Security Council 2374 Committee Holds Meeting with Mali, Regional States and Organizations to Discuss Implementation of 2374 Sanctions Measures

On 16 March 2022, the Security Council Committee established pursuant to resolution 2374 (2017) concerning Mali held informal consultations to hear statements related to the implementation of the sanctions regime by the delegations of Mali, Algeria, Burkina Faso, Gambia, Ghana (in its capacity as chair of the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS), Guinea, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, and the African Union.

The Chair of the Committee invited all delegations to share with Committee members the challenges faced in enforcing the targeted measures (international travel ban and assets freeze) established by the Security Council against the individuals designated by the Committee.

In their statements, participant delegations underscored factors such as, inter alia, the porosity of borders in the region, and the low level of access to banking services as obstacles to the full enforcement of sanctions.  They commented on regional dynamics, and some of them expressed their views on the sanctions imposed by ECOWAS on Mali.

Regional States and Organizations commended the efforts of the Committee in fostering dialogue with countries in the region and other regional actors.

Members of the Committee expressed their appreciation for the opportunity to discuss and engage with regional States and actors, whose cooperation is essential for the efficacy of the sanctions regime.  They also stressed that the sole objective of the sanctions regime is to promote peace and stability in Mali and encouraged all signatory parties of the 2015 Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation in Mali to redouble the efforts related to its implementation.

 

Source: United Nations

Libyan Artisans Restore Old Qurans for Ramadan

TRIPOLI — With the arrival of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in war-scarred Libya, a group of volunteers work around the clock to restore old or damaged copies of the Quran.

 

Khaled al-Drebi, one of Libya’s best-known restorers of Islam’s holy book, is among the artisans who arrive at a Tripoli workshop daily to meet the needs of the influx of customers during Ramadan.

 

For Muslims, Ramadan is a month of spirituality, where a daily dawn-to-dusk fast is accompanied with prayer and acts of charity — often translating into a surge in sales of Qurans.

 

“The purchase of new Qurans traditionally increases before the month of Ramadan, but this has recently changed in Libya,” Drebi told AFP.

 

For many, tradition has been interrupted by an increase in the cost of Qurans, especially “since the state stopped printing” them in Libya, he added.

The North African nation has endured more than a decade of conflict, leaving many of its institutions in disarray and dealing a major blow to the oil-rich country’s economy.

 

“The cost of buying (Qurans) has increased, and so the turnout for restoring old Qurans has gained unprecedented popularity,” Drebi said.

 

Compared to the cost of a new Quran — at more than $20 depending on the binding — Drebi’s workshop charges just a few dollars to restore one.

 

‘Indescribable joy’

 

But cost is not the only factor — for many, the older copies also have a sentimental value.

 

“There is a spiritual connection for some customers,” Drebi said, adding that many choose to preserve Qurans passed on from relatives. “Some say this Quran has the smell of my grandfather or parents.”

 

At the back of the room, Abdel Razzaq al-Aroussi works on sorting through thousands of Qurans based on their level of deterioration.

 

“The restoration of Qurans with limited damage takes no more than an hour, but for those that are very damaged, they could require two or more hours,” Aroussi said.

 

They “must be undone, restored and then bound,” he said — a meticulous process that requires a great deal of “time and concentration.”

 

Mabrouk al-Amin, a supervisor at the workshop, said the restoration process “requires a good number of artisans.”

 

“Working with the book of God is very enjoyable and we don’t get bored… there is an indescribable joy in this work,” he said.

Restorers say they have repaired a staggering half a million Qurans since the workshop opened in 2008, and more than 1,500 trainees have graduated from 150 restoration workshops.

 

Women restorers

 

In recent years, more and more women have been joining the ranks of the volunteer restorers.

 

“A large number of women were trained on restoring the holy Quran and today they have their own workshops,” Drebi said.

 

One female restorer, Khadija Mahmoud, has even held training sessions for blind women.

 

“We would not have been able to think of doing this… were it not for this capable woman,” Drebi added.

 

For Mahmoud, who trains women at a workshop in Zawiya, 45 kilometers west of Tripoli, restoring Qurans in a women’s workshop allows them to work comfortably and at a faster pace.

 

She added that the restoration work has given many women a meaningful way to fill their “spare time.”

 

“A large segment of trainees and restorers are retirees,” she said. “For them, there is nothing better than spending their spare time in the service of the Quran.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Rwandan Court Refuses to Lengthen Sentence of ‘Hotel Rwanda’ Hero

The Rwandan man portrayed as a hero in the movie “Hotel Rwanda” should not have his 25-year sentence extended to life in prison, a Rwandan court ruled Monday.

 

Paul Rusesabagina was convicted in September on eight terrorism charges for his role in a group opposing President Paul Kagame.

 

Rusesabagina said that he was a leader in the Rwanda Movement for Democratic Change but had no role in the group’s armed wing, the National Liberation Front, which has carried out attacks.

 

He refused to take part in the September trial, calling it a sham, and was not present at Monday’s ruling.

 

Prosecutors called the 25-year sentence too lenient.

 

His family has lobbied for his release, saying he is ill.

 

Rusesabagina saved around 1,200 people by sheltering them in a hotel during the country’s 1994 genocide, which saw over 800,000 killed.

 

Source: Voice of America

How China’s Tiktok, Facebook Influencers Push Propaganda

WASHINGTON — To her 1.4 million followers on social media, Vica Li says she is a “life blogger” and “food lover” who wants to teach her fans about China so they can travel the country with ease.

 

“Through my lens, I will take you around China, take you into Vica’s life!” she says in a January video posted on YouTube and Facebook.

 

But that lens may be controlled by CGTN, the Chinese-state run TV network where she has regularly appeared in broadcasts and is listed as a digital reporter on the company’s website. While Vica Li tells followers she “created all of these channels on her own,” her Facebook account shows at least nine people manage her page.

 

That portfolio of accounts is just one tentacle of China’s growing influence on U.S.-owned social media platforms, an Associated Press examination has found.

 

As China continues to assert its economic might, it is using the global social media ecosystem to expand its already formidable influence. The country has built a network of social media personalities who parrot the government’s perspective in posts, operating in virtual lockstep as they promote China, deflect criticism of its human rights abuses and advance Beijing’s talking points on world affairs like Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Some of China’s state-affiliated reporters have posited themselves as trendy Instagram influencers or bloggers. The country has also hired firms to recruit influencers to deliver carefully crafted messages that boost its image to social media users.

 

And it is benefitting from a cadre of Westerners who have devoted YouTube channels and Twitter feeds to echoing pro-China narratives on everything from Beijing’s treatment of Uyghur Muslims to Olympian Eileen Gu, an American who competed for China in the most recent Winter Games.

 

The influencer network allows Beijing to proffer propaganda to social media users around the globe. At least 200 influencers with connections to the Chinese government or its state media are operating in 38 different languages, according to research from Miburo, a firm that tracks foreign disinformation operations.

 

“You can see how they’re trying to infiltrate every one of these countries,” said Miburo President Clint Watts, a former FBI agent. “If you just bombard an audience for long enough with the same narratives people will tend to believe them over time.”

 

Russia’s war with Ukraine is but one example.

 

While the invasion was being condemned as a brazen assault on democracy, Li Jingjing presented a different narrative to her 21,000 YouTube subscribers, posting videos that echoed Russian propaganda and promoted misleading claims — including that the U.S. and NATO provoked Russia’s invasion.

On YouTube, Li Jingjing says she’s a “traveler,” “storyteller” and journalist.” But she does not reveal in her segments that she’s a reporter for CGTN, articulating views that are not just her own but also familiar Chinese government talking points. Neither Vica Li nor Li Jingjing responded to questions from AP.

 

The AP identified dozens of similar accounts, which collectively have more than 10 million followers and subscribers. The profiles often belong to Chinese state media reporters who have transformed their Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube accounts — platforms largely blocked in China — and begun identifying as “bloggers,” “influencers” or non-descript “journalists.”

 

“They clearly have identified the ‘Chinese lady influencer’ is the way to go,” Watts said of China.

 

Foreign governments have long tried to exploit social media to stealthily influence users, including during the 2016 U.S. election.

 

In response, tech companies like Facebook and Twitter promised to better alert American users to foreign propaganda by labeling state-backed media accounts.

 

But the AP review found most of the Chinese influencer social media accounts are inconsistently labeled as state-funded media. The accounts, like those belonging to Li Jingjing and Vica Li, are often labeled on Facebook or Instagram, but aren’t flagged on YouTube or TikTok. Vica Li’s account is not labeled on Twitter. Last month, Twitter began identifying Li Jingjing’s account as Chinese state-media.

 

CGTN did not respond to interview requests. CGTN America, which is registered as a foreign agent with the Justice Department and has disclosed having commercial arrangements with international news organizations including the AP, CNN and Reuters, did not return messages. A lawyer who has represented CGTN America did not respond either.

 

A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu, said “Chinese media and journalists carry out normal activities independently, and should not be assumed to be led or interfered by the Chinese government.”

China’s interest in social media influencers became evident in December when filings with the Justice Department revealed the Chinese Consulate in New York paid $300,000 to New Jersey firm Vippi Media to recruit influencers to post messages to Instagram and TikTok followers during the Beijing Olympics. Vipp Jaswal, Vippi Media’s CEO, declined to share with AP details about the posts.

 

English-speaking influencers have also cultivated a niche by promoting pro-Chinese messaging on YouTube and Twitter.

 

Last April, CGTN invited English speakers from around the world to join a months-long competition that would end with jobs as social media influencers in London, Nairobi, Kenya or Washington.

 

British video blogger Jason Lightfoot raved about the opportunity in a YouTube video and has accrued 200,000 subscribers with headlines like “The Olympics Backfired on USA — Disastrous Regret” and “Western Media Lies about China.”

The video topics are in sync with those of other pro-China bloggers like Cyrus Janssen, a U.S. citizen in Canada. During the Olympics, Janssen and Lightfoot shared identical images on the same day of Gu in posts celebrating her three-medal win and blasting the U.S.

 

Janssen told AP he’s never accepted money from the Chinese government. But when pressed for details about some of his partnerships with Chinese tech firms, Janssen responded only with questions about an AP’s reporter salary.

 

YouTubers Matthew Tye, an American, and Winston Sterzel, who is from South Africa, believe, in many cases, China is paying for content.

 

They were included last year on an email pitch to numerous YouTube influencers from a company that identified itself as Hong Kong Pear Technology. The email asked them to share a promotional video for China’s touristy Hainan province on their channels. Pear Technology followed up in another email with a pitch for them to post a propaganda video that asserted COVID-19 originated from North American white-tailed deer, not China.

 

Sterzel and Tye didn’t hear anything further after they requested the company provide evidence to support that claim.

 

“There’s a very easy formula to become successful,” Sterzel said in an interview. “It’s simply to praise the Chinese government, to praise China and talk about how great China is and how bad the West is.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Pope Evokes Malta’s Welcome of St. Paul In Migrant Appeal

VALLETTA, MALTA — Pope Francis visited the grotto Sunday where St. Paul lived after washing up on Malta, recalling the welcome the apostle received and urging better treatment of modern-day arrivals on the Mediterranean island.

 

On the final day of his weekend trip to Malta, the 85-year-old pontiff will also hold open-air mass before visiting a migrant center that will soon host refugees from the Ukraine war.

 

According to Christian tradition, Paul was shipwrecked on Malta in 60 AD while en route to Rome and performed several miracles in his three months there.

 

Following in the footsteps of former popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI, Francis visited the holy grotto in Rabat, lighting a candle and saying a prayer.

 

He recalled how Paul and his fellow travelers were welcomed, even though “no one knew their names, their place of birth or their social status.”

 

He called on God to “help us to recognize from afar those in need, struggling amidst the waves of the sea, dashed against the reefs of unknown shores” and grant that “our compassion be more than empty words.”

 

The pope, who last summer underwent colon surgery and canceled an event in February due to acute knee pain, appeared to have trouble walking during the visit, where he also met the sick and disabled at the connected Basilica of St. Paul.

 

Safe harbor

 

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has overshadowed the pope’s first trip to Catholic-majority Malta, a voyage delayed two years by coronavirus.

 

Addressing politicians and diplomats Saturday, he warned that “some potentate, sadly caught up in anachronistic claims of nationalist interests, is provoking and fomenting conflicts” in a thinly veiled accusation against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 

Asked by a reporter about a possible trip to Kyiv, he said a visit to Ukraine’s capital was “on the table.”

 

The war has caused the worst refugee crisis in Europe since World War II, which feeds into a key theme of Francis’ nine-year papacy — the need to welcome those fleeing war, poverty or the effects of climate change.

 

Malta is on the frontline of the route from North Africa into Europe and thousands of people who risked the crossing in overcrowded boats have ended up here.

 

But charity groups have accused Malta of turning a blind eye to desperate people in its waters, and the pope on Saturday reminded the archipelago of its status as a “safe harbor”, while adding that other countries must also step in.

 

“The growing migration emergency — here we can think of the refugees from war-torn Ukraine — calls for a broad-based and shared response,” he said.

 

‘Very tired’

 

After visiting the grotto, the pope headed to Floriana, near the capital Valletta, where he was set to conduct mass for a 10,000-strong crowd of followers.

 

Awaiting him among the crowd was 67-year-old Anna Balzan from the nearby city of Qormi and her extended family. Over her shoulders was draped a Vatican flag she purchased during John Paul II’s visit in 1990.

 

“I’ve seen Benedict and John Paul when they came to Malta,” she said, expressing concern for the current pope’s health.

 

“I saw him as very tired yesterday… I think he is suffering.”

 

Later Sunday, Francis will return to the theme of migrants by visiting the John XXIII Peace Lab, a center inspired by the pope of that name, which is preparing for the arrival of Ukrainian refugees.

 

Run for the past five decades by a Franciscan friar, now 91, it already hosts around 55 young men from different parts of Africa who arrived in Malta without any legal papers.

 

Source: Voice of America

US Calls Reports of Many Killed in Mali ‘Extremely Disturbing’

WASHINGTON — The United States is following “extremely disturbing accounts” of large numbers of people killed in a village in central Mali, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said on Sunday.

 

Mali’s military said on Saturday that it had killed more than 200 Islamist militants in the latest clash in a month of escalating violence.

 

Tensions with the West have increased since a move by Mali’s ruling military junta to delay democratic elections in February, as well as over its collaboration with private military contractors belonging to Russia’s Wagner Group.

 

In a statement, Price said there were conflicting reports about who was responsible for the killings that took place in late March in the village of Moura, about 250 miles (400 km) northeast of the capital, Bamako.

 

“We are concerned that many reports suggest that the perpetrators were unaccountable forces from the Kremlin-backed Wagner Group. Other reports claim the Malian Armed Forces (FAMa) had targeted elements of known violent extremist groups,” he said.

 

“These conflicting reports illustrate the urgent need for the Malian transition authorities to give impartial investigators free, unfettered, and safe access to the area where these tragic events unfolded.”

 

Officials at Russia’s embassy in Washington declined immediate comment on reports of the Wagner Group’s involvement.

 

The European Union has imposed sanctions on the Wagner Group, accusing it of clandestine operations on the Kremlin’s behalf. President Vladimir Putin has said the group does not represent the Russian state, but that private military contractors have the right to work anywhere in the world as long as they do not break Russian law.

 

The United Nations has repeatedly accused Malian soldiers of summarily executing civilians and suspected militants over the course of their decade-long fight against groups linked to al-Qaida and Islamic State.

 

The military has in some cases acknowledged that its forces were implicated in executions and other abuses, but few soldiers have faced criminal charges.

 

Meanwhile a surge in attacks since early March by an Islamic State affiliate has killed hundreds of civilians, according to official and military sources.

 

Source: Voice of America

IGAD Welcomes South Sudan Agreement On Force Unification.

The Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Dr Workneh Gebeyehu this evening welcomed the signing of an agreement between South Sudan parties to the R-ARCSS with armed forces to unifying their forces. Dr. Workneh applauded today’s agreement as an important milestone towards the full implantation of Transitional Security Arrangements in particular and the R-ARCSS in general.

 

Dr Workneh commended H.E. President Salva Kiir Mayardit and his Vice-President H.E. Riek Machar and the parties to the agreement for the goodwill and thanked the Government of the Republic of Sudan, the Chair of IGAD, for brokering the deal.

 

The Executive Secretary calls on all the parties to respect the terms of the agreement and implement it fully, faithfully and timely.

 

Source: Intergovernmental Authority on Development

African Refugees See Racial Bias as US Welcomes Ukrainians

Wilfred Tebah doesn’t begrudge the U.S. for swiftly granting humanitarian protections to Ukrainians escaping Russia’s devastating invasion of their homeland.

 

But the 27-year-old, who fled Cameroon during its ongoing conflict, can’t help but wonder what would happen if the millions fleeing that Eastern Europe nation were a different hue.

 

As the U.S. prepares to welcome tens of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing war, the country continues to deport scores of African and Caribbean refugees back to unstable and violent homelands where they’ve faced rape, torture, arbitrary arrest and other abuses.

 

“They do not care about a Black man,” the Columbus, Ohio, resident said, referring to U.S. politicians. “The difference is really clear. They know what is happening over there, and they have decided to close their eyes and ears.”

 

Tebah’s concerns echo protests of the swift expulsions of Haitian refugees crossing the border this summer without a chance to seek asylum, not to mention the frosty reception African and Middle Eastern refugees have faced in western Europe compared with how those nations have enthusiastically embraced displaced Ukrainians.

 

In March, when President Joe Biden made a series of announcements welcoming 100,000 Ukrainian refugees, granting Temporary Protected Status to another 30,000 already in the U.S. and halting Ukrainian deportations, two Democratic lawmakers seized on the moment to call for similar humanitarian considerations for Haitians.

 

“There is every reason to extend the same level of compassion,” U.S. Reps. Ayanna Pressley, of Massachusetts, and Mondaire Jones, of New York, wrote to the administration, noting more than 20,000 Haitians have been deported despite continued instability after the assassination of Haiti’s president and a powerful earthquake this summer.

 

Cameroonian advocates have similarly ratcheted up their calls for humanitarian relief, protesting in front of the Washington residence of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and the offices of leading members of Congress this month.

 

Their calls come as hundreds of thousands in Cameroon have been displaced in recent years by the country’s civil war between its French-speaking government and English-speaking separatists, attacks by the terrorist group Boko Haram and other regional conflicts.

 

The advocacy group Human Rights Watch, in a February report, found many Cameroonians deported from the U.S. suffered persecution and human rights violations upon returning there.

 

Tebah, who is a leading member of the Cameroon American Council, an advocacy group organizing protests this month, said that’s a fate he hopes to avoid.

Hailing from the country’s English-speaking northwest, he said he was branded a separatist and apprehended by the government because of his activism as a college student. Tebah said he managed to escape, as many Cameroonians have, by flying to Latin America, trekking overland to the U.S.-Mexico border and petitioning for asylum in 2019.

 

“I will be held in prison, tortured and even killed if I am deported,” he said. “I’m very scared. As a human, my life matters too.”

 

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees TPS and other humanitarian programs, declined to respond to the complaints of racism in American immigration policy. It also declined to say whether it was weighing granting TPS to Cameroonians or other African nationals, saying in a written statement only that it will “continue to monitor conditions in various countries.”

 

The agency noted, however, that it has recently issued TPS designations for Haiti, Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan — all African or Caribbean nations — as well as to more than 75,000 Afghans living in the U.S. after the Taliban takeover of that Central Asian nation. Haitians are among the largest and longest-tenured beneficiaries of TPS, with more than 40,000 currently on the status.

 

Other TPS countries include Burma, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen, and the majority of the nearly 320,000 immigrants with Temporary Protected Status hail from El Salvador.

 

Lisa Parisio, who helped launch Catholics Against Racism in Immigration, argues the program could easily help protect millions more refugees fleeing danger but has historically been underused and over-politicized.

 

TPS, which provides a work permit and staves off deportation for up to 18 months, doesn’t have limits for how many countries or people can be placed on it, said Parisio, who is the advocacy director for the Catholic Legal Immigration Network.

 

Yet former President Donald Trump, in his broader efforts to restrict immigration, pared down TPS, allowing designations for Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea in West Africa to expire.

 

Although programs like TPS provide critical protections for vulnerable refugees, they can also leave many in legal limbo for years without providing a pathway to citizenship, said Karla Morales, a 24-year-old from El Salvador who has been on TPS nearly her whole life.

 

“It’s absurd to consider 20 years in this country temporary,” the University of Massachusetts Boston nursing student said. “We need validation that the work we’ve put in is appreciated and that our lives have value.”

 

At least in the case of Ukraine, Biden appears motivated by broader foreign policy goals in Europe, rather than racial bias, suggests María Cristina García, a history professor at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, focused on refugees and immigrants.

But Tom Wong, founding director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Center at the University of California, San Diego, said the racial disparities couldn’t be clearer.

 

“The U.S. has responded without hesitation by extending humanitarian protections to predominately white and European refugees,” he said. “All the while, predominately people of color from Africa, the Middle East, and Asia continue to languish.”

 

Besides Cameroon, immigrant advocates also argue that Congo and Ethiopia should qualify for humanitarian relief because of their ongoing conflicts, as should Mauritania, since slavery is still practiced there.

 

And they complain Ukrainian asylum seekers are being exempted from asylum limits meant to prevent the spread of COVID-19 while those from other nations are being turned away.

 

“Black pain and Black suffering do not get the same attention,” says Sylvie Bello, founder of the Washington, D.C.-based Cameroon American Council. “The same anti-Blackness that permeates American life also permeates American immigration policy.”

 

Vera Arnot, a Ukrainian in Boston who is considering seeking TPS, says she didn’t know much about the special status until the war started and wasn’t aware of the concerns from immigrants of color. But the Berklee College of Music sophomore hopes the relief can be extended to other deserving nations.

 

Arnot says TPS could help her seek an off-campus job with better pay, so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support, as most in Ukraine have lost their jobs due to the war.

 

“Ukrainians as a people aren’t used to relying on others,” she said. “We want to work. We don’t want welfare.”

 

For Tebah, who is staying with relatives in Ohio, TPS would make it easier for him to open a bank account, get a driver’s license and seek better employment while he awaits a decision on his asylum case.

 

“We’ll continue to beg, to plead,” Tebah said. “We are in danger. I want to emphasize it. And only TPS for Cameroon will help us be taken out of that danger. It is very necessary.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Ramadan Begins in Much of Middle East Amid Soaring Prices

CAIRO — The Muslim holy month of Ramadan — when the faithful fast from dawn to dusk — began at sunrise Saturday in much of the Middle East, where Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has sent energy and food prices soaring.

 

The conflict cast a pall over Ramadan, when large gatherings over meals and family celebrations are a tradition. Many in the Southeast Asian nation of Indonesia planned to start observing Sunday, and some Shiites in Lebanon, Iran and Iraq were also marking the start of Ramadan a day later.

 

Muslims follow a lunar calendar, and a moon-sighting methodology can lead to different countries declaring the start of Ramadan a day or two apart.

 

Muslim-majority nations including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates had declared the month would begin Saturday morning.

 

A Saudi statement Friday was broadcast on the kingdom’s state-run Saudi TV and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and de facto leader of the United Arab Emirates, congratulated Muslims on Ramadan’s arrival.

 

Jordan, a predominantly Sunni country, also said the first day of Ramadan would be on Sunday, in a break from following Saudi Arabia. The kingdom said the Islamic religious authority was unable to spot the crescent moon indicating the beginning of the month.

 

Indonesia’s second-largest Islamic group, Muhammadiyah, which counts more than 60 million members, said that according to its astronomical calculations Ramadan begins Saturday. But the country’s religious affairs minister had announced Friday that Ramadan would start on Sunday, after Islamic astronomers in the country failed to sight the new moon.

 

It wasn’t the first time the Muhammadiyah has offered a differing opinion on the matter, but most Indonesians — Muslims comprise nearly 90% of the country’s 270 million people — are expected to follow the government’s official date.

Many had hoped for a more cheerful Ramadan after the coronavirus pandemic blocked the world’s 2 billion Muslims from many rituals the past two years.

 

With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, however, millions of people in the Middle East are now wondering where their next meals will come from. The skyrocketing prices are affecting people whose lives were already upended by conflict, displacement and poverty from Lebanon, Iraq and Syria to Sudan and Yemen.

 

Ukraine and Russia account for a third of global wheat and barley exports, which Middle East countries rely on to feed millions of people who subsist on subsidized bread and bargain noodles. They are also top exporters of other grains and sunflower seed oil used for cooking.

 

Egypt, the world’s largest wheat importer, has received most of its wheat from Russia and Ukraine in recent years. Its currency has now also taken a dive, adding to other pressures driving up prices.

 

Shoppers in the capital, Cairo, turned out earlier this week to stock up on groceries and festive decorations, but many had to buy less than last year because of the prices.

 

Ramadan tradition calls for colorful lanterns and lights strung throughout Cairo’s narrow alleys and around mosques. Some people with the means to do so set up tables on the streets to dish up free post-fast Iftar meals for the poor. The practice is known in the Islamic world as Tables of the Compassionate.

 

“This could help in this situation,” said Rabei Hassan, the muezzin of a mosque in Giza as he bought vegetables and other food from a nearby market. “People are tired of the prices.”

 

Worshippers attended mosque for hours of evening prayers, or tarawih. On Friday evening, thousands of people packed the al-Azhar Mosque after attendance was banned for the past two years to stem the pandemic.

 

“They were difficult (times) … Ramadan without tarawih at the mosque is not Ramadan,” said Saeed Abdel-Rahman, a 64-year-old retired teacher as he entered al-Azhar for prayers.

 

Higher prices also exacerbated the woes of Lebanese already facing a major economic crisis. Over the past two years, the currency collapsed and the country’s middle class was plunged into poverty. The meltdown has also brought on severe shortages in electricity, fuel and medicine.

 

In the Gaza Strip, few people were shopping on Friday in markets usually packed at this time of year. Merchants said Russia’s war on Ukraine has sent prices skyrocketing, alongside the usual challenges, putting a damper on the festive atmosphere that Ramadan usually creates.

The living conditions of the 2.3 million Palestinians in the impoverished coastal territory are tough, compounded by a crippling Israeli-Egyptian blockade since 2007.

 

Toward the end of Ramadan last year, a deadly 11-day war between Gaza’s Hamas rulers and Israel cast a cloud over festivities, including the Eid al-Fitr holiday that follows the holy month. It was the fourth bruising war with Israel in just over a decade.

 

In Iraq, the start of Ramadan highlighted widespread frustration over a meteoric rise in food prices, exacerbated in the past month by the war in Ukraine.

 

Suhaila Assam, a 62-year-old retired teacher and women’s rights activist, said she and her retired husband are struggling to survive on their combined pension of $1,000 a month, with prices of cooking oil, flour and other essentials having more than doubled.

 

“We, as Iraqis, use cooking oil and flour a lot. Almost in every meal. So how can a family of five members survive?” she asked.

 

Akeel Sabah, 38, is a flour distributor in the Jamila wholesale market, which supplies all of Baghdad’s Rasafa district on the eastern side of the Tigris River with food. He said flour and almost all other foodstuffs are imported, which means distributors have to pay for them in dollars. A ton of flour used to cost $390.

 

“Today I bought the ton for $625,” he said.

 

“The currency devaluation a year ago already led to an increase in prices, but with the ongoing (Ukraine) crisis, prices are skyrocketing. Distributors lost millions,” he said.

 

In Istanbul, Muslims held the first Ramadan prayers in 88 years in the Hagia Sophia, nearly two years after the iconic former cathedral was converted into a mosque.

 

Worshippers filled the 6th-century building and the square outside Friday night for tarawih prayers led by Ali Erbas, the government head of religious affairs. Although converted for Islamic use and renamed the Grand Hagia Sophia Mosque in July 2020, COVID-19 restrictions had limited worship at the site.

 

“After 88 years of separation, the Hagia Sophia Mosque has regained the tarawih prayer,” Erbas said, according to the state-run Anadolu Agency.

 

Source: Voice of America

The 49th Session of the UN Human Rights Council

Human rights are under threat in far too many parts of the world. Protecting and advancing respect for human rights requires all governments and peoples to come together and demand action and accountability.

 

When the United States returned to the UN Human Rights Council, we committed to participate in and help lead the global effort to promote and protect these precious rights. We do so as a nation willing to acknowledge our own shortcomings, and one committed to transparency and accountability.

 

Now, as the 49th session of the Human Rights Council closes, the impact of the United States’ return is apparent. The United States co-sponsored more than half of all resolutions considered during this session. These resolutions reinforce actions to promote respect for the human rights of persons with disabilities, demand an end to attacks on human rights defenders, emphasize the need for adequate housing for all, and underscore freedom of religion or belief. We also highlighted human rights abuses in Belarus, Burma, DPRK, Iran, Nicaragua, South Sudan, and Syria, as well as in Georgian territories occupied by the Russian Federation. The United States led the first HRC resolution on how governments can counter disinformation while fully promoting respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, including freedom of expression. We were pleased to host two signature events during this session bringing attention to the dangers faced by women human rights defenders and underscoring the critical role of equity and inclusion for members of racial and ethnic minority groups in healthy democracies.

 

The Human Rights Council also played an important role in beginning the process of holding the Kremlin to account for its war on Ukraine. Our restored and strengthened partnerships were instrumental in helping pass a resolution that created a new Commission of Inquiry — a powerful investigative mechanism. Because of this work, the international community will now document Russia’s horrific conduct in Ukraine as well as the Kremlin’s ongoing repression of its own domestic civil society.

 

As the 49th HRC session closes, the United States looks forward to building upon this good work to continue to address human rights challenges around the world.

 

Source: U.S. Department of State

Outcomes at the 49th Session of the UN Human Rights Council

The United States advanced U.S. foreign policy objectives at the 49th session of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) during our first session back as a voting member. We worked alongside Ukraine and HRC members to establish a Commission of Inquiry (CoI) – the first ever on Russia – to investigate alleged violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law in the context of Russia’s unprovoked war against Ukraine. The United States was also a member of the core group on Ukraine’s resolution to counter disinformation.

 

The United States co-sponsored more than half of the resolutions adopted and was a key member of the core groups on country-specific resolutions for South Sudan and Syria. The United States advanced other country-specific and thematic actions to promote greater respect for the human rights and fundamental freedoms of women and girls in all their diversity, indigenous persons, members of ethnic and religious minority groups, persons with disabilities, and members of other marginalized and vulnerable groups. The United States supported the Council’s role of shining a spotlight on countries of concern and promoting accountability for governments that abuse human rights. We also condemned reprisals against human rights defenders.

 

Russia: During an Urgent Debate on March 4, the United States voted to support Ukraine’s call for a CoI. The HRC voted overwhelmingly (32Y-2N-13A) to condemn Russia’s brutal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, called on it to immediately halt its assault on the people of Ukraine, and demanded that it withdraw its forces immediately. The vote illustrated Russia’s growing isolation in the international community. The CoI is the most robust investigative mechanism the Council possesses, and this is the first time since the Council’s creation in 2006 that it has established a CoI on Russia. The detailed information this Commission collects will help ensure the Kremlin’s horrific conduct in Ukraine is carefully documented to hold those responsible for human rights violations and abuses to account.

 

Belarus: The United States co-sponsored the European Union’s resolution extending the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Examination for a year. It was established in 2021 to investigate human rights violations surrounding the fraudulent August 9, 2020 presidential election in Belarus and the ongoing violent crackdown against civil society. Among other things, the resolution condemns reports of the regime’s holding of political prisoners and continued arbitrary arrests and detentions by Belarusian authorities, including of individuals who have peacefully protested or spoken out against Russia’s unprovoked war in Ukraine and against the Lukashenka regime’s repression. The OHCHR Examination issued its first written report on March 4, 2022, detailing widespread human rights violations by Belarusian authorities. The Examination will issue a second written report in March 2023.

 

Nicaragua: The United States co-sponsored the resolution led by eight Western Hemisphere partners on the promotion and protection of human rights in Nicaragua. The resolution established a group of human rights experts on Nicaragua to conduct thorough and independent investigations into all alleged human rights violations and abuses committed in Nicaragua since April 2018. The resolution also continues the urgent call for a stop to unjust arrests and detentions and for the immediate and unconditional release of political prisoners.

 

South Sudan: The United States, along with the United Kingdom, Norway, and Albania, led the renewal of the mandate of the Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan for another year. The Commission plays a crucial and unique role in collecting and preserving evidence of human rights violations and abuses with a view to promoting accountability and transitional justice in South Sudan. We continue to work with the Government of South Sudan and other regional partners to improve the lives of the South Sudanese people and support their path to peace.

 

Syria: As part of the core group on Syria, the United States co-sponsored a resolution that highlighted ongoing atrocities by the Assad regime in Syria, renewed the mandate of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria (COI), and called on OHCHR to document and report on civilian casualties. The United States stands with survivors of the Assad regime’s atrocities and will continue to strongly support Syrian human rights defenders and civil society, the COI, the International Impartial Independent Mechanism for Syria, and other UN mechanisms and agencies as they document the regime’s ongoing egregious abuses and violations.

 

Georgia: The United States proudly co-sponsored the Item 10 resolution on cooperation with Georgia. While much of the world’s attention is now rightly focused on Ukraine and Russia’s brutal invasion, we must also remember that Georgia continues to suffer under a 14-year Russian occupation of 20 percent of its territory.

 

Housing Resolution: The United States recognizes that access to adequate, affordable, and safe housing is important to leading a dignified life. We supported the addition by the core group (Brazil, Germany, Finland, and Namibia) of more inclusive language to the resolution, particularly on housing discrimination and the disparate impact of homelessness on members of vulnerable and marginalized populations, including in the aftermath of COVID-19. We were pleased to see that the resolution addressed racial discrimination in the housing market, including in the provision of credit and home appraisals, and encouraged the adoption of measures that lead to more diverse, inclusive communities.

 

Countering Disinformation: The United States, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Poland, Japan, Latvia, and Lithuania led the first-ever HRC resolution on the crucial role that countries play in leading inclusive, multistakeholder processes to counter disinformation. The resolution emphasized protection for the right to freedom of expression and encouraged countries to support increased transparency and media independence, literacy, education, and inclusion. It called on all countries not to conduct or sponsor disinformation campaigns and to condemn those countries that take such steps.

 

Agenda Item 7: The United States opposed Agenda Item 7, which singles out Israel. We voted against all resolutions that unfairly target Israel, including one under Agenda Item 2 on Accountability and Human Rights and three resolutions under Agenda Item 7.

 

The United States also supported the renewal of Special Rapporteurs for the human rights situations in Iran, North Korea, and Burma.

 

The United States strongly opposed several resolutions, as well as provisions in other resolutions, which sought to introduce vague language with no agreed meaning that implies human rights are held by groups or States rather than individuals, undermining respect for human rights and long-standing frameworks in the United Nations system. The use of language seeking to collectivize rights undermines the HRC’s focus on the universality of human rights and fundamental freedoms and seeks to subordinate individually held human rights to policy goals of development and economic progress.

 

Thematic Issues: The United States also co-sponsored resolutions on Freedom of Religion or Belief; Mandate Renewal for Human Rights and Terrorism; Cultural Rights and the Protection of Cultural Heritage; Participation of Persons with Disabilities in Sport; Prevention of Genocide; Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities; Right to Work; Human Rights Defenders; and Promoting the Voluntary Technical Assistance Trust Fund to Support Least Developed Countries and Small Island Developing States.

 

Joint Statements: The United States signed onto 13 thematic or country-specific joint statements. The United States led a joint statement co-signed by 85 countries reaffirming a shared commitment to territorial integrity. We joined over 50 countries to sign a Poland-led joint statement condemning human rights abuses against anti-war protesters, independent media, representatives of the political opposition, and civil society organizations inside Russia. We also joined 50 countries in a joint statement highlighting the critical human rights situation in Yemen and calling for further justice and accountability for human rights abuses. Additionally, we joined country-specific statements on Afghanistan and Sri Lanka and supported thematic joint statements on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Environmental Human Rights Defenders, UN Voluntary Fund for Torture, Children in Armed Conflict, International Women’s Day, the Responsibility to Protect and Minority Issues, and Mainstreaming Human Rights.

 

Side Events: The United States led two side events: one on racial justice and another on women human rights defenders and technology. Building upon the themes discussed during the 2021 Summit for Democracy and in commemoration of the UN International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, Howard University (Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center and Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center) and CIVICUS hosted a virtual HRC side event on March 24 which highlighted the importance of inclusion in democracies. A panel moderated by Dr. Paul Mulindwa (Uganda) featured civil society and former government leaders from around the world. Dr. Mulindwa posed a wide range of questions to the panelists on topics such as the sustainability of global movements for racial equity, importance of inclusion and representation in governmental leadership, disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on racial, ethnic, and religious minorities, institutional challenges to achieving equity, and recommendations for governments and civil society.

 

On March 29, the United States and the European Union Special Representative for Human Rights co-hosted a side event in partnership with Access Now and Frontline Defenders entitled “Protecting Women Human Rights Defenders Online.” The event was the first in a series of multilateral engagements within the U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council (TTC) working group to address the misuse of technology. Participants included Costa Rica’s Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, the Senior Advisor to the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders, and two prominent women human rights defenders. In co-hosting this event, the United States and EU sent a strong message to human rights defenders and those who threaten them that the U.S. and the EU prioritize this issue within the TTC and will work together to bring this to the forefront of our foreign policy and advocate for proper accountability.

 

Source: U.S. Department of State

VOA Interview: US Ambassador to UN Agencies for Food and Agriculture Cindy McCain

RZESZOW, POLAND — U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Agencies for Food and Agriculture Cindy McCain spoke with VOA Eastern Europe Bureau Chief Myroslava Gongadze during her visit to Rzeszow, Poland. McCain was in Rzeszow on Friday, visiting a food distribution center on the Polish border with Ukraine to see what aid is making it to the Ukrainian refugees.

 

VOA: “So, Cindy, you’re here in Rzeszow these days. What has your experience been with this crisis amidst this war in Ukraine?”

 

Ambassador Cindy McCain: “Well, I came here specifically so that I could take a look at the operations that were going on here at reception centers, how our U.N. agencies are performing, and where we can figure out the gaps. And as you know, there’s a huge food crisis. So, my role in this is to see what else we can do, how we can manage this, and how we can, can do more with less. And and that’s my primary role here. But I have to say, I was utterly overwhelmed with the graciousness and the kindness of the Polish people. This is a lesson in how to treat your fellow man here.”

 

VOA: “We have an enormous food crisis because of the war in Ukraine. Ukraine is one of the biggest agricultural countries and delivers a lot of food, specifically to the needs of Africa and the Middle East. How did you see the impact and what is … is the world ready to do something about it?”

 

McCain: “Well, the impacts, I mean, it’s a ripple effect that goes around the world. I think the … what we need to be concerned with right now is in the immediate needs, of course, of the people that are, that are en route or have already arrived in various parts of Europe now, not just Poland, but other parts. And also, the long … we have to look at the long term. I mean, how do we now make it sustainable, you know, to be able to manage and to be able to feed people, give them dignity of life, give them a future. And that’s a big job. And so, all of our U.N. agencies are working together on this, to not only, not only work on the immediate needs, but work on the long-term plans of it. And it’s a huge problem, as you know.”

 

VOA: “Are they — are those agencies effective? I’m hearing different views, different assessments. Do you think that international agencies are fast and effective enough in this, in this crisis?”

 

McCain: “Well, I think, for instance, agencies that are emergency relief agencies like World Food Program are meant to do just that. They are fast. They are nimble. They, you know, they are there in a nanosecond on most of these things. And the other agencies are long term. So of course, it takes a little longer to gear up and to build up because each situation is different. Nevertheless, they all work together very well. And there’s always room for improvement in wherever you are, but I think the U.N. is doing a marvelous job here.”

 

VOA: “About their presence on the ground. I talked to some representatives from the Ukrainian government, and they are asking for more food on the ground from the international community. They said that they don’t see them there, and it’s important for them to understand what is going on on the ground to have a better assessment of the needs.”

 

McCain: “Well, I think there’s more than you would think on the ground, because every agency that I’ve spoken to while I’ve been here, there are people on the ground. But again, you know, this is a tough area and things are dangerous. So, there’s a give and take as to, you know, how you commit your people and making sure that they’re also safe. But I understand people’s frustration. I also understand the urgency in all of this. Because it is an urgent, an urgent event and an urgent crisis. But, but I think, you know, we’ll see what happens here. There is one person that can stop this and that is Vladimir Putin. He can stop bombing and pull out.”

 

VOA: “It’s a more political question, but Russia is still part of the Security Council, U.N. Security Council, and obviously have a veto on the decision-making in the U.N. Is there any efforts or movement on, on the point of maybe kicking Russia out of Security Council?”

 

McCain: “Well, you know, my area of expertise and what I work on is food. And within our own organizations, though, the Russians were attempting to become vice president of World Food Program Board, things like that, and of course, we stopped that. It would — to me it would be an incredible disappointment if somehow the Russians were put in charge of an agency that is managing the largest crises in the world, and the people that are perpetrating it are somehow running it. So, we, we stopped it. And you know, we have to stop them at every point. And again, keeping in mind what we do as a group, my group here, is to feed, and to, to … not just short-term feeding but long-term feeding. Finding seeds now, making sure that we can produce crops. There are crops in the ground right now, but we may not be able to get them out of the ground because of mining, because of, you know, all the other, all the other issues that are coming about. We’ll get some of it out, but we won’t get all of it out. And so therein lies a huge worldwide problem.”

 

VOA: “I’m hearing that, I mean, the experts say that this, this effect of this war would be doubled, as we had effect from the coronavirus crisis two years ago. What are the U.N. agency, what are the other agencies prepared to do to, kind of, make the effect have a little bit less of the impact?”

 

McCain: “Well, I think, you know, Europe is certainly bearing some of the brunt of this. And I think, I think that if we carefully manage this and making sure — keeping in mind that food and agriculture being my most important part of this — but working together and being — as you’ve seen the world community is unanimously against this whole thing, and so I think you’ll see a world community galvanized and being, and willing, being willing to absorb a lot of this and making sure that these people have dignity and respect. I mean, this is a terrible thing that’s happening.”

 

VOA: “We have to stop the war.”

 

McCain: “Yeah, we do have to stop the war, you’re right.”

 

VOA: “OK, thank you so much … .”

 

McCain: “Thank you.”

 

Source: Voice of America