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Reptiles vulnerable to unscrupulous pet trading — study

By - Sep 30,2020 - Last updated at Sep 30,2020

The study found that 90 per cent of traded reptile species are captured from the wild (AFP photo)

PARIS — More than a third of reptile species are bought and sold online in often-unregulated international trade, researchers said on Tuesday, warning of the impact on wild populations of a pet market that puts a bounty on rare and newly discovered animals.

Even endangered species and those with small habitats — such as the speckled cape tortoise and Seychelles tiger chameleon — are bought and sold in online forums, according to the new study by researchers in Thailand and China, who found that three-quarters of trade is in species not covered by international regulation.

The market primarily caters to buyers in Europe and north America — the British Federation for Herpetologists has reported that there are more pet reptiles than dogs in Britain.

But unlike most other pets, the study found that 90 per cent of traded reptile species and half of traded individuals are captured from the wild.

"We did not expect that almost 40 per cent of the world's largest terrestrial vertebrate group would be in trade, that so many endangered and critically endangered species would be included," co-author Alice Hughes of China's Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden told AFP.

Researchers used the database of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which monitors international trade in its listed species and the Law Enforcement Management Information System (LEMIS) covering wildlife imports into the US.

The authors also searched some 25,000 web pages based on keywords in five languages and found that at least 36 per cent of reptile species are being traded — or 3,943 species.

The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, identified parts of southeast Asia as of most concern for the trade in endangered species.

In Africa, meanwhile, most countries had significant numbers of species that had not been assessed for vulnerability to extinction.

Hughes highlighted fears for newly-discovered species, with some animals appearing for sale online just months after they were described to science.

"Combined with the ease of keeping most reptiles there is the 'cool' angle, which is why there is a real pursuit of novelty, especially for colourful or unusual species like leaf tail geckos," said Hughes.

She added that previous research suggested whole wild populations of reptiles were harvested using details from scientific reports.

She said that because it takes time for a species to be listed with CITES, newly described species would not necessarily have any trade protections and this creates incentives for wildlife traffickers.

 

Lizard 'laundering' 

 

Richard Thomas, head of communications at the wildlife trade monitor Traffic, said scientists who describe a new species of reptile "are in the invidious position of putting a price on its head if they disclose the precise location".

"They will doubtless be aware it will lead to a run on the species from specialist collectors and breeders, and yet the type locality is an essential piece of the scientific documentation of the species that deserves to be in the record."

He said examples include the Roti Island Snake-necked Turtle, "decimated in the wild after its discovery", or Borneo's Earless Monitor-lizard, which began appearing for sale online in specialist reptile keeper groups shortly after its rediscovery.

Thomas said that the situation was not confined to reptiles, adding the discovery locations of at least two new slipper orchids in northern Vietnam have never been disclosed in the scientific literature "for their own safety".

But he said sourcing from the wild was not always a threat to species because it can create an incentive to protect their habitat.

Hughes and colleagues proposed shifting the burden of proof to ensure trade is sustainable before it is permitted, and called for better regulation in the pet trade.

But Thomas said even the regulated trade in CITES listed reptiles is "fraught with difficulties" and open to fraud, because they do not apply to captive-bred individuals.

"Many of these species are wild caught but laundered into legal trade through deliberate misdeclaration," he said.

Paris Fashion Week goes ‘physigital’ to beat the virus

By - Sep 29,2020 - Last updated at Sep 29,2020

PARIS — Paris women’s Fashion Week opened on Monday just as the city limited public gatherings in a bid to slow rocketing virus infections in France.

Like Milan — which finished Sunday — the vast majority of Paris shows over the next nine days will be virtual, with frustrated fashionistas watching on their phones and computers through TikTok, Instagram, YouTube and the labels’ own sites.

Hollywood star Sharon Stone declared the week open in a video message, urging designers to rise to the challenge of better serving “emancipated, free and bold women”.

“Fashion has to be more fair, diverse and equal,” she said.

Only a handful the biggest brands, led by Dior, Hermes, Louis Vuitton and Chanel, are staging real live shows.

With the vast bulk of international buyers and style journalists who usually flood the French capital staying away because of travel restrictions, Saint Laurent, Hedi Slimane’s Celine and Virgil Abloh’s luxury street brand Off-White have bowed out altogether. 

The lack of pomp of spectacle has led to no end of streaked mascara online from influencers mourning the loss of yet another proper fashion week to Covid-19.

“The last Paris fashion week which was entirely digital left us all orphans,” fashion historian Olivier Saillard told AFP.

People crave the “theatre of the live spectacle”, he added, saying the digital men’s and haute couture shows in June were something of an anti-climax.

Despite big social media campaigns, the new “physigital” reality — mixing digital and physical shows — lack fizz, with brands struggling to create the same buzz online.

Before the week had even officially started, John Galliano released images of his new Margiela collection, even though he is not supposed to show until next Tuesday.

 

‘The world has changed’

 

And rising French designer Marine Serre warned that “Amor Fati”, the film that will showcase her spring summer looks, “contains strong images that some viewers may be sensitive to”.

“This collection is a mirror of the last five months,” Serre told AFP.

With the Belgian master Dries Van Noten, she has called for a major rethink of how the industry works.

Their manifesto for responsible fashion has since been signed by hundreds of other designers.

“The world around us has changed radically,” Serre added.

Fashion’s enfant terrible of the moment, Demna Gvasalia of Balenciaga, said he also found himself asking if “fashion makes sense in the apocalyptic world in which we have been living since March”, when lockdowns began in Europe.

However, the Georgian designer told the industry bible Women’s Wear Daily that he has since “discovered that even in times of pandemic, people want something new. They even want it more to distract themselves from the horrors”, he added.

Even so, Salliard questioned whether it was worth persisting with shows while the pandemic continued.

“If there are no American and Asian buyers, and no journalists, what’s it for?” he asked.

The Korean label Kimhekim kicked off Monday’s six digital shows, with the young Georgian Irakli Rusadze making his Paris debut with his Situationist brand.

His slightly surreal film was shot on the streets of his native Tbilisi, with his models buying potatoes in its street markets.

Danish designer Cecilie Bahnsen, who “adores the idea that you can wear a ballgown with a pair of trainers”, also made her first bow with a film showcasing her long white, black and pastel dresses on a blasted Nordic heath and beach.

American artist Sterling Ruby with his S.R. Studio. LA. CA. brand and London newcomer Wales Bonner, who won the prestigious LVMH prize for young designers in 2016, rounded off the opening day’s shows.

By Fiachra Gibbons and Olga Nedbaeva

5G networks: Are there health risks?

By - Sep 29,2020 - Last updated at Sep 29,2020

Photo courtesy of fpm3.com

PARIS — Do 5G mobile telephones and networks pose health risks? Worries about the effect the technology has on humans and the environment have persisted as it has been deployed in various countries. What do scientists have to say about it?

 

What is 5G?

 

5G networks are touted as promising an exponential leap in the amount and speed of wireless data, enabling advances in self-driving vehicles, virtual reality, connected health and more as sensors and servers communicate instantly.

To get that speed, 5G uses higher frequencies than current networks. The trade off with higher frequencies is that their signals don’t travel as far and are easily blocked by buildings. This means more antennae will be needed to link up with phones. 

This is what concerns some people, who were already skittish about the giant antennae placed on top of towers and building. 5G networks will use many smaller antennae placed closer to people, such as on top of streetlights, potentially exposing people to even more radio waves.

 

What is the health impact of radio waves?

 

Mobile phones are not the only equipment to emit radio waves. TVs, radios, Wi-Fi are all also sources of exposure. 

The World Health Organisation (WHO) notes concern about such exposure but says: “To date, and after much research performed, no adverse health effect has been causally linked with exposure to wireless technologies.” 

It does acknowledge that only a few studies have looked at the frequencies to be used by 5G.

There are still concerns about the long-term use of mobile phones close to your head possibly increasing cancer risk, with the WHO recommending in 2011 using hands-free devices.

There are concerns that mobile phones, tablets and connected toys could have effects on the cognitive ability of children, with France’s ANSES safety agency recommending in 2016 limits to their exposure.

 

Biological versus health effects

 

When radio waves hit the body their principal biological effect is to heat body tissue. 

“Radiofrequency exposure levels from current technologies result in negligible temperature rise in the human body,” the WHO says on its website.

“Provided that the overall exposure remains below international guidelines, no consequences for public health are anticipated,” it adds.

But according to ANSES expert Olivier Merckel, “studies have shown biological effects in certain very specific parameters such as sleep and stress.”

But there is an enormous difference between a biological effect — when an organism responds to the environment — and determining that it poses a health risk. It is a distinction that often gets lost in public debate.

The determination of a health risk is made after observing whether the human body is capable of adapting to cumulative effects of exposure.

 

Specific concerns about 5G?

 

The lack of information on higher frequencies that are to be used by 5G means it is an area that France’s ANSES and other researchers are looking into.

5G networks are currently using frequencies close to those of Wi-Fi boxes, but they will eventually use much higher frequencies.

And as the frequency increases, radio waves are less able to penetrate the body, with absorbtion limited to the skin and eyes.

ANSES’s Merckel said “this poses different questions in terms of potential health effects.”

In 2012, ANSES evaluated airport body scanners, which use similar frequencies, and found they pose no health risks.

But even if the frequencies are close, the usage is different. With the deployment of 5G networks both users and non-users are likely to be exposed to varying amounts of radio waves on a more or less permanent basis.

By Paul Ricard

Upstart company wants to beat NASA in search for life

By - Sep 28,2020 - Last updated at Sep 28,2020

WASHINGTON — Can a small American aerospace company get to Venus before NASA returns to our superheated planetary neighbour?

That’s what Peter Beck, the CEO of Rocket Lab, is hoping as he sets his sights on launching a low-cost probe in 2023.

Over the past decade his company has become very good at putting satellites in to orbit — and his dream of taking the next step, an interplanetary mission, has received a shot of adrenaline recently with the surprising discovery of a gas linked to living organisms in Venus’s corrosive, sulfuric atmosphere.

“What we’re looking for on Mars is signs of previous life,” Beck explains.

“Whereas Venus, it’s signs of potential life now.” 

With its hellish landscape, Venus has been largely neglected by the major space agencies since the 1980s in favour of the Solar System’s more distant bodies.

Dozens of missions have notably been sent to Mars seeking signs of ancient microbes.

But the discovery by Earth-based radio telescopes of a gas called phosphine in Venus’ atmosphere, reported on September 14, sparked a new wave of enthusiasm among scientists who had for years defended the hypothesis that tiny organisms could live in the planet’s clouds.

Phosphine isn’t definitive proof of life. But it is possible its presence is linked to living organisms, as it is on our planet.

The finding led NASA to declare it was time to once more prioritise Venus.

Beck, however, has always been in the pro-Venus camp, and for two years has been contemplating sending an entirely privately-funded probe there, he said.

He calculated, with the help of a PhD student, that a small satellite called “Photon” that Rocket Lab developed in-house could be adapted into a spacecraft for an interplanetary voyage.

Such bids have historically been the domain of national space agencies, given the enormous costs involved — but Beck thinks he has developed a budget solution.

“I would expect a mission to Venus to be sort of $30 million,” he told AFP by video from Auckland, New Zealand.

“When you can measure interplanetary missions in tens of millions of dollars instead of billions, and months instead of decades, the opportunity for discovery is just incredible,” he said.

Rocket Lab’s specialty is sending small satellites into Earth orbit with its small 18-metre high rocket — a highly lucrative market in recent years as demand for microsatellites has exploded.

The company’s Venus probe will be very small, weighing around 37 kilogrammes and just a 30 centimetres in diameter.

The trip from Earth will take 160 days, then Photon will launch the probe into Venus’ clouds, where it will take readings as it falls, without a parachute, at almost 11 kilometres per second.

The probe will have between just 270 and 300 seconds to analyse an atmosphere that is almost a hundred times denser than Earth’s before it disintegrates or crashes on the planet’s fiery surface, where temperatures are hot enough to melt lead (480ºC).

The hardest part is deciding on the scientific instrument: what molecules should it look for? 

Miniaturisation is another problem. The probe will need to weigh three kilogrammes which some experts doubt is possible, but Beck disagrees. 

Rocket Lab will need help from leading scientists, and has already recruited MIT astronomer and planetary scientist Sara Seager.

The adventure is the latest chapter in a new era of space exploration fuelled not by governments but by individual curiosity and ambition, one that so far has been best symbolised by Elon Musk, the iconoclastic founder of SpaceX.

SpaceX revolutionised the sector through its reusable rockets that have now sent astronauts to the International Space Station and has its sights set on colonising Mars. 

NASA is no longer afraid to subcontract missions to privateers, and Rocket Lab will be paid $10 million to send a microsatellite into lunar orbit in 2021. 

As for Venus, Beck would like to offer his services to NASA. 

The space agency is considering returning to Venus, but not until 2026 at the earliest. Its last Venus orbiter was Magellan, which arrived in 1990, but other vessels have made fly-bys since then.

“We want to do many, many missions a year,” said the young CEO.

By Ivan Couronne

Nissan Patrol V8: Different flavours, consistent capability and character

By - Sep 28,2020 - Last updated at Sep 28,2020

Photos courtesy of Nissan

A large capable and thoroughly well-equipped full-size SUV, the latest Nissan Patrol is the most modern, yet. First driven during its global debut in Abu Dhabi late last and more recently and extensively in Jordan, in V8 versions, the Patrol is available in four trim levels and two engines.

Consistent in core character and capability across the range, the entry-level LE T1 Patrol’s persona is more akin to comfortable expedition vehicle. Meanwhile, the top-spec Platinum City version equals any premium brand European luxury SUV, with intermediary versions covering the ground between.

Descended from a long line of tough, dedicated and purposeful off-roaders, the Nissan Patrol doubles as both luxury car and in more basic spec versions as a staple family car in the Gulf Cooperation Council, where even the rugged older generation Patrol Super Safari is back on sale by popular demand and alongside the more advanced new model featured here. Well-accommodated on the UAE roads, the enormous Patrol is, however, a big rig whose charms rub off more and becomes easier to manoeuvre with every passing kilometre in Jordan, given its accurate steering and good visibility.

 

Towering personality

 

A much improved and re-styled evolutionary model designated as a new generation, the new Patrol builds on a successful recipe. Towering over most SUVs, the new Patrol retains its predecessor’s approximate proportions, but features a sharper-edged and more imposingly upright fascia with a bigger and lower positioned evolution of Nissan’s V-motion grille at the front and deeper side intakes, and slim C-shaped LED lights intersecting with a sharply edged bumper section frame. Redesigned and more contemporary rear lights along with a full width chrome strip meanwhile emphasise a more hunkered down horizontally-oriented stance.

Incorporating rugged body-on-frame construction and extensive off-road hardware for such an indulgent vehicle, the Patrol LE T1 and Platinum City differ slightly on the outside. Whereas the utilitarian entry-level model features smaller alloy wheels and slightly slimmer 265/70R18 tyres versus flashier top-spec 275/60R20 footwear, it is also fitted with an off-road bumper with a greater 34° approach angle compared to the latter’s lower, sharper and more stylish 28° bumper. A generous 26° departure angle remains unchanged while 273mm LE T1 and 275mm Platinum City ground clearance is excellent either way.

 

Venerable V8

 

Carried over is the previous Patrol’s venerable and powerful naturally-aspirated direct injection 5.6-litre V8 engine, as driven with both specifications. The more powerful of two engines available including a junior 4-litre V6, the Patrol’s big brawny power plant develops 400HP at 5800rpm and 413lb/ft torque at 4000rpm (gross), and is capable propelling the gigantic 2.7-tonne SUV through 0-100km/h swiftly in an estimated 6.5-seconds. Smooth and abundantly capable, the Patrol is just as happy cruising at a laidback low-rev pace as it is urgently reaching for rev limit to unleash its mightily full potential.

A brisk mover whether in town on highway or through snaking roads, the Patrol’s powerful V8 is responsive and generous from tick-over to redline, with plenty of low-end grunt, mid-range muscle and top-end punch. Progressive in delivery and quiet at low revs yet with distantly urgent bellowing at full chat, the Patrol drives all four wheels through a smooth and reasonably quick-shifting 7-speed automatic gearbox with lever-actuated manual shift capability. Driven under normal conditions in auto mode the Patrol drives the rear wheels primarily, with power allocated frontwards as needed for traction.

 

Comfort and capability

 

Providing plenty of grip on tarmac in auto mode, the patrol’s reassuring road-holding is matched by its balanced weighting and predictable manners. When needed, and for more difficult off-road conditions, the Patrol’s drive-line can be locked in four-wheel-drive at standard high ratio, or in low ratio mode for full-power crawling speed when needed. Additionally, the Patrol features a locking rear differential for more treacherous low traction conditions and electronic hill descent control. Its Terrain Mode drive selector can meanwhile electronically optimise various parameters for different conditions including sand, snow, rocks and road.

A comfortable continent-crunching cruiser with excellent cabin refinement and forgiving ride quality, the Patrol well-absorbed road imperfections, lumps and bumps even with top-spec low profile tyres, but was especially supple with the more rugged, less exposed, higher sidewall tyre option. Though comfortable at speed and in town, the patrol’s active hydraulic double wishbone suspension kept it settled on rebound and well-controlled through fast and tight corners. Also impressive were its powerful fade-resistant brakes, while its tight turning circle, big glasshouse and entry-level parking sensors or top spec surround view camera helped with manoeuvrability.

 

Luxury and fluency

 

A supple, relaxing, vast and weighty vehicle, the Patrol is nevertheless a more agile drive than expected. Driven like a large vehicle its instinct indicates a potential for understeer bias. However, driven like a much smaller, sportier hatchback, with more purposeful and early turn-in to shift weight to the outside and rear, the Patrol responded well, and seemed to tuck-in and tighten cornering lines with surprising agility. Unexpectedly chuckable and fluent through sprawling lanes and corners despite some body lean, the Patrol’s well-weighted steering also delivered more nuanced feel than most competitors.

Shrinking around the driver in driving ease, the enormous Patrol generously accommodates eight passengers, especially in non-sunroof versions. Offering commanding road views and much space and versatility, it features numerous design, material and technology improvements over its predecessor, including high tech driver assistance and safety features in high-end models. Sumptuous in Platinum City guise with twin screen infotainment system, gorgeous GT-R Tan leather upholstery, inspired by Nissan’s iconic supercar and much more, the Patrol however has a homely, comfortable and welcoming non-premium luxury ambiance in basic fabric seat, twin airbag LE T1 specification.

 

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

  • Engine: 5.6-litre, in-line V8-cylinders 
  • Bore x stroke (mm): 98 x 92mm
  • Valve-train: 32-valve, variable valve timing, DOHC, direct injection
  • Gearbox: 7-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive
  • Drive-train: Locking rear differential and 2.7:1 low gear transfer case
  • Power, HP (kW): 400 (294) @ 5,800rpm*
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 413 (560) @ 4,000rpm*
  • 0-97km/h: 6.5-seconds (est.)
  • 0-160km/h: 17.8-seconds (est.)
  • Fuel consumption, city / highway: 16.8- / 11.76-litres/100km (est.)
  • Fuel capacity: 140-litres
  • Height: 1,940mm
  • Width: 1,995mm
  • Length: 5,315mm (with towing hook)
  • Wheelbase: 3,075mm
  • Minimum Ground clearance: 273mm
  • Approach / departure angles: 34° / 26°
  • Kerb weight: 2716-2845kg
  • Gross vehicle weight: 3,500kg
  • Towing capacity: 2,000kg
  • Seating capacity: 8
  • Headroom, F/M/R: 1,037/1,015/924mm
  • Legroom, F/M/R: 1,065/989/721mm
  • Shoulder room, F/M/R: 1,620/1,612/1,537mm
  • Hip room, F/M/R: 1,503/1,483/1,240mm
  • Steering: Power-assisted rack and pinion
  • Turning radius: 12.1-metres
  • Suspension: Independent, double wishbone with active hydraulic damping 
  • Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs, 4- / 1-piston calipers
  • Tyres: 265/70R18
  • *Gross power and torque

 

Authenticity in our relationships

By , - Sep 27,2020 - Last updated at Sep 27,2020

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

Because of our upbringing, many of us grew up conditioned to hide who we really are. Instead, we present ourselves in ways that we believe will gain us more acceptance, admiration and validation. Does this describe you?

 

The price we pay

 

If we do not live genuinely and authentically, we will: 

• Have difficulty forming genuine and intimate connections: Authenticity is a prerequisite to building intimacy in relationships, but it requires us to embrace vulnerability, which in turn means allowing others to know us fully with all our needs, weaknesses, thoughts, warts and challenges. We often hide our true selves as we fear being judged and accordingly our relationships remain shallow and lack depth, meaning as well as a genuine connection

• Lose sight of our true nature: Years of living like a chameleon and only presenting a constructed version of ourselves to the outside world will eventually make us lose touch with who we are and what we need in life. It almost feels like we are living a scripted existence that encompasses all the shoulds and have to’s around us 

• Come across as “wishy-washy”: With time, people will recognise that our opinions and behaviours do not come from our solid convictions and values but change according to circumstance. This leads us to adopt double and triple standards to serve what works for us best in any given situation, which in turn prevents us from forging genuine and true relationships and friendships

• Stunt our ability to work on ourselves and grow: When people show an edited version of themselves to the world, they lose sight of identifying and improving personality weaknesses and other issues they might have, thereby reducing any chance for improvement

 

How can we be more authentic?

 

• Identifying and honouring our feelings and needs: Becoming aware of who we are by getting in touch with our vulnerabilities and needs: identifying them, acknowledging and accepting them. Knowing ourselves will help us understand why and how we react to life in certain ways, helping us to better manage those situations. Plus, the more we know ourselves, the better we can understand people around us

•Learning how to set healthy boundaries: Personal boundaries set the basic guidelines for how we want to be treated and, ultimately, for how we treat others. Setting boundaries ensures our relationships are mutually respectful and caring. We need boundaries to keep ourselves safe and healthy

•Learning how to become assertive: Not communicating our needs and vulnerabilities will allow resentment to build up in us while communicating them in destructive ways will lead to further damage and conflict with others. Assertiveness means communicating and setting limits thoughtfully and lovingly — saying what we need without attacking the other person. Even if the other person does not honour our request at times, simply standing up for ourselves in a respectful way will make us feel stronger and will enhance our self-esteem

• Acknowledging that this is work in progress: Awareness and self-improvement are long-term and ongoing processes; everyone should work on themselves and their shortcomings. This is done through reading, taking self-improvement courses and workshops, and engaging the help of a professional

 

What is psychological authenticity?

 

The attempt to live one’s life according to the needs of one’s inner self, rather than to the demands of society or one’s early conditioning. It’s living according to your convictions, beliefs and needs and presenting them to the outside world instead of hiding them under a false persona.

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

By Mariam Hakim

Relationships and Couples Therapist

Taste of success for Taiwan’s street vendors with Michelin award

By - Sep 27,2020 - Last updated at Sep 27,2020

TAIPE — A cloud escapes into the air as 80-year-old Taiwanese street food vendor Wu Huang-yi lifts the lid on a giant steaming basket to unveil a piping-hot batch of two dozen buns.

It is lunchtime at Taipei’s Huaxi Night Market — the capital’s oldest — and a queue has already formed at Wu’s stall, with diners eager to taste the pork belly whose aroma wafts from a steel pot bubbling in the cramped kitchen.

Self-taught chef Wu perfected his meat marinade more than 20 years ago, and he still goes to the market at 5am every day to handpick the pork belly, which he stews for hours in his special blend of ingredients.

“My buns are different from others, it’s all handmade. It’s tasty because it’s so soft and yet chewy,” Wu says.

“Everything is done according to tradition, and that’s the reason why it tastes good.”

Also known in Taiwanese as ho-ga-ti (tiger bites pig), the gua-bao is a circular flat steamed bun, which is folded in half and stuffed with braised meat, salted vegetables, coriander and ground peanuts.

Its shape resembles the ancient Chinese boat-shaped ingot, so gua-bao signifies prosperity and is often served at wedding banquets and corporate functions.

But Wu sells his for less than $2 each at his stall, where his whole family, including his wife, three adult children and a grandson help out.

And his hard work and dedication have finally paid off — this month he was recognised by Michelin and awarded a place on the food guide’s Bib Gourmand list, which is given to eateries that serve a top-class three-course meal for less than NT$1,000 ($34).

Taiwan now has well over 200 entries on Michelin’s list.

 

Light, speed, height and beauty

By - Sep 27,2020 - Last updated at Sep 27,2020

Stealing from the Saracens: How Islamic Architecture Shaped Europe

Diana Darke

London: Hurst and Co., 2020

Pp. 447

 

The irony in the title of this book will not be lost on anyone who knows that the term, Saracens, applied in a derogatory way to Muslims and Arabs, means “people who steal”, for the central theme of Diana Darke’s volume is quite the opposite: that many of the renowned, mediaeval cathedrals in Europe, called Gothic, are based on features and techniques that originated in the eastern Mediterranean.

In this massive cultural importation, minarets became church spires and bell towers in Europe, along with the adoption of other distinctive Middle Eastern architectural features such as stained glass, mosaics, pointed arches, double domes, rose windows and new vaulting methods. 

Also ironic is that some promoters of the Gothic style misunderstood its origins. Jerusalem’s iconic Dome of the Rock was copied by the Crusaders, who thought it was Solomon’s Temple, not a Muslim shrine.

Others like Christopher Wren, England’s leading 17th-century architect, recognised that the so-called Gothic style was invented by the Arabs. Its popularity lay in the much greater amount of light allowed into the building, the speed with which such structures could be erected, the heights which they could reach, and the beauty of their ornamentation. These features had religious as well as aesthetic motivation. As Darke writes, “Light streaming in through tall, high windows represented God and His presence, so people instinctively looked upwards and felt their spirits uplifted…” (p. 50)

Darke was inspired to write this book by the 2019 burning of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris; the discussions about its rebuilding alerted her to the fact that many did not understand the background of its architecture. She, on the other hand, was well-equipped with knowledge to fill in the blanks by virtue of decades spent visiting, researching and living in the Middle East and North Africa, and her extensive writing on cultural themes in the region, especially Syria. Her focus on Syria proved fortuitous as much of the distinctive Islamic architecture was developed during Umayyad rule in Balad Al Sham (Greater Syria), based on Muslim advances in science and geometry in particular. Prior to that was the style evident in early Christian churches still to be seen in Idlib province. “Having been fortunate enough to explore these north Syrian churches many times since the 1970s, most recently in 2010, I believe they constitute a vital and largely unexplored link to the Romanesque churches of Europe… without the missing link of these churches, it is impossible to understand how Hagia Sophia… model for so many later European churches, was built.” (p. 77)

Darke backs up her claims with historical facts and detailed descriptions of hundreds of mosques, churches and other public buildings in the eastern Mediterranean and Europe, so one can see the resemblances and how they developed. Further proof lies in the scores of beautiful colour photographs in the book displaying the buildings in question, from the Great Umayyad Mosque in Damascus to Cordoba’s Mesquita and Venice’s St Mark’s, and even more modern examples of Islamic architectural influence, such as in the works of Le Corbusier and Antoni Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. Readers can see for themselves how Islamic architectural influence spread, chiefly via Spain, but also Sicily, Venice and Amalfi, on its way to northern Europe, and later even farther afield to the Americas and Australia.

The book is doubly fascinating because Darke embeds her descriptions of architecture in lively, down-to-earth analysis of the social, economic, and cultural conditions under which the churches and mosques were built. While religious fervour was a motivating factor, trade, politics, power struggles and national identity were also at play. For a time, one is drawn into the world of the architects, such as Ottoman Sinan, as well as the master builders and stone masons who carried out the painstaking work needed to create these masterpieces.

While revealing rich, often hidden histories in the Eastern Mediterranean and Europe and their interconnections, Darke also reminds that migration, globalisation and cultural fusion are not only modern phenomena. They have been ongoing for centuries minus the technology one associates with them today. “People moved around in the ancient world, just as they do in the modern world, and usually for the same reasons — war, overpopulation or better economic opportunity… Again and again we are seeing that a strategic trading crossroads like the Middle East was always going to be a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic mix of all the civilisations that had ruled there… each building on the inventions and innovations of the one before, be it through warfare or cooperation.” (p. 99)

Directly and indirectly, Darke argues for history’s continuity and humankind’s interdependence, as well as for inclusion, tolerance and openness. “My purpose has been to show that no one ‘owns’ architecture, just as no one ‘owns’ science… Everything builds on what went before.” (p. 381) 

While she shows the devastating consequences of war, in this context most evident in the Crusades, she also gives many examples of how the three monotheistic religions shared common beliefs, aspirations and sometimes even worship space. Cross-fertilisation has resulted in some of the most beautiful structures in the world today, East and West. “No society exists in isolation. If it does and closes in on itself, it will soon die, for lack of stimulation and original thought.” (p. 7)

Do masks help boost COVID-19 immunity by sparking a response?

By - Sep 26,2020 - Last updated at Sep 26,2020

AFP photo

PARIS — Could the mask — already seen by many scientists as the most effective shield against COVID-19 — have yet another benefit? Some researchers now believe that they expose wearers to smaller, less harmful doses of the disease which spark an immune response.

This as yet unproven theory suggests that masks could help inoculate people while we wait for a vaccine. 

Non-medical fabric or disposable masks have been recommended across the world, mainly as a way to help stop infected people from spreading the new coronavirus.

While they do not offer full protection, masks may potentially reduce the amount of virus inhaled by a wearer, according to a recent paper published this month in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). 

“We hypothesise that the higher a dose [or inoculum] of virus you get into your body, the more sick you get,” one of the authors Monica Gandhi, a specialist in infectious diseases at the University of California San Francisco, told AFP.

“We think that masks reduce that dose of virus that you inhale and, thereby, drive up rates of asymptomatic infection.”

Gandhi, director of the UCSF-Gladstone Centre for AIDS Research, said that asymptomatic infection was linked to a strong immune response from T lymphocytes — a type of white blood cell — that may act against COVID-19. 

“We think masks can act as a sort of ‘bridge’ to a vaccine by giving us some immunity”, she said, adding that researchers were launching several studies to try and test the theory. 

These would include looking at whether the requirement of a mask in certain cities had reduced the severity of the disease there.

They are also looking at antibody studies in Taiwan, where masks are ubiquitous but there are very few restrictions.

“Of course, it’s still a theory, but there are many arguments in its favour,” Bruno Hoen, director of medical research at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, told AFP.

He said we should “take a different look at the use of masks”, which were initially deemed unnecessary by health authorities, against the backdrop of shortages. 

Today, they are widely recommended to slow the spread of infection.

 

Lessons from smallpox

 

The theory echoes “variolation”, a rudimentary technique used before the appearance of vaccines that involved giving people a mild illness to try to inoculate them against more serious forms of a disease. 

In Asia, early variolation often meant blowing dried scabs from smallpox patients up the noses of healthy people, according to the US National Library of Medicine. 

When it reached Europe and America in the 18th century, the practice — which sometimes killed the patient — commonly involved inserting smallpox under the skin. 

The NEJM article suggests a parallel in the idea that being exposed to small doses of virus boosts immunity.

“It is an interesting theory with a reasonable hypothesis,” Archie Clements, vice chancellor Faculty of Health Sciences at Australia’s Curtin University, told AFP.

But others expressed reservations. 

Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University in New York, said she was “pretty sceptical of this being a good idea”. 

She noted that we do not yet know if a lower dose of virus does mean a milder illness. 

We do not know if masks reduce exposure to the virus, she said on Twitter, adding that the duration and level of immunity are also still poorly understood. 

“This is an interesting idea, but there are too many unknowns to say that masks should be used as a tool for ‘variolating’ people against SARS-CoV-2,” she added. 

A key stumbling block to answering these questions is that testing the UCSF researchers’ hypothesis is difficult. 

“It is true that such a hypothesis in humans using gold standard methods (of experimental design) can never be proven given that we cannot expose humans deliberately to the virus,” Gandhi said. 

But some studies have proved useful, she said, including research conducted in Hong Kong on hamsters. 

Scientists simulated mask-wearing by placing one between the cages of infected rodents and healthy ones. 

They found that hamsters were less likely to catch COVID-19 if they were “masked”, and even if they did catch it, their symptoms were milder.

There have also been a few accidental real-world experiments. 

In one case, a cruise ship that departed from Argentina in mid-March issued everyone on board with surgical masks after the first sign of an infection. 

Researchers found that 81 per cent of those who caught the virus were asymptomatic, which Gandhi said compared to around 40 per cent on other vessels where masks were not worn systematically. 

 

Eating too much sugar could lead to more fat being stored around the organs: study

By - Sep 25,2020 - Last updated at Sep 25,2020

Photo courtesy of wordpress.com

WASHINGTON — A recent US study has found that eating a diet high in sugar could lead to more fat being deposited around the heart and stomach, which can be harmful to health and increase the risk of disease.

Carried out by researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health and Vanderbilt University Medical Centre, the new study looked at 3,070 healthy participants aged 18 to 30 who had their food and beverage intakes measured three times over a 20-year period to assess their intake of sugar-sweetened beverages (such as soft drinks, fruit drinks, energy drinks) and sugar added to foods (for example when cooking or in processed foods).

After a 25-year follow-up, the participants also underwent CT scans to measure fat volumes in their abdomen and around the heart.

The findings, published yesterday in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), showed that the participants who had a higher intake of both sugar-sweetened beverages and added sugar in their food had bigger fat stores around their organs.

“When we consume too much sugar the excess is converted to fat and stored,” explains study author So Yun Yi. “This fat tissue located around the heart and in the abdomen releases chemicals into the body which can be harmful to health. Our results support limiting added sugar intake.”

“Our findings provide more evidence that consuming too much added sugar and sugary drinks is related to a higher amount of fat tissue,” added study author Dr Lyn Steffen. “And, we know that fat deposits are connected with higher risks of heart disease and diabetes.”

To reduce these risks, Dr Steffen advises trying to reduce the amount of sugar we eat each day. “Have water instead of sugary drinks and choose healthier snacks over foods rich in added sugar like cakes,” she said. “Read food labels to check the amount of added sugar in what you are buying. Look for ingredients like syrups, glucose, fructose, sucrose and maltose. Being more aware of hidden sugar will help you cut back.”

The researchers point out that excess sugar in the diet is already a global problem. They note that the six countries with the highest sales of sugary drinks per capita are Chile, Mexico, Argentina, Peru, the US and Saudi Arabia, with levels of sugar consumption expected to increase in Asia, Africa, and Russia.

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