Copy of Legarde's IMF Jenga Gambit

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Ayanna Nahmias, Editor-in-ChiefLast Modified: 00:49 AM EDT, 22 February 2012

FRANCE, Paris - In the latest Greek Tragedy, aka the 'Greek Deal,' the Troika seems determined to ignore the adage of “not pouring good money after bad.”

Greece, Ireland and Portugal are the first three countries in the euro zone to agree to ‘bailout’ plans with the so-called Troika consisting of the European commission, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which place them under the direct tutelage of their creditors.

Although exact figures haven’t been publicly disclosed, it is believed that after this second bailout Greece will owe a total of €50 billion to the IMF, and according to German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, bailout No. 2 for Greece will be roughly €23 billion.

The IMF, ECB and European Commission have concluded that Greece's debt could hit 160% of GDP by 2020.  Even with recently implemented austerity measures which many claim are not substantive enough, Christine Legarde, the IMF’s managing director, seems poised to infuse additional capital into Greece’s foundering economy.

On Tuesday, Legarde issued the following statement, “The combination of ambitious and broad policy efforts by Greece, and substantial and long-term financial contributions by the official and private sectors, will create the space needed to secure improvements in debt sustainability and competitiveness.”

The obfuscated motivation behind the IMF’s desire to hurriedly conclude months of bailout negotiations despite Greece’s reticence and its likely inability to repay anything close to 100 cents on the drachma, has some questioning the deal.

According to financial news sources, this infusion has less to do with Greece and more to do with the rescue of the rest of Europe in an effort to prevent massive defaults and/or an exodus from the euro. Despite deep criticism, Legarde is faced with the same dilemma President Barak Obama wrestled with early in his presidency – capital infusion via bailouts or risk the total collapse of the economic system.

Legarde, as the IMF managing director is gambling that these measures will ensure the preservation of a 17-nation euro zone. Though many would argue that this is not central to the IMF's core mission, the global economies are so interdependent that like the game of Jenga, without careful positioning and risky calculations, it could all come tumbling down.

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Chile Strives for Economic Justice

EL BOSQUE, Chile - Chilean protests have been going on since 2019 and have headed on into 2020. Protesters in the streets chant, "Chile is waking up," but Chile's centrist right government has made some concessions. They now say that they want to raise the minimum wage from $396 to $460, presented by President Sebastian Pinera. However, the secretary-general and leaders of Chile's Senate and House wanted to persuade him to throw out that bill and focus instead on the government's total structural reform. It is hard to foresee precisely which direction the country will progress forward with so many different viewpoints. With December 8, 2019's non-binding consultation showing that 92.4% voters want a new constitution and 73.1% want an all-citizen convention, voters are making voices heard loudly and adamantly. Violence between police and protesters has led to 11 deaths and thousands thrown in jail

These clashes have been the government having to declare a "State of Emergency" as businesses are looted, and buses are burned. It would seem the people are staging their own unique drama as the world watches. With the country calling for curfew in major cities such as Santiago, the government is having to act strictly with shows of military force. The last time such force was used was at the Pinochet rule's close in the 1990s. The recent novel Coronavirus issue may be causing more issues in Chile. The people of Chilies are on edge over the food shortages that came about during lock down due to the Coronavirus. It seems that the government used water cannon and tear gas to quell a protest in a poverty-stricken area, El Bosque, Chile. 

The government is not getting in line with the overall message of equal treatment for all Chileans regardless of economic status. Though the government said in a statement that they distributed over 2,000 aid packages, still the entire needs of the country and El Bosque could not be met. The mayor of the district in El Bosque, Sadi Melo, declared the situation "very complex" due to the clearly seen "hunger and lack of work." What other tolls has Coronavirus taken? Since being ordered to stay at home, it looks like some are going hungry. President Pinera said that aid would go mainly to "the most vulnerable families." Following that comment Felipe Guevera, the governor of the metropolitan area, tweeted in Spanish about the ongoing crisis: "I understand the deep anguish of millions of Chileans, thousands are starving." While making these comments, Guevera subsequently dismissed the disputed comments he had made about the protests in a televised broadcast. The civil unrest witnessed in Chile can be seen in various Latin American countries, such as Colombia, where people have begun draping red cloths out-of-doors to signal hunger. 

The protests in Chile have been happening since the government announced it would raise metro fares in 2019. Let us hope the government can come to terms with the people's wants and needs before unforgivable violence occurs again. While the protests first started due to the raised metro fares, there were other issues at stakes, such as the high costs of health care, unequal handling of Chile's peoples, and unsatisfactory financing of education

There was trouble brewing in Chiles' waters for a while before Santiago's metro fares resulted in protests. Besides calling necessary attention to Chiles' problems, another good thing that has come out of the protests is incredible street art. Graphic artist Oscar Nunez, who has played a lead role in protests since they began, goes by the name Mr. Owl. Mr. Owl's art moves violence aside and allows for a peaceful conversation to occur between onlookers. Says Nunez, "I started using the imagery of a military police officer in a peaceful yoga pose. It is ironic and fresh, but my favorite part is that other graffiti artists have put their own touches to that image," he says. It seems many long-awaited and much-needed changes and beauty will come out of the pain of Chile and their sometimes peaceful, sometimes violent clashes. Hopefully, the future holds the changes they the people wish to see.

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Africa's Post-Colonial Addiction to Power and Corruption

AFRICA - The exchange of power among most African states is stained with blood. Once a leader comes into power, it becomes difficult to let go of the seat. Political leadership is attached to the amassing of wealth through every means possible. The vice has seen leaders cling on to power longer than the constitutionally defined limits. The result of this is the bloodshed that follows each election period. Three African heads of states have been in power for over three decades. They seek to rule by all means alienating their countries from the world. For decades, these countries have suffered from corruption, killings, the rigging of the election, and unlawful constitutional amendments. Political opponents and other critics are intimidated, jailed, and killed.

Ugandan Anti-Corruption Sign, Photo by Future Atlas

President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda

Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has led the country since 1986. The Aljazeera refers to him as "the five-time elected dictator." The Ugandan president faces silent accusations of robbing the citizens of the freedom of speech and the adverse infliction of human rights through extrajudicial killings. The president has also appointed his wife to a cabinet seat, and his son is his special advisor. The age limit for presidential leadership in Uganda is 75 years, and some sources speculate that he will try to alter the constitution to allow him a 6th term. If this doesn't work out, he will have his son run for the presidency after he retires.

President Paul Biya of Cameroon

Cameroonian President Paul Biya has led the country since 1982. His leadership saw the change of presidential term limits in 2008 to create a leeway for him to run for another term during the 2011 elections. The constitutional amendments saw more than 40 people lose their lives in anti-protests. The 87-year-old president is suffering from poor health, which has affected the execution of his duties. He hardly makes public appearances and can go for months (longest term- two years) without holding a cabinet meeting with his critics, terming him the "absentee president." Only death can rob him of the throne. In Cameroon, Elections are overseen by a body appointed by the head of state. The country still faces problems of unemployment, with a quarter of the population under 25years. Terrorism and internal conflicts are also a significant challenge, with 160,000 people fleeing to neighboring Nigeria. There is an evident conflict between French and English speakers in the country. English speakers threaten to detach from the state, which seems to overlook their rights. President Biya remains unmoved by the pressure from locals and the international community as he still aspires to run for the 7th term.

Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea

President Teodoro Obiang has sat as the president of Equatorial Guinea since 1979, making him the longest-serving president in the world. He attained power after overthrowing his uncle Francisco Macias Nguema from office in a military coup. The ex-soldier had his uncle executed by a firing squad for abuse of office. President Teodoro appointed his son and likely successor as his Vice president. He is, among others, accused of robbing their states of wealth to acquire luxurious homes and properties in France in a scandal dubbed the "ill-gotten gains." The United States has been fighting with the president's son over illegally acquired property worth $71million. The property is said to have been born of stolen from the oil-rich state. Though the country's constitution allows for multiple parties, it remains virtually a single party. Mr. Obiangs political party, "Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea," is the state's dominant party. Opposition stands no chance during elections, and looking into the future, with his son in line, the dynasty of Nguema's is likely to rule the country for decades.

Democracy is still novel in most African states. The civil society and regional blocks have been at the forefront in the fight for human rights and democracy. The trends are changing in some countries where long-serving leaders are accepting defeat and stepping down. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, the former head of Angola's state, stepped down in 2017 following defeat after 38 years in office. A military coup also overthrew Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe in 2017 after 37years of the presidency. Poor leadership, majorly resulting from lack of democracy, has been the major contributor to poverty among African states.

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Rwanda's Most Wanted Man Arrested in Paris and Extradited

RWANDA - Felicien Kabuga, 84, is a Rwandan businessman, who made the bulk of his fortune in the 1970s in the tea trade. He is also the founder and primary funder of Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) and stands accused of using twenty different aliases to evade capture. After evading apprehension for 28-years, he was finally arrested by French police on 16 May 2020, in a suburb of Paris.

Ntarama Genocide Memorial, Ntarama, Rwanda, Photo by Bradford Duplisea

Kabuga was the richest man in Rwanda before the 1994 genocide when the Hutus slaughtered approximately 800,000 Tutsis between July and April of that year. RTLM was a leading news outlet for Rwanda, but a significant propaganda arm for the Hutu militia, Interahamwe. Daily programming included anti-Tutsi content, songs, and speeches, including the broadcast of the names of people who were killed earlier in the day.

Indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) in 1997, Kabuga evaded capture by frequently moving between several East African countries, including Kenya, where it is believed that the government harbored him as a fugitive for many years. During this time, he continued to do business in the country, held a Kenyan passport, and investigators charge that Kenyan government officials actively aided and abetted the fugitive. Kenya has repeatedly denied these allegations.

Efforts to locate Kabuga and bring him to justice were abandoned when the Tribunal closed in 2015. However, Serge Brammertz, a United Nations’ war crimes prosecutor, leading the division responsible for adjudicating outstanding war crimes from Uganda, ordered the search restarted last year after learning that Kabuga may be hiding in Europe. Authorities located Kabuga in his French apartment based on information obtained by surveilling his children.

The diplomatic relationship between France and Rwanda – a former French colony, has been extremely complicated since the days of the genocide. Rwandans accuse the French of complicity in the genocide since the French government was an ally of Hutu leader, Juvenal Habyarimana, (whose death was the final catalyst for the genocide), before the massacres.

Rwanda charges that the French initially supplied arms to militias, and UN peacekeepers from France often helped known killers escape capture and prosecution. Twenty-six years after the genocide, archived records about Rwanda and the genocide are still classified in France, despite numerous calls for the documents to be made public. Rwandans also accuse the French of harboring génocidaires, including Kabuga, since 1994. Six charged génocidaires by the Tribunal remain fugitives who are possibly being harbored by France.

Kabuga has denied alleged involvement in the genocide during a bail hearing in a French court at the end of May. On 3 June 2020, a French court ruled that he be extradited to Tanzania, the home of the UN Tribunal. His lawyers argue that Kabuga will not receive a fair trial at the Tribunal, especially one held in East Africa. Rwandans prefer that he be tried in his home country for war crimes, but there is no extradition treaty between Rwanda and France at this time. Kabuga’s legal team will appeal the decision to France’s highest court, which they hope will be successful due to their assertion that his ailing health makes him unable to travel.

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Marxism and its Prominence in China

CHINA - Marxist macroeconomics claims that in any historical epoch, the means of economic production and exchange of goods lay the foundation of every event thereafter. Karl Marx, the founder of Marxian economics, concludes that the roots of an economic structure, alone, explain the entire history and politics not only of a nation, but of mankind. He places blame on the rich, “bourgeoisie”, as the group responsible for the oppression of the lower class and for the tiers that divide those of different economic status.

Shanghai, Photo by Mussi Katz

His writing establishes ways to remove inequality, further reasoning a need to remove all barriers that contribute to diversity among individuals. Marx establishes a sameness that antagonizes human nature. Furthermore, Marxist macroeconomic theory is compelling due to its depiction of a “utopian” economic structure; however, when put in action, it fails repeatedly.

Marxian economics is defined as a school of economic thought based on the roles of labor and development in the macro-economy. It was founded upon principles laid out in two bodies of work, The Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital. Albeit the content of Marx and Engel’s writing is alluring, it is flawed. If executed, the entire economy would never generate any revenue because everyone would make the same regardless of their amount of work. This is evident as both supply and demand remain constant when the income of an entire population remains constant.

Marxian economics also claims: in order for the production of goods to occur, labor is needed, therefore the value of a good must accommodate both the materials needed to produce it and the manufacturer. Once again, an even distribution of wealth is justified and Marx argues: the manufacturing of goods costs too much to generate more revenue for those who provide more labor. This argument fails to understand that a low GDP is the result of an even distribution of wealth, hence the inability for communist societies to pay manufacturers for their services. His argument remains paradoxical as he claims the poor economy is the reason those who work harder cannot make more, but then claims the structure of an economy must never establish a difference in wealth among its people. 

Historically, Marxian principles were practiced first in the Soviet Union following the October Revolution, around 1848. At this time, in The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels called for a revolt against capitalism by saying:” Workers of the World Unite”, a message that drew in many, rapidly. Soon after, Vladimir Lenin and the Bolksheviks seized power over Russia, jump starting the first society structured after Marxian ideals. As a result, the czar’s officials were executed and prisoner-of-war labor camps were established. These extreme exertions of power, and lack of consequences following, are reflective of a society with no given higher power.  

Another example of a failing communist society is China. Presently, China remains a communist country, with roots in 1921, modeled after the Russian Revolution. During World War II, the support of communism in China grew exponentially and nationalists were dictated by communists. 

In 1997, Hong Kong, which was known as a British colony, returned to Chinese control, but with it in writing that “current social and economic systems” and “lifestyle” in Hong Kong would remain the same for 50 years. Legally, Hong Kong is supposed to continue operating under a capitalist economy; thereby allowing rights to speech, press, assembly, and religious beliefs among residents until at least 2047. According to this, the Chinese government is violating their own Sino-British Joint declaration. This is just one example of how communist leaders tend to abuse their power, as they can always override their citizens. 

Protests in Hong Kong began to emerge in 2019 when a proposed bill stated it would allow local authorities to “detain and extradite” fugitive offenders that are wanted in areas that Hong Kong does not have extradition agreements with. Protests arose out of fear that there would be a legalized kidnapping and fear for the future after 2047 when the Sino-British Joint declaration expires. 

In the Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels argue that intellectual property is also a product of society, therefore, according to this school of economic thought, privacy is almost non-existent. There are myriad issues with privacy violations and ethical concerns among the citizens of communist societies regarding technology. For instance, anything that a Chinese citizen does on a software platform is open for the government to view. 

Ultimately, Marxian ideas of total government control and an equal distribution of wealth in order to combat oppression, cause more oppression. He depicts a world where those who work harder make the same as those who work less. Marxian macroeconomic theory is also oblivious to the need for economic growth, and when applied, it is impossible for such to occur. Moreover, in every society where Marx’s principles have been applied, the people have rebelled. It is evident in instances like these, Marxian macroeconomics does not and will not ever work. 

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India-China Clash Could Be a Sign of Things to Come

INDO-CHINA BORDER - The most violent border clash in decades between China and India occurred last week.  Is war between the world's two most populous nations really possible? Probably not, but the growing tension between them is reflective of the evolving power balance throughout Asia, experts say. Chinese military and diplomatic influence are surging throughout the region while India, backed heavily by the Trump administration, is increasingly poised as the West's strategic counterweight.  Ongoing low-level conflict, accompanied by occasional flashpoints and hostilities that fall short of open war, may be inevitable now.

India Chinese Military March in Tandem, Photo Source Edtimes.in

Ostensibly, last week's skirmish occurred because India discovered that China had built two tents and observation towers on the Indian side of the historical Line of Actual Control (LAC) that separates the two countries.  Earlier, China had brought in pieces of machinery, cut a trail into a Himalayan mountainside, and may have even dammed a river, satellite pictures suggest.  That would constitute an open breach of the LAC agreement, and in theory, would be an act of war.

However, anticipating an Indian advance, China decided to pull back its forces, leaving the tents and towers behind.  The Indian army soon destroyed the structures, but according to Beijing, unlawfully crossed into China to confront its troops.

The ensuing clash involving some 900 soldiers did not, in fact, include shooting.  Under current rules of engagement, Chinese and Indian soldiers are supposed to keep their rifles slung on their backs. The two sides, armed with little more than spike-studded batons and rocks, squared off, leaving 20 soldiers dead.  China also captured 10 Indian soldiers, who were released within a day after hastily arranged negotiations.

At one level, the outbreak of open hostilities is something of a shocker.  It' s been 50 years since China and India last clashed – in 1967, over the disputed Kashmir region.  An earlier conflict occurred in 1962, in part due to India recognition of the Dali Lama in Tibet and its refusal to allow Chinese patrols along its claimed border.   In that era, the Soviet Union and China were competing for global influence. With growing Sino-Indian tension, Moscow made a significant effort to support India, notably with the sale of advanced MiG fighter-aircraft.  In response, the United States and Britain refused to sell advanced weaponry to India, causing it to side formally with the Soviet Union in the deepening Cold War.       

But the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, the ever-expanding economic influence of China and the rise of the Asian Pacific as a renewed zone of geopolitical competition has altered this calculus.  The West, anxious to protect its long-standing allies from China's robust expansion, has been searching for a new strategic partner.  And with Japan's persistent reluctance to increase defense spending, successive American administrations, starting with President Obama's, have been forced to look elsewhere. 

Almost out of nowhere, India, which in 2014 elected its first conservative government overturning decades of entrenched center-left rule, has emerged as the perfect ally.    

The new Indian-American alliance has proceeded rapidly under the Trump administration, which has made no secret of its desire to transform the world's largest democracy into a bulwark against Chinese ambitions.  Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi rolled out the red carpet for Trump during the American president's high-level visit to Delhi in late February when the two leaders announced that Delhi planned to purchase some $3 billion worth of U.S.-made military helicopters for its navy and additional Apaches.

Already, the new Indo-American alliance has yielded a 2016 military base-sharing agreement, transfers of sensitive defense technologies, and increasingly routine cooperation in military exercises.  

The United States wants India to remain the Pacific's dominant maritime power and is also investing in India border security, which, over time, could implicate America in Delhi's never-ending border conflicts with China.

Still, India is playing a cagey game.  It cannot afford an open conflict with China any more than the United States can.  And with continuing internal conflict in the Kashmir region and with its Muslim minorities, as well as its long rivalry with Pakistan, the country has pressing security needs elsewhere.

Even as the two countries spar over their long-standing territorial disputes, India and Chian continue to explore avenues for cooperation.  After the 6th Annual China India Economic Summit held last September, Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping met for the first time to establish a high-level economic and trade dialogue mechanism.   The two leaders also agreed to designate 2020 as the beginning of a new era of cultural and people-to-people exchanges, with 70 events scheduled to mark the 70th anniversary of China-India diplomatic ties. 

Thanks to the latest border dispute, these friendly engagements have been placed on hold for the time being. Looking ahead, one should expect more low-level saber-rattling between China and India, accompanied by high-flown diplomatic rhetoric, but still carefully calibrated to avoid escalation.  Not surprisingly, the Trump administration, which publicly siding with India in last week's border dispute, also disavowed any intent to intervene, calling it a matter for India to decide.  And Beijing, for its part, has also downplayed the incident, abandoning its traditional efforts to portray fallen Chinese soldiers as national "martyrs."

This may well be the new face of "Cool" War in the Pacific-- or perhaps "Hot" Diplomacy would be more accurate.  Amid the flurry of charges and counter-charges, there is simply too much at stake economically for America, India, and China to allow their inevitable tensions to escalate into prolonged hostilities and outright war.  To be sure, battles of the kind that occurred last week could result in unintended military escalation and more considerable diplomatic fallout.  And should that happen, India could find itself pushed, willy-nilly, into a full-throated embrace of the West.                                                  

For now, though, all parties are keeping their options open. After all, there's a critical American presidential campaign underway, and Trump might well lose reelection.  That would give pro-Chinese forces within the US government a new opening.  It would likely lead to some changes in American diplomatic posturing toward China and less open hostility on trade. Paradoxically, it won't lessen the need for a China containment strategy, one which may require an increasingly well-armed, if militarily constrained, India at its core. It may even heighten that need.

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COVID-19 Inequities, is Universal Basic Income the Answer?

UNITED STATES - As the pandemic continues globally, parts of the U.S. are re-opening despite the real risks of surging infections and deaths due to COVID-19. While the one-time stimulus check of the CARES Act kept landlords and bill collectors temporarily at bay, it has been widely considered as “not enough,” with recent polling indicating that 82% of Americans would prefer the stimulus checks to be re-occurring monthly.

Time Money Puppet, Photo by Thomas Skirde

This recent shift in opinion shows that Americans are beginning to show a clear preference for a Universal Basic Income (UBI) solution. UBI is a guaranteed income provided by a government entity on a reoccurring basis that is additional to the current entitlement programs such as social security, disability, and welfare benefits.

There are clear trends that show why this shift in opinion on UBI is shifting. While facilities, workplaces, and government services previously closed or partially shut down due to social distancing requirements begin to reopen slowly, but this will not alleviate the pain felt by the most economically vulnerable. Increased under-employment and unemployment continues despite the end of lockdown. Those fortunate to still be in the labor force are not making enough money to repay loans from predatory lenders or credit card companies to survive.

The number of people negatively affected by the COVID-19 pandemic suffering from food and housing insecurity is drawing increased comparisons to the Great Depression, demonstrating that more progress needs to be made to avoid further adverse economic consequences. Furthermore, an estimated 27 million people lost their health insurance as of May 2, 2020. In all of this bad news, there is evidence of an "inevitable" second wave of infections and further lockdowns in the upcoming fall and winter seasons.

Social distancing requirements over an extended period, as well as the unanticipated financial repercussions of the pandemic itself, might also make a policy like UBI more attractive to the public. The promised money granted to citizens through UBI programs could act as an additional incentive for people to wear masks and social distance to prevent the resurgence of infections and deaths. At the moment in states like Mississippi, California, and Texas have witnessed rates of disease and hospitalizations continue to rise.

Even states considered to have handled the pandemic "successfully" are proceeding forward with caution in the hope that a vaccine may be developed before the fall when flu season begins. In the meantime, multiple states are adopting requirements to guide phased reopening of non-essential business sectors.

Universal Basic Income could also help workers with expenses during the transition back into the workforce, particularly in the capacity of remote work or even becoming entrepreneurs. Investment remains a prohibitive hurdle for startups, and the UBI may mitigate this barrier. Entrepreneurs and small business owners are the engines of the American economy, by enabling people to afford the costs for technology, broadband access, office equipment, and resources and other upfront costs, while guaranteeing dependable income.

This surety of regular, guaranteed income can lead to increased credit scores that will enable people to access to loans and other financial instruments. This will help more people realize the American dream, not through a handout, but as a stepping stone to upward mobility. But, most importantly, in this era of disease and pandemic, as the Trump administration continues the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act and contraction of Medicaid, UBI could become the difference between life and death, between going hungry or buying food, between purchasing medicine or going without taking it.

In any case, the COVID-19 pandemic is proving to be a transformative event in the global economy, one that is causing a definite shift in public awareness and preferences. The acceptance of Universal Basic Income in the form of monthly payments without any preconditions is not that different from the initial CARES Act, which, if extended, would serve as a precursor model. Both would have the potential to jumpstart the economy while undergirding the most vulnerable populations until a vaccine for COVID-19 is successfully developed and deployed on a national scale. Until then, as the U.S. economy recovers, the government must focus on a long-term economic strategy that will address the unique demands of the ongoing pandemic and its effects on private budgetary security.

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Extrajudicial Killings and Racism, a Global Pandemic

ISRAEL - Currently, the streets of many American cities are filled with crowds of people armed with signs, protesting the violent death of George Floyd, a black man, who was killed by white, former police officer Derek Chauvin. But the increased public speculation on systemic racism and discrimination is not unique to America; instead, the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement is present in nations worldwide, including Israel—the “Holy Land,” known for its claimed acceptance of all people regardless of race or faith.

Ethiopian Protesters Confront Israeli Police Over Death of Unarmed Teenager, Photo Flickr

On June 30, 2019, in the Israeli town of Haifa, 18-year-old Solomon Teka decided to spend some time at a neighborhood park. While there, he got into a small fight with a few other teenagers. A nearby off-duty police officer attempted to break up the fight after identifying himself. According to the officer, this caused the men to turn violent against him, and fearing for his life, and he aimed a warning shot. The bullet hit Solomon Teka, who later died in medical care. 

Teka was an Ethiopian Jew, a dark-skinned ethnic minority in a majority white country. The Ethiopian Jews have long endured systemic racism in Israel. Many of them are either migrants or descendants of refugees from the nearby countries of Ethiopia and Sudan, flocking to the Holy Land in search of religious freedom. However, their dreams are soon shattered as they continue to suffer from ingrained racism. Ethiopian Jews have the highest poverty rate in Israel and continue to be searched, tried, and arrested at a much higher frequency than any other community. They are often treated as second class citizens. Solomon Teka’s death was the last straw—thousands of protesters took to the streets, calling for a stop to the excessive use of police force against Ethiopian Jews. 

The protests blocked many major Israeli roads, halting commuting traffic from nearby cities. In Tel Aviv, protesters shut down the Ayalon Highway. While the Tel Aviv protests continued to be mostly peaceful, other cities were plagued with violence, as people burned tires, vandalized buildings, and fought with the police. 

Both sides of the violent riots suffered greatly—over a hundred protesters were arrested, and a similar number of police officers were injured. The police turned to tear gas and increased force in retaliation to rioters who threw stones and gas bombs at them. Through all of this, the Ethiopian Jews’ message remained clear: they were tired of the institutionalized racism that was ingrained in both the country of Israel and its police forces. These past protests and those of today’s Black Lives Matter demonstrations are eerily similar—presenting the possibility that action against racism has been futile so far. 

At one point in the protests, things seemed to take a turn for the better. In an attempt to answer the Ethiopian Jews’ pleas, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initiated a ministerial committee on the integration of Israeli citizens of Ethiopian origin. However, this action was increasingly hard to implement, as the majority of the targeted citizens were low-income citizens and did not have access to the Prime Minister’s committee. 

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin and Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan agreed that action against the country’s deep-rooted racism was necessary. Rivlin issued the following statement:

“This is not a civil war. It is a shared struggle of brothers and sisters for their shared home and their shared future. I ask all of us to act responsibly and with moderation. My home is your home. Let us continue to stand together like a wall against violence, any form of violence, and to fight together for our shared home.”

However, both figures shared the sentiment that violent protests would be met with the requisite police force and whatever means necessary to quell the riots. 

Authorities initially arrested the suspected police officer on charges of possible manslaughter. But they soon released him into house arrest, causing protests to rise once more. Charges against him were reduced to involuntary manslaughter, which is used in the case that the accused acts dangerously with clear violent intent, although not with the purpose of killing. The maximum sentence for involuntary manslaughter is 12 years, but Israeli courts usually only issue one or two years.

A few days after the charge, legal counsel began entertaining the idea of reducing it to negligent homicide, which has even fewer consequences. The officer was not also fired from the force, despite the call to do so by Tebeka, an organization that defends the rights of Ethiopian Jews in Israel. 

In a statement taken by the L.A. Times, Teka’s family lawyer asked for “the truth to be uncovered, and justice served.” He also mentioned that the “police and the State Prosecutor’s Office, in their public statements, show a tendency to attribute reduced responsibility to a police officer who killed our beloved in his prime,” alluding to the racism permeating Israel’s legal forces. 

While the Teka family continues to fight for an appeal following the officer’s reduced charges, the Black Lives Matter movement in Israel has flared up once again due to the death of George Floyd in America. Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the U.S. diplomatic mission in Tel Aviv, holding signs emblazoned with the words “Black Lives Matter,” “George Floyd,” and “Solomon Teka.” Because every name that is added to the list of racism-related deaths is a reminder that we, as a global community, are still far from equality for all.

*A Note of Importance: As a South Asian-American, I acknowledge that I can never truly understand the day-to-day struggles that people of African descent endure. However, as a human being, I fully support and stand by the BLM Movement; furthermore, as a writer, it is my responsibility to use the given platform to objectively detail the following situation as I see fit, allowing readers to interpret my work as they wish. ~ Sayuni Dharmasena

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Myth of Reparations | 40 Acres Minus Mule

UNITED STATES, Washington, DC - As the grand-daughter of an early civil rights activist, Attorney Julius Winfield Robertson, who was a dedicated advocate for human rights, and worked closely with U.S. Congressman Senator Estes Kefauver and Attorney James Nabritt, Jr. on historical civil rights cases, it saddens me to witness the protests of the killing of George Floyd reigniting the discussions about the issue of reparation.

Justice Americas Broken Promise, George Floyd Murder Protester, May 2020

The civil rights movement was governed by action versus committee. Activists were veritable “Davids vs. Goliaths” bravely challenging the legislative system which codified racism.  When Robertson’s firm, along with a junior partner, Dovey Johnson Roundtree, filed a segregation complaint in 1953 on behalf of a Women's Army Corps (WAC) private named Sarah Louise Keys, it would portend the Montgomery Alabama Bus Boycotts.

Most descendants of slaves, at least those with voices in the public square, are vociferously demanding that the issue of reparations become a cornerstone of the Democrat’s electoral platform. However, as a person of color who does not agree with the premise, I understand that my position is in the minority. To be clear, I do not disagree with the fact that structural changes need to be implemented to increase parity in the economic fortunes of those whose ancestors were enslaved and those whose ancestors owned them.

However, doling out what amounts to a one-time cash settlement is short-sighted and will not address past issues of institutionalized inequality. Thus, a Commission to study what any African-American in this country can attest to, unfair and unjustified mistreatment, results in little more than a menagerie of wish lists, often to meet immediate needs. A cash settlement will never eradicate increased incidents of extra-judicial killings, that latest of which is the murder of George Floyd who was murdered by former Officer Derek Chauvin who knelt on Floyd’s neck for 8 mins 46 seconds even after he became unresponsive presumed dead.

It will not assuage the pain felt by the family and community of Breonna Taylor an essential healthcare worker who was caring for COVID-19 patients at a local hospital, and who was murdered by police who stormed her home and shot her 8 times without cause. Then, there is Ahmaud Arbery who was hunted down by 3 men who decided that he should not be jogging in their neighborhood and therefore deserved to be shot and killed.

Six years after the 2014 article titled “Unarmed People of Color Killed by Police, 1999-2014,” which was written “after the announcement that NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo would not be indicted for killing Eric Garner, the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund Twitter posted a series of tweets naming 76 men and women who were killed in police custody since the 1999 death of Amadou Diallo in New York,” have yet to progress. As heinous is the string of extrajudicial killings are, they are not new, they are just being caught on camera. And as much as our heart aches from these murders, the system is inherently racist and it is the little things, the death by a thousand cuts that debilitates brown and black people in America.

Until systemic racism is eradicated and until people accept their culpability in maintaining this status quo, we will never begin the process of dismantling an inherently biased governance. Without this change, it will never stop a sales clerk from following blacks around the store who are legitimately shopping. It will never prevent a group of police from terrorizing a family, brutalizing their father. Then, threatening to kill their pregnant mom trying to protect her children, one of whom purportedly took a .99 cent doll from the Dollar Store. What started as a meme is truly the norm because we can never “breathe while black,” “jog while black,” “bird watch while black,” “drive while black,” think of any pedestrian activity and add “while black,” and that is the reality of most brown and black America.

It was a nice gesture that on Juneteenth, which commemorates the June 19th date of the end of slavery in the United States, that H.R. 40 a bill sponsored by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas), was televised in well-attended and animated House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties’ hearings. But this bill is not an opening salvo for change; it is just another futile exercise in pushing a Sisyphean boulder up the proverbial hill. The bill’s title spells out its intent, which is not one of action, but bureaucracy since H.R.40 has been advanced to create a “Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African-Americans.”

Anyone who has spent significant time in the workforce, private or public, understands the efficacy of commissions and panels, and most if honest would say they are “a waste of time,” and resources. In this respect, it is another bite at the apple of assuaging “white guilt,” through some means of pay-off. It is the latest version of 40-Acres and a Mule. That the politicians jumped on this bandwagon smacks of pandering. It is as if they believe at best that “Reparations” is the magic catchphrase that will guarantee to deliver black votes to them in 2020.

Alternatively, and more cynically, they are selling reparations as a panacea to the reemergence of Jim Crow-era tactics that currently beset the nation, particularly in the South. From a legislative perspective, reparations do not address the urgent actions being implemented around the country to dismantle the protections from disenfranchisement, such as gerrymandering, efforts to overturn the Voting Rights Act, law enforcement killings of black men, women, and children, as well as mass incarceration.

It indeed is as they say in the South, it is “broke and needs fixin’;” but equally true is the sentiment openly expressed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), and privately felt by many others:

I don’t think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago for whom none of us currently living are responsible is a good idea,” McConnell said. “We’ve tried to deal with our original sin of slavery by fighting a civil war, bypassing landmark civil rights legislation. We elected an African American president. (Source: MSN.com)

Thus, 150 years later it seems as if those who were against giving slaves 40 acres on which to rebuild their lives, are of the same ilk as those who felt that providing slaves their “freedom’ was payment enough.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr. explained how "Union General William T. Sherman’s Special Field Order No. 15, issued on Jan. 16, 1865, prescribed the 40 acres policy, but not the mule. That “would come later. But what many accounts leave out is that this idea for massive land redistribution was the result of a discussion that Sherman and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton held four days before Sherman issued the Order, with 20 leaders of the black community in Savannah, Ga., Where Sherman was headquartered following his famous March to the Sea. The meeting was unprecedented in American history.

This policy was actionable and substantial and would have radically changed the nature of this country. IT WOULD have been an actual reparation for the country’s “original sin,” because of the power inherent in the permanence of land, and self-governance.

Gates continues to explain that “Section two of the order specifies that these new communities, moreover, would be governed entirely by black people themselves … on the islands, and in the settlements hereafter to be established, no white person whatever, unless military officers and soldiers detailed for duty, will be permitted to reside; and the sole and exclusive management of affairs will be left to the freed people themselves … By the laws of war, and orders of the President of the United States, the negro [sic] is free and must be dealt with as such. With this Order, 400,000 acres of land — a strip of coastline stretching from Charleston, South Carolina, to the St. John’s River in Florida, including Georgia’s Sea Islands and the mainland thirty miles in from the coast,” as Barton Myers reports — would be redistributed to the newly freed slaves. The extent of this Order and its larger implications are mind-boggling, actually.” (Source: PBS)

The crux of the matter and any discussions about reparations that do not institutionally compensate the descendants of slaves is a moot point. And even, then, it cannot and will not fix the view by some that people of color in this country are inferior and undeserving of equal treatment under the law de facto or de jure, especially in employment and equitable pay, which is the real currency of freedom in today’s world. It also will never prevent the institutional inequities which exist, not just for African-Americans, but all people who were not blessed by the lottery of birth to be born into extreme wealth.

In this era of globalism, when foreign investors hold nearly “30 million acres of U.S. farmland, and the remainder held by corporations and farmers, the possibility of achieving this ‘commensurate’ reparation equal to the pain, suffering, torture, and horrors of 400-years of slavery, as initially ordered, will never be delivered. In lieu of this, we cannot let this election slogan become the ultimate manifestation of our desires for justice and equity. It is not up to others to make right what is wrong in our society, and with our lives. It is up to us to push, to demand, to protest, and to legislate, otherwise “Black Lives [will not] Matter,” nor will the lives of all the great Civil Rights martyrs from emancipation until today.

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Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

Africa's Technical Revolution

There were many skeptics when Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and small business resource Square, announced that he would be venturing to Africa in 2020.

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Africa has steadily grown through the years, finally becoming free of its misnomer as the “Dark Continent.” With more than 600 active technology hubs (up from 422 in 2018), we see organizations with the local address, facilities, and support for technical and digital entrepreneurs making Africa the next big market in technology for the coming decades, and possibly the century!

Africa’s fifty-four countries have a total population of 1.3 billion people, and according to McKinsey, by 2025, more than 100 cities in Africa will contain over a million people. Others predict that population growth will push those numbers to 4.3 billion within the next century. Africa also has the additional advantage of a youthful population, with an average age of just under twenty-years-old. Many of these individuals have studied abroad, and even those who have not had similar opportunities are incredibly tech-savvy because of Africa’s long reliance on block-chain and mobile banking solutions.

With such young potential and energy, there is a transition away from traditional rural economies to more technologically driven. This revolution is powered by the massive migration of young people from rural to more urban areas, which, according to reporting, surpasses even China and India in this trend. In 2019, six African countries were listed in the top ten fastest-growing economies globally. These included Ethiopia, Rwanda, Ivory Coast, Tanzania, and Ghana emerged in the top fifteen coming in spots 1, 2, 5, 10, and 15, respectively. These countries are no longer the exception; as a whole, Africa’s overall GDP projected to reach 2.6 trillion in 2020 and increase to 4.1 trillion in 2021.

These impressive stats are attracting the attention of some of the globe’s largest investors, many of whom are positioning their companies to benefit from this rapidly emerging market to achieve maximum growth. The continent is one of the last places where economic opportunity and growth potential are extraordinary because it is virgin territory.

China has taken full advantage of this opening, exponentially building upon its long-range investments in Africa’s infrastructure projects and other projects since the 1950s. Through the Sino-Africa bilateral trade agreements and treaties, China has established businesses and projects with Saharan and Sub-Saharan African nations, investing billions of dollars.

China and Africa’s modernization efforts yield a return on investment, as companies unwilling to risk expanding into territories without a well-established consumer base or reliable supply chain are now more confident in the opportunities presented by Africa’s thriving urban centers. With so much to offer, leaders of African nations no longer have to accept the lesser share of profits.

Leaders have become more adept at negotiating agreements in the best interest of their countries. Trade agreements that preserve the African nation’s ability to achieve equitable control of the profits through various methods, such as creating reserve sectors in which no foreign entity may participate, and most often with partnership arrangements requiring a percentage of citizen ownership in the company.

These types of arrangements facilitate knowledge transfer, which is necessary for the uplifting of the nation’s citizenry. The inequity of colonialism ensured that leaders of present-day African nation’s value not only natural resources but also human capital, for, without both, freedom is illusory.

The timely implementation of technology and digital service offering by African entrepreneurs or through government partnerships has enabled citizens to access essential services during a global pandemic. There have been challenges during the quarantines, social distancing, and other measures taken to mitigate the virus’ spread. Still, it has demonstrated the need for robust technology infrastructure and entrepreneurial thinking to meet the moment.

Companies that can provide fast, secure, and reliable wireless and WiFi services are the best position to ride the next wave toward immense growth and profitability. Multinationals such as “Facebook,” have partnered with companies such as “Airtell Uganda,” and “BSC” to leverage these opportunities. This trifecta is implementing a project to deliver mobile broadband to 3 million people in Northwest Uganda. And, South Africa has also launched initiatives to connect under served communities with WiFi and has negotiated for Amazon to establish a presence in Johannesburg.

Microsoft, which has operated in Africa since 1992, also continues to expand its footprint through cloud computing. As with Western nations, cloud computing will allow African governments to more efficiently scale their technology needs by enabling off-premises solutions to deliver services that otherwise would not advance because of antiquated systems. Technology partnerships are especially crucial during this era of the global pandemic when so many vital services can only be delivered through digital and virtual platforms to reduce the spread of the virus.

Now, African governments who chose to negotiate trade agreements with global governments, and entrepreneurs seeking partnerships with corporations interested in doing business in Africa, come to the table with a new power dynamic. One which will result in the creation of long-term capital investment, hard assets, and technology, all of which will create cyclical positive earnings. Urbanization of the citizenry, higher educational opportunities, sophisticated understanding, and use of technology is fueling an era of young African consumers. They will make up the backbone of the workforce, know how to live and work in the international arena, but their heart and interest remains anchored in Africa’s ascendancy.

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Sweet Revenge of West African Cocoa Cartels

Cocoa Seed Pod, Photo by David Greenwood-Haigh

WEST COAST, Africa - When one first thinks of chocolate, usually Europe comes to mind. As many connaisseurs of chocolate can attest, there is no sweeter pursuit than wandering the streets of Belgium or Switzerland in search of a piece of "brown heaven." Ironically, the natural resources which are critical to the success of these chocolatiers, and for which these countries are renowned, start as cocoas tree grown a continent away, in Africa. In fact, because of the plant’s need for a warm, tropical climate, there are no cocoa fields in Europe.

Ghana and the Ivory Coast, small neighboring countries on the west coast of Africa, produce over 60% of the world’s cocoa. Yet, despite demand being at an all-time high and the industry reaching a peak of $107.3bn per year, some cocoa farmers in West Africa are more impoverished now than they were in the 1970s and 80’s.

Seeking to rectify this inequity, the presidents of both countries entered into a partnership. They formed an alliance that many have dubbed the chocolate equivalent of the OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) or “COPEC.” The coalition decided to stabilize the market by assessing a $400 per metric ton premium on top of the current benchmark cocoa futures prices, which is currently trading at $2500 per metric ton.

Manufacturers have agreed to the premium, after first pushing back against Ivory Coast and Ghana’s first proposal of a $2600 per metric ton minimum, stating that their interests are aligned with that of the West African cocoa farmers.

Mars’ global communications director, Josh Gerbino, said “Mars believes boosting the income of cocoa farmers while ensuring cocoa is grown sustainably is key to a thriving cocoa sector. “ A spokesperson for Hershey, Jeff Beckman, said that “cocoa farmers should be able to support their families and earn a decent standard of living…”

Though all of this may seem altruistic on the part of the manufacturers, Jonathan Parkman, the co-head of agricultural trading at Marex Spectron, believes that chocolate prices will undoubtedly go up, and he doesn’t expect the multi-billion dollar companies to foot the bill.

“Who’s paying the bill for this?” Parkman asks, “ultimately, it’ll be the consumers.”

Eric Bergman, the vice President at Brokerage JSG Commodities Inc., concurs, stating that the new premium “is essentially a $1.2 billion tax on the cocoa industry”.

In the past, when different governing bodies have attempted market manipulate, the results were short term at best. Ultimately, when commodity prices rose, the demand subsequently fell, thus defeating these efforts. For example, when chocolate prices rose to $3000 per metric ton, supply declined sharply.

In the short term, the premium may boost supply. After decades of subsistence farming, this opportunity for greater returns on investment will incentivize growers. However, as prices rise, consumer demand for the final product will likely fall, resulting in a surplus supply, which farmers cannot sell to other markets. In the long run, some analysts fear that this premium may not be in the best interest of the farmers.

Yet, the inequity in the market supply chain in which the farmers have relatively little leverage, this may be their best bet since being solely dependent on supply and demand has not benefited them. As the adage goes, "the definition of insanity is doing the same thing repeatedly yet expecting different results." Thus, this approach, one in which partnerships with the farmers' respective governments, provides them with the best-negotiating positions.

According to Bloomberg.com, when supply exceeded demand in 2018, the price per metric ton plummeted steeply, and farmers and their countries were left reeling. The Ivory Coast even delayed a plan to extend electricity to villages as a consequence. However, the net benefit, according to individual analysts, is that the alliance between these two powerhouse producers of chocolate is worth any potential market downturn.

Together, these nations grow more than half of the entire world’s chocolate supply. Their presidents and their administrations have been working on these proposals for years, and with change comes pain. Still, the world's desire for and consumption of chocolate is not likely to diminish. As Jonathan Parkman put it, “you’re talking about two-thirds of the world’s cocoa"… The world cannot do without that cocoa,” and therefore, Ghana and Ivory Coast hold indomitable power.

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Quarantine Protests Go Worldwide

UNITED STATES - Many Americans look on in horror and disappointment as lock-down protesters take to the streets of California, North Carolina, Michigan, and Ohio. These, mostly, right-wing Americans march to end the lockdown enforced to combat the current Corona Virus epidemic. Their platform is simple. They believe that the lockdown infringes on their rights to work, congregate at church, hair and nail salons, and schools.

This “cabin fever” as President Trump put it, has many politicians and health-care professionals scared, and angry. Many doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers took to the streets to counter these anti-quarantine protests, by donning their scrubs and white coats to confront protesters and on some occasions bar them from continuing their march.

To some Americans, these protests seem like a phenomenon occurring only in their countries. This could not be further from the truth. Though international quarantine protests have not been covered by the media in the US; they are becoming more and more prevalent.

Anti-quarantine protesters have popped up in Canada, France, and Germany. These international protesters have similar oppositions to their American counterparts. They too feel that the counter-measures taken to flatten the curve are putting their countries’ economies at risk. The protesters do not focus on the need to quarantine to save lives by slowing the virus and giving healthcare officials the time and resources necessary to combat the disease. Instead, they take to the streets to fight for small business owners, and their jobs and in some instances their need for a haircut.

Some of the protesters’ claims do focus on saving human lives. Their fight for victims of domestic abuse, for example, can be said to focus on the well-being of others. However, Though the rise in domestic violence is more than devastating the number of lives that would be endangered if the quarantine was to end at this moment in time far exceeds the number of lives endangered by continuing it.

Protests in Canada have so far, been peaceful. This cannot be said for some of the European protests.  Protests in Paris have escalated to full scale riots. The lockdown has really intensified France’s economic inequalities.  The violence has been amplified in the past week as the protests gain traction and find their way into Parisian suburbs. Conflicts with police have escalated, trash cans and cars have been set on fire and just last week an elementary school was set on fire.

On the Polish-German border, hundreds of people protested against a Covid-19 lockdown last Friday night. Poland closed its borders for a mandatory two weeks due to the Corona Virus outbreak. Approximately 300 citizens that live in Poland but work in Germany are protesting their inability to leave their homes to go back to work. German citizens joined them in the protests though the two groups were separated by a fence to prevent people from crossing the border.

Approximately 20,000 Poles work in Germany and around 10,500 of them cross the Polish-German Border daily. Protesters are afraid that their jobs will not be waiting for them when the quarantine is finally lifted.

The Corona Virus crisis has brought virtually the entire world to its knees and it’s easy to believe that Americans are the only people reacting adversely to the quarantine efforts. It’s important to note however that these sentiments are felt worldwide. Many feel trapped in their homes, with no money, having just lost their jobs. They have no idea what the future holds. What we must keep in mind is that these measures ensure the safety of most people. While some are protesting that the quarantine may be worst than the disease, we must remember that, as Governor Andrew Cuomo stated, “the disease is death”.

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Will Kim Yo-jong Join the Ranks of Female Leaders?

Kim Jong-un, Photo by Victoria Borodinova.

Kim Jong-un, Photo by Victoria Borodinova.

PYONGYANG, North Korea — Today, reports seem to confirm the theory that North Korea's young and enigmatic leader, Kim Jong-un, 36, is believed to be dead. The United States has been consumed by the Coronavirus pandemic and the mounting death toll, which has currently topped 50,000, so the possibility of Kim's death, though noted by political pundits, has barely broken through the noise of the current national discourse.

The "supreme leader," as Jong-un is known, had been absent from the public's eye for some time, and speculations abounded regarding his ill-health. Following the death of his father, Kim Jong II, from a heart attack in 2011, Jong-un became the third-generation hereditary leader, and if he is indeed dead, he would most likely be succeeded by next heir, his sister Kim Yo-jong.

Fears of Jong-un's demise solidified when he missed an April 15 holiday honoring the founder of the country, Kim II Sung, who was his late grandfather. Then, ten days later, on the 88th anniversary of the Korean People's Revolutionary Army, Kim was once again absent, prompting rumors of his demise.

If proven right, the timing could prove additionally problematic for U.S. President Donald Trump, who has been seeking any win to off-set his administration's questionable response to mounting Covid-19 deaths. Trump became the first sitting president to meet with Kim, and in June 2019 stood next to him and his sister, Kim Yo-jong, in the heavily fortified demilitarized zone, which was established during the 1953 armistice which separated North and South Korea.

This third meeting between Washington and Pyongyang was unprecedented. However, these meetings were more advantageous for Kim, who had seized upon the elevation to the global stage by holding additional high-profile meetings, “four with South Korea's President Moon Jae-in, and five with China's President Xi Jinping.” The U.S. meetings did not result in the promised denuclearization deal, and with the possible death of Jong-un, the potential for this deal to be realized is even more unlikely.

When asked at a White House Briefing about Kim Jong-un's condition, the president said, "I think the report was incorrect, let me just put it that way. I hear the report was incorrect. I hope it was an incorrect report," he added, and the administration failed to provide any further comment. "We have a good relationship with North Korea, I have a good relationship with Kim Jong Un, and I hope he's okay. And I think it was a fake report," Trump added.

According to Newsweek, a senior Pentagon official not authorized to speak on the record was quoted as stating that "North Korean military readiness remains within historical norms, and there is no further evidence to suggest a significant change in defensive posturing or national level leadership changes."

Until confirmation of Kim's death by U.S. intelligence agencies, we can only speculate that he is dead as asserted by a "Hong Kong Satellite T.V. executive. Her uncle is purportedly a Chinese foreign minister, and she told her 15 million followers on Weibo that she had a source saying Kim was dead.

If Kim has died, then a succession of leadership would demand that his sister, Yo-jong, assume the reigns of power. According to the Associated Press, which reported that the chances of her being appointed are "more than 90%," per Cheong Seong-chang, an analyst at the Sejong Institute in South Korea who noted that "Yong-un she has "royal blood," and "North Korea is like a dynasty." Kim's sister is reportedly feared, but a capable and accomplished leader who has been groomed for this eventuality.

"Kim Yo-jong is the younger sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. She joined the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) in 2007, eventually serving as secretariat to her father, Kim Jong-il, until his death in 2011. Kim Yo-jong continued to ascend her party's ranks under her brother's rule, taking control of his image as the first vice-department director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department and later becoming an alternate member of the WPK's powerful politburo. After making a highly publicized appearance at the 2018 Winter Olympics, Kim joined her brother for his denuclearization summits with Trump." (Source: Biography.com)

It remains to be seen if the change in governance will result in the "hermit nation" becoming even more of a player in the global economy, and if under Yo-jong's leadership, the country will accelerate its modernization efforts. If so, Yo-jong will join the ranks of influential female leaders and heads of state, as she shepherds the economic development of North Korea under the auspices of China's global marketplace of state capitalism.

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Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

Christine Lagarde Appointed President of European Central Bank

Christine Lagarde Appointed President of European Central Bank

Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), has been appointed to be the President of the European Central Bank (ECB). The primary function of the president of the ECB is to manage the monetary policy in the Eurozone of the European Union (EU), particularly about the Euro. Lagarde will take over from current president, Mario Draghi who has led the organization since 2011.  

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Colin Kaepernick and Nike's #JustDoIt Headed to the Emmys

Colin Kaepernick and Nike's #JustDoIt Headed to the Emmys

To realize greatness in one’s chosen field, it takes dedication, unwavering tenacity, and commitment to the dream of a future much different from the “now” in which we inhabit. All significant accomplishments started with what people often labeled as “crazy,” thus it is fitting that the Nike commercial narrated by Kaepernick and titled "Dream Crazy,” has been nominated for a 2019 Emmy for Outstanding Commercial.

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Rogues Gallery | How Jeffrey Epstein, R. Kelly, and Others Evaded justice and Mandatory Prison sentences

Rogues Gallery | How Jeffrey Epstein, R. Kelly, and Others Evaded justice and Mandatory Prison sentences

Since the 2016 presidential election and with the advent of the #MeToo movement, more women have empowered enough to share their secrets - of sexual abuse, harassment, and rape. This movement has elevated the subject of the violation of women and girls to this nation and enjoined them to other countries, and cultures which accept as a norm the abject treatment of women, girls, and boys who are regarded as little more than chattel.

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Introducing U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe | Brian A. Nichols

HARARE, Zimbabwe - Brian A. Nichols presented his credentials on July 19, 2018, as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Zimbabwe.

Ambassador Nichols previously served as the Ambassador to Peru from 2014 to 2017.  He pioneered strategies against illegal gold mining, illegal logging, wildlife trafficking, and environmental degradation.  

Brian A. Nichols, U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe

Brian A. Nichols, U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe

He supported American trade and investment in Peru, increasing agricultural sales to over $1 billion annually, defending the rights of American investors, and building the Hemisphere’s largest public-private partnership—the U.S.-Peru Cacao Alliance.

Brian Nichols was Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) from 2011 to 2013.   In that capacity, he oversaw the full range of rule of law programs, counter-narcotics and multilateral issues managed by the bureau.  From 2007 to 2010, he served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Colombia, where he managed day-to-day U.S. diplomatic activities in Colombia including overseeing over $500 million in annual assistance. 

Ambassador Nichols previously served as the Director of the Office of Caribbean Affairs, coordinating U.S. policy toward 14 Caribbean countries.  He also served as Counselor for Political Affairs at the American Embassy in Indonesia from 2001 to 2004. Ambassador Nichols has also served in Mexico and El Salvador during major democratic transitions.  He began his Foreign Service career as a Consular Officer in Lima in 1989.

Ambassador Nichols has earned over 20 awards during his diplomatic career, including the 2016 Charles E. Cobb, Jr. Award for Initiative and Success in Trade Development.  He is married to Foreign Service Officer Geri Kam. They have two daughters.

Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

A Not So Sweet Situation - Cocoa and Cote d'Ivoire

A Not So Sweet Situation - Cocoa and Cote d'Ivoire

Although the default has proved harrowing for many, some people have outsmarted the system and began smuggling cocoa across the border to neighboring Ghana and Guinea where they can sell it to make a larger profit than in their homeland. Even though this has provided temporary relief for some, there does not exist a long term solution. As a result, many have taken to the streets in a cry for help for government assistance during this time of need. Likely fueling the protests is the fact that the Ivory Coast has not used either its stabilization fund or the Reserve Fund to support cocoa sales or otherwise mollify the situation.

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