Georges St. Pierre Officially Retires, Says He’s ‘Thankful’ to Go out on Top

Tim Daniels@TimDanielsBRTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistFebruary 21, 2019
NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 04:  Georges St-Pierre of Canada celebrates after defeating Michael Bisping of England in their UFC middleweight championship bout during the UFC 217 event inside Madison Square Garden on November 4, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

MMA legend Georges St-Pierre officially announced his retirement Thursday after a career highlighted by UFC welterweight and middleweight championship reigns.

“In combat sports, you should retire on top,” he told reporters. “I’m thankful I get to do that.”

Ariel Helwani @arielhelwani

GSP says goodbye. https://t.co/BOMQM0sOsq

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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Antuanetta Mischenko: Ukraine’s protest pianist remembers Maidan

Antuanetta remembers when she climbed on top of a burned bus and sat down at a yellow and blue piano.

The 21-year-old was playing a concert, held in front of a barricade in central Kiev during the Euromaidan protests five years ago.  On one side of her stood crowds of protesters, many of whom had camped out for months in the square, and on the other were special police forces, whose shields formed a stark line.

People’s breath fogged in the freezing air. It was early February and the days brought snow and temperatures below -20 degrees Celsius.

She had chosen to play Chopin’s Etude Number 12, a classical music piece known as the Revolutionary Etude. She struck the first descending notes of the piece and began to play, her bright red boot pressing the foot pedal, her hands skimming across the keys.

Suddenly, there was a loud noise. From behind the police line, loudspeakers began to blast a Russian pop song. It tried to drown out her playing, but she did not stop.

“It was like fighting [or] boxing for me,” she recalls now. “I decided that if they want to fight with bad music, I must fight with them with my classical music.”

And she continued on.

Police vs the people

When Antuanetta was younger, playing piano was as much a part of her routine as showering or sleeping.

She began at five years old and had her first solo performance at seven. She played through all of school and into adulthood; at the time of Ukraine‘s 2014 uprising, she was teaching piano and studying at the National Music Academy of Ukraine, the most prominent music school in the country.

But she was not sure that it was really what she wanted to do.

“It wasn’t like my parents told me you must … but it was like if you do something every day, like wash your hair … you don’t think ‘won’t you wash hair or [not]’,” she says. “You just have to wash your hair, you have to eat, you have to sleep, and it was like I had to play piano.”

Antuanetta began playing piano as a child and later studied at the Petro Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Her academy’s white-columned building looked on to Kiev’s Maidan Nezalezhnosti, or Independence Square, and from there she watched protests unfold in November 2013.

Thousands of people, mainly students, gathered to protest against then-President President Viktor Yanukovich‘s decision to withdraw from a potential EU trade agreement in exchange for closer ties with Russia.

Antuanetta was at home in the early morning on November 30, when the government ordered roughly 500 special police to the square. They forcefully removed the protesters.

It was in response to this crackdown that the Euromaidan protests began. In the following days, hundreds of thousands of people occupied the square, calling for an end to government corruption and the resignation of Yanukovich.

‘A little country in our great country’

The square quickly became an organized settlement, with volunteers running centres that catered to the needs of demonstrators as they camped out for months along the streets, providing everything from food to medicine to clothes. A mainstage in the square offered entertainment and political speeches, and the streets leading into the square were barricaded and defended by voluntary soldiers.

“It was like a state, like a little country in our great country,” Antuanetta says.

In December, Antuanetta began going to the square after a friend convinced her to come. She was not sure what she could do to help, but was willing to try. Her worry had grown over the days, wondering what would unfold and what the future of her country would be.

People like music, people understand it, and when they could hear melodies which they know, it helps them feel like one person … It gives [us] our power.

Antuanetta Mishchenko

On Maidan, she spotted a piano. It was painted blue and yellow, its wooden frame exposed to the harsh weather.

Men were carrying it towards the barricade, perhaps to use as defence against the government’s forces. She was shocked, and asked them to stop. She did not know what she would do with the piano, only that she did not want to see it ruined, and they relented.

She decided to try playing for people, but did not anticipate the effect that her music would have. She chose Chopin’s Etude Number 4, and a group of protesters and journalists gathered around her. The song was quick and emotional. The crowd listened, and when she finished they asked her to play again.

She continued to play for about two hours before she told the audience that she needed a break to eat and get warm. An hour later she returned and, to her surprise, there were people waiting for her.

Hundreds of thousands of people occupied Kiev’s Independence Square to demand an end to corruption and the resignation of then-president Viktor Yanukovich [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Day and night on Maidan

She ended up playing on Maidan every day and night until February.

She played everything from folk songs to classical music to the national anthem. People would listen, sing together and talk to each other, and she received chocolates and flowers in appreciation.

For her, Ukraine has always had a strong tradition of music. Folk songs have long served as a symbol of national identity and woven themselves into the country’s classical music, which has been both shaped by and used in defiance of past Russian influences.

“People like music, people understand it, and when they could hear melodies which they know, it helps them feel like one person,” she says. “It gives [us] our power.”

It was through playing that she realised her purpose. “I saw that my music can help people and that I can speak and talk about important things from my music and from piano,” she says.

Protesters and special police repeatedly clashed during the protests [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Over the months, Euromaidan demonstrators and officials held negotiations and life continued in the square, with tensions tightening and relaxing.

In January 2014, the government passed a law that restricted free speech, banned protests and broadened government powers – it was soon after revoked, but incensed crowds.

“Those days were like a culmination,” Antuanetta says.

The concert held on top of the bus would be one of the last peaceful actions, taking place just 10 days before the most violent day of Euromaidan, in which crowds were shot at by special police from rooftops, and at least 80 people were killed.

When Antuanetta played on top of the bus, she was not scared. She had visited the barricade before, where sandbags and debris were piled up in defence.

She cannot remember the faces of the policemen when she played, or rather, she could not see them. “I have bad eyes and I didn’t have glasses, so I just didn’t see their faces,” she says laughing. “Maybe I wasn’t scared because I didn’t see anything!”

It was important for her that her 12-year-old student also play because she wanted to show the police that they meant peace, and that their demonstration had a place for people of all ages, young and old, as they asked for a better future for their country.

Her fear only came to her once she went home that night. It was not enough for her to hear about Maidan from the news; she felt like she needed to be there. She was worried about what would happen next.

‘After Maidan, I understood, I am a classical pianist’

Now at age 26, Antuanetta still works at a children’s music school and is a full-time concert pianist, travelling for performances and competitions throughout Europe and to the US and Singapore. She uses her music for social work, giving voluntary concerts or working with young musicians.

Last year, she played a two-hour concert in the coastal city of Odessa, and she thinks that people came because of her role in the protests.

“It was not so important for them what I play but it was important for them that I will play,” she says.

She has found what she wants in music, she plays Ukrainian songs as much as possible when she travels and loves introducing classical music to younger generations.

“I want to do music, not for professional people, but … for … people who don’t know who Beethoven is for example or … Tchaikovsky,” she says. “When I was young, I thought maybe I want to be a singer or a composer, or maybe, I want to be a fashion designer. And after Maidan, I understood that, yes, I am a classical pianist, and yes, I can help people, and yes, I want to do it till the end of my life.”

Several pianos were located on Maidan and were played in peaceful protest during Ukraine’s 2014 uprising [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Other cities have also placed pianos in their central squares, and people sent Antuanetta photos of their local piano. She says the piano grew more popular, with more folk musicians and pop or rock stars using them in their concerts. Classical music has become fashionable, as people remember when they were young and went to music school themselves.

“When I saw it, I was so happy and so proud that piano was something very important not only on Maidan and not only part of this political situation, but very important [in our] culture.”

Antuanetta does not know what happened to the pianos that were played during Euromaidan. There were several of them throughout the square; one found its home in the Maidan Museum in Kiev, and she believes that two were destroyed in the conflict.

Five years on, she still feels anxious passing Hrushevskoho Street, where the barricade was set up. It was the site of many clashes – by the end of Euromaidan, at least one hundred protesters and more than a dozen police were killed.

At concerts today, Antuanetta still plays Chopin’s Etude Number 12, the Revolutionary Etude, and a song that she composed during the protests. She had played them the most in the cold winter air on Maidan, and they continue to live with her.

“I play it not at every concert but I think at every second concert,” she says. “[After] five years, I think I can play it with closed eyes.”

Antuanetta now uses her music for social work, hoping to bring classical music to younger generations, and Ukranian music to the world [Courtesy: Kira Kuznetsova]

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Jussie Smollett Turns Himself In After Being Charged With Making A False Police Report



Gary Gershoff/WireImage

In late January, Empire actor and activist Jussie Smollett was hospitalized following a reported homophobic and racist hate crime in Chicago. Now, just a little over three weeks later, Smollett has turned himself in after being charged with making a false police report, AP reports.

Smollett’s charge came in on Wednesday (February 20), and Smollett reportedly surrendered to police early Thursday morning. If convicted, he could face up to three years in prison and potentially be forced to pay for the cost of the investigation into his reported assault.

At a press conference Thursday morning, Chicago Police Chief Eddie Johnson called the reported attack “shameful” and a “publicity stunt” arranged because Smollett was “dissatisfied with his salary” on the show.

Details of Smollett’s attack — where two men apparently shouted slurs at him, beat him up, poured a chemical substance on him, and left him with a noose around his neck — were horrific. Less than a week after leaving the hospital, Smollett returned to the stage at the Troubadour in Los Angeles for a concert performance surrounded by a support system of family and fans. “I’m not fully healed yet but I’m going to,” he said from the stage. “I’m gonna stand strong with y’all.”

As investigators probed into the case, they identified two brothers who apparently knew Smollett — one of whom had appeared as an extra on Empire — and who told police Smollett hired them to coordinate a false attack, The New York Times reports.

Last week, the actor appeared on Good Morning America to address the incident as well as those who doubted his tale. “I’m pissed off,” he said. “It’s the attackers, but it’s also the attacks. … I have to acknowledge the lies, and the hate. And it feels like if I had said it was a Muslim, or a Mexican, or someone black [who attacked me], I feel like the doubters would have supported me much more. A lot more. And that says a lot about the place that we are in our country right now.”

Smollett’s attorneys released a statement saying that their client “enjoys the presumption of innocence, particularly when there has been an investigation like this one where information, both true and false, has been repeatedly leaked.”

We can all take action to stop racism and homophobia. To learn more about issues affecting the LGBTQ community, head to lgbt.mtv.com

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‘Billionaire’s son’ Bobby Misner knows YouTube doesn’t like him

Bobby Misner knows people don’t like him, and he is more than OK with it — he’s still raking in views. 

The 23-year-old YouTuber went viral in late 2018 when his video “LIFE of a BILLIONAIRE’S SON” became the subject of popular reaction vloggers. It’s something between a travel vlog and a movie trailer, flaunting a rich kid’s glamorous, privileged life across yachts on tropical beaches and helipads in major cities. Hate him as much as you want, but the video has more than 4.6 million views and Bobby now has 188,000 subscribers. 

SEE ALSO: YouTuber perfectly parodies pretentious Genius videos

Here’s the TL;DR so you don’t have to watch all eight minutes and 31 seconds of millennial flexing: Bobby was born into a financially comfortably family in Australia, but it all changed when he was 15, because his father sold his company for $300 million. From there, he bounced between schools, partied with celebrities, and lived the life of the nouveau riche. 

“I’ve always hated that how just because someone is born into a family of wealth, people automatically label them as a spoiled brat,” Bobby said in the video, bizarrely lit so that he appeared like a disembodied head. “Yes, my dad has a private jet. And I love flying it. Yes, my dad has a mansion and cars, and I love making videos with them.” 

It’s difficult to take anyone seriously when they list “fast cars and beautiful girls” as their major interests. Bobby comes off as incredibly out of touch throughout the video — he even pulls the classic, “I’m not rich, my parents are!” while bragging about attending a party with Kate Moss.

“But I never pretended that those things were something I owned,” Bobby’s floating head continued in the video. “And I recognize that my dad is the one who worked hard for them.” 

Can someone really be so oblivious, though? During a FaceTime call with Mashable, Bobby clarified that it was mostly an act to catch views.

“Basically I see ‘Bobby’ as a character,” the real Bobby said, calling from London. He bounces between cities, and is currently looking to set up a base in Los Angeles. “My name on paper is Robert. Realistically, no one’s portraying themselves, everyone pretends they’re on holiday the whole time, doing these nice things. If I’m gonna do that, I might as well create a character who … lives in this dream world.”

‘I feel like a lot of people think that from that video, I’m living this ridiculously lavish lifestyle but I’m actually quite a simple boy.’

He has a point. In a twisted way, it’s refreshing to see a YouTuber who doesn’t rely on being relatable to build an army of subscribers. If anything, he’s the embodiment of everything unattainable but highly desired in this capitalist hell. As much a dick as he appears in his videos, Bobby is surprisingly self aware — he notes that he isn’t “disadvantaged in any way,” and clarifies that he is in fact “a really down to earth guy.” 

At times, Bobby does seem like he gets how most people actually live. In a recent Instagram story, he complained about paying $43 for cucumber Juul pods. During the FaceTime call, he notably opted for traditional (wired!) earbuds over the current meme marker of wealth, Airpods. 

“I don’t necessarily wake up and drink champagne or something,” Bobby laughed. “I feel like a lot of people think that from that video, I’m living this ridiculously lavish lifestyle but I’m actually quite a simple boy.” 

But then again, it’s hard to believe that when he captions his Instagram photos with “Money is the drug and I’m a junkie.” He even uploaded a video that’s a cross between a flex and a manifesto called “RICH KID’S rule book to WEALTH,” instructing his followers to avoid getting scammed by “keeping your friend circle tight and small.” 

“When there’s someone like me, who has everything and everything appears to be perfect, it’s prime,” he responded when questioned about being the subject of scathing reaction videos. “It’s easy to hate on me because you can.” 

It really is too easy to hate on him, because he seems so stuck in his own world. Search “billionaire’s son” on YouTube, and you’re sure to find titles with his name adjacent to spoiled, arrogant, and cringe.

“It sounds so weird to brag about something your dad did,” YouTuber Danny Gonzalez joked in a reaction video. “My dad started bringing really pretty girls around. My dad has a really good work ethic. And I was also there.” 

It’s clear that Bobby idolizes his father, School of Audio Engineering (SAE) founder Tom Misner. The institute has private, for-profit college campuses worldwide and was sold in 2010. He talks about the elder Misner reverently in his vlogs, and his IMDb bio says he’s “learnt the most important aspects of life from his father, and that is to follow your dreams and work hard at attaining them.” 

His father still bankrolls Bobby’s lifestyle, to an extent. Bobby receives “an allowance” from his old man, but “it’s nowhere what people think.” He noted that he now makes more money than what his father gives him.

“My dad knows how to do it, right,” Bobby said during the call, explaining his channel’s goal. “I’m not gotta sit here and tell people, ‘I know how to make you millions.’ I don’t know. I’ll just tell you certain philosophies and stuff that I go by, but what I can tell people that when you’re here, living this life, there are things that I know.” 

He doesn’t believe that other YouTubers put in the same amount of effort into making a video that he does. In a subtle dig to the Vlog Squad’s style of quick cuts and daily video diaries, Bobby said other vloggers will “just use iMovie and put together some stuff from a day and be like, ‘This is it,” while his videos involve higher production quality. 

“Longevity is much more important to me than clout,” Bobby said. “Each video I put out, I want to watch it myself.” 

Even if it means being YouTube’s most arrogant influencer — maybe even usurping the Paul brothers from their asshole throne — Bobby is committed to his channel. While other YouTubers strive to be personable, Bobby does the opposite, basking in surreal luxury. He derides the more “authentic” social media stars who FaceTune their photos, perfect themselves with makeup, and then “tell you to be secure in yourself.” 

“I’m quite narcissistic,” Bobby concludes at the end of our call. He says this with like it’s a fact of life instead of a brag. “I like myself. I like the life I live and I’ll tell you straight up in my videos. As long as you’re honest about that, your viewers — even if they don’t like you — will feel like you’re telling the truth and they’ll follow your story.”

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Trailer for Elton John biopic ‘Rocketman’ is glitzy perfection: Watch

Lovers of Bohemian Rhapsody, rejoice — another larger-than-life rock bio-pic is headed our way. 

Rocketman, directed by Dexter Fletcher and written by Lee Hall, tells the story of Elton John’s meteoric rise to international fame beginning in the late 1960s. Star Taron Egerton of Kingmans: The Secret Service and Robin Hood portrays the glitzy, glamorous, and unspeakably talented John.

Born Reginald Dwight, a small-town boy with dreams of songwriting, John completely transformed himself to become the pop icon whom audiences know and love today. Rocketman aims to tell this story as “a fantasy musical,” bringing trippy new life to John’s most celebrated hits. 

Rocketman is in theaters May 31.

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Jim Boeheim Struck, Killed Man Walking Outside Vehicle on Interstate

Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim looks on during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Notre Dame Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019, in South Bend, Ind. Syracuse won 72-62. (AP Photo/Robert Franklin)

Robert Franklin/Associated Press

Syracuse head men’s basketball coach Jim Boeheim reportedly struck and killed a man with his vehicle on Interstate 690 in Syracuse, New York, late Wednesday night.

According to Douglas Dowty and Sarah Moses Buckshot of Syracuse.com, Boeheim’s car struck the man after he exited his vehicle following an unrelated crash.

In a statement provided to Kennedy Rose of the Daily Orange, Syracuse police said 51-year-old Jorge Jimenez was killed:

Kennedy Rose @KennedyRose001

BREAKING: Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim hits, kills pedestrian in fatal crash https://t.co/xmqi3wtkGh

Boeheim had no alcohol in his system and was released after being questioned by police. Police have also said Boeheim will not be charged at this time, per Kennedy Rose of the Daily Orange.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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World’s largest bee rediscovered and now you might never sleep again

In January 2019, a clan of scientists and conservationists tramped through the torrid Indonesian forest in search of the Wallace’s giant bee — a species that hadn’t been spotted alive since 1981.

“Nobody had seen it since then,” said Robin Moore, a biologist and communications director for the organization Global Wildlife Conservation, which funded the expedition. “It was feared extinct.”

It wasn’t. They found a female. 

The female bee — the larger sex of the species Megachile pluto — is four times the size of the typical European honeybee with a wingspan of 2.5 inches. It’s the largest known bee on the planet. “This is the holy grail of bees,” said Moore. 

An image of a living Wallace’s giant bee compared to a honeybee.

An image of a living Wallace’s giant bee compared to a honeybee.

Image: Clay Bolt

The species is named for Alfred Russel Wallace, the enterprising naturalist who conceived the theory of evolution at the same time as Darwin (though Wallace’s work was largely overshadowed by Darwin’s). In 1858, Wallace ventured into Indonesia and described this extraordinary bee, characterizing it as a “large black wasp-like insect, with immense jaws like a stag-beetle.”

Over the past few decades, dead bodies of the giant bees had been seen on the trade market, said Moore, but it was unknown if the species still existed. Now, Global Wildlife Conservation has the first live footage of the elusive critters, found on the North Moluccas Indonesian islands. 

“This is the holy grail of bees.”

The big pollinators aren’t easy to find. The bees burrow into mounds of soil built by termites, which hang on trees some eight feet off the ground or higher. To sleuth out the bees, the biologists had to find and stare at these mounds for 20 minutes at a time. The team scoured these brown mounds for four days with no luck.

SEE ALSO: George is dead and his species likely extinct. It’s the loss of a ‘crown jewel of evolution.’

“We all internally decided that we weren’t going to find these bees,” Eli Wyman, a Princeton University entomologist and bee expert who took part in the expedition, said in an interview.  

“Sometimes we were certain that large beetles must surely be the bee, other times, we would stare for ages at termite mounds only to move on disappointed, with a growing sense that we’d never discover the creature of our obsession,” added Clay Bolt, a natural history photographer, in a statement. 

But on the expedition’s fifth and final day, the search team passed a low hanging termite mound near the road. “We almost didn’t even stop to look at it,” said Wyman. “That turned out to be the magic nest.”

Photographer Clay Bolt takes the first-ever photos of a living Wallace’s giant bee.

Photographer Clay Bolt takes the first-ever photos of a living Wallace’s giant bee.

Image: Simon robson

“It’s pretty exciting,” Becky Irwin, a biologist who researches plant-pollinator interactions at North Carolina State University, said of the discovery. 

This rare find is especially significant, Irwin added, in light of there being a deluge of bad news about native bee and insect declines. “It’s kind of nice to have a bee that’s been rediscovered,” Irwin, who had no role in the expedition, said. 

Though, Irwin noted that it’s challenging to know how most wild bee populations are doing because many are located in remote places. “We don’t have good records of their population abundance,” she said.

The same can be said of Wallace’s giant bee. “The real status of the bees is still unknown,” said Wyman. The scientists’ next mission is to return and survey their population numbers. If it turns out these giant bees are dwindling, it wouldn’t be a great surprise. 

“They don’t really have any protection,” said Moore. “They are targets for trade.”

A guide examines a termite mound for the large bees.

A guide examines a termite mound for the large bees.

Image: Clay Bolt

As for why these bees are so giant, the jury is still out, said Wyman. It could be a case of island gigantism wherein species isolated on islands grow much larger than their mainland counterparts, sometimes due to a lack of predators. Or it could be that the larger bees were more fit to colonize and survive on a new island. 

Whatever the reason, the bee’s rediscovery illustrates that there are other “fantastical species” still out there that aren’t widely known or haven’t been seen in decades, said Moore. 

Wallace’s giant bee, for its part, lived only in museum collections, enticing curious entomologists to wonder if the creatures Alfred Wallace identified over 160 years ago still buzzed around in these remote humid forests. Until now. 

“As soon as I saw the entrance of the nest, I knew immediately,” Wyman said, referring to his first sight of the fated termite mound. “It was what I had pictured all these years.”

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Hungary ‘starving’ Iraqi migrants detained at border

Hungary has refused to provide food for between four and seven days for asylum seekers whose applications have been rejected prompting the European Court of Human Rights to intervene, a Budapest-based rights group told Al Jazeera on Thursday.

Andras Lederer, the information and advocacy officer at the Hungarian Helsinki Committee (HHC),explained that parents from two Iraqi families were denied food while detained in Hungary’s two transit zones in February. 

HHC is a human rights organisation that is the only group in Hungary to provide high-level legal advice to refugees for free. 

Most recently, two Iraqis were denied food for over four days, up to February 19, Lederer said. The family’s asylum claim was rejected, but their deportation to Iraq has been suspended.

Earlier in February, another two Iraqis were denied food for six-and-a-half days, up to February 14. 

Though the parents of the two families weren’t fed, Lederer said HHC was “very happy” their children received food, but it “shows that theoretically it’s possible to provide food to these people”. 

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) issued emergency orders forcing Hungary to provide food to the Iraqis under Rule 39 (PDF), an interim measure which only applies “where there is an imminent risk of irreparable harm.”

The ruling will be in place as long as they are detained in Hungary’s transit zones. 

‘Alien policing’

EU legislators say ‘yes’ to disciplinary action against Hungary

The Hungarian government, headed by the far-right Fidesz party, has long campaigned against migration, which they view as a threat to “Christian” Europe.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said immigration leads to the “virus of terrorism” when he launched his campaign earlier this month for European Parliament elections to be held in May. 

Orban has faced increasing cricism over his government’s alleged restrictions on academic freedom, media plurality and its stance on refugees. 

Last year, the government amended the country’s Asylum Act and Fundamental Law which allowed for the detention of rejected asylum seekers in two “transit zones” on the border with Serbia. 

These people are held under an “alien policing procedure” creating de facto detention in the transit zones. 

Lederer explained that a government decree from 2007 establishes physical and legal standards for the alien policing procedure. 

However, “there no clear regulation about food provision inside of transit zones in the decree”, he said. “Regarding all other potential sites where this alien policing procedure can be conducted, there are very detailed and clear regulations.”  

Another starvation in the transit zones, another #rule39 emergency order issued by the European Court of Human Rights to #Hungary.

Parents of 6 children did not receive food since last Friday. Family’s asylum application was rejected, their deportation to Iraq is suspended. pic.twitter.com/EDwG9qy8cM

— HunHelsinkiCommittee (@hhc_helsinki) February 19, 2019

It’s not the first time Hungary has denied rejected asylum seekers food. Two Afghan families and a pair of Syrian brothers were among those denied food by Hungarian authorities in August 2018.

The EHCR also issued interim measures in these cases. 

“This disregard for people’s wellbeing smacks of a cynical move to force people to give up their asylum claims and leave Hungary”, Lydia Gall, the Eastern EU and Balkans researcher at HRW, said at the time. 

The Hungarian government has not spoken about the cases and did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment. 

Lederer said the issue will likely continue unless the government decree is changed to include regulations for the transit zones. 

“It’s not an act of parliament,” which would make changing the measure more difficult, he said. “It just needs to be amended.”

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