Staff

Staff

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that the process of de-dollarization of the global economy is "inevitable."

Speaking at a meeting in Moscow with the government, Putin suggested discussing Russia's budget for the next three years, which has to be focused on development, implementation of major infrastructure projects, and stimulating economic activities.

"There are disputes about what to pay more attention to, where to direct more funds or (whether it is better) to save more and create a 'safety cushion,' how to create it in new conditions and what is a 'safety cushion' in modern conditions, when we have a well-known and inevitable process of de-dollarization," he said.

Putin stressed that Russia confidently copes with external pressure that he calls "financial and technological aggression by some countries."

He noted that the government promptly implemented effective protective measures, launched mechanisms to support key industries, system-forming enterprises, as well as small and medium-sized businesses.

All measures are aimed at preserving employment and jobs, as well as providing targeted assistance to Russian citizens, especially to families with children, and pensioners, he said.

"As a result of the implementation of this set of measures, we did not allow a sharp decline in the economy. Inflation was also quickly stabilized. After a peak of 17.8% in April, it dropped today to 14.1%, as of September 5," he said, adding that the inflation will be around 12% by the end of the year.

The monthly dynamics of key indicators also suggest that the economy is gradually stabilizing, leveling off, and entering a growth trajectory, with enterprises returning to the normal rhythm of work, he said.

In August, banks intensified their work, which is a good sign, showing the growth of the economic activities, he noted.

"We see that the actions of our, to put it mildly, ill-wishers are largely unpredictable and have recently been impulsive.

"They are clearly unprofessional, and that's why they are impulsive, which means that all the more we have to work in our logic, keep the initiative. Not just to react to some unfriendly steps, but to consistently solve their development tasks -- in the economy, social sphere, infrastructure. This fully applies to the preparation of the draft federal budget," Putin stressed.

The president also said responsible macroeconomic policy pursued in previous years paid off in crisis, and now the state of the Russian budget is much better than those in the economies of the G20 and BRICS countries, and so it is necessary to follow this line further.

Agencies

The French economy and finance minister on Monday warned of “contained increases” in electricity and gas prices for households at the start of 2023 as the state alone cannot bear the responsibility of inflation in energy bills through billion-euro price caps.

“When the price of electricity or gas has risen by almost 170% in the past few months, it would be completely irresponsible to put the burden of these increases solely on the state budget,” Bruno Le Maire told a morning show at LCI News.

He reiterated that the government policy is to pass on only a certain number of increases in electricity and gas prices as of 2023 to the households.

Last month, spokesperson Olivier Veran indicated that the government cannot hold on to billion-euro energy price caps to help households cope with soaring inflation forever.

Currently, the government has put in place a tariff shield to curb the hike in energy prices from passing on to individuals.

Without the protective tariff, households would face “unbearable prices” that could range in the electricity bill to at least €120 per month per household and €180 for gas prices, the finance minister said.

The protective measure was initially to expire on Dec. 31, but will now continue in 2023 for fewer beneficiaries.

According to the proposed strategy, the government next year will continue with “energy vouchers” or subsidies in a more targeted way to support the vulnerable population, Le Maire added.

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There are 50 million people trapped in modern slavery, as one in every 150 people are "either forced to work against their will or in a marriage that they were forced into," a UN report revealed on Monday.

The International Labour Organization (ILO), the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and Walk Free, an international rights group, jointly released the report named the Global Estimates of Modern Slavery: Forced Labour and Forced Marriage.

The 2021 global estimates showed that much more men, women, and children have been forced to work or marry in the period since the previous estimates released in 2017.

It said 27.6 million people, or 3.5 people in every 1,000 worldwide, are in situations of forced labor.

While women and girls share were 11.8 million, more than 3.3 million children also face forced labor, according to the report.

It said the figure rose by 2.7 million versus the previous report.

Out of the total, Asia and the Pacific host more than half with 15.1 people facing forced labor in the region, while 4.1 million people are forced to work in Europe and Central Asia, 3.8 million in Africa, 3.6 million in the Americas, and 900,000 people in the Arab States.

In proportion to population, however, forced labor is highest in the Arab States with 5.3 per thousand people.

It was followed by Europe and Central Asia with 4.4 per thousand, the Americas, Asia, and the Pacific – both at 3.5 per thousand and Africa with 2.9 per thousand.

The report also showed that migrant workers face higher risks in forced labor than other people.

Some 6.3 million people are expected to be in situations of forced commercial sexual exploitation at any point in time.

Meanwhile, the number of men, women, and children facing forced marriages has risen globally.

"An estimated 22 million people were living in situations of forced marriage on any given day in 2021," the report said, adding: "This is a 6.6 million increase in the number of people living in a forced marriage between 2016 and 2021."

While Asia and the Pacific rank first globally in a forced marriage with 14.2 million people, Africa, Europe, and Central Asia followed it with 3.2 million and 2.3 million people, respectively.

"When we account for the population in each region, the prevalence of forced marriage is highest in the Arab States (4.8 per thousand population), followed by Asia and the Pacific (3.3 per thousand population)," it added.

More than two-thirds of these people are female – 14.9 million women and girls, the report said.

It added: "Three in every five people in a forced marriage are in lower-middle income countries; however, wealthier nations are not immune, with 26% of forced marriages in high or upper-middle income countries."

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The demand for the dollar decreased as global monetary policies became less unpredictable, while commodity prices rose and gold's three-week downward trend came to an end.

On Thursday, the European Central Bank (ECB) hiked its three key rates by 75 basis points each in a historic move as eurozone inflation faces a record-high and war-driven energy crisis, creating new risks for the entire region.

Additionally, US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made it clear on Thursday that rate hikes will continue until inflation comes down.

"The Fed has the responsibility for price stability, by which we mean 2% inflation over time," Powell said at Washington, D.C.-based think tank Cato Institute.

Analysts underlined the fact that demand for the dollar diminished as uncertainties regarding the global monetary policies eased.

Last week, gold gained 0.3%, ending a three-week bearish trend. Silver went up 4.4%, palladium 7.5% and platinum 5.4%.

The World Platinum Investment Council said that due to China's heavy platinum imports, there may be disruptions to platinum supply in other regions.

Metals also saw an upward trend last week.

In the over-the-counter market, copper, aluminum and nickel prices also posted increases with 4.2%, 0.6% and 7.9% respectively.

Copper prices were backed by the fall in production in Peru.

Nickel prices rose as inventories fell and supply woes increased.

The decision of aluminum companies to reduce production worldwide, especially in Europe, has also increased supply concerns about aluminum.

Prices of oil, agricultural commodities

The world's biggest oil producers from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies, known as OPEC+, agreed to cut production by 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) in October.

International benchmark Brent crude on Monday traded at $92.29 per barrel at 10.03 a.m. local time (0703 GMT) for a 0.59% loss from the closing price of $92.84 a barrel in the previous trading session.

Meanwhile, a fluctuating course was observed in agricultural commodities last week. Wheat traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange rose 7.5%, corn gained 2.9%, while soybeans fell 0.5% and rice 0.3%.

The main reason behind the rise in wheat prices is the ongoing tension between Europe and Russia as well as supply concerns.

Corn prices also went up due to hot weather in Europe and a decline in production forecasts.

AA

Struggling to cope with soaring energy prices, bar and restaurant owners across Italy have decided to share their pain with their customers, putting their “unbearable” gas and electricity bills on display.

The nationwide “Bollette in Vetrina” (Bills on Display) initiative was launched by Fipe-Confcommercio – the Italian association of retail and catering businesses – with the aim of making customers aware of the grim reality: energy bills have tripled compared to a year ago.

The heavy toll from the ongoing energy crisis – a consequence of the Ukrainian war and Russia’s cutting of gas supplies to Europe – is forcing small and medium-sized retailers to choose between imposing price increases on their clients or shutting down.

“The initiative aims to make transparent what is happening today to those who manage a bar or restaurant in an attempt to explain to customers why they are paying a little more for coffee, with the risk of further increases in the coming months," said Aldo Cursano, vice president of Fipe-Confcommercio. “With increases in energy costs of up to 300%, we are working with a gun to our heads.”

Bar and restaurant owners are now hoping that their cry for help will be heard by the government before it is too late.

“As you can see from the numbers, in July, our bills tripled. We have gone from a €2,300 ($2,321) monthly bill to a €6,900 one,” Giorgio Catalano, the manager of Il Piccolo Diavolo, a bar in central Rome, told Anadolu Agency.

He pointed to the “monster” bill displayed right in front of the bar’s counter with a red box saying “darkness” for the month of August, as bills are expected to have risen even further.

“The trend is still on the rise, and now we are facing the fall and winter months, which means less light, less sun and the need to turn lights on for longer,” he noted, adding the situation is “impossible to manage.”

Catalano added that if the trend continues, he would need to cut his workers’ hours, which would mean consequently cutting revenues.

“But even in that case, we would survive only two or three months. It’s impossible to think to run a bar for the entire season or one year with these costs.”

In a symbolic protest against the spike in energy prices, on an evening in late August, Catalano decided to switch off the lights for half an hour at his bar, serving customers only by candlelight.

“It was a way to express our worries and share them with our customers,” he said.

Jobs at risk

According to Fipe-Confcommercio, around 120,000 businesses in the service sector are at risk of closing within the first six months of 2023, buried by unsustainable inflation and energy costs, with around 370,000 jobs at stake.

Business owners suggest the government adopt urgent measures similar to those approved to help citizens and firms cope with the coronavirus pandemic emergency, including fiscal aid and special grants.

“I think that putting pressure on businesses like bars and restaurants risks stopping the economy,” Catalano said. “There was some public aid during the COVID period, and thanks to that, we started to see the light at the end of the tunnel … Now it’s time for the government to step in again.”

Roberto Castroni owns an historic grocery store that bears his family name in central Rome. He agrees with many retailers that the government has to act swiftly to avoid an economic disaster.

“If businesses survive, they continue to produce and they can pay their loans. But if the government lets them die, then it’s a catastrophe,” Castroni told Anadolu Agency.

“Some funds could be provided through non-repayable grants, while others could be offered by the banking system via long-term loans,” he noted.

Italy’s caretaker government led by Mario Draghi is readying a new package of measures aimed at helping families and businesses weather the energy crisis as the winter comes.

However, finding a concrete response to record-high inflation and soaring energy costs weighing on businesses and families will be the first challenging task of the new Italian government that will emerge from national elections to be held on Sept. 25.

AA

A document announced by a group of conservative candidates for this month’s National Assembly elections reignited debate over constitutional rights in Kuwait, amid efforts to preserve traditional values met by calls for protecting public freedoms in the country.

Several conservative candidates contesting Kuwait’s parliament elections slated for September 29 signed a so-called ‘the values document’ on Sunday in which they pledge to support Islamic laws, enforcing traditional values such as gender segregation at beaches and gyms, rejecting “immoral” parties, concerts and festivals, and implementing stricter controls over massage parlors.

The signatories also undertake to apply, if elected, regulations that call for enforcing modest dress code, and stopping all pagan practices, imitating the opposite sex, gambling and insulting the companions of the Prophet (PBUH).

The candidates’ move seems to cater to a wide segment of the Kuwaiti society who’ve pushed in recent years for more action from politicians to maintain the conservative nature of the Kuwaiti society and its Islamic values and traditions. However, these efforts are often met with a counter drive from liberal activists; the most recent of which are efforts led by civil society groups and liberal candidates who voiced their rejection to the ‘document of values’ that they believe violates the constitution by forcing guardianship on the public.

Kuwait’s Women’s Cultural and Social Society released a statement rejecting the document, saying that Kuwait is a “civil and constitutional state” where personal rights and freedoms are protected by the constitution.

Third constituency candidate Jenan Bushehri said that the Kuwaiti people do not need guardians who tell them how to behave or what values they should follow. “Kuwaitis today need legislators who honor the constitution and understand the importance of intellectual pluralism and responsible freedoms,” she said.

People also took on social media to voice their frustration with the proposed document, saying that future MPs should instead focus on other pressing matters such as improving the state’s public services and infrastructure.

Public freedoms in Kuwait – the first country in the Gulf region to have an elected parliament and draft a constitution that stipulates separation of authorities and protects civil rights – is often a hot topic of discussion in the political scene; often pushed to the front during election campaigns, and also frequently debated in parliament. Earlier this year, Kuwait police canceled a concert after backlash from islamist MPs who threatened political escalation if authorities did not take action against public events where gender segregation isn’t enforced.

KT

Ambassador Tariq Al-Faraj presented his credentials as Ambassador of the State of Kuwait to Iraq's Foreign Minister Fouad Hussein.
In remarks to KUNA Sunday, the ambassador said that during the meeting, he conveyed the greetings of the Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Dr. Ahmad Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Sabah to the Iraqi foreign minister.
Ambassador Al-Faraj confirmed the will to strengthen the strong ties between the two friendly countries and peoples at various levels, in compliance with orders of the leadership of Kuwait to consolidate the relations of the State of Kuwait with various friendly countries./KUNA

Generations Communication Forum in support of the joint Arab action will contribute to crystalizing a unified vision, Algerian Minister of Foreign Affairs Ramtane Lamamra said Sunday. Lamamra made the statement during inaugurating the forum in Oran city, west of Algeria, in which Kuwait is taking part.

He said that the gathering aims to activate the role of Arab civil society in addressing the issues that concern the Arab world and meeting aspirations of the Arab nations.

The forum forms an opportunity to revive the historical memory of the Arab nations in terms of culture and civilization, which are the bases of the national identity of the Arab nation, he stressed.

He stated that this forum is being held a few weeks before the next Arab summit to be hosted by Algeria.

This coincides with the 68th anniversary of the November revolution in Algeria that was a title of the unity of the Arab ranks and the solidarity of Arab peoples and countries with the struggle of the Algerian people's liberation.

The five-day event is featuring a number of officials and activities of the civil society as well as some high-level academics from 19 Arab countries.

Of the attendees is Kawthar al-Jawan, head of Women's Institute for Development and Peace./KUNA

 Four people died of cholera due to the contamination of drinking water in Syria. The Kurdish administration has appealed to international organizations to provide support to limit its spread.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the symptoms began to appear on September 6 and have been confirmed through laboratory tests and sampling.

The symptoms have appeared in hundreds of civilians such as vomiting, diarrhoea, headaches, high body temperature, hypotension, and muscle spasms.

As per media reports, the majority of the affected cases are from the villages of the western countryside of Deir Ezzor, such as the villages of Al-Harmushiyeh, Hawaej Bumosaa’, Al-Kasrah and Al-Zughayr.

In turn, the Syrian Ministry of Health announced 16 cases of cholera in Aleppo governorate, which is mostly under the control of the government

The Kurdish administration called on international agencies, “especially the World Health Organization, to provide the necessary support to limit the spread of cholera.”

Cholera usually appears in residential areas with scarce drinking water or no sanitation systems. It is often caused by ingestion of contaminated food or water and leads to diarrhea and vomiting.

After an 11-year conflict, Syria is witnessing a severe water crisis, with the destruction of the water and sanitation infrastructure.

Neighbouring Iraq has witnessed since June a wave of cholera cases, for the first time since 2015.

The disease affects between 1.3 million and 4 million people annually in the world and leads to the death of between 21,000 and 143,000 people.


A fatal traffic accident near the Syria-Lebanon border revealed a huge shipment of illicit drugs, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported on Sunday.

The collision near the village of al-Zarah, around nine kilometers from Lebanon’s northern border, resulted in one death and several injuries.

A large quantity of narcotics including nearly three million pills of the stimulant Captagon and two tons of cannabis were found, sources told the SOHR.

The incident is part of ongoing efforts to flood Syria with drugs by Iran-affiliated militias led by the Lebanese Hezbollah, SOHR claimed.

Ravaged by years of war, the country is emerging as a “narco-state,” with Jordanian intelligence intercepting Hezbollah personnel involved in the drug trade, according to a report by the Middle East Institute (MEI).

SOHR has also reported that areas controlled by the Syrian regime forces are home to drug manufacturing plants run under Hezbollah’s supervision.

These plants reportedly produce large quantities of hashish and Captagon among other narcotics.

Dealers often attempt to smuggle drugs to wealthy Gulf states including Saudi Arabia, where buyers are likely to pay higher prices.

Authorities in Saudi Arabia made one of the biggest seizures of smuggled amphetamine on Wednesday, August 31.

Around 47 million tablets hidden in bags of flour were seized in a shipment that arrived at Riyadh’s dry port and was transferred to a warehouse.

Saudi authorities banned in 2021 imports of Lebanese fruits and vegetables after an attempt to smuggle more than five million Captagon pills inside pomegranates was foiled.

Traffickers from Syria are known to conceal narcotics in various different forms, including shipments of oranges, olives, and pomegranates.

On Tuesday, Syrian authorities even seized 24 kilograms of Captagon that had been crushed and reformed to look like hummus bowls.