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Massive floods threaten tens of millions in southern China
Heavy rains hammered southern China on the weekend, flooding homes, streets and farmland and threatening to upend the lives of tens of millions of people as rescuers rushed to evacuate residents trapped by rising waters. At least 11 people are missing, six of whom are from the town of Jiangwan near Shaoguan city in the province’s mountainous north, where heavy downpours have triggered landslides that injured six people, state-run news agency Xinhua said Monday. Days of rainstorms have lashed Guangdong province, an economic powerhouse home to 127 million people, bringing widespread floods that have forced more than 82,500 people to be relocated, state media reported, citing the local government. Since April 16, sustained torrential rains have pounded the Pearl River Delta, China’s manufacturing heartland and one of the country’s most populated regions, with four weather stations in Guangdong registering record rainfall for April. The Pearl River basin is subject to annual flooding from April to September, but the region has faced more intense rainstorms and severe floods in recent years as scientists warn that the climate crisis will amplify extreme weather, making it deadlier and more frequent. Last year, China encountered “more intense and extreme” downpours during the flood season than in previous years, with 72 national weather stations registering record daily rainfall and 346 stations breaking monthly records, according to the China Meteorological Administration. Since last week, at least 44 rivers in the Pearl River basin have swelled above the warning line, threatening to burst their banks, according to state broadcaster CCTV. On the Bei River, which flows into the Pearl River, authorities have warned of a “once a century” flood expected to reach 5.8 meters (19 feet) above the warning limit. The tributary had already burst its banks on April 8, marking the earliest arrival of its annual flood season since records began in 1998, according to Guangdong authorities. Aerial footage aired by CCTV on the weekend showed villages inundated by murky flood waters, with only roofs and treetops visible in some places. In Guangning county, Zhaoqing city, footage shared by residents on short video app Douyin shows muddy brown water gushing through village streets and sweeping away cars. In Shaoguan, a man is seen pushing his scooter through shoulder-high flood waters. And in Qingyuan city, social media footage shows strong gales and rain felling trees and flipping over motorcycles. Authorities raised the flood control emergency response for the Pearl River Delta to level 2 on Sunday – the second highest in a four-tier system. Many cities have suspended schools and hundreds of flights have been canceled in the metropolises of Guangzhou and Shenzhen. More than 80 houses have either collapsed or been severely damaged, resulting in a direct economic loss of nearly 140 million yuan ($20 million), Xinhua reported.   Source: CNN  
22 Apr 2024,21:27

Houthi attacks in Red Sea threaten internet infrastructure
The recent attack on the cargo ship Rubymar by the Iran-backed Houthis caused the crew to drop anchor, which damaged undersea internet cables, the US has said. Could the vital infrastructure now become a regular target? A new threat has emerged from the attacks by Iran-backed Houthis on shipping in the Red Sea that have caused delays to goods arriving in Europe from Asia. The United States said last week it believed the recent sinking of a Belize-flagged, Lebanese-operated fertilizer ship severed vital undersea cables that provide internet connectivity between the East and West. The attack on the M/V Rubymar on February 18 "forced the crew to drop anchor and abandon ship," a US defense official said. "Preliminary assessments indicate the anchor dragging along the seafloor is likely to have cut the undersea cables that provide internet and telecommunications service around the world," the official added. First environmental threat, now internet disruption The Rubymar has since sunk, causing an environmental disaster. A 29-kilometer (18-mile) oil slick emerged shortly after the attack, according to the US military's Central Command.  There are now fears that its fertilizer cargo could cause further damage, if it were to leak.  While the Houthis were not directly responsible for the damage to the undersea cable, their attacks have increased the threat to internet connectivity in the region as they make other, similar incidents more likely. The fiber-optic cables, 16 of which have been laid in the Red Sea, stretch along the ocean floor and allow internet data to travel at nearly the speed of light. Media reports suggest damage to the cable was so severe that it disrupted a quarter of internet traffic between Asia and Europe. "Accidents with ship anchors account for the second most common cause of submarine cable faults," Tim Stronge, vice president of research at the Washington-based telecoms research firm TeleGeography, wrote in a recent blog post. "On average, two cables suffer faults somewhere in the world every week." Repeated attacks increase risk to undersea internet cables Stronge added that the Houthi attacks on shipping do, however, present "real challenges" as sunken vessels create underwater hazards to the cables and cable-laying ships. The Houthi attacks have not just caused a spike in insurance for container ships, but also for the ships that help lay the undersea internet infrastructure. Stronge said that could make the installation of new cables in the Red Sea "prohibitive." "The real problem in a war risk area is that you cannot just repair the cable as you would anywhere else," Peter Sand, chief analyst at the Copenhagen-based maritime research firm Xeneta, told DW. "You cannot send a cable repair ship to the Red Sea right now," [due to the risk of attack.] The Wall Street Journal this week cited industry experts as saying that the cost to insure cable ships near Yemen has risen to as much as $150,000 per day.  Alternative cable routes must be explored Telecom industry experts are, meanwhile, calling for governments to do more to force the industry to find alternative routes for internet cables to lower the disruption caused by the severing of undersea lines. Land routes across Saudi Arabia, for example, could help avoid the Red Sea and other high-risk waters in the Middle East altogether. But land cabling is often a lot more costly, they warn. The Houthis, who control much of war-torn Yemen, have said they are targeting Israeli, US and UK-linked ships in the Red Sea in retaliation for Israel's war against the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza. The Iran-backed group has targeted dozens of vessels since late last year, and the Rubymar was the first ship to sink as a result of their assault. In the Houthi's first fatal attack, two Filipino and one Vietnamese crew members were killed when their vessel, the Barbados-flagged, Greek-operated True Confidence, was struck last Wednesday by a missile, setting the ship ablaze. The Houthis have denied targeting undersea telecom cables, but their near-daily attacks have caused many global shipping firms to avoid the Red Sea and the nearby Suez Canal to the Mediterranean. Instead, many vessels are plying a longer, more dangerous route around southern Africa to Europe, which takes an extra seven to 10 days. Insurance premiums for shipping have risen as a result of the heightened risks, while the rerouting has driven up fuel, staff and other costs, as more vessels are needed for the longer route.  Shipping rates also rose sharply late last year, but have been coming down since the end of January. Fatalities could spur more ships to use Africa route Despite the risks, some shipping companies continue to use the Red Sea. But the fatalities on the True Confidence and the severing of the undersea cables could see more firms choose the safer route around Africa. "Every company has its own risk assessment — which explains why some companies still transit [the Red Sea]. But a red line may now have been crossed with the casualties [on True Confidence]," said Sand. The latest attacks could even spark tougher measures by Western forces who have mounted naval missions to the nearby waterways to protect the vital shipping trade from Asia to Europe. The US and UK sent warships to the region in November when the attacks first began; a separate European Union naval mission began to the Middle East last month, backed by several EU states, including Germany. "I don't see a large-scale military response," Sand told DW. "This is a tug of war, so I expect the naval forces in the area to continue to do a thorough investigation of targets that need to be dealt with to secure the safe passage of commercial ships."
18 Mar 2024,20:31

Pak transporters threaten strike against fuel price hike in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Transporters in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) have issued a warning of a potential wheel-jam strike in protest against the recent spike in petroleum prices, a move that has been widely rejected by the business community, transporters, and political activists, Dawn reported. They have collectively called on the federal government to reverse the price hike that is  adversely impactin the inflation-affected population, burning a massive hole in their pocket. Transporters have expressed their readiness to unilaterally raise fares or initiate a wheel-jam strike if the government does not backtrack on the oil price increase. Khan Zaman Afridi, President of the Public Transport Owners Association Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, stated that they have scheduled a meeting of all transporter groups at the Haji Camp Bus Terminal on Monday, September 18, to make a decision regarding the strike or fare adjustments, according to Dawn. Afridi emphasized that the substantial increase of over Pakistan Rupee (PKR) 330 per litre in petroleum prices has exacerbated the hardships faced by both transporters and commuters. He stressed the need to raise a strong voice against what he termed as “injustice.” The transporters’ discontent extends across different unions, with approximately ten unions of various categories standing united against the government’s decision to hike oil prices, as reported by Dawn. Pakistan caretaker government on Friday announced another hike in the prices of petrol by Pakistani Rupees (PKR) 26.02 per litre and high-speed diesel by PKR 17.34 per litre. The rise in the rate brings the price of petrol to PKR 333.38 per litre and the rate of high-speed diesel is PKR 329.18 per litre. Pakistan’s Ministry of Finance announced the increase in the price of petrol and high-speed diesel, according to Dawn report. Furthermore, the Sarhad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) has also voiced its opposition to the record rise in petroleum prices, viewing it as detrimental to the national economy, businesses, and industry. The acting president of SCCI, Ijaz Khan Afridi, stated that the unprecedented surge in petroleum product prices would unleash a new wave of inflation, adversely affecting both the business community and the general public. Afridi urged the caretaker government to reconsider the fuel price increase in the best interest of the economy, businesses, and industry. He warned that the SCCI, along with traders, would initiate a protest movement against the price hike. Criticising the government’s perceived “anti-business” policies, Afridi expressed disappointment in the caretaker government’s endorsement of measures that have exacerbated the challenges faced by traders. He questioned how the national economy could improve when the business community grappled with uncertainty, according to Dawn. The SCCI leader called for a comprehensive review of the government’s economic policies and urged consultations with chambers and other stakeholders to revive the struggling economy. He cautioned that the recent substantial increase in fuel prices would further burden businesses and industry amid rising electricity, gas, and raw material costs, increasing the overall cost of industrial production and businesses. Afridi noted that the inflation-affected business community and the public, who have already protested against inflated bills, would suffer even more due to the significant fuel price hike. He urged both civilian and military leadership to play a proactive role in steering the economy in the right direction, emphasizing that failure to do so would worsen the economic situation. Meanwhile, Dr Khalil Mehmood Khalid, a provincial leader of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, expressed resentment over the recurring increases in fuel prices and power tariffs. He called on the caretaker government to reverse these decisions, warning that if the hikes were not rolled back, the public would have no choice but to initiate street protests, Dawn reported.
19 Sep 2023,14:37

Pak transporters threaten strike against fuel price hike in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Transporters in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) have issued a warning of a potential wheel-jam strike in protest against the recent spike in petroleum prices, a move that has been widely rejected by the business community, transporters, and political activists, Dawn reported. They have collectively called on the federal government to reverse the price hike that is  adversely impactin the inflation-affected population, burning a massive hole in their pocket. Transporters have expressed their readiness to unilaterally raise fares or initiate a wheel-jam strike if the government does not backtrack on the oil price increase. Khan Zaman Afridi, President of the Public Transport Owners Association Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, stated that they have scheduled a meeting of all transporter groups at the Haji Camp Bus Terminal on Monday, September 18, to make a decision regarding the strike or fare adjustments, according to Dawn. Afridi emphasized that the substantial increase of over Pakistan Rupee (PKR) 330 per litre in petroleum prices has exacerbated the hardships faced by both transporters and commuters. He stressed the need to raise a strong voice against what he termed as “injustice.” The transporters’ discontent extends across different unions, with approximately ten unions of various categories standing united against the government’s decision to hike oil prices, as reported by Dawn. Pakistan caretaker government on Friday announced another hike in the prices of petrol by Pakistani Rupees (PKR) 26.02 per litre and high-speed diesel by PKR 17.34 per litre. The rise in the rate brings the price of petrol to PKR 333.38 per litre and the rate of high-speed diesel is PKR 329.18 per litre. Pakistan’s Ministry of Finance announced the increase in the price of petrol and high-speed diesel, according to Dawn report. Furthermore, the Sarhad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) has also voiced its opposition to the record rise in petroleum prices, viewing it as detrimental to the national economy, businesses, and industry. The acting president of SCCI, Ijaz Khan Afridi, stated that the unprecedented surge in petroleum product prices would unleash a new wave of inflation, adversely affecting both the business community and the general public. Afridi urged the caretaker government to reconsider the fuel price increase in the best interest of the economy, businesses, and industry. He warned that the SCCI, along with traders, would initiate a protest movement against the price hike. Criticising the government’s perceived “anti-business” policies, Afridi expressed disappointment in the caretaker government’s endorsement of measures that have exacerbated the challenges faced by traders. He questioned how the national economy could improve when the business community grappled with uncertainty, according to Dawn. The SCCI leader called for a comprehensive review of the government’s economic policies and urged consultations with chambers and other stakeholders to revive the struggling economy. He cautioned that the recent substantial increase in fuel prices would further burden businesses and industry amid rising electricity, gas, and raw material costs, increasing the overall cost of industrial production and businesses. Afridi noted that the inflation-affected business community and the public, who have already protested against inflated bills, would suffer even more due to the significant fuel price hike. He urged both civilian and military leadership to play a proactive role in steering the economy in the right direction, emphasizing that failure to do so would worsen the economic situation. Meanwhile, Dr Khalil Mehmood Khalid, a provincial leader of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, expressed resentment over the recurring increases in fuel prices and power tariffs. He called on the caretaker government to reverse these decisions, warning that if the hikes were not rolled back, the public would have no choice but to initiate street protests, Dawn reported.
18 Sep 2023,15:29

Militatns threaten Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Minister
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Minister for Science and Information Technology Muhammad Atif Khan on Wednesday confirmed that he has received a ransom note purportedly from the outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), demanding Rs8 million in three days or he would be targeted. Earlier, a letter purportedly from the outlawed TTP’s Mardan chapter, the hometown of Mr Khan, was widely shared on social media wherein the outfit told the minister he was on their hit list and to remove his name he would have to pay Rs8m in ransom. The letter, issued on the TTP Mardan letterhead and addressed to the minister, stated they knew him very well and possessed all his data and record. “You are on the wanted list of TTP Mardan and now it is your turn. You have to accept our demands to have your name removed from the hit list or be ready to lose your life. Our demand is Rs8m within three days,” the letter warned. Later, Mr Khan, while responding to a question at the opening of the inter-university games, confirmed receiving the ransom note. He said: “I have received a letter formally demanding ransom and I have shared it with the relevant agencies.” To a question, he said he was not aware of other people also receiving ransom demands; however, he had openly stated the fact and informed the relevant agencies about it. Moreover, an audio clip of a purported exchange between the minister and a member of the Taliban was also doing the rounds on social media, wherein an unidentified person could be heard telling a man who appeared to be the minister that he must respond to the ransom note within three days. “I am not going to pay anything to you even if I have to lose my life for this,” the voice said to be of Mr Khan could be heard telling the unidentified person on the other end. “I have nothing else to say,” he added. Meanwhile, a TTP statement claimed the banned group had nothing to do with the ransom note, purportedly from its Mardan chapter. It said they would conduct an investigation and punish those behind the letter. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has recently recorded an uptick in incidents of terrorism and militancy amid reports of resurgence of the TTP in the region, which have also led to widespread protests in Swat and elsewhere in Malakand. Last month, an anti-Taliban peace committee member was among eight people killed after the vehicle he was travelling in was hit by a suicide blast in Swat. Last week, unidentified gunmen opened fire on a school van, killing the driver and injuring two children in the same district. Source: DAWN 
22 Oct 2022,18:44

Journalists condemn arrest of Pakistani news channel head, threaten nationwide protest
Journalist organizations across Pakistan on Wednesday strongly condemned the arrest of ARY News head Ammad Yousaf and demanded his immediate release. The journalists’ bodies and press clubs termed the arrest of ARY News senior Vice President an act of victimization and said that journalists will call for a nationwide protest if Ammad Yousaf is not released immediately, ARY News reported. Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) in its statement said that the government should come to its senses. PFUJ leader, Lala Asad Pathan said, “The government’s action is very shameful. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif should take immediate action into the matter.” PFUJ Dastoor Secretary General AH Khanzada said that if Ammad Yousaf is not released immediately, journalists will call for a nationwide protest. “Restrictions on freedom of expression will not be tolerated in any way, Lahore Press Club has also demanded the immediate release of the ARY News head,” said the Secretary of Karachi Press Club, Rizwan Bhatti. Yousuf’s arrest comes after the channel, which is the country’s biggest private broadcaster, was served a show cause notice by the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) on Monday. Meanwhile, the founder and CEO of the network Salman Iqbal along with two other anchors have been booked for sedition. On the complaint of the Station House Officer (SHO), a First Information Report (FIR) has been registered at Karachi’s Memon Goth police station. According to the channel, the FIR was registered just an hour before the arrest of ARY News head Ammad Yousaf. Anchorpersons, Arshad Sharif and Khawar Ghuman have been booked under the ‘sedition’ charges. The FIR has been registered under sections 120, 124A, 131, and 153A in which sedition and charges of plotting alleged conspiracy have been included. A day after the transmission of Pakistani television station ARY News was taken off air by the country’s regulatory authorities, the outlet’s senior Vice President Ammad Yousaf was arrested from Karachi in the early hours of Wednesday, the channel said. ARY News said that its journalist was arrested by Karachi Police and a raiding team broke into his house from the main gate in the middle of the night. It has termed Yousaf’s arrest as retaliation by the government against the channel and noted that police officers in plain clothes forcibly entered the journalist’s house. Regulatory watchdog PEMRA has alleged that the channel was airing “false, hateful and seditious” content based on “absolute disinformation with a clear and present threat to national security by instigating rebellion within the armed forces”, Dawn reported. In its notice to the news outlet, the regulatory watchdog also termed the news anchor who delivered the news as “biased.” PEMRA has also directed the channel’s CEO to appear in person for a hearing today (August 10). The entire episode was perpetuated due to a news piece aired by the channel on how the ruling Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) has reportedly activated its strategic media cell to malign Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman and the country’s former prime minister Imran Khan. The PEMRA notice to ARY News alleged that PTI leader Shehbaz Gill had made “highly hateful and seditious” remarks tantamount to “incite armed forces towards revolt,” Dawn reported. Shortly after ARY News was taken off the air, PTI leader and close aide of Imran Khan, Shahbaz Gill was arrested in Islamabad on Tuesday. An Islamabad police spokesperson said that Gill has been taken into custody for inciting the public against the state institutions, Geo News reported. “After the ban on ARY yesterday, they’ve today arrested @SHABAZGIL. Pakistan is living under a fascist imported government, that doesn’t care about the human rights of the people of Pakistan. We strongly demand the immediate release of Dr Gill,” Imran Khan’s PTI tweeted yesterday. PTI leader and former federal minister Fawad Chaudhry said that Gill was picked up from Banigala Chowk by unidentified personnel in cars with missing number plates. Meanwhile, the former prime minister slammed the arrest, asking “can such shameful acts take place in any democracy?” “This is abduction, not an arrest. Can such shameful acts take place in any democracy? Political workers treated as enemies. And all to make us accept a foreign-backed government of crooks,” Imran Khan tweeted. After the arrest of Gill, the country’s Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said that the current government has not broken the law and that the arrest was legal. In another key development, Pakistan Muslim League Quaid (PML-Q) leader Moonis Elahi said that he is sending Punjab Police for the protection of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan’s residence Banigala. Former interior minister of Pakistan and Awami Muslim League chief, Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed has warned the Shehbaz Sharif-led Pakistan government saying that if anyone tries to arrest Imran Khan that would trigger instability and bloody politics in the country. Source: ANI
11 Aug 2022,20:39

Pakistan: Petroleum transporters threaten wheel-jam strike
Petroleum transporters have announced that they will hold an indefinite protest from Wednesday onwards if the government does not increase fares of fuel transportation that have remained unchanged since 2011 and warned to cut fuel supplies across the country. Israr Ahmed Shinwari, spokesman of All Pakistan Oil Tankers Owners Association (APOTOA) said if their demands are not met within a week of protest, then they will give a call for a wheel-jam strike. He added that their 40,000 members are part of the protest. Notably, there are around 40,000 oil tankers engaged in transporting oil from Karachi to the upcountry areas. If the wheel-jam strike takes place, it will trigger an oil crisis in the country as oil trucks and tankers are a big source of fuel transportation from seaports to the rest of the country, reported the newspaper. Shinwari said that the sit-in protest will continue outside the headquarters of a state-owned oil marketing company. He added that we have given call for an indefinite peaceful protest. The newspaper reported that they will call off the protest only after the government accepts their demands and increase fares of fuel transportation that have remained unchanged since 2011. Furthermore, the APOTOA spokesperson said that the police officials have approached them to call off the protest so that they (police) could connect them with the officials concerned. However, they have refused to withdraw the protest call. Source: ANI
17 Feb 2022,17:59

Wildfires threaten unique critters on Australian ‘Galapagos’
It has been described as Australia's Galapagos Islands and has long been a refuge for some of the country's most endangered creatures. But devastating wildfires over recent days have undone decades of careful conservation work on Kangaroo Island and have threatened to wipe out some of the island's unique fauna altogether. Experts working on the island say the fires have killed thousands of koalas and kangaroos, and also have raised questions about whether any members of a mouse-like marsupial species that carries its young in a pouch have survived. Similarly, it remains unclear how many from a unique flock of glossy black-cockatoos got away from the flames and whether they have a future on an island where much of their habitat has gone up in smoke. Located off the coast of South Australia state, Kangaroo Island is about 50% larger than Rhode Island and home to 4,500 people and what was a thriving ecotourism industry. But the wildfires that have been ravaging swaths of Australia have burned through one-third of the island, killing a father and his son and leaving behind a scorched wasteland and a devastated community. They also have left people scrambling to help the critters that have survived. "Caring for all these animals is quite amazing," said Sam Mitchell, co-owner of the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park. "However, we are seeing a lot that are too far gone. We are seeing kangaroos and koalas with their hands burned off — they stand no chance. It's been quite emotional." Inspired in part by the late Australian wildlife expert Steve Irwin, Mitchell and his wife, Dana, bought the commercial park seven years ago in their early 20s, and have been renovating the place and taking in rescue animals since. On Friday night with the fire approaching, Dana fled with their 18-month-old son, Connor, while Sam stayed behind to defend the park and their dream. A wind change spared the park from the wildfire's path. Mitchell said the fires have killed thousands of koalas on the island, a particularly devastating loss because the creatures have remained largely disease-free there, while many koalas on mainland Australia suffer from chlamydia. The couple are currently caring for about 18 burned koalas, and they've had to euthanize many more. Meanwhile, Heidi Groffen could do nothing, as all eight monitoring stations she and her partner had set up to keep track of the mysterious Kangaroo Island dunnart, the mouse-like marsupial, melted in the flames. An ecologist and coordinator for the nonprofit Kangaroo Island Land for Wildlife, Groffen said the population of 300 or so dunnarts may have been wiped out altogether because they are too small to outrun wildfires, although she remains hopeful that some may have sheltered in rock crevices. "Even if there are survivors, there is no food for them now," she said. "We're hoping to bring some into captivity before they are completely gone." She said the creatures have long fascinated her because so little is known about them. Also uncertain is the future for the 400 or so Kangaroo Island glossy black-cockatoos. Once prevalent on the South Australia mainland, the birds retreated to the island after humans destroyed much of their traditional habitat. "Unlike some of the other animals, the birds are in the best position to escape. They can get away from the fires a bit more," said Daniella Teixeira, who is working on a doctoral degree about the birds at The University of Queensland. But much like the dunnarts, the cockatoos could find they don't have enough food left on the island, particularly because they eat only from a single type of tree known as a drooping she-oak. And many hot spots on the island continue to burn. Teixeira said careful conservation work over the past 25 years has seen the glossy black-cockatoo population increase from 150, but those gains have been wiped out in the space of a week. She said she is currently writing the final chapter of the thesis she began in 2016, but that suddenly everything has changed. "It's pretty hard to sit here and write a paper on them when I don't know their status today," she said. Source: AP/UNB AH
05 Jan 2020,20:09
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