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The scale of the world’s unprecedented current warming trend is producing irreversible changes to the planet, a sobering new UN climate report warned Monday.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group I report, Climate Change 2021: the Physical Science Basis, said it provides the clearest and most comprehensive assessment to date of the warming of the atmosphere, oceans and land.
"The scale of recent changes is unprecedented in thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of years," said the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), releasing the report.
"Many changes due to past and future greenhouse gas emissions are irreversible for centuries to millennia, especially changes in the ocean, ice sheets and global sea level," the WMO said.
In a statement, UN General-Secretary Antonio Guterres called the report “a code red for humanity," urging "stepped-up efforts."
"The alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable: greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestation are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk."
'Every region of Earth' affected
"Global heating is affecting every region on Earth, with many of the changes becoming irreversible," said the report.
The report noted that human-induced climate change is already effecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe.
Evidence of observed changes in extremes such as heatwaves, heavy precipitation, droughts and the proportion of intense tropical cyclones and, in particular, their attribution to human influence has strengthened since the last IPCC assessment report in 2014.
"The harsh reality of climate change is playing out in real time before our very eyes," said WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas, adding: "It is a foretaste of what faces future generations."
The reports "are not comfortable" but are "a balanced view of the majority of science," he noted.
Taalas said that some of the negative changes are already locked into the climate system, but others still can be addressed if the world makes strong, rapid and sustained reductions in emissions now.
"However, greenhouse gas concentrations, especially carbon dioxide, remain at record levels," he said.
The report projects that in the coming decades, climate changes will increase in all regions.
For 1.5 C of global warming, there will be increasing heatwaves, longer warm seasons and shorter cold seasons and changes in precipitation patterns affecting flooding and drought occurrences.
At 2 C of global warming, heat extremes would more often reach critical tolerance thresholds for agriculture and health, the report said.
Extreme heat
"The extreme heat we have witnessed in 2021 bears all the hallmarks of human-induced climate change. British Columbia in Canada recorded an incredible temperature of 49.6°C – breaking all previous records – as part of an intense and extensive heatwave in North America," said Taalas.
The IPCC's meeting was to approve its following report on the physical science basis of climate change, the first part of its Sixth Assessment Report.
The meeting was held remotely, the first time the IPCC has conducted an approval session in such a format before Monday's release.
"This report has been prepared in exceptional circumstances, and this is an unprecedented IPCC approval session," IPCC Chair Hoesung Lee told the opening session of the meeting, noting there were 234 authors of the report.
"This work has required multiple series of virtual meetings across time zones, disrupting daily lives and work rhythms, especially in the most critical phase of the last 16 months as we shaped the final draft," said Lee.
More than 14,000 scientific papers are referenced in the report.
The IPCC was created in 1988 by the WMO and the United Nations Environment Program.
‘Wake-up call to the world’
Alok Sharma, a UK government minister and president of UN climate summit COP26, said the Glasgow, Scotland summit set for this November now has to be a turning point.
“If ever there was going to be a wake-up call to the world when it comes to climate change, this report is it. But the future is not yet written. The very worst of climate change is still avoidable,” he was quoted by The Guardian as saying.
He insisted that it was “still achievable” to limit global warming to 1.5 C but that this goal is “retreating and retreating fast.”
“What we really need now is for all major emitters to play their part, and the G20 are going to be absolutely key to our 1.5 C future,” he said.
“This must be the COP [summit] that consigns coal to history.”
This echoed the comments of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
“Today's report makes for sobering reading, and it is clear that the next decade is going to be pivotal to securing the future of our planet,” he was quoted by the BBC as saying.
“We know what must be done to limit global warming – consign coal to history and shift to clean energy sources, protect nature and provide climate finance for countries on the frontline.”/agencies
One hundred asylum seekers were held in the town of Cesme in Turkey’s Aegean province of Izmir, Turkish officials said Monday.
According to a statement from the Turkish Coast Guard Command, a sail boat was stopped off the coast of Alacati in Cesme.
The 100 asylum seekers on board were later handed over to the Provincial Directorate of Migration Management.
Meanwhile, the Turkish Coast Guard Command also rescued 34 irregular migrants in waters off the coast of Dikili district in Izmir after they were pushed back by Greek forces in the Aegean Sea.
The irregular migrants, including women and children, were also sent to the Provincial Directorate of Migration Management.
Turkey’s five Aegean provinces -- Canakkale, Balikesir, Izmir, Mugla and Aydin -- are prime spots for refugees leaving Turkey for the European Union, with Greek islands lying within sight of the Turkish coast.
In recent years, hundreds of thousands have made short but perilous journeys across the Aegean in a bid to reach northern and western Europe in search of a better life.
Hundreds of people have died at sea as a number of boats carrying refugees sank or capsized. The Turkish Coast Guard has rescued thousands of others./aa
A senior local official in western Nigeria was kidnapped by gunmen early on Monday, according to authorities.
Some 20 gunmen abducted Alhaji Muhammed Sanni Idris, the commissioner for information in Niger state, from his hometown of Baban Tunga in the Tafa local government area, confirmed Alhaji Ahmed Ibrahim, the state's government secretary, adding that the kidnapping took place at around 1 a.m. local time (0000GMT).
"Security is already on the trail of the kidnappers, we hope they will discover him soon and rescue him unharmed," said Ibrahim.
Governor Sani Bello also confirmed the abduction, with his chief press secretary, Mary Noel-Berje, saying security agencies are trailing the bandits who are responsible.
Nigeria's state of Niger has been hit with a wave of attacks and abductions by bandits.
About 27 students were kidnapped in the town of Kagara in February.
Other mass abductions in the state include the kidnapping of over 100 pupils in the Tegina area. The pupils are currently still in captivity./aa
Germany has donated nearly 1.3 million doses of the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine to low-income countries, the government announced on Monday.
Deputy government spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer told a news conference in Berlin that as part of Germany's commitment to the UN's COVAX initiative, authorities have begun shipping surplus COVID vaccines, including AstraZeneca, which has so far proved unpopular domestically.
She said the first 1.3 million AstraZeneca doses were being delivered to Sudan (357,600 doses), Ethiopia (271,200 doses), Afghanistan (213,600 doses), Tajikistan (100,800 doses), and Uzbekistan (355,200 doses).
The EU's richest country has so far purchased nearly 17.5 million doses of AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine, but it remained unpopular among the population, although both German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Chancellor Angela Merkel personally chose it in hope of boosting public confidence.
Earlier this month, Germany still had nearly 5 million unused doses of AstraZeneca, while tens of thousands of doses were destroyed by authorities as they passed their expiration dates, according to public broadcaster WDR.
Demmer said Berlin has promised to donate at least 30 million doses of coronavirus vaccines to the least-developed low-income countries by the end of 2021, with more shipments to continue in the coming weeks.
"Germany is making an important contribution to the global fight against the pandemic. Our vaccine donations would also help to prevent the emergence of new virus variants, which has a potential to threaten us too," she said.
According to a Cabinet decision last month, Germany will initially donate AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines to the UN's COVAX initiative.
Germany has so far received nearly 78 million doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine, 17.5 million doses of AstraZeneca, 12.3 million doses of Moderna, and 4 million doses of Johnson & Johnson.
A majority of Germans preferred the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine due to its efficacy against new variants, while AstraZeneca remained unpopular due to concerns over its side effects.
In April, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) confirmed a possible link between the AstraZeneca vaccine and extremely rare cases of unusual blood clots.
However, the agency upheld its recommendation to continue using the vaccine, saying the "benefits of the vaccine in preventing COVID-19 outweigh the risks of side effects."
The World Health Organization (WHO) also recommended the AstraZeneca vaccine, stressing that "the vaccine is safe and effective" at protecting people from the extremely serious risks of COVID-19, including hospitalization, severe disease, and death./agencies
A Catholic priest was killed in western France on Monday, local media reported.
A Rwandan refugee reportedly confessed to French security officials that he murdered Olivier Maire in the Vendee region, according to right-wing magazine Valeurs Actuelles.
The priest's body was found near the town of Saint-Laurent-sur-Sevre in the northeast.
After coming to France in 2012, refugee Emmanuel Abayisenga was held responsible for a fire that broke out in a cathedral in Nantes in July 2020.
Abayisenga was reportedly due to be deported in 2019.
On Twitter, Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin said he would go to Vendee to express his condolences to Catholics.
Darmanin said Abayisenga could not be deported as he has been under judicial custody.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen also said: "You can be an illegal migrant, set fire to a cathedral, not be expelled, and then reoffend by murdering a priest."/aa
Flag carrier Turkish Airlines on Monday rented two additional helicopters to help Turkey extinguish ongoing forest fires in the country.
Turkish Airlines continues to support efforts to fight the largest forest fires in Turkey's history, according to an airline statement.
The air carrier previously announced that the company will donate 150,000 seedlings to reforest areas of Turkey hit by massive fires.
Now it has rented two firefighting helicopters and made them available to the Forestry Directorate under the Agriculture and Forestry Ministry.
Two Mil Mi-8 and Mi-17 helicopters with a capacity of 2.5 tons of water to fight fires were leased for two months with a one-month option and delivered on Aug. 9.
The copters will be situated at Dalaman Airport in Mugla province, southwestern Turkey, ready to respond to possible fires in the region as quickly as possible.
Negotiations are also underway for a third helicopter to be delivered, the statement said.
At least eight people have been killed, according to official figures, since fires started in southern and southwestern Turkey in late July./aa
A total of 33 foreign nationals who illegally entered Turkey were held in different parts of Turkey, according to security sources on Monday.
Gendarmerie teams in the Siverek district of the southeastern Sanliurfa province learned that some foreign nationals were hiding in cornfields next to the Siverek-Diyarbakir highway.
The teams raided and held 28 Afghan and Pakistani nationals. They were fined 133,000 Turkish liras (over $15,000) in total and referred to a local repatriation center.
Separately, another five people were held in the northwestern Kirklareli province.
Acting on a tip-off, gendarmerie teams held the Afghan nationals in the Vize district and Caglayik village. The migrants claimed they were beaten in Bulgaria and sent to Turkey. Later, they were referred to a local repatriation center./aa
Mustafa M., an Afghan national living in Sweden, experienced the joy of meeting his father in Turkey, after losing touch with him while fleeing the civil war in Afghanistan a decade ago.
Mustafa, 20, who lost three of his uncles to the attacks in Afghanistan's Logar province, left the country with his mother and four siblings when he was still in primary school, led by his father, who wished a safe life for his family.
After staying in Pakistan for nearly a year, they lost their father Abbas and one of his brothers Javad, when they tried to cross into Iran illegally one night.
Mustafa reached Greece via Turkey and then Sweden with his three siblings and mother, who stayed in Iran for a while.
After completing his education in Sweden, where they settled after the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) accepted their asylum requests, Mustafa started working as an educator's assistant in the city of Karlskrona.
He continued to track his father and older brother, whom he had not heard from for years.
When he met another Afghan who took refuge in Sweden, Mustafa realized that this person had a photo with his father. Hearing that the photo was taken in Istanbul three years ago, he hit the road hoping to find him.
Mustafa applied to the General Directorate of Migration Management in Ankara, where he arrived by plane after learning through the government's database that his father was currently residing in the central Anatolian city of Nevşehir.
Confirming his location by contacting Nevşehir Directorate of Migration Management, Mustafa came to the city to reunite with his father.
Mustafa and his father Abbas finally met 10 years later in the waiting room of the migrations management's office. They were unable to hold back tears and hugged each other for a long time.
While preparing to meet with his father, who was contacted by the personnel of the migration office, Mustafa told Anadolu Agency (AA) that he had lost sleep due to the excitement of seeing his father.
"We didn't know whether my father was dead or not. We knew that he was alive when we saw the photo. It was a very different feeling. We have no information about my missing brother," he said.
Mustafa added that he was very sorry to hear about the recent developments in Afghanistan.
Abbas, on the other hand, stated that despite searching for years, he was unable to find his family and suffered a lot.
Expressing that their family experience is a human tragedy, Abbas said: "I was always praying to Allah, thank God my prayers were accepted and I was able to reconnect with my children. Three of my brothers died in Afghanistan, and I went to Pakistan because of the danger to my life. From there I went to Iran. I lost my family while crossing to Iran. I fell and broke my foot while I was crossing to Iran. I searched for my family with a broken foot, but I couldn't find them. I thought that maybe my elder child had found the rest of the family but I just learned that they were unable to find him."
Abbas M. applied to the UNHCR and requested to be reunited with his family, whom he had lost contact with years ago.
Turkey and Iran are the countries most affected by the migration problem caused by increasing tensions resulting from the advance of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Turkey's Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop stated Thursday.
Video footage has shown large groups of migrants on the border area with Iran, although the Turkish government says there has been no surge in numbers yet.
Turkey, which hosts around 4 million refugees, is currently building new security measures on its eastern border. Afghans are believed to be the second-largest refugee community in the country after Syrians.
The Taliban have pressed a sweeping offensive across Afghanistan in recent months, capitalizing on the last stages of the U.S. troop withdrawal due to be completed by the end of August, and raising fears of a potential humanitarian crisis.
The United Nations recently estimated that half of Afghanistan's 39 million people are in need of aid, and called on the international community to maintain financial support for the country.
Many of the migrants arriving via Iran are heading for Istanbul to find work or passage to another coastal city from which to embark for Europe.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has said Turkish officials were holding high-level talks over the issue with Afghan counterparts.
The issue is also likely to feature in talks between Ankara and Brussels about updating a 2016 deal under which Turkey received aid for hosting migrants seeking refuge in the European Union./agencies
Turkey’s wildfires have left little behind, turning green forests into ashen, barren hills. The destruction is being intensely felt by Turkey’s beekeepers, who have lost thousands of hives as well as the pine trees and the insects their bees depend on.
Twelve days of deadly wildfires have dealt a major blow to Turkey’s honey industry and even its longer-term prospects appear bleak.
Nearly all of the residents of Osmaniye, a neighborhood in Turkey's southwestern Mediterranean resort of Marmaris, are beekeepers. Their beehives once looked out to the green hills of Muğla province where Marmaris is located and provided the main income for many families.
Ali Kaya, 33, is a second-generation beekeeper. After his father’s death, he took over the honey business his father had set up in 1979. Yet this week Kaya lost 250 hives in Osmaniye to the wildfires, as well as the entire ecosystem upon which his bees depend.
He says the entire region is in shock.
“There is nothing left here, no trees left. Animals burned. Some people’s homes and roofs burned,” he said. “I have no idea what we’ll do. Our heads are all messed up, our mental outlook destroyed. We can’t think clearly here in Osmaniye."
The red pine trees endemic to Anatolia span the Taurus mountain system. They can be seen along Turkey's coast from the Eastern Mediterranean all the way to the northern Aegean Sea, including a great number around Muğla. The pines provide a welcoming habitat for scores of shrubs and make an ideal environment for bees.
Beehives that managed to survive wildfires in Kalemler village of Manavgat, Antalya, southern Turkey, Aug. 7, 2021. (IHA Photo)
Bees in Muğla produce a special pine-based honey. Unlike most of the honey in the world, which is created from the nectars of flowers, bees in Muğla collect the secretions of Marchalina hellenica, a scale insect that lives on pine trees and feeds on their sap. What they leave behind, the bees take to make a nutritious honey.
Wildfires in Turkey started on July 28 amid a ferocious heat wave and raged on for days across more than half of Turkey's provinces. As of Monday, some wildfires were still burning in the provinces of Muğla, Aydın and Isparta. At least eight people and countless animals have been killed. Villages and resorts had to be evacuated, with some people fleeing to beaches to be rescued by sea. The wildfires also threatened two coal-burning power plants.
The Turkish government has promised to rebuild the many burned homes and compensate villagers for their animals, along with providing other aid.
Şamil Tuncay Beştoy, who heads the Environmental and Bee Protection Association, said hundreds of thousands of hives were saved purely by an accident of timing.
Many nomadic beekeepers, including some from Muğla, each year move their hives to Turkey's inland upper plains in the spring and come to Muğla from mid-August on for the pine trees. Those beehives were spared from burning but their whole production cycle has been shattered.
“Now they don’t have anywhere to come back to, there are no forests left,” said Beştoy, a beekeeper himself. “The bees and the beekeepers are waiting at the plains with no idea of what to do.”
Since they cannot remain on the plains for long because of their feeding needs, the association was working to find healthy, temporary forest locations in Muğla, which is already highly populated with hives.
It’s a short-term solution to save the bees but points to the need for close coordination between the government, beekeeping associations and beekeepers to chart the way forward. Workers may have to find new beekeeping routes or even jobs in other industries.
Even before the wildfires, Turkey’s beekeepers were already suffering from climate change, with droughts and high temperatures reducing the pine trees’ sap and killing the bugs.
“Beekeeping is a fundamental culture of Anatolia and we were already warning that we may lose it to the climate crisis. These fires have added fuel to that fire,” Beştoy said.
Further to the east, forests in Antalya’s Manavgat district were also incinerated. Beekeeper Güven Karagöl had to leave his hives behind once those flames grew near.
Beekeeper Güven Karagöl shows his burnt beehives in Kalemler village of Manavgat, Antalya, southern Turkey, Aug. 7, 2021. (IHA Photo)
“The fires came quickly and my beehives were burning, I could only watch. Six years of my work, this year’s labor, burned,” he told the Ihlas News Agency (IHA).
When he returned at daybreak after the fires, he saw some bees emerging and realized that 20 out of 100 hives had somehow survived.
“I thought I can’t do this in a completely blackened nature, my hopes were shattered,” he said. “These 20 hives gave me hope.”
The Turkish government has said that the burned forests would be reforested and groups have launched campaigns for saplings./agencies
The divorce of Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates and the split of properties afterward is the key reason behind the slip. Gates has been one of the top billionaires since 1987 and this is the first time he is below the third spot since Forbes started its list.
Gates' investment company, Cascade Investment LLC (CAS), transferred stocks worth $2.4 billion to Melinda Thursday, taking her net worth to $5.6 billion. Bill had already parted with $3.2 billion in May after the power-couple announced their separation.
Bill Gates is currently worth $129.6 billion, while Zuckerberg, with $132 billion, is at fourth.
According to Security and Exchange Commission filings, Melinda received 3.3 million AutoNation shares, 2.8 million Deere & Co shares and 9.5 million Canadian National Railway shares from Cascade.
Bill and Melinda decided to part ways after the former chief of Microsoft was found to be friends with Jeffrey Epstein in 2019. Gates was also under investigation for another probable relationship with a Microsoft employee, back in 2000.
Gates has referred to his friendship with Epstein as a huge error and told CNN, "It's a time of reflection, and at this point, I need to go forward. Within the family, we'll heal the best that we can."
It is, however, unclear how much Melinda Gates will ultimately get from the separation as the terms of their divorce was not open to public knowledge, reports Forbes.
Bill and Melinda will work together in their Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the largest charitable foundation in the world, as long as the latter is comfortable with working with her former husband./agencies