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The Foreign Press Association of New York is a nonprofit, independent, professional body of foreign correspondents based in the United States. Founded in 1918, the Foreign Press Association represents more than 400 members from 50 different countries. Although the bulk of its members come from Europe, there is not a single region in the world which is not represented among the membership. We are i

n the forefront of efforts to protect overseas journalists' rights here and to defend press freedom everywhere. Membership not only includes exclusive member benefits and discounts but it provides unique professional opportunities to expand your network and help establish you in New York City.

24/09/2024

Jewish Board of Deputies to grill Starmer over sausages! LFOI expected better bangers delivered Israel.

24/09/2024

Jewish Board of Deputies ready to grill Starmer over sausages. They wanted more lethal bangers.

24/09/2024

Israel’s Obsessive Campaign Against UNRWA
IAN WILLIAMS ISRAEL-PALESTINE POSTED ON SEPTEMBER 21, 2024

Palestinians inspect the site after an Israeli attack on a United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) school in Gaza City, Gaza on July 18, 2024. (DAWOUD ABO ALKAS/ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES)

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Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, October 2024, pp. 58-59

United Nations Report

By Ian Williams

AT THE PANIC-STRICKEN request of the U.N. and UNRWA, the U.N.’s Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) investigated 19 UNRWA staff for their alleged involvement in the Hamas raid of Oct. 7, 2023. Since the raid Israel has persistently made such allegations yet has consistently failed to produce any evidence when asked. In a spectacularly misjudged move, UNRWA, which has demonstrably lost ten times as many staff to Israeli military murders, had announced the summary dismissal of accused staff.

This was a stupidly disastrous move. Guilt by denunciation is always an unjust principle—but in this case UNRWA’s acceptance was possibly fatal for the organization and the stigmatized staff. It paints a personal target on the back of workers in addition to their general vulnerability as Palestinians and as aid workers, blazoning them as fair game for Israeli drones and murderers.

It was not as if this treacherous act took pressure off the organization. Donors foolishly albeit understandably took this as confession of collective guilt and promptly suspended funding for the organization, just as its services were in peak demand by Palestinians who were being ethnically cleansed by the Israeli blitzkrieg.

To suggest innocence for the accused was tantamount to dropping in on Salem Town Hall with a pointy hat and broomstick. Only the brave did. It took months before donors looked harder and noticed the complete absence of evidence, and by that time, to everyone other than Joe Biden’s and Antony Blinken’s press teams, it was clear that Israeli evidence was the stuff that perjury was made of.

One hesitates to see a conspiracy, but with remarkable synchronicity, pro-Israeli lobbyists and plants in ministries all across the Western world immediately popped up demanding immediate defunding. In subsequent months hitherto panicked politicians in donor capitals drew breath and noticed that Israel was very economical with its evidence. Some of the less flustered remembered that Israel and its acolytes had been fighting a grudge feud against UNRWA for years.

They might even have remembered the story about the little boy who cried “wolf!” Although it loses its effect when redacted to the “the country that continually shrieks ‘wolf’,” it is sobering that so many politicians don’t seem to notice the subsequent absence of vulpine predators advertised.

International diplomats did their own studies and could not substantiate Israeli claims, and too slowly donor countries shamefacedly backed down. Few would admit that Israel had hoaxed them—after all that would be anti-Semitic—but they resumed support for the agency.

And then came the latest OIOS report commissioned by the U.N.—and it has found no evidence at all for the staff member’s alleged involvement, while in nine other cases, the evidence was “insufficient to support” the allegations.

In one case, no evidence was obtained by OIOS to support the allegations of the staff member’s involvement, while in nine other cases, the evidence obtained by OIOS was insufficient to support the staff members’ involvement. With respect to these 10 cases, appropriate measures will be taken in due course, in conformity with UNRWA regulations and rules.

For the nine not proven cases, “the evidence obtained by OIOS indicated that the UNRWA staff members may have been involved in the armed attacks of Oct. 7, 2023. The employment of these individuals will be terminated in the interests of the Agency.”

The decades long obsessive campaign against UNRWA and all its work is going to continue even in the unregrettable absence of Gilad Erdan, the most recent Israeli pseudo-diplomat ambassador to the U.N., who has presumably seen the writing on the wall for his former patron Binyamin Netanyahu. He is hightailing it back to the “homeland” to position himself as head kapo in Camp Likud to replace his former patron. It is not too churlish to suspect that he returns with bundles of pledged campaign donations from his fanatic American Zionist fans. But his replacement is also his predecessor, Danny Danon, who had been equally hostile to the institution, although he might offer his equally outrageous opinions in a slightly less gratuitously hostile manner.

Confirming this obsession, UNRWA USA has revealed that Israeli government sites, with Google’s connivance, had been trolling UNRWA with misinformation in order to head off donations.

So no matter who represents Israel, Israeli “diplomacy” will continue its obsessive campaign against UNRWA, which has been shamefully left swinging by apologetic U.N. officials and diplomats who do, in fact, know better but do not have the courage to stand up.

UNRWA is the institutional memorial to the pledges made by the international community that the victims of the collective betrayal represented by the Partition resolution still have claims to return or restitution—and for assistance.

Thoughtcrime is the theme of the times. It is a major and punishable heresy, even at the U.N., to state manifest truths about Oct. 7: that babies were not dismembered and put in ovens, that many of the Israeli casualties were in fact victims of indiscriminate mayhem from the Israeli forces, that the evidence of mass r**e is exiguous, and above all that there is more substantial evidence of individual mayhem by the Israeli soldiers than from Hamas.

It is also worth stating, loudly, publicly and often, that it is not a crime for UNRWA employees to be supporters of Hamas or other Palestinian organizations, any more than it is for USAID workers to be American Republicans (or indeed Israeli Likud supporters). We may doubt the motives and indeed motivation of people like Republican Cindy McCain (widow of Republican Party leader John McCain) being head of the World Food Program, but one listens in vain for voices in the U.N. insisting that her support for a party pledged to diehard support of Israeli aggression precludes her from employment in the U.N. organization.

It does not take a long memory to recall when no one was allowed to talk to the PLO or the African National Congress, for example, but it is amazing how media and ministers forget that time. The actual names of the non-organizations change, but the constant is that “everybody” knows that the only Palestinians we should give ear to are those who are likely to give Israel what it wants, whenever it wants.

Faced with prima facie (indeed, in flagrante delicto) evidence of Israeli crimes, and despite Israel and its supporters being outed as habitual recidivist perjurers, it is remarkable how the Israeli campaign against UNRWA lurches on. No matter how often the accusations against UNRWA are knocked down, like Rasputin, they keep coming back.

Even more disturbingly, UNRWA and the U.N. itself, let alone the Western funders, are diffident in their defense of the agency. They treat Israeli complaints as legitimate and worthy of consideration instead of dismissing them out-of-hand as figments of an overheated imagination.

Erdan had successfully inculcated the U.N. system with Israeli military justice standards in which the accusation alone confirms guilt, which transfers by association to anyone who quibbles about the inquisitionary process. In an attempt to be candid, Deputy U.N. Spokesman Farhan Haq cautioned, “since information used by Israeli officials to support the allegations has remained in Israeli custody, OIOS was not able to independently authenticate most of the information provided to it.”

U.N. officials are indeed in a bind. They have to accept statements from all member states, no matter how redolent of taurine excreta. But Israel has long exceeded its bu****it ration. The answer lies with the members to recall the former Yugoslavia in mid-genocide or South Africa during Apartheid. They refused to accept the credentials of the perpetrators. If they do not have the courage to actually expel Israel, they can vote in the General Assembly to refuse to seat the delegation. Danny Danon could then concentrate on fundraising for Likud and marshaling the Israel lobby without the distraction of international law or the U.N. Charter. Indeed Erdan’s flamboyant shredding of the charter should be taken as an implicit withdrawal from the organization. Other countries, notably the U.S. and Russia, have sought to reinterpret the charter, but none have gone as far Israel in macerating it in word and deed.

U.N. correspondent Ian Williams is the author of U.N.told: The Real Story of the United Nations in Peace and War (available from Middle East Books and More).

https://on.ft.com/3ZuOemwShared Apartheid creepiness. Remember Spitting Images "I've never met a nice Serth Efrican!"
19/09/2024

https://on.ft.com/3ZuOemw

Shared Apartheid creepiness. Remember Spitting Images "I've never met a nice Serth Efrican!"

The parallels between South Africa then and the US today are striking

Join us tomorrow, September 13th @ 11am on Zoom for "Election Interference and Foreign Media", featuring Katie Fallow, d...
12/09/2024

Join us tomorrow, September 13th @ 11am on Zoom for "Election Interference and Foreign Media", featuring Katie Fallow, deputy litigation director at the Knight First Amendment Institute, and Ben Freeman, director of the Democratizing Foreign Policy program at the Quincy Institute. This briefing will be hosted by FPA President Ian Williams.

Register here - https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Dp1tgfxPQTG9wKURy8Ic1Q #/registration

12/09/2024

Three cheers for Belle Donati, who has been stealthily fire by Sky News for practicing real journalism on air by pushing back against preposterous statements from Israel's Dany Danon.

And damnation to spineless Sky News for putting truth in the rumours that it is an agent of a foreign scofflaw government.

Join us on Wednesday, September 18th at the Fitzpatrick Hotel, 57th St for the FPA September Meetup! Enjoy light bites a...
05/09/2024

Join us on Wednesday, September 18th at the Fitzpatrick Hotel, 57th St for the FPA September Meetup! Enjoy light bites and the chance to connect with FPA Members!

RSVP HERE - www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/FVPFS49JB4RMY

Not yet a member? Join now and come as our guest!

22/08/2024

These are spineless toadies calling for the recession of the Emmy nominations for Palestinian journalist Bisan Owda. They themselves are unprincipled and talentless but append the article so any real journalist can cross check and high light their sliminess. They are unlikely to merit attention otherwise

09/08/2024

FPA Board Member Camilla G Hellman is in conversation with two Award-Winning Scottish Artists, Andy Scott and Gerard Burns in the most recent episode of the American Scottish Foundation's Podcast

27/07/2024

The old copy-editors' joke about man bites dog = news while dog bites man is not occurs as yet another school was the beneficiary of the most moral army's lethal attentions.

Why don't we adapt to modern age? I foresee headlines like "TODAY ISRAEL DID NOT BOMB AS SCHOOL!" or "YESTERDAY ISRAEL DID NOT SHOOT UP A HOSPITAL"

27/07/2024

"I'm not Christian!" says the champion of White Christians. And they applauded!

Say Trump

25/07/2024

Joe Biden's departure impels me to step down as his tangential proxy speechwriter. I was a speechwriter for Neil Kinnock whose speech Joe plagiarized crashing his presidential bid in the 1980s.

As I understand the main vulnerability was not the plagiarism but the falsehood that Biden came from generations of miners (Neil did, Joe didn't)

Ah! What nostalgia well telling porkie pies on the campaign trail could cost a candidate bigly!

24/07/2024

OK folks, even Vanity Fair fell foul today.. A "reign" is what a monarch puts on your, a rein is what a rider use to guide a horse. OK?

Somebody is celebrating National Tequila day with a bang - big explosion at Jose Cuervo. But for the more literately inv...
24/07/2024

Somebody is celebrating National Tequila day with a bang - big explosion at Jose Cuervo. But for the more literately involved, you can buy the book! And those who care about such things should contact me directly and get signed copy for the same price!

Tequila: A Global History (Edible)

https://www.cjr.org/first_person/selina-cheng-wall-street-journal-gershkovich-evan-china-hong-kong-apple.phpLike we've b...
22/07/2024

https://www.cjr.org/first_person/selina-cheng-wall-street-journal-gershkovich-evan-china-hong-kong-apple.php

Like we've been saying for some years at the Foreign Press Association some western moguls are as bad as Chinese Commissars.

After 2019, as China tightened its grip on Hong Kong and mass protests gripped the city, police raided the Apple Daily and Stand News newsrooms and prosecuted their top editors with national security crimes. Several smaller media outlets shut down rather than risk similar treatment. It was the begin...

21/07/2024

The Foreign Press Association supports reporting, whether from Julian Assange, Al Jazeera in Gaza or Wall Street Journal's Evan Gershkovitch. We hope that the Kremlin extends similar face-saving clemency to him as Washington did to Assange - but it is a reporter's job to well... report, on what governments are doing. Solidarity from the FPA! Stop it, Mr Putin.

17/07/2024

The FPA send solidarity to our Colleagues in HK and the WSJ and condemns so called colleagues whose claim to be "Free" press is their freedom from courage or principles.

Note, the WSJ fired her, not the People's Daily. How can anyone trust a media organization headed by spineless worms?
17/07/2024

Note, the WSJ fired her, not the People's Daily. How can anyone trust a media organization headed by spineless worms?

The new chair of Hong Kong’s leading media professional group says she lost her job at The Wall Street Journal after she refused her supervisor’s request to withdraw from the election for the leadership post.

16/07/2024

Audrey spoke to the FPA in New York just after taking office. She has apposite things to say about the perils and possibilities of Internet,''
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The hacker turned politician using digital tech to reimagine democracy
Taiwan’s first ever minister of digital affairs has transformed politics, using online platforms and AI to give power to the country’s citizens – with lessons for us all

By Laura Spinney

1 July 2024

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.
Paul Ryding

In 2014, the approval rating of Taiwan’s government was less than 10 per cent. Popular dissatisfaction culminated in the Sunflower Movement, with students occupying legislative buildings to protest a proposed trade deal with China. Three weeks later, their demands were met. A decade on, this is seen as a turning point in Taiwanese democracy.

One group to emerge from the movement was the civic technology cooperative g0v (pronounced “gov zero”), which included the well-known hacker Audrey Tang. g0v proceeded to build a virtual platform for democratic deliberation called vTaiwan. The “v” stands for “virtual”, but it could just as easily stand for “vulnerable”, says Tang. Born with a heart condition that nearly killed her as a child, she has since become the country’s first transgender minister, and she draws parallels between the fragility of her own life and that of democracy.

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Disinformation wars: The fight against fake news in the age of AI

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Tang was invited to join the government in 2016 and set about implementing her vision of “radical transparency”, starting with vTaiwan. After the first covid-19 cases were declared in mainland China in late 2019, she became a central player in the Taiwanese government’s response as a cabinet member for digital affairs. By 2022, Taiwan was being universally lauded for its handling of the pandemic and Tang was given her own ministry, becoming the country’s first minister of digital affairs. In her new book, Plurality, she argues that Taiwan – often seen as a potential flashpoint for future global conflict – is now a thriving democracy that has much to teach the world. She stood down from her post in May following January’s elections, which is when we caught up with her.



Laura Spinney: How has technology contributed to an erosion of democracy?

Audrey Tang: Democracy depends on a citizenry being informed and engaged in the conversation, and technology that’s used to censor communication or to conduct surveillance – to make people transparent to the state rather than the other way around – has definitely hurt democracy. Even in places where there is no such top-down pressure, the sheer polarisation that exists online has harmed the discourse that is the backbone of democracy. The backslide has been quite acute in the last few decades as it has become harder for people to see democracy as something they can contribute to, or that delivers.

This is a bumper year for elections globally, and some worry that democracy will take a (further) beating. Do you see it as a watershed moment?

Taiwan successfully overcame the many attacks on our democracy because we had 10 years of experience working against very well-funded adversaries. We know, for example, that collaborative fact-checking inoculates people against disinformation better than looking at a checked fact. For democracies that are less well prepared than ours, yes, I do see this year as a possible watershed in terms of amplifying counter-democratic trends, if only because online discourse has become so central to democratic processes and the artificial intelligence tools that let bad actors manipulate the facts have become accessible to all.

Does AI have the power to save democracy as well as erode it?

Only people – the demos in democracy – can save democracy, but AI can help if it’s deployed to assist or augment collective intelligence. There are already narrow AI systems that detect online toxicity, for example, but the new generative AI, including large language models, can detect more nuance, including affinity, compassion, curiosity, reasoning and respect. If social media platforms embrace these models to foreground pro-democratic, pro-social conversations, research suggests that people will spend the same amount of time online, but they will engage in conversations that bridge, rather than exacerbate, ideological schisms. They will begin to see democracy as something they can do here and now, rather than something they only experience at election time, or that they delegate to parliamentarians.

High school students receive BioNTech vaccines against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at a school stadium in Taipei, Taiwan, September 22, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Wang - RC2QUP9O3V1J
Taiwan had a scoreboard ranking people’s preferred covid-19 vaccines

REUTERS/Ann Wang

In Taiwan, this starts by educating children to be digitally savvy. How is that achieved?

Even before I became a minister, I was a member of the committee that advised the government on curricular reform. The overhaul took effect in 2019, and our new curriculum has now been deployed to all primary schools [ages 6 to 12]. Instead of a one-size-fits-all education, based on critical consumption of information and standardised tests, the new curriculum emphasises autonomy, interaction and the common good. Co-creation replaces literacy at the core of it. I think the results speak for themselves. Surveys show that vTaiwan now leads the world in civic education.

Taiwan has been criticised because the government is free to dismiss policy proposals, and often does. How do you judge vTaiwan’s impact?

vTaiwan served as a proof of concept that, using open-source technology alone, civil society can deliberate policy matters in a fully participatory way that leaves nobody behind. That is important given that 10 years ago, the administration was enjoying an approval rating of 9 per cent and people automatically distrusted anything it said or asked. To begin with, the platform addressed mainly digital issues, but it ended up delivering quite impactful policies – for the regulation of the ride-hailing company Uber, for example. And the project later broadened its scope to non-digital issues, such as consultations for the Open Parliament Action Plan [which aims to bolster democracy through transparency, openness, participation, digitisation and literacy]. vTaiwan helped rebuild legitimacy.

A woman holding several small flags of the United States checks her mobile phone while waiting with other onlookers prior to the arrival of the US President in Warsaw on February 21, 2023. - US President Biden is due to deliver a speech in Warsaw later on February 21 at Royal Warsaw Castle Gardens. (Photo by Wojtek Radwanski / AFP) (Photo by WOJTEK RADWANSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
How will AIs like ChatGPT affect elections this year?
We are beginning to see the tip of the iceberg when it comes to threats from chatbots. In a huge election year, how will AI affect upcoming votes, asks Alex Wilkins

How do the Join platform and your latest initiative, Alignment Assemblies, move things on?

Join is a government-run – as opposed to a civil society-run – platform. It was launched a year after vTaiwan, and its most important function is to serve as a petition platform. Anyone who gathers 5000 signatures for a proposal can force a ministerial response.

Alignment Assemblies are conversations designed to steer the development of AI in ways that benefit society. It takes on board three lessons that we learned from the implementation of vTaiwan. First, we reach out to hundreds of thousands of people via SMS from what they know to be a government number. Second, once we have chosen a representative sample of several hundred citizens, we ask them to meet online in video chat rooms with AI facilitators – something that only became possible with recent advances in conversational AI. Both those measures have massively increased inclusivity, including of senior citizens. Third, we summarise the conversation using AI. A recent Alignment Assembly on the accuracy, reliability and consistency of information led, in just a few months, to an anti-fraud act that is currently awaiting deliberation in parliament.

How did your digital approach help in Taiwan’s response to the covid-19 pandemic?

Around the world, polarisation over vaccines hurt many more people than was necessary, but in Taiwan there was no anti-vaccine faction. That isn’t because Taiwanese people are homogeneous, it’s because we turned the conversation into a “my vaccine is better than your vaccine” race. We had a national online scoreboard where we kept track of people’s preferences for four vaccines by age bracket. It became a friendly competition, as between rival sports teams.

The idea, then and now, is to anticipate a conspiracy theory and prebunk it, instead of trying to debunk it after the fact when it might be too late. Prebunking works like inoculation: a weaker virus takes hold so a more potent one can’t. We applied the same strategy before the general elections in January to scotch the conspiracy theory that they would be rigged.

Demonstrators holding sunflowers shout slogans in front of the Presidential Office in Taipei March 30, 2014. Thousands of demonstrators marched the streets on Sunday to protest against the controversial trade pact with mainland China. The Chinese characters on the head bands read, "Reject the trade pact." REUTERS/Toby Chang (TAIWAN - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST) - GM1EA3U1AHG01
A decade ago, dissatisfaction with Taiwan’s government spawned the Sunflower Movement

REUTERS/Toby Chang

Did digital democracy have a positive impact on those elections?

Definitely. After the election, hate across party lines reached a historic low, and that’s despite Taiwan being the most targeted place in the world for disinformation and interference aimed at increasing polarisation. We have playbooks against such interference, including collaborative fact-checking and prebunking of conspiracy theories, so that it backfires and actually increases solidarity across Taiwanese people. The upshot is that, after the election, all three parties and their supporters feel that they have won a little bit. Our radically transparent approach to ballot-counting helped too: votes, which were on paper, were read out in front of observers with cameras.

Have other countries asked for your help in introducing digital democracy?

Very much so. I’m about to leave for a book tour in Europe, where I’ll meet my counterparts in European governments as well as civic society groups. I’ll spend a few days in Finland, which is one of the few countries in Europe to use the collaborative sense-making tool Polis for national consultation, as vTaiwan does. Digital ministers form an assembly of sorts, with experimental platforms all around the world, including Policy Lab in the UK and sitra in Finland.

Taiwan has a very high level of digital inclusivity. Could these processes work in other countries?

From 2016, we insisted that mobile broadband was a human right and the pe*******on rate of that alone was more than 80 per cent in 2022 – up from 67 per cent six years earlier. That’s even before you consider fixed broadband. We are one of the top countries in the world when it comes to internet inclusivity. But yes, what we have done is absolutely feasible in other countries. The point is that we bring technology to where people are. We’re not asking them to adapt to the technology – and offline options remain available. Accessibility is our top priority.

As a hacker-turned-minister, someone who has tried to renew democracy from the inside, is your ultimate goal to bring down the existing system?

I’m a Taoist, meaning that I don’t think in terms of bringing things down. I prefer Richard Buckminster Fuller’s metaphor in which an individual affects society like a trim tab – the tiny rudder that steers the actual rudder that steers the ocean liner. I don’t steer, I nudge. I want to persuade people to think of democracy as a social technology and to invent new ways of living together. The documentary Good Enough Ancestor, which is based on my book and my life, makes it clear that for me, it isn’t about trying to solve everything or closing down possibilities. It’s about opening them up for future generations, who will have different challenges and different tools, and harnessing diversity through co-creation. The same word in Taiwanese means “digital” and “plural”. I always thought of myself as both digital minister and minister of plural affairs.

Laura Spinney is a writer based in Paris, France

https://www.democracynow.org/2024/7/12/headlines/spanish_pm_urges_nato_to_end_double_standards_in_treatment_of_ukraine_a...
13/07/2024

https://www.democracynow.org/2024/7/12/headlines/spanish_pm_urges_nato_to_end_double_standards_in_treatment_of_ukraine_and_gaza?utm_source=Democracy+Now%21&utm_campaign=b619a7a4cc-Daily_Digest_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_fa2346a853-b619a7a4cc-193014547

VIVA ESPANA

In more news from the NATO summit, the U.S. approved a new $225 million military aid package for Ukraine, including a Patriot missile system. President Zelensky again urged NATO allies to lift all restrictions on Ukraine’s use of long-range weapons to strike targets inside Russia, saying the move ...

09/07/2024

Putin bombs Ukrainian kids hospitals and pretends he didn't. West condemns. Israel bombs all hospitals and and is unblushing about it, so US and UK send more weapons> As a reward for being honest?

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