Sunday, April 26, 2020

News

Israel decries Egyptian TV show predicting its destruction

SAMY MAGDY
CAIRO (AP) — Israel's Foreign Ministry on Sunday condemned a new Egyptian TV drama set in the year 2120 that predicts Israel's destruction as well as the breakup of the United States.
The Foreign Ministry statement said the series “is completely unacceptable especially because the two states have had a peace treaty for the past 41 years.”
Egypt and Israel have worked closely on security issues since the 1979 treaty, especially near their shared border in the Sinai Peninsula, in a shared effort against Islamic militants. However, public opinion in Egypt has remained largely against normalized relations with Israel.
The Egyptian series “El-Nehaya” — Arabic for “The End” — is about a computer engineer living in a dystopian future dominated by cyborg clones. It's one of the many dramas and soap operas that air each night during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which began last week.
In the first episode, a teacher tells a class of students about “the war to liberate Jerusalem," which he says occurred less than 100 years after Israel's founding in 1948. The teacher says Jews in Israel “ran away and returned to their countries of origin” in Europe. He made no mention of what happened to Jews in Israel whose families came from other Middle Eastern countries — roughly half the Jewish population.
A holographic map of a divided U.S. is also shown, with the teacher saying that “America was the central supporter of the Zionist state.”
There was no immediate comment from the Egyptian government.
The series is produced by Synergy, one of Egypt’s largest production companies, which has strong links with the government of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. The series airs on the ON television network, which is owned by a pro-government company.
The show's writer, Amr Samir Atif, told The Associated Press that the destruction of Israel "is a possible future in the absence of real peace and true stability in the region. ... Peace should be based on justice.”

Sunday, February 9, 2020

World

10 Wuhan professors signed an open letter demanding free speech protections after a doctor who was punished for warning others about coronavirus died from it

ktenbarge@businessinsider.com (Kat Tenbarge)
People attend a vigil to mourn for doctor Li Wenliang on February 7, 2020 in Hong Kong, China.
People attend a vigil to mourn for doctor Li Wenliang on February 7, 2020 in Hong Kong, China.
Photo by Anthony Kwan/Getty Images
  • An open letter signed by 10 Wuhan professors argues that the Chinese government needs to enforce its own freedom of speech articles in the Constitution of the People's Republic of China. 
  • The letter follows the death of Li Wenliang, a Wuhan doctor who was reprimanded by police for "making false comments" after warning people about the Wuhan coronavirus – which he later contracted. 
  • The open letter, along with another letter signed by academics around China, demands that the government apologize to and compensate coronavirus whistleblowers and make Li a national martyr.
At the onset of the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak, local doctor Li Wenliang warned his medical school alumni group about the discovery of a SARS-like illness via the messaging app WeChat. He was then reprimanded by Wuhan police and required to sign a letter acknowledging he had made "false comments" on the Chinese internet.
Li's warning proved to be true, and the Wuhan coronavirus has now killed at least 720 people and infected more than 34,500 around the globe. While treating patients, Li, 34, contracted the virus himself and died on February 6.
After his death, academics around China signed open letters addressing the Chinese government. 10 Wuhan professors signed one letter demanding the government enforce its own freedom of speech articles in the Constitution of the People's Republic of China, along with apologizing to and compensating 8 coronavirus whistleblowers.
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Screenshots disseminated on Twitter by French professor Sebastian Veg, who teaches the intellectual history of 20th century China, are purported to be taken from the Chinese internet. They show the signatures of the professors, along with excerpts of the open letter, which cites Articles 35 and 51 in the Chinese Constitution. 

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