2017
July
19
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 19, 2017
Loading the player...
Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

Today brought some good news: A young woman arrested in Saudi Arabia for wearing “suggestive clothing” was freed. She had been filmed on social media walking outside in the deeply conservative country in a short skirt, with her hair uncovered. After an international outcry, she was released without charge.

That kind of outcry is a powerful tool, and one human rights activists say they are turning to when it comes to attracting the attention of the United States and its president. As we wrote, a group of Afghan girls is currently participating in a robotics competition in Washington – after President Trump intervened to allow the students into the country when their visas were denied. (For a glimpse at the competition, click here.) And Mr. Trump’s personal appeal to Egypt’s president resulted in freedom for Egyptian-American activist Aya Hijazi, who had been imprisoned for almost three years.

Saudi Arabia’s crown prince launched Vision 2030 in an effort to reform society. It’s unclear whether gender rights will be part of that agenda, in a country where women cannot obtain driver’s licenses or work without a male guardian’s permission.

Certainly, an appeal to the heart can be a profound way to help. But when it comes to rights, those need to be guaranteed for all – not privileges dispensed only to those fortunate enough to have their fate go viral or to have caught the attention of someone powerful.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Once you have something, it's hard to imagine life without it. That's doubly true when it comes to entitlement programs, the Monitor's Mark Trumbull writes.

David Goldman/AP
Shane Satterfield, a roofer in Atlanta, faces more than $30,000 in debt for an associate degree in computer science from a for-profit college company that failed in 2014. 'I graduated in April at the top of my class, with honors,' says Mr. Satterfield, shown holding his diploma last year. 'And I can’t get a job paying over $8.50 an hour.'

College loans have been in the news: Thanks to missing paperwork, tens of thousands of students may not have to pay $5 billion worth of private loans. Meanwhile, for-profit students, who had been promised relief by the federal government due to fraud, find themselves still waiting for a way out.

It's hard to rebuild your life without a place to live. Realizing that, two US cities are rethinking how best to give a second chance to people who have been arrested or convicted.

Sara Miller LLana/The Christian Science Monitor
Sherin Khankan, Denmark's first female imam, opened the Mariam mosque last year in Copenhagen.

A mosque run by female Muslims is trying to upend the stereotypical narrative about Islam in Europe – and upending the patriarchy in the process. 

My mother-in-law remembers the first time trolleys rolled along El Paso streets. But for those who don't, artists are now taking a role in urban planning – offering sights, and even smells, of a potential future.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Demonstrators sing the national anthem next to violinist Wuilly Arteaga while blocking a street during a protest against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government in Caracas, Venezuela July 19.

A defining moment in a democratic revolution often comes when a nation’s poor, who mostly focus on daily material needs, join others in demanding basic rights and uncorrupted governance. A fruit vendor in Tunisia, for example, sparked a revolution in 2011 after taking a public stand for equality of law. In recent months, as Venezuela nears a breaking point in a political crisis, its poor have begun to join the peaceful efforts of others in seeking an end to the Maduro regime’s grab for indefinite power. 

This widening support among Venezuelans to restore democracy, reflected in months of protests and a large voter turnout for an unofficial July 16 referendum by the opposition, has forced other countries to seek a resolution as the crisis slides toward chaos. 

The Trump administration, for example, promises stiff sanctions if President Nicolás Maduro goes ahead with a pre-rigged vote on July 30 to rewrite the Constitution and move Venezuela closer toward Cuba-style authoritarian rule. The United States, says President Trump, “will not stand by as Venezuela crumbles.” The Obama administration first imposed sanctions in 2015.

So far, however, outside powers have yet to influence the regime other than to allow jailed opposition leader Leopoldo López to live under house arrest. The main action remains the steady loss of legitimacy of Mr. Maduro among the poor. His economic mismanagement has led to mass shortages despite the country’s vast oil reserves. Polls show 69 percent of citizens do not want him to stay in power. Nearly the same percentage oppose his attempt to alter the Constitution.

The opposition controls the National Assembly but its powers have been side-lined by Maduro by various maneuvers. Now, with widening dissent among the poor, the opposition has set up a parallel government and plans to name new judges for the Supreme Court. It has also called for a 24-hour strike by businesses on July 19. In addition, the government is heading toward a showdown with foreign creditors with a $3.5 billion payment on the national debt due in October. 

The crisis in Venezuela is the largest in Latin America in decades,but it is one that is now ripe in showing how much the region has embraced democratic principles. As is often the case, democratic progress can be led by poor or rich alike.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

When so much news we hear is disturbing, it can be tempting to simply tune out reports of our world’s many needs. But we can do better than that – we can be peacemakers. Contributor Marian English explains how affirming the presence and power of God brings a mental quietness that outweighs anxiety and sadness. It enables us to see God’s law of love in effect. “Blessed are the peacemakers,” Christ Jesus taught (Matthew 5:9). Peacemaking can begin with each of us, in our own thinking and actions.


A message of love

Eduard Korniyenko/Reuters
Visitors played soccer today in a stadium of straw near Krasnoye, Russia, part of an amusement park made entirely of the material – and erected to attract public attention to farming enterprises in the Stavropol region.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for joining us. Later this week, we'll have a story on how the technological revolution that gave rise to the Arab Spring is now being co-opted by autocratic regimes in the Mideast to spread disinformation and monitor dissidents – and what pro-democracy activists can do to keep up with the tech arms race.

More issues

2017
July
19
Wednesday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.