Churches burned down as anger over 'cultural genocide' of indigenous children sweeps Canada









Churches burned down as anger over 'cultural genocide' of indigenous children sweeps Canada
By the time he arrived, the clapboard structure, which had stood on Indigenous Penticton Indian Band lands for a century, had already burned to the ground.
As he sifted through the rubble and ruins the question he kept asking himself was: "How could this have happened - and what would come next?"
The answer, it seemed, was more devastation.
Two hours after the Sacred Heart's fire was reported on June 21, St Gregory's, just 30 miles down the road and also on Indigenous lands, had gone up in flames. A third, St Ann's, followed suit.
Fire chiefs said the timing of the blazes, which began on National Indigenous People’s Day, did not seem coincidental.
No one has claimed responsibility, but the suspected arson attacks came after more than 1,000 unmarked graves believed to hold Indigenous children were discovered at three former schools operated by the Catholic Church.
There were 751 found in western Saskatchewan, and 215 and 182 near two separate schools in British Columbia.
Since then, nearly two dozen more churches across Canada, many of which stood on Indigenous lands, have been anonymously vandalised or reduced to cinders.
Just this week, police responded to yet another "suspicious" blaze at a church in Surrey, British Columbia.
By the time the fire was extinguished, St. George Coptic Orthodox Church was almost entirely demolished and only a single wall was left standing. No one was reported to have been injured.
These incidents are being seen as part of a wider reckoning in Canada over one of its darkest chapters: a century-long forced assimilation programme during which around 150,000 Indigenous children were taken from their families and sent to government-funded residential schools.
Thousands of children are thought to have died from abuse or disease in the schools, which operated until the late 1990s. Many of the schools were run by the Catholic Church.
Canada, which was set up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2008 to investigate the schools, described the practices as “cultural genocide.”
Initially, it was estimated that 4,100 children disappeared from the schools.
Murray Sinclair, an indigenous former judge who led the commission, estimated that the true number could exceed 10,000.
"There is a deep sense of sadness in the hands of our people," Father Obi told The Sunday Telegraph.
He said he did not want to speculate on the cause of the fire at the Sacred Heart, but acknowledged recent events had produced a palpable sense of "anger towards the church."
"We wake up from time to time and hear that another church has burned down.”
He insisted that while "anger makes a lot of noise", it did not reflect how the majority of the country felt.
Both Indigenous people and politicians have condemned the spate of vandalism.
“I understand the anger that’s out there against the federal government, against institutions like the Catholic Church,” said Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
“But I can’t help but think that burning down churches is actually depriving people who are in need of grieving and healing and mourning.”
Some, such as Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, went further, labelling the spate of fires “a violent hate crime targeting the Catholic community".
Cynthia Stirbys, an assistant professor at the University of Windsor who has researched the residential schools, agreed the recent fires did not reflect the values of Indigenous communities.
"We don't really don't know who did that," she said.
But Dr Stirbys, who grew up learning of the horrors her family endured in residential schools, said many Indigenous people were also frustrated that their experiences were only just being acknowledged.
"This amnesia of Canada is making people really upset and there's a lot of anger," she said.
The recent developments have underscored the complexity of the Church's history for many Indigenous people.
Father Obi noted that the Sacred Heart Church, built entirely from wood by the Penticton Indian Band community in 1911, had offered a spiritual home to many living on the First Nation reserve.
For Carrie Allison, an elder from the Upper Similkameen Indian Band in southern British Columbia, the destruction of her local church St Ann's has only served to deepen her trauma.
As a survivor of the former Kamloops Indian residential school, where the remains of 215 children were found in unmarked graves in May, the 90-year-old said she had found joy in St Ann's.
"The church meant so much to all of us," Ms Allison said, including all their ancestors who helped to build it.
They wanted to see their hard work "cherished, not burn to the ground," she added.
But for Dr Stirbys, recovering from the trauma of the past can only be achieved when the Catholic Church is forthcoming about its role in the assimilation programme.
"The church should apologise - because they never have," she said.
Reference: The Telegraph: Rozina Sabur
Dalai Lama’s inner circle listed in Pegasus project data









Dalai Lama’s inner circle listed in Pegasus project data
China’s nearest observation posts are hundreds of miles from Dharamsala, the city in the foothills of the Indian Himalayas that hosts Tibet’s government-in-exile and its highest spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. Still, Tibetans there have often felt closely watched.
Suspected Chinese spies have regularly been detected in the hill station. A decade ago, a digital security specialist watched in disbelief as sensitive files on Tibetan government computers were extracted on the screen before his eyes – activity that led to the unearthing of a massive cyber-espionage network, known as GhostNet, which was largely traced to Chinese servers.
Surveillance technology has evolved, and leaked data points to another possible interest in Tibetan communications – this time from a less obvious source.
The phone numbers of a top ring of advisers around the Dalai Lama are believed to have been selected as those of people of interest by government clients of NSO Group. Analysis strongly indicates that the Indian government was selecting the potential targets.
Other phone numbers apparently selected by Delhi were those of the president of the government-in-exile, Lobsang Sangay, staff in the office of another Buddhist spiritual leader, the Gyalwang Karmapa, and several other activists and clerics who are part of the exiled community in India.
NSO’s Pegasus spyware allows clients to infiltrate phones and extract their calls, messages and location. The selected Tibetans did not make their phones available to confirm whether any hacking was attempted or successful, but technical analysis of 10 other phones on the suspected Indian client list found traces of Pegasus or signs of targeting related to the spyware.
Traces of Pegasus were found on 37 of the 67 phones in the data that were analysed by Amnesty International’s security lab. Of the 48 iPhones examined that had not been reset or replaced since they appeared in the records, 33 carried traces of Pegasus or signs of attempted infection. iPhones log the information that can reveal infection by the spyware.
The data may provide a glimpse at the delicate relationship between Tibet’s exiles and the Indian government, which has provided refuge for the movement since its leaders fled a Chinese crackdown in 1959, while also viewing it as leverage – and sometimes a liability – in its own relationship with Beijing.
The possible scrutiny of Tibetan spiritual and government leaders points to a growing awareness in Delhi, as well as in western capitals, of the strategic importance of Tibet as their relationships with China have grown more tense over the past five years.
It also highlights the growing urgency of the question of who will follow the current Dalai Lama, 86, a globally acclaimed figure whose death is likely to trigger a succession crisis that is already drawing in world powers. Last year the US made it a policy to impose sanctions against any government that interfered with the selection process.
The records suggest Tibetan leaders were first selected in late 2017, in the period before and after the former US president Barack Obama met the Dalai Lama privately on a foreign tour that also included earlier stops in China.
Senior advisers to the Dalai Lama whose numbers appear in the data include Tempa Tsering, the spiritual leader’s long-time envoy to Delhi, and the senior aides Tenzin Taklha and Chhimey Rigzen, as well as Samdhong Rinpoche, the head of the trust that has been tasked with overseeing the selection of the Buddhist leader’s successor.
The Dalai Lama, who has spent the past 18 months isolating in his compound in Dharamsala, is not known to carry a personal phone, according to two sources.
Dalai Lama’s inner circle listed in Pegasus project data
Following the launch of the Pegasus project, India’s IT minister, Ashwini Vaishnaw, said the project’s claims about Indian surveillance were an “attempt to malign Indian democracy and its well-established institutions”. He told parliament: “The presence of a number on the list does not amount to snooping ... there is no factual basis to suggest that use of the data somehow amounts to surveillance.”
India could have several motives for possible spying on Tibetan leaders but some in Dharamsala have concluded the question of succession may be a driving force. Naming successors to the Dalai Lama has sometimes taken years after the death of the title holder, and is usually led by the monk’s senior disciples, who interpret signs that lead them to the child next in line.
But China views the next Dalai Lama as a potential separatist leader who could weaken its authoritarian grip on Tibet. It has claimed the sole right to control the selection process, and analysts say it is already pressuring neighbours such as Nepal and Mongolia to rule out recognising any successor but its own.
Beijing is also contacting influential Buddhist teachers and clerics around the world, including some based in India, inviting them to China to try to lay the groundwork for its choice and muddy support for any candidate chosen by the Dalai Lama’s followers.
These entreaties to Buddhist leaders and other interference in the succession process have been viewed warily by India’s security agencies, who may have sought to closely monitor an issue with huge implications for Delhi’s own relationship with China – but where its direct influence and control is limited.
“India wants to make sure that Tibetans don’t strike a deal with the Chinese that involves the Dalai Lama going back to Tibet,” said a former staffer with the Tibetan administration, who asked not to be named.
Related: Modi accused of treason by opposition over India spyware disclosures
India may also be seeking to monitor continuing informal contact between Chinese officials and Tibetan leaders. The Dalai Lama revealed two years ago that India had vetoed his plans to try to meet Xi Jinping when the Chinese president visited India in 2014.
“The Dalai Lama himself has said several times that he maintains connections to the Chinese leadership through ‘old friends’,” the former Tibetan government staffer said. “India is very aware of this and they want to make sure that no deals are made without their knowing or involvement.”
Delhi officially backs negotiations on the status of Tibet, but a recent Indian thinktank report suggested the country’s intelligence agencies had not always been supportive of the Dalai Lama’s “middle way”, a blueprint to resolve the dispute by recognising Chinese sovereignty over Tibet but granting the province meaningful autonomy.
Other motives for possible monitoring of Tibetan leaders may be more straightforward, including that the Dalai Lama and the community around him are a magnet for sensitive information about Tibet and regularly meet dignitaries from around the world.
“I would assume that India would pay close attention to, for example, western officials coming to Dharamsala – I think they’d want to monitor that in detail,” said Prof Robert Barnett, the former director of the Tibet studies programme at Columbia University. “Perhaps, is the Dalai Lama asking them for asylum? I think that kind of concern would matter a lot to them.”
In multiple statements, NSO said the fact a number appeared on the leaked list was in no way indicative of whether it was selected for surveillance using Pegasus. “The list is not a list of Pegasus targets or potential targets,” the company said. “The numbers in the list are not related to NSO Group in any way.
The Tibetan movement, like other stateless groups, is vulnerable to cyber-attacks but not entirely defenceless. The US government has for more than a decade funded digital security consultants to fortify Tibetan computer networks. Leaders are briefed that any of their devices could be breached at any time and they should act accordingly.
Tibetan leaders closely study security strategies pioneered for other exile and dissident groups, including flooding their phones and emails with confusing and contradictory information, which can tie up intelligence agencies as they try to sift truth from fiction. Other strategies include setting up “minefields”, servers and devices that appear genuine but are actually decoys that feed attackers false information and allow their hacking attempts to be studied.
Reference: The Guardian: Michael Safi
Thai temple says construction of giant Buddha statue visible across Bangkok nearly complete









Thai temple says construction of giant Buddha statue visible across Bangkok nearly complete
A giant golden Thai Buddha that will be visible across Bangkok is nearly complete, chief monks said today. The 230ft-tall golden statue named Phra Buddha Dhammakaya Thepmongkhon started construction in 2017 but its completion date was pushed to 2022 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The copper structure was painted in bright yellow gold so that it glistens in the tropical sunlight while towering as high as a 20-storey building.
Temple spokesman Pisan Sangkapinij said he was pleased with the progress. He said: ‘The statue is already attracting more visitors to the temple and we are expecting many more once Thailand’s borders are reopened to tourists after the pandemic.’
The Buddha was constructed using 16 million dollars worth of donations in honor of Buddhism and as a tribute to their former monk Luang Pu Sodh Candasaro who helped develop the temple as a renowned centre for meditation. Buddhism is the official religion being practiced by more than 95 percent of the population in Thailand as well as neighbouring countries such as Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia.
Reference: Newsflare:
Pope Francis leaves hospital and returns to Vatican after colon surgery









Pope Francis leaves hospital and returns to Vatican after colon surgery
The pope has been discharged from a Rome hospital after he underwent colon surgery.
Pope Francis returned home to the Vatican on Wednesday, 10 days after the procedure.
The 84-year-old had half of his colon removed on July 4 due to a severe narrowing of his large intestine.
It was his first major surgery since he became pope in 2013.
The procedure was planned for when the pope’s audiences are suspended and he would normally be taking time off.
Francis thanked doctors for the success of the operation and offered prayers to others during a visit to Santa Maria Maggiore basilica on his way home, the Vatican said.
The pope traditionally visits the basilica after returning from a foreign trip to pray before an icon of the Virgin Mary.
He sat in the passenger seat of the Ford car which left Rome's Gemelli Polyclinic at about 10.45am.
The car went in a side entrance of the Vatican about an hour later following the detour to the basilica.
The Ford stopped before reaching the gate and Francis got out with the help of a bodyguard.
Vatican spokesman, Matteo Bruni, confirmed Francis' return from the hospital and visit to the basilica.
He said the pope had "expressed his gratitude for the success of his surgery and offered a prayer for all the sick, especially those he had met during his stay in hospital”.
Reference: Evening Standard:
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