Arab and Muslim candidates win 18 of 36 elections in Chicago suburbs

Arab and Muslim candidates win 18 of 36 elections in Chicago suburbs
Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau lost his re-election by a landslide to former trustee Jim Dodge, who is shown in this picture with his family. (Facebook: Orland Park for All)
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Updated 03 April 2025
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Arab and Muslim candidates win 18 of 36 elections in Chicago suburbs

Arab and Muslim candidates win 18 of 36 elections in Chicago suburbs
  • They were running for municipal and school board seats in areas with fast-growing Arab and Muslim populations
  • Keith Pekau, a mayor who last year told residents who asked local authorities to support a ceasefire in Gaza to ‘go to another country,’ loses his bid for reelection

CHICAGO: Arab and Muslim candidates won 18 of 36 seats they contested in suburban Chicago elections on April 1, a result participants and observers said reflected the growing influence of the community on the city’s politics.

The 36 hopefuls were running for municipal and school board seats in areas with fast-growing Arab and Muslim populations. Of the 18 who won, 12 of the races were uncontested. Of the 24 candidates who faced challengers, 18 lost but said they were not discouraged.

Two key races took place in Orland Township and the village of Orland Park, which has a population of 60,000 and is a part of the township.

First-time candidate Lena Matariyeh, a local real estate agent, received the most votes in a crowded field of 12 candidates to win a trustee seat on the board of Orland Township, a governing body that provides services for about 98,000 residents.

“When I came out on top, it was definitely something. It was amazing,” she told Arab News. “I always dreamed of doing something like this for myself to serve the community.

“For me, running for office was for personal and professional reasons. I’m always helping people move and relocate to our area, and to understand why people are leaving and why people want to move here.

“Orland has so much to offer and there’s always room for growth. So just to be involved on a first-hand basis with how we could improve and make this community work for all walks of life is what I dream for it to be.”

Matariyeh, a mother-of-four whose family has lived in Orland Park for 15 years, said she was motivated to run, in part, after the local mayor, Keith Pekau, told residents during a meeting in February 2024 they should “go to another country” when they asked the board to adopt a resolution supporting a ceasefire in Gaza.

“I would say that is what encouraged a lot of Arab Americans to run for office,” she added. “It might be something that encouraged me without me realizing it. I ran for many reasons but if people are telling us that we’re not part of the process, or we’re not following things a certain way, we have to show up and prove to ourselves that we do belong.

“This is everyone’s home. My family is the same as others whose ancestors came to this country. We all immigrated to his country. My background being Palestinian American, being born and raised here, I don’t think anyone should have to fight to be recognized or to receive the same rights as someone else who looks a certain way. My goal is for this to be a world of inclusion. We all should be respected.”

After the meeting last year during which Pekau made his comment, local Arab Americans rallied and registered to vote in large numbers. On Tuesday, the mayor lost his reelection bid to challenger Jim Dodge, who during his campaign promised to be more inclusive of the Arab and Muslim communities and “all residents regardless of their race, religion or ethnicity.”

Dodge did not, however, include any Arabs or Muslims on his ticket as his choices for the post of clerk and three available trustee spots. Mohammed Jaber, who in April 2023 became the first Arab American elected to serve on the High School District 230 Board of Education, which encompasses the bulk of Arab American families living in Chicago’s southwestern suburbs, told Arab News that Dodge had declined requests to include an Arab on his ticket, possibly because he was not sure how this might affect the outcome of the election.

However, the effect of the Arab Americans on this week’s elections was clear, Jaber said, noting that voter turnout among the community had doubled following Pekau’s disrespectful comments.

“The huge surge in Arab and Muslim candidates in this past election shows that there is growing community awareness that they need to be involved,” he added,

“Although only half of the 35 candidates were able to win office, it is a huge achievement. It also reflects on the hesitancy of some mainstream politicians to run with Arab running mates.

“The success of the Arab candidates shows that Jim Dodge, who won the race for Orland Park mayor, should have slated an Arab American candidate on his ticket. He did not, as many non-Arab activists and candidates didn’t have faith in the strength and dedication of the Arab and Muslim community to engage in the election process as we did on Tuesday, energetically and with pride.”

Egyptian American Mary Alexander Basta was reelected on Tuesday for a second term as mayor of Bolingbrook, a village in the western suburbs of DuPage County with a population of 74,000.

“I extend my deepest gratitude to the Arab community that has supported me throughout my journey,” Basta told Arab News. “Your dedication to uplifting our communities, fostering unity and advocating for meaningful representation has been truly invaluable.

“The Arab community plays a vital role in the fabric of our society, and it is essential that we remain engaged, active and involved in shaping our collective future. Our voices matter and our contributions enrich every aspect of civic life.

“I encourage more Arab Americans to step forward, whether by voting, serving in leadership roles or running for office. Representation is not just about presence, it’s about influence, advocacy and ensuring that our diverse perspectives are heard at every level of government.”

Basta, who studied communications at the American University in Cairo, added: “Together, we can continue to build a stronger, more inclusive community where everyone has a seat at the table. Thank you for your unwavering support and commitment to making a difference.”

Basta and her family moved to Bolingbrook in 2003 and she became involved in local education, serving as president of the Parent Teachers Association for schools her children attended.

She was named “Citizen of the Year” in 2018 for her community activism, and two years later was elected to the post of village trustee. In Dec. 2020, she was appointed acting mayor and won the election to the office in April 2021.

The other successful Arab American and Muslim American candidates in suburban Cook, DuPage and Will counties were: Rasha Atallah, elected trustee in North Palos School District 117; Nour Akhras, in Niles Township High School District 2189; Aisha Zayyad, in Orland School District 135; Fida Khalil, in Ridgeland School District 122; Sakina Kadakia, in West Northfield 31 School District; and Diane Shaar, elected trustee of Moraine Valley Community College.

Jackie Haddad Tamer was elected clerk of the city in Elmhurst; Mohammed Siddiqi as a trustee in Glendale Heights; Tasneem Abuzir as a trustee in Palos Township; Ranya El-Khatib as clerk of the village of Lombard; Ashfaq Syed as a council member in the village of Naperville; and Samia Wahab as a member of the West Chicago Library Board.

Zahawa Saleh was elected trustee in Marquardt School District in Addison; Nagla Fetouh in Willowbrook School District 62; Nader Najjar in Burr Ridge School District 180; and Denyana Masood in Rockdale School District 84.


UK universities hold almost $610m worth of investments linked to Israel, data shows

UK universities hold almost $610m worth of investments linked to Israel, data shows
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UK universities hold almost $610m worth of investments linked to Israel, data shows

UK universities hold almost $610m worth of investments linked to Israel, data shows
  • Palestine Solidarity Campaign receives 87 responses to freedom of information request campaign
  • Organization vows to ‘keep up the pressure until we achieve divestment at every university’

LONDON: UK universities hold almost $610 million worth of investments linked to Israel, research by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign has shown.

The organization submitted freedom of information requests to universities across the UK, discovering financial ties to major Israel-linked companies including BAE Systems, Siemens and Barclays.

Student-led campaigns to divest university investments from Israel have won a series of victories in Britain and continue to gain momentum.

The PSC has led efforts to pressure universities and other institutions into abandoning financial ties to Israel.

It is part of the larger Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement launched among Palestinian civil society in 2005.

The organization received responses from 87 universities following the freedom of information request campaign and has published a database of university ties to Israel through financial investments.

“Direct complicity includes military, security, technological, financial, logistical or infrastructure support,” the PSC said.

“This information adds impetus to the growing divestment campaigns led by students and academics that have won significant concessions from university authorities in the past 18 months.”

The organization found that several universities, including the Essex, Kingston and Warwick, have invested significant funds into companies such as HSBC, Alphabet and Booking.com.

All three companies have faced criticism over their ties to Israel.

Stella Swain, the PSC’s youth and student officer, said: “It’s absolutely shameful that any university is investing in companies complicit in genocide. The fact that our universities invest £460 million ($610 million) in these corporations is an outrage.

“But students across the country are taking action to demand an end to this complicity, standing in a proud history of student resistance to occupation, colonization and apartheid.”

The organization singled out four companies with extensive ties to the Israeli military: Caterpillar, which supplies bulldozers to the IDF; BAE Systems, a key partner in the F-35 jet program; Palantir, which provides AI tools to the IDF; and Alphabet, Google’s parent company which offers cloud computing services to Israeli forces.

Several universities across the UK have made major concessions to student protesters amid mounting pressure from the BDS movement.

Swansea University in Wales committed to abandoning the £5 million it holds in Barclays Bank, while Cambridge’s Trinity College voted last year to divest its sizable investment portfolio from arms companies.

Meanwhile, the University of Portsmouth recently divested an £800,000 investment in Caterpillar following significant student pressure.

“Universities can choose to end their complicity,” Swain said. “Many have started divestment negotiations as a result of student organizing over the past two years.

“These wins show that we need to keep up the pressure until we achieve divestment at every university.”


Saudi industry minister visits Indonesia for critical minerals cooperation talks

Saudi industry minister visits Indonesia for critical minerals cooperation talks
Updated 41 min 36 sec ago
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Saudi industry minister visits Indonesia for critical minerals cooperation talks

Saudi industry minister visits Indonesia for critical minerals cooperation talks
  • Indonesia holds world’s largest nickel reserves, has rich deposits of other critical minerals
  • Bandar Al-Khorayef is on a three-day visit to Jakarta, meeting top officials and executive

JAKARTA: Saudi Arabia’s Industry and Mineral Resources Minister Bandar Al-Khorayef held talks with his Indonesian counterparts in Jakarta on Wednesday, as the two countries explore cooperation in critical minerals and other key resources driving the global energy transition.

Indonesia is the world’s largest source of nickel and has rich deposits of other minerals, such as copper and bauxite. Its mining sector makes a significant contribution to the economy, accounting for about 11.9 percent of GDP in 2023.

Al-Khorayef arrived in the Indonesian capital for a three-day visit on Tuesday and his delegation is meeting both officials and top industry executives.

“We discussed ways to enhance industrial cooperation and expand partnerships between private-sector entities in the two countries, in addition to reviewing investment opportunities and the Kingdom’s goals to become an industrial and logistics hub in the region,” he said in a post on X, after talks with Indonesia’s Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita and State-Owned Enterprises Minister Erick Thohir.

Tohir also took to social media to highlight the focus of the planned partnerships.

“State-owned enterprises in mining, communications infrastructure, banking and renewable energy sources are the priority of our discussions and the cooperation we will forge,” he wrote on X.

Trade and investment relations between Saudi Arabia and Indonesia have been on the rise. Non-oil trade was worth about $3.3 billion in 2024, showing a 14.5 percent increase compared to 2020.

“There’s still plenty of room for mutual growth. This is why the Indonesian government welcomes the rising interest of Saudi investors in Indonesia’s strategic sectors, including to strengthen the ecosystem of our national industries,” Kartasasmita said.

“Indonesia, with its huge potential in natural resources, market and workforce, and the government’s commitment to industrial downstreaming efforts, is opening up vast opportunities for mutually beneficial collaborations,” he said.

Al-Khorayef’s visit was aimed at attracting more investment to the Kingdom and exploring mutual investment opportunities in mining, food, pharmaceuticals and auto parts industries, in line with Saudi Vision 2030.

On his first day in Jakarta, he met Indonesia’s special envoy for energy and the environment, Hashim Djojohadikusumo, representatives from Indonesia’s state-owned mining industry holding company, MIND ID, and mineral mining company PT Vale Indonesia.

“Indonesia and Saudi Arabia are at a key point in redefining the mineral economy,” MIND ID CEO Maroef Sjamsoeddin said.

“We are ready to explore cooperation opportunities, knowledge exchange and transformational innovation (projects),” he said.


China’s Xi visits Malaysia, pledges closer ties amid US trade war

Malaysian PM Anwar Ibrahim, right, receives Chinese President Xi Jinping at the airport in Kuala Lumpur, April 15, 2025.
Malaysian PM Anwar Ibrahim, right, receives Chinese President Xi Jinping at the airport in Kuala Lumpur, April 15, 2025.
Updated 16 April 2025
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China’s Xi visits Malaysia, pledges closer ties amid US trade war

Malaysian PM Anwar Ibrahim, right, receives Chinese President Xi Jinping at the airport in Kuala Lumpur, April 15, 2025.
  • Nations sign 31 deals on security, trade, technology, AI, visa exemptions
  • Malaysia is second stop on Xi’s regional tour, which also covers Vietnam, Cambodia

KUALA LUMPUR: Chinese President Xi Jinping met Malaysia’s King Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday, as part of a three-nation tour to advance ties in Southeast Asia as a trade war with the US intensifies.

Xi is in the country for a three-day state visit and was met by Anwar on his arrival at Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Tuesday evening.

On Wednesday he was received by the king at the National Palace before holding talks, along with the rest of the Chinese delegation, with Anwar in the administrative capital Putrajaya.

“China looks forward to building a high-level China-Malaysia shared future,” Xi said during a press conference with Anwar.

“Together we will energize modernization in both our countries, set up a fine example of unity and cooperation for the Global South and make a new and greater contribution for peace, stability and prosperity for our region and beyond.”

The visit comes just days after the US announced a 90-day pause on sweeping “reciprocal” tariffs, while raising tariffs on Chinese imports to an effective rate of 145 percent. Beijing responded with retaliatory hikes on US exports.

The Trump administration also imposed a 24 percent tariff on Malaysian imports, raising concerns about its export-driven economy.

“The rules-based order has been turned on its head — dialogue has yielded to demands, tariffs are imposed without restraint and the language of cooperation is drowned beneath the noise of threats and coercion,” Anwar said.

“China has been a rational, strong and reliable partner. Malaysia values this consistency. Malaysia will remain an unwavering and principled friend to China … When some nations abandon the principle of shared responsibility and others question long-standing commitments, China’s global initiatives offer a new lease on hope.”

During Wednesday’s meetings, Malaysia and China signed 31 memorandums of understanding, Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. The deals span security, trade, technology — including AI cooperation — and visa exemptions.

Since 2009, China has been Malaysia’s largest trading partner, accounting for 15 percent of Malaysia’s exports and 21 percent of its imports. In the first 10 months of last year, two-way trade totaled about $86.3 billion.

But the US also has a strong economic presence in Malaysia.

“Both the US and China are Malaysia’s main trading partners,” Dr. Lim Kim Hwa, director of the public policy think tank Penang Institute, told Arab News.

“While the 90-day tariff reprieve may mitigate the short-term impact, Malaysia needs to treat the complex relationship with both parties deftly so that both parties will not get the idea that a good relationship is a zero-sum game.”

He said that with Beijing, Malaysia should aim for greater participation in its domestic economy, as China was likely to pivot to domestic consumption to mitigate the impact of loss of direct exports to the US, and while “trade re-routing is inevitable, getting China’s commitment to minimize dumping will mitigate the impact on Malaysian manufacturers.”

Xi arrived in Kuala Lumpur from Vietnam and is also due to visit Cambodia.

Vietnam has been hit by a 46 percent US tariff and Cambodia 49 percent.

While Xi’s visit has been seen as a regional push to shore up Beijing’s ties amid the trade war, Oh Ei Sun, a political analyst at the Pacific Research Centre of Malaysia, said it was unlikely that the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations would commit themselves fully to China’s camp.

“This trip is not one which is in immediate response to the latest trade war, but is a long ago planned one which aims to further solidify the already substantial economic ties,” he told Arab News.

“It is highly unlikely that Malaysia or indeed Vietnam will throw its lot with the Chinese. So there is scarcely any significant geopolitical implication, as ASEAN countries, too, largely go their separate ways in engaging the US and China.”


Muslim prisoners in England more frequently subjected to force, data shows

Muslim prisoners in England more frequently subjected to force, data shows
Updated 58 min 59 sec ago
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Muslim prisoners in England more frequently subjected to force, data shows

Muslim prisoners in England more frequently subjected to force, data shows
  • Freedom of information request highlights disparity in treatment of prisoners
  • Muslim prisoners account for 18% of all inmates in England and Wales

LONDON: Muslim prisoners in England are more frequently subjected to painful restraining techniques at the hands of prison staff compared with other inmates, new data shows.

In eight out of nine prisons with high Muslim populations, Muslim men are more frequently targeted with batons, made to wear rigid bar handcuffs, or are held in painful positions, according to data obtained by freedom of information requests.

Maslaha, a social justice charity, requested the information from the nine prisons, The Guardian reported.

It comes amid calls for a crackdown on Muslim gangs in British prisons. The data received by Maslaha covers 2023, the latest full year available.

In London’s Belmarsh prison, which often holds terrorist suspects, Muslim prisoners made up 32 percent of the population in 2023.

However, that year, Muslim men in Belmarsh were subjected to 43 percent of incidents involving the use of rigid bar handcuffs and 61 percent of instances relating to pain-inducing techniques.

Similar disparities were recorded in Cambridgeshire’s HMP Whitemoor, London’s HMP Isis and HMP/YOI Feltham B, as well as HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes.

Just one of the nine prisons included in the data, HMP The Mount, recorded a use of force against Muslim prisoners lower than for the overall population.

Maslaha’s director, Raheel Mohammed, said that the disparities “lay bare the realities of life” for Muslims in British prisons.

He added that Muslims were “being targeted by the use of force, subjected to dangerous, pain-inducing techniques and singled out for deliberately humiliating treatment.”

Separate data from the Ministry of Justice, for September last year, showed that there were 15,594 Muslim prisoners in England and Wales. They accounted for 18 percent of all prison inmates.

In response to the statistics concerning the use of force, Mark Fairhurst, the national chair of the Prison Officers’ Association, said: “Staff only use force at the last resort when necessary and when it is used, it is always proportionate and reasonable.”

Last year, HM Prison & Probation Service launched a national initiative to tackle racial disproportionality in the use of force.

It included measuring disparities in treatment between prisoners of different ethnic groups and religions.
A Prison Service spokesperson said: “We recognize the use of force in prisons needs greater supervision and have already introduced mechanisms to reduce the disparities in how it is used.

“Our new race disparity unit will help tackle racial discrimination further.”


Trump says Harvard a ‘joke’ undeserving of US federal funding

Trump says Harvard a ‘joke’ undeserving of US federal funding
Updated 16 April 2025
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Trump says Harvard a ‘joke’ undeserving of US federal funding

Trump says Harvard a ‘joke’ undeserving of US federal funding
  • Harvard has stood out for defying Trump’s attempts to force it to submit to wide-ranging government oversight
  • Trump’s administration have justified their pressure campaign on universities as a reaction to what they say is uncontrolled anti-Semitism and support for Hamas

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump doubled down Wednesday on a funding standoff with top university Harvard that has become a focal point of his war against elite educational institutions.
Harvard has stood out for defying Trump’s attempts to force it to submit to wide-ranging government oversight, in contrast to several other universities that have folded under intense pressure from the White House.
“Harvard can no longer be considered even a decent place of learning, and should not be considered on any list of the World’s Great Universities or Colleges,” Trump said on his Truth Social platform.
“Harvard is a JOKE, teaches Hate and Stupidity, and should no longer receive Federal Funds.”
On Tuesday, Trump threatened to strip the university of its tax-exempt status as a nonprofit educational institution, after earlier freezing $2.2 billion in federal funding.
Trump has demanded that the university change the way it runs itself, including how it selects students and its hiring practices, and that it submit itself to “audits” of academic programs and departments.
On Tuesday, Harvard President Alan Garber said the school would not “negotiate over its independence or its constitutional rights.”
The US president and his administration have justified their pressure campaign on universities as a reaction to what they say is uncontrolled anti-Semitism and support for the Palestinian armed group Hamas.
The anti-Semitism allegations are based on protests against Israel’s war in Gaza that swept across campuses last year.
The White House has also strong-armed dozens of universities and colleges with threats to remove federal funding over their policies meant to encourage racial diversity among students and staff.