Humanity needs dialog to become aware of dangers to international peace: Lebanese MP

Humanity needs dialog to become aware of dangers to international peace: Lebanese MP
Member of the Parliament of Lebanon Bahia Hariri addresses the "Summit of the Future" in the General Assembly hall at United Nations headquarters in New York City, US, September 23, 2024. (Reuters)
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Humanity needs dialog to become aware of dangers to international peace: Lebanese MP

Humanity needs dialog to become aware of dangers to international peace: Lebanese MP
  • Bahia Hariri says that effort is required to reinstate trust in the international system

LONDON: The whole of humanity urgently needs dialog to become aware of the dangers that are threatening international peace and security following the erosion of the international system, a member of the Lebanese parliament said on Monday.

Addressing the UN General Assembly’s Summit of the Future on behalf of Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati — who canceled his trip due to the escalating situation in Lebanon — MP Bahia Hariri said that effort was required to reinstate trust in the international system.

“The Summit of the Future is taking place at a time that is ever so sensitive,” Hariri said.

“The whole of humanity urgently needs dialog to call ourselves into question and to become aware of the dangers that are threatening international peace and security after the erosion of the international system, violence, (and) lack of respect for values and conventions. In response to this, we require efforts to reinstate trust in this system.”

Her comments came after Israeli strikes killed more than 350 people in Lebanon on Monday, including more than 60 women and children. It was the deadliest barrage since the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.

The summit represents an opportunity to enhance cooperation on critical challenges and address gaps in global governance. It also aims to reaffirm existing commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals and the UN Charter.

Hariri said the Lebanese government “welcomes the efforts of the secretary-general and the United Nations to prepare this summit through the dialogs being addressed and the strategy and the approach to it in place since 2015; the 2030 sustainable development agenda; the Paris Agreement on climate change; the Addis Ababa action plan for sustainable development; the declaration made on the 75th anniversary of the United Nations in 2020; our common agenda in 2021; the statement by the secretary-general in 2022; the summit on the transformation of education; the fight against the spread of pandemics in 2023; and the SDG Summit.”

Hariri added: “All of these measures should reinstate trust. In the past we talked about a new generation every 10 years. The Lebanese Prime Minister Mikati is looking at levels of trust in Lebanese civil society and in scientific institutions and the youth.

“And we wish to underscore the importance of the secretary-general’s position on debating the results of this exceptional summit with civil society and with youth organizations.

“We hope that the young people of the city of Beirut will be the first to discuss the results of this Summit of the Future.”


Jordanian minister calls for more-inclusive global development and end to war in Gaza

Jordanian minister calls for more-inclusive global development and end to war in Gaza
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Jordanian minister calls for more-inclusive global development and end to war in Gaza

Jordanian minister calls for more-inclusive global development and end to war in Gaza
  • Zeina Toukan tells UN Summit of the Future ‘clock is ticking’ for Sustainable Development Goals and nations must work together to achieve them
  • She denounces ‘Israel’s barbaric war on the Palestinian people’ and describes resultant crisis in Gaza as a ‘human catastrophe’

WASHINGTON: Jordan’s minister of planning and international development on Monday urged the international community to take cooperative action to tackle the critical challenges that threaten efforts to achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
Zeina Toukan told the Summit of the Future at the UN headquarters in New York that the “clock is ticking” and nations must work together to ensure the goals are achieved by the target date, which is just six years away.
UN member states adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in 2015. It provides a shared blueprint for peace and prosperity for all peoples of the world through the achievement of 17 goals, including an end to poverty, improved public health and education, greater equality, and economic growth.
Toukan said global development will come through cooperation between countries, including the creation of an improved multilateral system through which all nations can achieve and benefit from development. Trust between nations is key to cooperation and the creation of such a system, she added.
To aid growth, the international community must do more to encourage innovation and creativity, Toukan said. She also called for the reform of the international financial system to make it more equitable, rather than one that hinders the economic growth of some nations.
Highlighting the important role of young people in the development of their nations, she said: “Youth deserves a better future: a future of justice, peace and opportunities.”
She added that the participation of young people in the public affairs of their nations, and internationally, is important for the well-being of the entire global system.
The international community must address the challenges of today to create a better tomorrow, Toukan said. She welcomed the adoption of a new “global digital compact,” which is part of the Pact for the Future, as a “milestone” that will help nations to provide better opportunities for their citizens by integrating the latest technology, including artificial intelligence, into their economies. The compact commits governments to upholding international law and human rights online, and taking concrete steps to ensure digital spaces are safe and secure.
Turning to the conflict in Gaza, Toukan denounced “Israel’s barbaric war on the Palestinian people” and called for it to end. She described the resultant crisis in the territory as a “human catastrophe” and a prime example of the plights that affect the most vulnerable peoples around the globe.
She said since the war between Israel and Hamas began on Oct. 7 last year, Israeli forces have killed more than 41,000 people in Gaza, the majority of whom were women and children.
“The vast destruction and forced displacement is a testament to the brutality of this war,” Toukan added. Israel “is creating a lost generation deprived of peace and hope” and facing “lost opportunity,” she said.
The only way forward in efforts to bring peace and stability in the region is the creation of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, Toukan added.
She urged the international community to avoid double standards, and to do more to help end the conflict and ensure adherence by all sides to international laws and UN resolutions.

 


Israeli aggression and ‘narrow’ interests’ of West block global progress, Syrian envoy tells UN

Israeli aggression and ‘narrow’ interests’ of West block global progress, Syrian envoy tells UN
Updated 24 September 2024
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Israeli aggression and ‘narrow’ interests’ of West block global progress, Syrian envoy tells UN

Israeli aggression and ‘narrow’ interests’ of West block global progress, Syrian envoy tells UN
  • Qusay Al-Dahhak says Syria opposed a ‘Pact for the Future’ adopted by member states on Sunday, because its plans for UN reforms do not go far enough

NEW YORK CITY: Syria said it voted against a “Pact for the Future,” which was adopted by a majority of UN member states on Sunday, on the grounds that it does not go far enough in terms of plans to reform the organization.

The pact, which received the backing of 143 of 193 member states in the vote, aims to rebuild trust in the UN and its ability to tackle global crises.

But Qusay Al-Dahhak, Syria’s permanent representative to the UN told delegates attending the “Summit for the Future” at the organization’s headquarters in New York on Monday that its mechanisms and systems need to evolve away from serving the “narrow interests” of a handful of Western states.

He said the brighter future desired by those who backed the pact, one that best serves all member states and their peoples, would only be achieved through “radical change.”

“(This will require) some Western countries to abandon the mentality of the past and their ambitions of hegemony and colonization,” Al-Dahhak said.

Though he did not name any specific Western states, he said that they should “cease attempting to impose their will on other peoples and respect their independent, national choices.”

He denounced the “illegal measures” he said have been taken by the West that have deprived Syrians of their future, undermined their legitimate choices and prevented them from accessing their own national wealth, but said Syrians are nonetheless “determined to move forward and build their own future.”

The US, the EU, Canada, Australia and Switzerland imposed sanctions on Syria in response to the actions of President Bashar Assad and his regime since the start of the civil war in the country in 2011.

Al-Dahhak said his country looks forward to a future based on dialog and diplomacy between nations, and on the promotion of multilateral action and the upholding of the principles of the UN Charter, which he said will not be best served by the pact in its current form.

“Hence the need to take immediate and serious measures to develop multilateral mechanisms and structures and to reinforce them to strengthen re-participation away from the policies of exclusion and the narrow interests of some Western states,” he added.

The envoy also condemned the “ongoing Israeli occupation of Arab territories in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon” and Israel’s continued “acts of aggression, crimes of genocide and ethnic cleansing,” which he said amounted to a “grave violation of international law and the principles and purposes of the UN Charter.”

Referencing the pact agreed on Sunday, he said transgressions by Israeli authorities also represent a major obstacle and hinder access to the “common future we all seek.” He said there was a need to unite and intensify the UN efforts to confront Israel’s regional aggression and its occupation of land belonging to other states.

Al-Dahhak also vowed Syria would join other nations in calling for reforms of global financial institutions to “guarantee participation of developing countries in the global economic decision making,” which he said would help to alleviate global debt.


Turkiye says Israel’s Lebanon strikes risk ‘chaos’

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. (REUTERS)
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. (REUTERS)
Updated 23 September 2024
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Turkiye says Israel’s Lebanon strikes risk ‘chaos’

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. (REUTERS)
  • “The countries that unconditionally support Israel are helping (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu shed blood for his political interests,” it said

ISTANBUL: Turkiye on Monday warned that Israel’s attacks on Lebanon threatened to push the Middle East deeper into “chaos.”
Israeli airstrikes killed 356 people, including 24 children, in Lebanon on Monday, the Lebanese health minister said, in the deadliest cross-border escalation since war erupted in Gaza on October 7.
“Israel’s attacks on Lebanon mark a new phase in its efforts to drag the entire region into chaos,” the foreign ministry said in a statement, after Israeli raids on strongholds of the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah in southern and eastern Lebanon.
An outspoken critic of Israel’s offensive in response to the attack by Hamas militants that sparked the war, Turkiye urged the international community to intervene.
“It is imperative that all institutions responsible for maintaining international peace and security, especially the United Nations Security Council, as well as the international community, take the necessary measures without delay,” the foreign ministry said.
“The countries that unconditionally support Israel are helping (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu shed blood for his political interests,” it said.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is due to address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, is expected to focus on the Gaza war.
On Monday, Erdogan told International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan during a meeting in New York that “Israel must be held accountable for its crimes,” the Turkish leader’s office said.
Khan in May requested the court issue arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant over alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.
Erdogan told Khan that Israel was “committing a genocide in Gaza” and that it was “recklessly making plans to carry out new massacres, wrongfully thinking that there was no power to stop them.”
He also said “it is extremely important that the genocide case against Israel at the ICC must be concluded” and that perpetrators must receive necessary punishment, according to his office.
 

 


After years of wildfires, Algeria tames the flames

After years of wildfires, Algeria tames the flames
Updated 23 September 2024
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After years of wildfires, Algeria tames the flames

After years of wildfires, Algeria tames the flames
  • In 2021, during a blistering heatwave and extended drought, 100 wildfires spread across the province of Tizi Ouzou, an area spanning around 3,000 square kilometers (1,158 square miles)

TIZI OUZOU, Algeria: In the mountains of northern Algeria, Mouloud Temzi inspects the aftermath of this summer’s wildfires: fig and olive trees burnt to husks, chicken coops twisted to cinders, empty apiaries and paths strewn with ash.
But the deputy mayor is grateful for one thing: no people died this wildfire season and that means a lot in a region where scores have been killed in the rampant blazes of recent years.
Five villages were affected in Ait Mahmoud — a commune of around 7,700 people in northern Algeria — but not a single home was lost, and Temzi puts this down to a rapid mobilization of the country’s newly beefed-up firefighting forces.
“We have learned how to act during fires, and now we handle them the way the Japanese deal with earthquakes,” said Temzi.
Better equipment and smarter policies, along with airplanes that can douse flames from above, are all part of a nationwide campaign that has already paid off, inhabitants of Tizi Ouzou told the Thomson Reuters Foundation as the burning season came to a close in August.
Sitting beneath a tree in the sleepy mountaintop village of Tagragra in Ait Mahmoud, retiree Cherif Hakimi is all too aware of the stakes.
“Last time (in 2021), the fires reached the houses, but not this time. Thankfully, the firefighters controlled it before it got here. If the fire had reached us, we would have been finished,” said the 69-year-old.
Wildfires have become an unwelcome staple of arid Algerian summers in recent years.
Temperature spikes caused by climate change, along with the hot and dry Sirocco wind that blows off the Sahara, human negligence and sometimes even arson, have coalesced to create devastating blazes.
Villagers used to fight the flames using whatever tools they had to hand — but buckets of water, twigs and water hoses were of little use in the face of an inferno.
That is why the government made it an urgent priority to revamp its firefighting measures, putting an emphasis on new equipment, a change to the law and greater public awareness.

DRONES, AI AND A NEW LAW
In the forested mountains of Kabylie, parched underbrush makes for easy tinder and renders the area vulnerable to fire.
In 2021, during a blistering heatwave and extended drought, 100 wildfires spread across the province of Tizi Ouzou, an area spanning around 3,000 square kilometers (1,158 square miles).
At least 90 people were killed, tens of thousands of acres of forest were devoured by flames, olive groves turned to ash, and countless remote villages and farms burned to the ground.
Alongside the immediate toll, there was a long-term cost to tally with reforestation likely to take decades and new setbacks each summer as smaller blazes broke out.
In 2023, at least 34 people were killed and several hundred injured in Bejaia, a province neighboring Tizi Ouzo.
But this year was different, despite crippling summer heat that fanned flames across the Mediterranean region, igniting fierce forest fires from Portugal to Greece to north Africa.
In January, a new law was passed that imposes life imprisonment on those caught deliberately starting forest fires.
The new law combines different articles into one dedicated law that carries harsher penalties.
In April, Tassili Travail Aerien, part of state-owned Tassili Airlines, said it had added 12 firefighting aircraft to its fleet.
That came on top of the 340 new firefighting trucks and 40 water tanker trucks added to the national forest services over the past two years.
Specific measures were also taken in Tizi Ouzou, ever vulnerable due to its mountainous terrain and thick forest cover that makes it prone to wildfires but also difficult for firefighters to penetrate when blazes break out.
Local officials built a landing pad for heavy-lift helicopters that transport water tanks and watchtowers for the forestry service. Their staff also cut paths through thick forests to make it easier for firefighters.
A drone and a high-resolution camera using artificial intelligence were deployed to monitor hot spots, according to Yazid Belkalem, head of the agriculture committee in the People’s Provincial Assembly, an elected body that monitors the performance of the local authorities.
Belkalem told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that there was still insufficient equipment in civil protection centers and sub-offices of the forestry department, and that his committee had recommended they get more resources.
Altogether, about 100 million Algerian dinars ($756,000) were allocated for drone use countrywide.
And the Algerian Red Crescent launched a disaster management unit in Tizi Ouzou — a 45-strong team of doctors, psychologists and paramedics — to intervene at pace and support the civil defense forces in evacuating the injured.
Local committees across Tizi Ouzou can coordinate rescue efforts more efficiently by sharing news on WhatsApp then calling on the unit for its help, said M’hend Allilat, the unit’s coordinator.
“The local committee close to the fire sends two to four members to go to the fire site to make an initial assessment: is it close to the houses or far away? Is it big or small? Are the firefighters present at the scene? Have the forest services intervened?” Allilat said.
INCREASED RISK
Coming up with a new best practices is key given climate change is making wildfires ever more likely and intense.
“The weather has become hotter, water shortages are increasing, and certain types of forests (cedar) are dying at a significant rate in the Aures region (in northeastern Algeria),” said Arezki Derridj, an ecologist at the University of Tizi Ouzou.
Because dead trees are more flammable, Derridj said flames spread faster, further sped by wind.
Another major factor is urban migration.
As Algerians move into cities, fewer people are left to manage farmland, Derridj said, turning fields into a tinderbox.
“The villages have been emptied of their residents, often leaving only the elderly and a few unemployed youth. Fields and orchards are no longer cultivated, so clearing them is rare,” said Derridj.
However, those Algerians still living in rural areas are now far more proactive, summoning help at the first sign of smoke.
As he sat in his office in Ait Mahmoud, Temzi’s phone rang – another call about another fire that local residents had reported.
For those who call the mountains of Ait Mahmoud home, vigilance is paramount.
“My family’s fields have been burned four times: in 2012, 2017, 2021, and most recently in 2024,” said Ghilas Mahiout, a local shopkeeper in his 30s.
“Everything is gone, we are exhausted.”
This piece is published in collaboration with Egab. ($1 = 132.2790 Algerian dinars)

 


Hezbollah says commander alive after Israel strike on Beirut

Hezbollah says commander alive after Israel strike on Beirut
Updated 23 September 2024
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Hezbollah says commander alive after Israel strike on Beirut

Hezbollah says commander alive after Israel strike on Beirut
  • In a statement, the Iran-backed movement said “commander Ali Karake is well... and has moved to a safe place”

BEIRUT, Lebanon: Lebanon’s Hezbollah said commander Ali Karake, who a source reported had been the target of an Israeli strike Monday on Beirut, was alive and had moved to safety.
In a statement, the Iran-backed movement said “commander Ali Karake is well... and has moved to a safe place.”