UN, Lebanon Launch $426 Million Humanitarian Emergency Appeal

UNICEF initiated the distribution of bottled water and emergency hygiene kits at Bir Hasan Public School in Beirut, Lebanon, targeting collective shelters and densely populated areas receiving internally displaced persons (IDPs). The team also began distributing 1,300 blankets and sleeping bags in displacement shelters. Credit: Fouad Choufany/UNICEF

UNICEF initiated the distribution of bottled water and emergency hygiene kits at Bir Hasan Public School in Beirut, Lebanon, targeting collective shelters and densely populated areas receiving internally displaced persons (IDPs). The team also began distributing 1,300 blankets and sleeping bags in displacement shelters. Credit: Fouad Choufany/UNICEF

By Naureen Hossain
UNITED NATIONS, Oct 2 2024 – The escalating hostilities between Israel and Lebanon have already threatened the safety and security of more than 1 million civilians, urging Lebanon’s government and the United Nations to take swift humanitarian action and call for international support.

On Tuesday, October 1, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Najib Mikati and the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon, Imran Riza, launched an emergency Flash Appeal of USD 426 million to mobilize resources that will support civilians affected by the hostilities and the developing humanitarian situation.

The appeal is intended to support the government-led emergency response through October to December 2024. It is intended to help in providing life-saving assistance for immediate needs that include food, shelter, healthcare, water, and municipal services. Funds will be allocated to humanitarian partners collaborating with the emergency response.

“This is a critical moment that demands the immediate attention and action of the international community,” said Mikati. “I urge all nations to step up their support in providing humanitarian aid and to use their influence to help bring an end to the violence.”

The appeal launched today would go forward to addressing the new and existing humanitarian needs of affected civilians. It will support the Lebanon Response Plan (LRP) 2024, which is the main framework for an integrated humanitarian plan in the country.

“Our aim is to build on and reinforce the strong cooperation and collaboration already in place, working closely with the government and our partner ministries at both national and subnational levels,” said Humanitarian Coordinator Imran Riza.

“Without sufficient resources, humanitarians risk leaving the population of an entire country without the support they urgently require,” he said.

According to the report issued on the appeal, the humanitarian response still faces multiple challenges. In addition to limited funding, humanitarian partners on the ground have also reported that securing unimpeded access to critical areas is a concern. Reaching affected groups in southern Lebanon is an issue, where congestion is limiting access to shelters. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has warned that the number of internally displaced peoples will only increase as the Israeli military issues evacuation orders, including for 30 villages in south Lebanon.

Senior leaders in the UN system, including the Secretary-General, are calling for a ceasefire or an end to the hostilities. UN Secretary-General António Guterres implored the international community to “urgently support” the appeal. In a statement, spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said that Guterres is “extremely concerned with the escalation of the conflict in Lebanon” and calls for an immediate ceasefire.

“An all-out war must be avoided in Lebanon at all costs, and the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Lebanon must be respected,” said Dujarric.

UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell also called for a ceasefire in the region. In a statement issued on Monday, she warned that humanitarian conditions were worsening by the hour as the violence intensified, adding that 300,000 children accounted for the 1 million people displaced.

“Any ground offensive or further escalation in Lebanon would make a catastrophic situation for children even worse. Such an outcome must be avoided at all costs,” she said. “We reiterate our call for all parties to protect children and civilian infrastructure, and to ensure that humanitarian actors can safely reach all those in need—in accordance with their obligations under international humanitarian law.”

UNICEF, along with its partners and fellow UN agencies, have been providing emergency supplies such as emergency hygiene kits, food, and sleeping bags. In addition to its child protection and psychosocial support services for children, UNICEF has also supported nearly 200 collective shelters in Lebanon hosting 50,000 displaced people by providing essential supplies.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Rejuvenating Tradition To Help Save Ancient Engineering Marvel—Dhamapur Lake

The Vijayanagar rulers constructed an earth-fill dam in 1530 AD to create Dhamapur Lake. There is now a campaign to save it. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Vijayanagar rulers constructed an earth-fill dam in 1530 AD to create Dhamapur Lake. There is now a campaign to save it. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

By Rina Mukherji
PUNE, India, Oct 2 2024 – Dhamapur is a small village in Malvan taluka of west Sindhudurg district, housing the famous Dhamapur Lake. The Vijayanagar kings constructed an earthfill dam in 1530 A.D., creating a man-made lake surrounded by hills on three sides. Canals connect it to the Karli river, irrigating lush paddies and farms that grow the red Sorti and Walay rice varieties typical to the region.

A Bhagwati temple constructed in the typical Konkan style stands on its banks. Small shrines to anthills flank this temple, which is devoted to Goddess Bhagwati. This is because all over the Konkan region, anthills are considered manifestations of the Earth Goddess and worshipped as Goddess Sateri. These are monuments to biodiversity and well-being; white ants or termites that build anthills are known to aerate the soil, help seed dispersal, and improve soil fertility. The worship of anthills is an old Vedic practice that continues to survive in and around the Konkan region of Maharashtra, Goa, and its neighborhood to this day.

The construction of the earthfill dam on Dhamapur Lake too spells of local ingenuity. Made up of porous laterite stone that is locally found here, every layer of stone is alternated with a layer of biomass made of twigs and branches.

This freshwater reservoir, used for irrigation and drinking water purposes, is one of Maharashtra’s oldest engineering marvels. Its waters and the Kalse-Dhamapur forests that flank it nurture a wide variety of unique floral and faunal species, making it a popular tourist destination.

But beauty apart, this man-made lake, which is geographically on higher ground as compared to the surrounding countryside, plays an important role in recharging the groundwater, acting as a sponge during the monsoons.  Apart from serving as an important source of drinking water and irrigation, Dhamapur Lake nurtures an entire ecosystem. Its waters and surrounding forests harbour a wide variety of flora and fauna, some of which are endangered species. Its significance can be gauged from the fact that it was given the Word Heritage Irrigation Structure (WHIS) Award by the International Commission of Irrigation and Drainage (ICID) in 2020.

But in recent times, several encroachments have affected this extensive waterbody. Guest houses, wells, and walkways built in its floodplains to boost tourism have been eating into its extensive area, in scant regard to the flora and fauna that thrive in its pristine waters.

Fighting for Dhamapur Lake

In recent years, though, Dhamapur Lake has found a savior in Sachin Desai and his organisation, Syamantak Trust. Incidentally, Sachin Desai and his wife, Meenal, have an interesting background that illustrates their love for the natural world and India’s time-honored traditions.

Believers in home schooling, the Desais fought out with the authorities to home-school their daughter. Abandoning high-paying corporate jobs, these two professionals set up the University of Life on their ancestral property to familiarize youngsters with traditional bricklaying, carpentry and farming skills in 2007. To stem the migration from the region, they sought to inculcate love and respect for traditional practices, foods, and cuisine among youngsters. This was how the Syamantak Trust came into being.

In the years that followed, learners and youngsters who spent time at the University of Life went to use the knowledge they acquired to specialize in respective fields or venture into entrepreneurship, selling local products to tourists frequenting Dhamapur. Rohit Ajgaonkar, once a student at the University of Life, has become an active volunteer with Syamantak and runs a small eco-café in Dhamapur.  Remarkable in its use of local materials, the eco-café has an array of local delicacies such as kashayam and jackfruit, wood apple, and mango ice creams.

Rohit and his mother, Rupali Ajgaonkar, also run a shop adjoining their eco-café, wherein they sell hand-pounded local masalas, mango and jackfruit toffee, local pickles, cashew butter, kokum syrups and kokum butter.  Prathamesh Kalsekar, another student of the University of Life who is the son of a local farmer, is now doing his B.Sc. (Agriculture) at the Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth. He has raised a private forest on his family land in Dhamapur, and now grows many local fruit and vegetable trees, bushes, and plants, particularly focusing on nutrient-rich wild varieties. He has also set up a nursery of saplings for distribution among local farmers.

A temple on the outskirts of Dhamapur Lake. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Bhagwati temple is on the banks of Dhamapur Lake. The temple is built in the typical Konkan style, wherein the deity is placed at one end in the sanctum sanctorum. The main section of the temple is reserved for the assembly of elders who meet and discuss matters related to the village. The temple is reminiscent of a bygone era when a place of worship also served as a place for the community to assemble and parley. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Ongoing Battle to Save Dhamapur

These skills and respect for nature came in handy when Syamantak embarked on its mission to save Dhamapur and other waterbodies in Sindhudurg district through a community-led movement, following the construction of a skywalk undertaken by the authorities in 2014, and the running of diesel-run boats for tourists by the panchayat (village self-governing body). But this was easier said than done, notwithstanding the public zeal.

Desai and his volunteers realized that “Sindhudurg district has several wetlands and waterbodies. However, the authorities haven’t notified or demarcated any of them. This permits encroachments, a lot of them by government bodies.” In the case of Dhamapur Lake, the high flood line was ignored, and private parties encroached upon the peripheral areas of the lake. Even the state government’s Department of Agriculture had built a nursery and sunk a well on the floodplains of the lake.

Making use of the National Wetland Atlas prepared by the Space Applications Centre of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) and the Maharashtra Remote Sensing Applications Centre in 2010, during the tenure of Minister of Environment & Forests Jairam Ramesh, Syamantak Trust approached the Western Zonal bench of the National Green Tribunal. Some residents of Sindhudurg district also filed an Environment Interest Litigation (EIL) to save the lake. At that time, the phytoplankton population had already decreased due to the construction of 35 pillars and the 500-meter-long cement concrete skywalk.

An Interim Order in 2018 by the Tribunal not only halted all further construction but saw every bit of concrete broken down and removed from the precincts of the lake. It also stopped the use of diesel boats on the lake . Furthermore, the state Public Works Department (PWD) was ordered to shell out Rs 1.5 crore for mitigation measures to be undertaken to reverse the damages caused by the construction of the 2.5 km skywalk and the use of diesel boats.

Meanwhile, following the formation of a 32-member Wetland Brief Documentation Committee as per an Order by the District Collector, the Syamantak Trust organized the local citizenry to document the flora and fauna of Dhamapur lake. They were soon joined by students from the local college of architecture, academicians, botanists, zoologists, and geographers from Mumbai and other parts of India, besides Dr Balkrishna Gavade and Dr Yogesh Koli, who lent their expertise for the study.  Mapping Dhamapur helped the volunteers learn about the kind of biodiversity hotspot the Western Ghats region is, especially in the forested tracts around Dhamapur Lake.

Five months spent documenting the various wetland flora and fauna showed 35 species of birds belonging to 18 families to frequent the lake, such as the Eurasian Marsh Harrier, Indian Pond Heron, Lapwing, Kingfisher,  and Small Bee-Eater. The lake was found to be particularly lush with phytoplankton and zooplankton species, which are the building blocks of a wetland ecosystem. The volunteers would also learn about how the Wax Dart butterfly was reported for the first time in Maharashtra, on the banks of Dhamapur lake.

Once Dhamapur was mapped, the volunteers went on to document a total of 57 wetlands and waterbodies in Sindhudurg district, including those as yet unlisted by the authorities. These included Vimleshwar in Devgad, Pat Lake in Kudal, and Jedgyachikond in Chaukul, among others.

The Uphill Struggle to Save Dhamapur Lake

The mapping and summary of violations were to come in handy when fighting to conserve Dhamapur Lake at the NGT.  However, the community’s fight to have Dhamapur Lake recognized as a wetland has not borne fruit so far. “Our case was dismissed by the NGT in 2023 on the grounds that the lake does not qualify to be a wetland in keeping with the Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules 2017, since it was constructed for drinking water and agricultural purposes,” Desai tells IPS.

However, the Trust and its community volunteers have not given up yet. They have now approached the Supreme Court to demand

1) Demarcation of the Lake’s buffer zone and high flood line; and

2) Notification of the Lake by the state government in its gazette.

Once notified, the Lake, they feel, would be protected against further encroachment from public and private bodies alike.

Meanwhile, Syamantak Trust, along with members of the local community, continue to familiarize visiting students and persons from other parts of India with this unique water-body and its flora and fauna through eco-trails. As of this year, Syamantak Trust has begun hosting classical music concerts with the theme “Connect to Nature,” allowing music lovers to explore the vast repertoire of Hindustani classical music and its connection to the seasons and nature’s clock.

Currently, the Desais and their volunteers in the local community sincerely hope that once people in Dhamapur and beyond learn to appreciate and love nature, it will help them connect better with the lake and its entire ecosystem. This can be the best and only bulwark against the destructive march of climate change.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Rejuvenating Tradition Help Save Ancient Engineering Marvel—Dhamapur Lake

The Vijayanagar rulers constructed an earth-fill dam in 1530 AD to create Dhamapur Lake. There is now a campaign to save it. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Vijayanagar rulers constructed an earth-fill dam in 1530 AD to create Dhamapur Lake. There is now a campaign to save it. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

By Rina Mukherji
PUNE, India, Oct 2 2024 – Dhamapur is a small village in Malvan taluka of west Sindhudurg district, housing the famous Dhamapur Lake. The Vijayanagar kings constructed an earthfill dam in 1530 A.D., creating a man-made lake surrounded by hills on three sides. Canals connect it to the Karli river, irrigating lush paddies and farms that grow the red Sorti and Walay rice varieties typical to the region.

A Bhagwati temple constructed in the typical Konkan style stands on its banks. Small shrines to anthills flank this temple, which is devoted to Goddess Bhagwati. This is because all over the Konkan region, anthills are considered manifestations of the Earth Goddess and worshipped as Goddess Sateri. These are monuments to biodiversity and well-being; white ants or termites that build anthills are known to aerate the soil, help seed dispersal, and improve soil fertility. The worship of anthills is an old Vedic practice that continues to survive in and around the Konkan region of Maharashtra, Goa, and its neighborhood to this day.

The construction of the earthfill dam on Dhamapur Lake too spells of local ingenuity. Made up of porous laterite stone that is locally found here, every layer of stone is alternated with a layer of biomass made of twigs and branches.

This freshwater reservoir, used for irrigation and drinking water purposes, is one of Maharashtra’s oldest engineering marvels. Its waters and the Kalse-Dhamapur forests that flank it nurture a wide variety of unique floral and faunal species, making it a popular tourist destination.

But beauty apart, this man-made lake, which is geographically on higher ground as compared to the surrounding countryside, plays an important role in recharging the groundwater, acting as a sponge during the monsoons.  Apart from serving as an important source of drinking water and irrigation, Dhamapur Lake nurtures an entire ecosystem. Its waters and surrounding forests harbour a wide variety of flora and fauna, some of which are endangered species. Its significance can be gauged from the fact that it was given the Word Heritage Irrigation Structure (WHIS) Award by the International Commission of Irrigation and Drainage (ICID) in 2020.

But in recent times, several encroachments have affected this extensive waterbody. Guest houses, wells, and walkways built in its floodplains to boost tourism have been eating into its extensive area, in scant regard to the flora and fauna that thrive in its pristine waters.

Fighting for Dhamapur Lake

In recent years, though, Dhamapur Lake has found a savior in Sachin Desai and his organisation, Syamantak Trust. Incidentally, Sachin Desai and his wife, Meenal, have an interesting background that illustrates their love for the natural world and India’s time-honored traditions.

Believers in home schooling, the Desais fought out with the authorities to home-school their daughter. Abandoning high-paying corporate jobs, these two professionals set up the University of Life on their ancestral property to familiarize youngsters with traditional bricklaying, carpentry and farming skills in 2007. To stem the migration from the region, they sought to inculcate love and respect for traditional practices, foods, and cuisine among youngsters. This was how the Syamantak Trust came into being.

In the years that followed, learners and youngsters who spent time at the University of Life went to use the knowledge they acquired to specialize in respective fields or venture into entrepreneurship, selling local products to tourists frequenting Dhamapur. Rohit Ajgaonkar, once a student at the University of Life, has become an active volunteer with Syamantak and runs a small eco-café in Dhamapur.  Remarkable in its use of local materials, the eco-café has an array of local delicacies such as kashayam and jackfruit, wood apple, and mango ice creams.

Rohit and his mother, Rupali Ajgaonkar, also run a shop adjoining their eco-café, wherein they sell hand-pounded local masalas, mango and jackfruit toffee, local pickles, cashew butter, kokum syrups and kokum butter.  Prathamesh Kalsekar, another student of the University of Life who is the son of a local farmer, is now doing his B.Sc. (Agriculture) at the Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth. He has raised a private forest on his family land in Dhamapur, and now grows many local fruit and vegetable trees, bushes, and plants, particularly focusing on nutrient-rich wild varieties. He has also set up a nursery of saplings for distribution among local farmers.

A temple on the outskirts of Dhamapur Lake. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Bhagwati temple is on the banks of Dhamapur Lake. The temple is built in the typical Konkan style, wherein the deity is placed at one end in the sanctum sanctorum. The main section of the temple is reserved for the assembly of elders who meet and discuss matters related to the village. The temple is reminiscent of a bygone era when a place of worship also served as a place for the community to assemble and parley. Credit: Rina Mukherji/IPS

The Ongoing Battle to Save Dhamapur

These skills and respect for nature came in handy when Syamantak embarked on its mission to save Dhamapur and other waterbodies in Sindhudurg district through a community-led movement, following the construction of a skywalk undertaken by the authorities in 2014, and the running of diesel-run boats for tourists by the panchayat (village self-governing body). But this was easier said than done, notwithstanding the public zeal.

Desai and his volunteers realized that “Sindhudurg district has several wetlands and waterbodies. However, the authorities haven’t notified or demarcated any of them. This permits encroachments, a lot of them by government bodies.” In the case of Dhamapur Lake, the high flood line was ignored, and private parties encroached upon the peripheral areas of the lake. Even the state government’s Department of Agriculture had built a nursery and sunk a well on the floodplains of the lake.

Making use of the National Wetland Atlas prepared by the Space Applications Centre of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) and the Maharashtra Remote Sensing Applications Centre in 2010, during the tenure of Minister of Environment & Forests Jairam Ramesh, Syamantak Trust approached the Western Zonal bench of the National Green Tribunal. Some residents of Sindhudurg district also filed an Environment Interest Litigation (EIL) to save the lake. At that time, the phytoplankton population had already decreased due to the construction of 35 pillars and the 500-meter-long cement concrete skywalk.

An Interim Order in 2018 by the Tribunal not only halted all further construction but saw every bit of concrete broken down and removed from the precincts of the lake. It also stopped the use of diesel boats on the lake . Furthermore, the state Public Works Department (PWD) was ordered to shell out Rs 1.5 crore for mitigation measures to be undertaken to reverse the damages caused by the construction of the 2.5 km skywalk and the use of diesel boats.

Meanwhile, following the formation of a 32-member Wetland Brief Documentation Committee as per an Order by the District Collector, the Syamantak Trust organized the local citizenry to document the flora and fauna of Dhamapur lake. They were soon joined by students from the local college of architecture, academicians, botanists, zoologists, and geographers from Mumbai and other parts of India, besides Dr Balkrishna Gavade and Dr Yogesh Koli, who lent their expertise for the study.  Mapping Dhamapur helped the volunteers learn about the kind of biodiversity hotspot the Western Ghats region is, especially in the forested tracts around Dhamapur Lake.

Five months spent documenting the various wetland flora and fauna showed 35 species of birds belonging to 18 families to frequent the lake, such as the Eurasian Marsh Harrier, Indian Pond Heron, Lapwing, Kingfisher,  and Small Bee-Eater. The lake was found to be particularly lush with phytoplankton and zooplankton species, which are the building blocks of a wetland ecosystem. The volunteers would also learn about how the Wax Dart butterfly was reported for the first time in Maharashtra, on the banks of Dhamapur lake.

Once Dhamapur was mapped, the volunteers went on to document a total of 57 wetlands and waterbodies in Sindhudurg district, including those as yet unlisted by the authorities. These included Vimleshwar in Devgad, Pat Lake in Kudal, and Jedgyachikond in Chaukul, among others.

The Uphill Struggle to Save Dhamapur Lake

The mapping and summary of violations were to come in handy when fighting to conserve Dhamapur Lake at the NGT.  However, the community’s fight to have Dhamapur Lake recognized as a wetland has not borne fruit so far. “Our case was dismissed by the NGT in 2023 on the grounds that the lake does not qualify to be a wetland in keeping with the Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules 2017, since it was constructed for drinking water and agricultural purposes,” Desai tells IPS.

However, the Trust and its community volunteers have not given up yet. They have now approached the Supreme Court to demand

1) Demarcation of the Lake’s buffer zone and high flood line; and

2) Notification of the Lake by the state government in its gazette.

Once notified, the Lake, they feel, would be protected against further encroachment from public and private bodies alike.

Meanwhile, Syamantak Trust, along with members of the local community, continue to familiarize visiting students and persons from other parts of India with this unique water-body and its flora and fauna through eco-trails. As of this year, Syamantak Trust has begun hosting classical music concerts with the theme “Connect to Nature,” allowing music lovers to explore the vast repertoire of Hindustani classical music and its connection to the seasons and nature’s clock.

Currently, the Desais and their volunteers in the local community sincerely hope that once people in Dhamapur and beyond learn to appreciate and love nature, it will help them connect better with the lake and its entire ecosystem. This can be the best and only bulwark against the destructive march of climate change.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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The Taste of Honey

By Mohammad Rakibul Hasan
Oct 2 2024 (IPS-Partners)

 
A resilient tiger widow from Bangladesh’s Sundarbans Mangrove Forest, Shorbanu Khatun, fights climate change’s impacts. She struggles to support her children while preserving honey and Gol leaf traditions amidst worsening storms, rising salinity, and societal exclusion.

Broder Description

Shorbanu Khatun, a tiger widow in the Sundarbans Mangrove Forest, Bangladesh, the world’s largest mangrove forest, faces an unforgiving reality. After a tiger kills her husband, she joins the ranks of the “tiger widows,” women shunned by their communities for their perceived misfortune. With climate change exacerbating the already harsh conditions, Shorbanu’s life constantly struggles against rising sea levels, frequent cyclones, and salinity that destroys crops and freshwater sources.

Determined to provide for her children, Shorbanu braves the perilous forest to gather honey and Gol leaves, crucial for her family’s survival. The risks are substantial—wild animals, pirates, and the ever-present threat of debt to moneylenders. Yet, she draws strength from the community of fellow widows and the worship of Bonbibi, the forest goddess who shields them.

As the natural environment deteriorates, the seasons become extreme, and traditional livelihoods vanish, Shorbanu’s story becomes a powerful testament to resilience and hope. Her life encapsulates the broader fight against climate change, showcasing an unbreakable bond with the Sundarbans, her home and lifeline.

Credit: Mohammad Rakibul Hasan

 


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The Approaching Rainy Season Signals Trouble for Gaza

Children in a displacement shelter in the Northern Gaza Strip receiving psychological support kits. Credit: UNICEF/Media Clinic

By Oritro Karim
UNITED NATIONS, Oct 2 2024 – As the humanitarian crisis in Gaza continues to grow more dire as a result of the Israel-Hamas war, concerns of diminishing public health are growing due to prolonged flooding. Repeated airstrikes and forced evacuations in recent weeks have pushed many displaced citizens to flooding hotspots. An influx of torrential rain has greatly exacerbated the failing sanitation system, increasing the risk of contracting waterborne diseases. Health experts fear that conditions will continue to worsen in the coming winter months.

A primary cause of concern for health officials is the large pooling of dirty water caused by the accumulation of torrential rain. This has created a suitable breeding ground for bacteria, viruses, and mosquitoes. Additionally, heavy flooding greatly increases chances of water contamination, which can cause diseases like cholera and Hepatitis A. The Global WASH Cluster adds that increased flooding raises the likelihood of citizens experiencing snakebites. It is also stated that mental health among displaced persons is expected to worsen as living conditions grow more harsh.

In a press release issued on 30 September from the United Nations (UN), Spokesperson for the Secretary-General, Stéphane Dujarric, stated that 215 learning facilities sheltering approximately 34,000 children are predicted to be severely damaged by flooding. Hundreds of thousands of Gazans are projected to be internally displaced in the coming rainy season.

Last year’s rainy season was described as “catastrophic” by health officials. Ajith Sunghay, the head of Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, described the sanitation levels in Gaza last year as “uninhabitable”, adding that most of the displaced persons don’t have access to clothes or blankets to stay warm. Sunghay emphasizes the harsh conditions of the winter months in Gaza by saying that he fears that many civilians will die and that this time of year is “entirely predictable”.

The healthcare system in Gaza is currently not properly equipped to handle the influx of sick and injured people that are predicted to come in the final quarter of 2024. According to OCHA, there are currently only 17 hospitals that remain partially functional, with all of them facing significant shortages in fuel, medicines, and supplies.

It is estimated that about 1.4 million people did not receive their monthly food rations in September due to a lack of supplies. Currently, humanitarian organizations are in the process of delivering 600,000 daily meals despite continued access challenges. Additionally, it is estimated by the World Bank that as of now, 100 percent of Gazans are living in poverty.

The Office for the Coordination of Human Affairs (OCHA) warns that further restrictions of humanitarian aid in critically vulnerable areas will greatly aggravate declining public health as aid organizations won’t be able to prepare for the upcoming rainy season. The UN and its affiliated organizations have developed a winterization plan in an effort to mitigate the harsh living conditions observed in Gaza for the final quarter of the year. This plan is targeted to assist over 850,000 individuals in almost 50 of the most flood-affected areas.

“It requires $242 million to improve shelter conditions; provide warm clothing and blankets; and redirect floodwaters away from critical infrastructure and dumping sites, among other interventions”, stated Dujarric. However, OCHA acknowledges that these efforts will not be successful if restrictions aren’t lifted, allowing for easier access between supply warehouses and displacement shelters. The UN urges further donor contributions as living conditions are projected to grow harsher in the coming months.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Nuclear Annihilation Threatened by Revival of 20h Century McCarthy Era Cold War & Red Scare

Sculpture depicting St. George slaying the dragon. The dragon is created from fragments of Soviet SS-20 and United States Pershing nuclear missiles. Credit: UN Photo/Milton Grant

By Alice Slater
NEW YORK, Oct 2 2024 – The world may have dodged an immediate bullet when the US intelligence agencies warned, this week, that by giving in to Ukraine’s pleading for long range missiles that could attack targets deep into Russia, we would be poking the Russian bear beyond its patience without even influencing the outcome of the war in Ukraine’s favor.

There had been a sense of waiting with bated breath in the wake of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin recent announcement that he would lower the threshold for Russia’s use of nuclear weapons, as the US and its NATO allies broadcasted their plans to ignore a repeated “red line” articulated by US President Biden not to provide arms to Ukraine which could be launched deep inside Russia.

Britain is playing its usual provocative role by sending clear messages that it would welcome US approval to let Ukraine use its “Storm Shadow” long-range missiles. We just got a short breather, in light of this recently issued public US intelligence evaluation.

Despite repeated requests to the US from Russian President Vladmir Putin to honor US promises made to Gorbachev and Yeltsin that the US would not expand NATO east of a unified Germany, when the wall came down and Gorbachev ended the Warsaw Pact and Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe without a shot, the US, driven by visions of Empire, steadily expanded NATO eastward.

It began with Clinton’s annexation of Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic in 1999, followed by Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia in 2004, and Albania, Croatia, Montenegro and North Macedonia between 2009 and 2017. At one point Putin was so dismayed at this expansion, he asked the Clinton administration if Russia could join NATO, but he was denied membership.

Putin made it very clear to the US and NATO that Russia, which shares a long border with Ukraine, would not tolerate Ukraine becoming a member of NATO. After the US supported a 2014 coup d’état replacing the pro-Russian president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych, with Petro Poroshenko who immediately announced that only the Ukrainian language would be recognized in Ukraine, a civil war broke out in the Eastern part of the country where the majority of the people were Russian and Russian speaking. More than 14,000 people were killed in that war before Russia invaded Ukraine.

Putin provided a draft agreement in 2021 to the US proposing that Ukraine remain neutral and that the Donbass region, undergoing the civil war, remain in Ukraine as a federation and have the right to speak Russian. The US completely ignored the proposal and Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

Putin was negotiating for a ceasefire with Yeltsin six months after the invasion, but Boris Johnson, the British Prime Minister came to Ukraine and told Zelensky not to make the deal! And the slaughter continues, with more than 20,000 civilians and 100,000 soldiers killed.

Thanks to the brief respite we just received from imminent nuclear annihilation, thanks to the sensible US intelligence services who took Putin’s recent warnings as a reason for caution in pursuing a headlong and heedless expansion of military aid to Ukraine, it is time to change the conversation with bold new proposals.

Proposals that are guaranteed to bring us a respite from the growing terror. Proposals that will bring a shift in planetary consciousness allowing us to respond cooperatively to the impending cataclysmic climate disaster down the road! Mother Earth grows impatient with the folly of humankind.

Here are a series of steps that are guaranteed to bring us peace on earth if the US is ready to mobilize against the MICIMATT (Military Industrial, Congressional Intelligence, Media, Academic, Think Tank complex) and work for peace!

Take up repeated Russian and Chinese proposals in the UN and in frequent speeches for a treaty to ban weapons in space

Take up repeated Russian and Chinese proposals in the UN to negotiate a cyberwar ban treaty

Reinstate the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with Russia and get US missiles placed by Obama and Trump out of Poland and Romania

Remove US nuclear weapons stationed in five NATO states: Turkey, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium as a deal for Russia removing its recently placed weapons from Belarus

Take all nuclear weapons off high alert and separate the warheads from their delivery system
as China does–the wisdom of the East

Dismantle NATO and pull it back from Russia’s border immediately

The ball, as they say, is in the US court. Or as Pogo Possum, a character in Walt Kelly’s 1950s comic strip was known to say, “We met the enemy and he is us!”

There is no doubt that Russia and China would be willing partners in these new initiatives. They have been proposing them to the United States for more than ten years!!

Alice Slater serves on the Boards of World BEYOND War and the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space, and as an UN NGO representative for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Technologie verschiebt die Grenzen von Online-Zahlungen im Jahr 2024: MDC prüft biometrische Zahlungen

WATERFORD, Irland, Oct. 01, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ein neues Phänomen im Jahr 2024 hebt den digitalen Zahlungsverkehr auf die nächste Stufe – die biometrische Verifizierung von Gesicht und Fingerabdruck. Minimum Deposit Casinos (MDC) – ein Geschäftsbereich der OneTwenty Group – hat im September 2024 beschlossen, diese Technologie zu analysieren und festgestellt, dass sie die Art und Weise, wie Menschen Zahlungen vornehmen, insbesondere in regulierten Online–Casinos verändert.

„Dies ist zweifelsohne ein Erlebnis der nächsten Generation. Mit einem einfachen Blick oder einem Fingerdruck können die Spieler ihre Identität bei Ein– und Auszahlungen leicht überprüfen. Dies erhöht die Bequemlichkeit für die Spieler, da umständliche Schritte und lange Wartezeiten entfallen. Damit werden die Grenzen des Möglichen deutlich verschoben“, so Miranda Raaff, Head of iGaming Information bei MDC.

„Wir haben festgestellt, dass sich die Spieler dazu entschließen, Einlagen von nur 1 USD zu tätigen. Mit der weltweit wachsenden Nachfrage nach schnelleren und sichereren Transaktionen haben sich biometrische Zahlungen zu einem neuen Trend entwickelt, der die Notwendigkeit von Passwörtern und PINs überflüssig macht und einen neuen Standard im globalen Online–Casino–Bereich setzt. Und das zu einem Zeitpunkt, der nicht besser gewählt sein könnte, da Halloween (31. Oktober 2024) vor der Tür steht.“

Schnelligkeit und Bequemlichkeit sind zwar entscheidend, aber die Sicherheit digitaler Zahlungen kann nicht hoch genug eingeschätzt werden. Das Ökosystem basiert auf hochmodernen Mechanismen, die gewährleisten, dass Finanzdaten nach den höchsten Sicherheitsstandards geschützt werden. Moderne militärische Verschlüsselungsmethoden, Multi–Faktor–Authentifizierung und Blockchain–Technologie sorgen dafür, dass Transaktionen nicht nur schnell, sondern auch sicher vor potenziellen Cyberbedrohungen sind.

„Die Technologie, die dieser Zahlungslösung zugrunde liegt, ist schlichtweg bemerkenswert. Insbesondere fügt die Blockchain eine zusätzliche Schutzschicht hinzu, die es nahezu unmöglich macht, Transaktionen zu verändern oder zu manipulieren. Die Spieler können nun in Sekundenschnelle sichere Transaktionen durchführen, ohne sich an Passwörter erinnern zu müssen. Das ist die Zukunft des digitalen Zahlungsverkehrs, und sie spielt sich genau jetzt vor unseren Augen ab“, so Raaff.

Während sich das digitale Zahlungssystem weiter entwickelt, betonte MDC, dass die regulierten Online–Casinos es mit offenen Armen empfangen würden.

Über MDC

MDC, ein Geschäftsbereich der OneTwenty Group, ist ein globales iGaming–Ressourcenportal, das die vertrauenswürdigsten und am besten regulierten Online–Casinos bewertet und den Spielern empfiehlt. MDC analysiert jeden Aspekt der Online–Casinos, von der Überprüfung der Glücksspiellizenzen bis hin zu Sicherheit, Tools für verantwortungsbewusstes Spielen und faire Spielpraktiken, bevor wir sie den Spielern empfehlen.

Kontakt–E–Mail: miranda@onetwentygroup.com


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000995208)

A tecnologia supera os limites dos pagamentos on-line em 2024: MDC examina pagamentos por verificação biométrica

WATERFORD, Irlanda, Oct. 01, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Um novo fenômeno em 2024 está levando os pagamentos digitais a um novo patamar – a verificação biométrica facial e de impressões digitais. A Minimum Deposit Casinos (MDC) – uma divisão do OneTwenty Group – decidiu analisar essa tecnologia em setembro de 2024 e constatou que ela estava mudando a forma como as pessoas fazem pagamentos, especialmente em cassinos on–line regulamentados.

“Não há dúvida de que estamos diante de uma experiência de última geração. Com um simples olhar ou toque, os jogadores podem confirmar facilmente sua identidade ao fazer depósitos e saques. Isso aumenta a conveniência para os jogadores, eliminando etapas complicadas e longos períodos de espera – verdadeiramente expandindo os limites do que é possível”, disse Miranda Raaff, diretora de informações sobre iGaming da MDC.

“Percebemos uma mudança na forma como os jogadores preferem fazer depósitos de valores baixos, como US$ 1. Com a crescente demanda por transações mais rápidas e seguras em todo o mundo, os pagamentos com utilização de biometria se tornaram um divisor de águas, eliminando a necessidade de senhas e PINs e estabelecendo um novo padrão no mercado global de cassinos on–line. E isso não poderia ter vindo em um momento mais oportuno, com a proximidade do Halloween (31 de outubro de 2024).”

Embora a velocidade e a conveniência sejam fatores essenciais, a segurança dos pagamentos digitais não pode ser negligenciada. O ecossistema é construído com base em mecanismos de ponta que garantem que as informações financeiras sejam protegidas pelos mais altos padrões de segurança. Métodos avançados de criptografia militar, autenticação multifatorial e tecnologia blockchain garantem que as transações não sejam apenas rápidas, mas que também estejam protegidas contra possíveis ameaças cibernéticas.

“A tecnologia que alimenta essa solução de pagamento é extraordinária. Em especial, o blockchain acrescenta uma camada extra de proteção que praticamente impossibilita que as transações sejam alteradas ou adulteradas. Agora, os jogadores podem fazer transações seguras em questão de segundos sem precisar memorizar senhas. É o futuro dos pagamentos digitais que está acontecendo diante de nossos olhos”, disse Raaff.

À medida que o ecossistema de pagamento digital continua a evoluir, a MDC destacou que os cassinos on–line regulamentados estão aderindo a essa forma de pagamento de forma receptiva.

Sobre a MDC

A MDC, uma divisão do OneTwenty Group, é um portal global de recursos de iGaming que analisa e recomenda aos jogadores os cassinos on–line mais confiáveis e regulamentados. A MDC analisa todos os aspectos dos cassinos on–line, desde a verificação dos detalhes da licença de jogo até a segurança, as ferramentas de jogo responsável e as práticas de jogo justo, antes de recomendá–los aos jogadores.

E–mail de contato: miranda@onetwentygroup.com


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000995208)

La technologie repousse les limites inhérentes aux solutions de paiement en ligne en 2024 – MDC explore la voie des paiements biométriques

WATERFORD, Irlande, 01 oct. 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Un nouveau phénomène visant à relever le niveau des paiements numériques est né en 2024, à savoir l’authentification biométrique par reconnaissance faciale et empreinte digitale. Minimum Deposit Casinos (MDC), une division du groupe OneTwenty, a résolu d’analyser cette technologie en septembre 2024 et a pu constater qu’elle remodelait les pratiques de paiement, notamment dans les casinos en ligne réglementés.

« C’est incontestablement une expérience nouvelle génération. D’un simple regard ou du toucher, les joueurs peuvent facilement s’authentifier lors de leurs dépôts et retraits, ce qui rend les conditions de jeu bien meilleures, supprime de fastidieuses étapes et met fin aux longues files d’attente. Autrement dit, cette technologie repousse véritablement les limites du possible » observe Miranda Raaff, Responsable de l’information iGaming chez MDC.

« Nous avons constaté une évolution dans la manière dont les joueurs choisissent d’effectuer des dépôts à partir d’un montant de seulement 1 dollar. À l’appui d’une demande renforcée en transactions plus rapides et plus sécurisées en provenance du monde entier, les paiements biométriques ont pris la forme d’un détonateur, écartant la nécessité de recourir à des mots de passe ou des codes PIN, et établissant ainsi une nouvelle norme appliquée à l’univers planétaire des casinos en ligne. Et ce phénomène arrive à point nommé, puisque les fêtes d’Halloween (à partir du 31 octobre 2024) approchent à grands pas. »

Si la rapidité et les aspects pratiques constituent des critères essentiels, la sécurité des paiements numériques ne saurait être négligée. L’écosystème repose sur des mécanismes de pointe qui garantissent la protection des informations financières en vertu des normes de sécurité les plus strictes. Au–delà de garantir la rapidité des transactions, des méthodes de cryptage militaire avancées, une authentification multifacteur et une technologie blockchain les abritent d’éventuelles attaques cybernétiques.

« La technologie qui alimente cette solution de paiement est tout simplement remarquable. Particulièrement, la blockchain apporte un degré de protection supplémentaire qui rend la modification ou la falsification des transactions quasi impossible. Les joueurs peuvent désormais effectuer des transactions sécurisées en quelques secondes sans se soucier d’avoir à mémoriser des mots de passe. C’est déjà demain pour les paiements numériques, et nous y assistons aujourd’hui » ajoute Madame Raaff.

À l’heure où l’écosystème des paiements numériques poursuit son évolution, MDC a souligné que les casinos en ligne réglementés l’embrassaient à bras ouverts.

À propos de MDC

MDC, une division de OneTwenty Group, est un portail international de ressources sur les jeux en ligne qui analyse et recommande aux joueurs les casinos en ligne les plus fiables au monde. MDC procède à un audit approfondi des casinos en ligne, en se concentrant sur la sécurité, les licences de jeu, les outils de jeu responsable et les pratiques de jeu équitables avant d’émettre ses recommandations.

Coordonnées électroniques : miranda@onetwentygroup.com


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000995208)

Coup d’envoi de la Ligue des esports prévu en mars 2025 pour la Fédération émiratie des esports et ITW Universe

DUBAÏ, Émirats arabes unis, 01 oct. 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — En partenariat avec ITW Universe, la Fédération émiratie des esports annonce d’ici mars 2025 aux Émirats arabes unis le coup d’envoi de la Ligue des esports, l’une des premières du secteur des sports électroniques. Cette Ligue des esports s’inspire d’homologues d’importance majeure comme la ligue de basket–ball NBA, la ligue de football EPL ou la ligue de cricket IPL pour inaugurer un système inédit de franchise et de repêchage visant à redéfinir l’esprit compétitif du jeu.

La ligue mettra en vedette six équipes franchisées concourant dans plusieurs catégories de jeux, à savoir l’arène de bataille en ligne multijoueur, le tir à la première personne, la compétition sportive ou la course automobile, entre autres. Son modèle de repêchage représente une innovation du genre esport visant à promouvoir un équilibre dans la compétition et inspirer de nouveaux talents.

Des étapes de qualification internationales verront le jour début 2025, et récompenseront les champions de la catégorie amateurs en leur réservant des places dans le pool de repêchage qui leur donneront l’opportunité de concourir aux côtés de stars internationales. Cette approche renforcera la position des Émirats en tant que pôle mondial de l’esport.

Son Altesse le Cheikh Sultan Ben Khalifa Ben Chakhbout Al Nahyane, Président de la Fédération émiratie des esports en témoigne :
« La Ligue des esports réunira les éditeurs, les joueurs, les organisateurs et les marques autour des nouveaux contours de l’esport à dessiner dans la région. »

Vivek Chandra, Dirigeant d’ITW Universe, ajoute :
« Elle établira une nouvelle référence mondiale qui fera des Émirats arabes unis une destination de choix pour l’innovation dans l’esport et les talents qui l’accompagnent. »

Saïd Ali Al–Tahir, Secrétaire général de la Fédération, souligne quant à lui :
« La Ligue des esports propose une plateforme aux nouveaux talents et positionne les Émirats comme un leader mondial au sein de la communauté esport. »

Et Naïm Khan, Responsable des jeux et de l’esport chez ITW Universe de conclure :
« La Ligue des esports dépasse le concept d’un simple tournoi pour prendre la forme d’une expérience immersive de divertissement agrémentée de fan zones, d’événements communautaires et de performances en direct, qui élèvera les sports électroniques à l’échelle d’un divertissement sportif grand public. »

À l’appui d’un marché relatif aux PC et aux jeux vidéo ayant dégagé 92 milliards de dollars de chiffre d’affaires en 2023, la Ligue des esports entend porter l’esport vers de nouveaux sommets en y intégrant des cadres sportifs éprouvés favorisant la naissance d’un écosystème durable pour le développement des talents et la compétition internationale.

Cette annonce ne fait que marquer le début d’un itinéraire fascinant, qui distinguera la Ligue des esports au titre d’un événement phare de sa catégorie à l’échelle planétaire.

Coordonnées : nayeem.k@itwconsulting.in

Une photo annexée au présent communiqué est disponible à l’adresse suivante :https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ca4080a3–0605–4ec8–b09f–307723f4f440


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000995203)