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More than 350 million adults have type 2 diabetes — report

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

DOHA — More than 350 million adults around the world live with type 2 diabetes, a figure that is expected to increase by 10 per cent in 2035 if the same trends continue, according to a report launched Tuesday.

The report, titled “Rising to the Challenge: Preventing and Managing Type 2 Diabetes”, said that at a global level, type 2 diabetes is one of the major challenges facing policymakers today.

As the challenge is recognised by the UN General Assembly, the WHO and the World Economic Forum, the report called for collective commitment to prevent diabetes and improve the quality of life of the people who suffer from it.

According to the report, launched at the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) 2015 in Doha, the challenge is universal because it affects everyone.

However, the risk will be higher in developing countries, according to the study, which added that they currently have lower healthcare expenditures but will record the fastest growth rates in diabetes prevalence.

Speaking at a session on diabetes, Stephen Colagiuri — professor of Metabolic Health at the Institute of Obesity, Nutrition and Exercise at University of Sydney — said every 10 minutes, 300 people are diagnosed with diabetes around the world, and the treatment cost is $15 million.

Colagiuri, and other health experts taking part in the session, urged decision makers to make diabetes a national health priority.

The report called on policy makers to improve disease management for people with diabetes, establish effective surveillance to identify and support those at risk of type 2 diabetes and to introduce a range of interventions that help create an environment focused on prevention.

At the opening of the two-day summit, Sheikha Moza Bint Nasser, chairperson of Qatar Foundation and Founder of WISH said: “The WISH conference helps change our global health reality towards achieving a greater ambition of providing quality health coverage for all.”

“We cannot overcome our healthcare challenges unless we begin to invest in solutions that link health and education, as they are intrinsically connected.  Innovation in education leads us to innovation in health. It is our wish to promote the causes of both access to basic primary education and universal health coverage,” she added.

The Doha summit is taking place with the participation of 1,000 world leaders, policy makers and healthcare experts to discuss new and ground-breaking solutions to the most urgent global health challenges.

Libyan plane returns to Tripoli after Egypt closes airspace

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

CAIRO — A Libyan commercial plane bound for Istanbul was forced to return to Tripoli on Tuesday after Egypt banned overflying its airspace, airport and airline sources said.

There was no immediate comment from Egypt which launched air strikes on Monday on suspected targets of Daesh in Libya, a day after the group released a video showing the beheading of Egyptian Coptic Christians.

The ban will push Libya, battling to contain a violent power struggle, further into isolation as Turkey was one of last countries where Libyan airlines were still flying to. Foreign carriers have left the oil producer.

Libyan airlines flying to Turkey need to cross Egyptian airspace to avoid Cyprus as the European Union has imposed an overfly ban for security reasons.

The Libyan Airline plane took off for Istanbul from Tripoli's Matiga Airport but returned after Egypt informed the carrier that it was not allowed to enter Egyptian airspace, the airline and airport said on their websites.

Morocco earlier said it had suspended all flights between Moroccan cities and Libya for security concerns.

Foreign airlines stopped flying to Libya last July when a faction called Libya Dawn attacked a rival group controlling Tripoli's main airport, taking control of the capital after a months of fighting. The airport and some 20 planes were damaged during the fighting, officials have said.

Turkish Airlines briefly returned last year to fly to Misrata, east of Tripoli. But it halted flights last month due to repeated attacks on the airport, part of a struggle between the rival factions that have fought for power since the overthrow of Muammar Qadhafi in 2011.

World Food Programme to maintain Yemen operations

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

ROME — The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) said Tuesday it would maintain operations in Yemen despite mounting insecurity which has forced the withdrawal of western diplomats from the troubled country.

“In these difficult times, WFP’s role becomes even more important,” WFP’s Yemen Director Purnima Kashyap said in a reference to the chaos that has engulfed Yemen since a Shiite militia overran the capital Sanaa in September.

The aid body calculates that 40 per cent of Yemenis are short of reliable food supplies with some five million people already facing what the organisation termed a “severe” risk of hunger or malnutrition.

“And the current upheavals are certain to hit the poorest and most vulnerable hardest,” Kashyap added.

WFP reached one million people in January through local partners, it said.

These included hundreds of thousands of people who have fled their homes because of the conflict.

WFP said it planned to start a school feeding programme and provide take-home rations to some 115,000 girls regularly attending school.

Kashyap appealed to donors to continue their support for the WFP’s activities in Yemen, saying they needed $146 million for the next 12 months.

“The crisis has been further exacerbated by continuing clashes in the south,” Kashyap added. “WFP is concerned about the many displaced by the fighting and those who could be displaced if it does not stop.”

Iraq tells United Nations that Daesh committed genocide

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

UNITED NATIONS — Iraq told the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday that Daesh militants have committed genocide.

"These terrorist groups have desecrated all human values. They have committed the most heinous criminal terrorist acts against the Iraqi people whether Shiite, Sunni, Christians, Turkmen, Shabak or Yazidis," Iraq's UN Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim said.

"These are in fact crimes of genocide committed against humanity that must be held accountable before international justice," he told the UN Security Council.

Alhakim did not give further details of the crimes.

The country's Shiite-led government, backed by US-led air strikes, has been trying to push back Daesh since it swept through mainly Sunni Muslim provinces of northern Iraq in June. At the time, the militants met virtually no resistance.

Alhakim said Iraq needed more help to liberate all areas under Daesh control.

UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights Ivan Simonovic said in October that the campaign of Daesh militants against Iraq’s Yazidi minority may be attempted genocide.

UN envoy to Iraq, Nikolay Mladenov, said he was gravely concerned about the safety of Iraq’s diverse ethnic and religious communities in areas under Daesh control, particularly thousands of women and children still in captivity.

“Almost daily terrorist attacks continue to deliberately target all Iraqis, most notably the Shiite community, as well as ethnic and religious minorities, across the country,” he told the Security Council.

“Equally worrying is the increasing number of reports of revenge attacks committed particularly against members of the Sunni community in areas liberated from [Daesh]control,” he said.

Mladenov urged the Iraqi government to quickly provide military and financial help it had pledged to local leaders and tribal fighters to take on Daesh, but warned against just a military solution.

“For Iraq to move forward, it is crucial that this fragile process of inclusion also expands to the political sphere,” Mladenov said. “An exclusively military solution to the problem of [Daesh] is impossible, indeed it would be counterproductive.”

Military chiefs in Saudi Arabia for anti-Daesh talks

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

RIYADH — Military chiefs from around the world will gather in the Saudi capital on Wednesday to assess the battle against Daesh extremists, diplomatic sources said.

The two-day meeting, a followup to earlier talks, will gather "all the countries that are involved" in the United States-led fight against Daesh, including Gulf nations, one of the sources said.

"I think it'll be sort of a general appraisal of where we're at, what needs to be done," added the source, who asked for anonymity.

Another diplomatic source said the meeting is "more an exchange of information" and a chance for coordination, rather than a forum for major decisions.

The talks among defence chiefs and their deputies coincide with the rise of Daesh in Libya, which has heightened concerns in the region after the group seized parts of Iraq and Syria last year.

Arab states have intensified their bombing of Daesh targets since the jihadists in early February claimed to have burned alive the Jordanian fighter pilot Mauth Kassasbeh, whose plane went down over Syria last year.

Jordan’s information minister on Monday said Bahrain had deployed fighter jets in the Kingdom to support the anti-Daesh air campaign.

Also Monday, the state news agency in the United Arab Emirates said its Jordanian-based warplanes hit oil refineries run by the jihadists.

The same day, Egypt carried out its first announced military action against Daesh in Libya, after the militants released a video showing the beheading of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians.

Regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia has since September been participating in the air strikes against Daesh in Syria.

The Pentagon announced last month that the first of nearly 1,000 US military personnel would soon begin deploying to Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar.

They will train moderate Syrian rebels to take on Daesh.

Among Western nations, Australia, Belgium, Britain, Canada, Denmark, France and the Netherlands have carried out air strikes against Daesh in Iraq, alongside the United States.

Germany said in December it would send about 100 soldiers to northern Iraq to train Kurdish peshmerga fighters battling the extremists.

Kurdish militants demand progress from Turkey or say peace talks may end

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

ISTANBUL — Kurdish militants demanded concrete steps from Turkey to advance a fragile peace process on Tuesday, accusing the ruling AK Party of stalling and warning that the negotiations could break down.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu responded with a call for the rebels to declare they have renounced armed struggle — a key government demand to advance talks before a June general election.

There has been speculation in recent weeks that jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan would call an end to a conflict which has killed 40,000 people over three decades and stunted development in Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast.

But his Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) said on Tuesday that the AK Party was creating "false perceptions" and needed to show it was sincere.

"Concrete steps should be taken by the AK Party. Otherwise the peace process is at a very critical and dangerous stage, and near ending," it said in a statement.

The government launched talks with Ocalan, who is in jail on an island near Istanbul, in 2012. Ocalan subsequently declared a ceasefire by the PKK, designated a terrorist group by Ankara, the United States and European Union, and its fighters began withdrawing to camps in northern Iraq where it is based.

Those involved in the talks remain tight-lipped on details, fearful of undermining prospects of a final deal. Kurds have been pushing for Ocalan's release, an amnesty for fighters and steps towards autonomy.

Failure to strike a deal could cause problems for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who needs the AK Party he founded to secure a large majority in a national election in June to push through plans for an executive presidency.

Davutoglu said the process was at a critical stage and those involved should be more careful about their words and deeds.

"We all have the right to expect a declaration that armed struggle has been renounced," he told reporters during a visit to Pakistan, in comments broadcast live on Turkish television.

 

Battle in parliament

 

Thousands of Kurds rallied in towns across the southeast on Sunday, the 16th anniversary of Ocalan's capture, some clashing with riot police as they called for his release.

Some close to the peace process have said unrest in the southeast suggests the PKK is flexing its muscles as it looks to stamp its authority on the mainly Kurdish region.

Ankara's hopes of a complete end to the PKK as an armed group have been frustrated by the role it has carved out for itself fighting in Syria and Iraq against Daesh militants.

Battle lines have also been drawn in parliament over planned new security legislation, which would boost police powers. The PKK and the pro-Kurdish HDP have called for it to be withdrawn.

Media reports have said a peace plan drafted by Ocalan was set to be announced, a condition he set for an end to hostilities and the withdrawal of PKK fighters from Turkey.

Speaking in parliament, HDP joint leader Selahattin Demirtas accused the government of only focusing on disarmament and shying away from disclosing 10 articles on issues such as democratisation and freedoms.

Ocalan's plan includes improvements in his jail conditions, government pledges to push through political reforms, establishing a body to monitor negotiations and an amnesty for sick PKK convicts, media say.

Abdulkadir Selvi, a columnist at the pro-government Yeni Safak newspaper, said PKK commanders in northern Iraq's Qandil mountains had blocked the announcement of Ocalan's disarmament call.

"Qandil is thus pushing the PKK leader into a position where he has no power of sanction and limited say over the group," Selvi wrote on Tuesday.

Bahrain launches criminal investigation against main opposition group

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

MANAMA — Bahrain has opened a criminal investigation of the country's main opposition group, the interior ministry said on Tuesday, accusing Al Wefaq group of trying to undermine national security.

Bahrain, a Western-allied kingdom and the base for the US Fifth Fleet, has been gripped by tension since security forces quelled protests by Shiite Muslims in 2011. The Shiites, who form a majority in the country, are demanding reforms and a better share in government.

The interior ministry said on its website that its general directorate of anti-corruption and economic and electronic security had referred Al Wefaq to the public prosecutor after it documented violations that represent "criminal offences" under Bahraini laws.

It said these violations, published on Al Wefaq's Twitter account and on its website, included "incitement to hatred against the ruling system and circulating false news to undermine civil peace and national security”.

An Al Wefaq spokesman said the group had no details about the case.

"No one has been contacted or notified about a case against the society," Sayed Taher Al Mousawi, head of Al Wefaq's media department, told Reuters.

A rights activist said the move was motivated by political considerations.

"We do not believe at all that such actions have any basis rather than political grounds," said Nader Al Salatna, acting president of Bahrain Youth Society, a local rights group.

Bahrain has stepped up a crackdown on Al Wefaq after the group and other, smaller opposition parties boycotted elections held in November and organised street protests to show their opposition to the poll.

Last month, Al Wefaq's head, Sheikh Ali Salman, regarded as the country's senior opposition leader, went on trial on charges of promoting the violent overthrow of the political system. The case has riled his followers and heightened unrest in the Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab state.

Earlier this week, an appeals court upheld a six-month prison sentence against Jameel Kadhim, a former parliament member and president of Al Wefaq's consultative council. He was charged with making false allegations that undermined national elections.

Al Wefaq says it is seeking political reforms through peaceful means, including having governments chosen from within an elected parliament. The government says it has implemented wide reforms, including giving parliament powers to oversee government work.

Jobless and desperate, Egyptians risk all in perilous Libya

By - Feb 17,2015 - Last updated at Feb 17,2015

AL OUR, Egypt — Facing grim economic prospects at home, desperate young Egyptians are seeking jobs in Libya — a country sliding into lawlessness where armed groups battle for control and dozens of their compatriots have been kidnapped.

Tackling unemployment in Egypt — where half of the rapidly growing population is under 25 — is one of the toughest challenges facing President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi.

He rules a country that has seen two presidents deposed in the past four years. The 2011 popular uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak was fuelled in part by anger over joblessness.

Affording a home and getting married is still difficult under Sisi for many young men unable to make a living.

The political and social unrest since Mubarak was ousted has scared foreign investors and tourists away from Egypt, the world's most populous Arab nation with 90 million people. This has exacerbated the job crisis, and the unemployment rate has climbed from 8.9 per cent to 13 per cent in that time.

Thousands of Egyptians have travelled to neighbouring Libya in search of work since 2011, despite their government advising against going to one of the most dangerous countries in the region.

Desperate for work, Egyptians, many from impoverished villages in the south where underdevelopment has been a problem for years, flock to Libya despite the dangers. It started during the 1969-2011 rule of Muammar Qadhafi when Libya was more stable and allowed them to establish communities and networks that they have been tapping into since, despite the increased risks.

They can be seen working on building sites, in factories, restaurants and shops in cities across Libya even as it has descended into chaos since a revolt toppled Qadhafi four years ago and where two rival governments vie for power.

Some Libyan oil fields continue to produce crude for export despite the near anarchy, though Egyptian migrants are not to known to have jobs in this highly skilled sector.

In the Egyptian village of Al Our, about 200km south of Cairo, it is easy to see why young men take the risk.

There are no paved roads, clean drinking water or adequate healthcare — the kind of conditions that have driven young men to give up on the state and join militant groups in the past.

Jobless men sit beside a canal filled with stinking, stagnant water.

Samuel Alham lived with his wife and three children, his three siblings and their children, and his elderly parents in a small cement house. Like many young Egyptians, he dreamed of one day buying a small plot of land to build his own home.

The 30-year-old's decision to go to Libya to work as a plumber was costly. In December, he was kidnapped on his way back to Egypt.

He was one of the 21 Egyptians whom Daesh militants beheaded, according to a video released earlier this week, and which prompted Egypt to carry out an air strike on militant targets in Libya on Monday.

 

'How can people eat?'

 

"I want my son. He went to support his children. He did nothing wrong," said Alham's weeping mother, when Reuters spoke to her in January, a few weeks before the video was released.

He was among 27 Egyptians — low-paid workers — who had been abducted in Libya since August, 13 of them in January alone.

Militants claiming allegiance to Daesh, the group that has seized swathes of Iraq and Syria, said they were responsible for the kidnappings of 21 of the "crusaders". The fate of the remaining six is unknown.

On Monday, thousands of traumatised mourners gathered at the Coptic Church in Al Our, struggling to come to terms with the fate of their compatriots, 13 of whom were from Al Our.

Al Our is in Minya Province, a traditional bastion of the Muslim Brotherhood. Sisi has cracked down hard on the Brotherhood since, as army chief, he toppled President Mohamed Morsi — a top Brotherhood figure — in 2013 after mass protests against Morsi's rule.

The government has said it plans to invest in Minya, which was also a hotbed of militancy under Mubarak in the 1990s, and other parts of southern Egypt after decades of neglect.

But just outside Al Our, cars with Libyan licence plates are a reminder of the tough decisions forced on its residents.

Abanob Ayyad, in his early 20s, was unable to make ends meet or support his younger siblings, let alone save money to buy an apartment so he could get married.

So he tried his luck in Libya, as a construction labourer.

The funds Ayyad sent home to pay for his brother and sister's college education ended abruptly in January when militants stormed his home in the Libyan city of Sirte and dragged him away along with 12 other Egyptian labourers.

He too, like 20 other compatriots, was marched to sea, forced to kneel and decapitated by Daesh.

"There is no work that can help here. How can people spend, eat, learn?" his mother Aziza Younan told Reuters in January.

"The country does not help them or treat them fairly... what can they do?"

 

Flight into unknown

 

At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, Sisi said Egypt aimed to lower unemployment to 10 per cent by 2020. He has announced major infrastructure projects such as a second Suez Canal and major roadworks designed to create jobs.

But those promises have yet to stir hope in villages like Al Our.

"I have made all attempts to get a job for my son, either in the government or the private sector, but in vain," said Bushra Shehata, whose son has been looking for a job since graduating from college nine years ago.

"People need connections to get a job," he added, echoing a common complaint made under successive Egyptian leaders.

But across town, more and more Egyptians lined up to buy tickets at Libyan Airlines offices.

One of them, a furniture painter who came back from Libya five months ago hoping for work in Egypt, said he had no choice but to return despite the growing risks.

Heavily armed gunmen stormed a luxury hotel in Tripoli favoured by Libyan officials and visiting delegations on January 27, killing at least nine people, including foreigners, before blowing themselves up with a grenade.

"We are going and it is God who is protecting us," said the painter, before rushing to the airline ticket counter when his number was called.

Egyptian security officials would like their countrymen to return home but acknowledge many need to stay in Libya to support their families — and others are still likely to go.

"We expect more of these killings," a security official told Reuters.

Chad begins US-backed military exercise as warm-up for Boko Haram

By - Feb 16,2015 - Last updated at Feb 16,2015

N’DJAMENA — Chad launched a US-backed counter-terrorism exercise on Monday with 1,300 soldiers from 28 African and Western countries, billing it as a warm-up for an offensive against Nigeria’s Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram.

The “Flintlock” manoeuvres unfolded as Chad and four neighbouring states prepare a task force to take on Boko Haram, the biggest security threat to Africa’s top oil producer Nigeria and an increasing concern to countries bordering it.

The Sunni jihadist group killed an estimated 10,000 people last year in its drive to create an Islamic emirate in northern Nigeria.

Boko Haram has escalated cross-border attacks in recent weeks in the Lake Chad area, where Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger meet. On Monday, it attacked a Cameroon military camp.

The annual exercises, which began in 2005, aim to improve cross-border military cooperation in the Sahel, a region prey to Al Qaeda-linked and home-grown Islamists, separatist insurgents and criminal gangs.

Forces loyal to president seize parts of Yemen’s economic hub

By - Feb 16,2015 - Last updated at Feb 16,2015

ADEN — Forces loyal to Yemen's president said they had seized strategic buildings in the southern city of Aden on Monday after a five-hour battle, escalating a civil conflict threatening to split the country in two.

The militias supporting Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi wrested parts of Yemen's economic hub from security forces allied to the Houthi movement, including its main power station and intelligence headquarters, sources said.

The country's north is dominated by the Shiite Muslim Houthis, who completed a takeover of the capital Sanaa last month. In the south, forces loyal to Hadi and separatists aiming to restore the former South Yemen appear to be in charge.

UN Yemen envoy Jamal Benomar tweeted on Monday that he had visited Hadi, who is still under house arrest at his residence.

Benomar said he had briefed Hadi on the UN Security Council resolution adopted on Sunday calling for an end to his house arrest and that of his government.

The United Nations Security Council on Sunday urged the Houthis to quit government institutions, threatening further steps if the violence does not stop.

Minister of Information Nadia Al Sakkaf tweeter that she had also visited Hadi on Monday, adding he had a heart condition and was "quite ill".

The Houthis forced Hadi to resign during their takeover, but he remains de jure president. They tried to dissolve the assembly two weeks ago, but its largest group, the General People's Congress Party (GPC), objected.

The GPC said on Monday it had withdrawn its objection, boosting chances of a consensus in multi-party talks on picking a new national administration.

Violence has escalated recently, filling the political vacuum left in January when the Houthis seized the presidential palace and forced Prime Minister Khaled Bahah’s government to resign.

Tens of thousands of Yemenis demonstrated in several cities on Saturday against Houthi rule as clashes between Houthis and Sunnis in a southern region left 26 dead.

In clashes overnight, sources in the Popular Committees of Aden, run by Hadi’s brother, Nasser, said they had also taken Aden’s television station and the administrative building of its free trade zone, with the loss of three fighters.

The Popular Committees confirmed several government buildings had been taken. Aden’s governor, Abdel Aziz Bin Habtour, confirmed the clashes but denied Hadi loyalists had taken over the television station.

“The situation is under control and what has happened is being dealt with,” a defence ministry website quoted him as saying.

Turkey becoming the latest country to withdraw its diplomats from Sanaa on Monday, following the closure of the embassies of the United States, major European nations and Saudi Arabia in recent weeks.

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