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New Zealand on Monday reopened its borders to visitors from around 60 countries for the first time since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic over two years ago.
“New Zealand is back on the world map for international tourism and business travelers,” Tourism Minister Stuart Nash and Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi announced in a joint statement.
“Today marks a milestone for visitors from our key northern hemisphere markets in the US, UK, Germany, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Canada and others, who can now jump on a plane to come here.”
Nash said thousands of people are expected to touch down on around 25 flights in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch on Monday.
“Today is a day to celebrate, and is a big moment in our reconnection with the world,” he said.
Monday’s reopening is part of New Zealand’s phase-wise lifting of what were some of the world’s toughest border curbs.
In the first stage, vaccinated New Zealanders and Australians were allowed to enter in February and March.
All visitors can “now travel here without isolation if they are vaccinated and do a pre-departure and arrival test for COVID-19,” according to the ministers’ statement.
At the New Zealand-US Business Summit in Auckland, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern spoke about her government’s “six-month exercise of accelerating New Zealand’s re-entry onto the world stage.”
“New Zealand is open for business … (and) the movement of people is scaling up,” she said, adding that it was now time for the country to “shift gears.”
With travelers from several countries including China and India are still barred, Immigration Minister Faafoi said the government will keep reviewing “New Zealand’s Reconnecting strategy to see if and when it might be possible to bring forward (the) final steps.”/aa
Around 150,000 people in Ukraine are using SpaceX's Starlink satellite services daily, a top Ukrainian official said on Monday.
"This is crucial support for Ukraine's infrastructure and restoring the destroyed territories," Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine's vice prime minister and digital transformation minister, said on Twitter.
He added: "Ukraine will stay connected no matter what."
SpaceX founder Elon Musk began Starlink space internet services in Ukraine in late February, after Russia launched the war.
At least 2,899 civilians have been killed and 3,235 others injured in Ukraine since the war with Russia began on Feb. 24, according to UN estimates. The true toll is feared to be much higher.
More than 5.4 million people have fled to other countries, with some 7.7 million people internally displaced, data from the UN refugee agency shows./aa
Thousands of Muslims gathered on Monday morning for Eid al-Fitr holiday prayers at the Diyanet Center of America mosque in the US state of Maryland marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
The mosque, which offers religious services for Muslims in the Washington-Maryland-Virginia area, is located in Lanham, Maryland, just outside the US capital.
The Eid holiday marks the end of the fasting month, during which most able-bodied Muslims abstain from food, drink, smoking, and sex from sunrise to sunset.
Worshippers bowed their heads in the Eid prayer slated for 8 am local time (1300GMT), and a second prayer was offered at 9.30 am (1430GMT). Following the prayers, they wished one another "Eid Mubarak" (blessed holiday) and had breakfast in the Islamic center's complex.
For Muslims worldwide, the first day of the holiday includes feasts and celebrations among families and friends.
Usman Haseb, 25, said he was “excited to come” to the mosque to spend the day with his fellow Muslims celebrating the special day, which he called “truly a blessing.”
“It is a beautiful atmosphere, honestly. It's all about brotherhood and sisterhood really coming together as a community,” said Haseb, an Indian-American from Chicago, Illinois.
Fatih Gurevin, a Virginia resident, said he was happy to celebrate Eid with people from different ethnicities in the region.
“Thanks to all who contributed to the building of the Diyanet Center, and it is truly a blessing to have a perfect Ramadan,” he added.
The center hosted some 25,000 people during Ramadan for iftar (fast-breaking) meals, and Monday's prayers drew over 3,000 worshippers, according to Bilal Kuspinar, head of the Diyanet Center of America.
The center is a project of the Turkish American Community Center, founded in 1993, and gets major support from the Turkish state's Religious Affairs Directorate (Diyanet)./aa
The hegemony of the US dollar is strengthening on currency markets as the global economy nears the end of high liquidity, meant to fight the financial fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.
After central banks opened the liquidity spigots during the pandemic, they U-turned towards monetary tightening amid rising inflationary pressures, especially since the Russia-Ukraine war began. This has caused high demand for the US dollar worldwide.
Demand for the US dollar index has risen globally, paving the way for a selloff in a number of other currencies.
Although the dollar index plummeted 6.7% in 2020, diving below the critical level of 90, it has been on the rise since the second half of last year due to supply chain constraints.
Central banks have begun normalizing their monetary policies due to high inflationary pressures since Feb. 24, when Russia began its war on Ukraine.
The US Federal Reserve has also signaled more aggressive interest rate hikes, which made the dollar index climb to 103.90 in April – its highest level in 20 years. /aa
The European Commission said on Monday that tech giant Apple abused its dominant position in the market of online wallets.
The EU executive body announced that it has sent a so-called “statement of objections” to Apple, informing the company of the preliminary results of an investigation launched in 2020.
The probe has found that Apple violated EU antitrust rules by only allowing Apple Pay as a contactless payment method (NFC or “tap and go”) on its own devices.
“We’ve come to the preliminary conclusion that Apple holds a significant position on the device market and a dominant position in NFC inputs and wallets on iOS and Europe,” Margrethe Vestager, the commission’s executive vice-President, explained at a news conference.
She said the commission is concerned by “Apple’s decisions to block access to the NFC technology for payment purposes and use it solely for its own mobile wallet, the Apple Pay.”
“As a result, users of Apple devices can only pay with the tap and go function using Apple Pay and no other wallets,” Vestager added.
According to the European Commission, evidence suggests that developers ditched their plans on creating new online wallets because they knew they would not be accessible to Apple users.
“This behavior stifled innovation and prevented competition in the mobile wallets market. As a result, European consumers have little choice of mobile payment solutions when paying in shops,” Vestager asserted.
Apple, which has previously said that it denied access to NFC technology for payments, can now reply to the European Commission’s objections.
The commission can impose a fine if it finds that Apple breached EU competition law.
In a separate case, the EU executive body found last year that Apple abused its dominant position for the distribution of music streaming apps through its App Store and distorted competition in the music streaming market.
Maintaining fair competition in the EU’s internal market is one of the few exclusive competencies of the EU. It allows the European Commission to decide on state aid rules and fine companies for breaching EU law./aa
Electorate and citizens in Kuwait had been getting ready on Sunday to welcome Eid Al-Fitr on Monday with palpable pleasure and exuberance as they seemed relieved of the painful coronavirus restrictions that had been in pressure for the closing two years within the nation. This yr, they are able to pass to mosques for prayers and attend circle of relatives gatherings and spend outings with family unhindered as up to now.
The primary day of Eid Al-Fitr starts on Monday in Kuwait marking the top of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. The opposite Gulf states Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain are celebrating Eid Al-Fitr from Monday. Eid Al-Fitr celebrations observe the top of Ramadan which lasts 29 or 30 days according to when the crescent moon is sighted. International locations which marked the start of the holy month of Ramadan on April 2 will thus conclude the thirtieth day of Ramadan on Would possibly 1.
“Through Allah’s grace, I’m more than pleased these days. The competition temper of Eid is right here as soon as once more,” mentioned expat Abdul Sattar, with out hiding his happiness. Within the closing two years, Eid festivities remained subdued in many of the global, overshadowed through the coronavirus restrictions and lockdown.
Slicing throughout spiritual limitations, a number of social teams and organizations have arranged Eid gatherings from Monday lasting for per week. Palestine, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, Egypt, Sudan, Turkey, Iraq, Australia and Singapore may also mark the Eid Al-Fitr on Would possibly 2.
In the meantime, Kuwait will revel in sizzling climate as of Monday, first day of Eid Al-Fitr and the temperature is forecast during the vacation to hover round 38-43 stage Celsius, the nationwide meteorological middle mentioned on Sunday. Meteorologist Abdulaziz Al-Qarawi mentioned that the elements remained reasonable on Sunday and the temperature ranged between 24 and 28 stage Celsius.
More than 2,000 people joined a fast-breaking or iftar meal in London on Friday as part of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
The ‘Open Iftar,’ supported by the mayor of London as part of its Ramadan Tent Project, was held at Trafalgar Square this year.
Mayor Sadiq Khan also joined the group from all faiths to mark the last few days of the fasting month.
“We made history in 2019 when London’s Trafalgar Square hosted the first-ever iftar,” said Khan, speaking to Anadolu Agency.
“We didn't think the second one would be three years later. it's been three years now because we've missed out in 2020 and 2021,” he said, referring to a break due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“It's wonderful to be back here with Muslims or non-Muslims, men, women and children. Many of us open our fast in one of those famous squares in the world, and it's wonderful.”
Khan also invited everyone to come to London next Saturday for a celebration of Islamic culture.
“We celebrate our diversity here in London. You're free to belong to any religion here in London. Muslims or non-Muslims get on really well. Here in London, we think it's really important not simply to tolerate differences, but to respect them, to embrace them, and to celebrate them.”/aa
The Japanese people on Sunday enjoyed the spirit of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan as they participated in fast-breaking, or iftar, events held at the Tokyo Mosque.
Muslims living in the capital Tokyo as well as non-Muslim Japanese gathered at the mosque which is affiliated with Turkiye's directorate of religious affairs.
The participants joined a cultural tour in the mosque during the day and later enjoyed a fast-breaking meal together, tasting Turkish food on the occasion of Ramadan.
While some wanted to know more about the mosque, others were interested in learning about the fast-breaking tradition.
Iftar is the evening meal which Muslims end their daily fast at sunset during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan./aa
May 1 Labor Day parade on Sunday turned violent in Paris as demonstrators went on a rampage vandalizing commercial and financial establishments and clashing with public authorities, partly to protest the pension reforms of newly re-elected President Emmanuel Macron.
“The thugs come to disrupt the May Day demonstrations, particularly in Paris, by committing unacceptable violence,” Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin denounced on Twitter.
The minister also told BFMTV news that eight police personnel were injured in the clashes and 45 people were arrested, including a female protester who attacked firefighters.
The main parade was organized by trade unions and student associations to demand better working conditions and higher wages, and to oppose the proposed pension reform by Macron that would increase the retirement age from 62 to 65.
The General Confederation of Labour (CGT), one of the main organizers of the rally, claimed that 50,000 demonstrators mobilized in the march that began around 2.30 p.m. local time (1230GMT) from Place de la Republique.
A group of demonstrators wearing head-to-toe black clothes broke away from the main procession at Boulevard Voltaire and began vandalizing commercial properties, breaking glass windows of shops, and lighting fires.
The vandalism turned violent at several places as demonstrators clashed, threw projectiles at the security personnel, and riot-geared police fired tear gas shells to disrupt the crowd.
A BFMTV news report identified the destruction of around 20 properties and shops, including McDonald's, an insurance company, real estate agencies, and banks.
A video on social media showed a protester that was later identified as a woman, wearing an orange helmet clashing with the firefighters who intervened to douse a fire at the intersection of Rue Alexandre Dumas and Boulevard Voltaire.
The fire brigade, Paris Pompiers, strongly condemned the aggression towards its personnel as a “scandalous attack.”
“Shame on the savagery, this new aggression towards the firefighters of Paris in the exercise of their functions, to protect the people, the property of the City and the smooth running of the event is incomprehensible,” it said on Twitter.
Left-wing leader Jean Luc Melenchon of the Jean Luc Melenchon party, who polled in third place in the recently concluded presidential elections, said he was fed up with “parasitic violence” on May 1, which made “the march of the unions invisible and serves as propaganda for our worst adversaries.”
He blamed the Paris police for not taking timely action against the disruptors and failing to guarantee the “right to demonstrate in peace” to the aggrieved workers.
Across France, some 250 other May Day rallies were relatively peaceful.
According to CGT, 210,000 protesters turned out for the demonstrations while the Interior Ministry put the figure at 116,500.
Protesters opposed Macron's re-election, called for political change with a left-wing and socialist agenda government, and demanded a dignified retirement age of 60./aa
For the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr, the smell of freshly baked orange biscuits and powdered sugar-dusted cookies typically fills the air in Mona Abubakr’s home. But due to higher prices, the Egyptian housewife this year made smaller quantities of the sweet treats, some of which she gives as gifts to relatives and neighbors.
The mother of three has also tweaked another tradition this Eid, which began Monday in Egypt and many Muslim-majority countries and marks the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. She bought fewer outfits for her sons to wear during the three-day feast.
“I told them we have to compromise on some things in order to be able to afford other things,” she said.
This year, Muslims around the world are observing Eid al-Fitr — typically marked with communal prayers, celebratory gatherings around festive meals and new clothes — in the shadow of a surge in global food prices exacerbated by the war in Ukraine. Against that backdrop, many are still determined to enjoy the Eid amid easing of coronavirus restrictions in their countries while, for others, the festivities are dampened by conflict and economic hardship.
At the largest mosque in Southeast Asia, tens of thousands of Muslims attended prayers Monday morning. The Istiqlal Grand Mosque in Indonesia’s capital Jakarta was shuttered when Islam’s holiest period coincided with the start of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 and was closed to communal prayers last year.
“Words can’t describe how happy I am today after two years we were separated by pandemic. Today we can do Eid prayer together again,” said Epi Tanjung after he and his wife worshipped at another Jakarta mosque. “Hopefully all of this will make us more faithful.”
The war in Ukraine and sanctions on Russia have disrupted supplies of grain and fertilizer, driving up food prices at a time when inflation was already raging. A number of Muslim-majority countries are heavily reliant on Russia and Ukraine for much of their wheat imports, for instance.
Even before the Russian invasion, an unexpectedly strong global recovery from the 2020 coronavirus recession had created supply chain bottlenecks, causing shipping delays and pushing prices of food and other commodities higher.
In some countries, the fallout from the war in Ukraine is only adding to the woes of those already suffering from turmoil, displacement or poverty.
In Syria’s rebel-held northwestern province of Idlib, Ramadan this year was more difficult than Ramadans past. Abed Yassin said he, his wife and three children now receive half the amounts of products — including chickpeas, lentils, rice and cooking oil — which last year they used to get from an aid group. It has made life more difficult.
Syria’s economy has been hammered by war, Western sanctions, corruption and an economic meltdown in neighboring Lebanon where Syrians have billions of dollars stuck in Lebanese banks.
In the Gaza Strip, though streets and markets are bustling, many say they cannot afford much.
“The situation is difficult,” said Um Musab, a mother of five, as she toured a traditional market in Gaza City. “Employees barely make a living but the rest of the people are crushed.”
Mahmoud al-Madhoun, who bought some date paste, flour and oil to make Eid cookies, said financial conditions were going from bad to worse. “However, we are determined to rejoice,” he added.
The Palestinian enclave, which relies heavily on imports, was already vulnerable before the Ukraine war as it had been under a tight Israeli-Egyptian blockade meant to isolate Hamas, its militant rulers.
Muslims follow a lunar calendar, and methodologies, including moon sighting, can lead to different countries — or Muslim communities — declaring the start of Eid on different days.
In Iraq, fewer shoppers than usual appeared to have visited the capital’s clothing markets this year. Security issues also plague celebrations, with security forces going on high alert from Sunday to Thursday to avert possible attacks after a suicide bombing in Baghdad last year ahead of another major Islamic holiday killed dozens.
In India, the country’s Muslims reeling from vilification by hardline Hindu nationalists who have long espoused anti-Muslim stances, with some inciting against Muslims. Tensions boiled over into violence at Ramadan, including stone-throwing between Hindu and Muslim groups.
Muslim preachers cautioned the faithful to remain vigilant during Eid.
Indian Muslims “are proactively preparing themselves to deal with the worst,” said Ovais Sultan Khan, a rights activist. “Nothing is as it used to be for Muslims in India, including the Eid.”
Still, many Muslims elsewhere rejoiced in reviving rituals disrupted by pandemic restrictions.
Millions of Indonesians have crammed into trains, ferries and buses ahead of Eid as they poured out of major cities to celebrate with their families in villages in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country. The return of the tradition of homecoming caused great excitement after two years of subdued festivities due to pandemic restrictions.
“The longing for (the) Eid celebration in a normal way has finally been relieved today although the pandemic has not yet ended,” said Hadiyul Umam, a resident of Jakarta.
Many in the capital flocked to shopping centers to buy clothes, shoes and sweets before the holiday despite pandemic warnings and food price surges.
Muslims in Malaysia were also in a celebratory mood after their country’s borders fully reopened and COVID-19 measures were further loosened. Ramadan bazaars and shopping malls have been filled with shoppers ahead of Eid and many travelled to their hometowns.
“It’s a blessing that we can now go back to celebrate,” said sales manager Fairuz Mohamad Talib, who works in Kuala Lumpur. His family will celebrate at his wife’s village after two years of being apart due to earlier travel curbs.
There, he said, they will visit neighbors after the Eid prayers, chanting praises of Prophet Muhammad, and sharing food at each stop.
“It’s not about feasting but about getting together,” he said ahead of the holiday. With COVID-19 still on his mind, the family will take precautions such as wearing masks during visits. “There will be no handshakes, just fist bumps.”/agencies