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The quest for an autonomous EU-China relationship generates tensions among the EU 27

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Composition by The European Times. Photo of Macron is © of Rémi Jouan, CC-BY-SA, GNU Free Documentation License, Wikimedia Commons

The French president makes European partners uncomfortable with his statements on the need to distance himself from the US on foreign policy, with reference to Taiwan. Poland revolts as Germany says the EU cannot be “indifferent”.

Article by Irene Castro – Correspondent in Brussels for ELDIARIO.ES – Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) Translated by The European Times.

A cooperative partner, a difficult competitor and a systemic rival. Three definitions that may even seem contradictory to define the EU’s relationship with China. These are the rules of the game that the leaders of the EU-27 established last October in the run-up to the preparations for the search for a rapprochement with the Asian giant, which is revealing the differences in the European club and even bringing tensions to the surface.

The EU has long been searching for its place in a polarised world. While Brussels has been engaged in preparing for the US-China trade war and much of its policies in recent months have been aimed at minimising dependence on Xi Jinping’s regime in the face of mistrust, the EU has been reviving diplomatic relations at various levels without losing sight of the strategic relationship with the United States.

“Efforts are moving in the same direction. Nobody in Europe, whatever you call the government or the member of the Commission, wants to disengage from China and go to two blocs in this world. Everyone says we need to engage with China, but do it responsibly and on the basis of European interests. We cannot be blind to the risks and dependencies’, summarises a European source.

This is what European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen argued in a speech in which she laid the groundwork for the relationship before travelling to Beijing. There she repeated the same message. Before Xi Jinping, the head of the EU executive complained about the “imbalances” in trade relations. Moreover, the German leader made it clear that the EU’s relationship with China will depend on the position it maintains with Russia regarding the war in Ukraine. The EU has come to the conclusion that only Xi Jinping can convince Vladimir Putin.

Von der Leyen’s tone was much harsher than that of French President Emmanuel Macron, whom she accompanied on that visit. “I know I can count on you to bring Russia to its senses and to bring everyone to the negotiating table,” said the liberal leader, who was received in luxury by Xi Jinping not only in Beijing but also at a dinner in Canton. Macron, who travelled accompanied by businessmen, secured economic benefits, including an order for 160 aircraft from the Chinese leasing company CASC to Airbus.

It was Macron, whose visit had already raised suspicions among allies since the announcement, who sparked the storm. If Beijing is asking for greater autonomy for the EU vis-à-vis the United States, it is precisely what the French president defended as soon as he took off after his trip to China. In an interview granted to the newspapers Les Echos and Politico during the flight home, Macron defended the need for the EU-27 to have “strategic autonomy” and to be a “third pole” with respect to these two opposing powers.

Macron argued that Europeans cannot be “vassals” of their allies, in reference to the US. And he was referring specifically to Taiwan, which is one of the focal points of tension between China and the US. “The worst thing would be to believe that we Europeans would have to follow in this matter and adapt to the pace of the United States and to an overreaction by China”, Macron argued at a time when China had deployed military manoeuvres with simulated attacks from aircraft carriers around the island in response to the trip by the president, Tsai Ing-wen, to California.

“We want good friends, we want partners, but we always want to be in a position to choose them, not depend on them”, he reaffirmed at an event a few days later in The Hague, where he warned the Europeans that if sovereignty is lost and dependence on other powers “they will no longer decide on their own”.

The position on Taiwan placed Brussels in a complex position and strained partners on both sides of the Atlantic. The EU government was at pains to make clear that the EU’s position on the island has not changed. “There is a well-established ‘one China’ policy and we continue to call for peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and take a clear position against any desire to unilaterally change the status quo, in particular through the use of force,” the spokesperson responded. The EU has important trade relations with Taiwan, but does not recognise it as a sovereign state.

The most vocal against Macron was Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, who was just starting a trip to the US. “They are looking short-sightedly at China in order to sell more EU products there at a huge geopolitical cost, making us more dependent on China, not less,” he said in Washington, with whom he is more closely aligned. “You can’t protect Ukraine today and tomorrow by saying that Taiwan is none of your business,” he warned, according to AFP: “I think that, God forbid, if Ukraine falls, if Ukraine is conquered, the next day China could attack, can attack, Taiwan. EPP leader Manfred Weber had spoken in similar terms in an interview in which he said the EU should “be on the side of Ukraine and Taiwan”.

Once again, these statements made Brussels uncomfortable, where it was pointed out that the EU is not involved in a war situation over the island.

More diplomatic was the German foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, who distanced herself from Macron by assuring that Europe “cannot be indifferent” to the tensions over Taiwan during her visit to China and defended the establishment of alliances with partners who share European values in reference to the US when facing “security threats” such as Russia, reports Politico.

The US government avoided drawing blood with Macron’s position. “France is our oldest ally. The values we share have guided our relationship and continue to do so today,” State Department spokesman Vedant Patel told a press conference, reports Agencia EFE. However, his words did not go unnoticed and were questioned by Republican politicians.

Brussels is trying to calm the waters and play down the tensions. “We have a number of member states with a significant variation of emphasis, but they all agree with the general policy towards China, which was reaffirmed at the October European Council,” says a European source on the trinomial “partner”, “competitor” and “rival” on the basis of which the EU is seeking its own relationship with China.

From the Field: Haiti’s ‘hostage population’ struggle to survive

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From the Field: Haiti’s ‘hostage population’ struggle to survive

The 2023 Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO) for Haiti describes life in the country as a daily, terrifying struggle for survival, the result of three consecutive years of economic recession, a political impasse, and unprecedented levels of gang violence.

Every day, more and more people fall into extreme poverty; 31 per cent of the population lives on less than US$2.15 a day, and some 4.8 million are food-insecure, which means that they struggle to meet their daily nutritional needs.

Artwork from Francisco Silva, featured in a UN humanitarian report on Haiti.

Find out more about the report to which three Haitian artists agreed to contribute their artwork, and read the stories of some of those caught up in the violence, here.

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SpaceX Starship debut flight to space received official approval

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SpaceX Starship debut flight to space received official approval

SpaceX headed by billionaire Elon Musk has finally received an official license to launch the Starship rocket to space for the first time in history. The license will be valid for five years.

SpaceX Starship rocket ready for its launch. Image credit: SpaceX

The license was granted by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration last Friday. This license was the final frontier that limited the progress of testing the novel launch technology in practice.

The launch should happen tomorrow, April 17. The precise hour was not disclosed, but it should happen from 5:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Central time. It will be performed from the SpaceX Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas – this schedule has been confirmed by the company itself on Twitter.

 

“After a comprehensive license evaluation process, the FAA determined SpaceX met all safety, environmental, policy, payload, airspace integration and financial responsibility requirements,” stated FAA in its official announcement.

Previously, SpaceX targeted earlier dates for the launch of its Starship rocket, but the licensing process delayed the original plans.  The rocket is expected to demonstrate its orbital flight capabilities.


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German defense maker Rheinmetall hit by a cyber attack

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German defense maker Rheinmetall hit by a cyber attack

German defense industry company Rheinmetall said it was attacked by hackers, but assured that its military business was not affected.

Military vehicle Boxer, produced by Rheinmetall Defence – illustrative photo. Image credit: Rab Lawrence via Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

According to the company’s spokesman, the cyber attack was directed against its division dealing with industrial non-military customers, mainly working in the automotive sector.

“Rheinmetall is currently investigating the extent of the damages and is in close contact with the relevant authorities,” commented representatives of the company.

State prosecutors are currently investigating the origin of the attack, but do not provide any specific details, or if this incident was related to the company’s support for Ukraine.

Rheinmetall AG is a German technology group that specializes in security and mobility solutions. The company has two main business segments: Rheinmetall Automotive and Rheinmetall Defence.

Rheinmetall Automotive produces components and systems for the automotive industry, including engine systems, emission reduction technologies, and electric mobility solutions. Rheinmetall Defence offers a range of products and services for the defense sector, including armored vehicles, weapons systems, and simulation and training systems.


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UN chief and officials condemn fighting between Sudanese forces

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UN chief and officials condemn fighting between Sudanese forces

The senior officials were responding to the outbreak of armed clashes between the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in many parts of the capital Khartoum and other areas outside the capital, on Saturday morning.

According to media reports, the RSF claimed that it had taken control of Khartoum international airport, Merowe airport, al-Obeid airport and the presidential palace.

The RSF, an independent Sudanese military force, grew out of the Janjaweed militia, formerly active in the Darfur region of the country. The organization has been involved in talks aimed at a transition from the military rule in place since the 2021 military coup, to a civilian government.

‘Immediately cease hostilities’

A statement attributable to the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General noted the UN chief’s call for the leaders of the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese Armed Forces to “immediately cease hostilities, restore calm and initiate a dialogue to resolve the current crisis,” and for Member States in the region to support efforts to restore order and return to the path of transition to civilian rule. 

The integration of the RSF into the armed forces has been one of the issues under discussion, as part of a UN-backed political agreement reached in February, following months of negotiations.

However, in a Security Council briefing on 20 March, Volker Perthes, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Sudan and Head of the United Nations Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS), warned that tensions between the Sudanese Army and the RSF have risen in recent weeks, and called for de-escalation.

In his statement on the current fighting, Mr. Perthes reached out to both parties asking them for an immediate cessation of fighting, to ensure the safety of the Sudanese people, and spare the country from further violence.

‘More violence will only make things worse’

Mr. Guterres also raised concerns over the “devastating” impact that any further escalation in the fighting would have on civilians, further aggravating the already precarious humanitarian situation in the country. 

Similar concerns were raised on Saturday by Martin Griffiths, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator. In a Tweet, Mr. Griffiths said that more violence would only makes things worse for the nearly 16 million people, around a third of the population, in need of humanitarian aid.

An update on the humanitarian situation in Sudan, released on 13 April by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), noted that humanitarian needs across Sudan are at an all-time high, with conflict one of the four most significant risks, alongside natural disasters, disease outbreaks, and economic deterioration.

Volker Türk, the UN rights chief, expressing alarm at the unfolding situation, Tweeting on Saturday that the people of Sudan “deserve better.” Mr. Türk wrote that a “voice of reason” is urgently needed, in order to stop violence and “revert to earlier promising path towards peace and civilian transition.”

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A new type of photonic time crystal gives light a boost

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A new type of photonic time crystal gives light a boost

The researchers created photonic time crystals that operate at microwave frequencies, and they showed that the crystals can amplify electromagnetic waves.

Researchers have developed a way to create photonic time crystals, showing that these bizarre, artificial materials amplify the light that shines on them. These findings could lead to more efficient and robust wireless communications and significantly improved lasers.

Time varying interface and light, photonic crystal – artistic interpretation. Image credit: Viktar Asadchy, Aalto University

Time crystals were first conceived by Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek in 2012. While conventional natural crystals have a structural pattern that repeats in space, in a time crystal, the pattern repeats in time instead.

Although some physicists were initially skeptical that time crystals could exist, recent experiments have succeeded in creating them. Last year, researchers at Aalto University’s Low Temperature Laboratory created paired time crystals that could be useful for quantum devices.

Now, another team has made photonic time crystals, which are temporal analogues of conventional optical materials. The researchers created photonic time crystals that operate at microwave frequencies and showed that they can amplify electromagnetic waves.

This ability has potential applications in various technologies, including wireless communication, integrated circuits, and lasers. 

So far, research on photonic time crystals has focused on bulk materials – that is, three-dimensional structures. This has proven enormously challenging, and the experiments haven’t gotten past model systems with no practical applications.

Now, the team including researchers from Aalto University, the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), and Stanford University tried a new approach: building a two-dimensional photonic time crystal.

‘We found that reducing the dimensionality from a 3D to a 2D structure made the implementation significantly easier, which made it possible to realise photonic time crystals in reality,’ says Xuchen Wang, the study’s lead author, who was a doctoral student at Aalto and is currently at KIT.

The new approach enabled the team to fabricate a photonic time crystal and experimentally verify the theoretical predictions about its behaviour. ‘We demonstrated for the first time that photonic time crystals can amplify incident light with high gain,’ says Wang.

‘In a photonic time crystal, the photons are arranged in a pattern that repeats over time. This means that the photons in the crystal are synchronized and coherent, which can lead to constructive interference and amplification of the light,’ explains Wang. 

Two-dimensional photonic time crystals have a range of potential applications. By amplifying electromagnetic waves, they could make wireless transmitters and receivers more powerful or more efficient.

Wang points out that coating surfaces with 2D photonic time crystals could also help with signal decay, which is a significant problem in wireless transmission. Photonic time crystals could also simplify laser designs by removing the need for bulk mirrors that are typically used in laser cavities.

Another application emerges from the finding that 2D photonic time crystals don’t just amplify electromagnetic waves that hit them from surrounding space but also waves travelling along surfaces. Surface waves are used for communication between electronic components in integrated circuits.

‘When a surface wave propagates, it suffers from material losses, and the signal strength is reduced. With 2D photonic time crystals integrated into the system, the surface wave can be amplified, and communication efficiency enhanced,’ says Professor Viktar Asadchy, who has generated the idea of 2D photonic time crystals.

Source: University of Amsterdam


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Light pollution may extend mosquitoes’ biting season

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Light pollution may extend mosquitoes’ biting season

A new study’s finding that urban light pollution may disrupt the winter dormancy period for mosquitoes that transmit West Nile virus could be considered both good and bad.

Example of the light pollution – illustrative photo. Image credit: Yassine Khalfalli via Unsplash, free license

The good news is that the disease-carrying pests may not survive the winter if their plans to fatten up are foiled. The bad news is their dormancy period, known as diapause, may simply be delayed – meaning they’re biting humans and animals longer into the fall. 

“We see the highest levels of West Nile virus transmission in Ohio’s late summer and early fall. If you have mosquitoes postponing or delaying diapause and continuing to be active longer in the year, that’s at a time when the mosquitoes are most likely to be infected with West Nile virus and people could be at greatest risk of contracting it,” said Megan Meuti, senior author of the study and an assistant professor of entomology at The Ohio State University. 

This study and earlier findings by Meuti and her colleagues are among the first to show that artificial light at night could significantly impact mosquito behavior – including effects that aren’t necessarily predictable. 

“We’re finding that the same urban light at night can have very different effects under different seasonal contexts,” she said. 

Meuti conducted the study with first author Matthew Wolkoff and Lydia Fyie, both PhD candidates in entomology at Ohio State. The research was published recently in the journal Insects

Diapause for female Northern house mosquitoes (Culex pipiens) is not quite a winter slumber, but rather a period of dormancy when the insects live in caves, culverts, sheds and other semi-protected locations. Prior to winter’s arrival, mosquitoes convert sugary sources, such as plant nectar, into fat.

As days get longer, females begin foraging for blood meals to enable egg production. Some get infected with West Nile virus by feeding on infected birds, and later transmit the virus when they feed on people, horses and other mammals. 

This study builds upon two previous findings from Meuti’s lab: For her dissertation, Meuti found that circadian clock genes differ between diapausing and non-diapausing mosquitoes, strongly suggesting that day length dictates when diapause should start.

And more recent work led by Fyie found that female mosquitoes exposed to dim light at night averted diapause and became reproductively active – even when short days indicated they should be dormant. 

In the current study authored by Wolkoff, the researchers pursued both lines of inquiry, comparing daily activity and nutrient accumulation by mosquitoes reared in two lab conditions – long days mimicking the insects’ active season and short days that induced dormancy – with and without exposure to artificial light at night. 

The study provided more evidence associated with a circadian pattern to mosquito behavior, showing that insects’ activity decreases during diapause, but the circadian rhythmicity of that activity is sustained even during this dormant period. 

The introduction of artificial light at night was found to affect those activity patterns and to influence mosquitoes’ acquisition of nutrient reserves needed for fattening up and weathering winter temperatures. 

Exposure to light pollution suppressed the amount of water-soluble carbohydrates – sugars that are an essential food source during winter – that were accumulated by mosquitoes in both long- and short-day conditions.

Patterns of accumulation of the sugar glycogen were reversed by exposure to artificial light at night: Under normal conditions, non-dormant mosquitoes had lots of glycogen in their bodies but diapausing bugs did not – but in mosquitoes subjected to light pollution, the long-day mosquitoes didn’t accumulate much glycogen and short-day mosquitoes showed an increase in glycogen accumulation.

The researchers observed consistent trends in activity-related effects of light at night, with slight increased activity among the dormant mosquitoes and slightly suppressed activity among long-day mosquitoes expected to be busy looking for food.

Though the findings weren’t statistically significant, Wolkoff said the combined observations suggest light pollution causes mosquitoes to ward off diapause – perhaps by scrambling signals from their circadian clock.

“This could be bad for mammals in the short term because mosquitoes are potentially biting us later in the season, but it could also be bad for mosquitoes in the long term because they might be failing to fully engage in preparatory activities they need to survive the winter during diapause, and that might reduce their survival rate,” Wolkoff said. 

The researchers plan to carry out field studies to see if these lab findings hold true in the wild.

Source: Ohio State University


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Newly revealed properties of melanin ‘ingredient’ could advance bioelectronics

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Newly revealed properties of melanin ‘ingredient’ could advance bioelectronics

After nearly a century of scientific inquiry, scientists have finally characterized a key component in the substance called melanin responsible for giving countless living organisms their color. 

A scientist working in a lab – illustrative photo. Image credit: Edward Jenner via Pexels, free license

In the study, published online in the journal Nature Chemistryan international team of researchers isolated a key molecule involved in the synthesis of melanin, a substance in the human body that produces pigmentation in the hair and skin and protects the cells from being damaged by ultraviolet radiation from the sun.

The molecule they studied has many physical properties of eumelanin, a type of melanin that typically produces only black and brown pigments. 

Despite what researchers know about melanin, its chemical structure has remained elusive, said Bern Kohler, an Ohio Eminent Scholar and professor of chemistry and biochemistry at The Ohio State University, one of three senior authors.  

“Melanin is as plain as the nose on our face and we still don’t know exactly what it’s made of and how it works,” said Kohler. “It’s thought to be a material made of large numbers of interacting components, and so what my collaborators and I are trying to get at is, what are melanin’s underlying chemical units and what are the interactions that give rise to its properties?”

In the lab, melanin can be made naturally from just a few simple chemical substances that combine or react to form the pigmented material. Thanks to the efforts of Jean-Philip Lumb of McGill University and Lluis Blancafort of the University of Girona, the team was able to successfully synthesize and analyze one of its molecule-sized ingredients. They found that it had many of the same properties as the final product melanin, even without further transformation.

“Melanin is like a complex dish that you cook from just a few ingredients,” said Kohler. “Given that melanin granules in skin contain billions of atoms, it was surprising to see melanin-like properties emerge in a molecule containing only a few dozen atoms.”

As a spectroscopist – or a scientist who investigates the interactions between matter and light – Kohler said what he finds most remarkable is the brilliant green color of the melanin-like molecule, which is able to absorb deep red light. 

“That’s very hard for a small molecule to do,” said Kohler. “This is one of the smallest organic molecules known that can absorb long wavelengths all the way out into the infrared.”

Its unusual optical and magnetic properties make the melanin-mimicking molecule an attractive prospect for advancing bioelectronics research, a field that aims to connect electronics and living biological materials to fabricate new technologies or therapies for medical treatments, said Kohler.

The study results also suggest that harnessing the power of melanin could be used to change the way humans harvest energy from our environment.

“Like solar energy conversion, part of our strategy for alternative energy is to absorb photons of light from across the solar spectrum,” Kohler said. “That’s what eumelanin does, rather naturally.”

Future research will aim to study melanin-like properties in similar kinds of molecules. Such strides could offer greater accessibility to synthetic biomaterial alternatives, but in the short term, Kohler imagines the team’s work uncovering a melanin-like molecule will inspire other labs to look more closely at how melanin’s properties may emerge from other unexpectedly small molecular units. 

“Our team is excited that further progress at understanding the structure of melanin can succeed by studying tailorable small molecules like the one we write about in this paper,” he said. “The chemistry is still tremendously complex, but interest should grow in small molecules as melanin models and the promise they hold for generating new, melanin-inspired materials.”

Source: Ohio State University


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Decoding the Enigma of FOREX

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person using black laptop computer
Photo by Kanchanara on Unsplash

In today’s interconnected world the foreign exchange market, known as FOREX plays a role, in shaping economies and influencing trade. If you’ve ever been curious about how countries buy and sell currencies or how exchange rates impact your travel plans this article will provide you with a gateway to understanding the captivating world of FOREX trading.

Getting to Know FOREX: What is it all about?

At its core, the foreign exchange market is like a marketplace where currencies are exchanged. Picture a market where traders swap their money for another currency with hopes of making a profit. The concept is similar. On a larger scale involving countries, banks, businesses and individuals.

Currency Pairs: The Intriguing Dance of Exchange Rates

To grasp the workings of FOREX it’s essential to comprehend currency pairs. Currencies are traded in pairs because when you buy one currency you simultaneously sell another. The first currency in a pair is referred to as the “base currency ” while the second one is known as the “quote currency.” For instance, when you see EUR/USD as a currency pair it means that the euro (EUR) serves as the base currency whereas the US dollar (USD) acts as the currency.

Exchange rates determine how one currency costs relative, to another.
If you’ve ever exchanged money for travel you’ve experienced a version of the foreign exchange market (FOREX). Exchange rates go up and down due, to factors such as indicators, geopolitical events and interest rates.

Why is FOREX important?

FOREX is not about numbers on a screen; it has an impact on our lives in ways that may go unnoticed. When traveling abroad exchange rates determine the value of your home currency in the destination country. If you’re involved in importing or exporting goods fluctuations in exchange rates can affect the cost of products and your profits. If you’re not directly involved in trading a stable FOREX market contributes to a global economy.

Who participates in FOREX?

The FOREX market is like a party that never stops. Participants include banks, governments, financial institutions, corporations and individuals. It’s a group, each with their reasons, for getting involved in this trading extravaganza.

Key Players

Central Banks: They act as conductors of the FOREX orchestra. These banks utilize currency interventions and interest rate policies to stabilize their economies and manage inflation.

Banks and Corporations: Businesses engage in FOREX to facilitate trade.
If an American company purchases goods from Japan it will need to convert US dollars into yen.

Hedge Funds and Investment Firms: These entities can be seen as the strategists of the FOREX world. They analyze market trends. Employ various techniques to potentially profit from currency fluctuations.

Individual Traders: Thanks, to the internet even individual traders can engage in FOREX trading. However, this requires research and a clear grasp of the market dynamics.

How Does FOREX Trading Work?

Imagine this, You’re a trader who believes that the euro will appreciate in value compared to the US dollar. Accordingly, you decide to acquire euros using dollars at the exchange rate. If your prediction proves correct. The euro indeed strengthens you can sell your euros for dollars at an exchange rate thereby making a profit.

Nevertheless, FOREX trading carries risks. Exchange rates can be unpredictable due to political developments. Consequently, traders often utilize tools such as stop-loss orders to mitigate losses.

Getting Started in FOREX, Tips for Beginners

Education is Crucial: Before diving into it headfirst make sure you acquire knowledge, about the FOREX market. Familiarize yourself with trading concepts, strategies and risk management techniques.

Let’s start small: Begin by using a demo account to practice trading without using money. This way you can familiarize yourself with the market before risking your earned cash.

Stay well informed: Keep up, to date with news and economic events that may have an impact on exchange rates. The knowledge you have equipped you’ll be to make smart trading decisions.

Exercise patience: Successful FOREX trading requires discipline. Avoid rushing into trades without conducting analysis and careful consideration.

In conclusion, the world of FOREX is like a puzzle with pieces each one influencing the bigger picture. From governments to individuals, everyone is interconnected in this dance of currencies. By understanding the fundamentals of FOREX you gain the ability to decipher news, make choices and even delve into the possibility of becoming a currency trader yourself. So whether you’re planning your adventure or pondering the complexities of global economics, the world of FOREX eagerly awaits your exploration.

First Person: Keeping memories of Rwandan genocide victims alive

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First Person: Keeping memories of Rwandan genocide victims alive

A toddler’s dress, and a five-year-old’s dress and sweater. Washed, cleaned, but still stained with blood.

These are the personal items that Immaculée Songa donated to “Stories of Survival and Remembrance -​ A call to action for genocide prevention,” currently on show at UN Headquarters, along with a photo album, showing her daughters, Raissa and Clarisse, laughing and smiling.

“The items in this exhibition are very important to me, because they remind us of the lives, the experiences of our people who are gone, who are no longer here. It’s up to us to talk about them and tell their stories, and how their lives were taken away.

Six years ago, I returned to Rwanda to search for my family’s remains. In a mass grave, I recognized the dresses my daughters wore at the last moment of their lives. The clothes were stuck to their bodies. They were all I had left of my children. So, I took them.

I first displayed my daughters’ clothes at the Illinois Holocaust Museum in the United States, in order to tell their story. Even though they were washed, you can see the blood stains, and you can imagine how they died.

Don’t let my daughters be forgotten

We talk about millions of Rwandans, Tutsis killed during the genocide, and we seem to forget the individuals. This exhibition is here so that we remember the history of each individual.

If I could speak to my daughters, I would tell them that I have not forgotten them, I love them very much and I have spoken about them a lot, because they had an atrocious death that they did not deserve.

I am a mother who did not perish, a woman who cries a lot. I tell myself that God saved me for a reason, to give me the strength to talk about my daughters, and to make sure they are not forgotten.

UN News/Florence Westergard

Garments worn by Immaculée Songa’s daughters, Clarisse and Raissa, are on display at the UN exhibition “Stories of Survival and Remembrance – A Call to Action for Genocide Prevention”

The facts don’t lie

We have a responsibility to tell the world that injustice exists, that people are dying because of injustice, and that the genocide in Rwanda was planned and executed by very clever people who recruited militants and convinced them to kill. The responsibility to prevent genocides lies with governments, those in positions of influence, and the United Nations.

On our side, we also play our part. For example, we organize commemorations and education days to explain to the public what can happen if people are not careful. Because genocide can be prevented.

There are several phases of genocide, and the last phase is denial. Today, all over the world, people are denying genocides. They have been given platforms, they write books, and say that genocide did not happen.

The facts don’t lie. So, if people see the facts, when they see my children’s clothes, there is no mistake. People said children were killed, and now they see that it’s true.

To ensure that the genocide is not repeated, we must engage everyone. We must go to the schools, and teach peace. When I talk to students, I can see them change. It makes a difference.

Before the genocide, 95 per cent of the population were not educated, and it was very easy to convince them to kill. I think that, if people have access to the education they need, they will advocate for peace.”

The exhibition “Stories of Survival and Remembrance – A Call to Action for Genocide Prevention” opens at UN Headquarters in New York.

The exhibition “Stories of Survival and Remembrance – A Call to Action for Genocide Prevention” opens at UN Headquarters in New York.

Stories of Survival and Remembrance – A Call to Action for Genocide Prevention”, is on display at UN Headquarters until 15 June.

The objects in the exhibition – clothes, toys, photographs, letters, recipes and other seemingly ordinary objects – survived the Holocaust, genocide and other atrocious crimes in Cambodia, Srebrenica (Bosnia Herzegovina) and Rwanda.

The exhibition is being held during the year of the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

It was inaugurated a few days before the celebration of the International Day of Reflection on the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda, in the UN General Assembly Hall on Friday, April 14.

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