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The Myanmar military's crackdown on mass anti-coup demonstrations has led to the deaths of 38 people on Wednesday, marking the deadliest day since the junta took power, the UN's special envoy for the country warned.
Christine Schraner Burgener told reporters during a virtual news conference that the killings have raised to more than 50 the number of those have who have died, and "many" others have been wounded amid ongoing mass demonstrations against the military's power grab.
Earlier in the day, police and security forces opened direct fire to disperse protesters rallying across the country against the junta. But that did not stop a large number of people from once again taking to the streets in major cities and towns to demand the restoration of civilian rule.
Burgener said the police, who are controlled by Myanmar's military, have used 9-millimeter submachine guns to fire on protesters using live ammunition.
In all, over 1,200 people have been detained since the Feb. 1 coup d'etat with many of their whereabouts a mystery to family members, according to the UN.
Successive states, including the US and Canada, have imposed sanctions on the junta in a bid to restore the democratically-elect government, but the Tatmadaw, as the military is formally known, has shown no signs of changing course. The US has vowed to issue harsher economic penalties, but they have yet to be unveiled.
Burgener said that in her conversations with the military, officials brushed off the penalties, saying they "are used to sanctions, and we survived” them in the past.
"When I also warned they will go in an isolation the answer was, we have to learn to walk with only a few friends," she said. “It’s clearly up to the member states to decide what kind of measures they will take further.”
Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar's now-contested ambassador, issued an emotional appeal last week for the international community to act using "any means necessary" against the military junta.
"Now is not the time for the international community to tolerate the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Myanmar military," said Tun, who has maintained the legitimacy of his appointment by the democratically-elected government.
Tun's role as UN ambassador was contested by the military-controlled Ministry of Foreign Affairs the day after Tun's explosive speech.
It appointed his deputy, Tin Maung Naing to fill the post, but the UN has yet to decide on who is the country's actual ambassador. /aa
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken on Tuesday pressed Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to end hostilities in the northern Tigray region, citing a “growing number of credible reports of atrocities and human rights violations and abuses.”
In a statement, State Department spokesman Ned Price said Blinken pressed Abiy in a phone call to withdraw outside forces from Tigray, including troops from Ethiopia’s Amhara region and from Eritrea, and for an immediate end to violence.
The United Nations Security Council is likely to discuss the situation in Tigray in a closed-door meeting later this week, diplomats said. The United States is president of the 15-member council for March.
The six-week-old Biden administration is seeking an end to hostilities in Tigray and what it describes as a deepening humanitarian crisis. It was the second time in less than a week that Blinken has cited reports of atrocities in the region.
“The secretary urged the Ethiopian government to take immediate, concrete steps to protect civilians, including refugees, and to prevent further violence,” Price said in the statement.
Speaking to reporters, Price said: “We strongly condemn the killings, the forced removals and displacement, the sexual assaults, and other human rights violations and abuses by several parties that multiple organizations, have, now reported.”
Blinken also asked that Abiy allow credible independent international investigations.
Abiy’s spokeswoman, Billene Seyoum, referred Reuters to a Feb. 28 statement in which Ethiopia’s ministry of foreign affairs called U.S. attempts to intervene in its internal affairs “regrettable”.
Ethiopia’s government takes its responsibility for the safety, security, and well-being of all citizens “very seriously” and is “fully committed to undertake thorough investigations” into alleged abuses and bring perpetrators to justice, that statement said. But it added the government had a duty to hold the nation together in the face of “treasonous and divisive forces.”
Ethiopia’s military ousted the former local ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), from the regional capital Mekelle in November, after what it described as a surprise assault on its forces in Tigray.
Thousands of people have died, hundreds of thousands have been forced from homes and there are shortages of food, water and medicine around the region of more than 5 million people.
The government has said that most fighting has stopped in Tigray but has acknowledged isolated incidents of shooting.
Both sides deny their forces have committed atrocities, and blame other forces for the killing of civilians.
Ethiopia and Eritrea have denied the involvement of Eritrean troops in the conflict alongside Ethiopian forces, although dozens of witnesses, diplomats and an Ethiopian general have reported their presence.
Blinken voiced grave concern about reports of atrocities in Tigray on Saturday, when he called on the African Union and other international partners to work with the United States to address the crisis.
The global economic outlook and oil market prospects show signs of continued improvement, OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo said on Tuesday.
Barkindo's remarks at the 49th Joint Technical Committee (JTC) came ahead of the 27th meeting of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) and the 14th OPEC and non-OPEC Ministerial Meeting (ONOMM) to be held on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. The group will decide on the production quota after March.
He highlighted the improving outlook for the global oil market and the world economy at large, emphasizing the need to stay the course on restoring sustainable oil market stability.
Barkindo said the pandemic-induced oil demand shock was left behind, and “oil demand remains on course to grow by 5.8 million barrels per day to around 96 million barrels per day.”
He emphasized “cautious optimism" regarding an economic and oil demand rebound in Asia.
He stressed that the global COVID-19 pandemic continues to pose downside risks to the recovery, citing data showing that new global infections rose in the last week of February for the first time in seven weeks.
“Progress on COVID-19 vaccinations continues in many countries, but the current pace shows that many developing countries risk being left behind. We hold out hope that the multilateral and multiparty efforts will support inclusive and speedy worldwide access to inoculations,” he said./aa
Turkey should follow the path of the European Union towards a more sustainable, efficient and green economy, a member of the EU delegation to Turkey said Tuesday.
Against the backdrop of the Circular Economy Week of Turkey, Ambassador Nikolaus Meyer-Landrut pointed out that the Green Deal is one of the most important programs for the EU in the post-pandemic period.
"The agreement focuses on making the EU a clean, efficient and competitive economy and a structure that will find solutions to environmental problems," he said, adding this a new growth strategy of the bloc.
"We will try to reach an EU economy which is carbon neutral but competitive," he said.
"The Turkish private sector has been paying greater attention to the EU's green deal, the good news for the future," he added, noting a stronger partnership is needed on the climate policy.
Green deal to bring opportunities
The EU wants to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in 2050, ensuring economic growth through the reuse of resources, noted Angel Gutierrez Hidalgo De Quintana, the head of the economic and social development section of the EU delegation to Turkey.
Reminding that there are many different goals in the agreement, Quintana said: "We are increasing our claim on climate with the new targets for 2030 and 2050. Providing economic and safe energy is already at the basis of the circular economy."
The EU Commission has introduced a new Circular Economy Action Plan -- one of the main blocks of the European Green Deal, Europe’s new agenda for sustainable growth.
The plan includes initiatives along the entire life cycle of products, targeting for instance their design, promoting circular economy processes, fostering sustainable consumption and aiming to ensure that the resources used are kept in the EU economy for as long as possible.
He noted goals such as the establishment of a chain, that is, the establishment of the farm to fork system, the protection of economic diversity and the zero pollution environment -- a huge commitment and a huge effort and a significant cost for the EU.
"All of the Green Deal work should bring economic benefits. Fossil fuel imports in the EU are above 35% so are investing in an economically meaningful place."
He also stressed that cooperation on green transformation with Turkey is quite vital, saying Turkey's waste management strategy in this case is significant, given the close trade ties between the two sides.
"We want Turkey to join forces in the transition to a green economy," he added./aa
Insults, beatings, arrests — health workers battling the coronavirus were subjected to more than 400 acts of violence related to Covid-19 worldwide in 2020, according to a report published Tuesday by a health NGO.
The Safeguarding Health in Conflict Coalition unveiled an interactive map that shows 1,172 violent acts and attacks occurred against health workers or facilities last year, “a minimum estimate,” according to the NGO.
More than a third (412) of the acts are directly related to Covid-19, it said, citing several examples including in Mexico, where a nurse was attacked and injured by a group accusing her of spreading the virus.
In Dakar, three social workers had stones hurled at them by residents who refused to have a coronavirus victim buried near their homes.
In Birmingham, England, a health worker was spat at and insulted by a neighbor.
The vast majority, 80 percent, of the perpetrators of the violence were civilians, but threats also came from public authorities.
In Egypt, health workers who criticized the regime’s handling of the pandemic were arrested by security forces and accused of spreading false information and of belonging to a terrorist group.
Insecurity Insight, which developed the interactive map, also recorded 802 attacks in countries at war or on victims of civil conflicts, such as the bombing of hospitals in Yemen and the kidnapping of doctors in Nigeria.
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“The map shows that violence and intimidation against health care was a truly global crisis in 2020, affecting 79 countries,” said Insecurity Insight director Christina Wille in a statement.
Leonard Rubenstein, the president and founder of the Safeguarding Health in Conflict Coalition and a professor at Johns Hopkins University, called on international governments to protect health workers, including by fighting disinformation.
Kuwait will close its land and sea border crossings, with the exception of shipping operations and workers in the neutral zone, from Wednesday until March 20, the cabinet said on Monday via Twitter.
Citizens, and domestic workers accompanying them, are allowed to return through land and sea ports, as are citizens’ first-degree relatives, the cabinet added.
The Council of Minsters said that citizens arriving into the country will be subjected to mandatory quarantine, and they must spend a week at a hotel and another week at home.
During their weekly meeting, the cabinet also said it would form a joint committee, headed by the Ministry of Interior and including the health ministry the civil aviation authority, tasked with overseeing that quarantine measures are enforced upon arrival.
It also said that as of Wednesday, restaurants and cafes, including those in shopping malls, would only operate for delivery and take away services until further notice.
Kuwait on Monday reported 899 new confirmed cases in the previous 24 hours, and five deaths related to the virus, bringing the totals to 184,989 and 1,049, respectively. Health authorities also said 955 patients recovered from the virus, raising the total to 173,182.
On Saturday, Kuwait announced it was extending an entry ban for non-Kuwaiti citizens until further notice as part of coronavirus restriction measures.
Foreign Minister Sheikh Dr Ahmad Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Sabah announced on Monday the State of Kuwait’s pledge of $20 million in aid for Yemen. The announcement came as the Kuwaiti top diplomat headed on his country’s delegation in a virtual donor conference to aid the humanitarian situation in Yemen. The conference parallels with the humanitarian plan to support Yemen 2021, hosted by the Swiss Confederation and Sweden, in cooperation with the United Nations, as the conference aims to amass international pledges worth $3.85 billion to alleviate the human suffering of the Yemeni people.
Many countries announced their pledges at this conference, such as Saudi Arabia, which announced a pledge of $430 million, the UAE with a pledge of $230 million, Germany with EUR 200 million, and US with $191 million. The UK also announced a pledge for GBP 87 million, Canada with $69.9 million, and the Swiss Confederation with $31 million, all in support of the humanitarian situation in Yemen.
Delicate situation
The Kuwaiti Foreign Minister made his speech in the conference, saying: “Ignazio Cassis, Vice President and Head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of the Swiss Confederation, Ann Linde, Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Antonio Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, your highnesses, I would like to thank you for the invitation to participate in the meeting to discuss the crisis in Yemen, in this very delicate situation, and in line with the humanitarian response plan for 2021, and I also wish to thank the government of Saudi Arabia for its successful hosting of the previous conference in June 2020.
“The United Nations was very sufficient in describing the situation in Yemen when it described it as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world, as the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic made it worse and added new challenges such as food shortages, the spread of diseases and the deliberate obstruction of humanitarian aid, in addition to high levels of violence, new waves of asylum and displacement in light of modest health and economic structures.
“In the past years, we have witnessed a concerted international effort through active participation in donor conferences, in line with the increasing urgency of humanitarian needs of the brotherly Yemeni people, as the crisis continues for its seventh year. These efforts confirm the collective international responsibility to support the humanitarian plan.
“Kuwait was a part of those efforts through its continuous support to Yemen in the humanitarian and developmental fields, as the total of the amount of donations made by Kuwait reached more than $1.559 billion, of which $850 million were spent in the humanitarian field since 2015. In accordance to the directions of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, and in response to the urgent humanitarian needs of the brotherly Yemeni people, Kuwait provides a two-year support of $20 million, from the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development.
“It should be noted that the GCC had made a lot of efforts in preparing an international conference for the reconstruction of Yemen and setting up a practical program to rehabilitate the Yemeni economy and facilitate its integration with the Gulf economy, especially after the Yemeni parties reach the desired political solution, wishing your conference good luck and success.”
Latest developments
Sheikh Dr Ahmad had earlier received the visiting US Special Envoy to Yemen Timothy Lenderking. The envoy provided an explanation on the latest developments of the Yemeni crisis, praising Kuwait contributions on the political and humanitarian levels to restore security and safety in Yemen. For his part, Foreign Minister reaffirmed Kuwait’s firm position towards providing all aspects of support to Yemen and its people, and making all efforts to restore security and stability to its territory.
He emphasized Kuwait’s keenness to stabilize the political and security conditions at the Republic of Yemen and reach a political solution in accordance with the three references, the Gulf Initiative and its implementation mechanism, the outcomes of the comprehensive national dialogue, and Security Council Resolution 2216.
He also stressed on the importance of the role of the US and its endeavors to end the Yemeni crisis and its humanitarian and development assistance to Yemeni people, affirming Kuwait’s support to all efforts undertaken by the Special Envoy in this regard.
Sheikh Ahmad Al-Sabah also urged the envoy to continue pressure on Houthi militias to stop the attacks that target the suburbs and civilian facilities, as Kuwait condemned those continuous attacks on the territory of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which are a direct threat to the Gulf and Arab national security. The meeting was also attended by, Foreign Ministry Senior officials and US Ambassador to Kuwait Alina Romanowski. – KUNA
Kuwait University marked more than 14 students as failed after they were caught cheating via “WhatsApp” application through groups that are managed and organized by a known individual, reports Al-Qabas daily.
Acting Director of the university Dr. Fayez Al- Dhafiri said the university administration referred the file of these students to the Cybercrime Department, after they were caught cheating in the College of Administrative Sciences. He affirmed that investigation is ongoing by the concerned authorities with the accused who is responsible for organizing the cheating process through his office, in order to determine more details.
His Highness Amir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad issued a decree today, Tuesday, to form the new government. The Amiri Decree stipulated the appointment of Hamad Jaber Al-Ali Al-Sabah as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense, Al-Rai daily reported.
The Amiri Decree stipulated the appointment of
Hamad Jaber Al-Ali Al-Sabah as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense
Abdullah Al-Roumi, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Justice and Minister of State for Integrity Promotion Affairs
Issa Ahmed Muhammad Hassan Al-Kandari, Minister of Endowments and Islamic Affairs
Dr. Mohammed Abdul Latif Al-Faris, Minister of Oil and Minister of Higher Education,
Dr. Basil Hammoud Hamad Al-Sabah, Minister of Health,
Dr. Ahmed Nasser Al-Muhammad Al-Sabah, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs,
Dr. Rana Abdullah Abdul Rahman Al-Faris, Minister of Public Works and Minister of State for Communications and Information Technology,
Mubarak Salem Mubarak Al-Haris, Minister of State for National Assembly Affairs
Thamer Ali Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah, Minister of Interior
Khalifa Musaed Hamada, Minister of Finance and Minister of State for Economic Affairs and Investment
Abdel-Rahman Badah Al-Mutairi, Minister of Information and Minister of State for Affairs Young
Ali Fahad Al-Mudhaf, Minister of Education
Shaya Abdulrahman Ahmad Al-Shaya, Minister of State for Impairment Affairs and Minister of State for Housing and Urban Development Affairs,
Dr. Abdullah Issa Al-Salman, Minister of Trade and Industry,
Mashaan Mohammad Mashaan Al-Otaibi as Minister of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy and Minister of Social Affairs and Societal Development.
Under the decree, His Highness the Prime Minister will inform the National Assembly about this decree, which comes into effect since its issuance. It will be published in the official gazette./KUNA
The YPG/PKK terror group has barred four French parliamentarians from entering a refugee camp in northeast Syria.
In a joint statement issued Tuesday, leftist deputies Frederique Dumas and Hubert Julien-Laferriere and members of the European Parliament (MEPs) Sylvie Guillaume and Mounir Satouri said delegations from Belgium, Finland, Germany, Austria and Spain had been able to visit the Al Hol refugee camp in recent weeks, but after their delegation crossed the Syrian border, they were prevented from entering the camp, which is under the terror group’s control.
Their on-site meetings confirm that the blocking of their entry to the camp is due to direct pressure from the French authorities, the statement said.
The statement underlined that Europeans, mostly French, are kept in camps and the situation is bad there, adding urgent measures should be taken for children held in the camps.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and the EU – has been responsible for the deaths of at least 40,000 people, including women, children and infants. The YPG is the PKK’s Syrian offshoot./aa