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Mourners bury Palestinian killed by Israeli settlers

By - Aug 05,2023 - Last updated at Aug 05,2023

Mourners carry the body of 19-year-old Palestinian Qusai Jamal Maatan, during his funeral in the village of Burqa in the north of the occupied West Bank, on Saturday (AFP photo)

BURQA, Palestinian Territories — Mourners on Saturday attended the funeral of a Palestinian killed by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, after the UN warned of a dramatic spike in such cases.

The Palestinian health ministry in a statement late Friday announced the death of Qusai Jamal Maatan, 19, saying he was “shot dead by settlers in the village of Burqa”, east of Ramallah.

At the funeral procession, Maatan was wrapped in a black and white keffiyeh head covering and Palestinian flag. Mourners carried his body through the village streets before his burial, said an AFP journalist at the scene.

Since early last year, the West Bank has seen a string of attacks by Palestinians on Israeli targets, as well as violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities and regular raids by Israeli forces who say they are pursuing militants.

In a statement on Saturday, Israeli forces cited Palestinian reports and witnesses as saying clashes broke out between Palestinians and Israeli civilians who were herding sheep near Burqa village.

Both sides threw rocks, the Palestinians let off fireworks and “Israeli civilians shot towards the Palestinians”, the army said.

“As a result of the confrontation, a Palestinian was killed, four others were injured and a Palestinian vehicle was found burned. Several Israeli civilians were injured from rocks hurled at them,” it said, adding security forces arrived after the shooting.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 June War.

Excluding occupied East Jerusalem, the territory is home to nearly three million Palestinians and around 490,000 Israelis who live in settlements considered illegal under international law.

 

Incidents rising 

 

The last major case of Israeli settler violence against Palestinians occurred in June.

Revenge attacks on the West Bank village of Turmus Ayya and others followed the killing of four Israelis by Palestinian gunmen, which militant group Hamas said was in response to an Israeli forces raid on Jenin refugee camp which killed six Palestinians.

The UN humanitarian agency OCHA on Friday said it had recorded 591 settler-related “incidents” in the West Bank in the first six months of 2023 resulting in Palestinian casualties, property damage, or both.

“That’s an average of 99 incidents every month, and a 39 per cent-increase compared with the monthly average of the whole of 2022, which is 71,” spokesman Jens Laerke told reporters in Geneva.

Also on Friday, the Palestinian health ministry said Israeli soldiers shot dead Mahmoud Abu Saan, 18, in the West Bank community of Tulkarm. The Israeli army said “suspects fired and hurled explosives and stones” at patrolling soldiers “who responded with live fire”.

Friday’s killings came three days after a Palestinian gunman wounded six people in a shooting at an Israeli settlement in the West Bank before being shot dead himself.

 

Gaza open-air cinema a breath of fresh air for Palestinians

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 03,2023

Palestinian youths play football outdoors in a poor neighbourhood in Gaza amid soaring temperatures and power cuts on July 31 (AFP photo)

 

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories — Gaza residents took their seats in front of a large projector screen set up on a sandy beach, a rare event in the Islamist-ruled blockaded enclave that has no operating cinemas.

Over two weeks in summer, the "Cinema of the Sea" festival which ended Monday screened some 15 films, many of them with Palestinian actors or producers.

Providing a respite from the heat, the waterfront "is the only outlet for the residents" in the impoverished territory, said Ali Muhanna, a theatre director involved in the initiative.

Around 2.3 million Palestinians live in the Gaza Strip, which has been under a crippling Israeli-led blockade since the Islamist group Hamas seized power in 2007.

Sitting barefoot in a pink dress at the open-air cinema on Gaza City's beach, seven-year-old Salma Shamaleh was transfixed by the screen.

"I have never seen a TV this size," she told AFP as she watched "Ferdinand", an animated blockbuster that tells the story of a giant but soft-hearted black bull.

The first film screenings in Gaza date to the 1940s, with the opening of the Samer Cinema, whose building now houses a car dealership.

Cinemas were forced to close in the late 1980s during the first Palestinian uprising, or Intifada. They reopened following the establishment of the Palestinian Authority in the 1990s but for years have largely been gathering dust.

In 1996, Islamists set a Gaza cinema ablaze.

While not explicitly banned, Hamas authorities fear cinemas may amplify what they view as foreign or Western beliefs that go against Islamic traditions.

There have been some outdoor screenings in recent years, most notably amid the rubble of buildings destroyed in Israeli air strikes during wars fought with Gaza militants.

Like across much of the eastern Mediterranean, Gazans have flocked to the seaside in recent weeks to escape soaring temperatures.

Shamaleh was thrilled by the cinematic experience. "Our house is nearby, I'll ask my mum for us to come every day," she said.

The festival’s programme featured “Farha”, a Jordanian film which, through a young girl’s perspective, depicts atrocities committed against Palestinians during the 1948 conflict that led to Israel’s creation.

The hard-hitting film resonated with Mona Hanafi, 50, who watched it with her daughter and dozens of other spectators.

“The film is brilliant in addressing a realistic Palestinian story... The performance and directing are impressive,” she said.

“Seeing the children and people watching the open cinema in Gaza made me happy,” added Hanafi.

Another audience member, Hadeel Hajji, said she had “never seen anything like that in my life”.

“I was with my family when I saw the screen from far away, so I came to watch,” she told AFP.

“Cinema of the Sea” was organised by Al-Bahr Elna Cooperative cafe in partnership with the culture ministry.

The cooperative was established in 2020 by a group of artists, with start-up funding from Palestinian institutions. Since that initial cash dried up, the group has relied on donations.

For Muhanna, the cafe’s founder, the festival has been an opportunity to show films which demonstrate how “Palestinians contributed to producing (cinema) and conveying the values of society”.

Atef Askoul, head of the Hamas-appointed body responsible for approving public art events, said Gazans who suffer from miserable living conditions under the blockade have “the right to watch films and cinema”.

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait reject Iran claims to disputed gas field

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 03,2023

 

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia and Kuwait said Thursday they have sole ownership of a disputed gas field also claimed by Iran, in an escalating feud after Tehran threatened to pursue exploration.

The offshore field, known as Arash in Iran and Dorra in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, has long been focal point of contention between the three countries.

The Kuwaiti and Saudi authorities said in a joint statement published on Thursday that "they alone have full sovereign rights to exploit the wealth in that area".

The two Arab Gulf states renewed "their previous and repeated calls to the Islamic Republic of Iran to negotiate" the demarcation of their maritime borders to settle the issue, according to the statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

Iran and Kuwait have held unsuccessful talks for many years over their disputed maritime border area, which is rich in natural gas. 

Recent attempts to revive negotiations have failed, and Iran's oil minister on Sunday said Tehran may pursue work at the field even without an agreement.

“Iran will pursue its rights and interests regarding exploitation and exploration” of the field “if there is no desire for understanding and cooperation”, Iranian Oil Minister Javad Owji was quoted as saying by the official Shana news agency.

Last month, Kuwait had invited Iran for another round of maritime border talks after Tehran said it was ready to start drilling in the field.

A few weeks later, Sky News Arabia quoted Kuwait’s Oil Minister Saad Al Barrak as saying his country would also begin “drilling and production” at the gas field without waiting for a demarcation deal with Iran.

The row over the field stretches back to the 1960s, when Iran and Kuwait each awarded an offshore concession, one to the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, the forerunner to BP, and one to Royal Dutch Shell.

The two concessions overlapped in the northern part of the field, whose recoverable reserves are estimated at some 220 billion cubic metres.

Last year, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia signed an agreement to jointly develop the field, despite objections from Iran which branded the deal as “illegal”.

Soaring hunger in Sudan as nearly 4m displaced — UN

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 03,2023

Men load Ethiopian products onto a truck in Sudan's border town of Gallabat on Wednesday (AFP photo)

WAD MADANI, Sudan — The UN sounded the alarm on Wednesday of impending famine in Sudan, where months of war have hit food supplies and pushed nearly four million people to flee the fighting.

"Over 20.3 million people, representing more than 42 per cent of the population in the country, are experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity," the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation announced.

Half that number was already highly food insecure last year, before war broke out between army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan and his former deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

In a new escalation of an already disastrous humanitarian situation, "6.3 million people are one step away from famine", the UN warned on Wednesday.

The fighting has destroyed critical infrastructure, severely hampered agriculture and blocked the delivery of crucial aid.

More than half of the population is "facing acute hunger" in West Darfur, which has seen some of the worst clashes, including civilians targeted for their ethnicity and mass sexual violence.

The latest figures from the International Organisation for Migration show that more than 3 million people have been internally displaced, with almost a million more fleeing across Sudan's borders.

The IOM figures show that upwards of 2 million people have fled Khartoum alone, 40 per cent of its estimated pre-war population.

For months civilians have been pleading for a reprieve from the ceaseless air strikes, artillery battles and gunfire that have turned cities including the capital into war zones.

No humanitarian corridors have materialised despite promises from the warring parties, preventing aid groups from delivering increasingly life-saving assistance.

Deadly urban battles continued in the war-torn capital on Wednesday, with an army spokesman announcing in a televised address that "dozens from the rebel militia" had been "killed and wounded" in an air strike in southern Khartoum.

The RSF, which has positioned itself as the saviour of democracy even as it is accused of atrocities, again accused the army of “conspiring” with the former regime of Omar Al Bashir.

Longtime autocrat Bashir was ousted in 2019 after popular protests. The fragile transition to civilian rule that followed was derailed by a 2021 coup led by Burhan, with Daglo as his number two.

When the two generals fell out in a bitter feud, Daglo accused Burhan’s government of starting the war in order to usher Bashir’s banned National Congress Party (NCP) back into power.

An RSF statement Wednesday said the army was “covering up” NCP officials’ activities across the country, particularly in eastern Sudan, and warned against “civil war”.

It accused the army of protecting members of the old guard who had escaped from prison early in the war, “with the express goal of again seizing the mantle of power in our country”.

Kuwait's scorching summers a warning for heating planet

By - Aug 03,2023 - Last updated at Aug 03,2023

People walk through a mist dispenser as they enter Al Mubarakiya Market amid soaring temperatures in Kuwait City on July 23 (AFP photo)

KUWAIT CITY — As the blazing summer sun beats down on Kuwait, shoppers stroll down a promenade lined with palm trees and European-style boutiques, all without breaking a sweat.

In one of the world's hottest desert countries, it's all made possible by architecture and technology: the entire street is located inside the heavily air-conditioned Kuwait City shopping mall.

Outside, where temperatures now often soar around 50°C, barely anyone is moving around on foot, leaving the historic market largely deserted.

"Only a few people stay in Kuwait at this time of year," said date merchant Abdullah Ashkanani, 53, as large fans sprayed cooling mist onto the few customers braving the blistering heat.

Ashkanani, who hails from Iran, said he keeps his shop open largely "for appearances" during the hottest months when most of Kuwait's four million residents flee abroad.

For those who stay behind in the tiny oil-rich country, life is made bearable by the ever-present Arctic blast of air-con systems.

“We can put up with it because the house, the car, everything is air-conditioned,” said pensioner Abou Mohammad, dressed in a white robe and keffiyeh and sitting in a comfortably cooled cafe.

The irony is not lost on him that such energy-guzzling systems produce the carbon emissions that are heating up the planet, especially the sweltering Gulf region, a climate hotspot.

Such excessive energy consumption, said Mohammad, has “brought this heat to Kuwait”.

 

Heating up  

 

Kuwait is home to seven percent of the world’s crude reserves — energy wealth that has long afforded many of its people a luxury lifestyle.

An extremely water-scarce country, it also relies heavily on fossil fuels to power seawater desalination plants.

Like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Kuwait is one of the world’s leading emitters per capita of CO2, a key driver of global warming.

Kuwait has always been hot, its dry summers fanned by the northwesterly shamal wind that also blows over Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Temperatures in Mitribah, a remote area in northwest Kuwait, often soar past 50°C, making it one of the hottest places on Earth after Death Valley in eastern California.

But in recent years, climate change has made summer peaks hotter and longer, said meteorologist Essa Ramadan, as periods of extreme heat have gone “from two weeks to about a month”.

The number of days per year that see temperatures rise above 50°C have more than tripled since the turn of the century, noted the meteorologist.

As the world records ever more heat records, “what is happening to us will happen elsewhere”, he warned.

 

Grassroots 

 

Kuwait, where glass towers soar into the sky and cars choke the highways, has only recently invested in public transport and green energy to help counter climate change.

Its environment protection authority, which falls under the oil ministry, recognises “a rise in temperatures in recent years”, its director Samira Al Kandari said.

To help change course, Kuwait has started building its first commercial solar power park, the Shagaya project.

With the first phase complete, and other projects planned, Kandari said Kuwait’s goal is that “renewable energy constitutes 15 percent of our energy production by 2035”.

“We will increase this percentage in the future,” she said.

Outside of the state institutions, some Kuwaiti citizens have launched grassroot initiatives, including tree-planting to help cool sun-baked urban environments.

Essa Al Essa, a 46-year-old dentist, started planting trees as a “hobby” in a vacant, sandy lot near his home on the outskirts of the capital, he told AFP.

In 2020, at the height of the Covid pandemic, he developed it into the Kuwait Forest project, starting a green space that also helps scrub the air and captures carbon.

“Trees are particularly useful in polluted places such as industrial and residential areas,” said Essa.

But he also hopes the natural shade and cooling they provide will help break the dominance of energy-intensive air-conditioning.

“The more we cool our houses”, Essa said, “the more we warm our surroundings”.

Grave fears for missing women, girls in war-torn Sudan

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

Fighters of the RSF have been accused of abductions (AFP photo)

WAD MADANI, Sudan — Desperate to check on her elderly mother amid the chaos of Sudan’s war, Amal Hassan left her family home in the capital Khartoum on May 30.

She has yet to return.

Her husband and three children in Omdurman — part of greater Khartoum — are among the hundreds of Sudanese families desperate for news of loved ones who have disappeared.

At least 3,900 people have been killed since war broke out in mid-April between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Hundreds more have simply vanished, leaving their families anxiously guessing whether they have died in the fighting or been abducted by combatants.

Many anxious families have turned to social media, desperate for news of missing relatives, in many cases girls and women, in the war that has seen repeated reports of sexual violence.

The online support project Mafqoud (Missing) lists the names of the disappeared together with their photos and a family member’s phone number.

Just one of the many listed is Saba Baloula Mokhtar, a 17-year-old girl who was last seen in Omdurman on May 18.

Human rights groups and Sudan-based activists say many have been taken by the RSF.

One woman who made it back to her family in north Khartoum, Heba Ebeid, said paramilitaries held her for three months, forcing her and other women and girls to cook for them.

Some of the missing are feared to have died in gun battles, artillery and air strikes in the war between army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan and RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

Others have been kidnapped, sometimes for ransom of up to 30 million Sudanese pounds (around $54,545), according to a report by the Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA).

A relatively lucky few have been freed, sometimes left by the side of the road after days, weeks or months of captivity.

 

Invisible victims 

 

The Sudanese Association for Victims of Forced Disappearance said it had filed “reports of 430 disappearances during the war”.

It has given the names of missing men, women and children to police stations in Wad Madani, a town 200 kilometres  south of Khartoum where many of the displaced have fled.

“According to survivors, these abductions are the work of the RSF,” Othman Al Basri, a lawyer with the association, told AFP.

SIHA has also collected testimonies from women who say they were kidnapped by paramilitaries and forced to cook for them or wash their clothes.

“We have so far counted 31 missing women and girls,” the group told AFP in a written statement.

“But we think the real number is much, much higher. Families avoid reporting cases of missing women, for fear of stigma.”

In the back of everyone’s mind is the same fear: That the disappeared have been subjected to the sexual violence that has been rampant in both the current and past Sudanese conflicts.

Since April 15, the governmental Combatting Violence against Women and Children Unit has recorded 108 sexual assaults in Khartoum and the western region of Darfur.

The unit stresses that the true number, like overall casualty figures, may be far higher, as their count includes only those who have received treatment and chosen to report the assaults.

Many more are thought to be suffering at home in silence.

 

Dead or alive? 

 

Most Sudanese hospitals are out of service, and police have mostly disappeared from the streets as their stations have been attacked and looted by the RSF.

Families have turned to resistance committees, the neighbourhood groups that used to organise pro-democracy demonstrations and which now provide assistance.

Sometimes they help dig out survivors from the rubble of bombed buildings, at other times activists have stood up to RSF fighters wo have been accused of terrorising neighbourhoods and looting property.

On July 3, civilians successfully stopped two young women from being abducted by RSF fighters, the Al Halfaya committee in Khartoum said.

In other cases, relatives and neighbours secured the release of four girls abducted in three separate incidents, the committee said.

Far from the capital, women and girls have also been reported missing in Darfur and the states of Sennar and White Nile.

“My daughter Najwa Mohammed Adam is 16 years old — we haven’t heard from her in 45 days,” said Halima Haroun, speaking to AFP from Chad after fleeing the West Darfur capital of El Geneina.

“We don’t know anything about her, if she’s dead or alive.”

A paramilitary source, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied accusations of abductions, saying “the RSF is not holding anyone.”

The source added that the RSF “is only holding one person, and that is because he is accused of a crime”.

 

Migrants between life and death in Tunisia-Libya desert

UN warns of ‘unfolding tragedy’ of migrants, refugees, asylum seekers in Tunisia’s border regions

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

A migrant of African origin collapses upon his arrival in an uninhabited area near Al-Assah on the Libya-Tunisia border, on Monday (AFP photo)

AL-'ASSAH, Libya — In the unbearable midday heat, a Libyan patrol near the border with Tunisia comes across a black African man collapsed on the reddish-brown desert sand.

He is barely breathing, and officers try to revive him, gently, with a few drops of water on his lips.

The man is just one among hundreds of migrants arriving daily in Libya after being abandoned in the desert borderland by Tunisian security forces, according to Libyan border guards and the migrants themselves.

By the time they reach Libya, the migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa are ready to drop from exhaustion, in temperatures that have exceeded 40°C.

AFP on Sunday witnessed the border guards rescue around 100 men and women from an uninhabited zone near Sebkhat Al Magta, a salt lake along the Libya-Tunisia border.

In the distant shimmering heat haze, six figures emerge, the latest to reach the area. They speak Arabic and say they have come from Tunisia.

Libyan border guards told AFP that, over the past two weeks, they have rescued hundreds of migrants who said they were left by Tunisian authorities in the border region near Al Assah, about 150 kilometres west of Tripoli.

In early July, hundreds of migrants from Sub-Saharan African countries were driven out of the Tunisian port city of Sfax as racial tensions flared following the death of a Tunisian man in a clash between locals and migrants.

 

Tunisians 'brought 

me here' 

 

Haitham Yahiya, from Sudan, said he worked for a year in Tunisia's construction sector after reaching the country clandestinely through Niger and Algeria.

"I was at work when they caught me and brought me here, first in a police car then in a [security forces] truck. Then they left me and told me to go to Libya," he said in Al-Assah.

At its closest point, near Sfax, Tunisia is only about 130 kilometres from the Italian island of Lampedusa. 

The North African country is a major gateway for migrants and asylum-seekers attempting perilous sea voyages in hopes of a better life in Europe, whose leaders have offered financial aid to help Tunisia manage the flow.

Human Rights Watch said up to 1,200 black Africans were "expelled, or forcibly transferred by Tunisian security forces" in July to the country's desert border regions with Libya and Algeria.

In mid-July, the Tunisian Red Crescent said it had provided shelter to at least 630 migrants who had been taken after July 3 to Ras Jedir, about 40 kilometres north of Al Assah.

A few days later, though, AFP gathered testimony from hundreds of migrants still stuck in the Ras Jedir buffer zone. They said they had been forced there by Tunisian security forces.

In Ras Jedir, 350 people remained in a makeshift camp, including 65 children and 12 pregnant women.

"Their living conditions are very problematic," a humanitarian official told AFP, adding that "it is not sustainable in the long term, there are no toilets, no water tanks, no real shelters".

At Al Assah, dazed migrants continue to stagger in, some with only sandals on their feet.

In twos and threes or by the dozens, they come. Some collapse. The guards hold bottles of water over their parched mouths.

Faced with the influx, Libyans from the border guards Battalion 19 of the army, and a unit against Saharan immigration, have been patrolling daily.

"We are on the demarcation line between Libya and Tunisia and we see more and more migrants arriving every day," said Ali Wali, Battalion 19 spokesman.

He said AFP received permission to accompany the units "to silence those [in Tunisia] who claim that we fabricated it all and brought the migrants here".

Their patrol area covers 15 kilometres around Al Assah. Wali said that depending on the day, they might find "150, 200, 350, sometimes as many as 400 or 500 irregular migrants".

On this day there are 110, two of them women. There are supposed to be two others. A soldier searches for them through his binoculars.

 

At least 17 dead 

 

On Thursday, a joint statement from United Nations agencies referred to the "unfolding tragedy" of migrants, refugees and asylum seekers in Tunisia's border regions.

"They are stuck in the desert, facing extreme heat, and without access to shelter, food or water. There is an urgent need to provide critical, life-saving humanitarian assistance while urgent, humane solutions are found," they said.

The UN has also singled out Libya in several reports in the past, denouncing violence against the 600,000 migrants it detains, most of them in camps.

The government of Tripoli has made it known in recent days that it rejects "resettlement" on its territory of migrants arriving from Tunisia.

The migrants, meanwhile, have crossed the border unknowingly. They walk, they said, in the direction that the Tunisian security forces told them to go — towards Libya.

As a heatwave has suffocated the Mediterranean, some like Alexander Unche Okole said they had walked for two days, without food or water.

Okole, 41, from Nigeria, said he entered Tunisia via Debdeb in Algeria, and "spent some time in Tunis but then the Tunisian police got me. They arrested me in the street and then took me down to the Sahara desert".

He showed a mobile phone whose screen was smashed, he said, by the Tunisians.

"With the Grace of God, the Libyans rescued me" and provided food and water, Okole said.

He survived but others have not.

Wali said officers found two bodies on Saturday, a couple of days after recovering five more including a woman and her baby. They had also discovered five corpses a week earlier, he said.

"How do you expect them to survive? The heat, no water, and a march of two, three days?" Wali asked.

Humanitarian groups in Libya reached by AFP gave a death toll of at least 17 over the past three weeks.

UAE vows to allow ‘peaceful’ assembly of climate activists at COP28

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

A handout image provided by the United Arab Emirates News Agency shows the UAE’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and COP28 President-Designate Sultan Bin Ahmed Al Jaber and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell during a signing ceremony of the Host Country Agreement in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday (AFP photo)

DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates said on Tuesday it would allow environmental activists to “assemble peacefully” at this year’s UN climate talks, despite a prohibition on unauthorised protests in the Gulf state.

The oil-rich UAE, set to host COP28 from November to December in the business hub of Dubai, requires official permission for protests but effectively bans demonstrations it deems disruptive.

At the upcoming UN climate talks “there will be space available for climate activists to assemble peacefully and make their voices heard”, it said.

The announcement was made in a joint statement with the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) released on Tuesday and published by the UAE’s official WAM news agency.

The statement was released after COP28 President Sultan Al Jaber and UNFCCC chief Simon Stiell signed a bilateral agreement in Abu Dhabi that provides the legal basis for organising and hosting the climate talks.

“We are firmly committed to ensuring that UN values are upheld at COPs,” the statement quoted Stiell as saying.

Tuesday’s announcement was welcomed by campaign group Climate Action Network International which commended “the COP28 Presidency for their dedicated efforts towards fostering an inclusive climate summit”.

But it warned that it would “resist any attempts to curtail [civil society] participation”, according to Harjeet Singh, its head of global political strategy.

“Our unwavering conviction is clear: there can be no climate justice without human rights,” Singh told AFP.

 

‘Rights record’ 

 

The UAE is a major oil producer and one of the world’s largest emitters of CO2 per capita.

The choice for it to host COP28 has sparked criticism from environmental groups which warn that the involvement of a major oil exporter could slow progress in the fight against global warming.

Non-government groups including Human Rights Watch have also warned that the Gulf state’s restrictions on freedom of expression could hinder the meaningful participation of climate activists.

“Civil society actors will struggle to effectively play their role in pushing for ambitious action to address the climate crisis in a country whose government has such an abysmal human rights record,” HRW warned in a March report.

Large protests have been common at most previous COPs, and limited rallies were allowed at the last UN climate talks in Egypt, where authorities regularly crack down on demonstrations and detain activists.

The COP27 Egypt host faced criticism over restrictions that made for a tight protest space, where activists had to request accreditation 36 hours in advance, and provide detailed information on the organisers and on the protest.

Approved demonstrations were allowed only during certain hours, and in a specific purpose-built area that saw a heavy security presence.

It was a far cry from COP26 in Glasgow, where tens of thousands of demonstrators from all over the world marched to demand “climate justice”.

 

Two-day holiday in Iran over extreme heat

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

TEHRAN — Iran on Tuesday declared a two-day holiday for government workers and banks nationwide as searing temperatures sweep across the country, state media reported.

The decision came after the meteorological office forecast temperatures exceeding 40oC in many cities, and hovering around 50 degrees Celsius in the southwest.

State broadcaster IRIB has said many cities including in the provinces of Ilam, Bushehr, and Khuzestan have seen temperatures rise above 45oC in recent days.

“The Cabinet agreed to the health ministry proposal to declare Wednesday and Thursday public holidays all over the country to protect public health,” the official IRNA news agency quoted government spokesman Ali Bahadori Jahromi as saying.

IRNA said the decision was taken because of what it described as an “unprecedented” heatwave across the country.

According to IRIB, Dehloran city in western Iran recorded the highest temperature of 50oC in Iran over the past 24 hours.

It added that temperatures were expected to rise in the north as well, including in the city of Ardabil as well as at the southern shores of the Caspian Sea.

The health ministry has warned of the risks of heatstroke from over-exposure to the sun, and urged people to stay indoors between 10:00 am and 4:00 pm.

Health ministry spokesman Pedram Pakain described the number of heat-related illnesses in recent days as “alarming”.

In June, Iran changed summer working hours for government employees who now start earlier, in order to save electricity in offices when temperatures peak.

The south-eastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan has been among the hardest hit by the heatwave.

Around 1,000 people have received hospital treatment there in recent days because of rising temperatures and dust storms, IRNA said.

The region has long faced severe water shortages, which triggered protests on Monday over an upstream dam in neighbouring Afghanistan restricting water flow, the Tasnim news agency said.

Iran, with a population of more than 85 million, is among the countries most vulnerable to climate change and the rise in global temperatures.

Like nearby countries, it has suffered extreme dry spells and heatwaves for years, which are expected to worsen as climate change continues.

It has also endured repeated droughts as well as regular flooding, a phenomenon made worse when torrential rain falls on sun-baked earth.

 

UN reports 11 killed as clashes rock Lebanon Palestinian camp

By - Aug 02,2023 - Last updated at Aug 02,2023

Smoke billows during clashes at the northern edge of the Ain Al Helweh camp for Palestinian refugees, in Lebanon's southern coastal city of Sidon, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

SIDON, Lebanon — Three days of fighting in south Lebanon's Ain Al Helweh Palestinian refugee camp have left at least 11 dead and dozens wounded, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Monday.

Clashes broke out over the weekend between members of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' secular Fateh movement and Islamists based in the camp, Lebanon's largest located in the coastal city of Sidon.

Renewed gunfire and shelling on Monday shook the camp, said an AFP correspondent in Sidon, sending frightened residents fleeing.

"According to reports, 11 were killed and another 40 were injured, including one staff member" of UNRWA, said Dorothee Klaus, the UN agency's director in Lebanon.

She added in a statement that UNRWA has "temporarily suspended" operations in the camp due to the fighting.

Palestinian factions said they had agreed on a truce on Sunday but it did not hold, with fighting continuing with automatic weapons and rocket fire.

Officials said five Fateh members and one Islamist had been killed in the initial violence over the weekend.

There was no immediate word on the identities of the other fatalities.

“UNRWA urgently calls on all parties to immediately return to calm and take all measures necessary to protect civilians, including children,” Klaus said.

The statement noted that “two UNRWA schools have sustained damaged” and more than 2,000 Ain Al Helweh residents had been forced to flee.

An AFP correspondent on Monday morning saw dozens of people, mostly women and children, leaving the camp carrying light luggage, while others took refuge in a nearby mosque.

Shells also fell outside the camp, AFP journalists said, with a nearby hospital evacuating patients and shops in Sidon closing fearing further escalation.

By long-standing convention, the Lebanese army does not enter Palestinian refugee camps in the country, now bustling but impoverished urban districts, leaving the factions themselves to handle security.

“We fled from the scene of the fighting, shells are raining in the streets,” a 75-year-old woman told AFP, requesting anonymity for security concerns.

She said armed factions were carrying weapons “to fight Israel, not to fight each other and become displaced”.

Ain Al Helweh, now home to more than 54,000 registered refugees, was created for Palestinians who were driven out or fled during the 1948 war that coincided with Israel’s creation.

In recent years, they have been joined by thousands of Palestinians who had been living in Syria and fled the war there.

Palestinian armed groups in Lebanon rarely confront Israel nowadays, but fighting between rival factions is common in Ain Al Helweh.

The latest violence began late Saturday, killing an Islamist and injuring six others, a Palestinian source inside the camp had told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

The next day, a Fateh military leader and four of his colleagues were killed during a “heinous operation”, the group said.

Tiny Lebanon hosts an estimated 250,000 Palestinian refugees, according to UNRWA.

Most Palestinians, including more than 30,000 who fled the war in neighbouring Syria after 2011, live in one of Lebanon’s 12 official camps, and face a variety of legal restrictions, including on employment.

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