Aquaculture overtakes wild fisheries for first time: UN report

Aquaculture overtakes wild fisheries for first time: UN report
A fisherman prepares to fish shrimps with a net at a shrimp farm and restaurant in Isla Venado, Puntarenas, Costa Rica, on June 22, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 08 June 2024
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Aquaculture overtakes wild fisheries for first time: UN report

Aquaculture overtakes wild fisheries for first time: UN report
  • While wild fisheries production has stayed largely unchanged for decades, aquaculture has increased by 6.6 percent since 2020, says Food and Agriculture Organization report

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica: Aquaculture is playing an increasingly important role in meeting the world’s food needs, surpassing wild fisheries in aquatic animal production for the first time, according to a report published Friday.
With global demand for aquatic foods expected to keep growing, an increase in sustainable production is vital to ensure healthy diets, the United Nations’s Food and Agriculture Organization said.
In 2022, aquaculture yielded 94.4 million tons of aquatic animal production — 51 percent of the total, and 57 percent of the production destined for human consumption, it said.
“Aquatic systems are increasingly recognized as vital for food and nutrition security,” according to the report, released as experts gathered in Costa Rica for talks on ocean conservation.
“Because of their great diversity and capacity to supply ecosystem services and sustain healthy diets, aquatic food systems represent a viable and effective solution that offers greater opportunities to improve global food security and nutrition,” it added.




The president of Costa Rica, Rodrigo Chaves, speaks during the opening of the Immersed Change Ocean Protection Summit in San Jose on June 7, 2024. (AFP)

While wild fisheries production has stayed largely unchanged for decades, aquaculture has increased by 6.6 percent since 2020, the report noted.
The sustainability of wild fishery resources remained a cause for concern, it added.
The proportion of marine stocks fished within biologically sustainable levels decreased to 62.3 percent in 2021, 2.3 percent lower than in 2019, the report said.
“Urgent action is needed to accelerate fishery stock conservation and rebuilding.”

With the world’s population projected to reach 8.5 billion by 2030, “providing sufficient food, nutrition and livelihoods for this growing population demands significant investments,” it added.
“Aquaculture has a major role to play, particularly in Africa where its great potential is not yet realized,” the report said, noting that more than 40 percent of the world’s population cannot afford a healthy diet.

Aquatic products remain one of the most traded food commodities, generating a record $195 billion in 2022 — a 19 percent increase from pre-pandemic levels, it said.
“Despite these significant achievements, the sector still faces major challenges from climate change and disasters, water scarcity, pollution, biodiversity loss” and other man-made impacts, it added.




Hervé Berville, France's secretary of state for the sea and biodiversity, speaks during the opening of the Immersed Change Ocean Protection Summit in San Jose on June 7, 2024. (AFP)

The report was released to coincide with a meeting in San Jose of country representatives, scientists and international experts to prepare for the third UN Ocean Conference, to be held in France in 2025.
United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Social Affairs Li Junhua said at the start of the talks that protecting the ocean was “not an option but an imperative.”
Costa Rica’s President Rodrigo Chaves, host of the two-day meeting, said that if the world does not act, “we as a generation would be taking away the future of humanity.”
Participants will debate issues including the capacity of the ocean to absorb carbon dioxide, the need for sustainable fishing and tackling marine pollution.
 


15 killed in Pakistan sectarian tribal clashes

15 killed in Pakistan sectarian tribal clashes
Updated 4 sec ago
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15 killed in Pakistan sectarian tribal clashes

15 killed in Pakistan sectarian tribal clashes

PESHAWAR: At least 15 people have been killed in clashes between two tribes in northwestern Pakistan, a local official said Tuesday, as a deadly feud over land is reignited.
With heavy weapons including mortar shells, the violence hit Kurram district near the border with Afghanistan where the same tribes fought in July.
“The conflict, initially over land, involves two tribes — one Sunni and the other Shia — which has turned the dispute into a sectarian clash,” a senior administrative official stationed in Kurram told AFP on condition of anonymity.
He said 15 people had been killed since Saturday.
The Associated Press of Pakistan, the official news agency, reported around twenty other people had been wounded.
The Kurram district, formerly a semi-autonomous area, has a history of bloody clashes between tribes belonging to the Sunni and Shiite sects of Islam that have claimed hundreds of lives over the years.
The last clashes in July killed 35 people and ended only after a jirga (tribal council) called a ceasefire, with officials attempting to broker a new truce.
Tribal and family feuds are common in Pakistan.
However, they can be particularly protracted and violent in the mountainous northwestern region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where communities abide by traditional tribal honor codes.
In Pakistan, a predominantly Sunni Muslim country, the Shiite community says they have long suffered discrimination and violence.


Filipino conjoined twins get new lease of life after surgery in Riyadh

Filipino conjoined twins get new lease of life after surgery in Riyadh
Updated 18 min 35 sec ago
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Filipino conjoined twins get new lease of life after surgery in Riyadh

Filipino conjoined twins get new lease of life after surgery in Riyadh
  • Akhizah and Ayeesha Yusoph underwent surgery at King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital
  • They were operated on by Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah and his team of 20 doctors and nurses

MANILA: Doctors from the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program have given Akhizah and Ayeesha Yusoph a new lease of life. The girls have thrived since their recent surgery in Riyadh and play just like any other children, says their mother.

The twins, born in December 2022 in Panabo city, Davao Del Norte province, on the southern island of Mindanao, were joined at the lower chest and abdomen and shared one liver.

When their 19-year-old mother started to look for help, a local charity connected her with the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center. The center is headed by Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, one of the world’s most renowned pediatric surgeons who also leads the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program.

After a series of tests and medical arrangements, the girls flew to Riyadh in May and, in June, underwent separation surgery at the at King Abdullah Specialized Children’s Hospital

The five-hour procedure was performed by Dr. Rabeeah and his team of 20 medics. It was sponsored by the Saudi government.

“When I learned that the operation was a success, I only felt one thing: I was filled with joy because my children’s suffering was finally over,” Hashima Yusoph, the girls’ mother, told Arab News.

She returned to the Philippines with the girls earlier this month and is now witnessing her children learning to walk and play with others.

“Before, they couldn’t walk. They were always just sitting or lying down. But now they can play. They can now keep up with the other children playing outside,” Yusoph said.

“They are happier now. They are always laughing, not like when they used to always cry because they were in pain. It was really hard before.”

Yusoph was accompanied to Riyadh by her mother. Their stay in the Kingdom coincided with the Hajj season and being Muslim, they could perform the pilgrimage that is one of the five pillars of Islam.

“We are very grateful to Saudi Arabia for giving us that opportunity, to do Hajj, to go to Makkah,” Yusoph said.

“I prayed for my twins that they will always be healthy. I also thanked Allah for the bountiful blessings that we received, especially for giving my daughters the gift of independent movement and a chance to live normally.”

Her life, too, has changed and she could now focus on finding work to help sustain the family.

“The twins’ surgery has made a huge difference in our lives. Now, I can also move freely unlike before — I had to carry them every day because of their condition. Their separation was really a great help in our lives,” she said.

“I want to thank King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ... They changed the lives of my daughters, our lives.”

Conjoined twins are a rare phenomenon, estimated to occur once in every 50,000 to 60,000 births.

Saudi Arabia is known as a pioneer in the field of separation surgery and, since the establishment of the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program in 1990, has separated more than 130 children who were born sharing internal organs with their siblings.

In March 2004, another set of Filipino conjoined twins, Ann and Mae Manzo, underwent separation surgery in Riyadh. Joined at the abdomen, the pelvis and the perineum, they were successfully operated on by Dr. Al-Rabeeah and his team.


North Korea vows response to US submarine’s visit to South Korea

North Korea vows response to US submarine’s visit to South Korea
Updated 23 min 18 sec ago
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North Korea vows response to US submarine’s visit to South Korea

North Korea vows response to US submarine’s visit to South Korea
  • South Korea’s military said the USS Vermont, a nuclear-powered and fast-attack submarine, arrived at the southeastern South Korean port city of Busan on Monday to take on supplies and allow its crew to rest

SEOUL: The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed Tuesday to boost the country’s nuclear war capability and take other steps to protest the recent arrival of a nuclear-powered US submarine in South Korea.
North Korea has repeatedly vowed to expand its nuclear arsenal, but the latest threat by Kim Yo Jong came after North Korea dialed up regional tensions by unveiling a uranium-enrichment facility and testing a new ballistic missile earlier this month.
In a statement carried by state media, Kim Yo Jong said that the submarine’s visit “clearly reveals the frantic military and strategic attempt of the US” She said North Korea’s nuclear war deterrent must be bolstered “both in quality and quantity continuously and limitlessly” in response.
“The US strategic assets will never find their resting place in the region of the Korean Peninsula,” she said. “We will continue to inform that all the ports and military bases of the ROK are not safe places.” ROK stands for the Republic of Korea, South Korea’s formal name.
Her comments suggested North Korea may test-fire a missile whose range covers a South Korean site where the US submarine is docked, some observers say.
South Korea’s military said the USS Vermont, a nuclear-powered and fast-attack submarine, arrived at the southeastern South Korean port city of Busan on Monday to take on supplies and allow its crew to rest.
Temporary deployments of powerful US military assets like aircraft carriers, nuclear-powered submarines and bombers to South Korea are not unusual, but Washington has boosted them over the last year in a show of force against North Korea’s evolving nuclear threats.
Pyongyang often responds furiously to such visits, calling them proof of hostile intentions, and reacts with missile tests.
On Sept. 13, North Korea’s state media published photos of a secretive facility to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons. It was North Korea’s first unveiling of a uranium-enrichment facility since it showed one at the country’s main Yongbyon nuclear complex to visiting American scholars in 2010. Last week, North Korea tested a newly built ballistic missile designed to carry what it calls “a 4.5-ton super-large conventional warhead” and a modified cruise missile.
Since late May, North Korea has also floated thousands of trash-carrying balloons toward South Korea in a Cold War-style psychological campaign, prompting South Korea to restart anti-Pyongyang propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts at border areas.
South Korea’s military warned on Tuesday of unspecified military action if the North pushes its balloon campaign to a point that seriously threatens the safety of South Korean civilians.
Military spokesperson Lee Sung Joon didn’t say what action South Korea could take, but he reiterated that the military isn’t considering shooting down the balloons midair because they could be carrying hazardous substances.
So far, North Korea’s balloon activities haven’t caused serious damage.


Nigerian officials seize cocaine worth almost $3 million at Lagos airport

Nigerian officials seize cocaine worth almost $3 million at Lagos airport
Updated 51 min 49 sec ago
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Nigerian officials seize cocaine worth almost $3 million at Lagos airport

Nigerian officials seize cocaine worth almost $3 million at Lagos airport

ABUJA: Nigerian officials seized 19.4 kg (42.77 pounds) of cocaine worth 4.66 billion naira ($2.93 million) from a passenger who arrived at Lagos airport on a flight from Ethiopia, its anti-drug agency said on Tuesday.
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) said it arrested a 48-year Nigerian businessman, who had been convicted of trafficking last year but paid a fine to avoid jail time, on Sept. 18. He was allegedly carrying 817 wraps of cocaine.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with over 200 million people, has in recent years gone from being a transit point for gangs moving drugs between South America and Europe to a full-blown consumer and distributor.
“The agency will continue to work to disrupt the activities of drug cartels operating in the country,” NDLEA chief Mohammed Buba Marwa said in a statement.
($1 = 1,593.0700 naira)


Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi

Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi
Updated 24 September 2024
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Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi

Pope offers refuge to Myanmar's jailed Suu Kyi
  • Suu Kyi, 78, is serving a 27-year prison sentence on charges ranging from corruption to not respecting Covid pandemic restrictions

VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis has offered to give refuge on Vatican territory to Myanmar's detained former leader Aung San Suu Kyi, Italian media said on Tuesday.
"I asked for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and I met her son in Rome. I have proposed to the Vatican to give her shelter on our territory," the pope said according to an account of meetings with Jesuits in Asia during his trip there earlier this month.
The Corriere della Sera daily published an article by Italian priest Antonio Spadaro giving extracts from these private meetings, which took place in Indonesia, East Timor and Singapore between September 2 and 13.
"We cannot stay silent about the situation in Myanmar today. We must do something," the pope is reported as saying.
"The future of your country should be one of peace based on respect for the dignity and rights of everyone and respect for a democratic system that enables everyone to contribute to the common good."
Suu Kyi, 78, is serving a 27-year prison sentence on charges ranging from corruption to not respecting Covid pandemic restrictions.
In 2015, her National League for Democracy won Myanmar's first democratic election in 25 years.
She was arrested by the military when it staged a coup in 2021 and is said by local media to be suffering health problems in detention.
The 1991 Nobel Peace laureate was once hailed as a beacon for human rights.
But she fell from grace among international supporters in 2017, accused of doing nothing to stop the army persecuting the country's mainly Muslim Rohingya minority.
The crackdown is the subject of an ongoing United Nations genocide investigation and persecution continues, according to Rohingya refugees in neighbouring Bangladesh.
Mainly Buddhist Myanmar has been in turmoil since the 2021 coup, with the junta fighting both establish ethnic rebel groups and newer pro-democracy forces.