Nintendo announces mobile game ‘Dr. Mario World’ for iOS and Android

'Dr. Mario World' is a new game for iOS and Android.
‘Dr. Mario World’ is a new game for iOS and Android.

Image: Nintendo

2016%252f09%252f16%252fe7%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.0f9e7.jpg%252f90x90By Johnny Lieu

Nintendo is releasing yet another game for your phone.

The company is set to release its puzzle game Dr. Mario World for iOS and Android devices sometime during the “early summer” of this year, as per an announcement on Thursday.

SEE ALSO: Meet the kid who paid for college by creating a Roblox game

There’s not a whole lot of detail yet, aside from the fact that the game will be free to download, but as you can expect, it will come with in-app purchases. 

Dr. Mario World will be initially available in 60 countries, and is a co-development with Nintendo, Japanese internet company LINE Corporation, and mobile game developer NHN Entertainment.

The original Dr. Mario was released in 1990 for the Nintendo Entertainment System, and other iterations of the series have since been published on the Nintendo 64, the 3DS, and Wii U.

Dr. Mario World is the latest crack by Nintendo at the mobile games business, which began with Super Mario Run back in 2016. 

Earlier on Thursday, Nintendo announced in its latest quarterly earnings report that Mario Kart Tour, which was slated for release in March, has been delayed until the summer. 

The company said that it pushed back the game’s release to “improve quality of the application and expand the content offerings after launch.”

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Lakers Rumors: LeBron James ‘Open’ to Playing with Kyrie Irving Again

Joseph Zucker@@JosephZuckerTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistFebruary 1, 2019
LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 18: LeBron James #23 and Kyrie Irving #11 of Team LeBron give each other high fives against Team Curry during the NBA All-Star Game as a part of 2018 NBA All-Star Weekend at STAPLES Center on February 18, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

LeBron James is willing to extend an olive branch to Kyrie Irving and reunite with his former teammate, according to The Athletic’s Sam Amick.

Amick spoke to a source who said James is “open to the possibility of playing with Irving again.”

Irving can opt out of his contract and hit free agency this summer.

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

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Some Facebook employees considered quitting over Apple mess

Facebook's mess leads Apple to remind them who's boss.
Facebook’s mess leads Apple to remind them who’s boss.

Image: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

2016%252f09%252f16%252fe7%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.0f9e7.jpg%252f90x90By Johnny Lieu

Facebook’s questionable research tactics has led Apple to remind them who’s boss.

After TechCrunch revealed Facebook misused Apple’s Enterprise Developer Certificate program to spy on consumer phone and web activity through its “Research” app, Apple pulled the plug.

SEE ALSO: Facebook is making more money than ever because nothing matters

Facebook relies on Apple’s program to run internal apps on iOS devices, from simple things like bus schedules to communication tools like Workplace and Messenger.

That led to plenty of frustration within Facebook’s workplace, as employees were unable to get work done due to the shutdown, as reported in the New York Times.

“After Apple’s revocation, employees inside Facebook became furious with the Onavo team, according to four people familiar with the company’s deliberations,” the report read. 

“Some said they would have to wait weeks to get app updates or changes approved through Apple’s App Store. Several employees in Facebook’s hardware division said they were considering quitting because they could not get any work done.”

While Apple has a program for testing apps called TestFlight, Facebook skipped this by asking participants to sideload the “Research” app on their phones. 

Apple’s Enterprise Developer Certificate program gives permission for Facebook to install its apps on iOS devices, and allows for deeper access than usual. The program is intended for companies to distribute in-house apps among employees, and by using it to deliver apps to the public, Facebook broke Apple’s rules.

Apple eventually restored Facebook’s access to its Enterprise Developer Certificate program on Thursday afternoon

Business Insider obtained a leaked memo from Facebook executive Pedro Canahuati, which offers more detail on Apple’s power over the social media giant. The memo, however, stops short of admitting Facebook did wrong.

“Apple’s view is that we violated their terms by sideloading this app, and they decide the rules for their platform, We’ve worked with Apple to address any issues; as a result, our internal apps are back up and running,” the memo reads.

“Our relationship with Apple is really important — many of us use Apple products at work every day, and we rely on iOS for many of our employee apps, so we wouldn’t put that relationship at any risk intentionally.”

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Anthony Davis Trade Rumors: Pelicans Weren’t Interested in Kristaps Porzingis

New York Knicks forward Kristaps Porzingis (6) drives against New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis (23) during the first half of an NBA basketball game in New Orleans, Saturday, Dec. 30, 2017. (AP Photo/Jonathan Bachman)

Jonathan Bachman/Associated Press

The New York Knicks reportedly explored including Kristaps Porzingis in a trade for New Orleans Pelicans big man Anthony Davis, but the Western Conference team was not interested in that move.

A source told ESPN.com’s Ramona Shelburne (h/t colleague Tim MacMahon) that New Orleans was not sure if he would remain with the team long-term, seeing how Porzingis can become a restricted free agent after this season.

Instead, the Knicks announced Thursday they traded Porzingis, Tim Hardaway Jr., Trey Burke and Courtney Lee to Dallas for DeAndre Jordan, Wesley Matthews, Dennis Smith Jr. and two future first-round draft picks.

This comes after Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN.com reported that Davis’ agent, Rich Paul, informed the Pelicans his client does not want to sign long-term with the team and preferred to be traded. Davis can become a free agent following the 2019-20 season and has a player option for 2020-21.

Davis was also fined $50,000 for his representative making a public trade demand while he was still under contract. 

Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports reported the Knicks were among the teams preparing to make New Orleans an offer in the aftermath of that news, and he pointed to Porzingis, Kevin Knox and the potential No. 1 overall pick in the 2019 draft as possible trade chips. However, the Pelicans clearly didn’t value Porzingis enough to pull the trigger on any deal.

MacMahon noted Dallas hopes to re-sign the 23-year-old, who averaged 22.7 points, 6.6 rebounds and 2.4 blocks a night while shooting 39.5 percent from three-point range in 48 games in 2017-18 prior to tearing his ACL.

The Mavericks hope Luka Doncic and Dirk Nowitzki can help them in that regard.

As for the Knicks, they will turn toward free agency and the upcoming draft as they attempt to build a contender after moving on from Porzingis and the contracts of Hardaway and Lee.

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Attacks undermine peace hopes in Philippines after historic vote

Manila, Philippines – Back-to-back explosions at a Roman Catholic cathedral followed by a grenade attack on a mosque last week have swiftly ended the honeymoon for Filipinos celebrating the ratification of the Bangsamoro, a political agreement designed to end decades of violence in the southern Philippines by strengthening self-rule for the country’s Muslim minorities.

The referendum that confirmed the Bangsamoro took place on January 21.

Six days later, the two bomb blasts at the church in Jolo town in Sulu province killed at least 21 people and wounded more than 100 others attending a Sunday service. Three days later, a grenade was thrown on a mosque in Zamboanga city in the middle of the night, killing two people and wounding four.

Sulu and Zamboanga are in the volatile and poverty-ridden Mindanao region in the southern Philippines, where Muslim rebels have been battling the government since the 1970s.

At least 120,000 people have been killed in the fighting.

‘Cowardly and evil’

The national government in Manila denied the attacks had anything to do with the referendum or its result.

But the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which negotiated for the Bangsamoro and is expected to lay down its weapons to govern the area, says the incidents are a challenge to the peace agreement.

Philippines’ Muslim region votes on new autonomy law (2:53)

The Jolo bombing was “nothing but a cowardly and evil attempt to extinguish the hope for peace that we have in the newly ratified Bangsamoro Organic Law”, the group said in a statement.

“The forces of extremism, wherever they may be coming from, are bent to keep us in the cycle of violence, distrust and hatred that we want to put an end to,” it added. 

Philippine authorities, although they initially downplayed a claim of responsibility by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, suspect the Jolo cathedral attack was the work of an ISIL-linked faction of the Abu Sayyaf armed group. 

The Abu Sayyaf, based in Sulu province, is a relatively small organisation notorious for bombings, beheadings and kidnap-for-ransom operations in the southern Philippines and the seas around Malaysia’s Sabah state.

Like the MILF, the Abu Sayyaf is a splinter group from the original Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), the first to rebel and fight the government for an independent state in Mindanao.

But unlike the MILF and the MNLF, the Abu Sayyaf rejects autonomy.

It has also outdone both groups in terms of brutality, which is why the Abu Sayyaf is now widely regarded as mere bandits and pirates – rebels without a cause.

“You have the usual suspects, which is of course the Abu Sayyaf,” security analyst Jose Antonio Custodio told Al Jazeera. “But sometimes these groups do it upon the bidding of other groups that prefer to operate in the shadows.”

Sulu wants out

Aside from rebel groups, as in most parts of the Philippines, several political dynasties wield power in Mindanao. Some of these wealthy and influential clans are known to employ private armies or, in some cases, existing armed groups.

Among the provinces comprising an already existing autonomous region, Sulu is the only one where votes against the Bangsamoro exceeded those for it. Elsewhere in Mindanao, the “yes” vote won by a landslide.

Philippines vows to ‘crush’ attackers after deadly church bombing (2:56)

However, the ratified law does not allow Sulu or any of the existing autonomous provinces to exclude themselves from the Bangsamoro; only those outside can opt in.

Sulu Governor Abdusakur Tan II has formally opposed the Bangsamoro, filing a case at the Supreme Court in October and insisting the autonomy law must include an option for exclusion.

Tan has also questioned the Bangsamoro’s form of government, arguing that the country’s constitution prohibits regional parliaments.

The planned Bangsamoro parliament will distribute power among political parties, district representatives and sectoral groups to diminish the power of the political clans whose feudal-style rule has left the region desperately poor.

‘All-out war’

Whichever groups were responsible for the attacks, the government has decided it’s the Abu Sayyaf they will pursue and punish.

President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the military to wage an “all-out war” to “crush” the group.

Government forces have already resumed air attacks on suspected Abu Sayyaf hideouts in Sulu; the military’s preferred strategy when ground combat is hampered by the difficult and remote terrain.

Delfin Lorenzana, Duterte’s defence secretary, said it was difficult to fight the Abu Sayyaf because people in Sulu, whether out of fear or because they support them, were unlikely to reveal the fighters’ whereabouts.

Some local officials even protect the Abu Sayyaf, Lorenzana added. 

A fresh wave of violence, it seems, is heaping more pressure on the Bangsamoro even before it has begun.

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Facebook isn’t sorry about its shady ‘research’ app

Sorry, not sorry -- Facebook, probably.
Sorry, not sorry — Facebook, probably.

Image: Alexander Koerner/ Getty Images

2016%252f09%252f16%252f8f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888.jpg%252f90x90By Karissa Bell

Facebook may have just been caught spying on teens’ phones under the guise of “market research,” but the company isn’t about to apologize for it.

In a company memo published by Business insider, Facebook’s VP of Production, Engineering, and Security Pedro Canahuati, attempts to explain the company’s ongoing drama with Apple that resulted from news of its “research” app being made public.

SEE ALSO: ‘F*ck ethics. Money is everything’: Facebook employees react to scandal on gossip app

Apple earlier revoked Facebook’s Enterprise Certificate, which allows companies to distribute apps internally outside of its App Store. Thousands of Facebook employees rely on these apps for day-to-day work. On Thursday, Apple granted Facebook a new Enterprise Certificate, but the company now has to rebuild “a few dozen” apps, as Canahuat explained in his memo to employees.

Canahuati also defended Facebook’s research tactics, and implied that the only issue was in how  Facebook’s research methods have been portrayed in the media. 

“This is a market research program that helps us understand consumer behavior and trends to build better mobile products,” Canahuati wrote.

“TechCrunch implied we hid the fact that this is by Facebook – we don’t. People participated in this program with full knowledge that Facebook was sponsoring this research, and were paid for it. They could opt-out at any time.”

Canahuati made no mention of the fact that the “Facebook Research” app was found to be suspiciously similar to Onavo, the Facebook-owned VPN app Apple yanked last year for similarly concerning privacy violations. As for Apple’s decision to pull the company’s Enterprise Certificate, Canahuati chalks it up to a misunderstanding, saying “our relationship with Apple is really important.”

“Apple’s view is that we violated their terms by sideloading this app, and they decide the rules for their platform. Our relationship with Apple is really important — many of us use Apple products at work every day, and we rely on iOS for many of our employee apps, so we wouldn’t put that relationship at any risk intentionally.”

Canahuati isn’t the first Facebook executive to defend the company’s practices. His memo comes one day after COO Sheryl Sandberg also defended the move in an appearance on CNBC.

Facebook couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

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Biggest Snubs from 2019 NBA All-Star Reserves Announcement

0 of 6

    Rick Bowmer/Associated Press

    There are more All-Star-caliber players in the NBA than spots allowed on All-Star rosters. It leads to snubs every year. 

    A handful of deserving names were left off. A few were big producers on weaker teams. Others didn’t have the numbers; rather, they should have earned consideration for their impact on winning rosters.

    There isn’t a wrong answer when choosing the final spots in each conference. And though each of these players qualify as All-Star talents, nobody who made the final cut deserves the boot.

1 of 6

    Howard Simmons/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 19.5 points, 6.4 assists, 44.0 percent FG, 37.6 percent 3PT

    Advanced Metrics: 19.29 PER, 2.95 RPM (No. 29 in NBA)

    Averaging 19.4 points and 6.4 while leading the Brooklyn Nets to a 28-24 start wasn’t enough for D’Angelo Russell.

    A numbers game keeps him off the initial roster, though he’s a good bet to replace injured Victor Oladipo.

    Russell has elevated his game this year, particularly as a lead scorer capable of carrying his team for stretches and fourth quarters. He’s shooting 44.4 percent on his pull-up, which has become one of the game’s deadliest. 

    His assists (6.4) and field-goal percentage (44.0 percent) are up while his turnovers are down (2.8 turnovers, 29.6 minutes). 

    A more efficient overall player, Russell has put up All-Star stats, and they haven’t been empty. 

2 of 6

    Nick Wass/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 19.6 points, 3.7 assists, 48.2 percent FG, 38.8 percent 3PT

    Advanced Metrics: 21.57 PER, 2.96 RPM

    The Philadelphia 76ers have lost just six games with Jimmy Butler active since acquiring him after November 9. 

    He’s a star whose stats have been held in check while playing alongside Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins in Minnesota and then Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid in Philadelphia. 

    Shooting over 47.0 percent from the floor for the third consecutive season, Butler continues to score with efficiency, including around the perimeter (38.8 percent 3PT), while often defending opposing team’s top weapons. 

    He had a case over Khris Middleton, who likely benefited from the Milwaukee Bucks record. 

3 of 6

    Rick Bowmer/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 15.0 points, 12.8 rebounds, 2.2 blocks, 65.0 percent FG

    Advanced Metrics: 24.39 PER, 5.18 RPM

    Fans won’t be happy in Utah, since Rudy Gobert returned a more active scorer and he’s still not an All-Star.

    Gobert himself won’t be happy, either, as ESPN’s Bobby Marks reports that the big man will miss out on a cool million-dollar bonus for not making the league’s unofficial midseason exhibition. 

    Gobert continues to make a case as the league’s top defensive difference-maker, ranking No. 1 in defensive real plus-minus (4.59). Donovan Mitchell has given the Jazz a new dimension of offense, but the team’s identity is still built around Gobert and the league’s No. 5 defense.

    He’s also averaging a career-high 15.0 points, providing Utah’s guards with an elite finishing weapon and clean-up man. 

4 of 6

    LM Otero/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 21.2 points, 7.9 rebounds, 50.3 percent FG, 43.3 percent 3PT

    Advanced Metrics: 19.35 PER, 2.35 RPM

    Having a career year as the No. 1 option for the 28-23 Los Angeles Clippers, Tobias Harris is deserving in a vacuum with an equally-strong case as LaMarcus Aldridge

    He’s developed in an well-rounded, three-level scorer, shooting 43.3 percent from three and 47.6 percent on pull-ups while converting 48.4 percent of his post-ups.

    Harris has evolved, from high-end role player with unlocked potential into lead scorer on a winning team out West. He’s still 26 years old and improving every season. Harris should be coming for the 2020 All-Star game.

5 of 6

    Ringo H.W. Chiu/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 21.2 points, 8.0 assists, 47.9 percent FG, 33.2 percent 3PT

    Advanced Metrics: 19.51 PER, 3.98 RPM

    The New Orleans Pelicans have fallen into lottery territory, which had to have hurt Jrue Holiday’s All-Star chances. 

    He’s been a constant for a team that’s dealt with an Anthony Davis injury and now a trade request. Holiday is having his most productive NBA season, averaging 21.2 points and 8.0 assists while maintaining his status as a reputable, tough defensive player. 

    His 3.98 real plus-minus ranks No. 16 in the NBA, ahead of Damian Lillard‘s, Karl-Anthony Towns’, Russell Westbrook‘s and Kawhi Leonard’s.

6 of 6

    Nick Wass/Associated Press

    2018-19 Per-Game Stats: 15.2 points, 7.0 rebounds, 55.9 percent FG, 32.4 percent 3PT 

    Advanced Metrics: 18.27 PER  3.36 RPM

    From New Mexico State, No. 27 overall and the G League, Pascal Siakam has suddenly emerged as a major-impact player for the No. 2 team in the East. 

    He’s doubled his scoring average to 15.2 points, giving the Toronto Raptors a high-energy rim runner and finisher. But his shooting has been the biggest development, with Siakam having already hit 36 three-pointers.

    He’s evolved, from strictly a weapon around the basket to a big who’ll now step out and make outside shots. 

    His 3.36 RPM ranks No. 23 in the NBA.

    Stats courtesy of NBA.com, ESPN.com

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LeBron James Reportedly to Return from Groin Injury Thursday vs. Clippers

Joseph Zucker@@JosephZuckerTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistFebruary 1, 2019
LOS ANGELES, CA - JANUARY 29:  LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on against the Philadelphia 76ers on January 21, 2019 at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

LeBron James will return to the Los Angeles Lakers‘ lineup for Thursday’s game against the Los Angeles Clippers, according to Yahoo Sports’ Chris Haynes.

James hasn’t played since the Lakers’ Christmas Day win over the Golden State Warriors, as he’s been dealing with a groin strain.

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

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

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Exposed: China’s surveillance of Muslim Uighurs

Zonguldak, Turkey – The Turkish coal-mining town of Zonguldak seems an unlikely place to meet a man who says he’s a Chinese spy, but it’s here where Yusuf Amat arranged to meet us.

Sitting in the lobby of a hotel overlooking the Black Sea, waiting for him to arrive, I wonder what kind of person would agree to inform on neighbours, friends and even family for a government accused by rights groups of carrying out a brutal campaign of mass arrests and detention.

As Amat walks in through the glass door, I almost miss him. Wearing grey overalls, a grey cotton-knit hat and a grey bulky jacket, everything about him – from his clothes to his mannerisms – is unremarkable. 

“Ni hao,” Amat says softly, greeting me in Mandarin as he casts his eyes down and gently shakes my hand.

“Sorry for being late, I just finished my shift at the gas station and had to take a few buses to get here.” 

Uighur Yusuf Amat alleges the Chinese government forced him into spying on his family and friends in Xinjiang and abroad [Jenni Henderson/Al Jazeera]

Amat is Uighur. A Muslim ethnic minority group in China, Uighurs have been the target of a major crackdown by the government in Beijing. A United Nations human rights panel says this has led to up to a million people being incarcerated, in what the Chinese call “re-education centres“.

“My role,” Amat explains,”was to feed information to officials.

“I reported on everything people did – what they ate, drank, what they did in private in their homes, whether it was friends or relatives, I shared it all.”

Amat says his information was sent to authorities.  

What upsets Amat, he says, is that the officials often imprisoned people for “harmless and inconsequential” reasons.

“You could have a long beard, or some religious text on your phone, or maybe you studied abroad or had a long distance phone call with someone overseas. It could all land you in detention.”

101 EAST: China’s Spying Eyes (25:10)

Amat says he began spying in 2012 because officials arrested and tortured his mother, threatening to keep her in detention unless he agreed to work for them.

“From when I was young, I always told myself I would protect my mum. But I didn’t do it. When they took me to see her, my heart was so pained.”

Amat says his handler sent him to also spy abroad, as part of China’s expanding global network of surveillance. From 2012 to 2018, Amat says he was told to infiltrate Uighur communities in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Turkey. He says Beijing has “countless” informants around the world.

“I’m from the small town of Karamay and I’m just one of many my handler deals with. There are dozens of towns the same size throughout Xinjiang, not to mention big cities. And then there are the international operations. So you can imagine how many eyes are out there.”

And Amat says China is getting bolder on the international front, claiming government operatives have abducted Uighurs abroad.

Once back in China, he says, many disappear into the re-education centres.

China’s government denies Uighurs are being arrested arbitrarily and held against their will and says these are “voluntary” vocational training facilities, designed to provide job-training and to stamp out “extremist” tendencies.

Amat says the government is “outright lying” and himself spent a year-and-a-half in a detention centre, having been arrested for trying to fly to the Middle East and join Muslim fighters.

It was while he was serving his sentence that he says authorities recruited him. Once he agreed to be an informant, Amat says he was given the job of cleaning the detention facilities.

His rounds gave him access to many areas of the centre.

“I’ve seen many people being beaten in interrogations inside. At times they used bare electrical cords – which inflict pain beyond what you can imagine. Those who were beaten made horrible shrieks, especially the young ladies my age. What I can’t forget is the blood – human blood on the floor, on the walls, everywhere, afterwards.” 

Al Jazeera spoke to more than a dozen former detainees. Many confirm they either witnessed or were themselves tortured and abused in these centres.  

Uighur Muslim scholar Abduweli Ayup volunteers his time to teach Uighur language and culture to children who have fled Xinjiang with their families [Steve Chao/Al Jazeera]

Abduweli Ayup, a teacher and writer, spent 15 months in three facilities in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang province. On the day of his arrest, he alleges police officers took him to a holding cell and raped him.

“The first day was very bad ,” says Ayup.

“They stripped me of my clothes, slapped my buttocks and then they abused me … more than 20 Chinese guys. The next day, police asked me, ‘One day, if you guys are in power, what will you do to us?’ I said, ‘Look, I’m a human being, I’m not an animal like you’.”

Ayup says in the months that followed, he was regularly beaten by other inmates. Prison guards ignored his calls for help, he adds.

“They want you to be tortured like this. If you’re tortured a lot, it’s easier for you to cooperate with them during the interrogation.”

Ayup says the rape and beatings were orchestrated to get him to admit to being a separatist or a “terrorist”.

“I am a teacher, I am a scholar. I have never thought about these things. I am not a separatist. I am not a terrorist. What do I have to confess?” he asks.

Ayup was jailed for raising money for Uighur schools after Chinese authorities made it illegal for children to learn the Uighur language. 

“They want to delete Uighur. They want Uighurs to believe the Chinese Communist Party is God,” Ayup says.

After being released, Ayup says he feared he would be locked up again, so he fled with his family to Turkey. Uighurs share a long history with the country and thousands have settled there in the last decade.

In Istanbul, Ayup has been documenting the stories of Uighur detainees.  

One of those is Gulbakhar Jaliloua.  

Ayup takes us to meet her at a safe house in the city. Sitting on a couch, she begins to sob uncontrollably as she recounts her experience.

“I was held for one year, three months, 10 days …  I counted every single hour and minute. An hour felt like a year,” she says.

Jaliloua says she was detained in Xinjiang while picking up a shipment for her clothing business. What baffles her about the arrest is that she isn’t even a Chinese citizen. When she told authorities she’s from Kazakhstan, they simply hid her identity, Jaliloua says.

“They gave me a Chinese name and Chinese ID number so the Kazakhstan embassy couldn’t find me.”

Jaliloua recounts how she was crammed into a small cell with up to 35 other women, and then subjected to terrifying interrogations that sometimes lasted 24 hours.  

“They put a black hood on my head, and handcuffs and chains… I couldn’t walk fast with the leg cuffs, so they kept pushing me. When I fell down, they dragged me to the interrogation room.”

Gulbakar Jaliloua is a Muslim Uighur and citizen of Kazakhstan. She says she was detained for more than a year by the Chinese authorities when she made a work trip to China. [Steve Chao/Al Jazeera]

Jaliloua says she and other Muslim inmates were not allowed to pray and they lived in constant fear they would be punished if found to be secretly doing so.

Starved in detention, she lost 30kg, but says her treatment was better than that meted out to Chinese Uighurs.  

“There was this young woman named Patigul … One day, she came back with her hair all messed up … She showed me the right side of her head. It was swollen and bleeding … after a heavy beating.”

Chinese officials categorically deny accusations of abuse and are ignoring growing international calls to shut down the “re-education” centres.  

The government says it will allow UN officials to visit the facilities, so long as they “abide by Chinese law … avoid interfering in domestic matters … and instead take on a neutral and objective attitude”.

Amat says it is no longer possible for him to stay silent on the treatment of his people.

“China thinks what they’re doing is right, but they’re wrong,” he says. “Yes, every country has their own laws, but there is also a universal international standard. And in my eyes they’re seriously violating this standard. Uighurs don’t have a right to our own freedom, to live the way we would like.”

A Uighur man stands in front of a map showing Xinjiang, the Uighur homeland in China that some believe should be the independent state of East Turkestan [Steve Chao/Al Jazeera]

Amat confesses he’s been consumed with guilt for informing on fellow Uighurs. 

“It’s like a painful needing stabbing into me everytime.”

I asked him why he’s decided to share this information now. Amat says he longer has much to lose. Most of his family have been placed in centres, in part, he says, because of his spying.

“My sister, my mother and my brother-in-law, his brothers, their parents, my uncle … they’re all in jail.  They’re all in there.”

Amat says he moved to Zonguldak because few Uighurs live in the town, making it harder for Chinese officials to ask him to spy.  

Now that he’s spoken to media, he says it’s likely he’ll face retribution.

But he says he’s ready.

“This is not just about my immediate family, this is about taking a stand for every Uighur. They’re all my family. My own life doesn’t matter. Whatever happens happens. I’ve lived enough.”

101 East follows the Uighurs’ quest for a safe place to call home. Find more here and join the conversation @AJ101East

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‘Everything stays on the table’: 2020 Dems weigh killing the filibuster


Elizabeth Warren

“Everything stays on the table. You keep it all on the table. Don’t take anything off the table,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said when asked about the fate of the filibuster. | Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images

Congress

White House contenders are debating whether to change Senate rules in order to enact their sweeping agenda.

Democrats have a lot of big ideas if they win back the White House and Congress in 2020. But it’s not clear they are willing to do a key thing needed to implement them: eliminating the filibuster.

Senate Democrats pursuing the White House are split on whether to even consider getting rid of the chamber’s longstanding supermajority requirement. The debate is heating up as the race for the presidential nomination begins and will largely determine whether the party can enact a “Green New Deal,” Medicare-for-All and other top priorities on the left.

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“Everything stays on the table. You keep it all on the table. Don’t take anything off the table,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said when asked about the fate of the filibuster. “That’s a clear answer. You’re not going to have a clearer answer than that.”

Countered Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), another likely presidential contender: “We should not be doing anything to mess with the strength of the filibuster. It’s one of the distinguishing factors of this body. And I think it is good to have the power of the filibuster.”

Democrats hold 47 Senate seats now and have a realistic shot at winning the majority back in 2020, but absolutely no prospect of getting a filibuster-proof 60 seats anytime soon. There are other ways around the 60-vote threshold, but they come with their own drawbacks, leaving the “nuclear option” of unilaterally killing the filibuster as perhaps the only way to advance major progressive changes the next time Democrats have unified control of Washington.

The filibuster has been under constant erosion over the past decade. Yet the legislative filibuster is a third rail in the Senate: The bulk of each party doesn’t want to get rid of the minority’s ability to block legislation, reasoning that over time the filibuster has driven bipartisanship and staved off extreme policy shifts.

But with Democratic candidates beginning to tout a sweeping agenda, the debate is shifting — especially as progressive activists push 2020 candidates to do away with the maneuver.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) spoke of the value of the filibuster in remarks to the liberal Pod Save America last week. However, in an interview on Thursday, she said it was an issue she’s still evaluating.

“It’s a very important question. I want to weigh all the pros and the cons over the next few weeks. I think it’s something that my colleagues will consider heavily,” said Gillibrand, who’s exploring a 2020 run. “Having just lived through being in the minority and how destructive the 51-vote threshold has been for Supreme Court justices, I just want to think long and hard about it.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), another potential White House contender, gave a nearly 30-minute speech on Thursday touting his plans to tax the wealthy. But he wasn’t quite ready to have a debate on how to pass it in the Senate with 41 senators able to block it: “Very good discussion. But not for today, OK? First of all we’ve got to take back [power]. You’re too far ahead.”

Changing the legislative filibuster would be enormously difficult. Many senators in both parties oppose the move, and it would almost certainly have to be done on a party-line basis. It’s also generally considered bad practice to talk about changing the rules in the majority while you’re in the minority: Democrats didn’t even discuss the filibuster at their annual retreat this week, said Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.).

Yet when Senate rules changes are deemed necessary, they can come quickly. Frustrated with the GOP blockade of some of President Barack Obama’s appointees in 2013 and with control of 55 seats, Democrats scuttled the 60-vote threshold on most nominees. Three of their members voted against it, though just one remains in the Senate.

Opposition to killing the legislative filibuster exists across the Senate Democratic spectrum, suggesting any future president would have a ton of work on her or his hands to convince senators to change the fabric of the chamber..

Moderate Democrats like Doug Jones of Alabama and Joe Manchin of West Virginia said in interviews that they’re against it, as did Hawaii liberal Mazie Hirono.

“No, we’d turn into the House,” said Hirono, who added that it was important for the minority to have some say on legislation.

“I think we’ll look at the Senate process,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.). “But I would be surprised if we’ll change the filibuster to eliminate it.”

Any rules change would have to be implemented by Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who as minority leader has opposed such a move.

Yet Democrats admit their ambitions are likely to be limited by the filibuster even if they romp in 2020.

Previously, some Democrats endorsed more modest procedural reforms, like getting rid of the 60-vote threshold to open debate on legislation as well as requiring “talking filibusters” where senators would actually have to hold the floor to block a bill, which they currently don’t have to do.

Once Democrats lost the majority in 2014, the effort fizzled. But most senators believe there’s a slippery slope. After Harry Reid’s Democratic caucus killed the filibuster on most nominees in 2013, Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) gutted it for Supreme Court appointments in 2017. Now he’s mulling a proposal to cut debate time on lower level nominees to limit the use of the filibuster’s delay tactics.

After that, the legislative filibuster is likely to be next on the chopping block, provided one party controls the White House, House and Senate and is ready to take advantage of it.

“I would be shocked if the filibuster sticks around for the entirety of my second term in the Senate,” said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who was re-elected last year. “It is very hard to figure out how you do a major health care reform without changing the rules.”

Murphy said he’s open to changes to the rules but said his party shouldn’t get ahead of themselves: “We’ll win first and worry about how to get stuff done second.”

In fact, that’s not what was happening in the fall of 2016 when it appeared that Hillary Clinton’s win was inevitable along with GOP losses in the Senate and House.

“Everybody expected her to win, you should have seen all the people calling and saying: ‘She’s going to be blocked if you don’t change the rule,’” Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.). recalled. But he said it was a legitimate debate: “How are you going to do like a big climate change bill? It’s very hard to do big broad legislation under the filibuster.”

President Donald Trump advocated the abolition of the filibuster as recently as December to get his border wall, to consistent opposition from Senate Republicans. Now that the GOP has lost the House, that drumbeat has quieted.

Many Republicans take the view that the filibuster is better for conservatives in the long run, with the GOP eager to block new regulations on guns, the environment and more. But Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) said it’s the “right thing to do” no matter who is in control.

Several Democrats, from Udall to Warren, said that Republicans effectively killed the filibuster in the last Congress by deploying budget reconciliation, a blunt tool that allows passage of legislation by a simple majority in the Senate. That technique has its own limitations. Full repeal and replacement of Obamacare proved impossible under the procedure’s restrictions and the legislative push ultimately failed. Meanwhile, many of the GOP’s prized tax cuts expire in the coming years under the budget rules.

Warren said that even without a major change to the Senate rules, the GOP has given Democrats a road map if they win power and decide not to gut the filibuster.

“On proposals like my wealth tax, the Republicans have proven that you can rewrite all the tax laws with a 51-vote majority,” Warren said. “So: give us a majority.”

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