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Government Policy

Syrian Minister of Social Affairs and Labour receives Bahrain’s Ambassador

Syrian Minister of Social Affairs and Labour Louai Emad El-Din Al-Munajjid received Bahrain Ambassador in Damascus Wahid Sayyar.

 

Al-Munajjid expressed thanks and gratitude to the Kingdom of Bahrain for dispatching humanitarian relief aid to the Syrian people in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake which jolted his country.

 

During the meeting, he stressed the importance of developing bilateral relations and activating joint agreements and exchanging expertise and visits.

 

Bahrain’s Ambassador also underscored the importance of developing joint ties, exchanging expertises and expanding cooperation in the field of social affairs. Other issues of common interest were also discussed. .

 

 

 

Source: Bahrain News Agency

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General

HH Shaikh Khalid bin Hamad opens 3rd Bahrain Baby Games

 

The third edition of the Bahrain Baby Games opened today under the patronage of First Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council for Youth and Sports (SCYS), General Sports Authority Chairman (GSA) and BOC President, His Highness Shaikh Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa

 

Bahrain Olympic Committee is organizing the four-day event at the Bahrain Table Tennis Federation and the Bahrain Federation for People of Determination (Isa Bin Rashid Halls in Isa Sports City).

 

The opening ceremony was also attended by GSA Deputy Chairman HH Shaikh Salman bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Bahrain Football Association (BFA) Deputy Chairman HH Shaikh Khalifa bin Ali Al Khalifa, Cabinet Affairs Ministry Undersecretary, BOC Deputy President HH Shaikh Isa bin Ali bin Khalifa Al Khalifa.

 

Also present were Education Minister Dr. Mohammed bin Mubarak Juma, Bahrain Paralympic Committee Chairman Shaikh Mohammed bin Daij Al Khalifa, GSA Chief Executive Officer Dr. Abdulrahman Sadiq Askar, BOC Secretary General Fares Mustafa Al Kooheji, Bahrain Table Tennis Association chairperson Shaikha Hayat bint Abdulaziz Al Khalifa, Bahrain Paralymic Committee Secretary General Ali Al Majid and other senior officials invitees and guests.

 

HH Shaikh Khalid bin Hamad commended the organization of the event , hailing the large participation of nurseries and kindergartens affiliated with the Ministry of Education.

 

He stressed the importance of this sporting, social and educational event in instilling a culture of sports in children at an early age and encouraging them to practise motor activities through a series of recreational and sports competitions that develop thought, mind and body.

 

 

 

Source: Bahrain News Agency

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General

Influencing for Africa: Post-COVID & Beyond – Oxfam International Pan Africa Program Progress Report 2022

Executive summary

This Progress Report covers the period 2018 to 2022 – a period of challenges and change for the world, for Africa and for the Pan Africa Program (PAP). During that period the COVID-19 pandemic hit hard. Although Africa experienced fewer deaths and infections than had been anticipated, it spotlighted the shortcomings in the continent’s health systems, economic and political structures and the inequality of its relationships with global partners. This was most starkly evidenced in the global failure to ensure equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines. But the pandemic also undid decades of positive development work and has left the continent poorer, more vulnerable and with less space for civil society to speak out.

This period began with a moment of hope

PAP’s 2019 ‘Rethinking Africa’ conference was an opportunity to confront not just the many challenges facing the continent but to reimagine Oxfam’s approach to tackling those challenges.

We listened to some hard truths – as well as encouragement and endorsement – from our partners and with their steer have radically reconfigured our team and our ways of working.

A new, unified way of working

Learning to do more with less, we are working in a less siloed way, with five thematic areas all working to a common set of objectives.

We are supporting and making space for our partners within African civil society to speak out for themselves and supporting them where they need us to do so.

We are engaging with continental and global decision makers at the highest level, through the African Union and through Oxfam’s own global policy mechanisms to bring about lasting change in the biggest challenges facing the African people; economic, climate and gender injustice, inequality, precarious food systems, lack of accountable governance and weak humanitarian and conflict policy.

Our successes and achievements

With the new approach, the new PAP team has succeeded in creating or engaging in several significant opportunities for African civil society to influence continental level policy and supporting them to do so. The strategic focus area in which we have gained the most achievements is in enhancing African civil society’s policy advocacy at the AU.

Achievements include convening Africa-wide high-level dialogues around Inequality in Africa, such as the High-Level Panel in Addis Ababa on the side-lines of the Feb 2020 AU Summit with Sierra Leone President H.E. Maada Bio; Launching the Africa Brief on the ‘Commitment to Reducing Inequality Index’; Raising our voices against an international financial architecture that is skewed against countries in the Global South.

We looked at the linkages between African cultural practices, food security, and conflict and explored the impact of COVID-19 on small-scale farming, food security and sovereignty in Africa.

We launched our ground-breaking ‘Care Policy Score Card,’ for assessing country progress towards an enabling policy environment on care; partnering with African and international organizations to call for equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines in Africa; and prompting discussion on enhanced Civil Society Organization (CSO) engagement with the AU and its EU partnership process. We have also pledged to support our 116 national humanitarian civil society partner organizations in influencing humanitarian aid systems and responses, after supporting their participation in the 2022 AU Humanitarian Summit.

PAP as a vital link

PAP functions as a vital link between Oxfam country programs and the AU, so engendering a pan-African agenda in country programs and with partners is an important area of work that we anticipate will expand further in future.

So far, we have brought Oxfam country program teams together to develop a strategy for Africa-wide food security, in line with the AU theme of ‘Strengthening resilience in nutrition and food security on the African continent’, and to engage in joint planning of the Fair for All program. We have also worked with Oxfam in Uganda and Oxfam in Zambia in conducting Fair Tax Monitoring Research to understand the depth of tax-related gender inequalities in the context of Covid-19 and beyond. In 2022, we have coordinated with all countries and regions as well as invested affiliates to develop an Oxfam in Africa Climate Strategy whose roll-out will gain momentum in the pre- and post-COP 27 engagements.

Knowledge platform

We have made progress towards developing a knowledge platform to support African countries in their continental influencing on development issues; for example, we created a documentary on the impact of COVID-19 on unpaid care work in African households; conducted research both for influencing energy transition in Zambia and for the Africa Mining Vision as a whole; and published an editorial series highlighting the challenges in the current state of food security in postCOVID-19 Africa.

Looking to the future

We will continue to pursue Oxfam’s vision of a self-reliant, democratic, and peaceful Africa that is responsive to the rights and development needs of her citizens. We will continue to build on the knowledge and experience of Oxfam colleagues, African civil society, African institutions and national governments as well as from experts from around the world to make the needs of African citizens known and acted upon in the appropriate spheres of power. Accordingly, Oxfam International has begun the process of transitioning to the OiA structure which will absorb Oxfam’s current regional structures, as well as PAP itself by April 2023.

The new ‘Oxfam in Africa’ (OiA) model presents opportunities for newer and more integrated ways of working in line with Oxfam’s Global Strategic Framework and ambition. Although PAP as we know it will cease to exist with the emergence of OiA, the new model will benefit immensely from PAP’s experiences. It has paved the way to enable us – and African civil society more widely – to build collective agency to engage more effectively in the continent and the rest of the world. This will strengthen our ability to tackle the major issues of the day and ensure that our youthful continent can fulfill its potential and ambitions and take its rightful place on the world stage

Source: Evaluation and Lessons Learned

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General

WHO is on the ground as climate-driven health emergency in the Greater Horn of Africa threatens 47 million lives

Climate change is the single biggest health threat facing humanity. It is estimated that environmental factors take the lives of around 13 million people every year. Global warming is influencing weather patterns, causing heat waves, heavy rainfall and droughts.

The Greater Horn of Africa is facing an unprecedented, acute hunger and health crisis driven by climate change, and compounded by conflict and economic shocks. Forty-seven million people in that region are now experiencing high levels of malnutrition or worse – up from 31 million – and more will go hungry as the drought affecting parts of the Region is expected to continue. Malnourished people become more easily sick, and sick people become more easily malnourished.

Climate change is also a major aggravating factor for infectious diseases like cholera and dengue fever. Disease outbreaks are surging in the Greater Horn of Africa, escalating the health emergency. The impact of outbreaks of infectious diseases during emergencies is multiplied, especially when combined with low vaccination coverage and poor access to health services.

WHO and partners are on the ground, ensuring access to basic health services, providing treatment for severe malnutrition, and helping countries detect, prevent and respond to disease outbreaks.

Source: World Health Organization

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General

Ending Ukraine War ‘Best Thing’ to Mend World Economy: Yellen

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen heaped pressure on Russia on Monday ahead of the G-20 summit in Indonesia, saying the best way to end world economic tumult was to stop the Ukraine war.

“Ending Russia’s war is a moral imperative and the single best thing we can do for the global economy,” Yellen told reporters as she met French counterpart Bruno Le Maire in Nusa Dua, on the resort island of Bali.

High fuel and food prices are among the top issues set to be discussed at the summit and few G-20 countries have escaped the economic pain.

Yellen will hope to build diplomatic pressure for an end to the war by blaming Russia.

Host Indonesia has called for talks and a peaceful resolution to the conflict but, like fellow G-20 members China, South Africa and India, has largely avoided criticizing Russia directly.

The summit is also expected to discuss the need to extend a Turkish and U.N.-brokered agreement allowing vital Ukrainian grain and fertilizer exports to transit safely through the Black Sea.

Ukraine is one of the world’s largest producers of both products. Russian President Vladimir Putin had appeared to walk away from the agreement but faced a sharp backlash from developing countries.


The current agreement expires on November 19. Le Maire underscored the need to counteract the effects of Russia’s invasion, namely on soaring fuel prices in Europe.

“I really think that the first issue that we have on the table is how to bring down energy prices and how to get rid of inflation,” he said.

Source: Voice of America

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General

LGBTQ-Friendly Votes Signal Progressive Shift for Methodists

The United Methodist Church moved toward becoming more progressive and LGBTQ-affirming during U.S. regional meetings this month that included the election of its second openly gay bishop. Conservatives say the developments will only accelerate their exit from one of the nation’s largest Protestant denominations.

Each of the UMC’s five U.S. jurisdictions — meeting separately in early November — approved similarly worded measures aspiring to a future church where “LGBTQIA+ people will be protected, affirmed, and empowered.”

They also passed non-binding measures asking anyone to withdraw from leadership roles if they’re planning to leave the denomination soon — a category that almost entirely includes conservatives moving toward the exits.

The denomination still officially bans same-sex marriage and the ordination of any “self-avowed, practicing homosexual,” and only a legislative gathering called the General Conference can change that.

But this month’s votes show growing momentum — at least in the American half of the global church — to defy these policies and seek to reverse them at the next legislative gathering in 2024.

Supporters and opponents of these measures drew from the same metaphor to say their church is either becoming more or less of a “big tent,” as the United Methodists have long been described as a theologically diverse, mainstream denomination.

“It demonstrates that the big tent has collapsed,” said the Rev. Jay Therrell, president of the conservative Wesleyan Covenant Association, which has been helping churches that want to leave the denomination.

“For years, bishops have told traditionalists that there is room for everyone in the United Methodist Church,” he said. “Not one single traditionalist bishop was elected. Moreover, we now have the most progressive or liberal council of bishops in the history of Methodism, period.”

But Jan Lawrence, executive director of Reconciling Ministries Network, which works toward inclusion of Methodists of all sexual orientations and gender identities, applauded the regional jurisdictions. She cited their LGBTQ-affirming votes and their expansion of the racial, ethnic and gender diversity of bishops.

Jurisdictions elected the church’s first Native American and Filipino American bishops, with other landmark votes within specific regions, according to United Methodist News Service.

“It is a big tent church,” Lawrence said. “One of the concerns that some folks expressed is that we don’t have leadership in the church that reflects the diversity of the church. So, this episcopal election doesn’t fix that, but it’s a step in the right direction.”

Bishop Cedrick Bridgeforth, elected in the Western Jurisdiction meeting, agreed. He is the first openly gay African American man to be elected bishop. The vote comes six years after the Western Jurisdiction elected the denomination’s first openly lesbian bishop, Karen Oliveto of the Mountain Sky Episcopal Area.

The LGBTQ-affirming resolutions point “to the alignment of the denomination more with the mainstream of our country,” Bridgeforth said. “It can also help us begin to center our conversations where we have unity of purpose, rather than centering on divisions.”

Bridgeforth will lead churches in the Greater Northwest Area, which includes churches in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and small parts of Montana and Canada. He said he has always worked across ideological lines in his administrative duties and would continue to do so.

“I have used our differences as an opportunity for us to come together,” he said. “It creates more space for a different kind of conversation than, ‘That’s different, that’s bad, we can’t be together.'” If some churches under his jurisdiction do choose to leave the United Methodist Church, Bridgeforth said he would help them make that transition.

“I would not want anybody to be where they don’t want to be,” he said.

Progressive groups have said the church should be open to appointing bishops and other clergy, regardless of sexual orientation, who show they have the gifts for ministry and a commitment to serve the church.

Conservatives, however, say the church needs to abide by its own rules.

“I am sure Bishop Bridgeforth is a person of sacred worth, but he does not meet the qualifications to hold the office of elder, much less bishop, and should not have been elected,” Therrell said.

At least 300 U.S. congregations have left the denomination this year, according to United Methodist News Service. Hundreds more are in the process of leaving, and Therrell predicted that number would be in the low thousands by the end of 2023. Overseas conferences in Bulgaria and Slovakia have ended their affiliation with the denomination, and churches in Africa are considering it, he said.

Many are bound for the newly formed conservative denomination, the Global Methodist Church.

The UMC is a worldwide denomination. American membership has declined to about 6.5 million, from a peak of 11 million in the 1960s. Overseas membership soared to match or exceed that of the U.S., fueled mostly by growth and mergers in Africa. Overseas delegates have historically allied with American conservatives to uphold the church’s stances on sexuality.

Support for a compromise measure that would have amicably split the denomination, negotiated in 2020, fell apart after that year’s legislative General Conference was postponed three times due to the pandemic. The next General Conference is now scheduled to begin in April 2024 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

A vote by a 2019 General Conference was the latest of several in recent decades that reinforced the church’s ban on gay clergy and marriage. But that vote also prompted many local conferences to elect more liberal and centrist delegates, whose influence was felt in this month’s regional votes.

Source: Voice of America

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General

Wagner ‘Atrocities’ Give Mali Jihadists Ammunition for Propaganda

Since the withdrawal of the French army from Mali, Russia’s Wagner Group has replaced it as a target of jihadis propaganda, experts say, with extremists making hay with claims that its mercenaries have committed atrocities against civilians.

Having been pushed toward the exit by the leaders of Mali’s 2020 coup, France withdrew in August, more than nine years after its military intervened to stop a jihadi takeover of the troubled Sahel nation.

The colonels in charge in Bamako have been increasingly turning to Russia, and particularly to Wagner’s paramilitaries, according to Western sources.

Bamako denies this, acknowledging only the support of Russian military “instructors.”

But it is Wagner that the al-Qaida-linked group Jama’at Nasr al‑Islam wal Muslimin, or JNIM, has been targeting in the information war.

“Wagner’s operations are mainly located in central Mali and mainly target the Fulani community, of which JNIM presents itself as the protector,” said Heni Nsaibia, a senior researcher at ACLED, which specializes in the collection of conflict-related data.

“There have been many clashes between the JNIM and the Malian armed forces and Wagner, who are operating jointly,” Nsaibia said. “In many ways Wagner has replaced France as the foreign force in the conflict, even if the jihadists don’t refer to Wagner as ‘crusaders’ like they did to the French, but as a ‘criminal militia’ of mercenaries.”

Wagner emerged in 2014 during the first war in Ukraine and is suspected by the West of doing the Kremlin’s dirty work in conflicts including Syria and the Central African Republic, a charge Russia has always denied.

‘Ethnic war’

JNIM boasts of having caught the “Malian army, Wagner’s mercenaries and pro-government militias in an ethnic war against Muslims” in an ambush in the central Bandiagara region late last month.

They also claim to have given Fulani herders back the animals that government forces had taken from them.

For years “jihadists groups have presented themselves as the defenders of local populations from the army and its proxies, which according to them, do nothing but kill civilians,” said Boubacar Haidara, a researcher at the Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies.

The use of this “alibi to justify their violence” has been made easier by the “arrival of Russian elements,” he argued, at the same time as the “toll on civilians has become more and more deadly.”

While the majority of the 860 civilians killed in Mali in the first six months of the year were the victims of jihadis, about 344, or 40%, were killed in army operations, the United Nations said.

“The people judge by the atrocities committed on civilians,” said Binta Sidibe Gascon, of monitoring group Kisal, which stands up for Fulani communities. “Since Wagner arrived, and particularly after what happened in Moura, we are witnessing an exponential rise in the number of civilian victims.”

Massacre

Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused Malian soldiers of massacring about 300 civilians in Moura in March with the help of foreign fighters, who witnesses said were Russian. The Malian army denies those killed were civilian but rather more than 200 jihadis.

JNIM’s main leader in the region, the Fulani preacher Amadou Koufa, accused Wagner and the Malian army of the bloodbath in a rare video in June, claiming that only about 30 of his fighters were killed, while the rest of the dead were innocents.

“What is going to wake people up,” said Sidibe Gascon, is that despite “all these atrocities against civilians, no territory is being retaken and sadly the situation is getting worse, with more displaced people, schools closed and a humanitarian crisis.”

But Haidara said much of the Malian public “do not believe that civilians are being killed.”

“If the government was looking to Wagner for help in the information war, it can be happy with the results,” said Niagale Bagayoko, president of the African Security Sector Network. “In the capital and on social media they have won the opinion war against the West.”

Source: Voice of America

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General

IEC publishes preliminary lists of candidates for chambers of commerce elections

The Independent Election Commission (IEC) has published the preliminary lists of candidates who have been accepted for the 2022 Chambers of Commerce Board of Directors and Commercial Sector Representatives elections.

The preliminary lists of candidates that were published on the IEC’s website included lists for the Amman Chamber of Commerce, the Irbid Chamber of Commerce, the Zarqa Chamber of Commerce, the Aqaba Chamber of Commerce, the Salt Chamber of Commerce, the Jerash Chamber of Commerce, the Mafraq Chamber of Commerce, the Karak Chamber of Commerce, the Tafileh Chamber of Commerce, and the Madaba Chamber of Commerce, The Ma’an Chamber of Commerce, the Southern Mazar Chamber of Commerce, the Southern Shouneh Chamber of Commerce, the Rusaifa Chamber of Commerce, the Ramtha Chamber of Commerce, and the Ajloun Chamber of Commerce.

The IEC also published the application form for objection to the preliminary lists of candidates, which begins on 11/11/2022 and spans over three days.

It explained that a request to object to the preliminary lists of candidates should be submitted to the Election Supervision Committee at the headquarters of the Chambers of Commerce, based on the Chambers of Commerce regulations.

Source: Jordan News Agency

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General

60,000 perform Friday prayers in Al-Aqsa Mosque

Tens of thousands performed Friday prayers in the holy Al-Aqsa Mosque despite the strict military measures imposed by the Israeli occupation authorities at the holy mosque’s gates and entrances to the Old City in the occupied Jerusalem.

The Islamic Awqaf Department in Jerusalem said that about 60,000 worshipers performed Friday prayers in the premises of Al-Aqsa Mosque, from the West Bank governorates, including Jerusalem, and within the 1948 lands.

The occupation forces were deployed in the city’s streets and the Al-Aqsa Mosque’s premises. They were stationed at its gates, stopped the worshipers, checked their IDs, disallowed dozens from entering the mosque, as well as attacking and detaining a young man near Bab Hutta in the old city.

Thousands performed the Fajr prayer in the premises of Al-Aqsa Mosque, in response to Jerusalemite calls for the mobilization and mass participation in the Fajr and Friday prayers, in order to defend it against the occupation’s Judaizing plans.

Source: Jordan News Agency

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Queen Rania calls for paradigm shift in response to global crises at Paris Peace Forum

Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah urged the international community to embrace a paradigm shift in its response to the world’s multiplying crises, calling on all stakeholders to “treat this moment like the shake-up it is.”

Speaking at the fifth edition of the Paris Peace Forum on Friday, Queen Rania noted that the world is facing “a convergence of crises,” including the COVID-19 pandemic, war in Ukraine, climate change, inequality, and a general erosion of trust. “Yet, too often, we are failing to meet our common threats with a spirit of common cause,” she said.

“Our world is off-balance; simply trying to keep things steady is not enough,” Her Majesty stressed, calling for four critical realignments in humanity’s approach to shared challenges: “Renewing our faith in truth, recognizing that we all have equal worth, safeguarding the future, and believing in our ability to remake the world as we wish it could be.”

Expanding on the first measure, the Queen underscored the importance of speaking the truth and following up words with real action. “Honesty is the foundation of trust, but words are not enough. Cynicism flourishes in the gap between words and deeds,” she said.

Citing the world’s response to climate change as an example, Her Majesty highlighted the “chasm between promises and policies,” noting the stark contrast between pledges made as part of the 2015 Paris Agreement to prevent global temperatures from rising, and recent UN climate report findings, which estimate that “temperatures will rise a full degree past safe conditions.” “It’s too late for wish lists,”

Queen Rania cautioned. “We need binding to-do lists to save both our credibility and our planet.”

Moving on to the second realignment of the paradigm shift, Her Majesty emphasized the importance of honoring our common humanity, particularly with regards to refugee populations. “Self-sufficiency is an illusion,” she said.

“Until we embrace the reality of our connectedness, we’ll continue to bear the worst of its consequences.”

The Queen explained that the global refugee crisis has reached “epic proportions” with the number of displaced people around the world now exceeding 100 million, equal to “one-and-a-half times the population of France.” She also highlighted the difference in reception of refugees from Ukraine to those from countries such as Syria, Myanmar, and South Sudan, who had also been driven from their homes.

“What accounts for the contrast in compassion? Does skin color make all the difference?” she asked. “Too often, the barrier isn’t budgets. It’s bigotry and bias.”

Elaborating on the third aspect of the paradigm shift, the Queen stated “we have to act in the service of future generations,” clarifying that our choices will directly impact those who will inherit our legacy, even if we will never meet them in our lifetimes.

“Our job is to be good stewards of our time,” she said. “What matters is not the next election, or the next financial quarter, or the next generation of smartphones. What matters is doing right by the next generation of humanity.”

Reaching the paradigm shift’s final necessary realignment, Her Majesty made clear the need for “renewing hope and confidence in ourselves.”

“Despite the multi-crises we face, humanity has made enormous progress,” she reflected, relaying that, over the past few decades, one billion people have risen out of extreme poverty, infant mortality has fallen by more than half, and more children are attending school and less are going hungry.

“It’s not just technology that’s enabled these wins,” the Queen continued. “It’s collaboration and trust. The instinct to help. The goodness that resides in human hearts.”

Explaining that hope resides in our ability to believe that things can improve, Queen Rania encouraged the audience to resist complacency and try to anticipate crises earlier, “so that we can fix problems before they become perils, and prevent tomorrow’s crises before they start,” she said.

Launched in 2018, the Paris Peace Forum convenes yearly with the aim of contributing to bridging the governance gap by bringing together multiple stakeholders to advance concrete solutions to global problems where none exist. The annual event is often attended by public and private organizations from around the world that present their governance projects to global leaders, elected officials, experts, and other stakeholders.

Source: Jordan News Agency