Archive for April, 2022

US extends sanctions on three Libyans for smuggling fuel to Malta – The Libya Observer

The United States has extended the sanctions imposed on three Libyan individuals in Malta for smuggling and contributing to the destabilization of Libya.

The US Department of Treasury indicated, in a statement, the extension of the sanctions imposed on the Libyan Faisal Al-Wadi, who is on the blacklist on charges of smuggling drugs and Libyan fuel to Malta, in addition to two people associated with him, Musbah Mohammed Wadi and Noureddine Miloud Musbah.

The US Treasury said that competition for control of smuggling routes, oil facilities, and transportation means is a primary driver of the conflict in Libya, depriving the Libyan people of their economic resources.

The renewed sanctions against these individuals are in effect as they date back to August 2020. They freeze any assets of the Libyan individuals in the United States and prevent Americans from doing business with them.

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US extends sanctions on three Libyans for smuggling fuel to Malta - The Libya Observer

A mother’s love: Flies to Libya, brings back abducted son – The Daily Star

Shahinoor Begum left no stone unturned in the search for her kidnapped son even though everyone told her that there was no hope.

The 45-year-old mother sold her properties and spent around Tk 20 lakh in ransom to have her son released from a Libyan human trafficking gang and then embarked on a journey from her nondescript village in Cumilla to the war-torn Libyan city of Benghazi to find her son Yakub Hossain, aged around 20.

Yakub went missing while he was trying to go to Italy from Libya by taking the perilous boat journey through the Mediterranean. The family didn't know his whereabouts for six months.

"People around me said my son was dead. Some said he got killed. But I refused to believe them. I sold everything we had to bring my son back. I paid about Tk 20 lakh to his captors in four instalments for his release. I still couldn't find him. Then I went to Libya," Shahinoor told this correspondent.

On March 21, the iron-willed woman returned to her village in Debidwar with her son.

Shahinoor said her husband, who also lives in Libya, had two heart attacks after their son went missing.

"It destroyed our financial stability. I spent days crying, not sure what to do. Then I decided to go to Libya," she said.

She first travelled to Dhaka to get a passport and travel documents. "I paid Tk 3 lakh to a travel agent for airfare and other expenses. I boarded a Biman plane on January 8. This was my first trip outside Bangladesh. I was alone. I met a few people who were also travelling to Libya. I stayed in Dubai for a day. From Dubai I went to Egypt where we had a 24-hour transit. Finally, I reached my husband's home in Benghazi.

"After reaching Benghazi, I started contacting people who could speak in Bangla. I told them about my missing son. Seeing me cry, some of them contacted the International Organization for Migration which helped me rescue my son."

Shahinoor said the people of IOMrescued her son after a few days and also arranged a phone call between her and Yakub.

"When I heard my son's voice on the other end, I could not hold my tears. My son was also crying."

But she could not meet Yakub because he was in Tripoli at the time.

"With the help of IOM, my son and I could return home."

On reaching Bangladesh, both of them stayed at Ashkona Hajj Camp until March 21 before they were allowed to go home for a long-cherished happy reunion.

Yakub said he went to Libya on a tourist visa in May 2019 to become a migrant worker. He started working at an oil company in Benghazi for a monthly salary of around Bangladeshi Tk 35,000.

Looking for a better life, Yakub decided to go to Italy illegally at the beginning of last year on the advice of a man named Jahangir. He paid Tk 4 lakh to a broker named Rafiq to go to Italy.

But he was caught by the Libyan Coast Guard and landed in jail along with 300 others, he said.

"Around six months later, I tried to go to Italy again. This time, the human traffickers got hold of us," he said.

"They took our mobile phones, our money, our clothes and everything. We were kept in a small room that resembled a grave for 7 days. There was no light or air. Meals were given 2-3 days a week. They beat us up once a day. They used to beat us with whatever they could find."

The victims were kept in a slaughterhouse where some of the hostages died of starvation, he added.

Shahinoor said, "I will not let my son go anywhere again. I'm forever grateful to IOM for rescuing my son. We also need government support to get back the money that we have paid."

According to the Consular and Welfare Division of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 902 irregular citizens of Bangladesh have been repatriated from Libya from last September to March this year.

According to IOM sources, 23,601 people from different countries have gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.

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A mother's love: Flies to Libya, brings back abducted son - The Daily Star

ArtPlay Family Day Tea Party is April 30 – University of Alabama at Birmingham

ArtPlays tea party is an opportunity for families to come together, celebrate spring with music and snacks, and enjoy fun activities including story time by characters from Alices Adventures in Wonderland.

Enjoy the true spirit of spring with the ArtPlay Family Day Tea Party from 1-3 p.m. Saturday, April 30, at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

The party, at the historic ArtPlay House, will feature a variety of fun activities for families, including games in the garden, colorful art projects and story time.

Characters from the book Alices Adventures in Wonderland will read excerpts from the classic by Lewis Carroll. ArtPlay teaching artists will lead a variety of Wonderland-inspired activities, including a dance party and art projects that will make a Cheshire Cat grin. Snacks fit for a tea party will be served, along with fun music provided by local musicians and ArtPlay teaching artists.

The event is free and open to public; visit https://www.alysstephens.org/events/artplay-tea-party/.

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ArtPlay Family Day Tea Party is April 30 - University of Alabama at Birmingham

Bed and Breakfast prepares to launch the English Tea Club – warrenrecord.com

Monday marked a new milestone for The Ivy: An English Bed and Breakfast in downtown Warrenton as a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrated the upcoming launch of the English Tea Club on Easter Sunday.

Mike and Karen Kelley have operated The Ivy since August 2019, extending Warren County hospitality with an English flair to their guests.

Now, the Kelleys offer another opportunity for people from Warren County and beyond to experience The Ivys hospitality, and a proper tea, with the English Tea Club.

The club will launch with a special event from 2:30-4:30 p.m. on Easter Sunday, April 17, and will feature music and samples of the foods served during afternoon tea.

There are a few spaces available for Sundays tea. Registration is $10 per person and may be completed by visiting The Ivys website at theivybandb.com/teaclub. The deadline to register is Friday, April 15. Those who attend the launch will automatically become members of the English Tea Club.

However, those who are unable to attend Sundays launch may still become members of the English Tea Club by registering on the Ivys website. The annual membership fee is $10 per person.

Teas will be planned with monthly themes, including the Mad Hatters Tea Party in May, a celebration of Queen Elizabeths Platinum Jubilee in June, and the Boston Tea Party in July. Members will have an opportunity to reflect the monthly theme in their attire. The Platinum Jubilee will be formal.

English Tea Club members may also host private tea parties for six to 10 people.

Teas will be held on the porch or inside, depending upon the weather.

The Ivy: An English Bed and Breakfast is located at 331 N. Main St., Warrenton. For more information about the English Tea Club, visit The Ivys Facebook page. To register, visit theivybandb.com/teaclub.

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Bed and Breakfast prepares to launch the English Tea Club - warrenrecord.com

Guest author talks history of green tea – Daily Trojan Online

Wake Forest University associate professor of history Robert Hellyers book talk marks the first in person talk for the Shinso Ito Center for Japanese Religious and Culture since the pandemic. (Polina Past | Daily Trojan)

Robert Hellyer, author and associate professor of history at Wake Forest University, discussed his new book Green with Milk and Sugar: When Japan Filled Americas Tea Cups at Doheny Memorial Library Monday. Hellyers book navigates a dedicated history to green tea and provides a personal narration of his familys tea-processing factories.

The event, co-sponsored by USC Libraries, the USC Department of History and green tea company ITO EN North America marks the first in-person talk for the Shinso Ito Center for Japanese Religions and Culture since March 2020.

Hellyer, whose family shares a personal relationship with tea through their tea processing factories in the Japanese port cities of Shizuoka and Kobe, said his maternal grandmother reserved green tea for guests and coffee for Hellyer because green tea was a sophisticated, elevated beverage.

As my grandmother and I sat on lawn chairs savoring the aroma of freshly cut grass, she often talked of her time in Japan in the early 1930s as the wife of a tea merchant, wrote Hellyer in his book. Much of what propelled me to write this book was a desire to delve beyond the anecdotes from those summer days and to learn more about the worlds of my grandmothers.

Tea classifications, Hellyer said, can be discerned by oxidation levels and is categorized as green tea subcategorized into sencha, bancha and matcha oolong tea and black tea, the latter the most oxidized of the teas. Hellyer said there is a presupposition that America has no standard tea conduct, but green tea was at the center of it.

Many American families, particularly young girls, will be encouraged to have a tea set or have tea time, but we dont have coffee time in the same way, Hellyer said. Starbucks has its own nice, everyday elegance, but its not the sophistication.

Tea consumption patterns in the 1850s demonstrated that American consumers and even former United States presidents continued to drink green tea following the Boston Tea Party and the American Revolution, Hellyer said. Sentiment for green tea didnt wane until the postwar era, when anti-Japanese and anti-Chinese views spawned from propaganda.

While Britons preferred black teas, after 1800, in the United States, green tea came to hold an aura of sophistication and was more widely consumed, Hellyer said. Green tea was sold at higher prices than black tea.

Indian Ceylon, a competitor to Japan Tea the first national brand of green tea in the U.S. sought to sell its black tea to the U.S. market following a successful introduction into British society. Indian Ceylon altered Americans tastes from green to black teas with a strategy that involved negative advertising with racist overtones presenting both Japanese and Chinese green teas as dirty, dangerous and fraudulent, Hellyer said.

These advertisements had some impact in reducing American consumption of Japanese green tea but not immediately, Hellyer said. Thats because the war disrupted Indian Ceylon exports, so Japan was able to export more tea to Britain and other European markets.

In bolstering black teas reputation, Indian Ceylon contended that their tea was better quality because it was picked and refined by white individuals, which had long-term impacts on American consumption of Japanese green tea, Hellyer said.

Rebecca Corbett, co-head of the East Asian Library, associate University librarian and moderator of the event, said that, amid rising anti-Asian hate regarding coronavirus origins, conversations about historical instances of anti-Japanese and anti-Chinese perception that parallel modern trends are crucial to observing positive examples of interaction between North America and Asian countries.

A lot of Japanese Americans found it difficult, initially, to live in America and to not have that negative associations because of their heritage, Corbett said. We are looking at the economic and cultural history of tea as a product in America the popularity of it over time and peoples image of Japan and how that can be bound up in Japan as a branding symbol.

Lindsay O Neill, who attended the lecture with students from her General Education Seminar in Social Analysis: Drunk History, or How Beverages Changed the World class, said beverages can tell a significant story about Westward expansion and colonization facilitated by corporations.

Its a smaller way to look at these long term changes, said ONeill, an associate professor of history at the Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Hopefully, it makes people think, and USC students think more critically about whats on their plate.

Issay Matsumoto, who asked a question about advertisements role of promoting sencha as a health product to stimulate export numbers, said he attended the talk because of his intrigue with tea, which stems from his desire to learn about Japanese products influence in Asian markets.

Depending on the geopolitics of the time, tea can be culturally valued or devalued depending on its origin, Matsumoto said. From the experience, Matsumoto drew takeaways about consumption and production patterns across waters from Hellyers research and personal anecdotes.

You can tell histories close to you because the speakers own family history is linked to this. So, you can tell stories about your own family in really big, interesting ways, Matsumoto said.

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Guest author talks history of green tea - Daily Trojan Online