Lille: un mort dans les décombres des immeubles effondrés

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Un corps a été retrouvé dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche sous les gravats des deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés samedi matin en plein centre de Lille, très probablement celui d’un médecin porté disparu, qui avait emprunté…

Un corps a été retrouvé dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche sous les gravats des deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés samedi matin en plein centre de Lille, très probablement celui d’un médecin porté disparu, qui avait emprunté un appartement à des amis pour la nuit.

La victime n’a pas encore été officiellement identifiée, mais selon les secours, tout laisse à penser qu’il s’agit de cet homme, dont la voiture est garée sur place, qui ne s’est pas présenté à ses rendez-vous et dont le téléphone “bornait” dans la zone.

Le centre hospitalier de Calais, où officiait ce médecin, le Dr Alexandre Klein, a publié un communiqué dimanche matin pour faire part de son “décès accidentel”. “Un hommage sera organisé” en mémoire de celui qui était chef du pôle Santé mentale et addictologie, est-il précisé.

Selon les premiers éléments de l’enquête, il s’agit d’un psychiatre de 45 ans, parti de Calais pour se rendre à Reims et qui s’était fait prêter un appartement par des amis pour passer la nuit à Lille, a dit à l’AFP la procureure de la République de Lille, Carole Etienne.

Mais le corps retrouvé, “transporté à l’institut médico-légal”, doit encore être formellement identifié, a-t-elle insisté.

“Homicide involontaire”

Selon la maire socialiste de Lille, Martine Aubry, un arrêté de péril imminent avait été pris pour un des deux immeubles effondrés, que les pompiers avaient décidé d’évacuer dans la nuit de vendredi à samedi après le signalement d’un habitant.

Mais en s’écroulant samedi vers 9H15, cet immeuble a entraîné dans sa chute un immeuble mitoyen, dans lequel se trouvait ce médecin. Sa présence dans le bâtiment n’a été portée à la connaissance des secours que samedi en fin de matinée, a-t-elle expliqué à l’AFP.

La victime a été localisée vers 1h30 dimanche matin, puis extraite en fin de nuit, après des heures de fouille dans l’immense amas de métal et de briques de la rue Pierre-Mauroy, où se sont effondrés les deux immeubles de trois étages, une artère commerçante à deux pas de la Grand Place.

L’enquête ouverte samedi pour “mise en danger de la vie d’autrui” a été élargie au chef d’”homicide involontaire”, a précisé la procureure de Lille. Elle “a pour objectif de déterminer les responsabilités sur l’état du bâtiment”, notamment “la connaissance que pouvaient avoir les propriétaires”.

Le ministre délégué au Logement, Olivier Klein, qui se rendra à Lille lundi, avait indiqué samedi que le bâtiment n’était pas “frappé d’insalubrité”. 

Des experts judiciaires, accompagnés des services de la ville, visitaient dimanche matin une demi-douzaine d’immeubles avoisinants, évacués samedi, pour vérifier leur stabilité. Mais “aucun élément” ne laisse craindre l’éventuel effondrement d’un autre bâtiment, a souligné Mme Aubry.

“Du mal à réaliser”

“Les opérations de secours”, qui ont mobilisé 80 pompiers et plus de 40 engins, “sont terminées”, ont indiqué dimanche matin les pompiers du Nord sur Twitter, faisant état d’un bilan définitif d’une personne décédée et une autre secourue.

Le bilan aurait pu être bien plus élevé si un étudiant n’avait pas alerté la police municipale et les pompiers dans la nuit de vendredi à samedi, permettant l’évacuation d’une dizaine d’habitants, après avoir constaté que son “immeuble avait bougé” et qu’un mur s’éventrait.

“J’ai encore un peu de mal à réaliser que, du coup, j’ai échappé à ma propre mort, à celle de mes amis, à celle d’inconnus qui passaient peut-être là, parce que la rue Pierre-Mauroy est très passante”, a raconté à Europe 1 le jeune homme, Thibault Lemay.

“Il mérite évidemment d’être salué, il a évité un drame beaucoup plus important”, a estimé dimanche le porte-parole du gouvernement, Olivier Véran, sur BFMTV.

“Les pompiers ont commencé à tambouriner sur les portes, mais j’ai cru que c’était des fêtards et je suis resté au lit”, a raconté à l’AFP un habitant évacué, Benjamin Lopard, 35 ans.

“Quand les policiers sont arrivés, j’ai réalisé que c’était sérieux”, poursuit ce jeune homme, parti vers 5h30 samedi avec ses papiers, son ordinateur et une tenue de rechange. “Je réalise maintenant la chance incroyable qu’on a eue”, dit-il: sans cette évacuation “on serait tous dans des boîtes en bois”.

zap-cnp/tes

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Immeubles effondrés à Lille: les pompiers à la recherche d’une personne portée disparue

La maire de Lille, Martine Aubry, devant les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de la ville, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

NewsAmericasNow.com

Israël: grand retour de Netanyahu, désigné pour former le gouvernement

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Arrivé en tête des législatives en Israël avec ses alliés d’extrême droite et ultra-orthodoxes, Benjamin Netanyahu a été officiellement désigné dimanche pour former un gouvernement, une victoire pour l’ex-Premier ministre…

Arrivé en tête des législatives en Israël avec ses alliés d’extrême droite et ultra-orthodoxes, Benjamin Netanyahu a été officiellement désigné dimanche pour former un gouvernement, une victoire pour l’ex-Premier ministre qui avait juré de retrouver son costume.

Son gouvernement pourrait être le plus à droite de l’histoire d’Israël, une éventualité qui a suscité d’emblée des craintes localement et à l’international.

Plus tôt cette semaine, une majorité de députés, 64 sur les 120 du Parlement élu le 1er novembre, ont recommandé au président Isaac Herzog de confier à M. Netanyahu la tâche de mettre sur pied une nouvelle équipe ministérielle.

“Je vous donne le mandat de former un gouvernement”, a déclaré dimanche M. Herzog aux côtés de M. Netanyahu, lors d’une conférence de presse à Jérusalem.

“Je serai le Premier ministre de tous, de ceux qui ont voté pour nous et les autres. C’est ma responsabilité”, a déclaré M. Netanyahu, 73 ans, promettant “un gouvernement stable et performant, un gouvernement responsable et engagé”.

Il a 28 jours pour former son gouvernement, avec un supplément de 14 jours si nécessaire.

Benjamin Netanyahu revient aux affaires malgré son inculpation pour corruption et alors que son procès est en cours.

M. Herzog a dit “ne pas oublier” ni “minimiser” ces accusations -que N. Netanyahu rejette- et rappelé que la Cour suprême avait précédemment autorisé un député inculpé à former un gouvernement.

En Israël, le Premier ministre ne dispose d’aucune immunité judiciaire mais n’a pas à démissionner ou à se retirer pendant la durée de son procès.

“Faire peur”

C’est le chef de gouvernement sortant, le centriste Yaïr Lapid, qui avait évincé l’an dernier M. Netanyahu en ralliant une coalition hétéroclite décidée à mettre un terme au règne du Premier ministre le plus pérenne de l’histoire d’Israël, en poste de 1996 à 1999 et de 2009 à 2021.

Relégué au rang de chef de l’opposition, celui que tout le monde surnomme “Bibi” avait alors promis de “renverser le gouvernement à la première occasion”.

Aussitôt après l’annonce des résultats des législatives du 1er novembre, les cinquièmes en trois ans et demi, il a commencé les discussions avec ses alliés sur la distribution des portefeuilles ministériels.

Alors que son parti de droite, le Likoud, a obtenu 32 sièges à la Knesset, ses alliés ultra-orthodoxes 18 et l’alliance “Sionisme religieux” 14, un record pour l’extrême droite, son gouvernement pourrait être le plus à droite de l’histoire d’Israël.

Dimanche, à “ceux qui prophétisent des catastrophes et font peur au public”, M. Netanyahu a assuré que leurs “discours” étaient “faux”.

Chez les ultra-orthodoxes, le chef du parti séfarade Shass, Arieh Dery, revigoré par ses 11 sièges, lorgne sur les Finances ou l’Intérieur, d’après la presse.

M. Dery a été reconnu coupable de fraude fiscale en 2021 et avait auparavant été emprisonné pour corruption.

L’alliance d’extrême droite “Sionisme religieux” a elle réclamé le ministère de la Défense pour son chef, Betzalel Smotrich. Connu pour ses diatribes anti-palestiniennes, son numéro 2, Itamar Ben Gvir, cible lui la Sécurité intérieure.

“Jour sombre”

Outre la volonté d’accorder davantage de pouvoirs aux forces de sécurité, l’extrême droite pousse pour une réforme du système judiciaire, notamment pour que les fonctionnaires et élus ne puissent plus être poursuivis pour abus de confiance, l’une des charges retenues contre M. Netanyahu.

L’objectif de M. Netanyahu et de ses alliés “est de le sauver de son procès en laissant les intérêts de l’Etat d’Israël derrière”, a assuré dimanche le parti Yesh Atid de M. Lapid, déplorant “un jour sombre pour la démocratie israélienne”. 

Après la victoire de M. Netanyahu et de ses alliés, plusieurs pays occidentaux dont les Etats-Unis ont appelé à la “tolérance” et à respecter “les groupes minoritaires”.

Côté palestinien, les résultats du scrutin ont été perçus avec fatalisme. Le Premier ministre Mohammed Shtayyeh a affirmé ne se faire “aucune illusion sur le fait que les élections produiraient un partenaire pour la paix”.

Sous les précédents gouvernements de M. Netanyahu, la colonisation israélienne dans les Territoires palestiniens occupés a fait un bond et des accords de normalisation avec des pays arabes considérés comme une “trahison” par les Palestiniens ont été signés.

cgo/mib/tp

Des supporters du parti de l’extrême droite Otzma Yehudit (“Pouvoir juif”) attendant les résultats des législatives dans un hôtel de Jérusalem, le 1er novembre 2022
• Jalaa MAREY

Le président israélien Isaac Herzog (D) et le Premier ministre désigné Benjamin Netanyahu posent pour les photographes à Jérusalem, le 13 novembre 2022
• Menahem KAHANA

Itamar Ben Gvir, ténor de l’extrême droite en Israël, s’exprime durant des consultations avec les partis à Jérusalem, le 10 novembre 2022
• Menahem KAHANA

NewsAmericasNow.com

Lille: un mort dans les décombres des immeubles effondrés

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Un corps a été retrouvé dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche sous les gravats des deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés samedi matin en plein centre de Lille, très probablement celui d’un médecin porté disparu, qui avait emprunté…

Un corps a été retrouvé dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche sous les gravats des deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés samedi matin en plein centre de Lille, très probablement celui d’un médecin porté disparu, qui avait emprunté un appartement à des amis pour la nuit.

La victime n’a pas encore été officiellement identifiée, mais selon les secours, tout laisse à penser qu’il s’agit de cet homme, dont la voiture est garée sur place, qui ne s’est pas présenté à ses rendez-vous et dont le téléphone “bornait” dans la zone.

Le centre hospitalier de Calais, où officiait ce médecin, le Dr Alexandre Klein, a publié un communiqué dimanche matin pour faire part de son “décès accidentel”. “Un hommage sera organisé” en mémoire de celui qui était chef du pôle Santé mentale et addictologie, est-il précisé.

Selon les premiers éléments de l’enquête, il s’agit d’un psychiatre de 45 ans, parti de Calais pour se rendre à Reims et qui s’était fait prêter un appartement par des amis pour passer la nuit à Lille, a dit à l’AFP la procureure de la République de Lille, Carole Etienne.

Mais le corps retrouvé, “transporté à l’institut médico-légal”, doit encore être formellement identifié, a-t-elle insisté.

“Homicide involontaire”

Selon la maire socialiste de Lille, Martine Aubry, un arrêté de péril imminent avait été pris pour un des deux immeubles effondrés, que les pompiers avaient décidé d’évacuer dans la nuit de vendredi à samedi après le signalement d’un habitant.

Mais en s’écroulant samedi vers 9H15, cet immeuble a entraîné dans sa chute un immeuble mitoyen, dans lequel se trouvait ce médecin. Sa présence dans le bâtiment n’a été portée à la connaissance des secours que samedi en fin de matinée, a-t-elle expliqué à l’AFP.

La victime a été localisée vers 1h30 dimanche matin, puis extraite en fin de nuit, après des heures de fouille dans l’immense amas de métal et de briques de la rue Pierre-Mauroy, où se sont effondrés les deux immeubles de trois étages, une artère commerçante à deux pas de la Grand Place.

L’enquête ouverte samedi pour “mise en danger de la vie d’autrui” a été élargie au chef d’”homicide involontaire”, a précisé la procureure de Lille. Elle “a pour objectif de déterminer les responsabilités sur l’état du bâtiment”, notamment “la connaissance que pouvaient avoir les propriétaires”.

Le ministre délégué au Logement, Olivier Klein, qui se rendra à Lille lundi, avait indiqué samedi que le bâtiment n’était pas “frappé d’insalubrité”. 

Des experts judiciaires, accompagnés des services de la ville, visitaient dimanche matin une demi-douzaine d’immeubles avoisinants, évacués samedi, pour vérifier leur stabilité. Mais “aucun élément” ne laisse craindre l’éventuel effondrement d’un autre bâtiment, a souligné Mme Aubry.

“Du mal à réaliser”

“Les opérations de secours”, qui ont mobilisé 80 pompiers et plus de 40 engins, “sont terminées”, ont indiqué dimanche matin les pompiers du Nord sur Twitter, faisant état d’un bilan définitif d’une personne décédée et une autre secourue.

Le bilan aurait pu être bien plus élevé si un étudiant n’avait pas alerté la police municipale et les pompiers dans la nuit de vendredi à samedi, permettant l’évacuation d’une dizaine d’habitants, après avoir constaté que son “immeuble avait bougé” et qu’un mur s’éventrait.

“J’ai encore un peu de mal à réaliser que, du coup, j’ai échappé à ma propre mort, à celle de mes amis, à celle d’inconnus qui passaient peut-être là, parce que la rue Pierre-Mauroy est très passante”, a raconté à Europe 1 le jeune homme, Thibault Lemay.

“Il mérite évidemment d’être salué, il a évité un drame beaucoup plus important”, a estimé dimanche le porte-parole du gouvernement, Olivier Véran, sur BFMTV.

“Les pompiers ont commencé à tambouriner sur les portes, mais j’ai cru que c’était des fêtards et je suis resté au lit”, a raconté à l’AFP un habitant évacué, Benjamin Lopard, 35 ans.

“Quand les policiers sont arrivés, j’ai réalisé que c’était sérieux”, poursuit ce jeune homme, parti vers 5h30 samedi avec ses papiers, son ordinateur et une tenue de rechange. “Je réalise maintenant la chance incroyable qu’on a eue”, dit-il: sans cette évacuation “on serait tous dans des boîtes en bois”.

zap-cnp/tes

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Immeubles effondrés à Lille: les pompiers à la recherche d’une personne portée disparue

La maire de Lille, Martine Aubry, devant les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de la ville, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

Des pompiers dans les décombres de deux immeubles mitoyens qui se sont effondrés dans le centre de Lille, le 12 novembre 2022 dans le nord de la France
• Sameer Al-DOUMY

NewsAmericasNow.com

Stoke leads England past Pakistan to win T20 World Cup Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — England confirmed their reputation as the masters of short-form cricket by claiming the Twenty20 World Cup with a stirring five-wicket triumph over Pakistan at the MCG on Sunday.

A combination of miserly bowling and poised batting proved the difference as England claimed their second T20 World Cup following their win in the West Indies in 2010.

After restricting Pakistan to 137-8, England struggled for a period in the middle of their pursuit before Ben Stokes lifted the tempo with five overs remaining in Melbourne.

England’s Ben Stokes, centre, celebrates with teammates after hitting the winning runs. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake).

The all-rounder steadied England through a testing time and burnished his reputation for delivering in big matches by top-scoring with an unbeaten 52 runs off 49 balls.

England had one over to spare when Stokes struck the winning runs through mid-wicket, with the left-handed batter jumping into the air in celebration after a superb innings.

Largely dominant throughout the tournament, a shock loss to Ireland in a rain-affected match aside, England are the first nation to hold the T20 and 50-over World Cup titles in tandem.

In his first year as English captain, Jos Buttler led his country superbly throughout the month-long tournament in Australia and was delighted by his nation’s performance in the decider.

England’s Sam Curran celebrates the dismissal of Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake).

Sam Curran, who bowled superbly when taking 3-12 from four overs, was named both the player of the match and also of a tournament in which he finished with 13 wickets.

“I don’t think I should be getting this, the way Stokesy played there (but) we’re going to enjoy this occasion. (It’s) very special,” he said.

“The way I bowl, I go into the wicket with my slower balls and keep the batsmen guessing. (To be the) world champions, how good.”

While heavy rain fell around Melbourne on Sunday night, concerns that the final would be interrupted were unfounded with only a few drops falling early in England’s pursuit.

That was fortunate for England, which slipped behind the required run rate in the middle stages until Stokes’ settling innings, and also the 80,462 fans in attendance for the final.

Pakistan will ponder what might have been after star pace bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi injured himself while taking a catch to remove Harry Brook with the final still in the balance.

On returning to the field after treatment, Afridi was reintroduced into the attack with five overs remaining but lasted just one delivery before again limping from the MCG in despair.

This proved a reprieve for England, which still required 41 runs from 30 balls when Afridi was brought back on to bowl. It was here that Stokes launched the winning attack with the bat.

It is a deserved triumph for the tournament favourites — they were as methodical with both the ball and bat in hand in the final as they had been throughout the month in Australia.

Curran and right-arm leg spinner Adil Rashid were superb in helping restrict Pakistan, vindicating Buttler’s decision to bowl first after winning the toss.

Pakistan’s opening combination of Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan combined for 29 runs before the latter dragged a delivery from Curran on to his stumps in the fifth over.

Azam, the Pakistan captain, batted with measured aggression until losing his wicket caught-and-bowled to Rashid for 32 runs off 28 balls in the 12th over.

Rashid’s variety and ability to surprise when finishing with figures of 2-22 from four overs proved crucial in helping England restrict Pakistan at a pivotal moment in their innings.

As adept in the infancy and also at the death of Pakistan’s innings was Curran, who bowled superbly.

Buttler, who said on Saturday that he had dreamed of leading his nation to success as a boy, set an aggressive tone for England at the top of the batting order after Afridi removed Alex Hales in the first over.

But when an innings featuring classical cover drives and innovative shots was ended by Rauf Haris for 26 off 17 balls, the pro-Pakistan crowd came to life.

Stokes and Brook slowed the tempo when combining for a crucial 39-run partnership before the latter holed out to Afridi off the bowling of Shadab Khan in a pivotal moment.

But with Stokes at the crease and Afridi hobbled, England always looked likely to reach the target, with the hero at the crease praising the work of the nation’s bowlers.

“In finals, especially when chasing, you forget all the hard work that came first. To restrict them to 137, the bowlers have to take a lot of credit,” Stokes said.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Men who allegedly defrauded ‘Beachy Stout’ of millions granted bail Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Two men were last week each granted $900,000 bail on charges relative to defrauding murder accused and popular Portland businessman, Everton ‘Beachy Stout’ McDonald, of more than $30 million.

The accused men are Romane James, a 22-year-old Manchester farmer, and 21-year-old Demar Bryce, also a farmer, of a Clarendon address.

Both men appeared in the Kingston and St Andrew Parish Court on Thursday, on charges of conspiracy to defraud, simple larceny, possession of criminal property, and engaging in a transaction that involved criminal property.

They were offered bail following applications made by their attorneys for their release from police custody, pending trial.

James and Bryce are required to surrender their travel documents and return to court on February 20, 2023.

The alleged swindling of monies from McDonald occurred while he was in police custody on charges of allegedly murdering his two wives, Tonia Hamilton-McDonald in July of 2020, and Merlene McDonald in May of 2009.

Allegations relative to the fraud case are that between July 9, 2021 and June 8, 2022, James and Bryce conspired and devised a scheme in which cheques totalling US$215,300 were drawn up and encashed at various local branches of a particular bank.

Bank officials later called the police after it was determined that McDonald and a joint holder on the account did not authorise the cheques to be drawn and encashed, or for any information on the account to be changed.

Following a probe, the men were arrested and subsequently charged.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Why Antigua’s leader is wrong in blaming India for global climate change?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

by Vineet Malik

Small island countries have recently shown immense dissatisfaction towards developed countries in tackling climate change. Here, in the recent COP-27 Summit held in Egypt, Caribbean countries such as Barbados and Antigua have raised voices about the poor countries being scapegoated by the West. Even Barbados PM Mia Mottley was applauded for her bravery in blasting the West for its dealings with climate change and poor countries being unrepresented.

But it looks like PM Gaston Browne has just demanded India to pay up for the loss and damages caused by the US and European nations. As per what Al Jazeera stated regarding these developments, PM Gaston Browne mentioned the countries paying for the damages through payment of Global Carbon Tax. 

What loss and damages has India caused to it?

But, Gaston’s blame on India and his expectation from India are highly misplaced. How? Let’s understand.

Source: Associates Times

Why is India on Browne’s Climate Hitlist?

It seems that PM Brown is actually frustrated with the west over the climate crisis, but he is shedding it out against developing countries like India and China. Outraged PM Gaston Browne targeted India for an entire climatic impasse, where the elephant wasn’t given a toss.

Gaston Browne even asked New Delhi to come and support countries in rebuilding economies that are damaged by disasters. He asked for compensation and aid. All this is ok when you do not blame countries like India which have provided continuous assistance, instead you reprimand them and ask for money.

Initially, only the US, UK and some EU members were held accountable for climate change-related ramifications and adverse impacts but this time even India has been put in the same boat. That came as a surprise because India is still a developing country and it is essential for her to use her resources properly in order to become a developed nation. In spite of her challenges, she still assisted the CARICOM countries.

Henceforth, it is essential for the countries to understand India’s goodwill gesture and reciprocate in return. During desperate times amidst the Covid pandemic, India provided Rs.160 million of medical assistance to these island countries.

Source: Antigua News Room

New Delhi even assisted Antigua in the development of a hospital. USD$ 10 million of solar energy projects has also been provided to Saint John’s along with assistance through the International Solar Alliance. In 2019, India committed to providing a grant of USD$ 14 million for community development and 150 million lines of credit for solar and renewable energy.

During the 4th India-CARICOM Foreign Ministers meeting, New Delhi committed to providing support to CARICOM countries in multidimensional fields such as IT, and pharmaceuticals. But what has New Delhi got in return? Thrashing?

Even though challenges pertaining to climate change have created impacts on ecological balance but coming to India, it has already done tremendously well in promoting green and sustainable energy through the promotion of wind, and solar power.

India has tried its best in combatting climate change in spite of being a poverty and hunger-ridden country for decades. According to a BBC report, 33 per cent of the carbon emissions came from China, 13 per cent from the US and surprisingly, only 7 per cent from India. When the world was struggling with the virus, India’s share of energy coming from renewable resources reached 3 per cent and 175 gigawatts of renewable energy aims to be installed by 2022.

PM Brown should understand India’s stance and situation and come out of his misplaced priorities. He should develop a clear understanding of who’s the villain and who is not, based on the facts and initiatives. The facts suggest that the West was and is a larger emitter and the West should be considered the main enemy, not the countries from the East, especially India.

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NewsAmericasNow.com

Loss and Damage in the Caribbean: We see it, we feel it, we know it

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

A historic move was made at the beginning of this year’s United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change’s (UNFCCC) Conference of Parties (COP27), in Sharm el Sheik, Egypt: Loss and Damage (L&D) was finally added to the agenda.

What is L&D, exactly? It covers the impacts of climate change that occur despite adaptation and mitigation efforts. “Loss” refers to the negative impacts for which reparation or restoration is impossible; “Damage” to the negative impacts for which reparation or restoration is possible. The causes of these negative effects include both extreme events and slow onset events.

The minute I learned the issue would be on the table at COP27, I had an instant flashback to COP21 in Paris, when hordes of young people from both developing and developed countries came together, en masse, standing in the freezing wind, protesting and demanding that Loss and Damage be prioritised.

For years, countries of the Global North (those rich countries which have benefited from industrial development and are some of the largest emitters of the greenhouse gases contributing to climate change) have been putting up barricades, preventing any discussion of L&D, much to the chagrin of the Global South (those countries already facing the brunt of the climate crisis).

In his address at the opening of Climate Week in New York City, the new Executive Secretary of UN Climate Change, Simon Steil, described COP27 as “the world’s first opportunity in the era of implementation of the Paris Agreement to demonstrate progress.”

For many, this COP could not be considered remotely effective if L&D wasn’t up for discussion. Without talks around L&D, how could implementation to deal with climate impacts be achieved? For Caribbean countries, the COP27 mission is being led by the banner of climate justice, particularly through the Loss and Damage (L&D) agenda.

So why is Loss and Damage so important for Caribbean nations? Think of the residual impacts of climate change which mitigation and adaptation efforts are insufficient to prevent or alleviate — including desertification, or sea level rise. L&D is essentially a direct response to the inadequacy of mere adaptation and mitigation efforts.

It was the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) that first began championing the cause of L&D in 1991, in the run-up to the negotiations around setting up the UNFCCC11. AOSIS led the way in proposing the creation of an international insurance pool to assist in offering compensation to the most vulnerable and low-lying coastal developing countries, such as Mauritius, Seychelles, the Maldives, Samoa, Palau, etc., in terms of Loss and Damage arising from sea level rise. Since then, AOSIS has consistently called for a mechanism that would possess the ability and effectiveness to compensate countries.

The idea is to garner support for climate-vulnerable countries, which bear the heavier burden in terms of the climate crisis. Knowing fully well what this crisis means for their economies, societies, and livelihoods of their citizens, small island nations have been key in championing the L&D concept since its inception — and they have not backed down, creating a clear rally cry for raised ambitions around L&D financing.

In recent years, pressure has been steadily building to institutionalise a UNFCCC mechanism on L&D in response to the shortcomings of mitigation policy and the inadequacy of adaptation support for countries already experiencing the worst effects of climate change. This is why Caribbean leaders have been and continue to strive to make big strides at COP27 with regard to L&D.

For Caribbean and island nations, L&D is a debilitating obstacle that stands in the way of achieving development and fostering economic prosperity. As reported by CCRIF, annual expected losses from the effects of disasters triggered by such hazards are expected to be in the range of one to nine percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 2030, depending on the country and the rate of climate change.

The climate crisis has been manifesting through detrimental impacts across the scope of life in the Caribbean, including effects on agriculture and food production, human health, ecosystemstourismfresh water availabilityenergy productionlivelihoods, human productivity, critical infrastructure and economic development.

According to a report by the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, the Caribbean has experienced direct and indirect losses of over three billion United States dollars due to natural disasters associated with weather and climate events between 1970 and 2000 alone.

As I type this report from the computer centre outside COP27’s main plenary hall where all the lofty speeches took place a couple days ago, I am concerned about the massive losses and damages currently being faced by my fellow citizens of Trinidad and Tobago due to massive, widespread flooding overnight.

Loss and Damage. In the Caribbean, we see it, we feel it, we know it.

In light of oil companies scoring tens of billions in profits this year with crude prices skyrocketing in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a group of small island nations joined a call on November 8, pushing for a windfall tax that would force oil companies to compensate developing countries for the damage caused by climate-change-induced natural disasters.

“It is about time that these companies are made to pay a global COP carbon tax on these profits as a source of funding for loss and damage,” stated Gaston Browne, prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda and current AOSIS chair. “While they are profiting, the planet is burning,” he added, speaking on behalf of the 39-nation Alliance of Small Island States, many of whose very existence is threatened by rising sea levels and increasingly intense tropical storms. Meanwhile, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley championed a ten percent tax on oil companies to fund Loss and Damage.

Island nations did not come to Egypt to twiddle their thumbs. They will no longer be obstructed by the United States and the European Union, both having dragged the L&D discussion in the past. “We look forward to the establishment and officialisation of the fund by 2024,” Brown said.

At the heart of the matter, Loss and Damage is an issue of justice.

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UN climate summit set for tough negotiations in final week

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Climate change has reached a point where people can no longer adapt to many of the impacts. Delegates at the annual UN climate summit (COP27) in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, spent much of the first week discussing the suffering that’s already happening across the world and took the first tentative steps toward figuring out how to pay developing countries for this loss and damage.

There were a few pledges from individual governments – US$50 million from Austria, US$12 million from New Zealand, £5 million from Scotland, and US$2.5 million from Belgium. That is a drop in the ocean, and at this stage of the negotiations, it’s unclear how this can be integrated into the loss and damage finance mechanism that’s being negotiated at the talks, and which is likely to be a key area of discussion over the coming years.

Gaston Browne, prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda and representative of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), told reporters on the sidelines of COP27 that finance for loss and damage should come from wealthy states and taxes on fossil fuel firms. Notably, the conference is being attended by over 6,000 members of coal, oil and gas companies, a 25% increase from last year.

AOSIS would like to see an agreement at this COP on a fund that is “truly operational” by 2024, Browne said. He also wanted large greenhouse gas (GHG) emitters among developing countries, such as China, India and South Africa, to pay for loss and damage.

Developing countries unite over money

As in previous climate summits, the most contentious issue was climate finance from developed to developing countries. In a year marked by disasters worsened by climate change, developing countries showed a united front during the summit’s first week on the need for money, including for loss and damage. Developed countries continued to push back on such demands.

Bhupender Yadav, India’s environment minister, told China Dialogue that the country fully supported other developing countries in their demand for climate finance, including the establishment of a separate fund to pay for loss and damage. The demand was most forcefully articulated by Pakistan, which has suffered devastating floods this year. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres made a rare gesture by visiting the Pakistan pavilion at the summit and lending his support to the demand. Pakistan is also the current chair of the G77 and China group, a bloc of over 130 countries that conduct climate negotiations together.

Speaking at COP27, Prime Minister of Barbados Mia Mottley said ‘We were the ones whose blood, sweat and tears financed the industrial revolution’ (Image: UN climate change / FlickrCC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

A surprise from China

The main surprise from the Chinese delegation in week one was Special Envoy Xie Zhenhua’s comment at a World Bank side event that China’s methane plan is complete and in the process of approval. Xie revealed that the plan covers three sectors – energy, agriculture and waste management – and that a preliminary target is already in place. The goals are preliminary as China is still in the process of establishing a monitoring system for methane emissions. He also confirmed that, while China’s emissions control target (it’s nationally determined contribution or NDC) does not include methane, the country’s plan to reach net zero emissions by 2060 encompasses all the greenhouse gases (GHG) that are contributing to climate change.

The preliminary completion of the plan represents a deliverable under the China-US declaration on climate action at the UN climate summit in Glasgow last year, in which China agreed to develop a national action plan on “methane emissions control and reductions in the 2020s” by COP27.

“It is encouraging that the Chinese government has made progress on a methane plan,” Li Shuo, senior policy analyst with Greenpeace East Asia, told China Dialogue. “I hope that the plan can be released during this COP.”

China-US climate diplomacy has been on ice since US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan in August. At a press conference on Wednesday, Special Envoy Xie commented that while formal talks are off the table for now, informal conversations are ongoing and that he has already met with John Kerry, the US special presidential envoy for climate, on the sidelines of COP27. “The door was closed by them [the US], but we are trying to open it,” he said at the press conference.

Special Envoy Xie Zhenhua said China wholly supports developing countries in raising the issue of loss and damage (Image: UN climate change / FlickrCC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

“It’s clear that we are having technical level dialogue between the two sides at the climate envoys’ level in the multilateral context,” said Li. “Whether the climate suspension can be reversed is still a big question, which can only be answered on Monday when presidents Xi and Biden meet.”

The two are scheduled to meet at the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia, kindling hopes for a re-warming of relations on climate.

China’s position on the loss and damage finance mechanism is also in the spotlight. At a press conference on Wednesday, Special Envoy Xie indicated that China supports the establishment of such a mechanism, citing climate impacts across the country this year. “China wholly supports developing countries, especially vulnerable countries, in raising the issue of loss and damage,” he said.

The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change operates under the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities for developed and developing countries in the combat against climate change. Officially a developing country, China does not have an obligation to contribute to the financing of such a mechanism, Xie pointed out, adding that, as of Wednesday, Kerry had not raised the issue in their informal discussions. However, he added that China is “willing to help developing countries in mitigation and adaptation via South-South cooperation.”

The stalled negotiations

Unsurprisingly, at the end of the first week, the detailed negotiations remained stalled on all fronts – mitigation of emissions, adaptation to climate change impacts and the loss and damage finance mechanism.

There has been little progress on the 2009 promise by developed countries to mobilise $100 billion a year in climate finance for developing countries by 2020. So far, governments at this year’s summit have not even been able to agree on how to report on this broken promise. Developing countries sought a substantive decision that would balance mitigation and adaptation finance. The Adaptation Fund remains woefully short of money. Pledges to the fund worth $174.6 million have not been kept.

The delegates did agree that there was a gap between needs and availability of loss and damage finance and the urgency to address this, especially after a disaster. Some rich countries pointed out that they do this already; developing countries responded that they wanted a separate mechanism under the control of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change rather than ad hoc help. The Indian delegate said while humanitarian aid and response remain necessary following a disaster, loss and damage is about resilient recovery and should be in the form of grants, not loans.

Bickering over the nature of the facility, or even whether a separate facility is needed, will continue into week two and perhaps thereafter.

Africa COP

Hosted by Egypt, this year’s summit is being billed as an Africa COP and there were some announcements on helping African countries adapt to climate change impacts, including by US President Joe Biden, who delivered a well-attended speech as the first week drew to a close.

Before that, there were financial commitments of £200 million from the UK and 100 million euros from the Netherlands. The African Development Bank aims to mobilise $25 billion in climate finance by 2025, half of which has already been committed by the bank. The Global Centre on Adaptation estimates that the costs of adaptation on the continent will total $50 billion per year by 2050, even if the average global temperature rise is kept within 2C.

Then there was the African Carbon Markets Initiative (ACMI), which aims to generate $6 billion of revenue by 2030 for climate-related initiatives. “It is positive to see initiatives like this being created in an effort to integrate Africa into carbon markets, especially since Africa has had a very small portion of carbon markets so far,” said Lauren Ashmore, climate analyst with Development Reimagined.

However, carbon credits will likely be more expensive in Africa, so it will remain easier to buy them elsewhere. “There is a lack of clarity on how this structural issue can be solved,” Ashmore said.

RECOMMENDEDCOP27: ‘The African COP’

Carbon markets have their share of critics. “What we need is drastic emissions reductions across the world. A carbon market will allow polluting industries in the global north to carry on polluting while they ‘buy’ the credit for not emitting from an African country,” said Mohamed Adow, director of Power Shift Africa, a think tank.

However, the need for money in Africa is apparent. Attending the launch of the Africa Multi-Hazard Early Warning and Action System at COP27, President of Mozambique Filipe Jacinto Nyusi, said that most of the 55 African Union member states do not have fully functional multi-hazard early warning systems. “Climate change and poorly planned development will worsen the current risk profile and will render current early warning systems and other disaster risk management systems irrelevant,” he said.

Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera, pointed out in his address at the opening session: “Nature is losing its patience with us and lashing out with unrelenting vengeance. And as nature lashes out, our citizens are also losing their patience.”

Little focus on Latin America

COP27 has brought high visibility for African countries but that has not been the case for Latin America, with only four heads of government attending the start of the summit. Visibility may improve with the arrival of Brazil’s president-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the second week.

Of the four top leaders who attended the inaugural sessions, President Gustavo Petro of Colombia talked about the need for “mobilisation of humanity, devaluation of the hydrocarbon economy, avoiding war and moving to a decarbonised economy”. President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela held the “destructive capitalist model” responsible for climate change.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro delivers a speech at COP27 (Image: Prensa Miraflores / Alamy)

The Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), a bloc that brings together all the countries of the region except Brazil, presented a joint declaration detailing shared aims for the summit. This was seen by leaders and civil society as a first step for the region to eventually negotiate together at COPs, instead of participating in fragmented blocs.

Latin American leaders have emphasised several priority issues for the region, many of them shared. The list includes increased finance to adapt to the effects of the climate crisis, new financial instruments such as debt for climate swaps and protecting the forests, especially the Amazon. Costa Rica, Colombia and Ecuador signed a pledge to protect forests.

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Marowijne, wan bari fu yepi

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Max Nijman is een van de bekendste Moengonezen geweest. In zijn liederen had hij het vaak over zijn geboortedistrict Marowijne.

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Sept ans après, Borne commémore les attentats du 13-Novembre

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Sept ans après, la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne a rendu hommage dimanche aux victimes des attentats du 13 novembre 2015, en observant une minute de silence sur les lieux…

Sept ans après, la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne a rendu hommage dimanche aux victimes des attentats du 13 novembre 2015, en observant une minute de silence sur les lieux des attaques à Paris et Saint-Denis.

Le Stade de France, les terrasses du Carillon et du Petit Cambodge, de La Bonne Bière, du Comptoir Voltaire, de la Belle Equipe et enfin la salle de concerts du Bataclan: quasi le même cérémonial – lecture du nom des personnes tuées, dépôt de gerbe, minute de silence – s’est répété tout au long de la matinée en hommage aux 130 morts et plus de 350 blessés des pires attaques terroristes de l’Histoire de France, revendiquées par l’organisation Etat islamique (EI).

Le procès historique de ces attentats s’est achevé le 29 juin, au terme de dix mois d’audience. 

La cour d’assises spéciale de Paris a condamné Salah Abdeslam, le seul membre encore en vie des commandos, à la perpétuité incompressible, la peine la plus lourde du code pénal.

Ses 19 coaccusés (six dont cinq présumés morts étaient jugés en leur absence) ont été condamnés à des peines allant de deux ans d’emprisonnement à la perpétuité.

Mme Borne était entourée dimanche notamment de la maire de Paris Anne Hidalgo et des présidents des associations de victimes Life for Paris Arthur Dénouveaux, et 13onze15 Philippe Duperron.

“Je pense aujourd’hui à toutes les victimes des attentats (…). À toutes ces vies fauchées. À tous ceux qui vivent chaque jour avec l’absence d’un être aimé. À tous les survivants. Le temps n’efface ni le souvenir, ni la douleur”, a twitté François Hollande, qui était chef de l’Etat lors de ces attentats qui avaient semé l’effroi dans le pays.

reb/tes

La maire de Paris Anne Hidalgo (g) et la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne (d) lors des commémorations des attentats du 13-Novembre 2015, devant le café La Bonne Bière, le 13 novembre 2022 à Paris
• JULIEN DE ROSA

La maire de Paris Anne Hidalgo (g) et la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne (c) lors des commémorations des attentats du 13-Novembre 2015, au restaurant “Le Petit Cambodge” et le café “Le Carillon”, le 13 novembre 2022 à Paris
• JULIEN DE ROSA

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