Car Bomb Kills Popular Broadcast Journalist in Somalia

A Somali journalist with state-run media was killed Saturday in Mogadishu when a suicide bomber blew up his car, government officials and his colleagues said. Another journalist also was injured.

Abdiaziz Mohamud Guled, better known as Afrika, the director of the state-run Radio Mogadishu, died from his wounds, while fellow journalist Sharmarke Warsame, who was traveling with Guled, sustained a severe injury, according to government spokesperson Mohamed Ibrahim Mo’alimuu.

In a brief statement, Mogadishu police spokesperson Abdifatah Aden Hassan said that the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the blast, according to Agence France-Presse.

“A terrorist suicide bomber apparently wearing an explosive vest rushed towards the car in which the journalists were traveling in the Bondhere district of Mogadishu, jumped to the car window, and blew himself up,” Hasan said.

“He was a national hero, a brother, and friend, and we are deeply saddened by his death,” Abdirahman Yusuf Omar, Somalia’s deputy minister for information, wrote on his Facebook page.

Guled was a prominent journalist and had worked with different private radio and TV stations in Mogadishu before he joined the Somali National TV and Radio more than12 years ago.

Guled was once the producer of a popular government TV program, Gungaar, which means “In-Depth.” Guled at least once interviewed al-Shabab and ISIS suspects detained in government prisons by Somalia’s National Security Agency, to reveal information and the tactics used by the two terrorist groups in their attacks.

In November 2020, he was promoted and appointed as the director of the state-run Radio Mogadishu.

According to 2021 report by the Somali Journalists Syndicate and its partner, Somali Media Association, since February 2017, 12 journalists were killed in Somalia — three in 2017; four in 2018; two in 2019; two in 2020; and one in 2021.

According to U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists’ annual Global Impunity Index, which spotlights countries where members of the press are singled out for killing and the perpetrators go free, Somalia remains the world’s worst country for unsolved killings of journalists.

Source: Voice of America

Blinken Visits Senegal to Reaffirm Partnership

On the last day of a trip to Africa to bolster U.S. influence on a continent that receives much of its foreign aid from U.S. rival China, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said U.S. efforts to strengthen alliances in Africa must be evaluated on results.

The top U.S. diplomat visited Senegal Friday and Saturday on the last leg of a five-day, multi-nation trip during which he outlined the Biden administration’s policy toward Africa, declaring that the U.S. sees African countries as equal partners.

“We have to be judged on what we do and not simply on what I say and so let’s see over the coming months and coming years how we do,” Blinken said at a news conference Saturday in the Sengalese capital of Dakar.

Foreign Minister Aissata Tall Sall said at the news conference that U.S. influence in Africa “will always be important.” She noted the U.S. “never colonized” Africa and said the Sengalese “see the United States as a country of freedom.”

Earlier Saturday, Blinken met with Senegalese President Macky Sall at the presidential palace in Dakar. The two leaders also attended an event at Dakar’s Institut Pasteur, which hopes to begin producing COVID-19 vaccines with U.S. assistance next year.

On Friday, Blinken summarized the Biden administration’s policy toward Africa in a speech in Abuja, Nigeria.

“The United States firmly believes that it’s time to stop treating Africa as a subject of geopolitics — and start treating it as the major geopolitical player it has become,” Blinken said.

The continent needs billions of dollars annually for massive infrastructure projects such as building roads, railways and dams. Over the past decade, China has provided much of the infrastructure funding Africa has received.

Without mentioning China, Blinken vowed the U.S. would agree only to transparent and voluntary global infrastructure agreements that produce tangible benefits on the continent.

“Too often, international infrastructure deals are opaque, coercive; they burden countries with unmanageable debt; they’re environmentally destructive; they don’t always benefit the people who actually live there,” Blinken said. “We will do things differently.”

Blinken, who witnessed the signing of contracts valued at more than $1 billion Saturday between Senegal and four U.S. companies, said the U.S. is investing in Africa without imposing unmanageable levels of debt.

“As we look at infrastructure investment, and more broadly investment across the board, our purpose, the guiding principle, is to make this a race to the top. And if other countries want to engage in that race to the top … that’s a very good thing,” Blinken said.

Blinken’s visit to Africa was his first as secretary of state. He has said his trip is aimed at fostering cooperation on global health security, battling the climate crisis, expanding energy access and economic growth, revitalizing democracy and achieving peace and security.

The trip is part of the Biden administration’s effort to strengthen alliances in Africa after four years of a unilateralist approach under former U.S. President Donald Trump. It came amid worsening crises in Ethiopia and Sudan.

While in Kenya, Blinken called for ending the violence in Ethiopia, combating terrorism in Somalia and reviving Sudan’s transition to a civilian government.

On Saturday in Senegal, Blinken addressed the civil war between Ethiopian government forces and rebels in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region.

“Intensive diplomacy is ongoing with leadership from the African Union and its high representative, former Nigerian President Obasanjo supported by the United States,” Blinken said.

“We continue to push for an immediate end to hostilities without preconditions and humanitarian access to the millions of people who need life-saving aid,” he added.

Despite large contributions of money and vaccines to contain COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, the U.S. has had little success in gaining influence on the continent.

Nevertheless, Blinken said U.S. President Joe Biden would continue working to improve relations with African countries.

“As a sign of our commitment to our partnerships across the continent, President Biden intends to host the U.S.-Africa Leaders’ Summit to drive the kind of high-level diplomacy and engagement that can transform relationships and make effective cooperation possible,” Blinken said.

The top U.S. diplomat did not say when the summit would take place.

Source: Voice of America

Training on research and discovery of heritage

The Commission of Culture and Sports in cooperation with Italian-based ‘Research Center for the Eastern Desert (Ce.RDO)’ organized training focusing on research and discovery of heritage.

The training that was provided by experts from Politechnico Milano and Archeologists from the Commission of Culture and Sports, included research and conservation of heritage and role of the society, introduction to human skeleton remains, earth and marine science, 3D microscope scanning, and other related topics.

Indicating that the training was part of the “Adulis Archeological Research Project”, Prof. Serena Massa, Italian Archeologist, and Dr. Tsegay Medin, Eritrean Archeologist, said that the training will have a significant contribution to the future research and discovery of heritage in the country.

Noting that the training will have an important contribution to the discovery and conservation of historical and ancient heritage in the country, Ambassador Zemede Tekle, Commissioner of Culture and Sports, called on the trainees to apply the training they received practically on the ground.

The 10 days training was attended by 35 experts including 15 females from the central office of the Commission and regions.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

After Years of War, Millions of Syrians Now Face Serious Water Crisis

With the Syrian civil war in its 10th year and more than half the country’s population forcibly displaced by conflict, millions of Syrians face a new crisis: insufficient access to safe water that has increased food insecurity, diminished livelihoods and spurred further migration in search of resources.

According to an October 21 U.N Security Council report, people in Syria’s north and northeastern regions remain unable to reliably access sufficient supplies of safe water. The reasons are both environmental and man-made.

According to the U.N.’s September 9 action plan to address the water crisis, 5.5 million Syrians’ access to a critical water supply, the Euphrates River, is in jeopardy because of water levels that have been dwindling since January.

Less water flowing into the river from upstream, accompanied by irregular and reduced rainfall and higher-than-average temperatures, has created drought-like conditions in the region, according to the September U.N. report. The severity of the situation in Syria, say some experts, is largely attributed to the impact of climate change in the region.

Steven Gorelick is a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Woods Institute for the Environment and director of its Global Freshwater Initiative, a program that aims to increase freshwater supplies in countries threatened by climate change, such as Jordan.

Gorelick said that the outcomes of his work in Jordan may be used to evaluate water scarcity in other Middle Eastern countries, such as Syria. Droughts occur regularly in the region and in Syria, with its naturally semi-arid climate, but are worsened by the present environmental crisis, he said.

“Given climate change, much of the Middle East is highly vulnerable to the impacts of drought, which in portions of the region will become more frequent, last longer and will be more severe,” he said.

In addition to climatic factors precipitating the water crisis, civilian access to water has been further diminished because of the water supply systems.

According to the U.N. action plan, recurring shutdowns and “reduced operational capacity” of the Alouk water station in northeastern Syria has threatened about 500,000 people’s direct access to water in the city of Al-Hasakeh and the surrounding region. Similar issues have occurred with the Al-Khafsa water station, which supplies Aleppo from the western bank of the Euphrates, and the nearby Ein El-Bayda water pumping station, which supplies an estimated 184,000 people with water.

Water treatment and sanitation plants are also critical to maintaining a safe water supply, but Rula Amin, senior communications adviser and spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) regional bureau for the Middle East and North Africa, said her agency estimates some 50% of them are not functional.

The present situation is drastically different from 2011, the start of the civil war. At that time, more than 90% of the population had access to safe water, according to Amin.

‘Bound to get worse’

The water crisis has led to larger problems for Syria. Water scarcity has damaged crops and agricultural livelihoods, decreasing access to food and dramatically raising the prices of food and basic goods. At least 12.4 million Syrians are estimated to be food insecure, according to the U.N. action plan, a figure that, along with malnutrition rates, will only worsen with drought.

The need for water, food and basic supplies can drive already displaced persons to migrate again.

“The crisis is bound to get worse. And we expect that it will lead towards displacement, and it will weaken people’s ability to sustain their livelihood,” Amin said.

U.N. researchers say the water crisis has also increased the prevalence of water-borne diseases, an added strain to Syria’s public health system amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The water crisis is yet another obstacle for Syrians to overcome while they continue to work toward a sense of normalcy following decades of conflict.

“It’s that vicious, vicious cycle that is taking hold of the country and of the ability of the people to … even not just survive [but] to try to rebuild their life, to sustain a dignified level of living where they can actually maintain a good level for their well-being,” Amin said.

The present U.N. plan to address the water crisis is aimed at ensuring 3.4 million people have access to safe water through rehabilitating water stations and supplies and improving water treatment, according to its September 9 report.

The U.N. is also working to address food insecurity, malnutrition and income loss, and to increase access to essential health services. Along with UNHCR, other agencies, such as UNICEF and the Food and Agriculture Organization, are working in Syria to address civilians’ needs, according to Amin.

Sustainable, long-term solutions are required to address Syria’s growing needs, which Amin stressed. That may begin with increasing the breadth of humanitarian operations inside the country.

“You have to invest in projects that will help alleviate the impact of this water crisis, and that doesn’t happen within a one- or three-months project,” Amin said.

Syrians must now live with an added level of pressure and uncertainty.

“I think people feel squeezed,” Amin said. “It’s hard to find a job, it’s hard to put food on the table, it’s hard to rebuild your house. … So [there] are very few options for them to look through where they see an opportunity, where … things will get better.”

Source: Voice of America

600 Migrants Found Crammed Into 2 Trailers Rescued in Mexico

©MEXICO CITY — Some 600 migrants from 12 countries were rescued Saturday in Mexico after they were found crammed into two tractor-trailers, the country’s National Migration Institute said.

The 145 women and 455 men, who hailed from Central America, Africa and the Indian subcontinent, were found in the southeastern state of Veracruz, the institute said in a statement.

The vast majority were from the Central American countries of Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua but a total of 37 were from Bangladesh, six from Ghana, and one person was from India and Cameroon each, the institute added.

The migrants were crammed into the trailers of two trucks, said Tonatiuh Hernandez, the local head of the Human Rights Commission.

“There are children, minors, I saw pregnant women, sick people,” Hernandez said.

As the corridor between Central America and the United States, Mexico has seen vast numbers of migrants flow through its territory.

Two caravans of several hundred migrants are currently making their way through southern Mexico, aiming to acquire documents that allow them to transit through the country.

The flow of undocumented migrants has surged with the inauguration of U.S. President Joe Biden, who has taken a more humane approach to the border crisis than his predecessor Donald Trump.

The United States has recorded 1.7 million people trying to enter illegally from Mexico between October 2020 and September 2021, an all-time high for the period.

Source: Voice of America

Ambassador Igor N. Mozgo’s Speech on Russian Unity Day

Esteemed Mr. Minister, Your Excellencies, Representatives of the Eritrean Government and Diplomatic corps,

Ladies and Gentlemen, Friends

I would like to welcome you all to the reception devoted to the newest Russian National Holiday – Day of the People’s Unity or National Unity Day. National Unity Day is celebrated in Russia in honor of National Liberation and the preservation of Russia as a unified state. The motto of this Holiday is the words from a famous Soviet song: I, you, he, and she – together we are the whole country. And another slogan – When united we are invincible.

Primarily, I would like to explain to you a little bit about what this Holiday means to Russia. In fact, it symbolizes the solidarity and unity of the Russian people, ensuring the country’s well-being and prosperity. This holiday is rooted in the past.

This Day commemorates a Russian popular uprising that freed Moscow from Polish-Lithuanian occupation forces on November 4, 1612. Leaders of the uprising, Citizen Kozma Minin, and Prince Dmitry Pozharsky, became national heroes. Sometime before that, they had gathered a people’s militia that included representatives of different nationalities, estates, and religions near the city Nizhny Novgorod – this is the city in which I was born and raised – and directed it to liberate the capital of the Moscow State.

By that time, our country had been in the hands of the invaders and the impostor rulers for almost 15 years. Catholic Poles were in Moscow, in the Kremlin. Protestant Swedes occupied another ancient Russian city, Novgorod. In the South, the Tatars continued their raids on Russian towns and villages. All over the country, brigades of vagabonds were plundering and raiding whatever was leftover. This period is known as a “Time of Troubles.”

Russian people without any orders from boyars began to unite to defend themselves from the invaders. Ordinary people collected money, equipment, and weapons for fighting with the invaders. People’s militia headed by Citizen Kozma Minin and Prince Dmitry Pozharsky accomplished the feat by returning sovereignty and independence to our state. The monument dedicated to them, everybody can see on the Moscow Red Square near St. Basil’s Cathedral. And also on our monitor.

In 1649, Russian Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich made November 4 (October 22 of the then used Julian calendar) a public holiday. Russians celebrated this day until 1917. November 4 once again became a public holiday in 2005, when the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin signed a Decree on introducing Unity Day or the Day of the People’s Unity.

The cohesion and unity of our people helped us to preserve the State. We emerged victorious in the two Patriotic wars (against Napoleon and Hitler), rebuild the country after the Civil War after the October Revolution in 1917, first and second world wars, cope with the difficulties after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and regain its place among the world powers that determine the course of the world development.

National/People’s unity for us is not only a beautiful metaphor but also the basis for the existence of our multi-confessional and multi-ethnic people. Peace, cohesion, and harmony between the citizens of Russia of all nationalities, political and religious views are able to perform a miracle and lead Russia to power and prosperity.

A solicitous attitude towards our Motherland, care for it, loyalty to sincere friendship, and rejection of any external pressure are the pillars of Russian statehood, our genetic and cultural code. The Day of the People’s Unity marks the great probity of love for one’s Fatherland, pride in it, and respect for it.

Russian President, Vladimir Putin, said: “Each nation teaches the world its own lesson and builds its unique legacy. For Russia, such an invaluable legacy is many centuries of peaceful cohabitation of different ethnicities. There is just no other country as large and multi-faced as ours. Preserving the diversity of the peoples of Russia, their ethnic and cultural identity is of key significance to us, as are traditions of mutual trust, concord, and closeness. These foundations permeate the unity of the Russian nation with special inner power”.

He also mentioned that modern Russia is strong because of not only its new economic successes or its growing influence in international affairs. Russia was and remains powerful thanks to national unity and, of course, thanks to the tremendous intellectual and creative potential of our people, talented, qualified people who sincerely desire to act for the benefit of their nation. This is the best bridge to the successful future of Russia, to reviving and strengthening our country’s historic role.

I would further like to draw a parallel between the Holiday in Russia and the National Holiday in Eritrea, celebrated on September 1, the Day of the beginning of the armed struggle for the liberation of the country. The Eritrean people, united by their leaders, began a long way to independence. And they have reached the result. Now, Eritrea is one of the youngest independent and sovereign states in Africa (after South Sudan). It has its own way of development, pursues an independent domestic and foreign policy. Here, as in Russia, people of many nationalities and faiths live peacefully. The main thing for them is the prosperity of the country.

Russia and Eritrea are friendly countries. We cooperate effectively in the international arena, support each other at various world platforms, and conduct a productive bilateral dialogue. I think we will do our best to keep good relationships and develop contacts between our people.

Let me proclaim a toast: for the Unity of Peoples in Russia, for the Unity of Peoples in Eritrea, for the Unity of Peoples in every country of the world, and for the unity, friendship, and prosperity of the peoples of the whole world.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea