Categories
Gaza General Assembly Secretary General Security Council Sustainable Development Ukraine UN80 United Nations Veto Initiative Western European Group

Germany’s Annalena Baerbock elected President of the 80th General Assembly!

Re’Written by: Tristan James Jr.

Former German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock was elected President of the General Assembly’s 80th session on Monday.

Write in candidate Helga Schmid (also from Germany) received seven.

Her appointment comes as the regional group that includes Western Europe takes its turn at the helm of the world body.

She assumes the role at a challenging time, with ongoing conflicts, faltering development goals, mounting financial pressures, and the upcoming selection of the next Secretary General.

Ms. Baerbock received 167 votes following the secret ballot.

Fourteen delegations abstained

She becomes the first woman from the Western European group to hold the post and the fifth woman overall to lead the General Assembly.

The presidency rotates among the world body’s five regional groups.

At 44 years, Ms. Baerbock is also one of the youngest leaders to secure the top job.
United Nations

InsiderNotes!

Crucial juncture
Ms. Baerbock’s election comes at a critical juncture for the multilateral system, spearheaded by the United Nations.

With the Security Council deadlocked especially on moves to help end the wars in Ukraine and Gaza the Assembly has become a vital forum for diplomatic engagement and consensus building, even without binding authority on peace and security issues.

As conflicts rage, the Assembly has passed a series of resolutions calling for ceasefires, humanitarian access and the protection of civilians.

Many now see the Assembly as an essential platform for accountability and maintaining international focus on intractable crises, especially through the “Veto Initiative” adopted in 2022 which ensures that issues blocked by permanent members on the Security Council are debated in the Assembly as a priority.

A power wielded by the five permanent members China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States a veto (or negative vote) can block Council action even when all other members support a motion.

Pledge to be an honest broker
In her acceptance speech, President elect Baerbock acknowledged the current global challenges and pledged to serve as “an honest broker and a unifier” for all 193 Member States, emphasising her theme of

“Better Together.”

She outlined three priorities for her presidency: making the Organization more efficient and effective; advancing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; and making the Assembly a;

truly inclusive forum”.

She called for a UN that embraces everyone.

I see the diversity of the General Assembly as our strength.

This is the place where all nations come together and where every country has a seat and a voice.”

She also highlighted the importance of promoting gender equality, multilingualism, and engagement with civil society and youth.

UN80 initiative
Ms. Baerbock also touched on the UN80 initiative, which was launched by SecretaryGeneral António Guterres in March.

The UN80 Initiative should not be a mere cost cutting exercise,”

She said, stressing the need for bold ambition and readiness to take difficult decisions.

Our common goal is a strong, focused, nimble and fit for purpose organization. One that is capable of realising its core objectives we need a United Nations that delivers on peace, development and justice.”

A career defined by multilateralism
In congratulating Ms. Baerbock, current President Philemon Yang described her as a leader defined by

an unwavering commitment to multilateralism”, 
praising her
Better Together

A Vision of Gold.

Mr. Yang, who steered the Assembly through a year marked by the Summit of the Future and persistent global crises, expressed confidence in her ability to build trust and foster dialogue across divides.

Secretary General António Guterres said Mr. Yang’s successor was taking the gavel amid a “difficult and uncertain moment for the multilateral system,” noting she was only the fifth woman to lead the body.

The UN chief warned that “conflicts, climate catastrophe, poverty and inequality continue to challenge the human family,” and called on the Assembly to unite in forging common solutions.

The world parliamentThe General Assembly remains the UN’s most representative body, where each Member State has an equal voice and an equal say in decisions.

The General Assembly remains the UN’s most representative body, where each Member State has an equal voice and an equal say in decisions.

While its resolutions are non binding, the GA as the acronym goes in New York helps define global diplomatic norms, convenes dialogues on worldwide challenges and holds the Security Council to account.

The 80th session, starting 9 September, is expected to be pivotal not only for sheer number and intensity of crises ongoing but for advancing long term reforms, including the UN80 initiative and the selection of the next Secretary General before his term ends in 2026.

All Rights Reserved: Vibhu Mishra UN Affairs
Subscribe to be the first to receive any of our latest updates.

097135

Categories
3d Adult AI Bill Gates Breaking News China Daily Climate Action Digital Marketing E+commerce ECOSYSTEM Ethnophilosophical Exchange FOSSIL FUEL GLOBAL CITIZEN 45'MEDIA Global Modernization. IMF Information insidernotes MEDIOQ Newly Released News Letters UN wordpressmedia

The ‘America First’ Case for U.S. Engagement in Africa

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivers remarks alongside Democratic Republic of the Congo Foreign Minister Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner (L) and Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe during a Declaration of Principles signing ceremony at the State Department in Washington on April 25. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Of the three Gulf states that U.S. President Donald Trump visited last week, the United Arab Emirates struck some of the most spectacular deals.

Pledges between the two countries amounted to more than $200 billion, and following restrictions under former President Joe Biden the UAE will enjoy expanded access to advanced U.S. artificial intelligence chips.

Lifting these controls is a dangerous error, Alasdair Phillips Robins and Sam Winter Levy warn: Without them, the United States is

“placing the most important technology of the 21st century at the whims of autocratic regimes with sophisticated surveillance systems [and] expanding ties to China.”

InsiderNotes

The nexus between China and the UAE is especially apparent in Africa, where Emirati businesses are making green energy investments using Chinese technology and minerals.

The United States, meanwhile, looks set to retreat from the continent, with cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development and Trump’s tariffs pushing African nations to form new alliances.

Through the transactional lens that Trump is fond of,

Africa is not likely to be judged by its long-term potential or the future strategic risks of disengagement,”

InsiderNotes

Curtis Bell and Christopher Faulkner, of the U.S. Naval War College, write.

But the authors argue that U.S. Africa policy can still prioritize tangible returns through investments that build enduring partnerships, not through quick exits or one-sided gains.

Trump will have the chance to follow that advice as he meets with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in Washington on May 21.

South Africa is the United States’ largest trading partner in a region that is an important strategic gateway into Africa, yet Ramaphosa and Trump have not gotten off to a good start.

In fact, the diplomaticrelationship between the United States and South Africa has reached its lowest point since the latter’s transition to democracy in 1994, Imraan Buccus, a senior research associate at South Africa’s Auwal Socio Economic Research Institute, writes.

Much of the blame can be attributed to a Feb. 7 executive order awarding refugee status to Afrikaners that South Africa’s foreign ministry described as based on a “campaign of misinformation and propaganda.”

Ramaphosa has said that his country would not be “bullied” by Trump, but as he looks to reset relations and strike a much needed trade deal, the stakes for his meeting at the White House this week are high.

Categories
AI Bill Gates Breaking News China Daily Climate Action Digital Marketing E+commerce ECOSYSTEM GLOBAL CITIZEN 45'MEDIA Global Modernization. Information insidernotes UN Women Empowerment wordpressmedia world health organization

Very Serious Demand a ceasefire by all parties to end civilian suffering:

A mother crying out for help Israel’s genocide against Palestinians must stop and the siege on Gaza must end. Ceasefire Now!

I am a mother from Beit Lahia, and being a mother during genocide is to fight, every minute, every second to maintain your family when nothing is available.

InsiderNotes

Everything here is a struggle: “Getting clean water is a battle; securing food is a battle; getting fresh vegetables or fruits is a dream, but I am a lucky mother because my children are still alive.”

I look at my children and feel guilty because they have been denied their childhood, they were forced into the cruel world of adulthood, of war: no schools, no playgrounds, no daily walks by the sea. I hear bombs and wish I could wrap them with my own body, wish that my love, larger than the universe could protect them, shelter them. 

Let’s stand with this mother, and all the mothers in #Gaza, by showing our support for their right to protect their children and demanding Israel to stop the genocide and lift its total siege.

I don’t know if we will survive this round of bombardment, I do not know if the world will remember that one day people lived in a small place called Gaza, which had the most beautiful coastline in the world.

Here lived people who wanted to live, they had so many dreams, they wanted to raise their children under normal circumstances but never got the chance to do so. 

All I know is that if we do not make it;

we will leave knowing that we did everything in our power and beyond to protect our children

Beit Lahia is the capital of strawberries and flowers; it is now a city of rubble, smoke, and stench of death.

But please remember us by our strawberries and poppies and remember the names and faces of our martyred children

Categories
3d Adult AI Bill Gates Breaking News China Daily Climate Action Covid19 Currency Digital Marketing E+commerce ECOSYSTEM Entertainment Ethnophilosophical Exchange GLOBAL CITIZEN 45'MEDIA Global Modernization. IMF Information insidernotes MEDIOQ Modern Art technology Teen Travel UN wordpressmedia

Africa’s Internet Shutdowns: Where, Why, and How Do They Happen?

45’MEDIA Breaking News

As Sudan experiences a civil war where one of the most severe hunger crises of 2023 (and 2024 so far) is ongoing, access to humanitarian aid is both dire and scarce, and innocent lives are being scraped off the planet every day authorities added insult to injury by shutting the internet down when citizens needed it most. 

It was mid-February 2024, almost a year into the ongoing violence, when Sudan’s internet would be disrupted for around 10 days.

While the current civil war has been ongoing for over a year, violence and conflict have clung to Sudan’s back on and off for years, and throughout, internet shutdowns have been the norm.

A humanitarian aid worker in the country explained the most recent shutdown’s impact on their work on the ground, saying:

“Because of the internet shutdown, we are unable to communicate with our volunteers, we are unable to buy food, medicine and deliver these services to those in need.

Most of our soup kitchens in the greater Khartoum are cut off and therefore not working.” 

A civilian expressed: “Due to war, using online banking apps for transactions has gained popularity given the lack of liquidity.

Now, however, we are almost starving because of this shutdown, as we can’t even buy food and medicine.

All my interactions, including business and online courses, have come to a stop too.”

Whether or not access to the internet should be considered a human right is no longer up for debate: it should be.

The internet has become a vital part of the engine that propels the world forward, and to block someone’s access to it is to block someone’s access to their already existing human rights. 

Access to education, food, employment, health, and humanitarian aid, are all within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and because the internet has overwhelmingly become the means by which we access these rights, it should suffice that access to the internet itself should be a human right.

Global Citizen

We go deeper into this argument here.

So when an entire region or nation has been denied the right to access the internet due to political agendas that are not always in the best interest of the people, we should be worried as a global society. 

Internet shutdowns have increasingly become the norm across the African continent, and as uprisings and protests erupt, elections are scheduled and rescheduled, and wars and conflicts continue, it has become both a weapon and a currency.

Internet shutdowns across the African continent are not only frustrating, but they are increasingly harmful.

Here’s what more you should know:

What are internet shutdowns?

We’re not talking about an outage here.

An outage is when an error or accident occurs and the internet goes off as a result, for instance in times of extreme weather where infrastructure is destroyed, or in the case of maintenance repairs.

A shutdown, on the other hand, is the deliberate turning off of the internet to control a population or the information flow surrounding a situation, and is often orchestrated by some form of authority.

One of the most prominent internet crackdowns in recent history was that of the Arab Spring pro-democracy protests.

Global Citizen

Egypt’s authorities at the time caught on to the fact that demonstrators were using the internet to mobilize and multiply the protest movement, and so they shut off the internet directly impacting access to an open civic space for the right to protest and speak freely.

While it wasn’t the first internet shutdown in history, because of the magnitude of the Arab Spring protests, the world opened its eyes to how internet shutdowns can be weaponized.

A similar thing happened in the last African monarchy-state, eSwatini, in 2021, when pro-democracy and anti-police brutality protests erupted, the state shut down the internet citing “security reasons”, depriving children of their education, businesses of their income, and citizens alike of their free speech. 

If it’s still not clear why these shutdowns are a bad thing, a Global Citizen from Ghana, who wished to stay anonymous, broke it down for us: “The internet means Information, which means power in the hands of the people.

The reason governments like to impose restrictions is so the information flow can be stagnant, robbing people of their power to be seen and heard.”

How do governments shut down the internet?

There are two ways that governments can turn off access to the internet.

They can either rely on what’s called a routing disruption, which is to stop the transmission of information altogether, meaning people using the internet can’t connect to it, and information being sent will not find its destination.

This is largely what we’ve seen across the continent, particularly in the case of Sudan and eSwatini.

Global Citizen

The second is called packet filtering, where parts of the internet or specific sites are shut down, or specific content is targeted, for instance, Nigeria blocking access to Twitter in 2021.

What impact is it having on people’s lives? 

Civic space and West African court cases

After making the mistake of breaking Twitter’s “abusive behavior” regulations, former Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari’s Tweet was deleted by the social media platform.

In retaliation (or what the government referred to as protecting the state from “undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence”) the government banned Twitter for the entire country.

A ban that would last for seven months.

This move also came mere months after the end of the #EndSARS protests, in which protesters used Twitter as a tool to organize and mobilize their movement. 

At the time, Human Rights Watch and other organizations raised alarm about the impact of freedom of expression and an open civic space, however, these calls were ignored by Buhari’s government.

What’s more is that any use of Twitter, including by journalists and media houses, was deemed “unpatriotic”, and could result in persecution.

We’ll continue the rest of the discussion in our next blog, subscribe to be the first to be notified when it drops.

Categories
3d Adult AI Bill Gates China Daily Climate Action Covid19 Currency Digital Marketing E+commerce ECOSYSTEM Global Modernization. IMF Information insidernotes UN

Amnesty International Has Been Responding since Day One

45’MEDIA (BreakingNews)

Exactly six months ago, a new wave of devastation and profound suffering began.

Israeli civilians were targeted and at least 1,139 were killed by Hamas and Palestinian armed groups with hostages being taken and 132 remaining in captivity today.

Palestinians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories came under retaliatory attack and continue to face daily horrors more than 32,000 civilians have been killed in Gaza, and over 2.3 million remain at risk of genocide and famine.

Families are waking up every morning without their loved ones, and with uncertainty for their own lives.

I remain heartbroken — and determined to help.

I know you share my sense of moral responsibility.

While the U.S. government and the international community have failed to put an end to the staggering scale of death and devastation, Amnesty International has been responding since day one:

  • Our call for a permanent ceasefire, unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza, and the release of remaining civilian hostages has mobilized more than 1 million signatures from 167 countries1;
  • Our investigations have exposed numerous human rights violations and war crimes by all parties — including unlawful attacks by Israeli forces in which U.S.-made weapons were identified2;
  • Our experts are meeting with U.S. leaders and lawmakers, who are referencing and uplifting our research on the national stage3;
  • For over six decades4, we have been documenting how Israeli forces have committed grave human rights violations against Palestinians with impunity.

Amnesty is on the ground ensuring violations do not go unchecked all thanks to dedicated people like you  and we need your help to continue our lifesaving work.

We rely on compassionate supporters like you to fund our ongoing crisis response and pursue justice. This is your chance to make a difference and be one of the 600 people we need to sustain our efforts.

Your gift today will be doubled to expose injustice, end atrocities, and protect victims of the hostilities in Gaza, Israel, and around the world.

Tristan: this crisis is devastating but we must not give into despair or assume someone else will come to the rescue.

Behind the stories you read about Israeli and Palestinian civilians being killed in ruthless attacks, we are there, collecting evidence and interviewing survivors so we can seek justice.

Behind the historic number of Palestinians being displaced, we are there, documenting their plight so we can show people in power why a permanent ceasefire is so urgently needed.

And behind Amnesty, there’s YOU. With your help, we can ramp up efforts to protect human rights and demand accountability for the human rights crimes being committed around the world.

Your support will mean more investigations to uncover war crimes, more pressure for a ceasefire, humanitarian access, and hostage release, and more action to shine a light on injustice.

We have no intention of slowing any of this work. Help us maintain the resources needed to continue responding.

Thank you for powering our movement,

Paul O’Brien
Executive Director
Amnesty International USA

P.S. Not ready to make a donation? Use our simple tool to send a message to your members of Congress calling for an immediate ceasefire, which would help put an end to unlawful attacks, allow for lifesaving humanitarian aid, and negotiate the release of hostages.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started