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The U.S. counted its millionth organ transplant on Friday, a milestone that comes at a critical time for Americans still desperately waiting for that chance at survival.
It took decades from the first success — a kidney in 1954 — to transplant 1 million organs, and officials can't reveal if this latest was a kidney, too, or some other organ. But advocates opened a new campaign to speed the next million transplants by encouraging more people to register as organ donors.
Yet the nation’s transplant system is at a crossroads. More people than ever are getting new organs — a record 41,356 last year alone. At the same time, critics blast the system for policies and outright mistakes that waste organs and cost lives.
The anger boiled over last month in a Senate committee hearing where lawmakers blamed the United Network for Organ Sharing, a nonprofit that holds a government contract to run the transplant system, for cumbersome organ-tracking and poor oversight.
“This is sitting on your hands while people die,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, told the organization’s chief executive as she and other senators suggested UNOS should be replaced.
UNOS continually takes steps to improve organ supply and equity and won't be satisfied until everyone who needs a transplant gets one, CEO Brian Shepard responded.
Other experts say the fireworks are a distraction from work already underway.
"Everybody would like the system to be better,” said Renee Landers, a Suffolk University health law expert who, as part of an independent scientific advisory panel to the government, co-authored a blueprint for change earlier this year.
That blueprint, from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, sets a five-year deadline for improving every part of the complex transplant system — including the groups that collect organs from deceased donors, transplant centers that decide which ones to use, and the government agencies that regulate both.
“Focusing on only one aspect is actually not going to achieve” that goal, Landers said. “There are so many other pieces that have to fall into place.”
In the U.S., more than 400,000 people are living with functioning transplanted organs, UNOS said Friday. For all the lives saved each year, more than 105,000 people are on the national list still waiting for a new kidney, liver, heart or other organ, and about 17 a day die waiting.
Too often potentially usable organs aren’t recovered from would-be donors and too many hospitals turn down less-than-perfect organs that might still offer a good outcome for the right patient, the National Academies report found.
Kidneys are the organ most in demand and nearly a quarter of those donated last year were discarded, refused by hospitals for a variety of reasons.
A Senate Finance Committee investigation turned up additional problems including testing failures that between 2008 and 2015 led to 249 transplant recipients developing diseases from donated organs, 70 of whom died. In other cases, organs being shipped from one hospital to another were lost in transit or delayed so long they weren’t usable.
While those kinds of errors should never happen, they are a small fraction of the tens of thousands of transplants performed over that time period.
Solutions to the more common problems -- procuring more organs and making sure they’re used -- are tougher but attempts are underway:
--Kidney transplants increased 16% last year -- and by 23% among Black patients -- attributed to a UNOS-ordered change in how organs are distributed that allows kidneys to be shipped to sicker patients further away rather than being offered first to hospitals near where they were donated.
--In July, UNOS told hospitals to quit using a certain formula to test kidney function that can underestimate Black patients’ need for a transplant and leave them waiting longer than similarly ill white patients.
--Some “organ procurement organizations,” or OPOs retrieve organs from deceased donors at far higher rates than others. Medicare this year finalized new rules that require improvement or the low performers could be shut down in 2026.
—OPOs are reluctant to retrieve less-than-perfect organs that they know nearby hospitals won’t accept. Some hospitals may always refuse kidneys from donors over 70 or diabetics, for example. But soon, transplant centers' kidney acceptance rates will be tracked as a new quality measure.
To get ready, dozens of hospitals are using new computer filters to opt out of even receiving offers they don't intend to accept. Skipping them could allow those offers to more quickly reach places like Yale University's transplant center — known for success with less-than-perfect kidneys — before the organs sit on ice too long to be usable.
“You can’t criticize OPOs for not recovering organs if you’re not beginning to hold transplant programs accountable for the decisions they make,” said kidney specialist Dr. Richard Formica, Yale's transplant medicine director. “We have to come up with ways to incentivize people to change their behaviors.”
AP
Russian police arrested five people who proposed officials arrest and charge Vladimir Putin with treason for his decision to launch the invasion of Ukraine, which has led to catastrophic outcomes for Russia and its interests.
"The fact that several municipal deputies in St. Petersburg, Putin’s hometown, came forward accusing [him] of treason and calling for his removal is highly significant," Rebekah Koffler, a former DIA intelligence officer and author of "Putin’s Playbook," told Fox News Digital.
"They know the punishment will be severe. They can easily face a death sentence based on Russian federal law. The significance of this act of defiance and dissent by a handful of Russian officials cannot be possibly overstated."
The deputies appealed to the central governing body known as the Duma to punish Putin for countless deaths of military personnel, prompting economic sanctions from other nations, motivating NATO to expand and leading Ukraine to build its military power.
Their first point is that the president is blamed for the loss of the army, according to Russian newspaper Kommersant. The second problem is the economy. The deputies point to the withdrawal of investors from Russia and the "brain drain."
The group also held Putin directly responsible for prompting previously neutral Finland and Sweden to join NATO, thereby increasing the alliance’s power and presence along Russia’s border.
But, one day after seven deputies drafted their appeal, authorities ordered them to report to police for "discrediting the army." Two of the deputies left without any further action.
Ukraine’s offensive against Russia in the contested eastern Donbas region has seen a sharp change in fortune. The Ukrainian military advanced 30 miles in just three days since Sept. 1, marking significant progress during a major offensive.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also claimed that the military managed to recapture nearly 400 square miles of territory held by the Russians over the past few months.
And Russia has suffered significant losses during its campaign. CIA director William Burns and British intelligence chief Sir Ronald Moore in July said they believed Russia had lost around 15,000 troops, with "maybe three times" as many troops wounded.
If Ukraine can maintain that momentum, it could revive pressure among officials to take action and change the fortunes of Russia, according to Koffler.
"It is possible they decided to risk their lives in order to build momentum among the Russian people to oust Putin, which is an incredibly difficult thing to do because Putin has surrounded himself with loyal security and intelligence operatives," Koffler explained. "Even two months ago, I would say that a coup in Russia is unlikely.
Ukrainian servicemen fire a towed howitzer in eastern Ukraine. Anna Opareniuk/ Ukrinform/Future Publishing via Getty Images
"Today, with Ukraine’s counter-offensive gaining steam and Russia having become as much of a pariah as North Korea, I don’t rule out the possibility of a regime change organized from within."
Koffler noted that the death of Mikhail Gorbachev may have prompted this act of defiance. Gorbachev played a role in repairing relations between the Soviet Union and the United States, and his funeral drew thousands of Russians to mourn him despite Putin’s attempt to downplay the significance by ruling out a full state funeral and not even appearing at the funeral himself.
"We may be witnessing the beginning of the next chapter in Russian history," Koffler said. "The transition period, if this is what it is, will be highly risky. After all, we are dealing with a nuclear power."/FOX NEWS
International aid agencies have warned that water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea and malaria are spreading fast and tens of thousands of people, especially children, are vulnerable.
The death toll has reached 1,300. Aid workers say the count will go up unless urgent steps are taken to address food and medical emergencies.
Pakistan’s health infrastructure in much of the rural Sindh and neighbouring Balochistan province was already in poor shape. Run-down dispensaries lack trained doctors and patients often lie on floors due to a shortage of beds.
In light of the scale of the crisis, the UN issued a $160 million appeal to international donors to address the public health emergency.
Displaced families have set up makeshift tents using salvaged bed coverings and plastic sheets. Some of them lie on charpoys under the shade of Lai trees to escape sweltering temperatures, which have risen to 38-degree celsius in recent days.
Hunger and suffering is everywhere. Under the blazing sun, women and children chase passing cars in hopes someone might throw a few breadcrumbs at them.
These temporary settlements are also in desperate need of mosquito nets and clean drinking water.
“It’s a health catastrophe which is unfolding before us,” says Dr Abdul Ghafoor, who is part of Pakistan Medical Association, which has set up makeshift clinics in flood-affected areas.
“Skin infections are spreading fast as almost every district in the Sindh province is still inundated. That’s mainly because people have been forced to drink stagnant water.”
PMA medical camps run by a handful of doctors have been overwhelmed by thousands of patients, he says.
“We need immediate assistance otherwise the situation is only going to get worse.”
August saw record rains in Pakistan, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department began keeping the record.
With roads washed away, aid workers are struggling to take the much-needed relief from Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, to the worst-hit areas.
For instance, mosquito nets, which are easy to buy and transport, are difficult to come by. Some of the stores, which are still open, are selling the nets at double the market price.
“More than two-thirds of the patients that we are treating have malaria,” says PMA’s Ghafoor.
In Pakistan’s rural areas where the birth rate is still well above the global average, it's common for one woman to have 4-5 children, which means there is a large number of pregnant women amongst the displaced who are particularly at risk of catching infectious diseases.
At a relief camp in a village, some 50km from Badin city, doctors treated 800 women and 157 of them were pregnant. “Those pregnant women are in really bad shape,” says another volunteer.
Aid workers say widespread poverty and the accompanying malnourishment were already a big headache for Islamabad and now floods have added to those worries.
“Everywhere we go we encounter people who have high fever, diarrhoea, symptoms of malaria and they are vomiting,” says Humaira Bachal, a volunteer who is running a medical camp at a village near Badin city.
Pakistan was already reeling under an economic crisis, fueled by depleting foreign currency reserves. The government of Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif secured a $1.17 billion IMF loan on August 29 after months of wait.
However, that won’t be enough to deal with the ravages of the floods, which have badly affected the agricultural sector with the UN estimating that more than two-thirds of the crops in Sindh alone have been destroyed.
Inflation hit a 47-year high last month as food shortages propelled the prices.
Many of the displaced villagers work on farms for meagre daily wages. With no money in hand, some of them are still wading through 2-3 feet of water in the fields to make a living.
“We make 250 rupees ($1.12) picking up a maund (37kgs) of cotton. Me and my wife would normally do 2-3 maunds in a day. But now we can hardly manage one maund,” a villager tells TRT World.
The floods have exposed the unpreparedness of the government to deal with a natural calamity on such a scale. At the same time private aid agencies are struggling to reach millions of people scattered on the fringes of far-off towns.
Whatever little aid makes its way to the displaced people is distributed in such a haphazard manner that people with even hungry stomachs are yearning for some dignity.
Sabir Hussaian, a resident of Dadu district, saw in dismay when sacks of ration were dropped from helicopters and people pushed and fought to get their hands on them.
“For God’s sake, we end up fighting when you distribute aid like this. You leave but in our part of the world these fights over a sack of food turn into family feuds, which last for decades.”
Source: TRT World
Archaeologists in the nation of Georgia last week discovered a tooth belonging to an ancient human species believed to around 1.8 million years old.
The molar was found by a research student at the Orozmani dig site, dated between 1.77 and 1.84 million years old, in the Caucasus region. It's one of the earliest signs of hominins outside of Africa.
He showed the tooth to the team from the Georgian National Museum leading the dig. “Then we contacted our paleontologist and he confirmed it was a hominin tooth,” Giorgi Kopaliani, an archaeologist with the Georgian National Museum, told USA TODAY.
Kopaliani and his team began excavating Orozmani in 2019, but suspended the digging efforts in 2020 because of the pandemic. Work picked back up again last year. The team has so far discovered ancient stone tools and fossils from extinct animals such as saber-toothed cats and Etruscan wolves, Kopaliani said.
The area is located roughly 15 miles away by car from a world famous dig site called Dmanisi, where researchers uncovered hominin remains, including skulls, aged around 1.8 million years old. The tooth discovered last week joins those remains as some of the oldest evidence of early human species outside of Africa, according to Kopaliani.
The team, led by fellow archaeologist Giorgi Bidzinashvili, plans to continue excavating the Orozmani site for another week, and hopes to expand the team and the dig area in the future.
Researchers work at the Orozmani dig site roughly 60 miles from Tbilisi, the Georgian capital.
“Based on this tooth, the information we get from this site and its close proximity to Dmanisi site, now we … can talk about the population of the hominins in this area,” Kopaliani said. “There is a lot to work on, still. There is a lot to study.”
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USToday
Echorouk newspaper journalist Belkacem Haouam has been placed in pretrial detention due to an article he wrote about stopping the export of Algerian dates containing harmful pesticides. The Ministry of Commerce later denied the claim.
The decision to arrest Haouam came after the Ministry of Commerce filed a complaint against the newspaper and the journalist, alleging that it caused harm to the national economy.
Accordingly, the journalist was summoned to the court to appear before the public prosecutor and then the investigating judge, who ordered to put him on pretrial detention after being formally charged. Meanwhile, Echorouk was prevented from being printed, forcing it not to be issued last Thursday.
In the article in question, the journalist wrote about a decision taken by the Minister of Trade to immediately stop the export of Algerian Deglet Nour dates after they were withdrawn from several European markets because they contain high levels of chemicals not licensed in Europe.
Haouam affirmed that this decision was taken to preserve the reputation of Algerian dates and to address the problems associated with their export. He also referred to the great losses producers suffered due to the withdrawal of Deglet Nour from the shelves in countries that used to import Algerian dates.
Published on 7 September, the article angered the Ministry of Trade and Export Promotion, which issued a statement refuting this information. The ministry asserted in its statement: "Everything mentioned in this article is based on baseless and unjustified information that harms the national economy and the wealth of our country. The quality of Algerian dates is preferred at all international levels."
The ministry continued: "This unprofessional behaviour is based on the writer's failure to investigate the facts and the reliable information provided by directorates. The ministry's efforts largely focus on promoting and encouraging non-oil exports."
It pointed out that it: "Decided to take all necessary measures against the writer of the article and the relevant newspaper including judicial prosecution before the competent authorities."
However, the decision to imprison Haouam provoked strong reactions among journalists who sympathised with their colleague and considered that his imprisonment contradicts the Constitution, which stipulates the protection of journalists from freedom-depriving punishment in relation to journalistic work.
Echorouk newspaper also published a statement on the arrest of Haouam.
Journalist Rachid Ould Bousiafa shared: "Colleague Belkacem Haouam represents exceptional professional and moral value and is a true example of a journalist committed to the causes of his nation and country. His imprisonment is a mistake because his path is clean and rich in experiences. He defended the vulnerable, the oppressed and the poor, and he was an honest voice."
In the same context, lawyer and human rights defender Abdel Rahman Saleh confirmed: "Detaining a journalist after charging him based on his journalistic work is a violation of the Constitution and the law."
Media professor at the University of Algiers, Radwan Boudjemaa, wrote: "The absence of a newspaper from the kiosks without anyone noticing that is a sufficient indication of the death of the journalism profession in this country. The separation between society and the press is clear due to the lack of credibility."
An image of the article has been widely circulated across social media platforms./agencies
Tunisia’s coast guard has retrieved 24 more bodies of migrants who had been among about 120 people on boats that sank off the Tunisian coast at the end of April, a judicial official told Reuters on Wednesday.
The confirmed death toll has now reached 67 from last month’s sinking of four boats as they tried to cross the Mediterranean to Italy. More than 50 people are still missing./Agencies
Dozens of people protested in central Tunis on Friday to demand the release of a journalist and activist detained earlier this week and held on suspicion of "terrorism".
Ghassen Ben Khlifa, the editor of the website Inhiyez and a prominent pro-Palestinian activist, was arrested at his home on Tuesday.
Police officers also searched the house and seized two computers, according to multiple media reports.
Ben Khlifa has since been remanded in custody, said Amira Mohamed, vice-president of the SNJT journalists' union.
"We have had no explanation for why he was arrested," she told AFP.
"The arrest is one of a series of cases against journalists to intimidate them and silence them, which is a serious threat to freedom of the press in the country."
The SNJT organised Friday's demonstration which brought dozens of activists and journalists onto Habib Bourguiba Avenue in central Tunis, under heavy police guard.
They chanted "Free Ghassen!" and "Stop state oppression!", along with slogans against the police and the nearby interior ministry.
Some carried signs supporting press freedom.
Tunisia has seen a spike in prosecutions of journalists, including in military courts, since President Kais Saied seized wide-ranging powers in a dramatic move against parliament last year.
Civil society groups have warned of a return to the methods used by security services under autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who was overthrown in the 2011 revolt that sparked the Arab Spring uprisings.
On August 17, a military court sentenced an anti-Saied journalist to three months in prison for public remarks he made about the president and the armed forces.
AFP
A senior “Israeli” army spokesperson revealed that members of Morocco’s Royal Armed Forces are expected to participate in a military conference held in “Israel” next week.
Avichay Adraee, the “Israeli” army's spokesperson for Arab media, said in a tweet posted on Thursday that the “Israeli” army will host an international conference on military renewal and modernisation, and will include the participation of world military leaders- including Arab ones.
The conference, according to Adraee, is scheduled to take place on 12-15 September.
Possible attendees include army leaders from India, the US, a number of European countries, as well as Morocco, according to a poster Adraee shared on his Twitter account.
The conference will reportedly address "change and innovation mechanisms in the modern battlefield, with a focus on multi-dimensional defence, land access and strikes, as well as military spectrum management," as per his post.
The announcement comes as Tel Aviv and Rabat strengthened their military ties in July during a number of meetings in the kingdom between “Israeli” military chief Aviv Kochavi and Moroccan defence officials.
Kochavi, met with the Inspector General of the Royal Armed Forces as well as the head of intelligence services and the North African kingdom’s ministry delegate in charge of defence administration.
Kochavi’s visit to Morocco by was the first by an “Israeli” army chief and was met with protests from pro-Palestinian demonstrators in the kingdom.
Both Morocco and “Israel” normalised ties with each other in late 2020 through the controversial US-brokered Abraham Accords, which saw other Arab states establish diplomatic relations with Tel Aviv- notably the UAE and Bahrain.
Giorgio Cafiero
The Arab states’ newly established ties provoked anger in Arab and Muslim-majority states. Palestinian political factions slammed the move as a stab in the back for the Palestinian cause.
Since then, Morocco and Israel have gone on to sign a number of deals, including, science, trade and military.
“Israel” will also open a permanent embassy in Rabat, following an announcement in August, which will reportedly take a year and a half to construct, according to the Israeli outlet Yedioth Ahronoth.
AGENCIES
Sheikha Intisar Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah on Friday called upon the international community to aid women traumatized by war and violence.
Sheikha Intisar, Chairperson of the “consultative council of the international diwan,” made the call in a speech at “the international diwan,” held for the first time in the French city Nice, aimed at boosting sustainable economic and human development and coping with global issues namely environmental and food security.
Sheikha Intisar, who has been honored by the city mayor for her support for war victims, expressed her strong belief that Arab women can play a key role in establishing global peace. She also underlined Kuwait’s paramount role in aiding nations in crises, noting that this earned it the 2014 UN designation as the center of humanitarian action She has added that she bears responsibility of helping Arab women, hurt with war and violence, noting that she had experienced war perils during the 1990 Iraqi aggression on her country. Sheikha Intisar explained that she had founded Intisar social foundation for helping her peers in Kuwait and the Arab countries.
Sheikha Intisar has already been honored by the Mayor of the French city of Nice, Christian Estrosi, with the Legion of Honor, with the Knight rank, in appreciation of her support for war victims and serving the community through her foundation.
The medal award came to the attention of the French authorities for her clear role in serving youth and education in Kuwait through “Al-Nuair initiative” and “Al-Bareeq program”.
Sheikha Intisar stated to KUNA, “I am honored that my decades-long work as an entrepreneur, philanthropist, author, film producer and columnist in the fields of education, women’s self-empowerment, positivity and peacebuilding has today been recognized by France”.
She also emphasized that the award will give her the rural motivation to continue her work in community service.
The decoration that Sheikha Intisar received is considered the most famous in the world, granted on behalf of the President as a reward for the most deserving citizens in various fields.
Seventeen people have been killed and hundreds of houses burned during a militia attack on a village in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a local civil society head and officials said.
Gunmen from the feared Cooperative for the Development of the Congo (CODECO) militia stormed Mbidjo in Ituri province's Djugu territory during the morning, said Jules Uwechi, chairman of the village's civil society group, on Friday.
"They opened fire, set houses ablaze and pillaged the property of villagers... I myself narrowly escaped," Uwechi said in the provincial capital Bunia.
"When we went back we found 17 people had been killed –– seven women, eight men and two children."
Eleven of the bodies had been buried in a mass grave.
The army and the territory's administrator said by early evening they were not in a position to confirm the death toll.
But Uwechis explained, "There are no soldiers (at Mbidjo), there was no intervention against the militia."
"I was spending the night in my shop and suddenly I heard bullets and people moaning," said resident Lokana Maki.
"We have so far seen 15 dead and more than 300 houses burned and other people wounded and even kidnapped."
The death toll was confirmed by local chief Richard Venna.
One of the deadliest of over 120 militias
After the assault, the attackers returned to their stronghold some 10 kilometres away, he added.
CODECO is a political-religious sect that claims to represent the interests of the Lendu ethnic group.
It is considered one of the deadliest of the more than 120 militias operating in the DRC's troubled east, and has been blamed for a number of ethnic massacres in Ituri.
Last year, DRC's government put security officials in charge of gold-rich Ituri and neighbouring North Kivu province in a bid to curb violence, but the attacks continue.
The fresh attack took place not far from the site of another CODECO massacre in February in which at least 60 people were killed at a camp for displaced people.
Much of eastern DRC has seen a spike in violence this year, frustrating residents who say the army and the United Nations peacekeeping mission, known as MONUSCO, are not doing enough to keep people safe.
At least one person was killed in the eastern city of Beni this week when shots were fired during another protest against MONUSCO.
Source: AFP