Archive for ‘Market Lords’

02/07/2021

Indigenous Communities in Danger of Being Erased from the Map in Brazil

Indigenous Peoples protest in Brasilia, Brazil.
Indigenous Peoples protest in Brasilia, Brazil. © Andressa Zumpano
02/07/2021

Why Boosting Nature-Positive Food Production Makes Economic Sense

2 July 2021 (UNEP)* — The world’s first-ever international Food Systems Summit is slated for September 2021 and seeks to galvanize a global commitment and action to transform our food systems.

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©FAO/Maxim Zmeyev

With almost 690 million people going hungry in 2019, and most current farming practices driving biodiversity loss and global heating, there is an urgent need to take stock and change direction.

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02/07/2021

Ethiopians Go to the Polls Even After the US Tells Them Not to

By Ann Garrison | Black Agenda Report – TRANSCEND Media Service*

Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia are now alarming US political and military elites by forming an alliance and threatening to chart an independent path in the Horn of Africa. Many Ethiopians expressed enthusiasm for what they consider the country’s first real, competitive election.

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On Monday, June 21st, Ethiopians went to the polls to select a parliament, which will elect a prime minister, even though US officials told them not to, warning of chaos and violence. Maybe they think it’s arrogant of the United States to presume to be the global arbiter of peace, justice, and democracy.

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02/07/2021

‘Billions of People Will Lack Access to Safe Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in 2030 Unless Progress Quadruples’

Latest estimates reveal that 3 in 10 people worldwide could not wash their hands with soap and water at home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A mother and her children wash their hands outside their home using a bucket, water, and soap.
UNICEF/UN0388486/Panjwani

GENEVA/NEW YORK, 1 July 2021 (UNICEF)* – Billions of people around the world will be unable to access safely managed household drinking water, sanitation and hygiene services in 2030 unless the rate of progress quadruples, according to a new report from WHO and UNICEF.

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01/07/2021

The Invisible Crisis: World Food Programme Urges the World Not to Look Away as Families Starve in Madagascar

Human Wrongs Watch

AMBOVOMBE, MADAGASCAR, 27 June 2021 – The World Food Programme Executive Director, David Beasley, is urging the world to step-up and take action after bearing witness to the invisible crisis enveloping Southern Madagascar, where whole communities are teetering on the edge of starvation.

WF1240263 | Drought and severe hunger in Southern Madagascar
01/07/2021

Urgent Action Needed to End ‘Inhumane Conditions’ Facing Haiti Prisoners – UN Human Rights Chief

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)*Extreme overcrowding and lack of access to food, water and health, are among the ‘inhumane conditions’ that prisoners in Haiti must endure, often over the course of many years, according to a new UN report.

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© UNICEF/Roger LeMoyne | Boys reach through bars at a jail for juveniles in the Delmas neighbourhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 2005
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The document published on Wednesday [30 June 2021], based on visits to 12 detention centres by UN staff at the beginning of 2021, notes that in some instances up to 60 people were crammed into spaces measuring just 20 square meters, leaving them unable to even lie down on the floor to sleep.

01/07/2021

Once Again, Haiti Seems to Be Dying

Human Wrongs Watch

What will Latin America do about it?

Hurricane Tomas floods streets of Gonaives, Haiti
Hurricane Tomas floods streets of Gonaives, Haiti | Image from Wall Street International.

30June 2021 — (Wall Street International)* —  The story goes that on his first voyage to what would become America, Christopher Columbus disembarked on October 12, 1492, on a beach he named San Salvador, today Wattlin, in the Bahamas archipelago.

By December 1 he chose to live in a wonderful setting on an island he called Hispaniola. He took possession of it without asking, obviously, the locals. Colonization began by building a fort called “La Navidad”, on the north coast of what is today Haiti.

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01/07/2021

Number of Migrant Workers Increases by Five Million, Reaching 169 Million

Human Wrongs Watch

A new ILO report estimates that between 2017 and 2019 the number of international migrants has increased from 164 to 169 million.

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GENEVA, 1 July 2021 (ILO)* – The number of international migrant workers globally has risen to 169 million, a rise of three per cent since 2017, according to the latest estimates from the International Labour Organization (ILO).
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The share of youth migrant workers (aged 15-24) has also increased, by almost 2 per cent, or 3.2 million, since 2017. Their number reached 16.8 million in 2019.
30/06/2021

Sharing Scientific Knowledge

Human Wrongs Watch

By John Scales Avery – TRANSCEND Media Service*

We Stand on Each Other’s Shoulders

Cultural evolution depends on the non-genetic storage, transmission, diffusion and utilization of information.

John-Scales-Avery

John Scales Avery

The development of human speech, the invention of writing, the development of paper and printing, and finally, in modern times, mass media, computers and the Internet: all these have been crucial steps in society’s explosive accumulation of information and knowledge. Human cultural evolution proceeds at a constantly-accelerating speed.

Our modern civilization has been built up by means of a worldwide exchange of ideas and inventions. It is built on the achievements of many ancient cultures.

China, Japan, India, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, the Islamic world, Christian Europe, and the Jewish intellectual traditions, all have contributed.

Potatoes, corn, squash, vanilla, chocolate, chili peppers, and quinine are gifts from the American Indians.

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30/06/2021

‘We Are the Lucky Ones’

By Catherine Wachiaya in Tunaydbah refugee settlement, Sudan*

Ethiopian refugee Mihret hid in the bush for days without food or water, to escape the Tigray conflict. Now safe in Sudan, she is using her engineering skills to assist her community. Français

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Mihret, 25, an Ethiopian refugee and engineer poses on top of a water tank in the mobile office base at Tunaydbah settlement, Sudan.
© UNHCR/Ahmed Kwarte