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Assistant Secretary of the Kuwaiti Olympic Committee Ali Al-Marri stated that the opening ceremony of the Gulf Games hosted by Kuwait on May 22 will be different and unique and in line with a “new youthful approach that imposes its reality for the first time.”
Al-Marri added, in a press statement, that the opening ceremony will witness wonderful surprises that will delight the audience and participants. He invited the fans to attend the ceremony which will be held at the Rafael Nadal Academy in the Sheikh Jaber Al-Abdullah International Tennis Complex.The upcoming Gulf event is receiving attention and support from the political and sports leadership in the country, which confirms its success and its appearance in a manner worthy of Kuwait.He pointed out that the current edition of the course witnesses for the first time the participation of both sexes separately. Saudi women will also participate in it for the first time, indicating that the joining of the padel sports and video games to the course is the first event of its kind as well.
The championship competitions will start on Friday with the women’s athletics competitions, while the rest of the other competitions will follow, respectively.
The GCC games includes 16 different sports, including handball, volleyball, basketball, futsal, swimming, athletics, karate, judo, fencing, archery, tennis, cycling, ice hockey, table tennis, and padel, in addition to video games. For the first time, the tournament will witness the participation of the female athletes, as the players will participate in seven competitions in futsal, cycling, athletics, table tennis, basketball (3×3), video games and padel sports. (KUNA)
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Just as Mexican journalists prepared to protest the killing of a journalist last week, word came Monday that two more were shot to death in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, raising to 11 the number of such killings in the country this year.
The Veracruz State Prosecutor's Office said via Twitter that it was investigating the killings of Yessenia Mollinedo Falconi and Sheila Johana García Olivera, the director and a reporter, respectively, of the online news site El Veraz in Cosoleacaque.
Veracruz State Prosecutor Verónica Hernández Giadáns said the investigation would be exhaustive, including considering their journalism work as a possible motive in their killing.
The State Commission for Attention To and Protection of Journalists said the two women were attacked outside a convenience store.
“We condemn this attack on Veracruz’s journalism profession, give it prompt monitoring and have opened an investigation,” the commission said.
Their killings came on the heels of the ninth slaying of journalist this year, in the northern state of Sinaloa. Prosecutors there said Thursday that the body of Luis Enrique Ramírez Ramos was found on a dirt road near a junkyard in the state capital, Culiacan.
Prosecutors said that his body was wrapped in black plastic and that he died from multiple blows to the head.
Ramírez Ramos’ news website, “Fuentes Fidedignas,” or “Reliable Sources,” said that he had been abducted near his house hours earlier.
The dizzying pace of killings has made Mexico the deadliest country for journalists to work outside of war zones this year.
On Monday evening, Griselda Triana, wife of Javier Valdez, a journalist slain in 2017, spoke to some 200 journalists gathered at Mexico City’s Angel of Independence monument. The demonstration had originally been scheduled to protest the killing of Ramírez Ramos and those who preceded him.
Valdez, one of Mexico’s best-known journalists killed in recent years, was an award-winning reporter who specialized in covering drug trafficking and organized crime in the northern state of Sinaloa.
“In all this time I haven’t stopped thinking about how easy it is for them to kill a journalist in Mexico,” Triana said. “I feel hurt each time they take the life of so many colleagues.”
“There’s so much anger, indignation, powerlessness knowing that we come here to protest the murder of Luis Enrique Ramírez, (that happened) a few days ago in Culiacan, Sinaloa, and the news of the killing of two women journalists in Veracruz reaches us here,” Triana said. “It’s a whirlpool. The crimes against freedom of expression keep occurring every day. We shouldn’t tolerate it. We have the authority to ask the authorities to put a stop to this slaughter of journalists.”
The victims, like those killed Monday, are most often from small, hyperlocal news outlets. El Veraz operated a Facebook page and appeared to almost exclusively post notices about events or public information from the municipality's government. El Veraz’s motto was “Journalism with Humanity.”
The phone number listed for El Veraz rang to what appeared to be Mollinedo Falconi's cell phone, according to its message.
Cosoleacaque is just off a major east-west route in southeastern Veracruz. Organized crime is present in the area and involved especially in migrant smuggling, but there was no immediate indication of who could have been responsible.
Veracruz Gov. Cuitláhuac García said a search was underway for those responsible.
“We will find the perpetrators of this crime, there will be justice and there will not be impunity like we have said and done in other cases,” García said via Twitter.
Journalists had already scheduled a demonstration for Monday in Mexico City to protest killings of their colleagues, most recently that of Ramírez Ramos in Sinaloa.
Mexico’s state and federal governments have been criticized for neither preventing the killings nor investigating them sufficiently.
While organized crime is often involved in journalist killings, small town officials or politicians with political or criminal motivations are often suspects as well. Journalists running small news outlets in Mexico’s interior are easy targets.
Mexico has a protection program for journalists and human rights defenders, but it was not immediately known whether either Mollinedo Falconi or García Olivera were enrolled.
Participants receive support, such as electronic devices or “panic buttons” to alert the authorities to any threat; surveillance systems in their homes; even bodyguards in some cases. Often authorities recommend that threatened journalists move to another state or the capital to lessen the threat, but that means separating them from their work, livelihood and families.
While President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has promised a “zero impunity” program to investigate such slayings, journalists’ murders, like most homicides in Mexico, are never resolved by authorities. López Obrador has also kept up his regular verbal attacks on journalists critical of his administration.
In February, the Inter American Press Association called on the president to “immediately suspend the aggressions and insults, because such attacks from the top of power encourage violence against the press.”
In March, the European Union approved a resolution that “calls on the authorities, and in particular the highest ones, to refrain from issuing any communication which could stigmatize human rights defenders, journalists and media workers, exacerbate the atmosphere against them or distort their lines of investigation.”
Late Monday, presidential spokesman Jesús Ramírez said via Twitter that the federal and state governments would work together to investigate the killings. “The commitment is that there is not impunity.”
The world faces a 50 per cent chance of warming of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, if only briefly, by 2026, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday.
That does not mean the world would be crossing the long-term warming threshold of 1.5C (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), which scientists have set as the ceiling for avoiding catastrophic climate change.
But a year of warming at 1.5C could offer a taste of what crossing that long-term threshold would be like.
"We are getting measurably closer to temporarily reaching the lower target of the Paris Agreement," said WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas, referring to climate accords adopted in 2015.
The likelihood of exceeding 1.5C for a short period has been rising since 2015, with scientists in 2020 estimating a 20 per cent chance and revising that last year up to 40 per cent. Even one year at 1.5C of warming can have dire impacts, such as killing many of the world's coral reefs and shrinking Arctic sea ice cover.
In terms of the long-term average, the average global temperature is now about 1.1C warmer than the pre-industrial average.
"Loss and damage associated with, or exacerbated by, climate change is already occurring, some of it likely irreversible for the foreseeable future," said Maxx Dilley, deputy director of climate at the WMO.
World leaders pledged under the 2015 Paris Agreement to prevent crossing the long-term 1.5C threshold – measured as a multi-decadal average – but so far have fallen short on cutting climate-warming emissions. Today's activities and current policies have the world on track to warm by about 3.2C by the end of the century.
"It's important to remember that once we hit 1.5C, the lack of science-based emissions policies mean that we will suffer worsening impacts as we approach 1.6C, 1.7C, and every increment of warming thereafter," said Kim Cobb, a climate scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology./Reuters
A Turkish researcher at Stanford University in California has succeeded in achieving 3D in photography and imagery with a very low-energy, inexpensive and high-performance invention that can be integrated into cell phone cameras.
Okan Atalar's research was published in the journal Nature last month along with that of three other scientists at the same university.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, he said similar research in the field had attracted global attention in recent years.
Atalar said although the performance of existing optical systems that can measure depth with cameras is very low and requires high costs, after four years of effort, they have created a simple device that can be added to an existing camera.
"What makes this device special is that it is very cheap. Currently, such technology is not available on the market, and an optical device that provides depth perception consumes 100, maybe 1,000 times as much energy as a camera would. With our device, depth perception can be achieved with very low energy, very cheaply and with high performance," he said.
He went on to say that with this invention, when a photo is taken, the brightness and color of the light as well as its distance can be seen in each pixel.
"The technology we developed will advance virtual and augmented reality and the metaverse universe, improving its performance," Atalar stressed.
Following his article, he said that investors and research institutions in Silicon Valley called them and made an investment offer.
Saying they have not decided on the best use of the technology yet, Atalar added that they think the system could be used with robots and smartphones, but it can also be used in infrared cameras, which would make it possible to capture the depth axis through a simple integration with any camera./aa
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday condemned the weekend killing of dozens of civilians in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, calling on the authorities to investigate the massacre and bring those responsible to justice.
At least 52 people were killed in an attack attributed to the Cooperative for the Development of Congo (CODECO) militia group in Djugu territory at a mining site in the Banyali Kilo administrative area of Ituri province, local authorities said Sunday.
More civilians were displaced and reported missing when the attackers set fire to nearby Malika village, where they also reportedly raped six women.
In a statement, Guterres strongly condemned the attacks.
“The Secretary-General expresses his deepest condolences to the families of the victims and wishes a swift recovery to those injured. He calls on the Congolese authorities to investigate these incidents and bring those responsible to justice,” the statement said.
On Monday, the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) conducted a medical evacuation operation of severely injured civilians to medical facilities in Bunia, Ituri province.
“The Secretary-General also urges the authorities to ensure MONUSCO’s immediate, free and unimpeded access to the areas of the attacks to facilitate efforts to protect civilians,” it said.
Guterres reiterated calls on all armed groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to cease their callous attacks on civilians, participate unconditionally in the political process, including regional initiatives, and lay down their weapons through the Disarmament, Demobilization, Community Recovery and Stabilization Program.
Jules Ngongo, a spokesman for military operations in Ituri, said the killings resulted from clashes between two armed groups in the area vying for control of the gold mining quarry.
Unfortunately during their clashes, it is peaceful citizens who are used as human shields, he said.
President Felix Tshisekedi in a tweet condemned what he described as a repugnant and heinous crime and reaffirmed his “commitment to eradicate any insurgency on Congolese soil.”
“The government specifies that this barbaric and cowardly act by CODECO terrorists on innocent populations will in no way shake its determination to restore peace,” a government statement said.
CODECO has intensified attacks on villages in Ituri since last November, destroying nearly 1,300 houses in one such attack.
In February, a large-scale massacre attributed to CODECO militiamen left 62 people dead in an attack on a camp for displaced people.
Since last May, Ituri and North Kivu provinces have been under a "state of siege" where senior civilian officials in the state were replaced with army officers in a bid to curb growing insecurity.
However, rights activists and politicians say the siege has failed to stem violence./aa
US stocks sank to a 13-month low Monday in panic selling amid worries over whether the Federal Reserve would be able to halt ever-increasing inflation without sending the economy into a recession.
While uncertainties over the Russia-Ukraine war continued, the lack of any relaxation in China's "zero tolerance" COVID-19 policy and the tightening of measures in the country’s financial center, Shanghai, raised concerns that global inflationary pressures would rise.
Meanwhile, US consumers predict that prices in three years will be higher compared with a month ago, according to data released Monday.
Last week's selloff started on Thursday, a day after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 50 basis points and signaled that more rate hikes are on the table in coming meetings.
The Fed's hawkish stance and aggressive monetary tightening are viewed by investors as factors that could trigger a recession in the world's largest economy.
The big question is whether inflation can head below 3% without the Fed causing a recession
The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 653.67 points, or 2%, to 32,245.70 while the S&P 500 fell 132.10 points, or 3.20%, to 3,991. 24.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq plummeted 521.41 points, or 4.29%, to 11,623.25.
The MSCI World index fell 3.1%.
The yield on 10-year Treasuries diminished 10 basis points to 3.03%.
Gold futures fell 1.6% to $1,852.70 an ounce, while silver slid to $21.73, a 2.9% decline.
Global benchmark Brent crude was trading at $105 a barrel, down 6.5%, while US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at $102.28 -- a 6.8% loss.
The price of Bitcoin, the world's largest cryptocurrency market by trade volume, dove below $33,000 earlier to mark its lowest level since July 2021./aa
Turkiye's Embassy in Dominican Republic, which is accredited to neighboring Haiti, continues to monitor the hijacking of a passenger bus in Haiti including at least eight Turkish citizens, said diplomatic sources on Monday.
Eight Turkish citizens travelling in a passenger bus in Haiti were kidnapped on Sunday, said the sources, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
Following a Monday Cabinet meeting, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told reporters that a dedicated group has been set up to arrange for the rescue of the kidnapped Turkish citizens.
"We are monitoring the situation. A crisis desk has been set up in Haiti," he said.
Saying that he has spoken to both Turkiye's envoy in the Dominican Republic as well as Haiti's foreign and interior ministers, Cavusoglu noted that ransom is being considered as the reason motivating the kidnapping./aa
Roberto Marquez, a Mexican artist who has been painting various angles of Russia’s war from his makeshift set up under a bridge in Ukraine, aims to portray "the true face" of what he has witnessed in the country.
Marquez arrived in Ukraine in response to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's appeal for international support. The Mexican artist painted what he saw while visiting various cities in the war-torn country.
"Through my paintings, I want to show the world the true face of the war in Ukraine. My artworks demonstrate opposition to the war and protest the killings of people," he told Anadolu Agency.
As he continued to work on his painting under the bridge at the entrance of the Irpin city, which was damaged in a Russian attack, Marquez said: "People come up to me when I'm painting under the bridge that was hit and tell me about their experiences. In my paintings, I apply this expertise. I would not have had new knowledge if I had handled this subject in the painting studio. My artworks would be based on speculations."
'Brushes are weapons too'
Marquez, also known by his nickname "Robenz," has worked in the art world for years and moved to Ukraine after the war broke out on Feb. 24.
"When Zelenskyy said his country needed support, I decided to come here," he said, adding, "Brushes are weapons too, and I hope to raise awareness with the paintings I make."
He added: "When I draw, I have to be where things happen. This is where the action takes place."
Marquez said he gave away his latest painting to Zelenskyy. "Attacks by the Russian army, massacres in cities such as Bucha and Irpin, bombed houses, and people's fear and escape from attacks are depicted in my paintings."
He said one of his paintings depicted the Ukrainian president as a horse fighting evil.
The Mexican artist called Russia's attack on Ukraine "foolish," believing that Russia is "hundred percent" incorrect on this issue.
He added: "The events take place in 2022. People are dying. This is not right. Maybe it is little something I did. However, small support from many countries to Ukraine can have a big impact when combined."/aa
An attack by supporters of the PKK terror group at a children’s festival in Switzerland shows that terror engulfs Europe like "poison ivy," Turkiye's communications chief said on Monday.
Sharing Turkiye's Foreign Ministry statement on the incident, Fahrettin Altun stressed on Twitter that the attack also demonstrates the threat the PKK poses to Switzerland.
"The presence of the PKK in Switzerland has demonstrated once again that terrorism has engulfed Europe like poison ivy and that a multidimensional effort is necessary to counter this global threat," he said.
Reiterating that Turkiye carries out a determined and effective fight against terrorists and terrorism without discrimination, Altun underlined that Ankara also expects to see a strong struggle, practical cooperation, and sincere solidarity against global terrorism from other countries as well.
On Sunday, a group of 30 PKK supporters first verbally attacked Turkish families taking part in the International Children's Festival in Basel and then threw iron barriers that protected the celebration area at them, leaving at least six people wounded, who were taken to a hospital.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkiye, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkiye, the US, and European Union – has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa
The COVID-19 infections are increasing at a high speed in South Africa which is getting closer to a fifth wave as the positivity rate hit 31.1% on the weekend, a health official said on Monday.
“The current rise in infections is driven by two omicron sub-variants BA.4 and BA.5. Our scientists are closely monitoring the situation,” the Health Ministry’s spokesman, Foster Mohale, told Anadolu Agency.
The National Institute for Communicable Diseases has been reporting over 5,000 new COVID-19 cases daily for the past week.
On May 8, the institute reported 5,486 new coronavirus infections, bringing the total number to nearly 3.85 million.
On Saturday, the country recorded 8,524 new cases representing a 31.1% positivity rate among those tested, the highest rate since Dec. 15, 2021, when 26,976 daily infections were reported.
“We are concerned about the COVID-19 cases, and urge all unvaccinated and partly vaccinated South Africans to protect themselves through vaccination,” Mohale noted.
He said the majority of the people admitted to hospitals due to COVID-19 are unvaccinated.
As the infections spike, Aspen Pharmacare, Africa’s first COVID-19 vaccine-producing facility based in South Africa, announced that it is considering closing down its plant. The firm said it did not have orders from buyers.
The Aspen facility was described as a game-changer in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic as it produced vaccines on the continent, which faced difficulty in obtaining them.
“As President Cyril Ramaphosa has indicated that the government is doing everything possible to prevent the closure, we are engaging with Aspen authorities to address this challenge,” Mohale said.
He said the Aspen plant benefits the entire African continent and other parts of the world because of its proximity and reduces the long waiting time to access vaccines.
With a population of 60 million, South Africa has administered over 35 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines so far, which is about 30% of the country’s population if all receive a double jab.
The country has so far recorded at least 3.84 million infections -- the highest number of cases on the continent -- and 100,520 deaths./aa