Tag: Guardian

  • The Guardian view on hopes for Yemen: a long road to peace | Editorial

    The Guardian view on hopes for Yemen: a long road to peace | Editorial

    [ad_1]

    Hope has been hard to find in Yemen. After more than eight years of war, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives, many of them civilians, the situation is desperate. More than two-thirds of the population are dependent on humanitarian aid. Yet, since the agreement of a truce between the Saudi-led military coalition and Iran-backed Houthi rebels last April, the country has seen a year of relative calm. This month, there was a huge cross-border exchange of prisoners of war. In the background is the thaw between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which have used Yemen as the battleground for their rivalry.

    Riyadh spearheaded the coalition supporting the internationally recognised government led by Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, which had been ousted by the Houthis. It soon discovered that there would be no speedy victory, that the conflict was draining billions from its coffers and that Houthi attacks on its oil infrastructure were increasing the expense. The Houthis also had reason to talk, having suffered heavy losses and struggling with fuel shortages.

    The UN says that this is the best opportunity in years to end the war. It has also warned that the risk of the situation deteriorating again is very real. The reestablishment of Iran-Saudi relations is still in its early stages. More critically, while much of Yemen’s devastation resulted from foreign powers pushing their own agendas in an impoverished and fragile country, this was never just a proxy war. It is a complex and fractured dispute that has become more so with time.

    If Saudi-Houthi talks make progress, Riyadh says the next step will be talks between the Houthis and the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), to which President Hadi ceded his powers. The fragmented, unwieldy body includes officials from internationally recognised bodies and the leaders of armed groups. They are united by their opposition to the Houthis and are alarmed at being cut out of current negotiations. Bringing the peace process under UN auspices would help to build confidence. But the Houthis are emboldened, and their opponents have wildly different and contradictory agendas, including seeking a separate state in the south. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have backed different PLC members, reflecting varying interests. Forging a consensus will be immeasurably difficult. The proliferation of militias and entrenchment of a war economy are among the challenges making peace look more distant than it did eight years ago.

    Even if these parties can agree a deal, those who have suffered most – civilians – will be missing from the table. They deserve representation. Responsibility for their ordeal also extends far beyond the fighters on the ground. The US and UK have sold billions of pounds worth of weaponry to Riyadh since the conflict began. All parties have been responsible for human rights abuses, attacks on civilian targets and the blocking of humanitarian aid, but there has been no hint of accountability for the lives lost. The international community should press the case for effective and impartial investigations, and a transitional justice process. It should also find the money required to provide essential aid and services and fund the urgently needed operation to avert a catastrophic oil spill off the coast.

    There can be no peace without talking to all those waging this war. But nor can Yemen recover if control of its future is ceded solely to those who have done so much to destroy it.

    [ad_2]
    #Guardian #view #hopes #Yemen #long #road #peace #Editorial
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Animals |  The Guardian: A record number of dead dolphins washed up on French shores

    Animals | The Guardian: A record number of dead dolphins washed up on French shores

    [ad_1]

    According to those who campaign for animals, the time for dolphin populations is coming to an end. The French government has been called on to ban fishing in areas where animals are at risk.

    A record number dead dolphins have recently washed up on the shores of the Atlantic in France, writes a British newspaper The Guardian.

    Animal activists believe that this is only a fraction of the injuries and deaths of dolphins caused by fishing vessels.

    According to researchers at Pelagis, a marine mammal and bird observatory connected to the University of La Rochelle, entanglement in fishing gear is the main cause of death for dolphins, writes The Guardian.

    Researchers recorded 370 dead dolphins in the Bay of Biscay between December 1 and January 25.

    Last year, 669 dolphins were found on French beaches. Most of them were found between mid-December and early April.

    Marine conservation organization Sea Shepherd France has also reported on a case where a dolphin washed up on a French beach had been mutilated.

    The leader of the organization Lamya Essemlal according to the number of dolphins washed ashore is only the tip of the iceberg. According to the organization, the actual mortality of dolphins on the west coast of France could be up to 11,000 of the dolphin population, which is estimated at 180,000-200,000 individuals.

    “The majority of captured and released dolphins drown in the sea and their bodies sink,” he said, according to The Guardian.

    As a solution to the problem, it has been proposed, among other things, to allow fishing only in certain areas at certain times. The French government has also been called on to suspend certain non-selective fishing practices.

    #Animals #Guardian #record #number #dead #dolphins #washed #French #shores

    [ad_2]
    #Animals #Guardian #record #number #dead #dolphins #washed #French #shores
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • NC Sole Guardian Of J&K’s Identity, Culture, Diversity And Unity: Dr Farooq Abdullah

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir National Conference President and MP from Srinagar Dr Farooq Abdullah on Friday stressed on protecting the insignia of J&K’s unique culture and history.

    He said this while addressing a gathering in Umerheir, Buchpora. Party’s Chief Spokesperson and In-charge Constituency Zadibal Tanvir Sadiq was also present on the occasion.

    Interacting with the people, he said that the people of Jammu and Kashmir have been guarding the frontiers of their culture, heritage and traditions since ages. “It becomes all the more important to preserve our culture, language and traditions in our families in wake of the attempts aimed at destroying it by forces inimical to our unique political identity. I am sure that people will foil all such attempts by keeping the flame of unity and brotherhood alive. I see no way of achieving anything in J&K without a lasting unity between different sections of our society. We have to stop seeing ourselves as Hindu Muslim, Shia-Suni, Bareli Deobandi. Unity in diversity must be our creed to last for all time and under all circumstances, otherwise there is no end in sight to our common problems in the shape of poverty, unemployment, and under-development. Our mutual discord will make our descent into darkness,” he said.

    Dr Farooq said National Conference has a history of rendering sacrifices for the people of this State. Asking people to take pride in their culture and mother-tongue, Dr. Farooq Abdullah said that the identity of a nation was its most valuable asset.

    Dr Farooq further said that Jammu & Kashmir had survived numerous conspiracies and ploys to dilute its unique culture and history and that National Conference will never allow the apologetic proxies of communal parties to divide the people for their short-term, electoral and political gains.

    Dr Farooq Abdullah asserted that it was Sher-e-Kashmir Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah who prepared and presented a blue-print for the welfare and progress of Jammu and Kashmir. It was Sheikh Sahib who demonstrated that political power was not an end in itself but the means to an end. Political power is a medium to protect, nourish and nurture the identity of a people and this ideal has been upheld by the National Conference since its very creation, he added.

    [ad_2]
    #Sole #Guardian #JKs #Identity #Culture #Diversity #Unity #Farooq #Abdullah

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )