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More than 100 million people in Africa are facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity, according to a new Red Cross report.
Africa has long experienced food insecurity spurred by factors such as conflict, insecurity, locust infestation, rain shortfalls, climatic factors, market instability, and disasters contributing to low nutritious food production and accessibility, according to the International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC) report released late Thursday.
The aid group also said the COVID-19 pandemic has also been the predominant driver of high acute food insecurity in both rural and urban areas in most African countries.
In East Africa, it added, “worse outcomes are expected through at least May 2021 across much of the region (North East Somalia, South Sudan, Ethiopia – including the Tigray region) attributed to conflict and displacement, long-term macro-economic challenges, the economic impacts of COVID-19, multiple weather shocks and ongoing desert locust upsurge.”
The report said that in areas affected by conflict and civil insecurity, particularly in the Lake Chad, Liptako Gourma (the three border areas between Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali), NorthEast, North-Central and North-West Nigeria, access to land and other means of production is limited.
In West Africa and the Sahel region, “the food insecurity situation is unprecedented in terms of the scale of the increase it represents (currently and for the coming lean season), +159 per cent and +126 per cent respectively of people in acute food and nutrition insecurity compared to the five-year average (2015- 2020).”
Over one year, there has been an increase of around 80% for the current period, and 18% for the lean season (June-August). This is despite a year considered as good in terms of rainfall conditions and agro-pastoral production, according to the report.
“There is no time to waste,” said the group, urging immediate action in terms of both speed and scale. “We call for collective bold actions by sequencing and layering humanitarian response to longer-term strategy towards the zero-hunger goal.”/aa
The Turkish Central Bank will ban the use of crypto assets in payments as they entail significant risks for the parties to the transactions.
Payment and electronic money institutions will not be able to mediate platforms that offer trading, custody, transfer, or issuance services for crypto assets besides mediating fund transfers from them, said the Official Gazette early Friday.
The regulation will come into force as of April 30, it said.
Separately, the bank warned of the risks of crypto assets such as not being subject to any regulation or supervision mechanisms or a central regulatory authority, excessively volatilely, and possibly being used in illegal actions due to their anonymous structures.
The bank added that wallets can be stolen or used unlawfully without the authorization of their holders, and transactions are irrevocable.
"Their use in payments may cause non-recoverable losses for the parties to the transactions due to the above-listed factors, and they include elements that may undermine the confidence in methods and instruments used currently in payments," the bank said in a statement./aa
Turkey’s communications director reacted Thursday to a court ruling on the closure of Quran courses in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), saying the decision “is the product of an ideological and dogmatic mind.”
"To interpret secularism in such a shallow and wrong way is a step towards abolishing fundamental rights and freedoms," Fahrettin Altun said on Twitter, referring to the Constitutional Court of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus’s objection regarding the authority of the Presidency of Religious Affairs concerning education of the Quran.
He went on to say that secularism guarantees freedom of religion and cannot be used as a means of banning religious education.
The "wrong decision" is a threat to the existence of the Turkish Cypriots and unity, Altun noted.
Defining the decision as a "judicial coup against the freedom of religion and belief,” he stressed that it is the duty of everyone who respects democracy to react to this decision, which is "unacceptable.”
Altun added that Turkey will continue to be with the Turkish Cypriots with all its might and power and spoiled the dangerous game being played on the Turkish Cypriots./aa
History has a lot to say about the atrocious crimes committed by French colonial authorities in Algeria when it colonized the country for 132 years between 1830 and 1962.
At least five million people were killed and hundreds of thousands more injured during the course of the struggle for independence.
Other crimes included torture, murder, displacement of indigenous people, denial of the most basic rights, nuclear tests, the confiscation of fertile agricultural lands and the widely unknown looting of the North African country’s wealth and resources.
It took France about 70 years to fully control Algeria since occupying it on July 5, 1830.
Algerians only gained their independence from France in 1962, after fighting a ferocious war of liberation between 1954 and 1962 which claimed the lives of an estimated 1.5 million Algerians.
Algerian historians believe their land has continued to feed the French economy with its oil (discovered in 1956), gold, iron, coal and various minerals.
Seizing of Islamic endowments
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Issa Ben Akoun, a professor of Algerian history at the University of Algiers, said Islamic endowments were among the Algerian heritage looted by French colonial authorities following a decision they issued on March 23, 1843 to confiscate Islamic endowments throughout Algeria.
According to Ben Akoun, France realized the value the Islamic endowments could have in becoming a source of income for it and decided to nationalize them.
He said the decision by the French authorities was made against the Treaty of Surrender signed between Hussein Dey and France on July 5, 1830, which included that Islamic sanctities and endowments not be violated.
1871 Indigenous People Law
In 1871, the French colonial administration issued the Indigenous People Law, which historians believe had a great impact on the plundering of Algeria's resources and wealth.
Most importantly, the law made Algerians dependent on the colonialists, whether they were French or Europeans, and granted ownership of fertile agricultural lands to European colonists (settlers) who came from France, Italy, Spain and Malta, granting Algerians working at the farms only one-fifth of the production.
Algerians, who then came to be referred to as “the indigenous,” had their movements restricted and could only legally travel with the permission of the colonial authorities.
This law, which remained in force until 1945, resulted in the exploitation and plundering of Algerians’ wealth, the confiscation of their agricultural lands, and their expulsion to arid and mountainous lands.
Ammar Ben Toumi, the lawyer of the Algerian National Liberation Front which led the armed struggle against French colonialism (1954-1962), said in testimony on Oct. 30, 2012 that the aim of the Indigenous People Law was to shackle Algerians and allow settlers to exploit and plunder the country's wealth.
Another law issued by the colonial authorities against Algerians was the Crémieux Decree in 1870, which separated the indigenous Algerians from the Jewish population in the country by granting French citizenship to the Jews, which consequently gave privileges to the Jews and subjected Muslim Arabs and Berbers to a second-class indigenous status.
At a conference held at the Emir Abdelkader University of Islamic Sciences on Feb. 21, 2021, researchers and historians estimated that more than 110 tons of Algerian treasures of gold and silver and more than $180 billion are in France.
Speaking during the conference, historian Faisal bin Said Talilani described French colonialism in Algeria as the most hideous and barbaric that humankind has ever known.
According to Talilani, looting by colonial France extended to the emirate’s palace in the Bab al-Jadid area of Algiers, estimated by historical data to have housed seven tons and 312 kilograms of gold, 108 tons and 704 kilograms of silver, alloys of dust and pure gold, precious stones, luxury clothes and other Algerian savings and foreign money.
Talilani believes what was looted at the time of the occupation was worth 80 million francs. In today’s estimates, the amount exceeds $80 billion, with some French estimates putting the figure at around $180 billion./aa
The Muslim fasting month of Ramadan has arrived this year as thousands of displaced civilians are living in camps in northwestern Syria’s Idlib province, their living conditions exacerbated by more than 10 years of conflict.
Despite a cease-fire in Idlib announced in March last year by Turkey and Russia which brought a state of security to Syrians living there, they are still experiencing conditions of poverty and misery amid widespread unemployment caused by many years of fighting.
The situation has aggravated conditions for Syrian families in general during the month of Ramadan, especially displaced families living in Idlib, who lack sources of income to prepare for the fasting month.
Um Khader and her family fled from the rural Hama area three years ago due to continued attacks by forces of the Bashar al-Assad regime and now resides in the Atimah camp in Idlib.
She says her husband is unable to work after being hit in his spine.
"My children haven’t eaten meat for three years. I am speechless. We didn't make any preparations for Ramadan except our prayers," she said.
Another Syrian refugee, Khalid Sheiban, told Anadolu Agency that the prices of all goods have surged, leaving most of the refugees unable to afford basic commodities.
Sheiban said the previous Ramadan was worse and they are still facing the same conditions.
"Living conditions here are not good. The children are experiencing humiliation. We can't afford to provide them with the minimum requirements. Our financial situation is bad," he added.
Emad Khalid, a vegetable vendor from the town of Saraqib in eastern Idlib who sells vegetables in the Atimah camp, says that most of the camp's residents do not have purchasing power as they are mostly unemployed and lack financial resources.
"May Allah help the camp’s residents. I hope they can return to their places soon. All of them are waiting for such a moment to return to their homes and villages," Khalid said.
He added that most of the camp’s residents are breaking their fast during Ramadan with little food and they cannot buy meat.
In May 2017, Turkey, Russia and Iran announced a "de-escalation zone" agreement as part of talks in Astana, Kazakhstan. The de-escalation zones included Idlib province, areas of Latakia, Hama and Aleppo, northern rural areas of Homs province, eastern Ghouta and Al-Qunaitra and Daraa in southern Syria.
Regime forces and pro-Iranian groups, however, launched attacks in these areas and took control of many areas under aerial protection from Russia.
Following these developments and ceasing control of areas in Idlib in May 2019, Turkey and Russia signed an agreement in Moscow for a new cease-fire in March 2020./aa
Health officials in Jordan, Iraq, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Lebanon and Tunisia confirmed more coronavirus infections and related deaths Thursday.
Jordan
With 2,963 new infections and 70 deaths, the overall caseload in Jordan rose to 679,138, including 8,057 virus-linked fatalities.
As many as 621,870 patients have won their battle against the virus.
Iraq
Another 49 people in Iraq died in the past 24 hours, pushing the country’s fatalities to 14,885.
With 7,810 new infections, the caseload rose to 956,860. A total of 837,336 recoveries have been recorded.
Yemen
Fourteen fatalities and 75 infections were registered in Yemen in the past 24 hours.
The country’s virus tally stands at 5,657 cases, including 1,097 fatalities and 2,178 recoveries.
The figures are from regions under government control since April 10, 2020, when the first case was detected.
Saudi Arabia
Ten more deaths and 985 new cases were recorded in Saudi Arabia, bringing the tallies to 6,791 fatalities and 402,142 infections. There are 386,102 recoveries.
Palestine
Authorities in Palestine registered 14 new fatalities and 1,717 new infections.
Of the total, 555 cases were recorded in the West Bank and 1,162 in the Gaza Strip.
The country has recorded 305,187 infections and 3,204 deaths since the first case was detected.
Tunisia
Tunisia’s Health Ministry said 73 people died in the last 24 hours, taking the country’s death toll to 9,553.
It said the virus was detected in 2,649 more people, bringing the number of infections in the country to 279,376.
The country’s recovery tally reached 231,285.
Lebanon
As many as 31 people in Lebanon died from COVID-19, pushing the country’s death toll to 6,809, the Lebanese Health Ministry announced.
Another 2,501 people tested positive, with infections rising to 504,800, while the number of recoveries reached 416,624.
Worldwide
Since first being detected in Wuhan, China in December 2019, the pandemic has claimed over 2.98 million lives in 192 countries and regions.
More than 138 million cases have been reported worldwide, with recoveries now over 79 million, according to figures compiled by US-based Johns Hopkins University./aa
At least 10 people in northwestern Nigeria died and 50 others underwent kidney-related treatment after consuming “substandard and fake” juices, a health official said on Thursday.
Aminu Ibrahim Tsanyawa, the health commissioner in the Kano state, said no fewer than 400 persons were admitted to government hospitals after consuming the poisonous drinks.
In a video message, Tsanyawa said: “As you are aware, the Ministry of Health had in the recent past announced the outbreak of a strange disease traceable to the consumption of substandard juices.
“The consumption of this fake and substandard product has telling effects on the kidney, and other vital organs of the body.”
“Due to excessive heat that coincides with Ramadan, there is a possibility for high patronage of juices; I want to use this opportunity to caution residents to be on the watch-out,” he added.
Kano had over the past couple of weeks been battling an outbreak of a strange disease that has further stretched the health challenges of the bubbling state.
The update by the health commissioner came after the country’s food regulatory authority arrested suspected sellers of the juices.
Last week, the food regulatory body said the chemical used in the flavored drinks was found to be Hydroxylamine./aa
All local banks in Kuwait are given a deadline to make up to 70 percent Kuwiatization in upper and middle management jobs in the bank. According to local sources, the Central Bank of Kuwait issued a directive to submit a plan approved by the boards of directors that shows a clear path for achieving Kuwaiti nationals employed 70 percent in upper and middle management positions.
The Central Bank set a deadline for banks to submit their plans before the end of June.
The circular came within the framework of strategic endeavor to enhance national competencies in the banking sector at all job levels and its constant interest in developing job opportunities for Kuwaiti citizens.
Many expatriates, including Indians, are working in upper and middle management positions in local banks. With this new directive, Central Bank clarified that the Kuwaiti nationals must occupy 70% of all local banks' upper and middle management positions./aa
Japan’s decision to start releasing “treated” radioactive water from its Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea in two years has triggered calls for an international tribunal over the issue.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in told new Japanese ambassador Koichi Aiboshi in Seoul on Wednesday that there is great concern among South Koreans, as the two nations are geographically close to each other and share the sea, Yonhap news reported.
Japan said Tuesday that it had decided to dispose of more than one million tons of contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, more than a decade after a major accident at the facility.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga announced his government's decision following a cabinet meeting and said that disposing of the treated water is an inevitable issue in the decommissioning of the plant.
The plan will be implemented by ensuring broad and firm steps to prevent damage, he stressed.
Moon has asked his officials to “proactively consider bringing the matter to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea,” thus effectively seeking international mediation over the issue.
China also slammed Japan, which has received US support over the issue.
“Japan and the US claim that the treated nuclear wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear power plant is in accordance with international safety standards and even drinkable. Then why don't they keep the water for themselves? Or maybe ship it to the US?” said Hua Chunying, China’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman. “Of course, better have international assessment before they drink.”
Zhao Lijian, another Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, said the Pacific Ocean "is not Japan's sewer!"
"Has Japan really considered concerns at home and abroad? Is Japan's move in accordance with international law? Does the dumping of Fukushima wastewater meet international standards?" he added, according to Chinese daily the Global Times.
‘Pacific at risk’
Amnesty International also called on the New Zealand government to oppose the move.
“It is absolutely abhorrent that people’s rights are being put at risk this way. The human right to health, water, food and to life itself are all at stake by events such as this. This must not be allowed to go ahead. Thankfully, we do have some time to turn this around, and that gives me hope,” said Lisa Woods, Campaign Director of Amnesty International in New Zealand.
Woods said the Pacific region “will be especially at risk.”
“This is going to risk the rights of many, including people in Japan and others in the Pacific. We do not know what ramifications might be in the future. This must not go ahead,” she added, asking the government of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to oppose the move.
Taiwan also expressed its opposition to Japan's "unilateral decision to release tons of treated radioactive water" into the sea.
Japan should not "insist on going it alone" before having a clear idea of the implications of such an action, said Taiwanese government spokesman Lo Ping-cheng.
IAEA to work with Japan
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said in a statement that it will “work closely” with Japan, which is preparing to release a million tons of contaminated seawater used to cool the stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant.
IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said “Japan’s solution was both technically feasible and in line with international practice.”
He said the agency is also ready “to provide technical support in monitoring and reviewing the plan’s safe and transparent implementation.”
“Controlled water discharges into the sea are routine practice for operating nuclear power plants in the world after safety and environmental impact assessments,” the IAEA chief noted.
“Today’s decision by the government of Japan is a milestone that will help pave the way for continued progress in the decommissioning of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant,” said Grossi, while also underlining that “the large amount of water” at Fukushima made this a “unique and complex case.”
“Tanks with the water occupy large areas of the site, and water management, including the disposal of the treated water in a safe and transparent manner involving all stakeholders, is of key importance for the sustainability of these decommissioning activities,” he added.
The Japanese premier had said that the IAEA and other third-party organizations will be involved in the process to observe that the plan of releasing the treated water into the sea “is carried out with transparency.”
Suga said on Tuesday that the release plan is also based on the IAEA's scientific principles.
- Water containing tritium to be diluted
The radioactive materials formed in pure water, which functions as a coolant of the reactors, are decomposed except for the tritium material thanks to the Advanced Liquid Processing System.
According to the plan, the water containing the element tritium will be diluted at the level of 1,500 becquerels per liter. Thus, the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), will be able to discharge the water, which is increasing day by day, into the sea periodically.
TEPCO estimates that if the water stored in the plant is not released, the facility will fill its storage tank capacity by autumn 2022 at the latest.
The process of discharging the water into the sea is expected to take at least two years./aa