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China using 'predictive policing' in Xinjiang region: HRW
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Feb 27, 2018

Brutal Argentine 'Dirty War' ex-general Menendez dies at 90
Buenos Aires (AFP) Feb 27, 2018 - Luciano Benjamin Menendez, a general of Argentina's "Dirty War" dictatorship era so brutal he was sentenced to prison 14 times, died on Tuesday, the official Telam news agency reported. He was 90.

Known by nicknames like "the Hyena" and "Jackal," Menendez ran the infamous La Perla concentration camp, where thousands of opponents of the 1976-1983 military regime were tortured. Executions were routine at the site, surviving witnesses said.

Some 30,000 people disappeared -- presumably killed -- under Argentina's military regime, according to human rights groups.

Menendez headed the III Army Corps based in the industrial city of Cordoba, Argentina's second most populous city and at the time a center of labor unrest.

The late general was so hardlined he dismissed other generals like the late dictator Jorge Rafael Videla as "soft" on the opposition.

"There was never any illegal repression," he told judges at one of his trials, showing no sign of remorse for his crimes.

Menendez and other regime officials accused of human rights violations faced a wave of lawsuits when a blanket amnesty for dictatorship-era officials was fully rescinded in 2005.

At the time of his death, Menendez had been sentenced to prison in 14 cases -- 13 of them to life behind bars -- and awaited the start of a 15th trial.

Telam reported that Menendez died of liver disease at a Cordoba military hospital.

"Unlike his victims, we know the time and place of his death, and his family could bid him farewell," the group HIJOS, representing children of dictatorship-era victims, said in a social media posting.

HIJOS noted that Menendez had been sentenced to a life in a common prison, "the only place for a supporter of genocide."

Chinese authorities are using big data and predictive computing power to flag and detain individuals deemed threatening in the western Xinjiang region, Human Rights Watch said Tuesday.

According to the New York-based rights group, Xinjiang authorities are collating vast troves of information on individuals, often without their knowledge, and using this to identify targets to check up on.

The Xinjiang region has a mostly Muslim Uighur population, which has struggled with increasingly strict curbs on their faith, including bans on beards and public prayers.

"For the first time, we are able to demonstrate that the Chinese government's use of big data and predictive policing not only blatantly violates privacy rights, but also enables officials to arbitrarily detain people," Maya Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch (HRW), said in a statement.

"People in Xinjiang can't resist or challenge the increasingly intrusive scrutiny of their daily lives because most don't even know about this 'black box' program or how it works."

The data are collected under the "Integrated Joint Operations Platform," which pools information from individuals' bank records, legal past, computer details and other sources including security camera footage, HRW said.

According to people HRW interviewed, some of those targeted are detained and sent to extralegal "political education centers" where they are held indefinitely without charge or trial.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has led a sweeping crackdown on civil society since taking power in 2012, targeting everyone from human rights lawyers to celebrity gossip bloggers.

Xi's enactment of regulations such as the national security law established legal bases for the government's tightening grip, formalizing de facto restrictions that had long been in place.

The officially atheist authorities say the restrictions and heavy police presence in Xinjiang are intended to control the spread of Islamic extremism and separatist movements, but analysts warn that Xinjiang is becoming an open air prison.


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THE STANS
Iraq extends air blockade of Kurdistan by three months
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Feb 26, 2018
Iraq has extended by three months a ban on international flights to the autonomous Kurdish region, a senior official at Arbil airport in the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan said on Monday. The federal government in Baghdad first imposed the air blockade in September after Iraqi Kurdistan voted overwhelmingly for independence in a non-binding referendum rejected as illegal by the central government. It was extended in December for two months and was to run until February 28 but the authorities decided ... read more

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