Time - USA (2020-11-02)

(Antfer) #1

11


NEWS


TICKER


Thai pro-
democracy
protests rage

Thailand’s embattled
Prime Minister Prayuth
Chan-ocha vowed to
protect the monarchy
on Oct. 19 after several
days of student-led
protests. For months,
protesters have called
for monarchy reforms,
a new constitution
and Prayuth’s ouster.
Thousands have rallied
in October, despite
dozens of arrests and a
ban on protests.


U.S. to execute
female federal
inmate

The U.S. will carry out
its fi rst execution of a
female federal prisoner
in nearly 70 years, the
Justice Department
announced on Oct. 16.
Lisa Montgomery, 52,
who was convicted
in 2007 of killing a
pregnant woman in
order to kidnap the
baby, is scheduled to
be executed by lethal
injection on Dec. 8.

Khashoggi’s
fi ancée sues
Saudi leader

In a lawsuit fi led in a
U.S. court on Oct. 20,
Hatice Cengiz accused
Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin
Salman of ordering the
murder of her fi ancé,
slain Saudi journalist
Jamal Khashoggi. The
suit, which names 28
other people, could
reveal details about
what happened in the
kingdom’s Istanbul
consulate in 2018.

THE NIGERIAN ARMY AND POLICE SHOT


dead at least 12 peaceful protesters in two
suburbs of Lagos on Oct. 20, an Amnesty
International investigation confi rmed. Au-
thorities disputed the report, though video
footage that had emerged online appeared
to show authorities fi ring live rounds at par-
ticipants in nationwide #endSARS protests
over police brutality, which are calling for
the disbanding of the Special Anti-Robbery
Squad (SARS). U.S. presidential candidate
Joe Biden urged Nigeria to cease the “vio-
lent crackdown on protesters.”

NOTORIOUS FORCE The #endSARS hashtag
dates back at least to 2017, when it was used
to share experiences of assault and violence.
SARS was formed in 1984 to combat an
increase in armed robbery and crime, but
it has been widely accused of abusing its
power. Amnesty reported at least 82 cases
of torture, ill- treatment and extrajudicial
execution from January 2017 to May 2020.
Despite promises of reform, Amnesty says
SARS offi cers still act with impunity.

PROTESTERS’ DEMANDSOn Oct. 11, the
government announced the disbanding of
SARS. This is the fourth time in four years
there has been an announcement of either
the disbanding or the reform of the force,
but activists say the move does not go far
enough. Protesters also demand justice for
the families of victims of police brutality,
retraining of SARS offi cers before they are
redeployed to other police units, and cre-
ation of an independent body to oversee in-
vestigations into police brutality.

CRITICAL MOMENT The protests, organized
via social media, are leaderless, mostly
driven by young people who say they have
been unfairly profi led by SARS offi cers.
Those in the movement don’t plan to stop
the protests anytime soon, expanding their
aims beyond police brutality to harness
frustration over years of corruption and
bad governance. “Something has to give,”
says 28-year-old Jola Ayeye, speaking from
Lagos after the Oct. 20 violence. “We can-
not keep living like this.” —SUYIN HAYNES

THE BULLETIN


Nigeria’s youth rise up
against police brutality

CAT’S OUT OF THE BAG While working on part of the Nazca Lines on Peru’s southern coastal plain,
researchers discovered a 120-ft.-long feline fi gure etched into a hillside, as an image released by the
government on Oct. 15 shows. Ancient communities drew hundreds of geometric shapes in the area
by moving rocks to uncover the sands beneath. Offi cials said the cat art, dated to sometime between
200 B.C. and 100 B.C. and now preserved, “was about to disappear” because of natural erosion.
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