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Ancient Scythian mounds in Ukraine destroyed: Another violation of the Geneva Convention

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Russian forces have destroyed ancient burial mounds on the front line in southern Ukraine. In doing so, they potentially violated the Hague and Geneva Conventions, according to a study by the Ukrainian Conflict Observatory published on September 4, the Kyiv Independent reported.

In Ukraine, there are many ancient graves known as kurgans – up to 20 meters high and dating back to 3000 BC. They contain archaeological treasures, including from the Scythian era.

The Conflict Observatory analyzed open geospatial data to find that the two sites in the Vasilovsky district of Zaporozhye Oblast, for example, were damaged during their occupation by the Russian armed forces. In addition, they were used by the Russians for military purposes as military infrastructure was built around them.

Apart from the military constructions, the damage “may mean looting or destruction of the mound-related artifacts and ancient remains,” the report said.

Since cultural heritage is entitled to protection under international law, damage to the sites and their potential looting may constitute a violation of international humanitarian law under the Hague and Geneva Conventions.

Additionally, the limitations of open-source intelligence research suggest that “the true number of archaeological sites affected by Russian fortification construction is likely to be much higher than documented in this report,” the observatory added.

Russia’s war against Ukraine has had a severe impact on Ukrainian cultural heritage, destroying around 2,000 cultural sites and leaving 1.5 million museum artifacts in Russian-occupied territories. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) passed a resolution in late June recognizing Russia’s genocidal intent to destroy Ukraine’s cultural heritage and identity.

The sounds of the soil makes reveal the secrets of biodiversity

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Scientists at Australia’s Flinders University have found that healthy soil is a surprisingly noisy place. And deforested places or those with poor soil “sound” much quieter.

Experts draw this conclusion thanks to a new field in science – ecoacoustics, which studies soundscapes.

They listened to sounds made by ants, worms and other creatures living underground in South Australia to assess the relationship between soil sounds and biodiversity.

In the Journal of Applied Ecology, the researchers describe experiments with three different types of forest patches: two deforested patches of land, two forested patches that have been reforested in recent years, and two largely untouched patches of land.

Soil sounds were recorded during daylight hours at all six sites, and were supplemented by recordings of soil samples taken in a soundproof chamber.

The researchers counted the number of invertebrates in each soil sample to determine how many living creatures lived at each location.

The analysis showed greater diversity in both intact and restored sites, both of which have more complex acoustics.

Soil sound recordings at these sites include snaps, gurgles and a variety of other sounds – evidence of the diversity and health of life below the surface. The deforested area was quieter.

“Listening” to the soil could help identify areas in need of restoration or protection, or even warn of environmental disturbances, the researchers wrote.

“All living organisms make sounds, and our preliminary results show that different soil organisms have different sound profiles depending on their activity, shape, limbs and size,” said Jake M. Robinson, an ecologist at Flinders University in Australia, one of the the authors of the study, cited by Besjournals.

Illustrative Photo by Muffin Creatives: https://www.pexels.com/photo/close-up-photo-of-person-holding-sand-2203683/

Sudan famine: Emergency response must include more than food, urges top UN aid official |

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Sudan famine: Emergency response must include more than food, urges top UN aid official |

The head of UN aid coordination office OCHA in the war-torn country Justin Brady said the famine conditions which already prevail in Zamzam camp, in North Darfur, are “very dire” and access has become increasingly difficult.

The UN-partnered IPC Famine Review Committee (FRC) announced last week that famine conditions are ongoing in the Zamzam Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp which hosts 500,000 IDPs outside besieged El Fasher. 

In an interview with UN News’s Khaled Mohamed, Mr. Brady stressed that an effective response to the famine that is now evident as rival militaries continue to wreak havoc across Sudan, cannot be made on a “shoestring budget.”

“People think famine, and they think food, when in fact, what we need to respond, be it famine or displacement, is a package of assistance”, he said.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene are a crucial part of keeping beleaguered civilians alive, caught between Government troops and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for the past 15 months of brutal fighting: “They need health, protection, shelter, and non-food items.”

More resources critical

He told us that the situation can be reversed, “though it will take more than just humanitarians trying their hardest. We need the resources, political leverage, and advocacy to make the parties come to the table and end this war.”

Mr. Brady was speaking as the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) once again called for an immediate end to the fighting.

FAO said a rapid scale up of life-saving food, nutrition and cash assistance must go hand in hand with emergency agricultural aid.

“This is critical in conflict-affected areas to address immediate needs and avert the risk of famine from increasing and affecting other locations across Sudan”, the agency said.

Sudan is facing the worst levels of hunger ever recorded by the IPC in the country, as well as the world’s largest internally displaced crisis, with a staggering 755, 000 people are currently facing catastrophic levels of acute hunger (IPC Phase 5).

Around 25.6 million people are experiencing high levels of acute hunger.

The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

UN News: The IPC Famine Review Committee reported this month that the ongoing conflict in Sudan has pushed communities in North Darfur State into famine, notably the Zamzam camp near the state capital Al Fasher. Have you had the opportunity to get on-the-ground information recently about the current situation in that area? And is that area inaccessible to humanitarian workers?

Justin Brady: The situation in Zamzam particularly is very difficult. As you say, just outside of the state capital, which has been under siege and attacked by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for some weeks, if not months now. and access in that general area has become very difficult.

There are some partners on the ground there, such as MSF, who are providing us direct information, “ground truthing” on the situation, which is very dire, obviously given the classification of famine, which is something that, since April, when we launched the famine prevention plan, we were we were trying to avoid.

If we don’t have enough resources and we don’t have enough access, it is going to be very difficult to stop famine conditions from taking hold.

And that’s exactly what happened. we did see a major shift in the Government’s, approach to access. They were much more open to providing visas and travel permissions. That started in about mid-May. A bit late, though, in the process – and then, unfortunately, RSF has actually increased its bureaucratic impediments.

The Famine Review Committee returned a classification of famine for that location [Zamzam]. They did not draw a conclusion or provide recommendations on the other two camps – Abu Shouk and Al Salam – because they said that the data wasn’t sufficient. Think about it. Why wasn’t the data sufficient enough? Getting the data out due to access constraints has been a problem.

If we can’t get data out, how do we get the aid in? it’s just not a manageable situation in that regard. Now, people will then ask, are you going to declare a famine? The United Nations is not going to declare a famine in Sudan. Sudan has an internationally recognized government. In 2011, the United Nations did declare a famine in Somalia at a time when the Federal Transitional Government was not internationally recognized.

however, the Government of Sudan has indicated, through a press conference it recently held, as well as direct meetings I’ve had with them, that they do not recognize the classification of famine. They do not believe the data supports that. So, we should not expect a famine declaration from the Government at this time.

UN News: Which areas are most at risk of entering the famine cycle if the current conditions in Sudan continue?

Justin Brady: Yeah. The FRC (Famine Review Committee) data and this again is based off the integrated phase classification, the IPC, which is the internationally recognized system, for looking at food insecurity. They drew the conclusion that there are 14 localities where conditions similar to ZamZam probably exist. What are those conditions? Heavy displacement, conflict. you know, impacting access not only of humanitarians, but also of the commercial sector to provide goods to the market.

So we’re not even talking about people’s access to food. we’re talking about the availability of food. Is food actually there?

If there is food there, the access to it is quite limited because it is extremely expensive. We’re in a war economy. And we’ve seen prices skyrocket. We’ve seen the value of the Sudanese pound plummet. So those 14 localities, those are in the greater Darfurs, not just in North Darfur, Khartoum state, Kordofan states, and Jazeera, which is the breadbasket of the country.

To think that a famine might take hold there really exposes the nature of this entire conflict. So, we are doing our best to get to those various areas. And in recent weeks, the seasonal rains have started. and those are an impediment themselves that you can’t negotiate with.

The Government in February closed our access as humanitarians to the Adri crossing from Chad. That would lead very quickly, to West Darfur’s capital, Al Jenina, and then give us access to not only West Darfur, but Central and South Darfur as well. and the only opening we had that was authorized by the Government was the Tina crossing in North Darfur. That leads to Al Fasher.

Access continues to be a major problem. And some donors have seen that and said, well, we’ll give you funding when you get access.

I’m afraid, one, there’s a natural lag between funding streams and actual operations on the ground, depending on what one needs to procure, whom you need to recruit, and the activity you’re doing – it could take six, eight weeks, for money that’s received by a donor to translate into activities.

So we need to be ahead of this.

Second of all, when we do get access, we need to take advantage of those openings very quickly. If we don’t, they will close very quickly. So not having enough resources…Our appeal for this year is only a third funded, under $900 million received.

Having been involved with two famine prevention operations and now what is a famine response operation, you can’t do these on a shoestring budget. We need resources and, we are just not receiving them in the quantities required to do this.

And that limitation in resources has also caused us to prioritize. So that we are not really responding to people who are in IPC 3 phase [of the emergency food classification], which is a crisis level…Unfortunately, we’re having to drive right by them as we try to reach, the most, vulnerable cases, those closest to famine, when in fact, we should be helping everybody. 

Children collect clean, safe water from a UNICEF-installed station in Al-Serif village in Darfur.

UN News: Could you tell us more about the latest response to displacement from areas across Sudan, including Sennar, the Blue Nile, and Kassala States?

Justin Brady: You have this offensive that RFS have pushed, into Sennar state and White Nile, that has caused quite a bit of displacement from Sinja Town itself, most of that headed north into Government-controlled areas where we already have massive numbers of displaced. This is the largest displacement crisis in the world with 10 million internally displaced.

Another two million-plus have gone over the border into neighboring countries in the region. So, the interesting thing is, when we talk about ZamZam, we’re talking about an IDP camp. And that was sort of the norm. The model in Darfur was that IDPs would be settled into a camp. Whereas in the east and the north, since the war began in April of 2023, the vast majority of these IDPs are residing with host communities.

Now, this has a couple of impacts. Number one, it’s a little bit difficult for us to find them. and we don’t do a status-based response. If you’re an IDP, you don’t, by definition, get assistance. but it’s very difficult for us to assess the condition of those people. But their presence there is also having, a debilitating effect on the resilience of the host communities themselves.

The best we could do there is to pump resources into the basic services, so everybody benefits. But again, we don’t have enough resources to prioritize those caseloads.

I’m not even touching on the education. the fact of the matter is, the education system in Sudan, except for a few locations, has broken down completely over the past year. plus, we were seeing children missing out on another year of education. this is having a debilitating effect on the present, but it will.

The legacy of this conflict is going to be felt for decades and generations to come. 

UN News: You mentioned floods and heavy rain, and those are another challenge facing people in Sudan. Can you please tell us more about the humanitarian impact of this and the and response?

Justin Brady: The rains, as I said, are a yearly occurrence. And, you know, when we talk about Al Jazeera State River Nile states in the past and I served here as the Head of Office back in 2022, if we had any activities in those states, it was only related to the flooding. They did not experience humanitarian problems there.

Flooding is causing damage and losses, to people’s, belongings as well as their livelihoods, causing them to displace, if only on a temporary basis in some cases, the bigger concern is that it is going to contribute to waterborne diseases.

Water, sanitation, hygiene is not going to solve it on its own. We need those partners who do those various activities working together in one location to have an impact. And that has been an issue because the funding, as I mentioned, is only a third. but it is unevenly distributed across the areas of work. food security has received over 50 per cent of the funding that they have requested.

Obviously, people think famine and they think food, when in fact, what we need to respond, be it famine or displacement, is a package of assistance. not just food, but people also need, water, sanitation, hygiene. They need health, they need protection. They need shelter and non-food items. and in the case of famine areas, we need nutrition working there very closely.

UN News: The conflict poses a special challenge for women and girls. UNFPA reports that 6.7 million people are at risk of gender-based violence. And 3.5 million women and girls of reproductive age need reproductive health care services. Could you tell us more about this?

Justin Brady: For months now, we’ve been saying this has been a war against women and girls. And rape, sexual violence has been part of the strategy of some of the belligerents.

The reports of that [are] much more prevalent in areas controlled by the RSF or where the RSF is present. The RSF may deny that and say it’s not them, but they have created the conditions where this is possible.

They have removed the rule of law and, unfortunate impunity allows these perpetrators to do the worst thing possible. and we have reports of survivors of these attacks committing suicide thereafter.

The stigma in Sudan is very heavy from sexual based violence. and it’s very difficult to continue, as you did before.

This is something that we are looking to see how we can provide more funding – again, an area of work that has gotten very short shrift from the donors. as far as, the resources go. And this is also part of our approach to have a centrality of protection. This is a concept in the humanitarian field where we have the protection cluster, we have protection actors.

The reality is they only encounter tens of maybe hundreds of thousands of people. because of the reach they have. We’re talking hundreds if not millions of Sudanese. And this is, an approach where those other technical areas of work take on the responsibilities of strengthening the protection environment.

This is particularly important, since the departure of UNITAMS, the political mission, which had a protection pillar, and had people in the field who were reporting, they were working very closely with the High Commissioner for Human rights. When the Government, asked for that mandate to end, we lost a lot of capacity in this field.

I think one great development from the increase in visas allowed by the government, in addition to more humanity and technical staff coming in to help with the work, is the fact that journalists are now getting visas and coming in to not just Port Sudan, but traveling throughout, different portions of Sudan and bringing some accountability…shedding light on what has been a dark area where people, you know, nefarious actors, mostly young men, have gotten away with some of the most horrible acts you can imagine.

A woman who fled her home due to conflict rests at a centre for displaced people in El Fasher, Darfur.

© UNICEF/Mohamed Zakaria

A woman who fled her home due to conflict rests at a centre for displaced people in El Fasher, Darfur.

UN News: Finally, what message would you like to send to reverse the deepening humanitarian crisis in Sudan and restore some normalcy to people’s lives?

Justin Brady: I don’t know if this frustration comes through in my voice. we can stop this. We can contain this. We can reverse this. as we’ve been saying for months, though, it will take more than just humanitarians trying their hardest. we need the resources, and we need the political leverage and advocacy to make the parties come to the table and end this war.

If it doesn’t stop, then it is going to be near impossible for us to reach those who need us with the assistance that we have. If we are to do this on a shoestring budget and pass by people who desperately need our assistance but who aren’t on death’s doorstep, we are doing a disservice to the people of Sudan again, not just today, but for generations to come.

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UN rights chief calls for global ‘zero tolerance’ against antisemitism

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UN rights chief calls for global ‘zero tolerance’ against antisemitism

This comes just a day after the UN human rights office (OHCHR) issued a statement expressing horror over the reported summary execution of six Israeli hostages who were among those abducted by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups during the 7 October terror attacks.

Their bodies were recovered by the Israeli military over the weekend, from a tunnel near the border with Egypt, according to news reports.

Following the news, OHCHR’s High Commissioner, Volker Türk called for an “independent, impartial and transparent investigation and for perpetrators to be held to account.”

‘Sharp rise’ following 7 October

In his statement on Wednesday at a workshop on the issue in Geneva, Mr. Türk noted an increase in reports of antisemitic attacks and hate speeches globally, with a “sharp rise” occurring following the attacks on southern Israel, which ignited the on-going war in Gaza.

He said antisemitic acts have “left deep scars that are hard to heal. But we can – and must – learn from them.”

He said both the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) have been guided and strengthened by the fundamental goal of overcoming “hatred and ignorance that drive violence, destruction and dehumanisation.”

Tackling antisemitism

The rights chief noted that “People have been attacked. Lives have been threatened” following the Hamas-led attack on Israel last October.

“Homes and religious buildings have been defaced with messages meant to frighten and provoke hate,” he continued.

The High Commissioner further noted a spike in hateful language toward the Jewish community on social media as well as “inflammatory and toxic rhetoric” used by “irresponsible political leaders.”

“This is unacceptable, and we must tackle it together in all its forms,” Mr. Türk said.

Zero tolerance

Mr. Türk highlighted his recent call for zero tolerance of antisemitism in sports at the Human Rights Council’s panel on promoting human rights through sport and the Olympic ideal. 

He also said his office hosted a panel discussion in Berlin, alongside the World Jewish Congress, on combating antisemitism in football during the UEFA European Football Championship.

It is imperative that States and other actors take steps to address [antisemitism] – as well as all forms of hate speech that weaponise our diversity of origins and beliefs,” he said.

Addressing this issue will require prohibiting the advocacy of forms of hatred that lead to violence and delivering full protection of the law for all communities, the rights chief said.

Mr. Türk is encouraging member states to develop anti-discrimination laws and members of society to have a zero-tolerance approach to antisemitism.

“Antisemitism is not just an affront to Jewish communities; it is an assault on our collective humanity – breeding division, discrimination and violence,” Mr. Türk said. “We all have a duty to eliminate it.”

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Patriarch Theodore of Alexandria was outraged by the “deafening silence” of the Orthodox superiors

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Patriarch Theodore of Alexandria sent a letter to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the bishops of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, who are currently gathered in Istanbul.

The Patriarch again calls for support against the anti-canonical actions of the Russian Church in Africa, which has launched a “mission” on the continent, consisting of creating a schism, taking away temples of the Alexandrian Patriarchate and attracting local priests for higher pay. This has also been accompanied by political action with local African governments, many of which Russia maintains close relations with.

The letter-address of the Patriarch of Alexandria is addressed to the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the hierarchs of the Ecumenical See, asking for their practical support for the just struggle of the Patriarchate of Alexandria to protect the canonical order and the unity of the Church in Africa. Patriarch Theodore calls on the hierarchs to become “angels of light” and to inform every person of good will in detail about the injustice committed in Africa by the Russian Orthodox Church. He calls for pressure from the church body to return the ROC to canonical frameworks and stop its divisive actions.

Patriarch Theodore recalls the historical responsibility of the Ecumenical Patriarchate for the preservation of the Orthodox faith and the unity of the Church and asks for its active and effective intervention in this extremely important matter.

The appeal of the Patriarch of Alexandria also reflects his deep faith in the unity of the Orthodox Church and in the empathy between the Patriarchates, expecting the Ecumenical Patriarchate to play its primary role in resolving this crisis.

Patriarch Theodore expresses his indignation at the “deafening silence” of the other Orthodox prelates, who did not take any action or express a position against this violation of church canons.

This indifference and neutrality – says the patriarch – can be interpreted as tacit support for the Russian Church, thereby encouraging its anti-canonical actions.

2024 Athenagoras Human Rights Award Banquet

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The 2024 Athenagoras Human Rights Award will be presented to Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of martyred Russian hero Alexei Navalny

By Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate

With the blessings of His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the approval of His Eminence Archbishop Elpidophoros of America, the Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate (AEP) is pleased to announce that the 2024 Athenagoras Human Rights Award will be presented to Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of martyred Russian hero Alexei Navalny and now herself the leader of the Russian opposition. The Award will be presented on Saturday, October 19, 2024 (6 – 11pm EDT) at the AEP’s annual Athenagoras Human Rights Award black-tie banquet at the New York Hilton Midtown Hotel in New York City (1335 6th Avenue New York, NY 10019 United States).

The Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is a 501(c) (3) non-profit corporation. Your donation is tax deductible to the extent it exceeds $100, where $100 represents the cost of the meal.

Get tickets at:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/2024-athenagoras-human-rights-award-banquet-tickets-929437240807?aff=odeimcmailchimp&mc_eid=3b82ab41c1&mc_cid=6dac8419cb

Ukrainian Fashion Week supports young talents

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The event is being held in an in-person format for the first time in 2 years

Ukrainian Fashion Week is back for the first time in two years. The fashion event of the year opened on Sunday, September 1, in Kyiv and continued until September 4, 2024. The spring/summer 2025 collections will be presented at various catwalks and presentations.

Ukrainian Fashion Week is a major fashion forum that has been supporting young and emerging designers at the beginning of their careers for the past 27 years.

One of the famous people and artists, the actress and princess of Belgium, Isabella Orsini, gives her support to Ukrainian designers.

“Fashion is more than just clothing, it is a language that transcends borders. Ukrainian Fashion Week embraces these global trends, positioning Ukraine firmly on the international stage,” said Orsini, quoted by the event’s official page on social networks.

Barbadian beauty and R&B diva Rihanna also trusts Ukrainian talents. The singer chose a voluminous brown scarf by the designer Ruslan Baginski for an advertising photo shoot of her cosmetics brand.

Madonna, Beyoncé, as well as representatives of the British Royal Family, Kate Middleton and Queen Camilla, also trust the taste of stylist Baginsky.

 “We are firmly convinced that without the creativity of our designers it is impossible to imagine the essence of modern Ukraine. Our mission is to demonstrate creative power and Ukrainian resilience to the world, support the country’s fashion industry and inspire young artists who are just starting their journey to continue creating. It is important for a new talented generation to have a future in Ukraine,” the founder and CEO of Ukrainian Fashion Week, Irina Danilevska, told the event’s official website.

“Our endurance is a testimony to the strength and indomitable spirit of Ukrainian designers,” adds Danilevska.

This season, some of the most famous Ukrainian designers who continue to work, despite all the challenges, will have a field of expression. Among them are Kseniaschnaide, Frolov and Gunia Project, as well as a number of upcoming designers.

The fashion forum began with the participants of the New Names SS25 platform, who, together with their models, proudly walked through the heart of Kyiv, culminating on the steps of the Ukrainian House on the European Square.

Among the participants in New Names SS25 are the finalists from the “LOOK INTO THE FUTURE” competition, who presented their collections during the Fashion Week in Berlin: Veronika Daniliv, Maria Dobrova, Anastasia Naumenko, Aliona Prodan, Elizaveta Kostenko.

One of the designers in the program will receive an award from the United For Freedom charitable foundation of the entrepreneur and influencer Irina Adonina. This grant will support the winner in creating their next collection or developing an existing product.

“I hope that with the help of our award, everyone in the fashion world will hear about Ukrainian talents,” says the founder of the charity fund “United for Freedom” Irina Adonina.

Among the innovations this year is the “Open Shooting” format — a photo session with the collections of young designers, open to journalists, stylists and fashion activists.

Photo: The eccentric Lady Gaga chose a pink dress by a Ukrainian designer for her concert in Las Vegas. The unique garment was made in just 4 days, especially for the appearance of the singer in the summer of 2024 // instagram.com/ladygaga/.

Heavy fine in Holland for the company that cheated the faces of millions

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The Dutch have fined the American company Сlеаrvіеw AI for 30.5 million euros for creating an illegal database for the identification of citizens, they announced agencies.

The data protection authority will also impose a fine of up to 5 million euro on the company for non-compliance, as long as the illegal practice is not proven.

At the moment, there is no official comment from the AI Archive. It answers requests of public, private and other companies and chat firms through its own database of persons and data about them. They are collected from the social networks and other sources.

“Facial recognition is an extremely invasive technology that can’t be used by every person in the world,” said Aleid Wolfsen, the forerunner of the data campaign. The public is advised not to use the AI Server.

“Сlеаrvіеw AI violates the law and this makes the use of the company’s services illegal. So the Dutch organizations that use the platform can Big fines are expected,” he added.

Сlearvіew AI has no office in Europe. In October 2022, France imposed a fine of 20 million euros on Сlеаrvіеw AI and ordered the company not to collect and process data on natural persons residing in France without permission.

In 2023, the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) stated that Сlеаrvіеw AI had not received any evidence of compliance with the requirements.

In June, Сlеаrvіеw АІ reached a settlement in a case in Illinois, which alleged that a large collection of facial images intruded on the privacy of individuals. Which, according to the lawyers’ estimates, could cost more than 50 million dollars. The company does not accept any fault under the terms of the contract for waiting for the goods.

Illustrative photo: I.K. Aivazovsky. Aivazovsky in the circle of friends. 1893, height: 54.5 cm (21.4 in), oil on canvas, Aivazovsky National Art Gallery – Feodosia, Crimea.

Humanitarians urge Security Council to stop ‘freight train of suffering’ in Sudan

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Humanitarians urge Security Council to stop ‘freight train of suffering’ in Sudan

Edem Wosornu of the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA, and Stephen Omollo, Assistant Executive Director of the World Food Programme (WFP), briefed ambassadors in the wake of the recent confirmation of famine in the Zamzam displacement camp, home to 500,000 people.

Zamzam is located near El Fasher, capital of North Darfur state, and the Famine Review Committee also found that famine conditions are also likely present in other camps in and around the city.

We have failed

“This announcement should stop all of us cold because when famine happens, it means we are too late. It means we did not do enough. It means we, the international community, have failed. This is an entirely man-made crisis and a shameful stain on our collective conscience,” said Ms. Wosornu, OCHA’s Director of Operations and Advocacy.

She recalled that humanitarians had warned the Council about the risk of famine and widespread insecurity back in March and continued to sound the alarm in subsequent briefings. 

“Let me be clear: It is still possible to stop this freight train of suffering that is charging through Sudan. But only if we respond with the urgency that this moment demands,” she insisted.

‘A quagmire of violence’

The Sudanese National Army and a rival, formerly-allied military, known as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), have been battling since April 2023, pushing “millions of civilians into a quagmire of violence and with it, death, injury and inhumane suffering treatment.”

A staggering 26 million people are facing acute hunger, which Ms. Wosornu said is equivalent to “New York times three – full of starving families and malnourished children.” More than 10 million people have been forced to flee their homes, including some 726,000 displaced from Sennar state following recent RSF advances.

Sudan’s once vibrant capital, Khartoum, now lies in ruins, the national healthcare system has collapsed, and recent heavy rains in Kassala and North Darfur have increased the risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases. An entire generation of children is missing out on a second straight year of education. 

Concern for rape survivors

Ms. Wosornu also voiced grave concern over war crimes, with women and girls worst affected.

“Since our last briefing, new reports have revealed horrific levels of conflict-related sexual violence in Khartoum targeting girls as young as nine years old,” she said.

“Access to emergency healthcare and gender-based violence services is shrinking. Suicide rates among survivors is increasing. The number of children born out of rape surging.”

Expanding aid operations

Despite the dire situation, humanitarian agencies and their local partners continue to deliver life-saving assistance in Sudan and are expanding their “operational footprint” in areas where food insecurity is most acute.

They are “exploring every possible avenue to reach communities affected, including through airlifts”, she said, which requires receiving the necessary permissions to access airstrips.  

Humanitarians also plan to distribute more than $100 million in cash and voucher assistance by the end of the year in areas where markets are functioning. Other activities include providing seeds and other support to farmers.

Access and resources

“In short, we are pushing from every possible angle to stop this catastrophe from getting worse, but we cannot go very far without the access and resources we need,” she said.

At the same time, aid workers continue to be harassed, attacked and killed, while convoys transporting food, medicine and fuel have been subjected to looting, extortion and obstruction.

She said three trucks carrying therapeutic food have been blocked by the RSF for over a month in Kabkabiya, located west of El Fasher, thus “depriving malnourished children in Zamzam camp of assistance they desperately need to survive.”

‘Assistance delayed is assistance denied’

Furthermore, the recent escalation in Sennar has cut off the main southern crossline route for aid delivery from the coastal city of Port Sudan to Kordofan and Darfur.  Access via the northern route, through Ad Dabbah, has been intermittent due to conflict, insecurity, obstruction and delayed permissions.

“Lifesaving supplies in Port Sudan are ready to be loaded and dispatched to ZamZam, including essential medicines, nutritional supplies, water purification, tablets and soap. It is crucial that the approvals and security assurances needed are not delayed,” she stressed.

Additionally, relief supplies for the camp are also readily available in eastern Chad, but heavy rains have flooded the Tine crossing – the only cross-border route open to humanitarians after the Sudanese authorities revoked permission for the use of Adre crossing in February. 

She said Adre – with its tarmac roads and shorter distance to Darfur – would be the most effective route for delivering the large volumes of aid needed at this critical moment.

Assistance delayed is assistance denied for the many Sudanese civilians who are literally dying of hunger during the time it takes for clearances to come through, permits to be granted and flood waters to subside,” she warned.

Four key demands

Ms. Wosurno reiterated the humanitarian community’s four main asks for the Council, starting with ending the conflict. 

She also called on the warring sides to uphold their obligations under international law, and for rapid, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access across all possible routes. 

“Given the massive hunger crisis unfolding in North Darfur and other parts of the country, we need to reach people now – across borders, across battle lines, by air, by land,” she stressed.

She also highlighted the need for adequate funding to support aid operations. A $2.7 billion appeal for Sudan, launched earlier this year, has so far received $874 million, or just over 30 per cent of the money needed.  

‘A wake-up call for the international community’

Mr. Omollo also reminded ambassadors that for months, WFP and other humanitarian agencies have been warning of a widespread collapse in food security in Sudan.

“Conditions throughout Sudan are appalling, and getting worse by the day,” he said. “This forgotten crisis has not received the political and diplomatic attention it desperately needs. Yet it has wider implications and threatens to destabilize the wider region.”

Therefore, the famine confirmation “must serve as a wake-up call for the international community, and for members of this Council.” 

He appealed for coordinated diplomatic efforts to address the widespread operational challenges and impediments that aid agencies are confronting.

Meanwhile, WFP are significantly scaling-up operations to curb the spread of famine, including by providing a mix of in-kind food assistance, cash and local procurement, when feasible.

The UN agency aims to substantially increase the number of people it serves in Sudan, while also supporting refugees who have fled to Chad, South Sudan, Libya and other neighbouring countries.

“Humanitarian agencies will do everything we can to prevent famine from engulfing Sudan. But we can only operate where conditions allow, and where we are granted access,” he said.

“Now more than ever, we need the Security Council to focus on this crisis, and use its influence on the warring parties to halt the conflict that is tearing Sudan apart.  

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Stories from the UN Archive: 1960s roots of ‘no justice, no peace’

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Stories from the UN Archive: 1960s roots of ‘no justice, no peace’

On 15 April 1967, a delegation led by Dr. King met with the legendary Ralph Bunche and other top UN officials. Mr. Bunche was the first African American to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, and Dr. King was the second.

On the occasion of the International Day for People of African Descent, marked annually on 31 August, watch this report from the archives about the Mr. Bunche, a UN legend, below:

During the epic meeting with UN officials, Dr. King presented a petition, calling for an immediate and peaceful solution to the Vietnamese conflict (1961-1975).

Earlier that day, he had marched alongside 125,000 protesters in what was the first of many mass marches in opposition to the conflict.

Watch UN Video’s Stories from the UN Archive episode on the world-renowned civil rights advocate below:

‘No justice without peace, no peace without justice’

Outside UN Headquarters in the spring of 1967, Dr. King read aloud the petition, which even today, echoes calls for peace in ongoing wars around the world.

“From towns and villages, cities, campuses and farms, we have come in tens of thousands to march and rally at the United Nations in New York and at the birthplace of the world organization in San Francisco on the 15th day of April 1967,” he said. “We the participants in today’s unprecedented national peace demonstration, although of many national origins, faiths and shades of political opinion, are united in our conviction of the imperative need for an immediate, peaceful solution to an illegal and unjustifiable war.”

“We are determined that the killing be stopped and that a nuclear holocaust be avoided,” he said. “We rally at the United Nations in order to reaffirm our support of the principles of peace, universality, equal rights and self-determination of peoples embodied in the Charter and acclaimed by mankind, but violated by the United States.”

In terms of the priority of the peace movement and the civil rights movement, Dr. King said “from a content point of view, the issues are inextricably tied together”.

“In the final analysis, there can be no peace without justice, and there can be no justice without peace,” he said.

Inspiring future generations

The civil rights leader continued to advocate for peace throughout the last year of his life before he was assassinated in 1968, exactly one year after he visited UN Headquarters. His anti-war activism reinforced the connection between the conflict abroad and injustice at home in the US.

Dr. King’s lifetime efforts, from the March to Montgomery to his iconic I Have a Dream speech in Washington, have inspired future generations, including his own granddaughter. Earlier this year, 15-year-old activist Yolanda Renee King addressed an audience in the General Assembly Hall at a special commemoration of the International Day of Remembrance of Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, marked annually on 25 March.

“I stand before you today as a proud descendant of enslaved people who resisted slavery and racism like my grandparents, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King,” she said from the green marbled podium in the Assembly Hall.

“My parents, Martin Luther King III and Arndrea Waters King, have also dedicated their lives to putting an end to racism and all forms of bigotry and discrimination,” said the author of the newly released children’s book We Dream a World, which pays tribute to her celebrated grandparents.

“Like them, I am committed to the fight against racial injustice and to carrying on the legacy of my grandparents who championed social justice and equality,” Ms. King said, calling on young people around the world to take action.

“We must connect via the internet and organise across national boundaries around the world. This will open up new possibilities for global campaigns to advance human rights and social justice in all nations. I hope that my family’s legacy of social justice advocacy will inspire my generation to action and to confront issues affecting our world.”

Watch her full statement below:

Stories from the UN Archive

UN News is showcasing epic moments across UN history, cultivated from the UN Audiovisual Library’s 49,400 hours of video and 18,000 hours of audio recordings.

Catch up on UN Video’s Stories from the UN Archive playlist here and our accompanying series here.

Join us next time for another dive into history.

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