Tag: protests

  • Wuhan welfare protests escalate as hundreds voice anger over health insurance cuts

    Wuhan welfare protests escalate as hundreds voice anger over health insurance cuts

    [ad_1]

    Crowds of hundreds of older people took to the streets in the Chinese cities of Wuhan and Dalian on Wednesday in escalating protests against changes to the public health insurance system.

    The protests were sparked by cuts to monthly allowances paid to retirees under China’s vast public health insurance system. The changes, gradually introduced since 2021, come as local government finances are strained following years of strict and costly zero-Covid policies.

    On Wednesday, a crowd of demonstrators rallied in front of a park in the central Chinese city of Wuhan for the second time in a week. Video posted on social media showed security guards by the entrance to a popular scenic spot, Zhongshan park, forming a human chain to prevent more demonstrators from entering. Crowds pushed against officers, while some videos showed people singing the “Internationale”. The song, also an anthem of the Chinese Communist party, has been a feature of some recent protests and been used to accuse the party of straying from its origins.

    A separate protest, comprising hundreds of retirees, was also staged outside Wuhan’s city hall. Pictures shared on social media appeared to show local officials meeting some of those demonstrators for negotiations.

    Hundreds of people also rallied on Wednesday morning over the same issue more than 1,200km away, in the north-eastern city of Dalian, a witness confirmed to Agence France-Presse.

    “Give me back my medical insurance money,” the crowd shouted in one video, which the news agency geolocated to the city’s Renmin square, where a number of local government buildings are situated.

    In another video, a large column of police are seen guarding the city government building.

    Total numbers of Wednesday’s protesters ranged from hundreds to thousands, across media reports. At last week’s protests witnesses reported some participants being taken away by police. Local residents at the time said the retirees had threatened to take to the streets again on 15 February unless the government responded immediately.

    According to social media posts collated by a protest monitoring account, some public institutions in central Wuhan were closed for the day on Wednesday. There also appeared to be an increase in the number of community activities organised for the city’s older people, and some residents alleged security officers were preventing them from leaving their residential buildings, citing “public health insurance reasons”.

    “These old people can come out [to protest] not only for themselves but also for future generations,” said one supporter on social media. “Medical and social insurance without a contract is a Ponzi scheme of CCP. If you don’t go on the streets today, your children and grandchildren will become slaves for generations.”

    Another said: “If you reduce the basic living allowance for the people, who would trust the government in the younger generation?”

    The protests in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people, have been exacerbated by the fact that its officials are largely unaffected by the changes, analysts have said.

    “Civil servants and public institution staff are still entitled to subsidised medical assistance insurance on top of the employee health insurance scheme,” political risk consultancy SinoInsider said in a note.

    “Senior and retired CCP (Chinese Communist party) cadres have long had access to generous medical treatments at public expense and without having to pay for basic healthcare insurance.”

    Local governments could “compromise and meet protester demands early” rather than engage in a drawn-out dispute, the firm added.

    On Thursday, China’s state planner and finance ministry announced policies aimed at stimulating spending on housing and unlocking consumer savings that have been built up during the pandemic.

    The announcements, reported by state media, also included measures to help older people, improve childcare services and encourage couples to have more children.

    Localised protests are not rare in China, but a spate of rallies across multiple cities last year with a shared focus on Covid restrictions and their social impact rattled authorities, who worked quickly to shut them down and arrest participants. There was also speculation that the sudden lifting of zero-Covid restrictions just weeks later was also connected to the protests.

    Additional research by Chi Hui Lin

    With Agence France-Presse



    [ad_2]
    #Wuhan #welfare #protests #escalate #hundreds #voice #anger #health #insurance #cuts
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • TMC MP alleges censorship of opposition protests in RS during PM Modi’s speech

    TMC MP alleges censorship of opposition protests in RS during PM Modi’s speech

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: TMC MP Derek O’ Brien on Thursday hit out at the government alleging censorship of the opposition protests in the Rajya Sabha during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s speech in the House.

    Amid sloganeering by opposition members, Modi spoke for about 90 minutes in reply to a debate on a motion thanking the President for her address to a joint sitting of Parliament, and listed various achievements of his government.

    “CENSORSHIP IN #Parliament When PM @narendramodi spoke, no MP from the opposition @AITCofficial @INCIndia @AamAadmiParty @BRSparty @cpimspeak and others were shown exercising their democratic right inside Rajya Sabha. SHAME @sansad_tv Worse than any Emergency of 5 decades ago,” tweeted O’Brien, the leader of the House for TMC in the Rajya Sabha.

    As Modi gave his nearly 90-minute speech on the motion of thanks on President’s address, MPs belonging to the opposition parties raised slogans demanding a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) probe into the Adani issue.

    There were noisy scenes in the Rajya Sabha as Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar tried to bring it in order to start general discussions on the Union Budget for 2023-24.

    “There is a need of immediate enquiry into the world’s biggest scan. We want to get to the bottom of this. You can survive a Parliament session by avoiding answering key questions…but they (questions) won’t go away,” O’Brien said later.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #TMC #alleges #censorship #opposition #protests #Modis #speech

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Protests in Karnataka over Kumaraswamy’s ‘anti-Brahmin’ remarks

    Protests in Karnataka over Kumaraswamy’s ‘anti-Brahmin’ remarks

    [ad_1]

    Bengaluru: Days after Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) leader and former Karnataka Chief Minister H.D. Kumarswamy’s controversial remarks on Union Minister Pralhad Joshi, Brahmin groups on Thursday staged protests at Koppal and Gangavathi, warning that they would tell Brahmins to maintain distance from the JD-S.

    The Brahmin Samaj Youth Association has staged a protest at Ashoka circle in Koppal and Gangavathi cities and demanded an unconditional apology from Kumaraswamy.

    Recent comments on Brahmanism, and on a Brahmin candidate becoming chief minister if the BJP is voted back to power, by Kumaraswamy have sparked a controversy in Karnataka.

    However, Kumaraswamy later clarified that he has no objections if a Brahmin candidate is made the CM.

    ” … but if the party plans to make Pralhad Joshi the chief minister, if the BJP is voted to power, it must declare his candidature before the assembly elections. The main reason for me to mention Pralhad Joshi’s name is not because he is a Brahmin. He belongs to a lineage which has the DNA of the killer of Mahatma Gandhi and ones who attacked Sringeri Mutt. Karnataka Brahmins are well cultured. I don’t have any intention of fixing the BJP party. I have intentions of not letting the people into a fix,” he said.

    “There is a conspiracy to project different faces in the elections to get votes and make a backdoor entry to the post of CM. These conspiracies should not cheat people. That is why I am voicing concerns,” Kumaraswamy said.

    Meanwhile, one of the protesters said: “It is not correct to target the community for politics. The political difference is a personal matter. These statements would create rifts in society.”

    “Kumaraswamy should apologise for this. Otherwise, legal action will be initiated against him. The complaint would be given to the Governor also. The community members will be asked to maintain their distance from the JD-S,” another protestor said.

    [ad_2]
    #Protests #Karnataka #Kumaraswamys #antiBrahmin #remarks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Allegations against Adani: Chhattisgarh Cong protests in front of LIC, SBI offices

    Allegations against Adani: Chhattisgarh Cong protests in front of LIC, SBI offices

    [ad_1]

    Raipur: The ruling Congress in Chhattisgarh on Monday staged protests in front of the Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and State Bank of India (SBI) offices in all the district headquarters across the state in connection with the allegations against the Gautam Adani group and the resultant stock market upheaval.

    Adani group stocks have taken a massive hit after US-based activist short-seller Hindenburg Research made a litany of allegations including fraudulent transactions and share price manipulation. The group has dismissed the charges as lies.

    Opposition parties have alleged the value of shares held in Adani group firms by LIC and leading lender SBI had eroded massively, which they claimed was a setback to taxpayers.

    The protesters sought a joint parliamentary probe into the allegations against the Adani group as well as a white paper on the issue from the Bharatiya Janata Party-led Union government.

    Addressing the gathering outside the Jai Stambh Chowk branch of SBI, Chhattisgarh Congress chief Mohan Markam said the allegations show LIC and SBI made “risky investments” in the Adani group.

    The common man, who has been affected by the stock rout, needs to know who sanctioned such “disproportionate loans” from state entities to the group, Markam said.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Allegations #Adani #Chhattisgarh #Cong #protests #front #LIC #SBI #offices

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Israelis protests for fifth week against Netanyahu government

    Israelis protests for fifth week against Netanyahu government

    [ad_1]

    Jerusalem: Tens of thousands of Israelis demonstrated in several cities to protest the government’s plan to reform the judicial system.

    The largest protest is being held in the coastal city of Tel Aviv, which was attended by thousands of people, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Demonstrators have rallied for five weeks in a row to voice their discontent with the judicial reforms proposed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. They say the reforms will weaken the courts and give the ruling coalition more power.

    “These people (protestors) came to save our country,” said former Prime Minister Yair Lapid at the demonstration in Haifa, northern Israel. “We will fight this in the parliament and the courts … and we will save our country.”

    Netanyahu and his partners say the changes are necessary in order to limit the judicial system’s power, which has become too powerful in recent decades. They also say the supreme court often intervenes in political issues that should be determined by the parliament.

    Netanyahu has vowed to push forward with the reforms despite the protests.

    Netanyahu himself is facing a trial on corruption charges. While he denies any wrongdoing, his opponents say the reforms are personally motivated.

    The reforms include giving the parliament the ability to override supreme court rulings with a simple majority, greater influence for politicians in the appointment of supreme court judges. In addition, legal advisers to ministries will be political appointments instead of civil servants. All could enable Netanyahu to influence the outcome of his own case.

    According to Israeli media reports, doctors and lawyers will stage symbolic strikes next week to protest against the reforms.

    Israel’s tech sector has also staged demonstrations against the plans, claiming they will harm the economy.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

    [ad_2]
    #Israelis #protests #week #Netanyahu #government

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • SL celebrates I-Day amid boycott by Oppn, public protests

    SL celebrates I-Day amid boycott by Oppn, public protests

    [ad_1]

    COLOMBO: Highlighting the gravity of the financial crisis Sri Lanka has been undergoing, President Ranil Wickremesinghe, while addressing the nation on the eve of 75th Independence, said “we have reached the point of destruction.”

    President was addressing the nation following the Independence Day celebrations attended by a large number of foreign dignitaries and envoys but boycotted by all major opposition political parties and the Catholic Churchand amidst public protests against the huge cost that had to be borne for the celebrations.

    The main minority Tamil representative party, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) boycotted the Independence Day celebrations and declared it as a ‘Black Day’.

    The Catholic Church protested against the spending of over $500,000 (200 million in Sri Lanka rupee) for Independence Day while the Indian Ocean island was going through its worst-ever economic crisis. “Sri Lankan citizens have become prisoners of poverty and a brutal dictatorship,” stated the head of the Catholic Church, the Archbishop of Colombo, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith.

    “Politicians have failed to find practical solutions to the crisis. A government that has no money to bring medicine to the country, spends 200 million rupees to celebrate independence with great pride,” the Church leader charged.

    Meanwhile, on Friday night, police violently chased away a group of protestors who staged a Satyagraha against the Independence Day celebrations, and some of them had been arrested. The protestors were a section who led a three-month-long continuous protest from April until former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and the government led by his brother Mahindawere forced to step down.

    However, President Wickremesinghe who took over the reins and managed to control the week-long queues for food, fuel and cooking gas, vowed that he would introduce new political reforms with the aim of taking Sri Lanka to a developed country by 2048, the centenary of the Independence.

    “I’m not attempting to treat the superficial condition with painkillers. But to treat the root cause of the malaise. It is challenging and difficult, but it’s our only option. I know that many of the decisions I have been compelled to take since assuming the presidency have been unpopular. However, because of those decisions, today no citizen of this country will die of dehydration in oil queues. You won’t starve without gas. Not curse without fertilizer,” Wickremesinghe, who runs the country with the Rajapaksa loyalist majority parliament, said.

    “There are those who want to keep perpetuating this wound forever, though I don’t wish. Let’s seek to heal this wound though it’s difficult and painful. If we endure the suffering and pain for a short period of time, we can get the wound healed completely,” Wickremesinghe said referring to the dire situation where people had to face the soaring cost of living and massive tax hikes introduced in January.

    “Today, we are facing an unprecedented economic crisis, hitherto never experienced. Why have we faced such a situation? Who is responsible for such? Let’s be truthful. All of us are more or less responsible for this situation. None of us can point fingers and blame each other. We made mistakes from the beginning. Efforts were made to rectify those mistakes, though it was not possible to correct them completely,” the President confessed.

    Sri Lankan President also announced that measures have been taken to introduce maximum devolution of powers in a unitary state, a promise that had been made to India which intervened to solve the ethnic crisis mainly between the majority Sinhalese and the minority Tamils. In 1987, Indo-Lanka Accord was signed between the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and Lankan President J.R. Jayawardene with a Constitutional amendment devolving power at a Provincial level.

    Wickremesinghe announced the release of Tamil nationally owned lands that were occupied by the military since during the war and the freeing of former Tamil rebel fighters who had been incarcerated for long years, a demand made by Tamil political parties and others.

    Meanwhile, Indian State Minister of External Affairs V. Muraleedharan, who represented India at the Independence celebration, met President Wickremesinghe on Saturday evening and conveyed greetings of Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the 75th Independence Day of Sri Lanka.

    The Indian Minister also appreciated the measures taken by the Sri Lankan government to ensure ethnic harmony and also had discussed the implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.

    [ad_2]
    #celebrates #IDay #boycott #Oppn #public #protests

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: ‘Save Waqf Board properties’, ALMMO protests at Dharna Chowk

    Hyderabad: ‘Save Waqf Board properties’, ALMMO protests at Dharna Chowk

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: All India Muslim Minority organization (ALMMO) staged a protest at Dharna Chowk on Friday demanding judicial powers for Waqf Board.

    Members of various Muslim organisations, social activists, and several citizens participated in the protest.

    Protestors accused chief minister K Chandrashekhar Rao of not abiding by his statements given in the Assembly nine years ago.

    They held that the dharna was to remind the CM of the promises made in his manifesto nine years ago.

    Saving the Waqf properties is the motive behind the protest, a protestor said.

    They further added that the Muslim minorities have been betrayed in terms of their rights and that the state government should hand over the waqf properties to underprivileged Muslims only.

    Chairman of Deccan Waqf Protection Society, Osman Hajiri said that the state government had earlier promised the judicial powers to be given to Waqf Board. “However, the promise remains unfilled,” he added.

    He said that Waqf land encroachments have been going on for ages, but prime properties of the Waqf like that of the Hussain sha wali Dargah, which is worth around one lakh crore, have been lost though it was under the favor of the board after an argument in Telangana High Court.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Save #Waqf #Board #properties #ALMMO #protests #Dharna #Chowk

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Iran: WhatsApp, Instagram to remain blocked after Mahsa Amini protests

    Iran: WhatsApp, Instagram to remain blocked after Mahsa Amini protests

    [ad_1]

    Tehran: The Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi announced on Wednesday that the government will continue to restrict access to social media networks— Instagram and WhatsApp, which have been blocked for months due to the protest movement.

    The Iranian authorities imposed strict restrictions on the Internet and social networks, after protests erupted following the death of Mahsa Amini, in mid-September, three days after she was arrested by the morality police.

    Raisi said on the country’s national television on Tuesday evening that these two platforms owned by the American internet giant Meta, “were the root of insecurity in the country during the recent riots,” AFP reported.

    “The two platforms will only be allowed to operate if they have a legal representative in the country who is responsible for their users’ activities,” the president said.

    According to NetBlocks, the current restrictions are the most severe since 2019, when Iran cut off all Internet access in response to fuel protests.

    Protests in Iran continues

    Iran has been witnessing protests since the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, on September 16, after she was arrested in Tehran by the morality police on suspicion of not respecting the country’s dress code.

    The demonstrations involved people from all walks of life and different sects in Iran after Amini’s killing.

    Iranian women are at the fore in the demonstrations, in which many young people participate, to chants of “Woman life freedom” and “Death to the dictator.”

    The protests represent one of the country’s boldest challenges since the 1979 revolution.

    [ad_2]
    #Iran #WhatsApp #Instagram #remain #blocked #Mahsa #Amini #protests

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Turkey won’t approve Sweden’s NATO bid as long as Quran-burning protests continue’

    ‘Turkey won’t approve Sweden’s NATO bid as long as Quran-burning protests continue’

    [ad_1]

    Ankara: Turkey will not approve Sweden’s bid to join NATO as long as it continues to allow Quran-burning protests, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, adding that his country looks positively on Finland’s application for membership of the military alliance.

    “Sweden! Don’t even bother to try. We cannot say ‘yes’ to your joining NATO as long as you continue to allow burning and tearing of my sacred book, the Quran,” Erdogan said in an address to Parliament on Wednesday.

    “Our view on Finland is positive, but not for Sweden,” he added.

    Ankara’s backlash against Stockholm’s NATO bid comes after the latter’s permission for recent protests involving Quran burning in the Nordic country, as well as the issue of extradition of people affiliated with anti-Turkey groups.

    The Swedish police allowed a protest in which a far-right politician burned a copy of the Quran outside the Turkish Embassy in Stockholm in January.

    Sweden and Finland submitted their formal requests to join NATO in May 2022, which were initially opposed by Turkey, an alliance member, citing their support for anti-Ankara Kurdish organisations and political dissidents.

    A month later, Turkey, Sweden and Finland reached a memorandum of understanding (MoU) ahead of the NATO summit held in Madrid.

    Under the MoU, Turkey agreed to lift its veto on the NATO bids by Finland and Sweden, which in return pledged to support Ankara’s fight against terrorism and address its “pending deportation or extradition requests of terror suspects expeditiously and thoroughly”.

    The Turkish parliament has not ratified the Nordic countries’ NATO bids so far, citing that they have yet to meet Ankara’s requests.

    [ad_2]
    #Turkey #wont #approve #Swedens #NATO #bid #long #Quranburning #protests #continue

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Renowned Iranian filmmaker banned from travel for supporting protests

    Renowned Iranian filmmaker banned from travel for supporting protests

    [ad_1]

    Tehran: The Iranian authorities imposed a travel ban on the well-known filmmaker Masoud Kimiai, after he expressed his support for the protests that have been sweeping the Islamic Republic for months.

    The Independent Filmmakers Association of Iran announced that Masoud Kimiai was planning to leave Iran on Sunday evening to attend the Rotterdam film festival in the Netherlands, but the security officials prevented him from leaving Iran.

    The filmmaker was due to travel to the Netherlands to screen his latest film, “Killing a Traitor”, a historical melodrama set in Iran in the 1950s.

    Since beginning of nationwide protests in Iran from September 2022, the government of Islamic Republic has banned many actors and people involved in Iranian cinema from leaving the country.

    On October 14, Iranian filmmaker Mani Haghighi had his passport confiscated at the airport as he was about to board a flight to attend the BFI London Film Festival.

    On November 11, Bahram Radan, a well-known actor of Iranian cinema, published a video on his Instagram page and announced that he was banned from leaving.

    Since September 16, the Islamic Republic has witnessed protests following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, three days after she was arrested by the morality police for not adhering to strict dress codes.

    Dozens, including members of the security forces, died on the sidelines of the protests, of which women are an essential part. The authorities announced the arrest of hundreds of protesters for their involvement in protests.



    [ad_2]
    #Renowned #Iranian #filmmaker #banned #travel #supporting #protests

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )