lawsuit against Israel at the International Criminal Court which they joined this month over American and Israeli protests, a senior U.S. Republican senator said on Monday.

Lindsey Graham, part of a seven-member delegation of senators visiting Israel, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, said existing U.S. legislation "would cut off aid to the Palestinians if they filed a complaint" against Israel.

At a news conference in Jerusalem, Graham called the Palestinian step "a bastardising of the role of the ICC. I find it incredibly offensive."

"We will push back strongly to register our displeasure. It is already part of our law that would require us to stop funding if they actually bring a case," said Graham, of South Carolina.

U.S. President Barack Obama's Democratic administration has said it does not believe Palestine is a sovereign state and therefore does not qualify to be part of the ICC, but has not explicitly threatened to withhold aid.

Any cut in U.S. funds could make it hard for the Palestinian self-rule authority in the West Bank and Gaza to survive. The U.S. supplies more than $400 million annually to the Palestinian Authority. Israel has frozen a monthly transfer of some $120 million in tax revenues it collects for the Palestinians.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has confirmed the Palestinians will formally become a member of the ICC on April 1, after applying earlier this month.

With jurisdiction dating back to June 13, 2014, the court's prosecutor could investigate the 50-day war between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip in July and August 2014, during which more than 2,100 Palestinians, 67 Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas applied to the court after losing a vote at the U.N. Security Council seeking a deadline for an Israeli withdrawal from land it captured in a 1967 war and where Palestinians seek to establish a state.

Israel and the United States deplore Palestinian moves at the U.N. as unilateral steps that undermine diplomacy, which has made little progress in years and collapsed most recently in April.

Graham urged the Palestinians to re-evaluate ICC membership, saying he supported their aspirations for statehood but opposed joining the court as a "provocative step" against Israel.

Senator John McCain, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, charged that a U.S.-led campaign against Islamist militants in Syria and Iraq was moving too slowly, arguing that aerial attacks had to be backed up by "more boots on the ground." He did not say which country should provide the troops.

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On Martin Luther King Day, Police Reform Advocates Take Message to United Nations

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Al-Tariq Shabazz, a 33-year-old New Jersey resident, has already started teaching his sons, 8 and 10 years old, to be careful in their interactions with police. Shabazz taught them to be firm, respectful and very mindful, he says.

Even so, he's still concerned about how vulnerable they are. "You could be right but still get hurt by them," Shabazz says of the police.

Shabazz was one of approximately 1,500 participants marching in the #Dream4Justice March, an anti-police brutality protest that took place in New York City on Monday to coincide with Martin Luther King Day. Chanting "I can't breathe!" as they walked, demonstrators demanded reforms to the New York Police Department and law enforcement agencies nationwide.

The protesters, who set out at approximately 1:15 p.m., walked some four miles from Harlem to the United Nations to draw attention to police brutality worldwide. When they arrived at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, located across the street from the U.N. on 47th Street between First and Second Avenues, protest organizers again demanded police reform.

The #Dream4Justice March was organized by Justice League NYC, which describes itself as “a task force of juvenile and criminal justice advocates, artists and experts, and formerly incarcerated individuals.”  

Protesters against excessive use of police force also convened in Union Square, DNAinfo.com New York’s Ben Fractenberg reported via Twitter.

Advocates have become increasingly vocal in their demands that the NYPD end tactics that they believe disproportionately impact minorities, such as “broken windows” policing. The premise of "broken windows" is that police pursuit of minor, quality-of-life crimes might stave off more serious offenses. Police reform advocates maintain, however, that the policy antagonizes minorities.

The marches come in the wake of tension between communities of color and police that came to a head this summer in New York City and across the country. On July 17, NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo put Eric Garner in a choke hold while arresting him for selling loose cigarettes. Garner, who was unarmed, died shortly after the incident. On Aug. 9, Ferguson, Missouri Police Officer Darren Wilson fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown. He was also unarmed. Both events sparked weeks of intense protests over the use of police force, which flared up again after two grand juries decided not to indict the officers involved in both cases. Related protests popped up around the globe.  

After the protests, public statements by New York mayor Bill de Blasio on the use of force by police led to intense criticism by the police officer's union and worsened a rift between police and public officials. This was exacerbated by the December shooting of two police officers by a man allegedly seeking revenge for Garner and Brown's deaths. Police officers turned their backs on Mayor De Blasio at subsequent events and embarked on an unofficial slowdown.

The NYPD did not respond to Newsweek's requests for comment at press time.

Mayor De Blasio, speaking at Reverand Al Sharpton's National Action Network, called for continued social change in New York City, but implored activists to do so respectfully, quoting King: "Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that." 

De Blasio said people who "spew hate" toward police officers are preventing social change.

"You're holding us back. Change the policies. Change the practices. Change the laws. But respect the people who protect us," he said, according to an official transcript of his remarks.

At the Justice League rally, Dino Dunnom, a 49-year-old resident of Hollis, Queens, said he hopes the recent deaths of Garner and Brown will prompt people and policies to become more respectful of life.

Dunnom says he gave his son "the other talk, the prevention piece," with regard to the police, telling him how to dress to avoid conflict with cops, for example. But he wishes it was a talk he didn't have to have. 

"We should be free to wear and dress and do as we please," he laments, later adding that his son saw the talk as "as a shift from young adulthood to adulthood."

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New Video Shows ISIS Threatening Lives of Japanese Hostages

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A new video purports to show a member of the Islamic State (ISIS) threatening to kill two Japanese hostages. Two men, Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa, appear in the video which is filmed in the same style to those that showed James Foley, Steven Sotloff, and other western hostages killed since August 2014. Both men appear kneeling on the ground in a desert and are wearing similar orange jumpsuits to those worn by other such hostages.

The video shows a man who appears similar to, and may in fact be, “Jiahdi John,” a member of ISIS believed to hail from the United Kingdom. “John" has appeared in several other videos released by the terrorist organization, including footage showing the murders of other ISIS hostages.

The video was distributed on social media by al-Furqan Media, a propaganda media organization controlled by ISIS. The opening of the video shows a news anchor discussing Japan’s recent pledge of $200 million to fighting the Islamic State.

The black-clad militant then says: “To the prime minister of Japan, although you are more than 8,500 kilometers away from the Islamic State, you willingly have volunteered to take part in this crusade, you have proudly donated $100 million to kill our women and children, to destroy the homes of the muslims." He then demanded $100 million in ransom for each hostage and said both men would be executed in 72 hours if the ransom was not received.

Japan is now working to verify the video and Reuters has reported that the foreign ministry in Tokyo has said: "Such a threat by taking hostages is unacceptable and we are extremely resentful."

 

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Why Nearly Half of Us Hear Voices (and How to Fix It)

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One night, during her first year at the University of Sheffield, Rachel Waddingham struggled to fall asleep at a friend’s house. She could hear three middle-aged men whose voices she didn’t know talking about her in another room. “They were saying, ‘She’s stupid, she’s ugly, I wish she would kill herself,’ ” she says. “I was angry and went downstairs to challenge them, but no one was there. They kept laughing and saying, ‘She’ll never find us.’ ”

The voices became a recurring presence, providing an aggressive, unsettling commentary on her life. Waddingham came to believe they were disenfranchised workers, forced to film her around the clock, and she interpreted her world through that scenario.

When her neck ached, she assumed a tracking device had been planted under her skin. At the supermarket, the voices would ask each other questions – for instance, “Does she know what she’s buying?” – leading Waddingham to reach sinister conclusions. “I’d wander from aisle to aisle feeling quite anxious,” she says. “I worried they might have poisoned the food. I’d come back with orange juice, milk, bread and cheese, because it’s all I could work out was safe.”

As with so many others struggling to make sense of their voices, Waddingham turned to alcohol to cope, and avoided friends because she feared “the three” would secretly film them as well. Months later she dropped out of university and moved into a bedsit, too afraid to eat or bathe. A doctor eventually admitted her to a psychiatric hospital, where staff diagnosed her with schizophrenia and put her on a cocktail of drugs that expanded to include Olanzapine, Sulpiride, Risperidone and Venlafaxine, among others. The voices faded, but the side effects of the medication made life intolerable. Waddingham gained more than 30kg, developed diabetes and lactated. Her eyes would roll involuntarily, and she struggled with akathisia, an overwhelming sense of restlessness that caused her to shuffle from foot to foot. Suicide attempts followed, and she felt “like a walking zombie”.

“Up until I got into psychiatry, I didn’t try to kill myself,” says Waddingham, who is now 36 years old and runs support groups for voice-hearers. “I was terrified and I was overwhelmed, but I was still fighting to stay alive. I gave up when I handed responsibility to the doctors. They were going to fix me, give me the right meds, but it didn’t work out quite as simple as that.”

Life with the Not-Yets

In October, Waddingham and more than 200 other voice-hearers from around the world gathered in Thessaloniki, Greece for the sixth annual World Hearing Voices Congress, organised by Intervoice, the international network of people who hear voices and their supporters. Part of the Hearing Voices Movement, these voice-hearers reject the traditional idea that voices are necessarily a symptom of mental illness. They recast voices as meaningful, albeit unusual, experiences, and believe potential problems lie not in the voices themselves, but in a person’s relationship with them.

By acknowledging their voices and staying in dialogue with them, members can wrest back control of their lives – and even start to appreciate the messages they carry. They seek to do this without an over-reliance on medication, which can leave people numb to their emotions. As Dutch voice-hearer Jim van der Wal says: “You can’t heal if you can’t feel.”

Almost FriendsRachel Waddingham has learned to stay in dialogue with the voices in her head instead of silencing them with medication.

The road to recovery often begins in small support groups run by the Hearing Voices Network (HVN). The first group formed in the Netherlands in 1987, and, since then, groups have cropped up in 30 countries, including Bosnia, Canada, Japan, Tanzania and the US. Members share their stories and exchange coping mechanisms, which can include setting appointments to talk with the voices, so the voice-hearer can function without distraction the rest of the day. Above all, these groups give voice-hearers a sense of community and togetherness where they can be seen as people rather than patients.“I feel as I do every year – that I’ve come home to my people and my tribe,” an Australian woman said at the opening event in a lecture hall inside the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. “I feel like I belong somewhere. I thank you for giving me my place.”

Research suggests that up to one in 25 people hears voices and that up to 40% of the population will hear voices at some point in their lives. Many will never experience any form of distress, something that is mediated by one’s perception of the phenomenon. “If people believe their voices are omnipotent and can harm and control them, then they are less likely to cope and more likely to end up as a psychiatric patient,” says Eugenie Georgaca, a senior lecturer at the university, and the organiser of the conference. “If they have explanations of voices that allow them to deal with them better, that is a first step toward learning to live with them.”

A central premise of HVN is that voices frequently emerge following extreme stress or trauma. Research bares that out: more than 70% of voice-hearers are thought to have experienced some form of trauma in their lifetime, which could take the form of extreme abuse or bullying. The characteristics of voices vary widely from person to person, but the voices sometimes mimic the sound and language of past abusers. In other instances, they may personify characteristics of the victim at the time of their abuse – or bear no similarities to anyone at all. They can be demonic and frightening, angelic and friendly, and can take every form in between.

Waddingham, for instance, now hears the voices of 13 people, some of whom reflect her past experiences. Among them are Blue, a frightened but cheeky three-year-old; Elfie, an angry teenager; The Scream, a female voice that is filled with pain and suffering; and The Not-Yets, an artificial grouping of voices that Waddingham is not yet ready to engage with fully. “They say very nasty things about me – abusive, sexual, violent things, which echo what was said around me when I was little,” she says. “I try to think of them as frightened children that don’t yet know that it’s not OK to say those things. I think they’re just caught up as if that’s still happening. I’m trying to be quite compassionate towards them.” When the younger voices can’t fall asleep she reads them bedtime stories from her iPad. When voices suggest she’s going to be harmed by a stranger, she thanks them for their concern but lets them know she is being vigilant about her safety.

Phantom Choirs

Traditional psychiatry discourages patients from engaging with voices, and prefers to silence them through medication. But HVN members say that listening to voices is vital to calming them down. Eleanor Longden, a voice-hearer and psychologist at the University of Liverpool, uses the analogy of sitting in a room with a mix of people who are angry, intimidating and out of control. “You have two options,” she says. “The first it to sit down with them and set useful boundaries, and to try and understand why they are so upset. The second is to lock them in another room hoping they will calm down. Most of the time they will start banging on the door and shouting louder. Behind the door they are more intimidating because you don’t know what they are thinking.”

After leaving a psychiatric hospital with a diagnosis of schizophrenia at 18, Longden was assigned to work with a psychiatrist who encouraged her to overcome her fear of her voices. Her mother helped her test the boundaries of what these voices could actually do. “They said they could forecast the future and would predict the colour of the next car to pass the house,” she recalls. Her mother asked for their predictions and pointed out they were not more accurate than chance. Another time, a voice threatened to kill her family if Longden didn’t cut off her toe, and Longden could hear a “phantom choir” laughing along with it. She refused to obey. Her family didn’t die – but the choir did go silent.

She tried to deliver her messages with respect: the less belligerent she was to the voices, the less belligerent they became to her. “I started to see my experiences as a sane reaction to insane circumstances,” she says. Voices that called her weak and pathetic were actually encouraging her to be strong and assertive. “I told the voice, ‘I don’t want to be victimised again either, but when you shout at me and call me an embarrassment it has the opposite effect and makes me more timid and less happy,’ ” she says. She later bought a book on assertiveness. “I would say, ‘You can help me practice,’ and the voice was like, ‘Alright.’ ” Some voice-hearers speak out loud to their voices, while others use internal dialogue. Regardless of the form of communication, voices can manifest at any time of day, which means voice-hearers must think of practical solutions to deal with them without alarming colleagues and passers-by. Some choose to wear Bluetooth headsets so they can speak aloud to the voices in public without causing alarm, while others talk into their mobile phones.

Marina, a voice-hearer in Athens, works as a web designer and at some points has heard up to 60 voices. They sometimes make her laugh in her open-plan office (she’ll simply say she is reading something funny online), and other times they’ll tell her that her brother has been in a severe accident. “I’ll say I am going to the bank and I just go somewhere quiet to deal with them.”

Marina Marina has learned to trick her voices into submission.

Her voices are not always hurtful. They sometimes encourage her to add new ingredients to her recipes and ask her questions about new acquaintances, which she uses to determine whether they can be trusted. But sometimes she doesn’t want to be bothered. At night, when she feels the voices coming, she can envision a hand and they will stop talking before they start. Sometimes when the voices call on her she says, “I’m not Marina. I’m a rabbit. Let me eat my carrot.” When they become threatening and overbearing, Marina can change the topic by distracting them with rhymes. “There was a period when they would not allow me to eat,” she says. “They were telling me there were cockroaches in my food.” In Greek, the word “cockroaches” rhymes with the word “eyelashes”, so Marina would bring up the latter, leading to a conversation about cosmetics.

Dimitris, who runs a self-help group in Thessaloniki, says that his voices emerged not from any form of trauma, but after he went to a hypnotist to explore his interest in telepathy and other ways of communicating with the divine. “I heard one voice calling me God,” he says. “That had to do with my fantasies that I am actually God. It’s the thing that gets me high.” Over many years he has learned to avoid certain triggers, including a particular woman he is attracted to. When he saw her, voices would gossip about his attraction and put him down. “If I drink alcohol or coffee, smoke or masturbate the voices are more intense,” he says. He now avoids these activities as well. He has also “stopped expanding the scenario” of his fantasies that he is God. “It’s easy for the dream to turn into a nightmare,” he says.

The Origins of Consciousness

Standing by the pool at the Hotel Philippion, the venue for this year’s symposium, a photographer asks Marius Romme to lean in closer to his wife Sandra Escher. “It’s been a while since we did this,” she jokes. “We used to do it all the time,” Romme says, before the two lock lips. They’ve spent a lifetime listening to the trauma suffered by voice-hearers. Yet Romme, now 80, and Escher, 69, remain optimistic in their beliefs, which gave rise to the hearing-voices movement three decades ago. “Voices have significance in the lives of voice-hearers and can be used to their benefit,” Romme says. “It’s not a handicap, it’s an extra capacity.”

Romme hasn’t always thought like that. Starting in 1974 he ran the social psychiatry department at the Medical Faculty of the University of Maastricht. “All my career, I worked with people who hear voices, and I regularly prescribed medicine,” he says. “As all psychiatrists, I thought the voices were meaningless.” He took a diagnostic approach, asking patients only if they heard voices, not what the voices said, and dismissed them as symptoms of mental illness. His thinking began to change when a patient named Patsy challenged his approach. Patsy started hearing voices as an eight-year-old after being severely burned. By the time she came to see Romme, she was 30 years old and her voices had forbidden her from seeing friends, leaving her isolated and severely depressed. Tranquilisers relieved some of her anxiety, but did not silence the voices. They did, however, leave her less alert and unable to feel her emotions.

“She was exceptional because she did not agree with me,” Romme says. “She was more critical of my approach, saying, ‘You don’t help me with my problems. The voices are more powerful than I am.’” She questioned why he considered her mentally ill and yet saw nothing strange in religion. “You believe in a God we never see or hear,” she told him, “so why shouldn’t you believe in the voices I really do hear?”

Eventually she gave Romme a copy of The Origins of Consciousness and the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind by the Princeton University psychologist Julian Jaynes. In it, Jaynes argued that hearing voices had been common until the development of written language. He believed the voices heard by the heroes of Homer’s Iliad were not literary metaphors but real experiences. “They were voices whose speech and direction could be as distinctly heard by the Iliadic heroes as voices are heard by certain epileptic and schizophrenic patients,” he wrote, “or just as Joan of Arc heard her voices.”

Sandra & Marius Sandra Escher and Marius Romme encourage sufferers to embrace their voices.

Attributing meaning to the voices gave Patsy comfort, and Romme encouraged her to speak with other voice-hearers. They weren’t always easy to find, so Romme enlisted the help of Escher, then a science journalist whom he had met years earlier. A Dutch broadcaster ran an interview with Romme in which he asked voice-hearers to send him postcards with their respective stories. Around 700 postcards arrived, including more than 500 from people who experienced auditory hallucinations – and got on with life just fine. “We thought that all people who heard voices would become psychiatric patients,” Escher says. “That simply wasn’t true.”

They began to think of voices as a common human experience, and one that needed to be brought into the open. They invited all the postcard-senders to attend the first hearing-voices conference in the Netherlands, to share stories and coping mechanisms. The research of Romme and Escher, who eventually married, struck a chord with the public and stoked interest from the media – though not always for the reasons they had hoped. “Sometimes the journalists were terrible,” Escher remembers. “They would phone and ask, ‘Do you have seven schizos and seven dissociatives?’ I started asking for the questions in advance. Some saw the interviews like looking at monkeys on show.”

A Collective Voice

Romme and Escher do not accept that voices are a symptom of schizophrenia, but rather that they are a response to troubling life experiences. That idea – and their broader approach to voices – remains far from mainstream, however.

Russell Margolis, director of the Schizophrenia Programme and a professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins University, accepts that voices can manifest from trauma. But he is quick to point out that they can also be part of broader syndromes such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, which demand specific treatments.

“One of my great concerns about an organisation focused on a symptom is that people can get so wrapped up in their symptom that they don’t move forward,” he says. “I’m sure the approach can be helpful for some, but I can see some instances where it could be destructive.”

Yet for many, the hearing-voices approach remains an important counterpoint to the dominant psychiatric model. Waddingham’s voices forced her to confront her past and have helped her push past her pain.

She now takes care of the voices that once tormented her. “I can feel a lot of what that voice is feeling,” she says. “So I might be pretty chilled out and if I get this sudden jolt of anxiety it might be one of my voices reacting to something. If I can chill them out, and they can feel safe, then I feel safe. Years ago I would have interpreted these feelings as evidence of me being watched. Now I have a way of making sense of them that gives me some autonomy and control.”

Waddingham is now helping others do the same. She runs the Voice Collective, a London-wide project supporting children, young voice-hearers, and their parents. And, in 2010, she began establishing hearing-voices groups inside English prisons, where according to the UK Ministry of Justice, 25% of women and 15% of men demonstrate psychotic symptoms, but are left to cope on their own. The challenges they face – alone in a prison cell – make Waddingham even more thankful for how far she has come.

“I feel so privileged,” Waddingham says. “I’ve travelled. I’m married. I’ve got cats. And I’ve started my own business. People always say I work too much, and I say, ‘I spent a good decade drugged up with no life. I’m recapturing some of what I lost’. ”

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Turkish Police Carry Out Wiretapping Raids Targeting Erdogan Enemies

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Turkish police on Tuesday carried out raids targeting dozens of people suspected of a role in illegal wiretapping, a move local media said was aimed at supporters of President Tayyip Erdogan's ally-turned-foe, U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen.

Separately, the interior ministry replaced police chiefs in 21 provinces, according to an announcement published in Turkey's Official Gazette. It was not immediately clear why they were being replaced.

Broadcasters including CNN Turk said the raids, in four provinces including Ankara, were against the "parallel structure", the term Erdogan uses to refer to Gulen's supporters in the judiciary, police and other institutions.

Arrest warrants were issued for 28 people at the TIB telecommunications authority and at TUBITAK, Turkey's Scientific and Technological Research Council, local media said.

A corruption investigation targeting Erdogan's inner circle which became public in December 2013 was based in part on wiretapped conversations, many of which were subsequently leaked on the Internet.

The government says Gulen was behind that investigation and had instigated it in an attempt to overthrow the government. A Turkish court issued an arrest warrant in December for the Muslim cleric, who has lived in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999.

Erdogan responded to the investigation with a purge of the state apparatus, reassigning thousands of police and hundreds of judges and prosecutors deemed loyal to Gulen, in what his supporters said was a cleansing of the cleric's influence.

Turkey's Western allies have reacted with alarm to what they see as signs of erosion of the rule of law. Four prosecutors who initiated the graft inquiries have been suspended, the court cases dropped and government influence over the judiciary tightened.

Parliament was to vote on Tuesday on whether to commit four former ministers for trial over the corruption allegations, one of the last avenues of the investigation left open.

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Obama to Focus on Middle Class in State of Union Address

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President Barack Obama will challenge the Republican-led Congress to back his tax-raising ideas for helping middle-class Americans in a State of the Union speech on Tuesday that will set up a tough debate and may impact the 2016 campaign to replace him.

Looking to burnish his legacy with two years left in office, Obama will appear before a joint session of Congress in the well of the House of Representatives at 9 p.m. The speech will be his best opportunity of the year to command the attention of millions of Americans watching on television.

Obama will push a plan to increase taxes by $320 billion over 10 years on the wealthy by closing tax loopholes and imposing a fee on big financial firms. The money would be used to pay for an increase in benefits for the middle class.

Obama's aim is to help those left behind by an economic revival taking hold six years into his tenure, which began with the Democrat facing a crippling financial crisis.

"Now that we have fought our way through the crisis, how do we make sure that everybody in this country, how do we make sure that they are sharing in this growing economy?" Obama said in a White House-produced YouTube video preview of his speech.

Obama's proposals are already being viewed skeptically by Republicans who control both houses of Congress and who are in no mood to raise taxes on anyone.

"More Washington tax hikes and spending is the same, old top-down approach we’ve come to expect from President Obama that hasn’t worked," said Michael Steel, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, the top U.S. Republican.

But White House officials are betting that Republicans, also under pressure to help the middle class and needing to prove they can govern, will be willing to compromise on some aspects of the plan.

"So are they going to agree on everything? Absolutely not," senior White House adviser Dan Pfeiffer told CBS'"Face the Nation" on Sunday. "I think we should have a debate in this country between middle class economics and trickle-down economics and see if we can come to an agreement on the things we do agree on."

The proposals are also likely to be the subject of a debate among potential candidates to replace him in 2016, a campaign that is just now getting started.

Obama will take his proposals on the road the next day, traveling to Idaho and Kansas to promote them. And he will be interviewed by three YouTube bloggers.

The speech will also allow Obama to update Americans on the struggle against Islamic extremists, two weeks after 17 people were killed in Paris attacks.

He will defend his decision to seek to normalize diplomatic relations with Cuba. Alan Gross, the U.S. aid worker whose release from a Cuban prison helped pave the way toward restoring diplomatic ties with Cuba, will be among first lady Michelle Obama's guests for the speech.

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Nigerians Face Killings, Hunger in Boko Haram's 'State'

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Boko Haram says it is building an Islamic state that will revive the glory days of northern Nigeria's medieval Muslim empires, but for those in its territory life is a litany of killings, kidnappings, hunger and economic collapse.

The Islamist group's five-year-old campaign has become one of the deadliest in the world, with around 10,000 people killed last year, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Hundreds, mostly women and children, have been kidnapped.

It remains the biggest threat to the stability of Africa's biggest economy ahead of a vote on Feb. 14 in which President Goodluck Jonathan will seek re-election.

But while it has matched Islamic State in Syria and Iraq in its brutality -- it beheads its enemies on camera -- it has seriously lagged in the more mundane business of state building.

"The Islamic state is a figment of their imagination. They are just going into your house and saying they have taken over," said Phineas Elisha, government spokesman for Adamawa state, one of three states under emergency rule to fight the insurgency.

Unlike its Middle East counterparts wooing locals with a semblance of administration, villagers trapped by Boko Haram face food shortages, slavery, killing and a lock down on economic activity, those who escaped say.

"(They) have no form of government," Elisha, who saw the devastation caused by Boko Haram after government forces recaptured the town of Mubi in November.

Boko Haram, which never talks to media except to deliver jihadist videos to local journalists, could not be reached for comment.

"Muslim Territory"

Boko Haram's leaders talk about reviving one of the West African Islamic empires that for centuries prospered off the Saharan trade in slaves, ivory and gold, but they demonstrate little evidence of state building.

In August a man saying he was Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau -- the military says it killed Shekau -- issued a video declaring a "Muslim territory" in Gwoza, by the Cameroon border.

There were echoes of Islamic State's proclaimed caliphate in Iraq and Syria two months earlier. Boko Haram controls an area just over 30,000 square km of territory, about the size of Belgium, according to a Reuters calculation based on security sources and government data.

But while in Syria, after initially brutal takeovers, Islamic State has tried to win over communities, those who escaped Boko Haram say the rebels do little for them beyond forcing them to adopt their brand of Islam on pain of death.

"They provide raw rice to cook, the rice that they stole from the shops. They provide a kettle and ... scarves to cover up the women," said Maryam Peter from Pambla village.

"People are going hungry. They are only feeding on corn and squash. No meat, nothing like that. The insurgents are not providing anything else," she added.

Maryam said most daily interactions with the militants involved them questioning villagers on their movements and forbidding them from trying to escape -- a rule she managed to flout when she fled a week ago.

A government-run camp in a former school is now her home, along with 1,000 others, where mothers cook on outdoor fires while children run around. Some 1.5 million people have been rendered homeless by the war, Oxfam says.

Bodies Pile Up

And those the militants kill, they often fail to bury. The first thing the Nigerian Red Cross has to do when a town falls back into government hands is clear the corpses, Aliyu Maikano, a Red Cross official, told Reuters.

After the army recaptured Mubi in November, Maikano had to cover his nose to avoid the stench of rotting corpses.

Those still alive "were starved for food, water, almost everything there. There's no drinking water because (in) most of the wells there you'll find dead bodies," Maikano said.

Many residents looked tattered and malnourished, and some were unable to speak.

"They are heartless. ISIS (Islamic State) is a kind of organised group, it's a business. These guys are not."

A former resident of Mubi said the rebels had renamed the town "Madinatul Islam" or "City of Islam".

But when government spokesman Phineas Elisha walked into the Emir's palace after its recapture, everything had been looted, even the windows and doors.

"Mubi was a ghost town ... Virtually all the shops were looted." he said. It took him hours to find a bottle of water.

Sometimes the rebels simply loot the unprotected villages and hide out in bush camps, security sources say. Murna Philip, who escaped the occupied town of Michika five months ago, said a few dozen fighters had occupied an abattoir, a school and a lodge, but little else.

To survive under their watch you have to pretend to support them, said Andrew Miyanda, who escaped the rebels last week, walking for days to the Benue river.

"They would write Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'Awati Wal-Jihad (Boko Haram's full name) on their trouser legs in marker or the back of their shirts," he said. "You had to turn up your trousers with the marker on to show that you are a member."

Buildings were torched and boys were abducted for "training", he said, a practice reminiscent of Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army.

Slowly, with the help of traditional hunters armed with home made guns and a reputation for magic powers, government forces have pushed Boko Haram out of some of its southern possessions.

Morris Enoch, a leader of the hunters, says they found an arsenal of military weapons: rocket launchers, machine guns, dynamite, anti-aircraft guns and grenades.

The rebels rarely leave behind much else.

 

The Hunt for Boko Haram, an in-depth ebook on the terrorists tearing Nigeria apart by Alex Perry, is available now from Newsweek Insights.

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Japan PM Abe: Threat to Japanese Captives 'Unacceptable'

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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday condemned as "unacceptable" the threat to the lives of two Japanese purportedly taken captive by Islamic State militants, and said the international community should not give in to terrorism.

Speaking at a news conference in Jerusalem during a tour of the Middle East, Abe added that Japan would do its utmost to secure the captives' safe release.

The Islamic State group, which holds territory in Iraq and Syria, issued a video online purporting to show two Japanese captives and demanding $200 million from the Japanese government to save their lives.

"The international community needs to respond firmly and cooperate without caving into terrorism," Abe said.

Asked whether Japan would pay ransom to secure the two captives' release, Abe replied: "With regard to this case, we attach the utmost priority to saving lives, and gathering information with the help of other countries. We'll make utmost efforts to save the lives (of the captives) from now on."

Abe on Saturday had pledged $200 million in non-military aid for countries contending with Islamic State.

Abe told the Jerusalem news conference that Japan would go ahead with the aid, which he said was humanitarian in nature.

"Japan will make as much contribution as possible in non-military areas, including provision of support for refugees from Iraq and Syria," he said.

"The $200 million aid Japan has unveiled was humanitarian aid aimed at providing food and medical services in order to save those people in the region who have lost their homes and become refugees. I believe that this is the aid that is most needed by refugees," he added.

Abe, who took office two years ago pledging to boost Japan's role on the global stage, also repeated his promise that Japan would contribute to non-military areas of the Middle East and seek to play a role in bringing peace to the region.

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A Manhattan Made-for-TV Murder

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As Wall Street investor Thomas Gilbert Sr. stood under the giant elm trees shading Princeton University’s stately Nassau Hall on a sunny June Commencement Day in 2009, he saw a gleaming future for his son, Thomas Jr. “He’s going to run a hedge fund!” the senior Gilbert, also a Princeton alumnus, declared with pride when asked what the handsome, 6-foot-3, blond-haired Tommy planned to do with his economics degree.

Things turned out very differently for both Tommy and his father.

Tommy, now 30, never held down a job after graduating and lived off his parents’ handouts. And on January 4 he was arrested on suspicion of shooting his 70-year-old father in the head inside his parents’ eighth-floor Manhattan apartment.

Tabloids and TV news were riveted by the drama of the wealthy scion who, according to an indictment, killed his father on a Sunday afternoon with a .40-caliber Glock pistol after asking his mother, Shelley, to run out and fetch him a sandwich. When she returned to her tony Beekman Place apartment shortly after 3:15 p.m., Tommy was gone and her husband was dead in the bedroom, the Glock not so artfully placed on his chest, as if to suggest this was a suicide. She called 911 and reported that she thought Tommy had murdered his father, court papers show.

When cops descended on Tommy’s shabby, one-bedroom apartment in New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood around 11 o’clock that night, after tracking him down by pinging his iPhone and ordering him to return to his apartment, they found ammunition for a .40 Glock, a Glock manual and carrying case, a speedloader, a red dot site for a handgun, 21 blank credit cards and a “skimmer” device used to steal credit card numbers. Arrested on the spot, Tommy was indicted by the Manhattan district attorney’s office a few days later.

The details of the Tommy Gilbert case have captured the imagination of a certain portion of society in Manhattan and the Hamptons. After all, if money, good looks, an Ivy League education and an entrée to Wall Street aren’t sufficient ingredients for happiness and success, what is?

“People are calling him a monster, but the person I knew wasn’t a monster,” a former Princeton classmate tells Newsweek. “He was a human and a likable one.”

Marc Agnifilo, a lawyer for Tommy, declined to comment.

With his J. Crew looks (and a closet full of J. Crew clothes, according to a former girlfriend, Anna Rothschild), Tommy seemed like a classic New York WASP. He enjoyed the best education, starting with Manhattan’s elite Buckley School and the Deerfield Academy boarding school in Massachusetts. The family belonged to the obsessively exclusive Maidstone Club in fashionable East Hampton, New York, close to where his father and mother own a house worth more than $10 million in the elite Georgica Association enclave. Nearly every weekend, even in winter, Tommy surfed the notoriously rough waves off Montauk, and he went to NASA space camp as a child, a former Princeton classmate said. “I remember him saying once after graduation, ‘I always wanted to work there,’” the classmate said.

Shelley, a former debutante and the daughter of an AT&T executive, attended the all-female Ethel Walker boarding school, in Simsbury, Connecticut, and the all-female Hollins College in Virginia, two institutions known to draw proper, well-heeled young women. She worked briefly at a New York investment bank that later became known as Rothschild Inc. Shelley’s society wedding in 1981 to Thomas Sr., at St. Bartholomew’s church on Park Avenue, a Byzantine-Romanesque structure in which Vanderbilts worshipped, was followed three years later by Tommy’s birth.

 

01_23_Gilbert_01Thomas Gilbert, Jr. is walked into Central Booking at Manhattan Criminal Court on Jan. 5, 2015. Gilbert is charged with murdering his father, hedge fund owner Thomas Gilbert, Sr.As blogs bristled with barbs about a “spoiled brat” and “trust-fund baby,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce indicated at a press conference on January 5 that money was behind the ghastly crime. The senior Gilbert had been paying the $2,400-a-month rent on Tommy’s Chelsea apartment, and New York’s tabloids reported that Tommy was not happy with his father’s threat to cut his weekly allowance to $300 from $400—hardly a princely sum in Manhattan.

Tommy is “clearly a bright, troubled kid” who had a “difficult relationship with both parents,” says a person close to him who spoke on condition of anonymity. “He needs serious psychiatric long-term treatment.”

While no evidence has emerged of a diagnosed mental health problem, there were some disturbing signs. Last September 18, court records show, Tommy was charged by police in Southampton with violating a June 2014 protection order taken out by Peter Smith Jr., whose father rode the Hampton Jitney bus on weekends from Manhattan with Tommy’s father. Only three days earlier, in nearby Sagaponack, the Smith home, a 17th century historic mansion, burned to the ground in circumstances that are unclear. Lisa Costa, a detective with the Southampton police who is investigating the fire, says Gilbert is a “person of interest” in the blaze.

Tommy spent the five years since he left Princeton doing not much more than surfing, practicing Bikram yoga, working out, eating sushi and watching Netflix, according to Rothschild, who dated him in early 2014. Rothschild, a 49-year-old Manhattan socialite who runs a public-relations firm and is 19 years older than Tommy, encouraged him to attend black-tie gala events, where he would sip one glass of wine at most. Until he moved into the Chelsea apartment in May 2014, he lived in a dark, cramped basement studio apartment, also paid for by his father, near 86th Street and Lexington Avenue, where the Upper East Side starts to turn from pricey to gritty. “Tommy was quite well dressed and very clean, but that studio,” with ragged furniture and a television with no cable service, “was appalling,” says a person who saw it.

His signature trait, friends and former classmates told Newsweek, was his quietness. “Basically, he has no friends, his phone didn’t ring and nobody texted him,” says Rothschild. When Tommy told her he was interested in acting, she said she told him, “I don’t think that’s the best option for you, because you don’t talk a lot.” But last April she encouraged him to set up a session with a photographer to get professional modeling pictures.

Tommy apparently never talked, even to his former Princeton classmate, about why he had graduated two years later than expected, though court papers show he was busted for drugs on the eve of his original graduation date, in 2007. “He seemed kind of gentle but insecure,” that former classmate says. “He always seemed ambivalent. He was sweet, but he seemed abnormally calm. He wasn’t even anxious about his thesis.” The 64-page thesis, titled “The Word Effect: Effects of the Word Content in the Financial Times on Firms’ Earnings in the U.K.,” is lightweight by Princeton standards. Wei Xiong, the economics professor who was Tommy’s thesis adviser, says, “I honestly don’t remember this student.”

Despite his father’s bold prediction at that commencement, Tommy was skeptical of Wall Street. He saw it as “having way too much power and control,” the former classmate says. Others say that was a reflection of his attitude to his father, who was also a Harvard Business School graduate. “He would talk about how anything he attempted to do, it wasn’t good enough” for his father, Rothschild says. “He probably figured, What’s the point of having a job?”

Last May, Tommy did register a hedge fund, though it never raised any money, securities filings show. In an industry where fund names typically convey meaning, he called his the Mameluke Capital Fund. The Mamelukes were medieval slaves who rose up against their Egyptian rulers in 1250 and held on to power for nearly three centuries.

While wealthy in absolute terms, the Gilbert family was not superrich by New York standards. A will filed in Manhattan Surrogate Court shows Gilbert Sr.’s estate worth $1.627 million. Slayer laws would prevent Tommy from inheriting his one-third share if convicted. In a possible sign of a cash crunch, according to a former colleague of the father, the Gilberts listed their East Hampton home for sale last month for $11.5 million. (The listing was canceled after the murder.)

Thomas Gilbert Sr. “was driven by power, money and success,” the former colleague tells Newsweek—particularly in recent years, as he struggled to grow a small hedge fund, Wainscott Capital Management, that he started in 2011 after four decades in private equity. The older Gilbert would typically sleep only four to five hours a night and fire off emails at 4 a.m. that were “frenetic,” this person says.

Frenetic was the last word people would use to describe Tommy.

At the Main Beach Surf Shop in East Hampton, George “McSurfer” McKee remembers Tommy as someone who always took the path of least resistance, who was “a little below-average in turning and catching waves. He was kind of fooling around.” While he always had plenty of surfboards, he tended to avoid the tough-to-control short boards, preferring a longer, wider “fishtail” board. “He would always,” McKee says, “ride the easiest one to ride.”

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Google Close to Investing $1 billion in Elon Musk’s SpaceX Company

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Google is close to investing in Elon Musk’s private spaceflight company, SpaceX, with The Wall Street Journal reporting that the search engine giant will is in the process of finalising a $1 billion investment meaning that SpaceX Would be valued at more than $10 billion.

At an opening of a SpaceX branch in Seattle last week, Musk unveiled plans to launch 700 satellites, synchronized with earth’s rotation which could provide global internet access. One of the advantages of such a system, Musk told Bloomberg Businessweek, is that data would not have to be redirected through earth-bound networks, but could transfer from satellite to satellite until it finds its destination and is beamed to antennae back on earth, thus making for a faster connection.

“The speed of light is 40% faster in the vacuum of space than it is for fiber,” explained Musk. The plan would provide low-cost internet access not only to the world, including  isolated and impoverished areas, but to Mars as well, where Musk has been planning to establish a colony and build a city in the coming decades - the main objective for SpaceX.

Silicon Valley companies, like Google and Facebook, have been jostling to expand their consumer base by providing web access to the three billion plus people who have poor access to the internet or none at all.

Mark Zuckerberg founder of Facebook, has spoken of his intentions to experiment with drones that could act as global connectivity hubs and transmit internet signals around the globe. Technology entrepreneur Greg Wyler recently announced a similar, though smaller, scheme called OneWeb, which would also used satellites that could send signal down to rooftop antennas.

Up until now, Google had been toying with Project Loon, a scheme which would provide internet to inaccessible parts of the world using a network of weather balloons. The balloons would float in the stratosphere, the middle part of the earth’s atmosphere composed of different layers of wind, each with their own speed and direction. The Loon balloons would rise or descend to enable them to travel where they were needed. People could then connect to the balloon network which would relay the signal back to earth.

Pilot testing was successful in New Zealand in 2013, and continued in California and Brazil

but it’s unclear whether this experimentation will continue if Google do invest in SpaceX.

SpaceX, the first private company to launch a rocket into orbit and return it to earth, would appear to be well equipped to deliver on its promise of providing global internet coverage, while Musk’s vision of inhabiting Mars seems to be moving ahead too.  

Last year, he told CNBC: “I hope that the first people could be taken to Mars in 10, 12 years… the thing that matters long term to have a self-sustaining city on Mars and to make life multi-planetary”, and last week he told Bloomberg Businessweek: “It will be important for Mars to have a global communications network as well... I don’t see anyone else doing it.”

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The Dawn Wall: The Inside Story

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Grass-roots climbers are uncomfortable with statements like “the hardest climb in the world”. But most would agree that last week’s first free ascent of the Dawn Wall on El Capitan, Yosemite, ranks as one of the toughest rock-climbs ever to be completed.

Americans Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson spent 19 days on the famous 3,000-foot wall in California. Full-time professional climbers, the men are no strangers to elite-level performance. Nevertheless, the project drained them entirely. Keen to grasp any marginal gains they could, the two 30-year-olds climbed the most difficult parts in the shade or at night; the cooler temperatures allowing them better purchase on the razor blade-thin granite holds. During rest periods they repaired the holes in their fingertips with sandpaper and superglue, and sanded the rough edges of their tight-fitting, rubber compound rock shoes.

For many people, climbing seems an odd activity; strange really, as we all start out climbing instinctively – how else do we go up and down stairs in the first few months of life? Most of us give up early, due to discouraging parents and a sense of self-preservation. Tommy Caldwell never did; he was rock-climbing aged just three.

Caldwell’s Dawn Wall journey began seven years ago when he first inspected the line as a potential free-climb. Originally designated an “aid-climb”, where climbers fix ropes and use shunts, the Dawn Wall was considered even by talented climbers to be impossible to free-climb due to its sheer lack of holds and the wall’s relentlessly steep angle. I, too, have glanced across at the face while climbing a neighbouring route; it is an extraordinary expanse of rock.

Caldwell, 36, had the vision and the self-belief. He dared to dream. And after watching a movie of Caldwell trying to climb sections of the route, Jorgeson, a former indoor world champion, asked to join him on the project. They failed on five occasions spread over several years.

The ultimate aim was for both climbers to climb all 32 pitches (sections of rock) from bottom to top without falling, gripping the rock features with only their hands and feet. While the men had safety ropes, they were merely to halt a fall and couldn’t be relied upon for progress up the wall.

There were other aspects of the climb that were unusual. For one, the camaraderie between the two climbers. In a show of team-spirit, Caldwell stated that it was crucial that both members of the team made the summit – a rare sentiment in a sport that has, in recent years, followed the trend of many mainstream sports in celebrating the cult of the individual. “More than anything, I want to top out together,” Caldwell said on day 13. “We gotta make that happen. It would be such a bummer to finish this thing without Kevin. I can’t imagine anything worse, really.”

Top of the WorldAmerican climbers Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson, left, successfully ascended the Dawn Wall of El Capitan, Yosemite, earlier this month.

But that ambition was severely tested when Jorgeson struggled for an age on pitch 15. Everything was in the balance. With bleeding fingertips, worried that he was holding his teammate back, Jorgeson finally made it and, exuberantly, he posted on Instagram: “After 11 attempts spread across 7 days, my battle with pitch 15 of the Dawn Wall is complete. Hard to put the feeling into words. There’s a lot of hard climbing above, but I’m more resolved than ever to free the remaining pitches.” The men had trained so hard and prepared as well as they possibly could. Still, they needed the gods on their side.

“The conditions were just magic. It was the one moment over the last 10 days when it was actually cloudy and cold enough to climb during daylight. It all lined up to create this one moment in which my skin was good enough and the conditions were perfect,” said Jorgeson.

The level at which top climbers now operate is flabbergasting, even to the most experienced. Jorgeson climbed pitch 16 by making a jump six feet horizontally to catch a downward-sloping edge of rock, which he then had to hold despite the swinging momentum of his body. Now, with the most difficult section of the wall completed, the duo felt invigorated, and the people watching, via their social media updates, began to scent success.

Gymnasts, Ballerinas, Chess-Players

So what does it take to climb at this level? There are three broad spheres requiring mastery: physical, technical and mental. Being strong in all three is rare. Think elite gymnast, ballerina and chess-player rolled into one.

Physical requirements include finger strength, the ability to maintain contact with a variety of different-shaped holds; the ability to generate anaerobic power via fast-twitch muscle fibres for single, desperate moves; good lactate tolerance in the forearms to sustain strength through consecutive difficult moves; core strength and flexibility to ensure the feet can reach and engage footholds.

Technically, these climbers have thousands of movement patterns ingrained from years of experience, as well as very specific moves for this climb that are rehearsed over several years. These mental schemes mean they can act on a sequence of moves quickly, almost unconsciously. The glaciated granite of Yosemite is notoriously difficult to climb, requiring a whole suite of movement skills.

Caldwell has dedicated most of his climbing career to ascending the big walls of Yosemite. Mental tenacity and the ability to focus under extreme pressure are what distinguish the best climbers. Overcoming the fear of falling and the fear of failure is often the biggest challenge, whatever the level.

But Caldwell has overcome many difficulties in life. In 2000, while climbing in Kyrgyzstan, he and his team were taken hostage by Islamist militants. Left briefly with a single guard, Caldwell pushed him over what he assumed was a cliff, allowing his team to escape at night. Finally, it emerged the guard had survived the fall. But Caldwell was traumatised by the incident and the media interest it stirred. Then, just a year later, he cut off his own index finger with a saw in a DIY accident. It was re-attached by surgeons but it lost most of its function, so Caldwell had it re-amputated.

Mastering ‘El Cap’

To complete pitch 15 alone of this climb would be considered world-class. In the context of 32 pitches, it is mind-boggling. On top of this, Caldwell and Jorgenson had to work out the logistics of living in winter on a sheer rock face for almost three weeks, hauling up their supplies behind them and setting up “porta-ledges” – mobile, double-mattress-sized camp beds erected at 90 degrees to the wall. Their supplies included fresh coffee and iPhones. They practised yoga and did press-ups to maintain good form between attempts at each section. A small, expert film crew accompanied them, moving around on a complex web of fixed ropes. Nothing was left to chance.

Above pitch 16, the climbing relents to some extent. On the final part of the climb, I am sure the climbers will have been accustomed to the flow – at one with the wall and utterly focused. Vertical and overhanging terrain becomes normal and, with each small success, the will to succeed grows deeper. The dream closer.

 

Touching the VoidThe successful ascent of one of the world's most difficult climbing routes by Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson, whose taped hands are pictured, attracted unprecedented attention for the sport on social media.

What is so special about El Cap? The first time I saw it, I had just finished the first year of university. I was mesmerised. I had climbed the north face of the Eiger and a couple of Himalayan peaks by first ascents, but still I had never seen a piece of stone so big and flawless as this. The fact that you can drive underneath it makes it logistically simple to reach. Even with a big load, a 30-minute hike from the parking lot through trees brings you to the base.

The descent off the back requires caution and a few abseils – not unreasonable as far as climbing descents go. But its front is a smooth, sheer, stupefying cliff full of history.

There is often a great sense of camaraderie among the climbers in “the Valley”, particularly on Camp 4, a place steeped in legend. Just next to it is the base of the Yosemite rescue team, comprised of top climbers. There is a feeling that you are part of something special in Yosemite. On that first trip, I had spent three days on the wall. It is a strange alien world. For days afterwards, I was dehydrated and my hands were cut and swollen. But I felt so alive.

Over the past 30 years, almost every climber I have met has either visited Yosemite or desperately wants to. A true climbing Mecca, even the easiest big free-climbs on El Cap, such as Freerider, are still too difficult for the majority.  Some complete the West Buttress and the shorter East Buttress, but they are not tackling the highest, steepest part of the wall. Most people come to climb The Nose, right up the centre, using at least some aid. In peak season, small international teams are strewn from bottom to top, inching their way up.

Most of the routes here started out as aid climbs, the pioneers linking cracks and corners up to the top. Later, bolder aid climbs were established, with big reputations and requiring specialist skill. The first major line to be free climbed was Salathé by Paul Piana and Todd Skinner, a real breakthrough achievement in 1988. In 1993, Lynn Hill broke a huge barrier by free-climbing The Nose

American climbers haven’t monopolised pioneering here, however: the Bavarian brothers, Thomas and Alexander Huber, were extremely prolific between 1995 and 2007. UK climbers have made an impact too, notably Leo Houlding, whose route, The Prophet, is still one of the most serious big-wall climbs in the world. El Cap is a vertical stage that continues to allow the elite to search out the limits of possibility. Climbers like Houlding and the Hubers have applied their Yosemite skills in more remote big walls in the Himalayas, Baffin Island and Antarctica. The extra complications of difficult access, altitude, glaciers, and little chance of rescue mean that the stakes are much higher than a climb in Yosemite.

Real-Time Climbs

While climbers have been surprised by the media storm surrounding Caldwell and Jorgenson’s ascent, in some ways El Cap has always been in the public space. Tourists spend hours watching climbers in action, in a similar way to people at Kleine Scheidegg, Switzerland, who point telescopes at alpinists on the Eiger. The difference this time is that the adventurers themselves could drip-feed tweets, Facebook posts and video clips to a breathless audience, providing a blow-by-blow account of their progress.

People go climbing for many reasons: to escape the mundane pressures of work, to be close to nature, to be lost in the endeavour. Surely spending hours on social media detracts from this? Critics will doubtless claim the duo have created a media circus. But look closely at their messages and there is a self-effacing tone. I am not sure Barack Obama quite understood that sentiment, however, passing on his congratulations in another tweet: “So proud of Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson for conquering El Capitan. You remind us that anything is possible.”

Nevertheless, the spotlight on such a great achievement by two elite climbers is a positive step. The public needs to know what today’s pioneers are doing. Yes, many of them are virtually unheard-of outside climbing circles, but  the Dawn Wall story makes a welcome change from the usual fuss around quite ordinary climbers being guided up Everest, on a route first climbed 60 years ago, and rigged all the way by Sherpas.

Hopefully, the better-informed media pieces have educated the public in a new narrative that reveals elite climbers not to be thrill-seeking “adrenaline junkies”, but as extraordinarily talented individuals who have spent hours perfecting this vertical ballet. 

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Facebook Claims It Boosted World Economy by $220 Billion

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Facebook, which currently has 1.35 billion users – 2,000 times the size of the UK population – contributed over $227 billion to the world economy last year and helped to create 4.5 million jobs, according to a report by the consultancy firm Deloitte.

The study, which was commissioned by Facebook, analyses all the economic activity that is generated from marketing on the social media site, as well from mobile apps and games that consumers play. Sales made from advertisements on Facebook for example can be credited to Facebook directly.

The ice bucket challenge, which was created to promote awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, was spread via social media in summer 2014 and is a good demonstration of how Facebook has accelerated funding for charity.

Between July and August last year, the ALS association received $98.2 million compared to $2.7 million the previous year, and the report suggests that much of this was raised from the 2.4 million videos of the challenge posted on Facebook.

The lion share Facebook’s economic contribution was generated in the United States, where the site has an economic impact of $100 billion and supported almost 1.1 million jobs, followed by the UK with $11 billion and then Brazil with $10 billion.

Speaking to Reuters on Friday, Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said: "People believe that technology creates jobs in the tech sector and destroys jobs everywhere else. This report shows that's not true.”

According to Sandberg, Facebook has been particularly beneficial for small businesses since it has expanded its advertising of small and medium enterprises. "Across the world there is a greater urgency about creating jobs. The good news is that the tech industry is powering the economy and creating jobs within and beyond its own campuses. Every day, businesses of all sizes, sectors, and skill sets are using the Facebook platform to grow and expand," Sandberg said.

Sandberg is set to travel to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland this week and will be meeting with Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt and Microsoft's ‘chief executive Satya Nadella on Thursday to discuss the future of the digital economy.

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Russia Orders Snap Test of Nuclear Missiles

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Russia has ordered a snap drill of its Strategic Missile Troops (RVSN), which control the country’s 305 land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads, according to a statement issued by the unit’s high command today.

“More than 1,200 servicemen have been drafted to take part in the test exercises,” Colonel Igor Yegorov from the RVSN said. “Throughout 2015, we have planned at least four similar such drills,” he added.

Last October, Yegorov said that by the start of 2015, up to 1,000 troops from the RVSN would be charged with what he called ‘particularly dangerous’ work with nuclear arms.

The drills, which Yegorov says aim to educate Russia’s missile unit in anti-terrorist combat, are due to take place in the Uzhurskoe rocket facilities, in Siberia, between the central Russian cities of Novosibirsk and Krasnoyarsk.

According to Yegorov, Russia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, Ministry of Emergency Situations and the Federal Security Service are all cooperating with Russia’s ballistic missile command in the drills, as some of the exercises will be dedicated to raising the RVSN’s responsiveness and effectiveness.

“Servicemen will go through over 20 exercises, focusing on missile-defence, suppressing attacks against land units, evacuation drills and bomb dismantling practice,” Yegorov said.

This will be the first drill of the year for Russia’s RVSN and comes after the Kremlin’s decision last summer, to add an extra 8,500 troops to its 18,000-strong missile unit by 2020.

According to the Moscow Times some $650 billion dollars will go into the overhaul of Russia’s entire armed forces in the next five years, with the modern replacements somewhat overdue for its aging, Soviet-standard nuclear arsenal.

The announcement of the drill also follows the Boston Globe’s reports yesterday that Russia had explicitly and abruptly ended its nuclear partnership with the US which has allowed Washington to monitor and help secure Russia’s military stockpile since 1992.

The newspaper based their reports on the accounts of three individuals who were present at the meeting, speaking on the condition of anonymity and the minutes from the meeting.

The decision was reportedly made by the Russian government behind closed doors in a meeting with US representatives in Moscow last month, coming into effective this year.

The Pentagon and the US Department of Energy were the US backers of the project which has already cost Washington $2 billion dollars since monitoring started 23 years ago.

The project had been envisioned to go on until 2018, with the US already having set aside $100 million towards this year’s spending, with 13 Russian facilities due to be put under US surveillance.

It was reported the straining of diplomatic relations between the two countries over Russia’s military presence in Ukraine contributed to the “unexpected” decision.

The Russian military has sought to pursue joint ventures with partners outside the West since the Ukraine crisis, most recently embarking on a military partnership with Iran, as Russian defence minister Sergey Shoygu announced the two countries would undergo joint training sessions and strengthen military cooperation at a conference in Tehran today.

 
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Houthi Fighters Seize Presidential Palace in Yemen's Capital: Sources

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SANAA (Reuters) - Houthi fighters entered Yemen's presidential palace after a brief clash with the compound's security guards, witnesses and security sources told Reuters, a day after some of the worst battles in the capital in years.

Guards at the presidential palace housing the main office of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi said they handed over the compound to Houthi fighters after a brief clash. Witnesses said there was a brief clash between a Houthi force and palace guards.

Witnesses also said they saw the Houthis seize armored vehicles that had been guarding the entrances to the palace.

The Houthis on Monday fought artillery battles with the army near the presidential palace, in some of the most intense fighting in Sanaa in years, and surrounded the prime minister's residence.

Nine people were killed and 90 wounded before a ceasefire came into force on Monday evening.

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Even Before the Coup, Yemen Was Burning

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The ancient city of Sana’a is one of the oldest continuously-inhabited cities on the planet. Its astounding street markets, almost unchanged since the time of the Prophet, used to attract hordes of Western tourists. Not any more. The risk of kidnap has become too great; the British Embassy advises its nationals to leave the country if possible, and if not, to keep any movement around the capital to an absolute minimum. Walking anywhere in the city these days raises hairs on the back of the neck.

The kidnap of foreigners, usually by hill tribes seeking leverage over the Sana’a government, has a long history in Yemen. It used to be considered bad for business to harm the victims, who were traditionally released unhurt – that has changed too. In a sign of the resurgence of Islamic extremism in the region, kidnappers have started selling their victims to al-Qaida and abducted foreigners increasingly end up dead.

For the last year or more, the West’s fear and attention has been focused on the emergence of Isis in Syria and northern Iraq. The Islamic State’s ideology, the brutality of its methods, and the success of its territorial campaign have eclipsed al-Qaida, the movement that spawned Isis, but which also formally disavowed them a year ago. Since the death of Osama bin Laden, al-Qaida has seemed divided, directionless; a diminished force.

Its franchise in Yemen, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), was perhaps best known abroad for thwarted attacks on the West, such as that of Umar Farouk Abdumutallab, the so-called underpants bomber, who tried to blow up a plane over Detroit in 2009, or the cargo-planes bomb plot of 2010. But with the group’s claim of responsibility for the recent attacks in Paris, however, al-Qaida appears to have made a dramatic international comeback.

In truth, Yemen has always been an al-Qaida stronghold. As the ancestral homeland of bin Laden himself, Yemen is arguably where the movement was born. The first ever al-Qaida attack took place in Yemen, when US Marines staying in two hotels in Aden were bombed in 1992, and, despite some setbacks, al-Qaida has never been extinguished in Yemen since. In 2010, the CIA declared AQAP the most potentially dangerous franchise on the planet. In 2011, the year of Yemen’s Arab Spring, AQAP exploited the revolutionary chaos by taking over the southern province of Abyan, which they declared an Islamic Emirate. It took the Yemeni military a year to drive them out again.

In recent times AQAP’s targets have been mostly domestic. A suicide bomb attack on a Parade Day rehearsal in May 2012 killed 120, and injured 200 more; a horrendous assault on a defence ministry hospital in December 2013 left 56 dead; on the same day as the Paris attacks, a car bomb outside a Sana’a police college killed 37.

Water WeaponFlooding in the outskirts of Sana'a.

In 2013, when a 10-month, UN-sponsored National Dialogue Conference opened in Sana’a, with the promise of a new constitution ahead of fresh elections in 2015, AQAP’s prospects seemed, briefly, to dim. But then, in September, Yemen’s transition to democracy was dramatically derailed when disgruntled Shia Houthi tribesmen from the north of the country first surrounded and then took over the capital. With the Houthis continuing to tighten their grip – Houthi fighters today overran the Presidential palace after fierce fighting in Sana'a – all bets on a 2015 election are now off. Instead, with rumours swirling that the Houthis are covertly supported by Iran, the prospect of an Iraq-style sectarian conflict beckons. Renewed instability is a boon to AQAP, who have always fought the ‘apostate’ Shia Houthi, and have positioned themselves as a logical rallying point for Sunni resistance. Yemen no longer looks like the model of peaceful transition to democracy that it did a year ago, but more like the next Middle East nation to spin violently apart.

Terror’s Return

Al-Qaida has a long track record of exploiting sectarian differences. In Yemen, though, it has developed another, more surprising, method of winning tribal hearts and minds: its members have become champion exploiters of the country’s chronic water shortage. (The country is one of the five most water-stressed in the world, with just 86 cubic metres available per capita per annum, according to the World Bank. Even drought-prone Somalia has 572 cubic meters available per capita. The UK, by contrast, has 2,262 cubic metres).

In regions south and east of Sana’a, where many communities have been ignored for years by the central government, AQAP has won significant support not just by providing villagers with water, but also by helping them to dig wells and install other vital water infrastructure. Sharia, the Islamic law that al-Qaida is determined to impose, means, in one of its many possible translations, “the path to the water hole” – a metaphor for spiritual salvation with obvious appeal to followers of a religion that originated in the Arabian desert. AQAP is trying to make that metaphor a reality.

This activity goes far beyond social work. In an impoverished farming nation, where over half the population still lives off the land, access to water, and the ability to irrigate crops, is often a matter of life or death. Even government officials estimate that local disputes over land and water already lead to 4,000 deaths every year.

Sana’a is badly affected, too. Supply is already so poor here that municipal taps function on average only once a month. Its 2.6 million residents have long relied on rooftop cisterns filled with water expensively tankered in from elsewhere. According to a study commissioned by the World Bank, the city could be unsustainable as soon as 2019. Unless action is taken soon, Sana’a’s residents may be forced to leave the city to wither and die. The wars of the future, it is often said, will be fought not over oil but over water. Yemen offers us a glimpse of the coming apocalypse.

Worse, AQAP is looking to export its water “weapon.” In a document discovered by the Associated Press in 2013, addressed to AQIM (al-Qaida in the Maghreb), AQAP suggested trying to win locals over “by taking care of their daily needs like water. Providing these necessities will have a great effect on people, and will make them sympathise with us and feel that their fate is tied to ours.” AQAP has identified the provision of water and its infrastructure as a key means of doing this. The United States’ former Enemy Number One in the region, the Islamist ideologue Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed by a US drone strike in 2011, was the holder of a BSc in Civil Engineering from Colorado State University.

AQAP may also have learned from the mistakes of other AQ franchises, such as their neighbours in Somalia, al-Shabaab. The greatest reversal suffered by that organisation came during the southern Somali drought of 2011, which it dealt with by asserting that it existed only in the minds of Western propagandists. Refugees fleeing the drought zones were ordered to return to their homes and to pray for rain. Tens of thousands died as a consequence, and popular support for al-Shabaab collapsed.

Wells, Not Drones

The Sana’a government is miles behind AQAP in its appreciation of the problem. A new strategy for managing the nation’s dwindling resource is urgently needed. At the National Dialogue Conference, Yemen’s tiny, beleaguered community of hydrologists lobbied hard for their sector to be made a priority – but in this year’s spending round, the budget of the ministry of water and environment’s National Water Resources Authority (NWRA), was cut by 70%. As Najib Maktari, a senior ministry adviser, put it: “It shows you how little importance Hadi attaches to the sector.”

Thirsty NationFarmers in Sana'a are drilling unlicensed boreholes to irrigate their thirsty qat crops.

The vast majority of the government’s resources is spent on the military, as it has been for years. There are over 400,000 men under arms in Yemen fighting Houthis in the north, separatists in the south, and al-Qaida just about everywhere. They are aided in this last campaign by US drones – though the Yemeni government does not have its own drones, it is widely believed to provide American drone operators with target intelligence. In fact, Yemenis have judged their president such an enthusiast for drone strikes that he has long been nicknamed “Drone al-Hadi.” The results of these policies, very much abutted by the strong Western support of al-Hadi’s government, have ranged from ineffective to catastrophic.

Mohamed Ali al-Gauli is a schoolteacher from the remote mountain district of Khawlan. His brother and cousin were killed in a US drone strike while driving in their car and, as a reminder of the tragedy, he keeps a scrap of tailfin, complete with American markings, from the missile he holds responsible for the deaths. His brother and uncle, he insists, had nothing to do with AQAP. Their mistake had been to pick up four armed hitch-hikers in the course of a routine shopping trip.

As in Pakistan and elsewhere, the accuracy of the drone strikes used in Yemen has been called into question. A recent study by Reprieve, the New York–based human rights group, which was widely circulated on Yemeni social media, suggested that strikes aimed at 17 named men have so far killed 273 people, at least seven of them children; while at least four of the targets are still alive. “You know, those drones are very expensive,” Al-Gauli observes bitterly. “Yet in our village, it takes a 2km donkey ride to fetch water from a well. If someone spent a tenth of the cost of a missile on a well for our village, maybe no-one would pay attention to al-Qaida and they would go away.”

The Sana’a administration has made mistakes, but the crisis in Yemen is not all of President al-Hadi’s making. At its root, say sociologists, is Yemen’s extraordinary population growth, from five million in 1960, to 26 million today, to a projected 40 million by 2030 – numbers that would be a challenge to provide with fresh water even if Yemen were rich and stable. Sana’a, with a population growth of almost 7% – more than double the national rate – faces the greatest challenge. There were fewer than 20,000 people living in the city in 1910. Soon there will be three million. Desalination is not an option for Sana’a, which is both too far from the ocean and, at 2,250m above sea level, too high to make it practical. “For its size, Sana’a is a city in the wrong place,” said Brett Grist, a British former consultant to NWRA. “It’s as simple as that.”

Water for Drugs

Yemen’s water crisis has been in pipeline, as it were, for at least 40 years. Until the 1970s Yemenis irrigated their crops as they had always done, with seasonal rainwater captured in elaborate systems of mountain terraces. Increasing demand for food as the population expanded, however, led farmers to seek a more reliable source of irrigation – and they found one in groundwater, pumped up by tubewells from beneath their feet.

The switchover accelerated with the discovery of oil in the 1970s when the government, anxious to increase agricultural production, introduced fuel subsidies to encourage farmers to drill. Without maintenance, much of the beautiful, millennia-old mountain terracing, for which Yemen is famed, was abandoned. It soon collapsed, deepening the farmers’ dependence on groundwater.

The political ramifications of that decision are still being felt. There were mass protests by Houthi tribesmen last autumn over the central government’s attempt to reduce those fuel subsidies which, now that Yemen’s oil is running out, it can no longer afford. The Houthis, though, would not countenance the higher water drilling costs that a subsidy cut would entail. The government quickly reversed their decision, but not quickly enough to avert a coup.

President HadiPresident Hadi has failed to stop farmers in Sana'a from drilling unlicensed boreholes to irrigate their crops.

Switching to groundwater irrigation has also been an environmental disaster. Aquifers take time to recharge, but Yemenis aren’t giving them a chance. In the Houthi heartland of Sa’adah, for instance, groundwater is being extracted 12 times faster than nature can replace it. Thirty years ago, it was possible to find groundwater at a depth of 100m in the Sana’a basin. Today’s drillers sometimes have to go as deep as 1,200m. The shallow, self-replenishing reserves were plundered long ago; the water now being exploited is so-called fossil water that may never be replaced.

Tens of thousands of farmers, forced from their land, have headed for the big city looking for alternative employment where there generally is none. As the Sana’a basin aquifer depletes further, this trickle of displaced farmers looks certain to become a flood.

Perhaps the biggest challenge in conserving the country’s dwindling aquifers comes from what is actually cultivated on Yemeni farms. The government’s intention, when it first subsidised agricultural diesel in the 1970s, was that farms should produce food. But farmers soon found it much more profitable to grow qat, the amphetamine-like chewing leaf to which Yemen, as a nation, is addicted. An estimated one in three Yemenis, perhaps eight million people, are regular users of the drug, which, although a controlled substance in the West, is legal in Yemen and throughout the Horn of Africa. Yemenis spend, on average, between a quarter and a third of their income on qat, about $4bn a year nationally. According to one Dutch study, the qat business accounts for 16% of employment and 25% of GDP.

Qat trees are deep-rooted and thirsty, and because only the soft, leafy tops of the tree are suitable for consumption, they are notoriously wasteful to grow.  Some analyses suggest that 40% of all the fresh water available in Yemen is used in the cultivation of a product that has no nutritional value whatsoever – and this in a country where more than half of all children under five are stunted by malnutrition. Yet the area of land dedicated to the cultivation of qat continues to expand by 10% a year.

Attempts to rein in the trade have all foundered due to insurmountable  vested interests. The land-owning tribal sheikhs and military figures who profit most from qat farming tend also to be members of parliament and block any change. When, for example, parliament tried to discuss the import of qat from Ethiopia – a measure designed to undercut local profits, thus reducing the appeal of the crop and therefore the amount of Yemeni land dedicated to it – one MP stood up and announced: “We’ll shoot down the planes.”

“Our greatest problem in Yemen” adds the deputy chairman of  NWRA, Abdulla al-Thary, is that noone ever thinks about the common good. It is always I, I, I and never We, we, we.”

The Wildcat Drillers

Private and unlicensed wells continue to be sunk at an astonishing rate by so-called wildcat drillers who own and operate a vast fleet of mobile rigs. Estimates suggest that there are 14,000 privately-owned tube wells in the Sana’a basin today, with more being drilled every day.

The under-resourced water ministry does its best, but has effectively lost the war against the wildcatters, who tend to be employees of the same influential sheikhs who control the qat trade. For example, a government programme to install supposedly tamper-proof GPS transmitters in all known rigs failed when the operators found ways to remove or destroy them. In 2012, NWRA set up a public hotline and encouraged Sana’anis to report any suspicious-looking drilling operation. But the uptake was minimal; and even when NWRA officials turned up to try to prevent an illicit operation, they were quickly chased off by tribal gunmen, or even, on one occasion, by co-opted police.

Recently, Noori Gamal, a senior hydrologist with the water ministry, heard a rumor that a wildcatter was in action in Hadda, the main downtown business district, and invited me to meet him there. I could hear nothing at first, but his experienced ear immediately detected the rumble of a deep hydraulic rotary drill. He lead me three blocks, and there it was: a tall Heath-Robinson contraption in the side garden of a private house belonging (as we later discovered) to a qat-farming, land-owning sheikh. Backed up to the wellhead, blocking the road, was a long, low truck loaded with hundreds of metres of drill pipe. The street was filled from side to side with a waist-high river of drill lubricant that oozed from the borehole, a wobbling mass of soapy white foam through which two boys were pulling wheelies on mountain bikes. Half a dozen labourers stood about, surly and staring, their cheeks distended from the lumps of qat in their mouths.

The foreman of the operation was not pleased to see us, but Gamal soon made it clear he wasn’t there to try to stop him. Obstructing a drilling operation, he explained afterwards, had become a perilous business; the sheikh who employed the foreman could manipulate the political system to have Gamal fired, or arrested, or much worse.

“I see unlicensed drilling rigs as mobile artillery batteries, and the tankers that distribute the groundwater as missiles landing in every neighbourhood,” Gamal added. “I don’t think that language is too strong. What we are doing to our water resource does as much damage to our country as any military campaign and the water shortage is already killing more of our people than al-Qaida ever will.”

Off the Precipice

There are no easy solutions in Yemen. Last November, in co-operation with the UN and the Dutch embassy, the water ministry launched a three-year project in the Sana’a basin aimed at persuading its farmers to start conserving their resources, and to pump less groundwater. To the south of the city, meanwhile, where a large aquifer remains untapped, new municipal wells are being sunk. These and other measures can buy Sana’a some time. Yet tapping more aquifer water will only postpone the inevitable. “Yemen is like a man sliding towards a precipice,” said a former water minister, Abdul-Rahman al-Eryani. “He will definitely go over the edge. The only question is when.”

Not everyone is so gloomy. Some senior officials believe the wholesale change of approach to water management that the country needs is possible, and that they have time. The experience of a community of Ismaili Shia in Haraaz in the western highlands offers some hope. Fifteen years ago they decided to uproot their qat orchards – some 200,000 trees have so far been destroyed – and plant crops of comparable commercial value, notably premium coffee, for which Yemen was once famous. (The Mocha coffee bean takes its name from the Yemeni Red Sea port of that name.) The Ismailis also introduced modern drip irrigation and have begun to repair their water-harvesting terraces. As a result, the Haraaz water table is no longer falling, and the local economy is thriving. Could this brave experiment become a model for the rest of the country?

The chairman of NWRA, Ali al-Suraimi, seems to think so. He believes that even Sana’a could be sustainable if highland farmers reduce their dependence on groundwater. “We need to repair our terraces and go back to the old ways, and to live like our grandfathers did,” he says. It is an unhappy paradox, but the future of Yemen, together with its ancient capital, may depend on the ability and willingness of its people to turn back the clock.

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Far-Right Group Distributes Anti-Muslim Leaflets in East London

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A video posted on Facebook on Sunday shows a ‘Christian Patrol’ taking place on London’s Brick Lane, carried out by the far-right Britain First organization in a move that interfaith thinktank Faith Matters labelled as “exploitative”.

The footage shows two members of the group driving down the busy street in an armoured Land Rover before distributing leaflets to people which read: “Muslim patrols are operating in this area confiscating alcohol and harassing women” and include the cross of the knights templar symbol which is often used by far-right groups.

This is not the first time the group have carried out such actions while claiming ‘religious’ grounds. The last time they were active was almost a year ago, in late January 2014 when they did so supposedly in response to counter ‘Muslim Patrol’, which was taking place in the same areas in east London.

Muslim Patrol, who haven’t been active since 2013, posted videos of themselves online also, and they were known to confiscate alcohol from people, shout homophobic abuse and condemn women they regarded as being inappropriately dressed. Steve Rose, who works at Faith Matters, which aims to promote community between religions, says that most of them are now in jail.

However, despite Britain First claiming to be combatting these ‘Muslim patrols’, Rose says that their motivations are much more provocative. “This year, they’re doing it under the pretext that Muslim groups are trying to ‘impose Shariah law in this area’ - although they don’t say how.”

Rose explained that Britain First used to carry out more traditional political activities - it’s a registered party - but that they “now consider themselves as a street movement. They’re pushing their agenda of cultural nationalism and trying to say there’s this binary between Christians and Muslims.”

He pointed out that the video also showed Britain First’s tactics: “You can see them trying to goad people to provoke a reaction so they can say ‘Look, there are angry, violent Muslims’. It’s very exploitative.”

The Met Police said that they were made aware of the group on January 16th and officers spoke to the group who left a short time later, adding that no arrests were made.

They added: “We continue to monitor the situation. We work to ensure our officers are in the right place at the right time to reassure the local community and deal with any issues that arise.”

In contrast to these two small, aggressive ‘patrols’, the dedicated security groups who have stepped up protection of Jewish areas in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attacks are affiliated with, and trained by, the Met Police. The Shomrim Orthodox organisation tweeted last week that they would be stepping up patrols in north west London, and the Community Security Trust whose slogan is “protecting our Jewish community” told Newsweek last week that they were also increasing security and training more volunteers.

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Five Chechens Arrested in France Accused of Planning an Attack

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Five Chechens have been arrested in southern France on suspicion of planning an attack, local prosecutors and police sources said.

Local newspaper Midi Libre reported that a hoard of explosives have been found overnight near the football stadium Stade de Sauclières during a series of police raids in Béziers and and other areas around Montpellier.

According to the local state prosecutor Yvon Calvet, raids continued to be carried out today.

Four of the suspects were arrested in and around Montpellier whilst the fifth was arrested 40 miles away in Beziers on Monday.

The arrests come less than two weeks after three men claiming to be Islamic militants killed 17 people in Paris over the course of three days. However, it is not yet known whether there is any relationship between the previous attacks and the current arrests. Reuters has reported that the latest incidence may be related to organised crime, while other media outlets have said that those arrested have been linked to terror plots.

Russia’s Chechnya, which has a large Muslim population, has seen some of the (largest) protests against publishing the prophet Muhammad on the front cover of the Charlie Hebdo magazine.

France has been on high security alert ever since the attacks in Paris and a dozen people have been arrested since. Four of those arrested have been accused of providing logistical support to Amedy Coulibaly, who shot a police women and four hostages inside a Jewish supermarket.

Anti-terror raids were launched across Europe in the last week. In Belgium 15 people were arrested on suspicion of plotting a terrorist attack, while two suspected jihadists were shot dead in a police raid. Raids have also been carried out in Germany where two men were arrested in Berlin on suspicion of recruiting fighters to join ISIS.

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Activists Blackmail North Korea With Threat of 'The Interview'

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South Korean activists said on Tuesday they will follow through with plans to fly copies of The Interview into North Korea by air balloon if the communist country fails to create a dialogue with Seoul. Talks intended to resolve issues between the two countries were proposed in late December, but North Korea has yet to respond officially.

"We will launch a large volume of the movie's DVDs across the border unless Pyongyang accepts Seoul's dialogue offer," Park Sang-hak, the head of activist group Fighters for a Free North Korea (FFNK) said at a news conference today according to Yonhap News Agency. "Now is the time for the North to answer to the South's proposal for talks.”

The air-balloon stunt has become a means of negotiating with the North after FFNK revealed plans to launch copies of the controversial film from neighbouring South Korea last year.

Working in tandem with New York based Human Rights Foundation (HRF), which has funded similar balloon missions in the past, FFNK distributes illegal content such as political leaflets and banned films to the “hermit state” in order to educate the populace on the world outside of their strict political regimen. The most recent launch on Monday included 100,000 anti-Pyongyang leaflets.

The Interview became the source of world-wide attention last year for depicting the assassination of North Korean leader Kim Jung-un. Before its release, the film’s distributor, Sony Pictures was hit by a major cyber attack during which hackers gained access to a trove of confidential files. The scandal shook Hollywood and was perceived as a ‘national security matter’ by White House officials.

Speaking last month, HRF founder Thor Halvorssen said that aiding the “human-made North Korean tragedy starts with educating and creating a civil society inside that country and breaking the monopoly of information that the Kim regime has successfully been able to deploy for so long”, adding that the threat of The Interview is that it destroys the Kims’ image as demi-Gods in the country.

“Parody and satire is powerful,” Halvorssen said. “Ideas will bring down that regime.” The group has since agreed to stop distributing  leaflets until Lunar New Year’s Day next month, providing that talks are negotiated. 

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South Korean Teenager Travels to Syria to Join ISIS

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An 18-year-old South Korean man has reportedly traveled into Syria by way of Turkey to join the Islamic State, also known as  ISIS. Identified only as “Kim,” he disappeared on January 10. South Korean police believe he willing traveled into Syria, rather than having been abducted.

According to local media, Kim contacted ISIS via email and frequented ISIS-related websites, he spoke with one Turkish contact, “Hassan,” frequently. He had a Twitter under the name “Sunni Mujahideen” and once tweeted, “How to join IS? Does anyone know? I want to join IS.”

“Many materials suggest that he was greatly interested in [ISIS]. However, police cannot confirm whether he had actually joined them,” Jeong Jae-il, a South Korean police official, told The Korea Herald.

Kim’s family allowed him to travel to Turkey with a family friend, who has not been identified, but were unaware he would meet up with his Turkish contact or travel into Syria with intentions of finding ISIS.

A growing number of teenagers from abroad have tried to join the terrorist group over the past several months, including three American girls who were stopped and one Australian teenager who has now appeared in their propaganda videos. Two Austrian girls joined ISIS in early 2014, they have appeared on social media wearing militant attire and holding machine guns.

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