Chinese Astronauts Land After 6 Months on Space Station

Three Chinese astronauts returned to Earth on Saturday after six months aboard their country’s newest orbital station in the longest crewed mission to date for China’s ambitious space program.

The Shenzhou 13 space capsule landed in the Gobi desert in the northern region of Inner Mongolia, shown live on state TV.

During the mission, astronaut Wang Yaping carried out the first spacewalk by a Chinese woman. Wang and crewmates Zhai Zhigang and Ye Guangfu beamed back physics lessons for high school students.

China launched its first astronaut into space in 2003 and landed robot rovers on the moon in 2013 and on Mars last year. Officials have discussed a possible crewed mission to the moon.

On Saturday, state TV showed images from inside the capsule as it traveled at 200 meters per second over Africa before entering the atmosphere.

The trio were the second crew aboard Tiangong, or Heavenly Palace. Its core module, Tianhe, was launched in April 2021. Plans call for completing construction this year by adding two more modules.

Authorities have yet to announce a date for launching the next Tiangong crew.

China is excluded from the International Space Station due to U.S. unease that its space program is run by the ruling Communist Party’s military wing, the People’s Liberation Army.

China was the third nation to launch an astronaut into space on its own after the former Soviet Union and the United States.

Tiangong is China’s third space station following predecessors launched in 2011 and 2016.

The government announced in 2020 that China’s first reusable spacecraft had landed following a test flight but no photos or details of the vehicle have been released.

On Tuesday, President Xi Jinping visited the launch site in Wenchang on the southern island of Hainan from which the Tianhe module was fired into orbit.

“Persist in pursuing the frontiers of world aerospace development and the major strategic needs of national aerospace,” Xi told staff at the site, all of them in military uniform.

Source: Voice of America

UN Releases $100 Million to Battle Hunger in 6 African Countries, Yemen

GENEVA —

The United Nations said Thursday it has released $100 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund to help millions facing hunger in South Sudan, Somalia, Sudan, Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia and Yemen.

Millions in these seven countries cannot feed themselves and their families because of armed conflict, drought, and economic turmoil made worse by COVID-19.

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs also said the spillover effects of the war in Ukraine threaten to drive millions of people even closer to famine.

OCHA spokesman Jens Laerke told VOA Yemen, South Sudan, and Somalia are already in what the United Nations calls a Phase 5 emergency – catastrophic hunger or famine.

“Other countries—Nigeria, Sudan, and Kenya for example—Ethiopia as well—we have millions of people who are just one step away from this catastrophic phase,” he said. “And we have to avoid that they end up in that phase because that is where people literally die from starvation and disease on our watch. If we have to avoid that, we need to act now.”

Ukraine and Russia are known as the “breadbasket of the world,” supplying nearly a third of the world’s wheat and barley exports. The World Food Program said the war in Ukraine will increase global hunger.

It said the conflict is disrupting food and energy markets and driving food prices beyond consumers’ reach.

The United Nations launched appeals for each of the seven countries months ago for global total of $43 billion. Laerke said only 6.5% of this amount has been funded. He said the U.N. knows the $100 million it has made available for emergency relief will not solve the problems facing these countries.

“But it does plug a hole. It does cover a gap that is immediate, that is urgent, and that is absolutely necessary if we want to save lives in these countries,” he said. “And that is the function of Central Emergency Response Fund. It is kind of a provider of last resort.”

Laerke added that U.N. agencies hope donors will understand the situation facing these countries and support their humanitarian operations. If not, he said, drastic cuts will have to be made in critical projects.

Source: Voice of America

Report: Majority of Black Americans Say Race Shapes Identity

A majority of Black Americans say being Black is central to how they think about themselves and shape their identities, even as many have diverse experiences and come from various backgrounds, according to a new report by Pew Research Center. About three-quarters of Black people said so despite where they come from, their economic status or educational backgrounds.

Overall, 14% say being Black is only somewhat important to their identity and 9% say it has little to no impact, highlighting the diversity of thought among Black Americans, which include U.S.-born Black people and Black immigrants, and different ethnicities, political party affiliations and ages.

Pew Research Center released its report on Black identity on Thursday, and the results pinpoint the critical role race plays in shaping identity in the U.S.

“What our data suggests to me is that being Black is important to all Black people, according to our findings, regardless of the intersections of their identity,” said Kiana Cox, research associate and co-author of the report. A “majority of Black people, 76%, said that being Black was really important to them.”

Cox, who has worked with Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C., for about four years, said they wanted to make sure they had a large enough sample to “get this kind of nuance within racial and ethnic groups, but also to understand sort of life and society as Black people understand it.”

Shelly Eversley, a professor at The City University of New York, said the 76% of survey respondents who consider their Blackness important to their identity was still less than she would expect it to be because “race informs every asset of Black life.”

“Understanding the way race informs daily life is protection for a lot of Black people,” said Eversley, who has taught about race for 20 years and is interim chair for the Department of Black and Latinx Studies. She was not a participant in the report.

She said being Black is something you are aware of at a young age. Black children are often disciplined harder at school and other places, and their parents tend to have conversations with them about the dangers of racism when they are still young, she added.

The report also points to how the importance that people place on being Black fosters a sense of connectedness among communities, Cox said.

People who say that being Black is an important part of their personal identity were more likely to express a sense of connection with Black people in their local communities, in the U.S. and around the world than those who said Blackness is relatively less important.

There are 47 million Black people in the U.S., about 14% of the population, according to the 2020 census. Most Black adults in the U.S. where born in the country, but an increasing portion of the population is comprised of immigrants, about 12%. Of the Black immigrant population, 90% were born in the Caribbean or Africa.

Cox also said she was shocked to learn that place — or where people grew up and were living — played a large role in identity and how people shaped their values and what they viewed as important issues.

Black Americans cited violence and crime, along with economic issues such as poverty and homelessness as the most important issues to address in their communities, according to the report. The most important local issues named across subgroups of Black Americans does vary but often violence and crime, economic issues and housing issues rank among the top three.

Overall, 17% of Black Americans said the most important issue is violence or crime — a category that includes drug activity, theft and vandalism, among other offenses. Eleven percent cited economic issues as the most important, 7% cited housing and 6% cited COVID-19 and public health. Nearly half of Black adults said local leaders are most responsible for addressing these important issues.

A separate poll conducted in March by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research revealed an overwhelming majority of adults say more progress is needed in achieving equal treatment for Black people in dealings with police and the criminal justice system. That’s two years after protests against the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis sparked a racial reckoning across the country.

When asking about community issues, the survey used an open-ended question, so “the answer of what Black Americans think is important is a little more multilayered than just violence or crime,” Cox said, noting that there is so much more that goes into that category than police violence.

The report also showed that about half of Black people who say being Black is crucial to personal identity feel very or extremely informed about the history of Black people in the U.S. Of that group, about half say they learned that history from family and friends. A large majority, regardless of how Blackness shapes their personal identities, say they have spoken to their families about their own history.

“The clarity in which family as a source of history for both U.S. Black history, like the kind of history we expect to learn in school, and ancestral history, what we learn about our family histories, was very interesting. It came through so strongly,” Cox said. “What that is telling us, is it confirms what scholars and historians have told us about the strength of family for Black Americans, especially in terms of greater knowledge.”

The survey of 6,513 U.S. adults, including 3,912 Black Americans, was conducted Oct. 4-17, 2021. It uses a sample drawn from Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel and Ipsos KnowledgePanel, which are designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for Black respondents is plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.

Source: Voice of America

Burhan pledges to release Sudan’s FFC detainees within three days

Further, he said he directed the competent authorities s to review the state of emergency and to keep some provisions related to the economic situation, to help create a suitable atmosphere in the country.

Since last February, the security forces have arrested 18 FFC leaders ERC members, claiming that they embezzled confiscated funds. Also, they arrested a large number of the resistance committees members, while some 21 political activists went missing after their participation in anti-coup protests.

The peace partner Sudanese Revolutionary Front (SFR) led by Hadi Idris, a few hours after al-Burhan’s statement, welcomed his pledge to implement confidence-building measures.

The SRF further said that al-Burhan positive response to their initiative and request to create a conducive environment constitutes “goodwill and a serious gesture” to start a dialogue that leads to a comprehensive political settlement.

Al-Burhan welcomed the agreement of political forces on a number of programmes to overcome the current crisis and complete the democratic transition in the country.

“We hear about the unity of the revolutionary forces, and we are happy with that because that will speed up consensus.”

He further said they are ready to hand over power once the political forces reach an agreement.

“In the event of a political agreement, we are ready to sit in the place they determine for us. And we will tell them to move forward as long as you agree,” he stressed.

He pointed out that the current crisis the country is going through requires concessions from all parties.

In a press conference held on Thursday, the FFC renewed their demand for the release of detainees, an end to violence against demonstrators and the removal of the state of emergency.

The co-signatories of the constitutional declaration of 2019 stressed that they will not participate in any political process without these three confidence-building measures.

Source: Sudan Tribune

Former justice minister calls on Israel to support democratic transition in Sudan

Former justice minister called on Israel to clarify its position on the coup leaders after developing security cooperation with the isolated coup leaders who have undermined efforts to establish democracy in Sudan.

In an opinion article published in Haaretz on April 12, Nasredeen Abdulbari said the Sudanese military delegation visited Israel two weeks before the coup and maintain contacts and exchanged visits since that date.

He added that these meetings and visits were perceived in Sudan as proof of Israel’s support for the military leaders. Therefore generated a negative impact on the opinions of the public and pro-democracy forces in Sudan on the future of the normalization process between the two countries.

“For the sake of future relations, Israel must clarify its position regarding the undermining of Sudan’s transition to democracy by the military,” he wrote.

Abdulbari also underscored that the military leaders brought back to power the Islamists who backed Hamas and other terrorist groups and posed a threat to Israel’s stability.

However, the former minister did not mention the use by the coup leaders of Israeli tear gas, and Skunk Water a mal-odorant water to disperse protesters developed and manufactured in Israel.

Asked earlier this year about Israeli cooperation with them, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, head of the military-led Sovereign Council said that their cooperation is limited to security issues.

Sudan and Israel had to sign a political agreement to normalize the relations in Washington in November 2021 but the coup of October 25, postponed the historical event.

The former justice minister who dealt with the legal aspects of the normalisation process said Israel’s interest in normalization with Sudan requires supporting democracy in Sudan.

“By doing so it will bring about a change in the perception of many Sudanese, who think that Israel is supporting the authoritarian military regime, or acquiescing to it. There is no place for this regime, in Sudan or anywhere else,” he stated.

Source: Sudan Tribune

Sudan’s Burhan gestures towards steps to ease tensions

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Al-Araby

Sudan’s military leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan gestured in comments on Friday towards steps to ease tensions in the country six months after a military coup. “We are embarking on a difficult period and we must all present concessions for the sake of our country,” he said, noting the deteriorating economic and security situation in the country in comments at a Ramadan gathering. “We are prepared to put forward what we can to create the atmosphere for a dialogue that leads to solutions,” he added. Security forces have brutally suppressed pro-democracy protests since Sudan’s military gene… Continue reading “Sudan’s Burhan gestures towards steps to ease tensions”