Friday, 30 September 2022

Our Predecessors Built a World of Winners and Losers. It’s Time for Something Different.

Our Predecessors Built a World of Winners and Losers. It’s Time for Something Different.

Opinion

Darren Walker
Darren Walker -

Our international rules-based order through which the world’s nations pursue global peace and development is crashing into the limits of its founding vision. What our predecessors built some eight decades ago, after the Second World War — from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to the United Nations — is in desperate need of repair. But it remains essential, and salvageable. For billions of people, the stakes could not be higher. This is painfully true for the people of Ukraine, where Vladimir Putin continues his malevolent invasion of a sovereign nation and subversion of international law. It’s also true across the Global South, where I believe our global development finance system has proved outdated, outmoded and outmatched. We must reform the architecture of our global order — the blueprint for our system of international relations and development finance. Group of 7 countries, major global-development organizations and big global foundations remain too uncomfortable, too unwilling, to expand their range of funding and planning partners, especially stakeholders from the Global South. Many of us assume that our so-called expertise is more valuable or relevant than the experience of the communities affected by today’s crises. Of course, these are precisely the individuals and organizations to whom we should be listening, because they are most proximate to the problems that we can only solve together. According to a recent study from the United Nations Development Program, during 2020 and 2021, nine of every 10 countries have actually slid backward on the Human Development Index, a first in the three-decade history of this trusted report on health, education and standards of living. These findings set in sharp relief the staggering costs and consequences of our cascading global crises, all of which are aggravated by inequality. During the pandemic, the global order failed to sufficiently finance vaccine distribution and access, costing countless lives and inflicting incalculable damage on the economies of poor nations. As the world transitions to recovery, the inequities are only widening, both between and within countries. The picture is hardly better for what should be a shared effort to mitigate and adapt to the global climate emergency and to meet the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals more broadly. In 2009, for example, the world’s wealthy nations pledged that, by 2020, they would contribute $100 billion every year to help poor nations prepare for the consequences of climate change. Our system has now failed to meet even that modest goal three years in a row, and counting. This system was founded to serve a simple, powerful ideal: peace through economic engagement. Never again would the United States and Europe allow widespread economic depression and dislocation to recreate the conditions that led to isolationism, nationalism, fascism, and global conflagration. This vision found its consummate expression at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, where delegates created the World Bank and International Monetary Fund — and then in the charter of the United Nations a year later. With support from a range of institutions, including the Ford Foundation, it evolved and expanded to include a plethora of development agencies, a complex mix of government, multilateral, and civil society organizations. By and large, this system of international cooperation helped achieve its original objective: preventing the horror of a third world war. It sustained peace and prosperity, at least for the West, and ushered in unprecedented (if not uncomplicated) social and economic progress around the world. At the same time, and from the start, this order was rife with flaws. For one, it did little to impede the proxy wars of world powers, particularly the United States and Soviet Union, across Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. For another, it reinforced and even replicated the inequalities it ought to have dismantled, dividing the world into donors and recipients, creditors and debtors, givers and takers, winners and losers. It became a new face of imperialism and colonialism. Today, the challenges that face this order compound on one another. We’re engaged in a generational contest between authoritarian ideology and democratic values in countries the world over, including our own, but we’re responding with the cutting-edge thinking of the 1940s. Global leaders should commit to three principles for reform, to repair historic wrongs and to seize new opportunities for progress. First, we must recognize that growth is good, but not good enough. We need metrics beyond G.D.P. to measure and manage toward what matters most: the human rights and human dignity of people in every country. Second, we must think bigger and bolder, but also for the longer term. We know that investment in equitable development today is far more cost effective than dealing with the consequences of our failure to invest during the decades ahead. Most important, we must ensure that the people affected by 21st-century crises — and the development community’s responses to them — have a voice in shaping policies and programs that serve them. The global community can start immediately by releasing more resources, currently tied up in development organizations, and by listening to and learning from inspiring leaders across the Global South. Ultimately, though, we can and must reorganize our efforts around the needs of people and communities, not just nation states, so governments, civil society and private sector entities all work in common purpose toward a global common good. The New York Times



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3905691/darren-walker/our-predecessors-built-world-winners-and-losers-it%E2%80%99s-time

UN Chief Urges Yemen’s Warring Sides to Renew Expiring Truce

UN Chief Urges Yemen’s Warring Sides to Renew Expiring Truce

Arab World

Asharq Al-Awsat
21 September 2022, US, New York: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks at a press conference following the Round Table of the Global Crisis Response Group on Food, Energy and Finance and the Informal Leaders Round Table on Climate Change. (dpa)

The UN chief is strongly urging Yemen’s warring parties to not only renew but expand a truce that expires Sunday, saying it has brought the longest period of relative calm since the conflict began in 2014. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday that the legitimate government and Iran-backed Houthi militias should prioritize the national interests of the Yemeni people and “choose peace for good.” His statement followed a stark warning Tuesday from the UN envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, that the risk of a return to fighting “is real.” Both sides accepted the UN-brokered truce for two months at the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan on April 2. It has been extended twice, and Grundberg and the secretary-general have been pushing both sides for a longer extension to try to start negotiations toward ending the conflict. “Over the past six months,” Guterres said, “the government of Yemen and the Houthis have taken important and bold steps towards peace by agreeing to, and twice renewing, a nationwide truce negotiated by the United Nations.” With the Sunday deadline looming, Guterres strongly urged the parties to expand the duration and terms of the truce in line with a proposal presented by Grundberg that has not been made public. Nabil Jamel, a government negotiator, said the UN proposal includes ways to pay civil servants in Houthi-held territories and reopen roads of blockaded cities, including Taiz.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3905666/un-chief-urges-yemen%E2%80%99s-warring-sides-renew-expiring-truce

Riyadh Int’l Book Fair Kicks Off with Participation from 30 Countries

Riyadh Int’l Book Fair Kicks Off with Participation from 30 Countries

Varieties

Riyadh - Omar al-Badwi
Riyadh International Book Fair 2022 at its opening (SPA)

The Riyadh International Book Fair (RIBF) 2022 kicked off on Thursday amid a wide turnout of visitors looking to discover the latest publications and titles of participating publishing houses from over 30 countries. RIBF, which is considered the most important book festival in the Arab world, will last for 10 days. Around 1,200 publishing houses are showcasing their titles at the grand fair, with the theme of “Cultural Chapters.” Moreover, the fair will feature seminars and cultural and artistic events. As a “guest of honor,” Tunisia is attending with a group of its intellectuals and artists. In honor of Tunisia, RIBF theaters were named “Carthage,” “Green Tunisia” and “Kairouan.” RIBF is classified as the largest book market in the region, and one of the most important destinations for selling and distributing Arabic books. The fair is known for attracting many visitors and a high volume of sales. Tunisia’s participation at the RIBF will cover several enrichment seminars. A session on “Tunisian Architecture” had already shed light on the legacy of ten centuries of Tunisian civilizations. On the sidelines of the exhibition, Tunisian artist Ziad Gharsa, one of the most prominent singers of Tunisian musical heritage, will perform for three nights at the Green Tunisia theater. At the concerts, Gharsa will play many musical instruments, such as the oud, violin, and piano. There will also be the Tunisian Night at the al-Ahmar Theater at Princess Nourah University in Riyadh, where Saber al-Rubai, Latifa, and Olfa bin Ramadan will be in concert on Oct. 1. On Oct. 6, visitors will get to enjoy Andalusian poems performed at the Green Tunisia theater.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3904156/riyadh-int%E2%80%99l-book-fair-kicks-participation-30-countries

Taliban Say Suicide Blast in Kabul Kills 19

Taliban Say Suicide Blast in Kabul Kills 19

World

Asharq Al-Awsat
File Photo: Medical staff move a wounded youth on a stretcher inside a hospital, Kabul, Afghanistan, April 19, 2022. (AFP)

A suicide bombing struck an education center in a Shiite area of the Afghan capital on Friday, killing 19 people and wounding 27, a Taliban-appointed spokesman for the Kabul police chief said. The explosion inside the center in the Dashti Barchi neighborhood of Kabul took place in the morning hours, said the spokesman, Khalid Zadran. He did not have further details in the immediate aftermath of the bombing. The bombing was the latest in a steady stream of violence since the Taliban seized power. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack in the area, which is populated mostly by members of Afghanistan's minority Shiite community, The Associated Press said. The ISIS group — the chief rival of the Taliban since their takeover of Afghanistan in August 2021 — has in the past targeted the Hazara community, including in Dashti Barchi. “Our teams have dispatched at the site of the blast to find out more details,” Abdul Nafi Takor, a Taliban-appointed spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said earlier.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3903976/taliban-say-suicide-blast-kabul-kills-19

Thursday, 29 September 2022

IAEA Elects Saudi Arabia as Board of Governors Member Until 2024

IAEA Elects Saudi Arabia as Board of Governors Member Until 2024

Business

Vienna - Asharq Al-Awsat
IAEA's Board of Governors plays an important role in deciding on critical issues. SPA

The General Conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency has been elected, by a majority of votes, to become a member of IAEA's Board of Governors. The Kingdom received the majority of votes from its geographical group, which includes countries of the Middle East and South Asia, the Saudi Press Agency reported. The Board of Governors, which consists of 35 members, is considered one of the most important decision-making tools in the Agency, SPA said. The Board plays an important role in deciding on critical issues, mainly verifying the peaceful activities of the state parties to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, it added.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3903876/iaea-elects-saudi-arabia-board-governors-member-until-2024

UN Security Council to Vote Friday on Resolution Condemning Russia Annexation Referendums

UN Security Council to Vote Friday on Resolution Condemning Russia Annexation Referendums

World

Asharq Al-Awsat
The UN Security Council meets at the UN headquarters in New York, US. Reuters file photo

The United Nations Security Council will vote Friday on a resolution condemning the referendums on annexing several Russia-occupied regions of Ukraine, the council's current president, France, said Thursday. The resolution -- drafted by the United States and Albania -- has no chance of passing thanks to Moscow's veto power, though it can then be presented to the General Assembly, said AFP. The text, seen by AFP, "condemns the Russian Federation's organization of illegal so-called referenda" in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, saying they "have no validity," "cannot form the basis for any alteration of the status of these regions," including "any purported annexation." It calls on member states not to recognize any annexation of the areas by Russia and demands Moscow "immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine." The meeting is set for 3:00 pm (1900 GMT) Friday, ahead of another discussion on the leaks discovered in the Nord Stream gas pipeline, and the same day that Russian President Vladimir Putin is to hold a formal ceremony at the Kremlin on the annexations. Despite the certainty of Russia's veto on the resolution, all eyes will be on the responses from India and China. The two countries in February abstained from voting on a resolution condemning Moscow's invasion of its former Soviet neighbor, but China earlier this week called for the "territorial integrity" of all countries to be respected. The later General Assembly vote will offer a picture of just how isolated Russia has become internationally. Western nations "are quietly confident that there will be strong support for Ukraine's territorial integrity in the General Assembly," Richard Gowen, an analyst at the International Crisis Group, told AFP. "I think a lot of countries were starting to back off from support for Ukraine at the UN as the war dragged on," he said. "But by putting annexation and territorial integrity on the table, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin will force a lot of wavering states to back Ukraine again," Gowen added, including some African nations. "Ultimately Putin has made a fundamental diplomatic error," he said. The General Assembly voted on resolutions regarding the Ukraine invasion three times this spring, with the final vote in April showing some signs of slipping international unity against Moscow. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Thursday condemned the annexations as a "dangerous escalation" that has "no place in the modern world."



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3903866/un-security-council-vote-friday-resolution-condemning-russia-annexation

Iran Has Lost Sight of Its Greatest Asset: Women

Iran Has Lost Sight of Its Greatest Asset: Women

Opinion

Firoozeh Dumas
Firoozeh Dumas -

Growing up in southern Iran and Southern California, I had the pleasure of having a father who loved to tell stories about his childhood in Iran. Most of his stories were funny, but there was one that always brought him to the brink of tears. Of course, he never cried; he always changed the subject right at the breaking point. It was the story of his oldest sister, Sedigeh, the smartest sibling in their large family. Because she was a girl, she was married at 16, which was not unusual for Iranian society in the 1930s. Despite her intellectual curiosity, she never had a chance to finish school. My father made it clear to me that he considered this to be a crime. My aunt Sedigeh, now 99 and blind, made the most of her life, raised four successful sons who married strong women and raised successful children. As much as she relished her family, the rest of us wondered what she could have done with her life had she been given the freedom to prosper like her brothers, all of whom became doctors or engineers. But even my aunt Sedigeh, with all the limitations forced upon her, did not as a young woman have to wear a hijab, the head cover that was made compulsory by the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The hijab has not always been a part of Iranian culture. Pictures of Tehran in the 1960s and ’70s show women wearing Jackie Kennedy-inspired dresses, short sleeves and miniskirts. But more important than their freedom to dress as they wished, Sedigeh’s generation witnessed the rise of women throughout Iranian society, in law, education and medicine, to name a few fields. At the same time, there were many Iranian women, like many today, who willingly wore the hijab, or even the chador, which covers the entire body but not the face. That was their choice. Once the hijab became government mandated, it no longer sprung from religious belief alone. It became a symbol of a basic human right that had been taken away. In Iran, the punishment imposed on women who defy hijab laws includes arrest, flogging or a prison sentence. Iranian women today are risking detainment and worse for an unimaginably simple request: the freedom to go outside the house without a head covering. We all know that Mahsa Amini, the 22-year-old Iranian woman who died after Iran’s morality police detained her for wearing her hijab in an “improper” way, did not die of a heart attack. Since Ms. Amini’s funeral on Sept. 17, demonstrations, led primarily by women, have broken out in cities across Iran. Their grievances aren’t limited to the laws dictating how they dress. The protesters are demanding freedom from all the suffocating strictures imposed by their country’s clerical leadership. These demonstrations feel different from previous uprisings, all of which have been violently squashed by the regime. My aunt Sedigeh, blind but still a seer, said to me yesterday: “When I was a young woman, I had no idea that life was any different anywhere else. This generation knows that they deserve more; they want what I didn’t have. I want that for them, too.” I am certain that if she could, my aunt Sedigeh would be protesting with them now. When women are oppressed, no one wins. Iran today is full of educated, capable women who have risen to the top of their fields and whose bodies, paradoxically, are regulated by the government. Regardless of their education or contributions to society, outside their homes, every woman in Iran is at the mercy of the morality police. This is insulting, soul-crushing and not sustainable. These brave, determined women marching in the streets want the chance to live unencumbered and to regain rights taken by a government that treats them as second-class citizens. Their level of determination, their hunger, can lead to great things. I have no doubt that Iranian women, if given the opportunity to fully become who they are meant to be, could be making even greater contributions to society that would benefit all Iranians. Instead, they are asking not to be killed for showing their hair. How did Iran get here? I weep for my aunt Sedigeh, who witnessed women rise in Iranian society, only to see their progress erased. Without some kind of compromise on the part of the government, Iran will be headed toward even greater unrest. Women cannot live under these unjust laws forever. Iran’s clerical establishment must recognize that lifting the Islamic dress code is a necessary first step toward greater equality. Extending this most basic of human rights to women is not a complicated issue. The real issue is the mistaken belief that women’s bodies need to be monitored and controlled. My father, an engineer who helped build Iran’s oil refineries, used to say, “If Iran hadn’t had oil, the country would have truly prospered.” Cursed with natural resources, the country lost sight of its future. Its greatest asset was never under the ground. Iran’s greatest asset is marching in the streets right now. The New York Times



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3903836/firoozeh-dumas/iran-has-lost-sight-its-greatest-asset-women

Lebanese Parliament Fails to Elect New President

Lebanese Parliament Fails to Elect New President

Arab World

Asharq Al-Awsat
An MP casts his vote during the first session to elect a new president at the parliament building in Beirut, Lebanon September 29, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Parliament failed to elect a new head of state on Thursday to replace President Michel Aoun when his term ends on Oct. 31, and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said he would call another session when consensus emerged on a candidate. However, it is unclear whether legislators in a deeply divided parliament will be able to reach a quorum for the session, raising prospects of renewed political paralysis. The bulk of votes cast by lawmakers at Thursday's session -- 63 -- were blank. Michel Moawad won the backing of 36 of 122 lawmakers who attended. Unless consensus emerges on a candidate, the presidency looks set to fall vacant when Aoun's term ends. Lebanon is going through an economic meltdown and the government struggles to implement structural reforms required for a bailout from the International Monetary Fund. The crisis, which started in late 2019, has plunged three-quarters of the country into poverty and the Lebanese pound has lost 90% of its value against the dollar. Anticipating a presidential vacuum, politicians have stepped up efforts to agree a new cabinet led by Prime Minister Najib Mikati - who is currently serving in a caretaker capacity - to which presidential powers could pass until a president can be agreed.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3902296/lebanese-parliament-fails-elect-new-president

Hamilton Says Failure to Win this Season 'Not End of the World'

Hamilton Says Failure to Win this Season 'Not End of the World'

Sports

Asharq Al-Awsat
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, of Britain, smiles, after winning the pole position during qualifying for the Formula One Saudi Arabian Grand Prix auto race on Dec. 4, 2021, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (AP)

Seven-time Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton said on Wednesday he does not see it as "a dry spell" or "end of the world" if he fails to win a race this season. The Briton has struggled all year in his Mercedes and ahead of Sunday night's race in Singapore is well out of the running for another world title, with Red Bull's Max Verstappen on the cusp of retaining his crown, AFP said. It is a far cry from last season, when the two went head to head for the title in the final race, and Hamilton and Mercedes are yet to take a chequered flag this term. "I do not look at it as a dry spell. I feel this year has been a year of growth. It has been a good experience for all," Hamilton told reporters in Kuala Lumpur. "There are six races (left) so there's six opportunities and we will try to get a win, but if we do not do well, I do not think it is the end of the world. "We will get back to the top." The 37-year-old called this "one of the toughest seasons" of his career, having wrestled with a car that has suffered from porpoising -- bouncing at high speed -- and been found wanting against the dominant Red Bulls. "We just need to understand the car," Hamilton added. For all that, along with team-mate and fellow Briton George Russell, Mercedes are battling with Ferrari for second in the constructors' championship. "Our goal is a second placing. Hopefully, in the next six races, we will do well," he said. Earlier, Mercedes signed an agreement to extend their title sponsorship with Malaysian oil giant Petronas with a multi-year contract until at least 2029.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3902146/hamilton-says-failure-win-season-not-end-world

Neymar Swept Up in Brazil Vote Battle after Video for Bolsonaro

Neymar Swept Up in Brazil Vote Battle after Video for Bolsonaro

Sports

Asharq Al-Awsat
Brazil's forward Neymar warms up before a friendly football match between Brazil and Tunisia at the Parc des Princes in Paris on September 27, 2022 FRANCK FIFE AFP

Football superstar Neymar was swept up in Brazil's presidential election campaign after posting a video on social media Wednesday thanking President Jair Bolsonaro for visiting the player's charitable children's foundation. The Paris Saint-Germain and Brazil striker did not get into politics in the brief message to Bolsonaro, posted four days out from Sunday's voting, AFP said. But that did not stop Bolsonaro's camp from playing up the video from one of the country's biggest stars as the far-right incumbent seeks a come-from-behind win against leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), who leads in the polls. "Hello, President Bolsonaro... I wanted to thank you for your illustrious visit," Neymar, 30, said on Instagram. "I would have loved to be there with you, but unfortunately I'm too far away... I hope you enjoyed your visit to the institute, which is the greatest goal of my life." Communications Minister Fabio Faria and Bolsonaro's senator son Flavio promptly reposted the video on Twitter. The message came after ex-army captain Bolsonaro visited the Neymar Jr. Institute, a charitable foundation the football star founded in 2014 that runs educational, cultural and sports programs for 3,000 underprivileged children in the southeastern city of Praia Grande, where Neymar grew up. Bolsonaro backers have adopted the yellow-and-green jersey of Brazil's national team as a symbol of support for the president, along with the Brazilian flag. "Let's all go yellow and green with the national team's jersey to vote for our captain Sunday!" Faria tweeted.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3902031/neymar-swept-brazil-vote-battle-after-video-bolsonaro

Hurricane Ian Pounds Florida as a Monster Storm

Hurricane Ian Pounds Florida as a Monster Storm

World

Asharq Al-Awsat
Waves crash along the Ballast Point Pier ahead of Hurricane Ian, Sept. 28, 2022, in Tampa, Florida. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Hurricane Ian plunged much of coastal southwest Florida into darkness Wednesday, as the monster storm brought "catastrophic" storm surges, wind and flooding that had officials readying a huge emergency response. The US Border Patrol said 20 migrants were missing after their boat sank, with four Cubans swimming to shore in the Florida Keys islands and three rescued at sea by the coast guard, AFP said. The National Hurricane Center (NHC) said the eye of the "extremely dangerous" hurricane made landfall just after 3:00 pm (1900 GMT) on the barrier island of Cayo Costa, west of the city of Fort Myers. Dramatic television footage from the coastal city of Naples showed floodwaters surging into beachfront homes, submerging roads and sweeping away vehicles. Some neighborhoods in Fort Myers, which has a population of more than 80,000, resembled lakes. The NHC said Ian was packing maximum sustained winds of 150 miles (240 kilometers) per hour when it landed. It later weakened to a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 90 miles per hour, while still battering Florida with "storm surge, winds and flooding," the NHC said at around 11:00 pm local time Wednesday (0300 GMT). More than two million customers were without electricity in Florida on Wednesday evening, out of a total of more than 11 million, with southwestern areas of the state the hardest hit, according to the PowerOutage.us tracking website. Ian is set to affect several million people across Florida and in the southeastern states of Georgia and South Carolina. As hurricane conditions spread, forecasters warned of a once-in-a-generation calamity. "This is going to be a storm we talk about for many years to come," said National Weather Service director Ken Graham. "It's a historic event." Florida's Governor Ron DeSantis said the state was going to experience a "nasty, nasty day, two days." - 'Life-threatening' - The town of Punta Gorda, north of Fort Myers, was in near-total darkness as the storm wiped out power, save for the lucky few buildings with generators. Howling winds ripped branches off trees and pulled chunks out of roofs. About 2.5 million people were under mandatory evacuation orders in a dozen coastal Florida counties, with several dozen shelters set up, and voluntary evacuation recommended in others. For those who decided to ride out the storm, authorities stressed it was too late to flee and residents should hunker down and stay indoors. Airports in Tampa and Orlando stopped all commercial flights, and cruise ship companies delayed departures or canceled voyages. With up to 30 inches (76 centimeters) of rain expected to fall on parts of the so-called Sunshine State, and a storm surge that could reach devastating levels of 12 to 18 feet (3.6 to 5.5 meters), authorities were warning of dire emergency conditions. "This is a life-threatening situation," the NHC warned. The storm was set to move across central Florida before emerging in the Atlantic Ocean by late Thursday. - 'Nothing is left here' - Ian had plunged all of Cuba into darkness a day earlier, after battering the country's west as a Category 3 storm and downing the island's power network. "Desolation and destruction. These are terrifying hours. Nothing is left here," a 70-year-old resident of the western city of Pinar del Rio was quoted as saying in a social media post by his journalist son, Lazaro Manuel Alonso. At least two people died in Pinar del Rio province, Cuban state media reported. In the United States, the Pentagon said 3,200 national guard personnel were called up in Florida, with another 1,800 on the way. DeSantis said state and federal responders were assigning thousands of personnel to address the storm response. "There will be thousands of Floridians who will need help rebuilding," he said. As climate change warms the ocean's surface, the number of powerful tropical storms, or cyclones, with stronger winds and more precipitation is likely to increase. The total number of cyclones, however, may not. According to Gary Lackmann, a professor of atmospheric science at North Carolina State University, studies have also detected a potential link between climate change and rapid intensification -- when a relatively weak tropical storm surges to a Category 3 hurricane or higher in a 24-hour period, as happened with Ian. "There remains a consensus that there will be fewer storms, but that the strongest will get stronger," Lackmann told AFP.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3901776/hurricane-ian-pounds-florida-monster-storm

Wednesday, 28 September 2022

Do Not Bring Your ‘Whole Self’ to Work

Do Not Bring Your ‘Whole Self’ to Work

Opinion

Pamela Paul
Pamela Paul -

For those lucky enough to have worked from home over the past two-and-a-half years or seven years or whatever it was, it’s back to the office time. We are finally R.T.O. and I.R.L., at least until the next wave hits. And some people can’t wait. So what exactly does it even mean? According to TED talker and corporate consultant Mike Robbins, author of a book called — that’s right — “Bring Your Whole Self to Work,” it means being able “to fully show up” and “allow ourselves to be truly seen” in the workplace. Per Robbins, it’s “essential” to create a work environment “where people feel safe enough to bring all of who they are to work.” Bringing the whole self is a certified buzzphrase at Google and encouraged at Experian. An entire issue of the Harvard Business Review has been devoted to the subject. In this new workplace, you don’t have to keep your head down and do your job. Instead, you “bring your whole self to work” — personality flaws, vulnerabilities, idiosyncratic mantras and all. Perhaps you’ve heard of whole self’s cousin, the “authentic self,” also urged to head into the office. According to BetterUp, which bills itself as the first Whole Person™ platform, “That means acknowledging your personality, including the quirky bits, and bringing your interests, hopes, dreams, and even fears with you, even if they don’t seem relevant to your work.” In other words, for the world outside the H.R. department, the phrase “bringing your whole self to work” is almost guaranteed to induce a vomit emoji. Rarely has a phrase of corporate jargon raised so much ire and rolled as many eyeballs with everyone I’ve talked to about the subject. And yet. In recent years, the “whole self” movement has gained momentum in part because it dovetails with fortified corporate diversity, equity and inclusion (D.E.I.) programs. Both purport to make employees feel comfortable expressing aspects of their identity in the workplace, even when irrelevant to the work at hand. Comfort sure sounds nice. The problem is for many people, it’s no more comfortable dragging the whole kit and caboodle into the workplace than it is showing up every day on a relentless basis. Nor is it necessarily productive. Not all people want their romantic life, their politics, their values or their identity viewed by their colleagues as pertinent to their performance. For some people, a private life is actually best when it’s private. So here’s an alternative: Let’s all bring only — or at least primarily — the worky parts. You remember those fragments: the part that angsted over every résumé punctuation mark and put a suit on for the first interview, the part whose mom urged her to put her best face forward in the workplace? It’s that old-fashioned thing we used to call “being professional.” Heck, it’s the you you were for your entire corporate history, until the prevailing H.R. doctrine abandoned buttoning things up. But “bringing your whole self to work” is a cheap benefit — easier for employers to provide than, say, a raise — and one vague enough to be largely meaningless. Nor is it available to the majority of the American work force. Nobody is asking a line worker or customer service representative to add more personal vulnerability to the enterprise. For most gainfully employed people, it’s not work’s job to provide self-fulfillment or self-actualization. It’s to put food on the table. After all, the office isn’t the only place you exist — why should they get to have all of you? If you only bring the best parts of you or at the very least, the part of you that does the actual work, you’re more likely to get rewarded for it. One friend and former manager of boomer vintage told me she credited her own success to religiously bringing her best self to work — and making sure the crabbiest, most critical part of her personality stayed home. Why deprive people of the ability to complain about work to their husband or roommate the moment they walk through the door? That’s where it generally belongs, despite the current misguided effort. Nor is it fair to ask the workplace to deal with all your hopes, dreams and problems. “A lot of staff that work for me, they expect the organization to be all the things: a movement, OK, get out the vote, OK, healing, OK, take care of you when you’re sick, OK. It’s all the things,” an executive director for an advocacy organization recently told The Intercept. “Can you get your love and healing at home, please?” Look, it’s understandable that things have gotten blurred. During the pandemic, many of us inadvertently shared a lot more of ourselves than we might have otherwise. Think, too, of this additional benefit: Now you have an excuse to get your work self out of the house. Some people there may actually be sick of that person. The New York Times



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3901701/pamela-paul/do-not-bring-your-%E2%80%98whole-self%E2%80%99-work

Israel Thwarts Train Derailment Attempt in Galilee

Israel Thwarts Train Derailment Attempt in Galilee

Arab World

Tel Aviv- Asharq Al-Awsat
File Photo: Israeli forces gather at the scene of an attack in the West Bank. Reuters file photo

The police and Shin Bet Security Service said on Wednesday that their forces have thwarted an attempt to derail a train in northern Israel by placing an obstacle on the railway tracks. An Arab Israeli man was detained and taken for investigation after the object was found on the railway line between the cities of Acre and Karmiel, the police said. The man, a Galilee resident in his 20s, was arrested close to the tracks along Route 85, near the town of Jadeidi Makr, a few kilometers east of Acre. He was handed over to the Shin Bet security service for questioning. Police said there was no damage or injury as a result of the incident, which occurred on the Rosh Hashanah holiday when the trains were not running. Much of the information related to the ongoing investigation was placed under a gag order. Israeli security forces are on high alert during the Jewish holidays, which began on Sunday and will last until mid-October. Former senior police officer Shachar Ayalon, the CEO of Israel Railways, said the incident is very serious and that the Israeli security services should be concerned. He said that a train traveling at a speed between 120 to 140 kilometers per hour can come off the rails if it hits an object, and the cars can flip over. He added that the conductor can’t avoid it because there’s no time or space to stop. Ayalon noted that these trains usually carry between 800 and 1,500 passengers. “The operation indicates the significant increase in terrorist intent, adding to its danger that the perpetrator is an Israeli citizen,” he said, noting that previous attempts were made before to derail trains. He noted that patrols constantly roam the areas along railways and that monitoring devices, electronic sensors, and cameras were installed.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899936/israel-thwarts-train-derailment-attempt-galilee

Dubai to Host 1st Metaverse Assembly at Museum of the Future

Dubai to Host 1st Metaverse Assembly at Museum of the Future

Technology

Dubai - Asharq Al-Awsat
Dubai's Museum of the Future. (UAE Government Media Office)

Dubai will host the first of its kind Metaverse Assembly at the Museum of the Future and AREA 2071, Emirates Towers, Dubai on Wednesday. The event will discuss the most prominent trends in designing and building metaverse worlds, virtual training and education, e-commerce, virtual medical technology, arts, electronic games, and organizing events and conferences in the world of metaverses. Minister of Cabinet Affairs, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees, and Managing Director of the Dubai Future Foundation Mohammed al-Gergawi stressed that the Assembly aims to clarify the importance of supporting the adoption and development of the latest future innovations. Gergawi noted that the global event is a new step to unify the visions of government agencies, technology companies, international organizations, and institutions to explore the metaverse's opportunities, capabilities, and applications. He explained that the Dubai Metaverse Strategy, launched by Dubai Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, is a leading and innovative model for governments in implementing initiatives and strategies that employ technologies and future innovations, developing digital and legislative infrastructure, and supporting creative ideas based on the metaverse. "The Dubai Metaverse Assembly will contribute to the international efforts to harness metaverse applications. It will help to enhance the readiness of governments, companies, and society for the major transformations that we will witness in the coming decades, which will impact how we live and work," he added. The event will be held on Sept. 28 and 29 and will host more than 300 experts and specialists and 40 local and global organizations and technology companies participating in more than 25 sessions and workshops with more than 30 international speakers. The sessions on the first day of the Assembly will witness the participation of many UAE ministers and senior officials, including Minister of Economy Abdullah al-Marri, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy, and Teleworking Applications Omar al-Olama, and Group Chairman and CEO of DP World and the Chairman of the Ports, Customs and Free Zone Corporation, Sultan bin Sulayem. They will discuss topics such as the economic size of the metaverse opportunity, the future of the new world, opportunities in virtual real estate, metaverse impact on supply chain and enabling people and operations, maximizing the potential of ecosystems on the metaverse, building the responsible metaverse, augmented reality and its effects, and the Dubai Metaverse Strategy. The second day will discuss several interesting topics, including diving into the metaverse by META, the future of nations in the metaverse, the role of governments in virtual worlds, opportunities in aviation, sectors impacted by the metaverse, the UAE metaverse contributors, aging in the metaverse and the building blocks for web 3.0 and the metaverse. The workshops will discuss topics such as accelerating value creation in the metaverse, aviation in the metaverse, the road to the metaverse and innovating governance, decoding the metaverse, leaping over web 2.0 into the metaverse, brands in the metaverse, metaverse as a game changer, how shopping, banking, and gaming are spearheading the metaverse, immersive learning experiences in the metaverse, and venture capital for the metaverse, among other topics.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899926/dubai-host-1st-metaverse-assembly-museum-future

Stocks and Oil Drop as Dollar Gains on Recession, Ukraine Fears

Stocks and Oil Drop as Dollar Gains on Recession, Ukraine Fears

Business

Asharq Al-Awsat
Kremlin-backed officials in four regions under Russian control have claimed victory in controversial annexation votes, spooking investors STRINGER AFP

Equities and crude prices fell, while the dollar held at multi-year highs Wednesday as recession fears mount, while traders are also growing increasingly concerned about tensions with Russia after it declared victory in controversial Ukraine annexation polls. Investors are also keeping a close eye on London, after new finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng's tax-cutting mini-budget last week sent shock waves through markets, pushing the pound to a record low and leading to dire warnings for Britain's economy, AFP said. While Asia saw small gains Tuesday, New York and Europe ended mostly in the red again, with Wall Street jolted by data showing a surprise improvement in US consumer confidence -- likely because of a dip in petrol prices -- and a jump in home sales. The figures pointed to resilience in the world's top economy despite three successive bumper Federal Reserve rate hikes -- and expectations for another in November -- as it tries to tame four-decade-high inflation. Several Fed officials have lined up this week to reassert their determination to keep hiking until prices are brought under control, even at the cost of a recession. Observers are now betting that borrowing costs will top out at around 4.75 percent next year, and some policymakers have suggested they could remain elevated for some time. The prospect of such tight monetary policy has battered equities, as US 10-year Treasury yields -- a gauge of future rates -- approach four percent for the first time since 2010. The Dow and S&P 500 ended down Tuesday, though the Nasdaq enjoyed a slight uptick. Asia resumed its downtrend, with Tokyo, Hong Kong and Seoul all down more than two percent, while Shanghai, Sydney, Singapore, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta were also off. - Russia nuclear warning - And the dollar remains the go-to unit as the Fed leads the way in central bank tightening. "The fact we have such a strong increase in US yields is attracting flows into the US dollar," said Nannette Hechler-Fayd'herbe, of Credit Suisse Group AG. "As long as monetary and fiscal policy worldwide are really not coming to strengthen their own currencies, we should be anticipating a very strong dollar." The greenback rose against sterling, with the British currency battered by concerns that Kwarteng's spending plan would ramp up borrowing just as the Band of England was trying to hike rates to fight inflation, causing consternation among many observers. The dollar was also approaching 145 yen, having sunk from a high close to 146 yen after the Japanese government intervened last week to support its currency. Sentiment was also rattled by worries about developments in Ukraine, after Kremlin-installed authorities in four regions under Russian control claimed victory in annexation votes, with Moscow warning it could use nuclear weapons to defend the territories. Ukraine and its allies have denounced the so-called referendums as a sham, saying the West would never recognize the results of the ballots. But former Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev -- an ally of President Vladimir Putin and now deputy chairman of the country's security council -- issued a stark warning that Moscow was ready to act decisively. "I want to remind you -- the deaf who hear only themselves: Russia has the right to use nuclear weapons if necessary," he said on social media. On crude markets both main contracts were down more than one percent on recession worries and as Bloomberg quoted sources as saying that US inventories increased more than four million barrels last week. The drop comes despite a report that Moscow is calling on OPEC and other major groups to slash output by a million barrels a day when they meet next week. - Key figures at around 0230 GMT - Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 2.2 percent at 25,984.51 (break) Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: DOWN 2.4 percent at 17,433.43 Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.8 percent at 3,069.22 Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.0663 from $1.0730 on Tuesday Euro/dollar: DOWN at $0.9551 from $0.9595 Euro/pound: UP at 89.71 pence from 89.39 pence Dollar/yen: UP at 144.83 yen from 144.81 yen West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 1.9 percent at $76.99 per barrel Brent North Sea crude: DOWN 1.9 percent at $84.67 per barrel New York - Dow: DOWN 0.4 percent at 29,134.99 (close) London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.5 percent at 6,984.59 (close)



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899791/stocks-and-oil-drop-dollar-gains-recession-ukraine-fears

Tuesday, 27 September 2022

Saudi Crown Prince Receives Message from Swedish PM

Saudi Crown Prince Receives Message from Swedish PM

Gulf

Riyadh - Asharq Al-Awsat
Deputy Foreign Minister Waleed al-Khuraiji receives the message during a meeting with Swedish Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Petra Menander in Riyadh. (SPA)

Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Crown Prince and Prime Minister, received on Tuesday a written message from Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson. The message hailed the role Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in mediating a prisoner swap between Russia and Ukraine amid the conflict between them. This reflects his keenness on supporting all international efforts to resolve the conflict through political means and ease its impact, it added. The message was received by deputy Foreign Minister Waleed al-Khuraiji, on behalf of Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah, during a meeting with Swedish Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Petra Menander in Riyadh. The officials discussed bilateral relations between their countries and ways to develop them in various fields. They also exchanged views on issues of common interest.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899686/saudi-crown-prince-receives-message-swedish-pm

Saudi Royal Decree Reshuffles Cabinet, Names Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Prime Minister

Saudi Royal Decree Reshuffles Cabinet, Names Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Prime Minister

Gulf

Jeddah - Asharq Al-Awsat
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. (SPA)

Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz issued on Tuesday a Royal Decree naming Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as prime minister. Cabinet sessions attended by King Salman will continue to be chaired by him. King Salman also decreed a reshuffle of the cabinet. Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was named Minister of Energy, Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was named Minister of Sport and Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was named Minister of Interior. Prince Abdullah bin Bandar bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was named Minister of the National Guard, Prince Khalid bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was named Minister of Defense, Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah bin Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud was named Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Farhan Al Saud, was named Minister of Culture. Dr. Abdullatif bin Abdulaziz bin Abdulrahman Al Al-Sheikh was named Minister of Islamic Affairs, Call and Guidance, and Dr. Essam bin Saad bin Saeed was named Minister of State for Shura Council Affairs. Walid bin Mohammed Al-Samaani was named Minister of Justice and Dr. Tawfiq bin Fawzan bin Mohammed Al-Rabiah was named Minister of Hajj and Umrah. Dr. Majid bin Abdullah Al-Qasabi, as the Minister of Commerce and Acting Minister of Media. Eng. Abdulrahman bin Abdulmohsen Al-Fadhli was named Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture, and Adel bin Ahmed Al-Jubeir was named Minister of State for Foreign Affairs. Majed bin Abdullah bin Hamad Al-Hogail was named Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing, Mohammed bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al-Jadaan was named Minister of Finance, and Eng. Abdullah bin Amer Al-Sawaha was named Minister of Communications and Information Technology. Eng. Ahmed bin Suleiman bin Abdulaziz Al-Rajhi was named Minister of Human Resources and Social Development, Bandar bin Ibrahim bin Abdullah Al-Khorayef was named Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources, and Eng. Saleh bin Nasser bin Al-Ali Al-Jasser was named Minister of Transport and Logistics Services. Ahmed bin Aqeel Al-Khateeb was named Minister of Tourism, Eng. Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih was named Minister of Investment, Faisal bin Fadhel bin Mohsen Al-Ibrahim was named Minister of Economy and Planning, Fahd bin Abdulrahman bin Dahes Al-Jalajel was named Minister of Health and Yousef bin Abdullah bin Mohammed Al-Benyan was named Minister of Education. Prince Dr. Mansour bin Miteb bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Sheikh Saleh bin Abdulaziz bin Mohammed bin Ibrahim Al Al-Sheikh, Prince Turki bin Mohammed bin Fahd bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Dr. Mutlab bin Abdullah Al-Nafisah, Dr. Musaed bin Mohammed Al-Aiban, Dr. Ibrahim bin Abdulaziz Al-Assaf, Mohammed bin Abdulmalik Al Al-Sheikh, Khalid bin Abdulrahman Al-Issa, and Dr. Hamad bin Mohammed bin Hamad Al Al-Sheikh were named Ministers of State.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899636/saudi-royal-decree-reshuffles-cabinet-names-crown-prince-mohammed-bin-salman

Giorgia Meloni Is Extreme, but She’s No Tyrant

Giorgia Meloni Is Extreme, but She’s No Tyrant

Opinion

Mattia Ferraresi
Mattia Ferraresi -

It happened here, again. Nearly 100 years since the March on Rome, Italy on Sunday voted in a right-wing coalition headed by a party directly descended from Benito Mussolini’s fascist regime. This is, to put it mildly, concerning. Yet the most pervasive worry is not that Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party will reinstitute fascism in Italy — whatever that would mean. It’s that a government led by her will transform Italy into an “electoral autocracy,” along the lines of Viktor Orban’s Hungary. During the campaign, the center-left Democratic Party — Brothers of Italy’s main opponent — obsessively invoked Hungary as Italy’s destiny under Ms. Meloni’s rule. The contest, they repeated, was one between democracy and authoritarianism. In the end, the Democrats’ anguished “alarm for democracy” failed to persuade voters: At an early reckoning, the party took 19 percent against the Brothers of Italy’s 26 percent. There are many reasons for that. One surely is that the picture they drew of Ms. Meloni, as a would-be tyrant taking an ax to Italian democracy and ushering in an era of illiberalism, was unconvincing. For all the rhetorical radicalism and historic extremism of her party, the fact remains that it will not be operating in circumstances of its choosing. Tethered to the European Union and constrained by Italy’s political system, Ms. Meloni won’t have much room to maneuver. She couldn’t turn Rome into Budapest even if she wanted to. The major bulwark against autocracy in Italy can be summed up in one word: Europe. Our fragile economy — set to grow, in a best-case scenario sketched out by the International Monetary Fund, only 0.7 percent in 2023 — is heavily dependent on European institutions. Beyond the usual web of economic ties, the country is the biggest beneficiary of a European Commission-led recovery fund set to disperse in the next four years over 200 billion euros, or $195 billion, in grants and loans. Crucially, this economy-saving aid, without which the country may well spiral into recession, is conditional on respecting democratic norms. Any step down an Orban-like path would imperil Italy’s entire economy, surely a no-go for the new government. Playing by European rules wouldn’t be as big a concession as it might seem. After all, Brothers of Italy over the years has progressively tempered its euroskeptic instincts. In 2014, Ms. Meloni announced that “the time has come to tell Europe that Italy must leave the eurozone.” The party, she pledged, would pursue “a unilateral withdrawal” from the monetary union, and in 2018 she sponsored a bill to remove references to the bloc from the Italian Constitution. Yet as the prospect of power came closer, those goals dropped off the party’s agenda. “I don’t think Italy needs to leave the eurozone and I believe the euro will stay,” Ms. Meloni conceded last year. On foreign policy, too, Ms. Meloni is aligned with the dominant view on the continent. Formerly friendly with President Vladimir Putin of Russia — she asked the Italian government to withdraw its support of sanctions in the wake of Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and congratulated Mr. Putin on his no-doubt fraudulent re-election in 2018 — she has, since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, reinvented herself as a torchbearer of Atlanticism and a staunch supporter of NATO. She is now a major proponent of a Europe-wide price cap on gas, the continent’s most potent economic weapon against Mr. Putin (and a measure, incidentally, so far opposed by Hungary). Whether opportunistic or sincere, such moves signal how ready Ms. Meloni is to occupy a conventional, Europe-friendly position, placating international partners and investors alike. Then there’s the country itself. For a start, the right-wing coalition — which also includes the League party and Forza Italia — fell short of the two-thirds majority in Parliament that would have allowed it to modify the Constitution without recourse to a popular vote. Ms. Meloni’s dream of turning Italy’s parliamentary democracy into a presidential system, which critics saw as the first step toward a perilous extension of executive power, is already ruled out. Managing the fractious government coalition won’t be easy, either. On one side, there’s Matteo Salvini, the ebullient leader of the League. Resentful of Ms. Meloni’s rise — which has come at his expense — and adamantly pro-Putin, he could cause endless trouble. On the other, there’s Silvio Berlusconi, who has already warned his partners that Forza Italia “will break with the government if it takes an anti-E.U. line.” In this quarrelsome setting, it will be extremely hard for Ms. Meloni to push through any truly disruptive policies. If she does, the already audible calls to reinstate Mario Draghi, who led the national unity government that fell in July, will grow louder. Italy’s notoriously volatile political environment is also balanced by democratic institutions designed to foster stability and prevent authoritarian backsliding. The decentralized system is made of 20 semiautonomous regions and nearly 8,000 municipalities, firewalls to rein in centralized power. The Constitutional Court, whose general legitimacy has never been in question, is fairly independent from political influence, and the justice system recently went through a comprehensive, E.U.-driven reform. Any attempt by Ms. Meloni to arrogate powers to herself would be stoutly opposed. To be sure, there are genuine reasons for concern. Ms. Meloni is the first post-fascist leader to win a national election in Italy after World War II, and her party is the heir of the Italian Social Movement, the reincarnation of the long-dissolved and constitutionally banned Fascist Party. The process of “de-demonization” that Brothers of Italy went through, including openly repudiating the fascist tradition, hasn’t quashed the deeply rooted connections with neo-fascist circles. Party officials have often been caught mingling and doing business with the sketchiest far-right groups around. What’s more, Ms. Meloni’s sympathies, if not her present political orientation, lie with Europe’s illiberals. As recently as Sept. 15, she led her party to vote against a European resolution censoring Mr. Orban, and she is a close ally of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party, which is embroiled in a fierce rule-of-law dispute with the European Commission over government control of the judiciary. Her platform — militantly anti-migrant, socially reactionary and steeped in a culture of clientelism and tribalism — is unmistakably nativist and radical. All this, of course, is problematic. But not all problems lead to autocracy. The New York Times



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3899631/mattia-ferraresi/giorgia-meloni-extreme-she%E2%80%99s-no-tyrant

WFP Provides Food Assistance for 250 Thousand Yemenis

WFP Provides Food Assistance for 250 Thousand Yemenis

Arab World

Aden - Mohammed Nasser
A Yemeni girl whose family received food aid through the United Nations provided by the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (United Nations)

The United Nation World Food Program (WFP) announced plans to maximize support for Yemen, suspended earlier this year due to funding shortfalls, supported by a 30 million euros contribution from Germany. The WFP said in its Situation Report for August that it will resume work to complete 300 assets in 40 districts across nine Yemeni governorates, reaching 254,000 people through food assistance (FFA) projects. It also announced resuming its school feeding program and dispatched 1,200 metric tons (mt) of school feeding commodities in August. However, due to a lack of funding and commodity arrival delays, WFP will only be able to assist around 665,000 (one-third) of the planned 1.9 million school children over the current semester. According to the report, the inter-agency response continued during August, including through the Food Security and Agriculture Cluster (FSAC) and the UN Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM), led by UNFPA with UNICEF and WFP as supply partners. By the end of August, the Rapid Response Mechanism had assisted 37,000 people with RRM kits, which include ready-to-eat food provided by the WFP, especially that 18 of the 22 governorates have been impacted by the heavy rains that caused widespread floods across the country, with Marib and Hajjah governorates most affected. The report revealed that 19 million people suffer from food insecurity in Yemen, while 161,000 people live in famine-like conditions, 3.5 million people are acutely malnourished and 3.1 million people were assisted by the WFP in August. The latest WFP food security data showed that the nationwide prevalence of inadequate food consumption increased in July for the third consecutive month, reaching the highest levels seen since February 2018. The report further said that under the terms of the Black Sea Grain Initiative, a WFP- chartered bulk carrier departed Ukraine on August 30 with 37,000 mt of wheat grain bound for WFP’s GFA program in Yemen. The vessel is expected to arrive by mid-October. By the end of August, the International Organization for Migration Rapid Displacement Tracking reported 51,000 people displaced so far this year, with 20,600 displaced since the truce came into effect on April 2. The RRM, for its part, assisted 10,500 people in August, approximately a 35% decrease compared to the previous month, the report showed. The WFP also assisted 406,000 Yemeni children and mothers with nutrition assistance in Yemen in August under its Treatment of Moderate Acute Malnutrition program. It started the first round of cash assistance for nutrition support under its nutrition assistance program in the same month.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3897496/wfp-provides-food-assistance-250-thousand-yemenis

Monday, 26 September 2022

Grundberg in Riyadh to Discuss Expanding Yemen Truce

Grundberg in Riyadh to Discuss Expanding Yemen Truce

Gulf

Aden - Ali Rabih
United Nations envoy to Yemen Hans Grundberg. (AFP file)

United Nations envoy to Yemen Hans Grunberg arrived in Riyadh on Monday as part of efforts to expand the truce in the war-torn country. The nationwide truce is set to expire on October 2. It was first adopted in April and has since been twice renewed for a two-month period each time. Official sources said Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed bin Saeed Al-Jaber met with Grundberg on Monday. Jaber stressed Saudi Arabia’s support to the UN’s efforts to expand the truce with the aim of reaching a comprehensive ceasefire and political solution. Grundberg had suggested to the Yemeni government and Iran-backed Houthis four proposals to expand and improve the truce, including extending it for more than two months at a time. He has yet to receive responses to his proposals. In his latest statements, he remarked that results cannot be reached “if there is no political will on the part of the Yemeni parties, and this is necessary for success.” The Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council and government are not opposed to making concessions that will favor people living in areas controlled by the Houthis, however, the militias’ failure to commit to their pledges regarding the reopening of routes to besieged Taiz city remain a main obstacle in the extension of any truce. The Houthis, for their part, continue to impose new conditions with the aim of achieving political and economic gains. They have already exploited the truce to loot resources and oil derivatives revenues at Hodeidah port and recruit new fighters. Houthi spokesman Mohammed Abdulsalam Flita recently suggested that the militias may impede Grundberg’s latest proposals if Sanaa International Airport is not reopened without any restrictions. He also suggested that the UN monitoring mechanism at Hodeidah port be removed. The Yemeni government estimates that the Houthis managed in the past six months to reap 200 billion rials (a dollar is worth around 560 rials in militia-held regions) from oil derivatives revenues at Hodeidah port. These funds have all gone towards the militias’ military efforts and recruitment of new fighters in preparation of a new round of fighting. Moreover, the army has accused the Houthis of committing thousands of violations of the truce that have killed and injured around 1,200 civilians and soldiers.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3897371/grundberg-riyadh-discuss-expanding-yemen-truce