The Minister of Culture was imprisoned in connection with financial corruption cases

Tripoli, The Representative’s Office announced, today, Wednesday, the detention of the Minister of Culture and Knowledge Development, in pretrial detention, pending cases of financial corruption in special maintenance contracts for the ministry.

In a statement, the office said that the Public Prosecution had ordered the minister’s pretrial detention after revealing to her the validity of obtaining benefits in violation of laws and regulations from public money, spending it in a manner other than the intended purpose, and falsifying official documents for the purpose of complicating the procedures for reviewing and tracking aspects of the disbursement of public money.

The office explained that the opening of the case came about the reports submitted in a number of corruption incidents that marred the administrative and financial work carried out by the ministry, including contracting for the maintenance of the book and publishing house building, the meeting room of the ministry, and the traffic circle established in front of the ministry building; Although the Ministry has maintained the aforementioned buildings and facilities during the past year, relying on covering the last aspects of expenditure on the documents approved when executing the previous contract.

The statement indicated that the Public Prosecutor directed an investigation into the case, and the financial and administrative documents and documents were reviewed, and the extent of their procedural integrity was reviewed for the aspects of spending public money; A number of other measures were taken, the latest of which was the questioning of the Minister of Culture and Knowledge Development today, Wednesday, before the Public Prosecutor ordered her detention in connection with these cases.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Fewer Police, Medics, so Mardi Gras Parade Routes Shortened

NEW ORLEANS — New Orleans is shortening parade routes for the upcoming Mardi Gras season because there are fewer police officers, medics and other first responders to handle the crowds, officials said Tuesday.

The city canceled Mardi Gras parades this past February because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and 2020 parade crowds are considered a big reason that New Orleans was an early pandemic hot spot.

“The big news and the best news is that Mardi Gras is returning to the city of New Orleans and to the world in 2022,” Mayor LaToya Cantrell said.

As city officials announced their Carnival plans, Governor John Bel Edwards said Tuesday that he’s again extended Louisiana’s public health emergency, which was first enacted by the Democratic governor in March 2020.

He’s modified it several times since then, and the latest version contains few restrictions for businesses and no statewide mask mandate.

But Edwards announced that agencies led by his Cabinet secretaries will again start requiring employees and visitors to wear masks inside their offices, including at Office of Motor Vehicle locations around the state.

“While vaccines and booster doses are the strongest tools we have in the fight against COVID, public health experts also agree that masks are an important way to slow the spread of the omicron variant now. This means you should be masking indoors around people who aren’t in your household,” Edwards said in a statement.

The face covering recommendation comes as infectious disease experts say Louisiana appears to be entering its fifth surge of the coronavirus outbreak, driven by the fast-spreading omicron variant of the virus. The number of new cases of COVID-19 has doubled over the past week, and hospitalizations of patients with the coronavirus illness are starting to grow again.

That hasn’t derailed Mardi Gras plans in New Orleans, however.

Weeks of Carnival season parades lead up to Fat Tuesday, which will be on March 1. Members of each parade krewe pay for that group’s parade.

Some krewes have not decided whether to roll, but none has given pandemic guidelines, mandates or restrictions as the reason for their uncertainty, Cantrell said.

“Clearly it’s about the bottom line and the impacts COVID has had on our community and on our economy and particularly on their krewe members. … They pay the price for us to enjoy our Mardi Gras,” the mayor said.

She said krewes will have to follow city pandemic restrictions.

Cantrell noted that “if things go wrong in our city” she might have to change its plans for Carnival and Mardi Gras.

But she said she is confident the city can make it through the omicron variant, flu season and the holiday season.

With 80% of its residents fully vaccinated, New Orleans is a national leader, she said.

Source: Voice of America

Acting speaker of the House of Representatives invites members of the House to a consultative meeting on Monday.

Tripoli, The Acting speaker of the House of Representatives has invited all members of the house for a consultative meeting on Monday, December 13, at the the House of Representatives office in the Complex of Rexus Hall in Tripoli.

Council spokesman Abdullah Bleiheg said on the House SMS page that the representatives are invited to discuss developments of the political process in the country tomorrow.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Acting Head of Government participates in the signing ceremony of the National Project for Integration of Persons with Disabilities Agreement.

Tripoli, The General Authority of the Tripoli Social Solidarity Fund on Saturday signed the agreement on the National Project for Integration of Persons with Disabilities.

The Acting Head of Government of National Unity Ramadan Abu Janah participated in the signing ceremony of this agreement, which was sponsored by the Ministry of Social Affairs, and with the participation of the Ministries of Economy and Trade, and Education and Scientific Research.

On the sidelines of the signing of the agreement, the possibility of providing logistical support to the Department of Social Service in the General Authority of the Social Fund was discussed as well as providing the necessary advice and training courses that will raise the efficiency of the members and segments of the disabled in this project.

The Acting Head of Government praised efforts of the Ministry of Social Affairs, and the important role it played in launching several projects to serve the disabled, describing it as an effective segment of society, and pledging Government’s commitment to provide necessary needs for such projects.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Dictionary.com Anoints Allyship Word of the Year for 2021

NEW YORK — Allyship, an old noun made new again, is Dictionary.com’s word of the year.

The look up site with 70 million monthly users took the unusual step of anointing a word it added just last month, though “allyship” first surfaced in the mid-1800s, said one of the company’s content overseers, John Kelly.

“It might be a surprising choice for some,” he told The Associated Press ahead of Tuesday’s unveiling. “In the past few decades, the term has evolved to take on a more nuanced and specific meaning. It is continuing to evolve and we saw that in many ways.”

The site offers two definitions for allyship: The role of a person who advocates for inclusion of a “marginalized or politicized group” in solidarity but not as a member, and the more traditional relationship of “persons, groups or nations associating and cooperating with one another for a common cause or purpose.”

The word is set apart from “alliance,” which Dictionary.com defines in one sense as a “merging of efforts or interests by persons, families, states or organizations.”

It’s the first definition that took off most recently in the mid-2000s and has continued to churn.

Following the summer of 2020 and the death of George Floyd, white allies — and the word allyship — proliferated as racial justice demonstrations spread. Before that, straight allies joined the causes of LGBTQ oppression, discrimination and marginalization.

“This year, we saw a lot of businesses and organizations very prominently, publicly, beginning efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion. Allyship is tied to that. In the classroom, there is a flashpoint around the term critical race theory. Allyship connects with this as well,” Kelly said.

In addition, teachers, frontline workers and mothers who juggled jobs, home duties and child care in lockdown gained allies as the pandemic took hold last year.

Without an entry for “allyship,” Kelly said the site saw a steep rise in lookups for “ally” in 2020 and large spikes in 2021. It was in the top 850 searches out of thousands and thousands of words this year. Dictionary.com broadened the definition of “ally” to include the more nuanced meaning. The terms “DEI” and “critical race theory” made their debuts as entries on the site with “allyship” this year.

What it means to be an authentic ally has taken on fresh significance as buzz around the word has grown louder. One of the aspects of allyship, as it has emerged, is how badly it can go.

Among the examples of how to use the word in a sentence cited by Merriam-Webster is this one written by Native activist Hallie Sebastian: “Poor allyship is speaking over marginalized people by taking credit and receiving recognition for arguments that the unprivileged have been making for their entire lives.”

As global diversity, equity and inclusion executive Sheree Atcheson wrote in Forbes, allyship is a “lifelong process of building relationships based on trust, consistency and accountability with marginalized individuals and/or groups of people.” It’s not, she said, “self-defined — work and efforts must be recognized by those you are seeking to ally with.”

Allyship should be an “opportunity to grow and learn about ourselves, whilst building confidence in others,” Atcheson added.

Among the earliest evidence of the word “allyship,” in its original sense of “alliance,” is the 1849, two-volume work, “The Lord of the Manor, or, Lights and Shades of Country Life” by British novelist Thomas Hall: “Under these considerations, it is possible, he might have heard of Miss Clough’s allyship with the Lady Bourgoin.”

Kelly did some additional digging into the history of allyship in its social justice sense. While the Oxford English Dictionary dates that use of the word to the 1970s, Kelly found a text, “The Allies of the Negro” by Albert W. Hamilton, published in 1943. It discusses extensively the potential allies of Black people in the struggle for racial equality:

“What some white liberals are beginning to realize is that they better begin to seek the Negro as an ally,” he wrote. “The new way of life sought by the liberal will be a sham without the racial equality the Negro seeks. And the inclusion of the Negro in the day-to-day work, in the organization, the leadership and the rallying of the support necessary to win a better world, can only be done on the basis of equality.”

On the other side of allyship, Kelly said, “is a feeling of division, of polarization. That was Jan. 6.” Allyship, he said, became a powerful prism in terms of the dichotomy at a chaotic cultural time during the last two years.

Other dictionary companies in the word of the year game focused on the pandemic and its fallout for their picks. Oxford Languages, which oversees the Oxford English Dictionary, went for “vax” and Merriam-Webster chose “vaccine.” The Glasgow, Scotland-based Collins Dictionary, meanwhile, plucked “NFT,” the digital tokens that sell for millions.

While Merriam-Webster relies solely on site search data to choose a word of the year, Dictionary.com takes a broader approach. It scours search engines, a broad range of text and taps into cultural influences to choose its word of the year.

Source: Voice of America

Acting Prime Minister meets French ambassador to Libya.

Tripoli, The acting Prime Minister of the Government of National Unity, Ramadan Abu Jinnah”, received, Monday, French Ambassador to Libya, Beatrice Duhlin, to discuss cooperation aspects between the two countries.

During this meeting, Abu Janah praised France’s role in working to resolve Libyan issues, supporting national reconciliation efforts, and converging views between all Libyan parties. The meeting dealt with aspects of joint cooperation between the two countries, and ways of enhancing them to serve the interests of both countries, especially in the fields of education, health and transportation, in addition to exchanging experiences between Libyan and French youth.

The acting Prime Minister stressed the depth of relations between Libya and France, expressing his aspiration for more cooperation to serve the interests of both countries and achieve stability, pointing to the steps taken by the government to ensure that elections are held without hindrances.

For her part, the ambassador indicated her country’s keenness to enhance the existing cooperation to serve the interests and aspirations of the two countries, praising the efforts of the national unity government in working to unify state institutions and lay the foundations for national reconciliation in preparation for the electoral process to achieve lasting stability in the country.

Source: Libyan News Agency