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Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and News Discussion from August 26th to September 1st, 2024 - Ruto Must Go - COTW: Kenya

Boycotts due to genocide hit multinationals The boycott is having an effect: Multinational companies are coming under greater pressure because of business relationships with or in Israel. As Handelsblatt reported on Wednesday, the catering group Yum Brands, parent company of the restaurant chain KFC, as well as the fast food company McDonald’s and food company Mondelez reported problems “as a result of the Middle East conflict”. This means significant drops in sales that can be traced back to boycott campaigns in connection with Israel’s war against the population in Gaza. All three companies reported a drop in sales in their international business. While Yum Brands is being criticized for investing in Israeli start-up companies, McDonald’s, for example, distributed free meals to the Israeli army (IDF) in October. System catering operator Americana, which is responsible for the branch presence of KFC and Pizza Hut in the Middle East region, suffered a 45 percent drop in its net profit in the first half of 2024, according to Handelsblatt. The Kuwaiti Alshaya Group announced that it would lay off 2,000 employees after a drop in sales as a result of a campaign against the Starbucks branches it operates. In Indonesia, the operator there forestalled a campaign by publicly distancing itself. The McDonald’s franchisee donated 100,000 US dollars for humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip. The parent company had bought back more than 200 branches from its partner there after protests against IDF support. The Pakistani government set up a committee at the end of July to identify companies that should be boycotted because of their support for Israel in its offensive in the Gaza Strip. Last week, Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced that he would suspend coal exports to Israel “until it ends the genocide.” Diplomatic relations have already been severed. According to the Times of Israel, Colombia is currently no longer importing weapons or surveillance technology from Israel.

Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and News Discussion from July 14th to July 20th, 2025 - A Golden Age Of Copper

The “Hague Group” announced measures against Israel at Bogotá conference. To kickstart that process, 12 states from across the world — Bolivia, Colombia, Cuba, Indonesia, Iraq, Libya, Malaysia, Namibia, Nicaragua, Oman, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and South Africa — committed to implementing the six measures immediately through their domestic legal and administrative systems to break the ties of complicity with Israel’s campaign of devastation in Palestine — and set a date of 20th September, to coincide with the 80th UN General Assembly, for additional states to join them. Consultations with capitals across the world are now ongoing. Around 30 countries participated at the meeting (including, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, and China), though it’s unclear which states are willing to join this initiative in September.

Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and News Discussion from July 7th to July 13th, 2025 - Sanctions on Russia: The Sequel

According to CGTN, these are the latest tariffs issued by Trump: 25% - Japan 25% - South Korea 25% - Malaysia 25% - Kazakhstan 30% - South Africa 40% - Laos 40% - Myanmar 25% - Tunesia 30% - Bosnia 32% - Indonesia 35% - Bangladesh 36% - Cambodia 35% - Serbia 36% - Thailand Apparently, Trump also sent these letters to a few countries, including Japan and South Korea.

Komunitas hexbear.net

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, 100, dies

He armed Indonesia during their genocide against East Timor. https://web.archive.org/web/20170226181104/https://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/reports/indoarms.html Unfortunately, despite its professions of support for human rights in Indonesia, the Carter Administration picked up where Kissinger and Ford had left off. As Noam Chomsky writes in the preface to Matthew Jardine’s 1995 book, East Timor: Genocide in Paradise, “In 1977, Indonesia found itself short of weapons, an indication of the scale of its attack. The Carter administration accelerated the arms flow.”[7] U.S. arms sales hit $112 million in 1978, and averaged nearly $60 million per year for the four years of the Carter administration – this was more than twice the level of weaponry supplied to the Suharto regime by the Ford Administration.

Komunitas lemmy.world

‘X’ Rebrand Gets Twitter Blocked Under Indonesia Porn Laws

Indonesia is just bizarre. They’ve got the most draconian and nonsensical laws. The only step up is a full on fascist country like China or russia. Other than being cheap, I don’t understand why so many digi nomads want to live there.

Komunitas hexbear.net

To any lurking good faith lemmy users who want to ask questions about socialism, you may do it in this thread, I will protect you

I’ve known people who’ve been there. I’ve known an Indonesian guy for instance who used to go on vacations to the DPRK to go skiing. Apparently it’s a fairly normal vacation destination for Indonesians because they can get into the country easily. From what’s described to me, day to day life is pretty comparable to any other poor country in Asia. Life out in the countryside is probably the hardest. It seems like the worst aspects of living in the DPRK all relate to poverty rather than the cartoonish goofy dictatorship that westerners claim the country is like. They don’t have great internet access, but from what I’m told nearly every person in the DPRK buys USB drives full of pirated stuff anyway. Other than their media, the DPRK is pretty normal, and in fact doing quite well considering their decades of sanctions and international aggression. They haven’t had widespread food insecurity in a while. Their healthcare system seems stable. They had energy instability for a while in the 90s they seem to have managed.

Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and International News Discussion from June 1st to June 7th, 2026 - Zionists Violate Ceasefire / Suspiciously Pro-Fascist Colombia Runoff Elections / Sudan Quagmire Continues

The sea recedes as the tsunami approaches Australian wheat harvest to halve as farmers adapt to energy crisis The Aluminum Shock Hitting the Global Economy The global aluminum market is being squeezed by two powerful forces at once: conflict in the Middle East and rising US tariffs. Industry executives say disruptions to production and shipping in the Gulf region are removing significant supply from global markets just as tariffs are already pushing prices higher We’re having the worst wheat crop in decades. You’ll notice the ripple effects soon at the grocery store Historic cattle shortages push US beef prices to record highs Writing’s on the wall for the bond market – for those who can read it Sovereign yields are climbing sharply almost across the world – notably in the United States, Britain and Australia among advanced economies and also across Asia from India to Indonesia – as levels of government indebtedness reach or approach record highs. The process is becoming self-feeding because as yields and debt service costs escalate, so too does demand for new borrowing. Persian Gulf Oil Tanker Traffic May Never Fully Recover Prepare for El Niño, UN warns - it could be the strongest in decades

Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and News Discussion from December 18th to December 24th, 2023 - Chad el-Mandeb - COTW: Yemen

Very interesting story about the massive political changes in Yemen in the 1940s. Had this saved in Arabic somewhere, so I translated this for you homies and cleaned it up with comrade ChatGPT. Until the mid-twentieth century, Yemen in the 1700s retained a sense of enduring stability, seemingly impervious to the transformative winds of change. To external observers, Yemen appeared motionless and resistant to evolution. In the northern part of the country, the Zaydi Imamate stood as an institution with an eleven-century legacy, interrupted only briefly on two occasions. The entrenched divides, passed down through generations, manifested predictably in various relationships: Zaydis versus Shafi’is, Zaydis versus the diminishing Isma’ilis, Qahtanis and Seyyids, Upland tribes versus the villages and plantations of Lower Yemen, and coastal towns versus inland towns, among others. Although change had the potential to manifest, the fundamental structure remained steadfast. Remarkably, Aden, under British administration, thrived as the world’s second-busiest port at times, trailing only behind New York City. Meanwhile, families from Hadhramut sought prosperity in far-flung places such as Singapore and Indonesia. International trade in coffee flourished, sustaining activity in the western uplands and a few Red Sea ports, despite a decline initiated by evolving commercial and global cultivation patterns by the mid-eighteenth century. However, these shifts failed to shake the foundations of deeper traditions. One might have anticipated that Aden, as a bustling port, could become a breeding ground for ideological shifts. It seemed plausible that subversive ideas could disseminate among the diverse migrant labor population, originating from all corners of Yemen, and subsequently find their way back to their respective homelands. Alternatively, returning Hadhramis might import provocative notions from their experiences abroad. Yet, when disruption eventually unfolded, it did so unexpectedly, emanating from a source that caught everyone off guard. In the aftermath of World War II, the Kingdoms of Iraq and Saudi Arabia identified in Yemen a kindred, traditionalist state, deserving of reinforcement. This was particularly crucial as the Yemeni Imamate was undergoing a significant shift towards hereditary rule, mirroring the established royal traditions in Saudi Arabia and Iraq, in stark contrast to the Zaydi Shia tradition. A strategic plan was devised to enhance and modernize the Yemeni military. In 1940, Iraq implemented a multifaceted approach, flying in Yemeni students for enrollment in its military academy while concurrently dispatching a training mission to Yemen. This mission included Jamil Jamal, a young officer from Mosul, a decision that would prove to have profound consequences. Merely four years earlier, Jamal had served as the aide-de-camp to the leader of the 1936 coup, directly implicated in the murder of the Iraqi Army’s ‘founder.’ Despite the coup’s failure and the demise of its leader, authorities sought to rehabilitate Jamal, consigning him to career exile as an officer in the riverine police. Unexpectedly, he found himself attached to the Yemen training mission, offering an opportunity for redemption. The mission concluded in 1943, yet Jamal chose to remain in Yemen. Five years later, he employed his coup-making skills, aligning with a plot to assassinate the ruling Imam. A new Imam briefly ruled in Sana’a before being overpowered by the slain Imam’s son and Jamal was executed soon after. This event triggered a series of complex local wars in both northern and southern Yemen, financially and logistically supported by regional powers. The ensuing two decades, spanning the 1960s and 1970s, witnessed a convoluted interplay of old cleavages, with Aden losing its significance due to geopolitical shifts brought about by the Arab-Israeli conflict. Aden, once a bustling maritime destination, diminished in importance as the Suez Canal blockade during the Arab-Israeli conflict rendered it largely irrelevant. By the time the canal reopened, technological advancements allowed ships to travel longer distances without the need for restocking, further diminishing Aden’s strategic value. In the late 1970s, a substantial portion of Yemen’s male population sought employment as migrant laborers in the oil-rich Persian Gulf countries, reshaping the nation’s economic landscape. As remittances from abroad became the primary source of income, Aden and traditional coffee cultivation ceded their prominence. The societal fabric in Yemen began to unravel swiftly, and the dissolution of long-standing structures occurred surprisingly rapidly. This tumultuous period prompted adventurous figures, such as the late President Ali Abdullah Saleh, to actively participate in reshaping Yemen’s destiny.

Komunitas hexbear.net

Bulletins and International News Discussion from April 1st to Whenever We Reach About 3000 Comments - Keeping It Rial In Hormuz

Ghana to manufacture first vaccine with support from Indonesia - Consul of Indonesia to Ghana This was disclosed by the Honorary Consul of the Republic of Indonesia to Ghana, Paskal A B Rois, popularly known as Togbe Afrika, who indicated that the Indonesian government is supporting Ghana’s National Vaccine Institute in establishing a vaccine manufacturing capacity. … Rois also emphasised that the partnership reflects the strong diplomatic and economic ties between Ghana and Indonesia, stating that “Very soon, Ghana will come out with its first vaccine,” he said, noting that Ghana will become the third country in Africa to produce vaccines, after Senegal and South Africa.