Time March 16–23, 2020
TheBrief News
NEWS
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Migrant death
after Turkey
opens border
A child died after a boat
carrying 48 people
capsized off the Greek
island of Lesbos on
March 2. It was the first
reported death since
Turkey announced
it was opening its
borders with Europe to
migrants on Feb. 29,
resulting in a huge
increase in people
attempting to get from
there to Greece.
U.S. seeks
new fees from
immigrants
Under a proposed
Executive Office for
Immigration Review
regulation released
Feb. 27, it could cost
immigrants nearly
$1,000 to fight
deportation in court—
nearly 10 times the
previous amount. The
rule would also charge
asylum seekers a $
court fee, with waiver
applications available
for those who can’t pay.
Netanyahu
tops Israel’s
election
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
claimed victory over
centrist rival Benny
Gantz in Israel’s
general election
on March 2, the
country’s third in less
than a year. Results
suggested Netanyahu’s
conservative Likud
party failed to win an
outright majority, but
he called it a “victory
against all odds.”
TRAIL OF DESTRUCTION Fallen trees and other debris covers buildings in northern downtown
Nashville after a tornado ripped through the city and surrounding area in the early hours of
March 3. At least 24 people were killed across four counties, including several children—making
it the second-deadliest tornado in Tennessee history. Dozens of structures, including homes and
churches, collapsed during the storm, and disrupted power lines cut electricity for 50,000 buildings.
Surrounded by Smoldering houSeS
and burned cars in northeast New Delhi,
Mohammed Efaz said he would never return
to India’s capital. “We will never come back
here to live among Hindus,” Efaz told TIME
as he loaded his small truck, preparing to
flee to his home village after riots in Delhi
left at least 47 people, mostly Muslims, dead
in late February. “The divide between Hin-
dus and Muslims is unbridgeable now.”
MEAN STREETS Beginning Feb. 23 and
lasting several days, the riots were a
bloody milestone after six years of Hindu-
nationalist rule. Since winning re-election
with a huge majority in May, Prime Minis-
ter Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) has pushed policies that critics say put
Muslims at risk, including a controversial
citizenship law in December that sparked
months of protests. The Delhi riots began
after a local Hindu- nationalist politician
called for Muslim protesters to be cleared
from the streets, but many observers said
the febrile climate made violence inevitable.
MOB RULE Some Hindus were also killed,
but it quickly emerged that Modi’s BJP and
the Delhi police force his government over-
sees had quietly supported the mobs tar-
geting Muslims; rioters chanted slogans,
burned buildings and beat Muslims as po-
lice reportedly looked on. “They have tacit
permission, and probably also protection,”
says Thomas Blom Hansen, a scholar of
Hindu nationalism at Stanford University.
Modi condemned the violence three days
after it began, but experts say that while the
BJP claimed noninvolvement, its rhetoric
and policies were responsible.
BURNED BRIDGES Muslims, who make up
some 15% of India’s population to Hindus’
79%, fear not only more violence but also
continued government persecution. Before
driving away with his wife and son, Efaz
had no doubt who was to blame. “The BJP
has won in its battle to paint all Muslims as
traitors,” he said. “This is what the Hindu
nationalists wanted.” —billy Perrigo/
london and Sameer yaSir/delhi
THE BULLETIN
After Delhi violence, Muslims
in India fear what’s next
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