14

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53155160

Archived

[...]

The crackdown is broad and systematic, and extends beyond democracy movements. Over 300 people have been arrested in national security cases since June 2020, with around 200 formally charged and dozens convicted. Prosecuted people include activists, community organisers, former legislators, journalists and student leaders. In one significant case, 47 pro-democracy activists and politicians were prosecuted for organising an unofficial primary election in 2020, which in a democracy would be considered normal political activity.

Suppression extends beyond organised opposition to basic civic engagement. After a major fire in November 2025, at least five people who questioned government responsibility and demanded accountability were arrested or detained. Even trivial activities now carry national security implications.

Independent civil society is being dismantled and replaced with state-aligned structures, mirroring mainland China’s model. The government has created state-aligned community committees and fire-prevention mutual aid committees that extend monitoring and political management into everyday community life. Control is no longer exercised only through top-down enforcement but through bottom-up networks embedded in local communities.

[...]

The diaspora has become the primary vehicle for organised civic resistance. Exiled journalists report on seditious topics and counter government disinformation. Organisations such as the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation and Washington DC-based Hong Kong Watch conduct advocacy and sanctions campaigns.

[...]

Reversing this process will be a long-term effort, not achievable through any single policy change. Domestically, it is key to preserve an accountability culture, civic identity and historical memory. Hong Kong’s diaspora preserves the memory that Hong Kong was once defined by freedom of expression, rule of law and a vibrant civil society.

Internationally, governments must recognise that this is not only a local issue but a challenge to international norms and the advance of a broader authoritarian governance model. Responses must include sustained diplomatic pressure, coordinated sanctions against those responsible for abuses, legal frameworks to address transnational repression and stronger protections for diaspora communities and independent media.

[...]

6

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53153566

Archived

The rights group 'Article 19' is alarmed by a recent smear campaign carried out by the Chinese embassy in the Philippines targeting an investigative journalism outlet following their reporting on Chinese influence operations in the country. The online harassment is part of a broader pattern of transnational repression and influence operations in the Philippines’ information space that seeks to discredit China-critical narratives. It undermines the right of the media to independently carry out critical journalism and share information in the public interest.

'Article 19' calls for the Chinese embassy to cease its harassment of independent journalists, and for Filipino authorities to use available diplomatic channels and protection mechanisms to respond and maintain the safety of the targeted outlet.

[...]

In October 2025, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) published print and video reporting by Regine Cabato analysing Chinese influence operations in the country. Following publication, the Chinese embassy in the Philippines shared a series of Facebook posts smearing the investigative outlet, attacking their credibility and suggesting their reporting served foreign, rather than Philippine, interests.

PCIJ found that accounts aligned with ex-president Rodrigo Duterte quickly circulated the embassy’s initial post, resulting in over 400 re-shares to a combined audience of at least 3 million followers within 24 hours. In a 2025 hearing, Duterte-aligned influencers had confirmed participation in Chinese-funded media training seminars, with one participant stating he ‘gained an understanding of “how China media works”’. These subsidised trips are a common tactic in China’s foreign information manipulation operations playbook; they persuade local elites and other non-Chinese proxies to push Beijing’s preferred narratives.

[...]

13

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53155160

Archived

[...]

The crackdown is broad and systematic, and extends beyond democracy movements. Over 300 people have been arrested in national security cases since June 2020, with around 200 formally charged and dozens convicted. Prosecuted people include activists, community organisers, former legislators, journalists and student leaders. In one significant case, 47 pro-democracy activists and politicians were prosecuted for organising an unofficial primary election in 2020, which in a democracy would be considered normal political activity.

Suppression extends beyond organised opposition to basic civic engagement. After a major fire in November 2025, at least five people who questioned government responsibility and demanded accountability were arrested or detained. Even trivial activities now carry national security implications.

Independent civil society is being dismantled and replaced with state-aligned structures, mirroring mainland China’s model. The government has created state-aligned community committees and fire-prevention mutual aid committees that extend monitoring and political management into everyday community life. Control is no longer exercised only through top-down enforcement but through bottom-up networks embedded in local communities.

[...]

The diaspora has become the primary vehicle for organised civic resistance. Exiled journalists report on seditious topics and counter government disinformation. Organisations such as the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation and Washington DC-based Hong Kong Watch conduct advocacy and sanctions campaigns.

[...]

Reversing this process will be a long-term effort, not achievable through any single policy change. Domestically, it is key to preserve an accountability culture, civic identity and historical memory. Hong Kong’s diaspora preserves the memory that Hong Kong was once defined by freedom of expression, rule of law and a vibrant civil society.

Internationally, governments must recognise that this is not only a local issue but a challenge to international norms and the advance of a broader authoritarian governance model. Responses must include sustained diplomatic pressure, coordinated sanctions against those responsible for abuses, legal frameworks to address transnational repression and stronger protections for diaspora communities and independent media.

[...]

5

Archived

Several Chinese airlines, including national carrier Air China, said they will raise their fuel surcharges on domestic flights from Sunday as the war in the Middle East drives up oil prices globally.

Air China, China Southern and its subsidiary Xiamen Airlines said in statements that they will increase surcharges on flights of up to 800 kilometers by 60 yuan ($8.70), and 120 yuan for longer flights. Spring Airlines and Juneyao Airlines also announced fuel surcharge hikes.

International flights will be subject to the system's calculations, according to statements issued on Wednesday that did not mention the conflict.

The move comes as the war in the Middle East, and Iran's effective closure of the crucial Strait of Hormuz, have sent crude prices soaring.

[...]

56
submitted 2 weeks ago by Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org to c/world@quokk.au

Archived

[...]

The crackdown is broad and systematic, and extends beyond democracy movements. Over 300 people have been arrested in national security cases since June 2020, with around 200 formally charged and dozens convicted. Prosecuted people include activists, community organisers, former legislators, journalists and student leaders. In one significant case, 47 pro-democracy activists and politicians were prosecuted for organising an unofficial primary election in 2020, which in a democracy would be considered normal political activity.

Suppression extends beyond organised opposition to basic civic engagement. After a major fire in November 2025, at least five people who questioned government responsibility and demanded accountability were arrested or detained. Even trivial activities now carry national security implications.

Independent civil society is being dismantled and replaced with state-aligned structures, mirroring mainland China’s model. The government has created state-aligned community committees and fire-prevention mutual aid committees that extend monitoring and political management into everyday community life. Control is no longer exercised only through top-down enforcement but through bottom-up networks embedded in local communities.

[...]

The diaspora has become the primary vehicle for organised civic resistance. Exiled journalists report on seditious topics and counter government disinformation. Organisations such as the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation and Washington DC-based Hong Kong Watch conduct advocacy and sanctions campaigns.

[...]

Reversing this process will be a long-term effort, not achievable through any single policy change. Domestically, it is key to preserve an accountability culture, civic identity and historical memory. Hong Kong’s diaspora preserves the memory that Hong Kong was once defined by freedom of expression, rule of law and a vibrant civil society.

Internationally, governments must recognise that this is not only a local issue but a challenge to international norms and the advance of a broader authoritarian governance model. Responses must include sustained diplomatic pressure, coordinated sanctions against those responsible for abuses, legal frameworks to address transnational repression and stronger protections for diaspora communities and independent media.

[...]

6

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53153566

Archived

The rights group 'Article 19' is alarmed by a recent smear campaign carried out by the Chinese embassy in the Philippines targeting an investigative journalism outlet following their reporting on Chinese influence operations in the country. The online harassment is part of a broader pattern of transnational repression and influence operations in the Philippines’ information space that seeks to discredit China-critical narratives. It undermines the right of the media to independently carry out critical journalism and share information in the public interest.

'Article 19' calls for the Chinese embassy to cease its harassment of independent journalists, and for Filipino authorities to use available diplomatic channels and protection mechanisms to respond and maintain the safety of the targeted outlet.

[...]

In October 2025, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) published print and video reporting by Regine Cabato analysing Chinese influence operations in the country. Following publication, the Chinese embassy in the Philippines shared a series of Facebook posts smearing the investigative outlet, attacking their credibility and suggesting their reporting served foreign, rather than Philippine, interests.

PCIJ found that accounts aligned with ex-president Rodrigo Duterte quickly circulated the embassy’s initial post, resulting in over 400 re-shares to a combined audience of at least 3 million followers within 24 hours. In a 2025 hearing, Duterte-aligned influencers had confirmed participation in Chinese-funded media training seminars, with one participant stating he ‘gained an understanding of “how China media works”’. These subsidised trips are a common tactic in China’s foreign information manipulation operations playbook; they persuade local elites and other non-Chinese proxies to push Beijing’s preferred narratives.

[...]

17
submitted 2 weeks ago by Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org to c/world@quokk.au

Archived

The rights group 'Article 19' is alarmed by a recent smear campaign carried out by the Chinese embassy in the Philippines targeting an investigative journalism outlet following their reporting on Chinese influence operations in the country. The online harassment is part of a broader pattern of transnational repression and influence operations in the Philippines’ information space that seeks to discredit China-critical narratives. It undermines the right of the media to independently carry out critical journalism and share information in the public interest.

'Article 19' calls for the Chinese embassy to cease its harassment of independent journalists, and for Filipino authorities to use available diplomatic channels and protection mechanisms to respond and maintain the safety of the targeted outlet.

[...]

In October 2025, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) published print and video reporting by Regine Cabato analysing Chinese influence operations in the country. Following publication, the Chinese embassy in the Philippines shared a series of Facebook posts smearing the investigative outlet, attacking their credibility and suggesting their reporting served foreign, rather than Philippine, interests.

PCIJ found that accounts aligned with ex-president Rodrigo Duterte quickly circulated the embassy’s initial post, resulting in over 400 re-shares to a combined audience of at least 3 million followers within 24 hours. In a 2025 hearing, Duterte-aligned influencers had confirmed participation in Chinese-funded media training seminars, with one participant stating he ‘gained an understanding of “how China media works”’. These subsidised trips are a common tactic in China’s foreign information manipulation operations playbook; they persuade local elites and other non-Chinese proxies to push Beijing’s preferred narratives.

[...]

10

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53121782

Archived

A court in Taiwan awarded Chunghwa Telecom more than half a million US dollars in compensation for the damage a Chinese vessel caused to a subsea telecom cable. The financial award comes on top of a three-year prison sentence Taiwan imposed in June 2025 on the Chinese national who was commanding a decrepit vessel with a murky identity.

[...]

It came out in court in June 2025 that the captain, who would only give his name as Wang according to media reports, had ordered two sailors to drop anchor in a well-marked zone prohibiting anchoring and marked on charts to have critical undersea infrastructure. Early on the morning of February 25, the vessel was observed moving in a zigzag pattern. Chunghwa Telecom reported an outage on its cable Tai-Peng 3, which runs to the offshore islands of Penghu.

[...]

A court in Taiwan convicted the captain in June 2025 and sentenced him to three years in jail [...] The captain later appealed, but a court in Taiwan rejected his case.

[...]

This and several other incidents prompted Taiwan to dramatically increase its monitoring of vessels. It said it was specifically targeting ships with third-world flags like the Togo registry of this vessel. It asserted that the vessels are all Chinese-owned and present an increasing danger to Taiwan as tensions escalate with China and the demands for reunification.

9

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53121782

Archived

A court in Taiwan awarded Chunghwa Telecom more than half a million US dollars in compensation for the damage a Chinese vessel caused to a subsea telecom cable. The financial award comes on top of a three-year prison sentence Taiwan imposed in June 2025 on the Chinese national who was commanding a decrepit vessel with a murky identity.

[...]

It came out in court in June 2025 that the captain, who would only give his name as Wang according to media reports, had ordered two sailors to drop anchor in a well-marked zone prohibiting anchoring and marked on charts to have critical undersea infrastructure. Early on the morning of February 25, the vessel was observed moving in a zigzag pattern. Chunghwa Telecom reported an outage on its cable Tai-Peng 3, which runs to the offshore islands of Penghu.

[...]

A court in Taiwan convicted the captain in June 2025 and sentenced him to three years in jail [...] The captain later appealed, but a court in Taiwan rejected his case.

[...]

This and several other incidents prompted Taiwan to dramatically increase its monitoring of vessels. It said it was specifically targeting ships with third-world flags like the Togo registry of this vessel. It asserted that the vessels are all Chinese-owned and present an increasing danger to Taiwan as tensions escalate with China and the demands for reunification.

48
submitted 2 weeks ago by Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org to c/world@quokk.au

Archived

A court in Taiwan awarded Chunghwa Telecom more than half a million US dollars in compensation for the damage a Chinese vessel caused to a subsea telecom cable. The financial award comes on top of a three-year prison sentence Taiwan imposed in June 2025 on the Chinese national who was commanding a decrepit vessel with a murky identity.

[...]

It came out in court in June 2025 that the captain, who would only give his name as Wang according to media reports, had ordered two sailors to drop anchor in a well-marked zone prohibiting anchoring and marked on charts to have critical undersea infrastructure. Early on the morning of February 25, the vessel was observed moving in a zigzag pattern. Chunghwa Telecom reported an outage on its cable Tai-Peng 3, which runs to the offshore islands of Penghu.

[...]

A court in Taiwan convicted the captain in June 2025 and sentenced him to three years in jail [...] The captain later appealed, but a court in Taiwan rejected his case.

[...]

This and several other incidents prompted Taiwan to dramatically increase its monitoring of vessels. It said it was specifically targeting ships with third-world flags like the Togo registry of this vessel. It asserted that the vessels are all Chinese-owned and present an increasing danger to Taiwan as tensions escalate with China and the demands for reunification.

56
submitted 2 weeks ago by Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org to c/world@quokk.au

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53108988

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s unwillingness to condemn forced labor in China risks reducing pressure on the Chinese government to end its repression of ethnic Uyghurs.

Responding to Member of Parliament Michael Ma’s comments casting doubts on reports of forced labor in China, Carney told the media on March 30 that Canada “takes issues of forced labor and child labor incredibly seriously.” But when asked directly whether forced labor is present in China, Carney said that “there are parts of China that are higher risk.”

Carney’s remarks ignore extensive and consistent documentation of state-imposed forced labor involving Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in China’s supply chains, including cotton, automotive, solar, and critical minerals. The United Nations, Human Rights Watch, and others have for several years reported on crimes against humanity by Chinese authorities in the Xinjiang region.

Carney’s comments also divert from past Canadian government statements expressing concern at forced labor in Xinjiang. In January 2021, Canada’s Global Affairs Ministry issued an advisory warning businesses of forced labor risks there.

[...]

Carney’s government [...] has so far failed to adequately enforce legislation blocking products made with forced labor and has not acted on a proposed supply chain due diligence law modeled in part on legislation in the European Union.

[...]

As Prime Minister Carney takes Canada forward in a multipolar world, he should make clear that Canada’s foreign and trade policy will be grounded in human rights, including by unequivocally condemning Uyghur forced labor.

[...]

7

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53108988

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s unwillingness to condemn forced labor in China risks reducing pressure on the Chinese government to end its repression of ethnic Uyghurs.

Responding to Member of Parliament Michael Ma’s comments casting doubts on reports of forced labor in China, Carney told the media on March 30 that Canada “takes issues of forced labor and child labor incredibly seriously.” But when asked directly whether forced labor is present in China, Carney said that “there are parts of China that are higher risk.”

Carney’s remarks ignore extensive and consistent documentation of state-imposed forced labor involving Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in China’s supply chains, including cotton, automotive, solar, and critical minerals. The United Nations, Human Rights Watch, and others have for several years reported on crimes against humanity by Chinese authorities in the Xinjiang region.

Carney’s comments also divert from past Canadian government statements expressing concern at forced labor in Xinjiang. In January 2021, Canada’s Global Affairs Ministry issued an advisory warning businesses of forced labor risks there.

[...]

Carney’s government [...] has so far failed to adequately enforce legislation blocking products made with forced labor and has not acted on a proposed supply chain due diligence law modeled in part on legislation in the European Union.

[...]

As Prime Minister Carney takes Canada forward in a multipolar world, he should make clear that Canada’s foreign and trade policy will be grounded in human rights, including by unequivocally condemning Uyghur forced labor.

[...]

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 11 points 1 month ago

That was my first thought, too. But as the article also says,

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has also said that Ukraine is ready to help protect Gulf countries from the Iranian regime, but is asking them to help Ukraine in return.

If all sides are willing, they will find a way I hope.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 14 points 2 months ago

This is not a 'trend' but a controlled influence campaign by the Chinese party-state.

"As a Chinese person who has been online throughout years and years of heavy Sinophobia, it felt refreshing to have the mainstream opinion finally shift regarding China," Claire, a Chinese-Canadian TikTok user, tells BBC Chinese.

There has been no "heavy sinophobia" but reports that were and still are critical about the Chinese government. Nor does the mainstream opinion now shift as people are still if not even more aware of Beijing's atrocities. This is just an influencer saying something like that for money, and I would like to know who pays her.

The article itself says later:

[Chinese state media and the government] have sought to portray the US as a decaying superpower because of inequality, a weak social safety net and a broken healthcare system. According to a commentary in state-owned Xinhua, the "kill line" meme "underscores how far the lived reality can drift from the ideals once broadcast to the world".

And:

It's little wonder that Chinese authorities are pleased with Chinamaxxing [...] Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said [...] he was "happy" to see foreigners experiencing the "everyday life of ordinary Chinese people".

Sure, they are pleased. They control the entire campaign on social media.

As the article says at the end:

It's hard to know what Chinese people make of so many things because all public conversation and activity is heavily policed. Criticising the government is risky and protests are quickly quashed.

Tere is a lot the memes making it to the West don't show. China's youth are facing an unemployment rate that sits at more than 15% and burning out from a gruelling work culture, yet sharing too much of their pessimism online could alert internet censors. They are worried about finding a home as the country's property crisis continues, and dating is no easier than anywhere else.

Yes, and there is a lot more what is not displayed on Chinese social media given the state's censorship.

The headline and the article are highly misleading imo. This is pure Chinese Communist Party propaganda.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 12 points 3 months ago

China's one-child policy has many issue caused by the government, and there are many consequences unique to this Chinese policy and that the article doesn't contain, such as unrecognised children in China’s post one-child policy landscape:

... Although gender may seem to be a less obvious element of China’s one-child policy, it was a crucial component. Not only did this cultural gender preference cause a large demographic imbalance between boys and girls, but it also led to phenomena like mass adoptions and even infanticides of baby girls. The government has also occasionally contributed to unethical and extreme measures by carrying out forced abortions and sterilisations in order to make families comply with the policy ...

The one-child policy, which reigned in the country for more than 30 years, has also resulted in the development of an entire generation of children—who are now also adults —that do not appear in Chinese state records. People who fall into this group are popularly called “Heihaizi“, China’s “black children” who could not obtain a hukou— an official household registration. Such children were primarily second-born or later children who, upon birth, had no recognized right to exist due to this family planning policy ...

Even in the case that families would want to regularize their Heihaizi’s administrative status and obtain a hukou registration, the cost to do so is often too prohibitive for them. This aspect has additionally highlighted economic and social disparities, as wealthier and more affluent families have been able to circumvent the norm by paying the fee for a hukou.

Not registered Heihaizi, therefore, end up being forced to stay away from society and even public spaces, spending most of their time confined to exclusively familiar spaces ...

This is devastating and absolutely incomparable in its cruelty to any other country afaik.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 15 points 4 months ago

This is by far not the only such story. Many NGOs such as Safeguard Defenders, a human rights organization focusing on China, provide deep insights in China's transnational repression, for example in its Transnational Repression Reporting Guide.

As the article also says, China is ramping up its collective punishment of families:

... China’s CCP pressured the 70-year-old father of activist Yang Zhanqing’s to get his son to stop his rights work. After Yang, who lives in exile in the US, refused, his aged father lost his job and his home.

“Activists get used to this [CCP harassment] after being subjected to it so many times, but for people like my father, to them it’s like the world is ending,” says Yang.

Former miner Dong Jianbiao paid the ultimate price.

In 2022, he died in prison, his bruised body covered in blood. Police rushed through the cremation, forbidding the family their request for an autopsy.

The CCP punished Dong because his daughter splashed ink over a poster of Xi Jinping in 2018. She has since disappeared into the black hole of China’s illegal psychiatric detentions ...

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 11 points 7 months ago

@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world

There is ample evidence for forced organ harvesting in China. Despite new regulations introduced by Beijing in the mid-2010s, the rapid expansion of China’s transplant industry is very questionable, according to a scientific investigation by Robertson et al. The study also provides useful insights into this Chinese practice.

The UN also said it "received credible information that detainees from ethnic, linguistic or religious minorities may be forcibly subjected to blood tests and organ examinations such as ultrasound and x-rays, without their informed consent [...]".

“Forced organ harvesting in China appears to be targeting specific ethnic, linguistic or religious minorities held in detention, often without being explained the reasons for arrest or given arrest warrants, at different locations,” they said. “We are deeply concerned by reports of discriminatory treatment of the prisoners or detainees based on their ethnicity and religion or belief.

Michael Nguyen, a researcher from the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics in California, discusses China's organ donation system after it was officially established in 2013:

Within a two-year period, China reported donations from 2766 individuals, with 7785 transplants performed in 2015. These dramatic increases in donors and transplantations seem implausible given the low rate of deceased organ donation (3.9 deceased donors per million people) and a low willingness to donate (47.45% of the general public). These findings prompted suspicions that unethical organ procurement continues to supply the ever-growing demand for organs.

You'll easily find more information on this issue form very reliable sources.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 23 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Putin and Xi discuss immortality, while forced transplants remain a problem in China

[...] activist groups contend that despite the adoption of new regulations, organ transplants from prisoners or members of certain ethnic groups will continue, and will certainly not put an end to transplant tourism in China.

As recent as 2021, United Nations human rights experts expressed concern about reports of “organ harvesting” from specific groups, including Falun Gong practitioners, who have long been persecuted by Beijing, and members of ethnic and religious minorities, such as “Uyghurs, Tibetans, Muslims and Christians, in detention in China.”

In a statement, UN rapporteurs reported that “experts said they have received credible information that detainees from ethnic, linguistic or religious minorities may be forcibly subjected to blood tests and organ examinations such as ultrasound and X-rays, without their informed consent; while other prisoners are not required to undergo such examinations. The results of the examinations are reportedly registered in a database of living organ sources that facilitates organ allocation.” [...]

Addition:

Killing prisoners for transplants: Forced organ harvesting in China

[...] Organ transplantation is a life-saving therapy for millions of patients and one of the greatest successes of modern medicine. However, a limited supply of donor organs, paired with a massive demand for transplants, has fuelled the global organ trafficking industry which exploits poor, underprivileged and persecuted members of society as a source of organs to be purchased by wealthy transplant tourists.

Although this practice occurs in many countries, the situation in China is particularly concerning. China is the only country in the world to have an industrial-scale organ trafficking practice that harvests organs from executed prisoners of conscience. This practice is known as forced organ harvesting.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 16 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

This comes from the Russian government.

Senior lawmaker Vladimir Gutenev, who also heads the State Duma’s Industry and Trade Committee, recently urged Russians to prepare for “regular and necessary” internet shutdowns.

“We’re used to paying with cards or smartphones and having constant connectivity,” he said. “But now it’s important to accept temporary restrictions as a necessity.”

You can look it up yourself - in Russia and elsewhere - using the [Shutdown Tracker Optimization Project](Shutdown Tracker Optimization Project):

According to Russian internet monitoring project Na Svyazi, authorities shut down the internet more than 650 times in June alone, most frequently in the cities of Nizhny Novgorod, Saratov, Tula, Omsk, and Rostov.

There is ample evidence that the Russian government frequently shuts down the internet, and this is said not by some media but the Kremlin itself.

Addition:

Mapping Russia’s Internet blackouts: The Russian authorities keep shutting down mobile Internet. Here’s where it happens most, and how the outages are spreading.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 11 points 9 months ago

This is a very weird framing of this study. The original study (which is linked in the article) is in German. Those who don't speak German will find a useful translation provider, I provide the study's summary literal translation:

>Young people: EU and democracy are good, but reforms are needed

  • 57% prefer democracy to any other form of government - 39% think that the EU does not function particularly democratically
  • Young Europeans want change - 53% criticize the EU for being too preoccupied with trivialities instead of focusing on the essentials
  • Cost of living, defense against external threats and better conditions for businesses should be priorities for the EU
  • Only 42% think that the EU is one of the three most powerful global political players

Among others, the study also says (again, a direct translation, I am not paraphrasing):

48% of young Europeans believe that democracy in their country is under threat, compared to 61% in Germany. Two thirds rate their country's membership of the EU as positive. At the same time, 53% of young people criticize the fact that the EU is too often concerned with minor issues. Half of 16 to 26-year-olds think the EU is a good idea, but very poorly implemented.

I don't say that everything is perfect, but the whole study paints a completely different picture than this article - and especially its headline - appears to suggest.

[Edit my comments for clarity, translation has not been edited.]

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 10 points 1 year ago

Amazing how this thread illustrates how many tankie alt accounts are here on Beehaw already.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 16 points 1 year ago

You might have (intentionally?) misunderstood the content.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 12 points 1 year ago

Germany says 'blackmail' of Ukraine will bring more war

Germany's foreign minister Annalena Baerbock says Europe must put pressure on the US to stand by its European allies and warned against forcing Kyiv to surrender [...] Baerbock's statements were similar to those of other European leaders discussing how to approach likely changes to transatlantic relations during Trump's second term.

[-] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 19 points 1 year ago

Judge keeps Musk's DOGE from further digging into US Gov's spending

Citing potential “irreparable harm,” US Federal Judge Paul A. Engelmayer Saturday blocked Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) from accessing specific records within the Treasury Department, thus acquiescing to a request from New York Attorney General Letitia James and 19 States under Democratic rule.

The plaintiffs contended Musk's team accessing this data could pose risks to cybersecurity and violate federal law by potentially mishandling or exposing sensitive personal and financial information of millions of Americans.

Engelmayer also ruled that any data already accessed by DOGE must be destroyed immediately. This injunction is in place until at least February 14, 2025, when further arguments involving national security, privacy rights, and political motivations, will be heard.

view more: next ›

Hotznplotzn

joined 1 year ago