Even Mother Earth’s fury has failed to awaken us

Even Mother Earth’s fury has failed to awaken us

Even Mother Earth’s fury has failed to awaken us
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Mother Earth has been the archetype of generosity and graciousness for as long as our planet has existed. Like every mother, though, there is a point where we push her too far and she loses her patience.

Even before the coronavirus pandemic, Mother Earth had already been giving us polite warnings that we were pushing her and our planet too far. Since then, she has started to show her frustration more frequently.

And yet we have continued to ignore the rapidly deteriorating state of our environment to the point where it is starting to threaten our very existence.

The weapons used in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan, and elsewhere to destroy families and territories are not unlike the tools we humans have turned on Mother Earth, cutting down and torching her forests, parching her of freshwater, poisoning her soil, and overexploiting her resources.

We are right to be concerned about the harm humans are inflicting upon other humans, but we should be far more concerned by the existential threat posed to humanity by our wretched destruction of the environment that sustains us.

As we look around us, we see lakes and arable land disappear, pollinating insects dwindle, fish vanish from our oceans, and weather phenomena become ever more extreme.

We have continued to ignore the rapidly deteriorating state of our environment to the point where it is starting to threaten our very existence.

Hassan bin Youssef Yassin

The year 2023 was not only the hottest on record; it was an outlier in the trend of global warming, a slowly rising line suddenly turning exponential. 

Livelihoods around the world are being decimated by the greed of our fishing fleets, intensive agriculture, and our collective inability to acknowledge the harm, waste, and pollution that our daily lives inflict on the planet.

Despite our highly advanced information and communication technologies, empathy and understanding are losing ground, creating division at the very moment that we most need cooperation to stave off this common threat.

The hurt and delusion, the staggering self-interest of the media, corporations, and politicians, and the tragic blindness and complacency of humanity are all leading us toward the precipice.

Even the rage of Mother Earth has failed to awaken us. Must it take an even greater natural disaster to jolt us into action before it is too late? 

Hassan bin Youssef Yassin worked closely with Saudi Arabia’s petroleum ministers Abdullah Tariki and Ahmed Zaki Yamani from 1959-67. He led the Saudi Information Office in Washington from 1972-81 and served with the Arab League’s observer delegation to the UN from 1981-83.
 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Five of the best: Pakistan-England Test thrillers

Five of the best: Pakistan-England Test thrillers
Updated 3 min 13 sec ago
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Five of the best: Pakistan-England Test thrillers

Five of the best: Pakistan-England Test thrillers
  • Pakistan, England will play first Test of three-match series on Monday at Multan 
  • England skipper Ben Stokes has been ruled out of first Test due to injury

MULTAN: The history of Tests between England and Pakistan is resplendent with memorable matches since the very first series in 1954.

Ahead of their three-match series starting on Monday in Multan, AFP Sports recalls five of the most exciting Tests between the two countries:

Pakistan had been playing Tests for less than two years when Fazal Mahmood took 12 wickets to beat England by 24 runs in the final Test at The Oval — a shock the home media dubbed “England Fazalled” as it gave Pakistan a 1-1 series draw.

Chasing just 168, England were cruising at 109-2, but lost their last eight wickets for 34 as seam-bowler Fazal took 6-46 making Pakistan only the second country to win a Test on their maiden tour of England after Australia.

Fazal also bagged 6-53 in the first innings, figures that Wisden noted “would have been much better but for dropped catches.”

After two tame draws, Pakistan were chasing a modest 231-run target at Headingley to win a series in England for the first time.

England captain Ray Illingworth removed three of the top order with his off-spin as Pakistan were reduced to 65-4, but Sadiq Mohammad and Asif Iqbal put their side back on course with a fifth-wicket stand of 95.

All-rounder Iqbal was out for 33 but opener Sadiq was still there, batting serenely.

After Sadiq fell, caught and bowled by Basil D’Oliveira for 91 with 44 more still needed, England paceman Peter Lever ripped through the tail and the visitors were all out for 205 to lose by 25.

Pakistan squeezed home by two wickets in a pulsating second Test at Lord’s where pace spearheads Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis starred with ball and bat to create the legend of the “two Ws.”

The menacing Waqar had match figures of 5-91 and 2-40, while left-armer Wasim returned 2-49 and 4-66 as England collapsed from 108-3 in their second innings to 175 all out.

Chasing just 138 to win, Pakistan were in trouble at 95-8 when Waqar joined Wasim at the crease.
Wasim hit 45 and Waqar 20 as they put on an unbroken 46 for a famous victory.

England bowled out Pakistan for 158 on the final day leaving them 176 to win in only 44 overs, in fast fading light.

Pakistan skipper Moin Khan employed every time-wasting trick in the book to escape with a draw, appealing to the umpires that it was too gloomy for his fielders to see the ball near the end.

But the officials and Graham Thorpe were having none of it and kept going as dusk closed in.

From 65-3, Thorpe steadily accelerated as the light grew dimmer, putting on 91 with Graeme Hick off 21 overs to take England within 20 of only their second win on Pakistan soil, and on a ground where the hosts had been unbeaten for a staggering 34 Tests.

Nasser Hussain joined Thorpe at the crease and the pair gleefully reached the target less than three overs later in almost total darkness with Thorpe a triumphant 64 not out.

England were denied a Lord’s victory as Pakistan completed a 75-run win in a thrilling first Test largely due to slow bowler Yasir Shah’s 10 wickets in the match.

Pakistan’s bowling attack was too powerful for England with pace trio Rahat Ali, Wahab Riaz and Mohammad Amir, who was returning to Test cricket after serving a ban for spot-fixing, supporting leg-spinner Yasir.

Chasing 283 to win on the fourth day, Alastair Cook’s side collapsed from 195-6 with victory sealed by Amir on his first Test appearance since 2010 when he shattered last man Jake Ball’s stumps.

It sparked a joyous celebration which culminated in the entire Pakistan team doing military-style press-ups on the outfield. A brilliant series went on to be drawn 2-2.


Israel army encircles Gaza’s Jabaliya as Hamas rebuilds

Israel army encircles Gaza’s Jabaliya as Hamas rebuilds
Updated 12 min 42 sec ago
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Israel army encircles Gaza’s Jabaliya as Hamas rebuilds

Israel army encircles Gaza’s Jabaliya as Hamas rebuilds
  • Israeli forces have bombarded Jabaliya regularly since the war in Gaza started, displacing almost all of its residents

GAZA: The Israeli military said Sunday its forces surrounded the Jabaliya area of northern Gaza in response to indications Hamas was rebuilding despite nearly a year of strikes and fighting.
“The troops of the 401st Brigade and the 460th Brigade have successfully encircled the area and are currently continuing to operate in the area,” the military said in a statement.
The military said it had intelligence indicating the “presence of terrorists and terror infrastructure in the area of Jabaliya... as well as efforts by Hamas to rebuild its operational capabilities in the area.”
“Prior to and during the operation, the IAF (air force) struck dozens of military targets in the area to assist IDF (army) ground troops,” the military said, adding targets hit were weapons storage facilities, underground infrastructure sites and other militant infrastructure sites.
Gaza civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that multiple strikes rocked Jabaliya through the night and there were many casualties.
Israeli forces have bombarded Jabaliya regularly since the war in Gaza started, displacing almost all of its residents.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel.


Lahore Biennale returns after 4-year hiatus featuring works of 60 local, international artists 

Lahore Biennale returns after 4-year hiatus featuring works of 60 local, international artists 
Updated 14 min 28 sec ago
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Lahore Biennale returns after 4-year hiatus featuring works of 60 local, international artists 

Lahore Biennale returns after 4-year hiatus featuring works of 60 local, international artists 
  • Biennale’s third edition will be held from Oct. 6-Nov. 8 at historic Lahore Fort
  • Artists from over 30 countries collaborate with Pakistani peers for the exhibition

LAHORE: The Lahore Biennale is set to return after a four-year hiatus today, Sunday, at the city’s historic Lahore Fort with a grand spectacle featuring the works of at least 60 local and international artists revolving around the themes of ecologies and sustainable futures. 

The theme for the third edition of the biennale is titled: ‘Of Mountains and Seas.’ It showcases the convergence of art, environmental awareness, and global collaboration to help imagine alternative futures, the biennale said on its official website. 

The exhibition, which will showcase the art of around 60 artists from 30 countries, is expected to run till Nov. 8. Ahead of the spectacle on Sunday, the Pakistan Art Forum joined hands with the Lahore Biennale Foundation for a curtain-raiser event on Thursday titled: ‘Decolonial Feminist Ecologies: On Body and Land.’

The curtain-raiser featured performances by its curator and local artist Abdullah Qureshi, Iranian-born artist Sepideh Rahaa and Kenyan-German collaborative artist Syowia Kyambi. The curtain-raiser was held at the Brown House in Lahore, overlooking the historic Shahi Hamaam bathhouse and the iconic Wazir Khan Mosque. 

“We wanted to showcase our art in a bustling public space, not art as gate-kept by colonial legacies or their bureaucracies,” Abdullah Qureshi told Arab News on Thursday. 

Qureshi is also a multidisciplinary artist, educator and filmmaker. He roped in Rahaa and Kyambi, his friends and fellow artists, from Iran and Kenya respectively for the biennale. 

“We tend to think of art as this controlled, quiet space where people are observers from a distance,” Qureshi explained. 

“[The three of us wanted to] think about these ideas outside the Western canon.” 

Kyambi’s art exhibited two distinct worlds, the high-rises and apartment complexes to the rural countrysides. The Nairobi-based artist handed out maps and pictures to her audience, shared stories and painted bright colors on a mud wall. 

“[Art] can’t be constricted to a neat and tidy studio or a clean canvas,” she said. “Art is forever moving, changing and clamoring.”

Kyambi encouraged her audience to speak out during her performance and voice their opinion on whether they liked it or disliked it, and whether they understood her art or not. 

“We want to imagine futures of solidarity, community and resistance,” she told Arab News. “Not just stay quiet at everything unfolding in front of them.”

Rahaa, the Iranian-Finnish artist, focused on feminizing labor by showcasing a short documentary on women working in Punjab’s rice fields.

“I am building up ancestral knowledge, indigenous knowledge [related to Pakistan] as well as ancient ways of cultivation of rice,” Rahaa told Arab News. 

She was particularly taken by women farmers singing as they toiled the rice fields.

“These women are cultivating the same their grandmothers would have, singing the same songs,” she said. “As artists, this is important for us to record.”

The event was sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy and Kone Foundation, a non-profit organization based in Helsinki, Finland.

“The themes of [this] exhibition are sort of very much ones we identify with,” Per Albert Ilsaas, Norway’s ambassador to Pakistan, told Arab News. “Feminist ideals, human rights, rights of women, and marginalized communities are important to Norway.”

Pakistan Art Forum founder Imtisal Zafar said he wanted to promote lesser-known local artists by arranging their collaboration with international ones. 

“Show the world how much talent we have here,” he told Arab News. 


UAE delivers $100 mln humanitarian aid for Lebanon

UAE delivers $100 mln humanitarian aid for Lebanon
Updated 14 min 46 sec ago
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UAE delivers $100 mln humanitarian aid for Lebanon

UAE delivers $100 mln humanitarian aid for Lebanon
  • UAE dispatches aircraft carrying 40 tonnes of urgent medical aid to Lebanon
  • Aid campaign held in collaboration with WHO

DUBAI: The UAE has launched a $100 million relief campaign to support the people of Lebanon amid the ongoing Israeli escalation, state news agency WAM reported. 

Under the name “UAE stands with Lebanon”, the country, in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), dispatched on Friday an aircraft carrying 40 tonnes of urgent medical aid to Lebanon.

Reem bint Ebrahim Al Hashimy, Minister of State for International Cooperation, said the flight reflects UAE’s commitment to support the war-impacted communities. 

She highlighted the UAE’s vision to provide all possible humanitarian aid to meet critical needs of the most vulnerable. 

Meanwhile, the UAE has continued to provide humanitarian and relief assistance to residents of the Gaza Strip as part of “Operation Chivalrous Knight 3”.

On Friday, it secured shelter tents and essential supplies for displaced families in Gaza.

As part of the relief campaign, the UAE has also set up a floating hospital in Egypt’s Al-Arish and another field hospital in Rafah to provide medical services for the injured Palestinians amid the war on Gaza.


After a year of war, Gazans wonder how to deal with tons of rubble

After a year of war, Gazans wonder how to deal with tons of rubble
Updated 37 min 12 sec ago
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After a year of war, Gazans wonder how to deal with tons of rubble

After a year of war, Gazans wonder how to deal with tons of rubble
  • Year of war generates at least 42 million tons of rubble
  • Piled up, rubble would fill Great Pyramid of Giza 11 times

KHAN YOUNIS: In the ruins of his two-story home, 11-year-old Mohammed gathers chunks of the fallen roof into a broken pail and pounds them into gravel which his father will use to make gravestones for victims of the Gaza war.
“We get the rubble not to build houses, no, but for tombstones and graves — from one misery to another,” his father, former construction worker Jihad Shamali, 42, says as he cuts through metal salvaged from their home in the southern city of Khan Younis, damaged during an Israeli raid in April.
The work is hard, and at times grim. In March, the family built a tomb for one of Shamali’s sons, Ismail, killed while running household errands.
But it is also a tiny part of the efforts starting to take shape to deal with the rubble left by Israel’s military campaign to eliminate Palestinian militant group Hamas.
The United Nations estimates there is over 42 million tons of debris, including both shattered edifices that are still standing and flattened buildings.
That is 14 times the amount of rubble accumulated in Gaza between 2008 and the war’s start a year ago, and over five times the amount left by the 2016-17 Battle of Mosul in Iraq, the UN said.
Piled up, it would fill the Great Pyramid of Giza — Egypt’s largest — 11 times. And it is growing daily.
The UN is trying to help as Gazan authorities consider how to deal with the rubble, three UN officials said.
A UN-led Debris Management Working Group plans a pilot project with Palestinian authorities in Khan Younis and the central Gazan city of Deir El-Balah to start clearing roadside debris this month.
“The challenges are huge,” said Alessandro Mrakic, the Gaza Office head for the United Nations’ Development Programme (UNDP) which is co-chairing the working group. “It’s going to be a massive operation, but at the same time, it’s important that we start now.”
Israel’s military has said Hamas fighters hide among civilians and that it will strike them wherever they emerge, while also trying to avoid harming civilians.
Asked about the debris, Israel’s military unit COGAT said it aimed to improve waste-handling and would work with the UN to expand those efforts. Mrakic said coordination with Israel was excellent but detailed discussions on future plans were yet to take place.

Tents amid the ruins
Israel began its offensive after Hamas militants entered Israel on Oct. 7 last year, killed about 1,200 Israelis and took over 250 people hostage.
Nearly 42,000 Palestinians have been killed in a year of conflict, Palestinian health authorities say.
On the ground, wreckage is piled high above pedestrians and donkey carts on dusty narrow paths that were once busy roads.
“Who is going to come here and clear the rubble for us? No-one. Therefore, we did that ourselves,” taxi driver Yusri Abu Shabab said, having cleared enough debris from his Khan Younis home to erect a tent.
Two-thirds of Gaza’s pre-war structures — over 163,000 buildings — have been damaged or flattened, according to UN satellite data. Around a third were high-rise buildings.
After a seven-week war in Gaza in 2014, UNDP and its partners cleared 3 million tons of debris — 7 percent of the total now. Mrakic cited an unpublished preliminary estimate that it would cost $280 million to clear 10 million tons, implying around $1.2 billion if the war stopped now.
A UN estimate from April suggested it would take 14 years to clear the rubble.

Concealed bodies
The debris contains unrecovered bodies, as many as 10,000 according to the Palestinian health ministry, and unexploded bombs, Mrakic said.
The International Committee of the Red Cross says the threat is “pervasive” and UN officials say some of the debris poses a big injury risk.
Nizar Zurub, from Khan Younis, lives with his son in a home where only a roof remains, hanging at a precarious angle.
The United Nations Environment Programme said an estimated 2.3 million tons of debris might be contaminated, citing an assessment of Gaza’s eight refugee camps, some of which have been hit.
Asbestos fibers can cause larynx, ovarian and lung cancer when inhaled.
The World Health Organization has recorded nearly a million cases of acute respiratory infections in Gaza in the past year, without saying how many are linked to dust.
WHO spokesperson Bisma Akbar said dust was a “significant concern,” and could contaminate water and soil and lead to lung disease.
Doctors fear a rise in cancers and birth defects from leaking metals in coming decades. Snake and scorpion bites and skin infections from sandflies are a concern, a UNEP spokesperson said.

Land and equipment shortages
Gaza’s rubble has previously been used to help build seaports. The UN hopes now to recycle a portion for road networks and bolstering the shoreline.
Gaza, which had a pre-war population of 2.3 million crammed into an area 45 km (28 miles) long and 10 km wide, lacks the space needed for disposal, the UNDP says.
Landfills are now in an Israeli military zone. Israel’s COGAT said they were in a restricted area but that access would be granted.
More recycling means more money to fund equipment such as industrial crushers, Mrakic said. They would have to enter via crossing points controlled by Israel.
Government officials report fuel and machinery shortages because of Israeli restrictions that slow clear-up efforts. The UNEP spokesperson said prolonged approval processes were a “major bottleneck.”
Israel did not specifically comment on allegations it was restricting machinery.
The UNEP says it needs owners’ permission to remove debris, yet the scale of destruction has blurred property boundaries, and some property records have been lost during the war.
Several donors have expressed interest in helping since a Palestinian government-hosted meeting in the West Bank on Aug. 12, Mrakic said, without naming them.
A UN official, requesting anonymity to avoid undermining ongoing efforts, said: “Everybody’s concerned whether to invest in rebuilding Gaza if there is no political solution in place.”