News
Four men sentenced to life
A court in Tanzania’s capital has sentenced four men to life imprisonment for the gang rape and sodomy of a girl under the age of 18 in a case which caused outrage in the country.
Among the convicts are Clinton Damas, a soldier with the Tanzania People’s Defence Force, and Praygod Mushi, a prison officer.
The other two convicts are Nickson Jackson and Amin Lema.
In addition to the life sentences, the four men have each been ordered to pay 1m shillings ($370; £275) to the victim.
A fifth suspect – a senior policewoman suspected of ordering the sex attack – is to be tried separately in October.
The case has triggered shockwaves in Tanzania, which is a highly conservative society.
Outside the Dodoma Resident Magistrate’s Court on Monday, the men’s defence lawyer, Godfrey Wasonga, said they were dissatisfied with the ruling, claiming that some legal provisions had been violated.
But several activists, celebrities, and human rights defenders have praised the court’s judgment on social media.
A video of the gang-rape began circulating online in August, and soon afterwards police urged the public not to forward the footage so as “to avoid torturing the victim and her family”.
The East African nation is struggling to deal with a surge in gender-based violence, with many cases going unreported, according to local media.
“Ignoring these issues will only lead to their increased occurrence in our society,” warned the Legal and Human Rights Centre last month.
In recent weeks a police commander, Theopista Mallya, was removed from her post following controversial comments in which she linked the victim to sex work.
Additional reporting by Wycliffe Muia and Natasha Booty
News
Ford Shifts Gears With New Promise: No More “Boring” Cars
Changing It Up
Ford is shifting its focus to models like the Mustang, Bronco, and Raptor—vehicles that CEO Jim Farley sees as central to the company’s future.
The Puma, currently a small petrol car, will also be transformed into a fully electric vehicle, despite Ford scaling back its commitment to sell only electric cars in Europe.
Ford’s new electric vehicles, including the Capri and Explorer, will use the same platform as Volkswagen’s ID series, with the company hoping customers will embrace the transition.
Farley also hinted that Ford is setting its sights high, aiming to compete with brands like Porsche, with the Mustang playing a more aggressive role in the sports car market.
Declining Sales
Despite these bold moves, Ford has been experiencing declining sales.
The company’s sales dropped nearly 17% in July 2023 compared to the previous year, and Ford has already exited certain markets, such as Denmark.
This decision to invest heavily in SUVs for Europe may be risky, especially since hatchbacks like the Dacia Sandero and Volkswagen Golf continue to dominate the sales charts.
However, Ford remains committed to reshaping its image and focusing on cars that make a lasting impact.
Business
23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki rules out third-party takeover offers
23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki rules out third-party takeover offers
Money
Get two tickets to The Dungeons, and save up to £53
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The London Dungeon
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To do this, we have introduced a ticket price to allow you to get the dates you really want, but we promise that with our price guarantee you will not find cheaper tickets anywhere else!
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4.Once you hit Book, a unique booking code will appear on the Sun Savers app or website. Copy your unique booking code and click the book button again, this will direct you to the Sun Superdays The Dungeons website where you can book your tickets. You must claim your unique code by Wednesday, October 30. And book your tickets by midnight on Wednesday, November 20, 2024.
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Terms and Conditions:
18+ UK only (exc. IoM & CI). Multiple code collect 05/10/24-17/10/24. 2 tickets per household, all bookings to be made in pairs. Non-transferable & non refundable. Subject to availability, daily allocation limits apply (53,410 total tickets available, incl. 7,100 no cost tickets, remaining tickets from £5 (based on an adult ticket to The Blackpool Tower Dungeon) – £25 per ticket). Online access required. Saving against advanced adult online prices and varies per date. Dates and periods are subject to change without notice until 31/03/25. Saving correct at time of send. The Dungeon experience varies across locations. Savings, pricing and allocation vary by attraction. For full T&Cs see sunsavers.co.uk.
The Dungeons may not be suitable for people of a nervous disposition. Recommended child age is 12+ and under 5’s are not permitted
News
Israel confirms launch of ‘limited’ ground operation in Lebanon
The Israeli military said it had begun a “limited, localised” operation against Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon, opening a new front in its war against the militant group.
In a brief announcement released Tuesday, it said it was striking Hezbollah targets in areas close to the Israeli border, and that air force and artillery units were carrying out attacks to support the ground forces.
It gave no details on how long the operation would last but said the army had been training and preparing for months.
“A few hours ago, the IDF began limited, localised and targeted ground raids,” it said. “These targets are located in villages close to the border and pose an immediate threat to Israeli communities in northern Israel.”
Earlier, US officials said Israel had launched small ground raids against Hezbollah and sealed off communities along its northern border on Monday as Israeli artillery pounded southern Lebanon.
State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said Israel informed the US about the raids, which he said were described as “limited operations focused on Hezbollah infrastructure near the border”.
Israel declared the areas around the communities of Metula, Misgav Am, and Kfar Giladi in its north, near the border with Lebanon, as a closed military zone.
Meanwhile, Lebanese army troops withdrew from positions along the country’s border with Israel by 5km, a security source told Reuters.
The army has historically stayed on the sidelines of major conflicts with Israel. In the last year of hostilities, it has not joined Hezbollah in firing over the southern border.
Heavy shelling was reported in the Lebanese towns of Marjayoun, Khiam and Wazzani, near the southern border.
At least two Israeli strikes also hit Beirut’s southern suburbs, with a Reuters reporter seeing a flash of light and hearing a loud blast about an hour after the IDF had warned residents to evacuate areas near buildings it said contained Hezbollah infrastructure.
At least 95 people were killed and 172 wounded in Israeli strikes on Lebanon’s southern regions, the eastern Bekaa Valley, and Beirut in the past 24 hours, Lebanon’s health ministry said early on Tuesday.
The IDF and Hezbollah – an ally of Hamas – have exchanged fire almost every day since the war in Gaza began, displacing tens of thousands of people in both Israel and Lebanon.
Israel says it will continue to strike Hezbollah until it is safe for about 60,000 evacuated Israelis to return to their homes near the border, while Hezbollah has promised to keep firing rockets into Israel until there is a ceasefire in Gaza.
Hezbollah vowed on Monday to keep fighting after its longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah and a series of other top officials were recently wiped out by Israeli strikes.
In the first address by a senior commander since Nasrallah’s death on Friday, the militia’s deputy chief Naim Kassem said the “resistance forces are ready for a ground engagement”.
He said Hezbollah had continued to fire rockets as deep as 150km (93 miles) into Israeli territory.
“We know that the battle may be long,” he said. “We will win as we won in the liberation of 2006,” he added, referring to the last big conflict between the two foes.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Hezbollah’s main backer, Iran, that “there is nowhere we will not go to protect our people and protect our country”.
In a three-minute video clip in English that he addressed to the Iranian people, he accused their government of plunging the Middle East “deeper into war” at the expense of its own people, whom it was bringing “closer to the abyss”.
Israeli strikes in recent weeks have hit what the military says are thousands of militant targets across large parts of Lebanon.
Over 1,000 people have been killed in Lebanon in the past two weeks, nearly a quarter of them women and children, according to the Health Ministry.
Earlier on Monday, an airstrike hit a residential building in central Beirut, killing three Palestinian militants, as Israel appeared to send a message that no part of Lebanon is out of bounds.
US President Joe Biden called for a ceasefire once again on Monday.
“I’m more worried than you might know and I’m comfortable with them stopping,” he told reporters when asked if he was comfortable with Israeli plans for a cross-border incursion. “We should have a ceasefire now.”
Foreign Secretary David Lammy echoed Biden’s call for ceasefire and urged Britons to leave Lebanon, describing the situation as “volatile” and with the “potential to deteriorate quickly”.
The UK Government has chartered a flight out of Lebanon for Britons seeking safety amid fears of a wider conflict.
British nationals and their spouses, partners and children under 18 are eligible for the flight, and those who are vulnerable will be prioritised.
Mr Lammy chaired a ministerial meeting of the Cobra emergency committee on Monday to discuss the crisis.
There are an estimated 5,000 British citizens in Lebanon and the Government says it is working on “all contingency options”.
Business
Xi Jinping is worried about the economy
China’s sputtering economy has its worried leaders pulling out all the stops.
They have unveiled stimulus measures, offered rare cash handouts, held a surprise meeting to kickstart growth and tried to shake up an ailing property market with a raft of decisions – they did all of this in the last week.
What is less clear is how the slowdown has affected ordinary Chinese people, whose expectations and frustrations are often heavily censored.
But two new pieces of research offer some insight. The first, a survey of Chinese attitudes towards the economy, found that people were growing pessimistic and disillusioned about their prospects. The second is a record of protests, both physical and online, that noted a rise in incidents driven by economic grievances.
Although far from complete, the picture neverthless provides a rare glimpse into the current economic climate, and how Chinese people feel about their future.
Beyond the crisis in real estate, steep public debt and rising unemployment have hit savings and spending. The world’s second-largest economy may miss its own growth target – 5% – this year.
That is sobering for the Chinese Communist Party. Explosive growth turned China into a global power, and stable prosperity was the carrot offered by a repressive regime that would never loosen its grip on the stick.
Bullish to bleak
The slowdown hit as the pandemic ended, partly driven by three years of sudden and complete lockdowns, which strangled economic activity.
And that contrast between the years before and after the pandemic is evident in the research by American professors Martin Whyte of Harvard University and Scott Rozelle of Stanford University’s Center on China’s Economy.
They conducted their surveys in 2004 and 2009, before Xi Jinping became China’s leader, and during his rule in 2014 and 2023. The sample sizes varied, ranging between 3,000 and 7,500.
In 2004, nearly 60% of the respondents said their families’ economic situation had improved over the past five years – and just as many of them felt optimistic about the next five years.
The figures jumped in 2009 and 2014 – with 72.4% and 76.5% respectively saying things had improved, while 68.8% and 73% were hopeful about the future.
However in 2023, only 38.8% felt life had got better for their families. And less than half – about 47% – believed things would improve over the next five years.
Meanwhile, the proportion of those who felt pessimistic about the future rose, from just 2.3% in 2004 to 16% in 2023.
While the surveys were of a nationally representative sample aged 20 to 60, getting access to a broad range of opinions is a challenge in authoritarian China.
Respondents were from 29 Chinese provinces and administrative regions, but Xinjiang and parts of Tibet were excluded – Mr Whyte said it was “a combination of extra costs due to remote locations and political sensitivity”. Home to ethnic minorities, these tightly controlled areas in the north-west have long bristled under Beijing’s rule.
Those who were not willing to speak their minds did not participate in the survey, the researchers said. Those who did shared their views when they were told it was for academic purposes, and would remain confidential.
Their anxieties are reflected in the choices that are being made by many young Chinese people. With unemployment on the rise, millions of college graduates have been forced to accept low-wage jobs, while others have embraced a “lie flat” attitude, pushing back against relentless work. Still others have opted to be “full-time children”, returning home to their parents because they cannot find a job, or are burnt out.
Analysts believe China’s iron-fisted management of Covid-19 played a big role in undoing people’s optimism.
“[It] was a turning point for many… It reminded everyone of how authoritarian the state was. People felt policed like never before,” said Alfred Wu, an associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore.
Many people were depressed and the subsequent pay cuts “reinforced the confidence crisis,” he added.
Moxi, 38, was one of them. He left his job as a psychiatrist and moved to Dali, a lakeside city in southwestern China now popular with young people who want a break from high-pressure jobs.
“When I was still a psychiatrist, I didn’t even have the time or energy to think about where my life was heading,” he told the BBC. “There was no room for optimism or pessimism. It was just work.”
Does hard work pay off? Chinese people now say ‘no’
Work, however, no longer seems to signal a promising future, according to the survey.
In 2004, 2009 and 2014, more than six in 10 respondents agreed that “effort is always rewarded” in China. Those disagreed hovered around 15%.
Come 2023, the sentiment flipped. Only 28.3% believed that their hard work would pay off, while a third of them disagreed. The disagreement was strongest among lower-income families, who earned less than 50,000 yuan ($6,989; £5,442) a year.
Chinese people are often told that the years spent studying and chasing degrees will be rewarded with financial success. Part of this expectation has been shaped by a tumultuous history, where people gritted their teeth through the pain of wars and famine, and plodded on.
Chinese leaders, too, have touted such a work ethic. Xi’s Chinese Dream, for example, echoes the American Dream, where hard work and talent pay off. He has urged young people to “eat bitterness”, a Chinese phrase for enduring hardship.
But in 2023, a majority of the respondents in the Whyte and Rozelle study believed people were rich because of the privilege afforded by their families and connections. A decade earlier, respondents had attributed wealth to ability, talent, a good education and hard work.
This is despite Xi’s signature “common prosperity” policy aimed at narrowing the wealth gap, although critics say it has only resulted in a crackdown on businesses.
There are other indicators of discontent, such as an 18% rise in protests in the second quarter of 2024, compared with the same period last year, according to the China Dissent Monitor (CDM).
The study defines protests as any instance when people voice grievances or advance their interests in ways that are in contention with authority – this could happen physically or online. Such episodes, however small, are still telling in China, where even lone protesters are swiftly tracked down and detained.
A least three in four cases are due to economic grievances, said Kevin Slaten, one of the CDM study’s four editors.
Starting in June 2022, the group has documented nearly 6,400 such events so far.
They saw a rise in protests led by rural residents and blue-collar workers over land grabs and low wages, but also noted middle-class citizens organising because of the real estate crisis. Protests by homeowners and construction workers made up 44% of the cases across more than 370 cities.
“This does not immediately mean China’s economy is imploding,” Mr Slaten was quick to stress.
Although, he added, “it is difficult to predict” how such “dissent may accelerate if the economy keeps getting worse”.
How worried is the Communist Party?
Chinese leaders are certainly concerned.
Between August 2023 and Janaury 2024, Beijing stopped releasing youth unemployment figures after they hit a record high. At one point, Chinese officials coined the term “slow employment” to describe those who were taking time to find a job – a separate category, they said, from the jobless.
Censors have been cracking down on any source of financial frustration – vocal online posts are promptly scrubbed, while influencers have been blocked on social media for flaunting luxurious tastes. State media has defended the bans as part of the effort to create a “civilised, healthy and harmonious” environment. More alarming perhaps are reports last week that a top economist, Zhu Hengpeng, has been detained for critcising Xi’s handling of the economy.
The Communist Party tries to control the narrative by “shaping what information people have access to, or what is perceived as negative”, Mr Slaten said.
CDM’s research shows that, despite the level of state control, discontent has fuelled protests – and that will worry Beijing.
In November 2022, a deadly fire – which killed at least 10 people who were not allowed to leave the building during a Covid lockdown – brought thousands onto the streets in different parts of China to protest against crushing zero-Covid policies.
Professors Whyte and Rozelle don’t think their findings suggest “popular anger about… inequality is likely to explode in a social volcano of protest.”
But the economic slowdown has begun to “undermine” the legitimacy the Party has built up through “decades of sustained economic growth and improved living standards”, they write.
The pandemic still haunts many Chinese people, said Yun Zhou, a sociology professor at the University of Michigan. Beijing’s “stringent yet mercurial responses” during the pandemic have heightened people’s insecurity about the future.
And this is particularly visceral among marginalised groups, she added, such as women caught in a “severely discriminatory” labour market and rural residents who have long been excluded from welfare coverage.
Under China’s contentious “hukou” system of household registration, migrant workers in cities are not allowed to use public services, such as enrolling their children in government-run schools.
But young people from cities – like Moxi – have flocked to remote towns, drawn by low rents, picturesque landscapes and greater freedom to chase their dreams.
Moxi is relieved to have found a slower pace of life in Dali. “The number of patients who came to me for depression and anxiety disorders only increased as the economy boomed,” he said, recalling his past work as a psychiatrist.
“There’s a big difference between China doing well, and Chinese people doing well.”
About the data
Whyte, Rozelle and Alisky’s research is based on four sets of academic surveys conducted between 2004 and 2023.
In-person surveys were conducted together with colleagues at Peking University’s Research Center on Contemporary China (RCCC) in 2004, 2009 and 2014. Participants ranged in age from 18-70 and came from 29 provinces. Tibet and Xingiang were excluded.
In 2023, three rounds of online surveys, at the end of the second, third and fourth quarters, were conducted by the Survey and Research Centre for China Household Finance (CHFS) at Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu, China. Participants ranged in age from 20-60.
The same questions were used in all surveys. To make responses comparable across all four years, the researchers excluded participants aged 18-19 and 61-70 and reweighted all answers to be nationally representative. All surveys contain a margin of error.
The study has been accepted for publication by The China Journal and is expected to be published in 2025.
Researchers for the China Dissent Monitor (CDM) have collected data on “dissent events” across China since June 2022 from a variety of non-government sources including news reports, social media platforms operating in the country and civil society organisations.
Dissent events are defined as instances where a person or persons use public and non-official means of expressing their dissatisfaction. Each event is highly visible and also subject to or at risk of government response, through physical repression or censorship.
These can include viral social media posts, demonstrations, banner drops and strikes, among others. Many events are difficult to independently verify.
Charts by Pilar Tomas of the BBC News Data Journalism Team
Money
Exact age Brits spend the most on pets as bills rise to £936-a-year for essentials
GEN Z and millennial pet owners are spending the most on their four-legged friends – splashing out £936 on all the essentials each year.
A study of 2,000 cat and dog owners found those aged between 18 and 34 spend £78 each month on their furry companions – well above the national average of £64.
While older pet owners aged 45 and over are much more frugal – forking out just £52 every month, and £623 over the course of a year.
Toys (17 per cent) are among the biggest expenses for young pet owners – compared to just eight per cent of their older counterparts.
But overall, 47 per cent of all owners want their pets to enjoy their meals and are willing to pay for it – with two thirds of pet spend going on food.
The research was commissioned by Pet Drugs Online to mark the launch of The Top to Tail Report.
Dr Sarah Page-Jones, the retailers’ lead veterinary surgeon, said: “What your pet eats can have a huge impact on their health and wellbeing.
“For example, cats are obligate carnivores, so they can’t get all the nutrients they require from plant-based foods.
“It’s also important to consider your pet’s age, breed and activity levels to allow you to tailor their nutrition to their needs.
“Giving your pet both wet and dry food helps to provide good levels of flavour, nutrition and hydration.”
It also emerged that play (68 per cent), treats (67 per cent) and talking to their pets (67 per cent) are the top ways owners show affection.
And 19 per cent take their dogs on holiday with them.
But while owners were keen to ensure their pets’ happiness, medical treatments were lower on the list of priorities – with 48 per cent admitting they don’t regularly take their pet for check-ups at the vet.
Four in 10 (39 per cent) aren’t frequently treating for fleas, 45 per cent won’t regularly worm their pet, and 58 per cent aren’t providing tick treatment.
And 45 per cent don’t routinely vaccinate their four-legged friends.
Although interest in holistic health treatments is on the rise – with 26 per cent of those polled, via OnePoll, opting for these to better support their pet’s wellbeing.
While the same percentage (26 per cent) also give them supplements.
Dr Sarah Page-Jones added: “Taking your pet to the vet at least once a year can provide a wealth of benefits.
“It allows your pet to receive a general health assessment where any subtle changes may be noticed, ensures you’re up to date with the latest vaccinations, as well as discussing any additional care that may be needed.
“Also, if you’re exploring a holistic approach to your pet’s health, it’s always worth discussing with your vet first hand.”
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