Archive for ‘Climate Crisis’

13/10/2020

16 Ways to Take Action on Climate

Human Wrongs Watch

12 October 2020 (UN Environment)* — Looking for easy and simple ways to make high-impact, achievable steps to reduce your carbon pollution and persuade others to do the same? Here are 16 actions:

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These actions, derived from experts and research by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) alongside others, are featured as part the Count Us In campaign, a diverse coalition of culture, faith, sport, cities and businesses.

Organizers hope the activities and support of the partners will inspire one billion people to take practical steps to reduce carbon pollution and challenge leaders to act more boldly on climate.

Individual action can make a significant impact. Count Us In organizers estimate that if 1 billion people take practical action in their own lives, they could reduce as much as 20 per cent of global carbon emissions.

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13/10/2020

‘Staggering’ Rise in Climate Emergencies in Last 20 Years, New Disaster Research Shows

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — The first 20 years of this century have seen a “staggering” rise in climate disasters, UN researchers said on Monday [12 October 2020], while also maintaining that “almost all nations” have failed to prevent a “wave of death and illness” caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

13/10/2020

State of Climate Services 2020 Report: Move from Early Warnings to Early Action

Human Wrongs Watch

Geneva, 13 October 2020 (World Meteorological Organization)* —  Over the past 50 years, more than 11,000 disasters have been attributed to weather, climate and water-related hazards, involving 2 million deaths and US$ 3.6 trillion in economic losses.

12/10/2020

Gendering Agriculture so Women Take the Lead in Feeding Africa

Human Wrongs Watch

IBADAN, Nigeria, Oct 12 2020 (IPS)* – Africa’s hopes of feeding a population projected to double by 2050 amidst a worsening climate crisis rest on huge investments in agriculture, including creating the conditions so that women can empower themselves and lead efforts to transform the continent’s farming landscape.

Rhoda Tumusiime

As we celebrate the 2020 International Year of Rural Women, Africa needs to reflect more on the role women play in food and nutrition security, land and water management.

Also, the impact of COVID-19 on women’s capacity to provide food for their families and care for their loved ones underscores the importance of strengthening their capacities by designing gender responsive actions.

We know the world has the technology and resources to eradicate hunger but finding the right policies and the will to implement them often elude us.

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12/10/2020

Rural Women Play a Crucial Role in Agriculture, Food Security and Nutrition, Land and Natural Resource Management, and Rural Enterprises. However…

Human Wrongs Watch

12 October 2020 (UN Women)*This year on International Day of Rural Women (15 October), the spotlight is on the urgent need for Building rural women’s resilience in the wake of COVID-19, for “building back better” by strengthening rural women’s sustainable livelihoods and wellbeing.

Women in Bangladesh work while wearing masks. Photo: UN Women/Fahad Kaizer

Photo: UN Women/Fahad Kaizer

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12/10/2020

‘It Is All about Governance’ – International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction:

Scene of devastation - houses destroyed.

The Connecting Business initiative (CBi), supported by OCHA and UNDP, is a coordinated network of local business responding to disasters, such as Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas in 2019. PHOTO:UN Photo/OCHA/Mark Garten

COVID-19 and the climate emergency are telling us that we need clear vision, plans and competent, empowered institutions acting on scientific evidence for the public good.

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11/10/2020

Q&A: ‘Before the pandemic, refugee mental health was severely overlooked. Now it’s a full-blown crisis’

Human Wrongs Watch

By Tim Gaynor*

UNHCR’s Senior Mental Health Officer Pieter Ventevogel says COVID-19 has been a tipping point for many refugees in distress. But with the crisis comes an opportunity. Español   |  Français

5f7e13dd4A South Sudanese refugee sits outside his shelter in Uganda’s Bidibidi settlement, November 2019. His wife was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in South Sudan in 2012 and she took her own life in exile. © UNHCR/Rocco Nuri

11/10/2020

More than 70 Million Migrants Living across International Borders in the Americas, Set to Benefit from New Health Care Help

Washington (IOM)*  – More than 70 million migrants living across international borders in the Region of the Americas are set to benefit from a joint agreement signed on 9 October 2020 by Carissa F. Etienne, Director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and António Vitorino, Director General of the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

centralamericancaravanThe IOM-PAHO agreement will focus on increasing and scaling-up interventions that address barriers to health care and the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on migrant populations. Photo: IOM/Rafael Rodríguez

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11/10/2020

Immediate Action Required to Address Needs, Vulnerabilities of 2.75 Million Stranded Migrants

Geneva (IOM)* - Effective international cooperation is urgently needed to address the circumstances of millions of migrants stranded worldwide due to mobility restrictions imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19, the International Organization for Migration on 9 October 2020 said.

stranded_pic_croppedFarhiya and her eight-month-old son await return assistance to Ethiopia at a reception centre in Bossaso, Somalia, two of the 2.75 million migrants stranded globally due to COVID-19 mobility restrictions. Photo: IOM/Muse Mohammed 

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10/10/2020

The Coup Is Being Televised

Human Wrongs Watch

Tune in for further instructions

The TV debate Trump-Biden
The TV debate Trump-Biden | Image from Wall Street International.

10 October 2020 (Wall Street International)* — We are watching now what may very well be the last American election. Before 2016, such words would have been unthinkable and unspeakable. The rapidity with which they have become not only possible, but actual, has many of us reeling in disbelief. In these darkest of times, I do not and can not afford myself the luxury to speak about any other current events or issues. Nothing is more important today.

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