Staff

Staff

 Interior Ministry and Public Authority for Manpower (PAM) are discussing a request from Domestic Help Offices Union (DHOU) in Kuwait to allow helpers transfer from one employer to another in case of a labor dispute, and if the helper wishes to work for another employer.

The step would help protect the worker’s right as guaranteed by law, and that deportation should not be the first step to be taken – rather there should be serious steps to re-deploy the worker, and in case that is not possible, the worker should receive their full rights before leaving. The two sides are also discussing the issue of employers keeping workers’ documents such as Civil ID and passports, which is considered by the Union as illegal and in violation of law 68/2015 in regards to domestic help and contradicts international treaties on human rights.

Meanwhile, Commerce and Industry Ministry is reviewing its decision in regards to setting the cost of bringing domestic helpers at not more than KD 890, based on the needs of the local market and the difficulties of bringing them. The DHOU claims that setting the cost at KD 890 is not suitable with the increase of airline ticket prices.

Meanwhile, Ethiopia may open its embassy in Funaitees area next month. Domestic help offices are getting ready for business following the agreement between Ethiopia and Kuwait which will be officially signed in the coming days. Domestic help offices may sign preliminary contracts to bring in workers. This might lower the recruitment cost, as this coincides with an official Filipino decision to raise the age of domestic helpers to 24 instead of 23 years./KT

Russia’s Wagner Group has begun hiring criminals and other previously undesirable personnel to bolster its dwindling numbers ahead of taking on a central role in the Kremlin’s new offensive in Ukraine, according to Western intelligence.  

The prolific private military contractor firm is “lowering recruitment standards, hiring convicts and formerly blacklisted individuals” and providing them with “very limited training,” the U.K. Defense Ministry’s military intelligence concludes in a new assessment. The group has reinforced front-line forces in recent weeks and taken heavy casualties.

“This will highly likely impact on the future operational effectiveness of the group and reduce its value as a prop to the regular Russian forces,” according to the assessment.

Russian President Vladimir Putin first ordered the private firm in March to withdraw from prior operations in Africa and Syria to reinforce troops in Ukraine that met surprisingly deadly resistance from local forces. After completing an “operational pause” of his offensive in recent days, Putin likely expects the Wagner Group will grant Russia a new advantage even as the disparity among pro-Kremlin forces on the battlefield appears to be causing new problems.

“Wagner head, Yevgeniy Prigozhin, has recently been made a Hero of the Russian Federation for Wagner’s performance in Luhansk,” the defense ministry states, citing one of the two oblasts that compose the Donbas, the focus of Russia’s latest offensive. “This, at a time when a number of very senior Russian military commanders are being replaced, is likely to exacerbate grievances between the military and Wagner.”

“It is also likely to impact negatively on Russian military morale,” it concludes.

The damning assessment comes as forces loyal to Moscow plan to escalate operations in the Donbas while continuing to target civilian centers across Ukraine from afar. On Saturday, they conducted limited ground attacks on Donetsk, the other oblast in the Donbas, according to the Institute for the Study of War, which has fastidiously documented Russia’s battlefield movements since its invasion.

“The end of the Russian operational pause is unlikely to create a massive new wave of ground assaults across multiple axes of advance despite Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu’s public order for exactly that,” the institute writes in a new analysis note.

“The Russian Ministry of Defense notably did not claim any new territorial gains on July 17,” the institute stated, adding that it predicts “ the end of the operational pause will be characterized by a fluctuating and staggered resumption of ground offensives.”

It adds that Russia appears to be “undertaking long-term force regeneration efforts that would allow the Kremlin to rebuild the badly damaged Russian military and/or sustain a long war in Ukraine.”

It cites Ukrainian intelligence assessments that Russia’s Young Army Cadets National Movement training center has created 500 new cadet classes and 1,000 junior army classes – accepting volunteers as young as 8 – who would not be ready to enter combat for a significant period of time. Russia has also opened up additional training for volunteers for its army, aviation and navy sectors including those “without military experience who want to join the Russian military,” according to the institute.

Ukraine, too, has faced troubling issues as it struggles to field an effective fighting force and the political leadership to support them. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in his nightly address revealed that he had fired the chief of Ukraine’s principal security service as well as the prosecutor general – though neither was accused of treason – and that at least 60 people from within those offices who remain in occupied territory are under suspicion of “working against our state.”

He said a total of 200 other people in government had come under similar suspicion.

“The specific actions and any inaction of each official in the security sector and in law enforcement agencies will be evaluated,” Zelenskyy said. “Everyone who together with him was part of a criminal group that worked in the interests of the Russian Federation will also be held accountable.”/US Today

A heatwave broiling Europe has spilled northward to Britain and fuelled ferocious wildfires in Spain and France, which evacuated thousands of people and scrambled water-bombing planes and firefighters to battle flames in tinder-dry forests.

Two people were killed in the blazes in Spain that its prime minister linked to global heating, saying, "Climate change kills."

That toll comes on top of the hundreds of heat-related deaths reported in the Iberian peninsula, as high temperatures have gripped the continent in recent days and triggered wildfires from Portugal to the Balkans.

Some areas, including northern Italy, are also experiencing extended droughts. 

The climate crisis makes such life-threatening extremes less of a rarity — and heatwaves have come even to places like Britain, which braced for possible record-breaking temperatures.

The hot weather in the UK was expected to be so severe this week that train operators warned it could warp the rails and some schools set up wading pools to help children cool off.

In France, heat records were broken, and swirling hot winds complicated firefighting in the country's southwest.

"The fire is literally exploding," said Marc Vermeulen, the regional fire service chief who described tree trunks shattering as flames consumed them, sending burning embers into the air and further spreading the blazes.

Authorities evacuated more towns, moving another 14,900 people from areas that could find themselves in the path of the fires and choking smoke. In all, more than 31,000 people have been forced from their homes and summer vacation spots in the Gironde region since the wildfires began on July 12.

In Spain, more than 30 forest fires around the country have forced the evacuation of thousands of people and blackened 220 square kilometres of forest and scrub.

 

'Literally under fire'

Climate scientists say heatwaves are more intense, more frequent and longer because of the climate crisis — and coupled with droughts have made wildfires harder to fight. 

They say the climate crisis will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive.

Teresa Ribera, Spain's minister for ecological transition, described her country as "literally under fire" as she attended talks on the climate crisis in Berlin.

At least 748 heat-related deaths have been reported in the heatwave in Spain and neighbouring Portugal, where temperatures reached 47 C earlier this month.

In Britain, officials have issued the first-ever extreme heat warning and the weather service forecast that the record high of 38.7 C, set in 2019, could be shattered.

France’s often-temperate Brittany region sweltered with a record 39.3 C degrees in the port of Brest, surpassing a high of 35.1 C that had stood since September 2003, French weather service Meteo-France said.

Ireland saw temperatures of 33C in Dublin –– the highest since 1887 –– while in the Netherlands, temperatures reached 35.4C in the southern city of Westdorpe. While that was not a record, higher temperatures are expected there on Tuesday.

Neighbouring Belgium also expected temperatures of 40C and over.

The Balkans region expected the worst of the heat later this week but has already seen sporadic wildfires./agencies

At least 30 political activists in Thailand have been hacked using Israeli cyber-arms company NSO Group's surveillance spyware Pegasus.

Thai human rights group iLaw, in its report on Monday, said 24 political activists, three academics and three members of civil society groups were targeted between October 2020 and November 2021.

The probe by iLaw, Southeast Asian internet watchdog Digital Reach and Toronto-based Citizen Lab, followed a mass alert from Apple in November.

The alert informed thousands of iPhone users, including in Thailand, that they were targets of "state-sponsored attackers".

Yingcheep Atchanont, programme manager at iLaw, was among those hacked and said his group would investigate further, and pursue legal action once it becomes clear who in Thailand was operating Pegasus.

"NSO has said that they only sell the software to governments and that all the victims here are Thai government critics, so they benefited the most," he said.

NSO Group and a spokesperson for Thailand's government did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

'Tip of the iceberg'

Pegasus has been used by governments to spy on journalists, activists and dissidents and the Israeli firm behind it, NSO Group, has been sued by Apple and placed on a US trade blacklist.

Wetang Phuangsup, a spokesperson for Thailand's ministry of Digital Economy and Society, said his ministry was not aware of any usage of spyware by the government.

Citizen Lab's report, which was separate to that of iLaw, examined digital traces left in the victims' phones and identified Pegasus usage in Thailand as far back as May 2014.

John Scott-Railton, a Citizen Lab researcher, said the investigation showed Pegasus was being operated in Thailand, with many more hacking victims likely.

"What we uncovered is a lot of targeting of dozens of people over a specific time frame, but having done investigation into Pegasus...over the decade, I am confident that it is the tip of the iceberg," he said in an online presentation on Monday.

The estimated spending required to revive threatened species is around $1.15 billion a year, the report said, adding that the previous government's targeted spending for threatened species was $33.7 million.

Australia's average land temperatures have increased by 1.4 degrees Centigrade since the early 20th century.

"Sea levels continue to rise faster than the global average and threaten coastal communities," the report said.

Many of the country's most prized ecosystems, such as the Great Barrier Reef which has been hit by mass coral bleaching, are threatened by the climate crisis and environmental extremes, the report said.

While coral reef health is declining due to marine heatwaves, the report also highlighted the threat of ocean acidification, caused by absorption of carbon dioxide from the air, which it said was nearing a tipping point that would cause the decline of coral juveniles that are key to reef recovery./Reuters

Australia has lost more mammal species than any other continent and has one of the worst rates of species decline among the world's richest countries, a five-yearly environmental report card released by the government has said.

Animals such as the blue-tailed skink are only known to exist anymore in captivity, while the central rock-rat and Christmas Island flying fox are among mammals considered most at risk of extinction in the next 20 years, largely due to introduced predator species, the report said on Tuesday.

The sandalwood tree is also in decline.

The report, which comes after drought, bushfires and floods ravaged Australia over the past five years, said increasing temperatures on land and sea, changing fire and rainfall patterns, rising sea levels and ocean acidification were all having significant impacts that would persist.

"The State of the Environment Report is a shocking document – it tells a story of crisis and decline in Australia's environment, and a decade of government inaction and willful ignorance," Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said in a statement.

She said the previous government received the report in late 2021 and, in contrast, the new Labor government would make the environment a priority.

"I won't be putting my head in the sand," she said.

Opposition deputy leader and former environment minister Sussan Ley's office was not immediately available for comment.

'Black Summer' bushfires 

The number of species added to the list of threatened species or in a higher category of threat grew 8 percent from the previous report in 2016 and would rise sharply as a result of the bushfires that hit in 2019-2020.

The "Black Summer" bushfires killed or displaced an estimated 1 billion to 3 billion animals and razed 9 percent of koala habitat.

The Brazilian Amazon has lost about 18 trees per second in 2021 as deforestation in the country increased by more than 20 percent, according to a satellite data-based report.

The Mapbiomas report  released on Monday said the country lost some 16,557 square kilometres (1.65 million hectares) of indigenous vegetation in 2021, an area bigger than Northern Ireland.

In 2020, the area lost was 13,789 square kilometres.

Nearly 60 percent of land deforested in 2021 was in the Amazon, the world's largest tropical rainforest, the report said.

"In the Amazon alone, 111.6 hectares per hour or 1.9 hectares per minute were deforested, which is equivalent to about 18 trees per second," according to Mapbiomas, a network of NGOs, universities and technology companies.

Clearing land for farming was the main driver, accounting for almost 97 percent, it said, with illegal mining also a major factor.

Encouraging deforestation

In the last three years, coinciding with the presidency of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, the tree cover lost in Brazil was about 42,000 square kilometres, "almost the area of the state of Rio de Janeiro," said the report.

Data from the National Institute of Space Research (INPE) show that between January and June 2022, the Brazilian Amazon lost 3,988 square kilometres to deforestation.

And government statistics state that average annual Brazilian Amazon deforestation increased by 75 percent during Bolsonaro's presidency compared to a decade earlier.

Environmentalists accuse Bolsonaro of actively encouraging deforestation for economic gain and of weakening research and protection agencies.

Türkiye is becoming a strategic energy hub for Europe in the wake of the Russian offensive in Ukraine, according to a new report by a leading German foundation.

Konrad Adenauer Foundation’s confidential report, which was sent to conservative German lawmakers this week, recommended enhanced cooperation between Berlin and Ankara to address energy problems and security challenges.

“In terms of diversifying Germany's energy policy, there are limited alternatives to Russia in the short term,” the report said, but underlined that Türkiye offers “real alternatives,” as European countries are seeking to reduce their dependency on Russia.

The report highlighted Türkiye’s growing role as a strategic energy hub for Europe to bring natural gas from the Caspian Basin, Central Asia, the Middle East, and the Eastern Mediterranean Basin.

According to the report, Iran’s natural gas and oil can also be transported via Türkiye, if talks on the revival of the Iran nuclear deal is successful.

“As the Israel-Türkiye cooperation on energy is now becoming more realistic, Türkiye is emerging as an energy hub,” the report stressed.

Cooperation in security and foreign policy

Konrad Adenauer Foundation prepared the report after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s visit to Ankara on March 14, in which he called for closer dialogue and cooperation between the EU and Türkiye.

“We will do our best to expand our bilateral relations and to realize the full potential of our cooperation,” Scholz said during his visit.

Experts of the Konrad Adenauer Foundation underlined that Germany and Türkiye should also enhance cooperation in the fields of security and foreign policy.

“The war in Ukraine has shown that despite their differences, it is necessary for Berlin and Ankara to further intensify their strategic and security partnership,” they said in the report.

“In addition to Ukraine, there are other regional crises that show the need for closer rapprochement between Türkiye and Germany, such as the fragile situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, developments in the South Caucasus and in Afghanistan, the Russian presence in Africa, and the future orientation of the Central Asian countries.”

The report also recommended German policy makers to pay more attention to Türkiye's security needs and its expectations from its European partners.

“Türkiye will continue to be in the Western bloc in the future and will remain the most important NATO ally on the southeastern flank,” it stressed.

“Its location makes Türkiye a key player in the South Caucasus, the Black Sea region and the Middle East, and it is of fundamental geo-strategic importance for Europe, hence Germany cannot ignore its security perceptions and interests,” it also said./TRT

  • Fauci, who leads the US COVID-19 response, said it's harder and harder to get people to listen.
  • "Even the people who are compliant want this behind them," Fauci told Politico.
  • Fauci said simple steps like getting vaccinated would reduce the risk of getting seriously ill.

More than two years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the country's chief medical advisor said it's difficult to get even the most COVID-19-conscious Americans to follow pandemic guidelines.

"It's becoming more and more difficult to get people to listen, because even the people who are compliant want this behind them," Anthony Fauci said in an interview with Politico. "What I try to convince them [of], with my communication method, is we're not asking you to dramatically alter your lifestyle. We're not asking you to really interfere with what you do with your life. We're just asking you to consider some simple, doable mitigation methods."

Fauci's latest battle has been convincing Americans to get their COVID-19 booster shot.

The Omicron BA.5 variant of the coronavirus is the dominant strain in the US and has a greater ability to evade immunity than past versions, leading Fauci and other officials to highlight the importance of getting boosted last week.

"Variants will continue to emerge if the virus circulates globally and in this county," Fauci said during that press conference. "We should not let it disrupt our lives, but we cannot deny that it is a reality that we need to deal with."

Less than half of fully vaccinated Americans have received their first booster dose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only 28.5% of people over 50 and 35.2% of people over 65 have received a second booster.

Business Insider

Why hasn’t the U.S. been able to contain monkeypox?

 

What’s happening

As cases of monkeypox continue to rise in the United States, public health experts are beginning to question whether it’s too late to prevent the infectious disease — which has been endemic in parts of Africa for decades — from gaining a foothold in the U.S.

As of Friday there were 1,800 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S., though experts say lack of testing capacity means the true spread of the virus is likely much wider. “I think the window for getting control of this and containing it probably has closed, and if it hasn’t closed, it’s certainly starting to close,” Scott Gottlieb, former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

While some of the early challenges presented by the monkeypox outbreak echo the same major difficulties of the coronavirus pandemic, specifically limited availability of tests and vaccines, health officials say the comparisons between the two viruses only go so far.

Most importantly, monkeypox — though it can cause severe flu-like symptoms and debilitating pain — is rarely fatal. It’s also not new. Unlike COVID, which left scientists scrambling to understand how it spread and how it can be treated, monkeypox was first documented back in 1958. Monkeypox typically spreads through close, often intimate, physical contact, rather than through the air. There also is no need to wait months for vaccines to be developed. Smallpox vaccines helped eradicate the once-devastating global disease and have also been effective against monkeypox.

Why there’s debate

Experts say even the worst-case scenario for monkeypox would look nothing like the catastrophic affects of the coronavirus, which has killed more than a million Americans and 6.3 million people worldwide. Still, many have expressed frustration that the U.S. has struggled to contain the current outbreak with so many tools at its disposal.

Sen. Richard Burr, R-Va., accused the Biden administration of “failing to learn from the devastating effects” of COVID and other recent infectious diseases when reacting to monkeypox. His criticisms mirror those of a number of public health experts who say the U.S. is repeating mistakes it made early in the pandemic by failing to scale up testing and vaccine capacity fast enough, waiting too long before mounting a serious response and allowing bureaucratic logjams to stand in the way of more proactive mitigation strategies.

Though anyone can get monkeypox, most cases of the current outbreak have been detected in men who have sex with men, a factor some believe may have contributed to a perceived lack of urgency around the virus. “Would monkeypox receive a stronger response if it were not primarily affecting queer folks?” San Francisco Supervisor Rafael Mandelman said in a speech last week. There are also concerns that the prominence of infections in gay men may lead members of other groups to lower their guard, creating more room for the virus to spread throughout the broader population.

What’s next

Federal and state health officials are working to expand availability of testing and vaccines, but it remains to be seen whether that effort can happen fast enough to block monkeypox from spreading to a point where it can’t ever be fully contained. If that happens, Gottlieb said, monkeypox may become a fact of life in the long term like a variety of other infectious diseases.

Perspectives

The U.S. has been flying blind without being able to measure just how widespread the virus is

“Monkeypox is unlikely to affect as many Americans as Covid-19. Nevertheless, an important lesson of the past decade of Covid-19, Ebola and Zika epidemics is that unchecked transmission means a virus will not stay limited to any one subset of the population and will lead to unpredictable health complications.” — Jay Varma, New York Times

As with COVID, the global response has been scattered and self-defeating

“We should all refuse to walk blindly, allowing the present to become prologue to greater catastrophe. Global health officials must advocate for and enact a unified, coherent approach to fighting the monkeypox pandemic before it reaches the proportions of covid-19. If we act, guided by the lessons of the past two years, we can avoid the mistakes that cost the world millions of lives.” — Eric Feigl-Ding, Kavita Patel and Yaneer Bar-Yam, Washington Post

The right strategies are available, but leaders aren’t willing to use them

“Government officials all over the world have a responsibility to learn from the mistakes of the COVID pandemic and not repeat them. The transcript of the last 2.5 years is right in front of them. Will they act in defense of public health, or will they, again, indulge in their political acrobatics and be indifferent to human suffering? And will we, as a global population, let our governments treat us this way?” — Muhammad Jawad Noon, Scientific American

The U.S. will fail time after time until it builds a sustainable public health system

“The U.S. is at a crossroads. … It can mount an effective monkeypox response and provide communities across the country with the infrastructure needed to promote health care for everyone. Or it can continue to play catchup in crisis after crisis and let common infections continue to rage in-between.” — David C. Harvey, Stat

Allowing the virus to spread abroad made its arrival in the U.S. inevitable

“Rich countries have ignored endemic monkeypox in West and Central Africa for far too long, despite having effective vaccines, which should be equitably distributed to the populations at risk worldwide. The crucial point is that all these efforts should be happening right now. We have to stop underreacting to the world’s latest infectious-disease threat.” — Monica Gandhi, The Atlantic

Monkeypox is still manageable with the right strategies

“With every emerging pathogen, there is always a narrow window of opportunity to stop small clusters of infections from spreading more widely. The United States failed to do this for past epidemics, including HIV and COVID-19. Monkeypox should be a relatively easier virus to control, but only if the United States takes the needed steps now.” — Shan Soe-Lin and Robert Hecht, Boston Globe

The public’s willingness to respond to a new virus has eroded after years fighting COVID

“Some will certainly roll their eyes and skepticism will be high, higher than it has been in the past when we’ve spoken about infectious diseases, but these are not reasons not to act.” — Michael Wilkes, KCRW

Monkeypox is a harbinger of much deadlier outbreaks still to come

“The biggest worry for Americans is not the disease: It’s that our response to it shows how little we have learned from COVID-19, and how much there is still to do to limit the risks from future pandemics.” — Richard Danzig and James Lawler, Bloomberg

Many of the same logistical problems that hurt the COVID response have reemerged

“The existence of a vaccine is just the start; rolling it out, deciding who needs it and where is its own complicated narrative. That work must begin now, in order to stay ahead of an outbreak that is still growing and in order to maintain trust in vaccines and in public health in general. The stakes are high.” — Melody Schreiber, The New Republic

Framing monkeypox as a gay disease poses a danger to everyone

“The more I read and hear about monkeypox, the more I’m a little annoyed at how the media has anointed men who have sex with men as the biggest threat to our survival from monkeypox.” — John Casey, The Advocate

The 360

In what has already been a brutal summer of heat waves across much of Europe, temperature records are expected to be broken in parts of the U.K., Germany and France this week, putting thousands of lives in danger.

Temperatures are expected to reach as high as 109°F on Tuesday in locations where air conditioning is not a common amenity, and health officials are warning that excess deaths due to heat are all but guaranteed. With temperatures forecast to be 15°F to 30°F above normal, the U.K. Met Office issued a first-ever extreme heat warning, and scorching conditions could drag on for weeks.

More than 1,000 people have been killed in Spain and Portugal due to heat-related causes in recent weeks. Temperatures around the continent are expected to shatter all-time records Monday and Tuesday, and the death rate is expected to rise sharply. With luck, it won't mirror the toll of 70,000 who were killed during a heat wave in Europe in 2003.

With the extreme heat that scientists have shown is linked to climate change, wildfires have erupted on the continent. In a pine forest left parched due the rapid evaporation caused by high temperatures, nearly 1,700 firefighters in France have been battling an enormous blaze near Bordeaux.

“The situation is critical, mainly because the weather is unfavorable to us,” Vincent Ferrier, a French official, told reporters Monday.

Wildfires, made more frequent due to rising global temperatures, have also erupted in Spain and Portugal, forcing thousands from their homes. As shocking as the effects of climate change have been to witness in recent years, scientists continue to warn that they will worsen as long as humans continue to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

An Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) study published last year found that Europe was warming faster than many other parts of the globe due to fluctuations in the jet stream caused by rising temperatures.

In fact, Europe has already exceeded the 1.5°C threshold for catastrophic climate change set forth by the IPCC, having warmed by 2.2°C since the start of the Industrial Revolution.

“Every fraction of a degree counts. Greenhouse gas concentrations are at record levels. Extreme weather and climate disasters are increasing in frequency and intensity,” United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said of the report.

Indeed, the speed at which climate change is unfolding has caught some experts by surprise. In 2020, for instance, the Met Office produced a hypothetical map of what summertime heat wave temperatures might look like in 2050. That reality, however, was nearly matched this week.

As has been documented over the past several years, the climate change dangers now facing Europe include extreme heat waves, drought, wildfires and inundating rainfall. Last year, more than 150 people died when torrential downpours resulted in flash flooding in parts of Germany and Belgium, and a record-breaking heat wave in Greece helped fuel a wildfire that destroyed homes and businesses. Europe's hottest day on record was recorded in Sicily last August, when the mercury hit 119.8°F.

These individual events are part of a larger pattern and a consequence of a warning planet. A mountain of research has shown that it is by no means limited to Europe or the United States.

At a time when Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., all but torpedoed President Biden's goal of cutting U.S. emissions in half by 2030 when he announced Friday he would not vote to pass a budget reconciliation bill that included measures intended to tackle climate change, the problem of rising temperatures is taken seriously across the political spectrum in Europe.

Yet while leaders there have pledged ambitious goals for reducing the emissions causing climate change, they will need the help of nations like the U.S., China and India in order to make a significant impact on the heat waves that continue to make life miserable on the continent.

Touring the scene of one of the many wildfires currently ravaging Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez summed up the dire situation.

"Climate change kills,” he said Monday. “It kills people, it kills our ecosystems and biodiversity.”

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