Bangladesh seeks crucial funding for 50 million climate-vulnerable citizens at COP29

Special Bangladesh seeks crucial funding for 50 million climate-vulnerable citizens at COP29
People carrying relief materials wade through flood waters in Feni, in south-eastern Bangladesh, on Aug. 24, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 11 November 2024

Bangladesh seeks crucial funding for 50 million climate-vulnerable citizens at COP29

Bangladesh seeks crucial funding for 50 million climate-vulnerable citizens at COP29
  • Dhaka needs at least $1 billion annually to implement climate change adaptation plan
  • Bangladesh already spends around $3 billion every year to address climate change impacts

Dhaka: Bangladesh will focus its negotiations at the COP29 climate conference on boosting crucial funding for a plan that will benefit over 50 million people living in areas most at-risk to climate hazards, authorities said, as the summit began on Monday.

Bangladesh is one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, ranking seventh globally in the 2021 World Climate Risk Index.

The South Asian nation faces frequent natural disasters, including cyclones, floods, droughts and deadly heat waves. By 2050, the government estimates that one in every seven Bangladeshis — or 13.3 million people — will be displaced due to climate change.

As world political and business leaders from nearly 200 countries gather in Baku, Azerbaijan this week for the UN’s annual meeting, Bangladeshi officials have set their goals on securing more climate financing.

“If we receive at least $1 billion as an annual grant to implement the climate change adaptation plan, it will create a significant change in dealing with climate change impacts,” Shawkat Ali Mirza, director of climate change and international convention at the Department of Environment, told Arab News.

“We don’t have this fund, and we are continuously working to bring this fund from developed countries. This is the main focus of our negotiations at the COP29.”

COP29 has been dubbed the “climate finance COP” due to its central goal: to agree on how much money should go every year to help developing countries cope with climate-related costs.

Annually, Bangladesh already spends between $3 to $3.5 billion to deal with climate change impacts, said Mirza, who is part of Dhaka’s delegation at COP29.

For decades, the government has made systematic investments in climate resilience and disaster preparedness, including reducing cyclone-related deaths by 100-fold since 1970. International institutions, such as the World Bank, have recognized Bangladesh as a “global leader in climate change adaptation.”

Under the National Adaptation Plan, authorities have identified at least 14 climate hazards in 11 locations — including along the Bay of Bengal — where almost a third of Bangladesh’s 170 million population currently live.

“The main objective of our national adaptation plan is to improve people’s quality of life by increasing climate tolerance … We need $230 billion by the year 2050 to implement it,” Mirza said.

“More than 50 million people living in these (climate) stress areas will benefit from this National Adaptation Plan in the next 27 years.”

Dhaka’s plan will cover eight sectors, including water resources, agriculture and biodiversity, where authorities will implement mechanisms for climate adaptation.

The government is building on its own success stories, such as the invention of rice varieties and production methods that are adaptable to climate change impacts as well as the distribution of around 6.5 million solar home systems across the country.

In its coastal areas, where over 43 million people live, authorities have already introduced rainwater harvesting systems and use reverse osmosis technology to provide safe drinking water.

“But we need to do more, as there are millions of people who are affected by climate change issues,” Mirza said.

Around 77 percent of the heat-trapping gas in the atmosphere can be traced back to G20 member states, while the 47 least developed countries — including Bangladesh — create less than 3 percent of global emissions, according to the UN Environment Programme’s 2024 Emissions Gap Report.

“We have to keep in mind that through adaptation, we will not be able to solve all the issues. For instance, if we want to get rid of heat stress, the whole world should work together on reducing emissions,” he said.

“Otherwise, there is no solution to the climate crisis.”


Russian diplomat: Impetus for peace in Ukraine after Putin-Trump summit has been exhausted

Russian diplomat: Impetus for peace in Ukraine after Putin-Trump summit has been exhausted
Updated 4 sec ago

Russian diplomat: Impetus for peace in Ukraine after Putin-Trump summit has been exhausted

Russian diplomat: Impetus for peace in Ukraine after Putin-Trump summit has been exhausted
  • Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov accuses European powers of successfully torpedoing peace efforts
  • ‘This is the result of destructive activities, primarily by the Europeans’
MOSCOW: A top Russian diplomat said on Wednesday that the impetus to find a peace deal to end the fighting in Ukraine which emerged after a summit between President Vladimir Putin and President Donald Trump in August had proven to be largely exhausted.
Trump and Putin met at a Cold War-era air force base in Anchorage, Alaska, on August 15 in an attempt to end the deadliest land war in Europe since World War Two.
Trump, who had previously said Kyiv should give up land to make peace with Moscow, has repeatedly said that he is disappointed with Putin for not ending the war, and has cast Russia as a “paper tiger.”
Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, who oversees relations with the US and arms control, accused European powers which support Ukraine of successfully torpedoing peace efforts.
“Unfortunately, we have to admit that Anchorage’s powerful momentum in favor of agreements has been largely exhausted by the efforts of opponents and supporters of the war,” Ryabkov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.
“This is the result of destructive activities, primarily by the Europeans,” he said.
Putin sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine in February 2022, triggering the biggest confrontation between Russia and the West since the Cold War.
Western European leaders and Ukraine cast the war as an imperial-style land grab and have repeatedly vowed to defeat Russian forces. Putin blames the West for ignoring Moscow’s security concerns after the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union about the enlargement of the NATO military alliance.
Ryabkov also said that the potential appearance of US Tomahawk missiles in Ukraine would mean a “qualitative” change in the situation, Interfax quoted him as saying.
Trump said earlier this week he would want to know what Ukraine planned to do with Tomahawks before agreeing to provide them because he did not want to escalate the war.

Pope Leo tells US bishops to address Trump’s immigration crackdown

Pope Leo tells US bishops to address Trump’s immigration crackdown
Updated 17 min 42 sec ago

Pope Leo tells US bishops to address Trump’s immigration crackdown

Pope Leo tells US bishops to address Trump’s immigration crackdown
  • Leo, the first US pope, was handed dozens of letters from immigrants describing their fears of deportation under the Trump administration
  • The pope questioned on Sept. 30 whether the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies were in line with the Catholic Church’s pro-life teachings

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo told US bishops visiting him at the Vatican on Wednesday that they should firmly address how immigrants are being treated by President Donald Trump’s hardline policies, attendees said, in the latest push by the pontiff on the issue.
Leo, the first US pope, was handed dozens of letters from immigrants describing their fears of deportation under the Trump administration’s policies during the meeting, which included bishops and social workers from the US-Mexico border.
“Our Holy Father … is very personally concerned about these matters,” El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz, who took part in the meeting, told Reuters. “He expressed his desire that the US Bishops’ Conference would speak strongly on this issue.”
“It means a lot to all of us to know of his personal desire that we continue to speak out,” said Seitz.
The Vatican did not immediately comment on the pope’s meeting.
Elected in May to replace the late Pope Francis, Leo has shown a much more reserved style than his predecessor, who frequently criticized the Trump administration and often spoke in surprise, off-the-cuff remarks.
But Leo has been ramping up his criticism in recent weeks.
The pope questioned on September 30 whether the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies were in line with the Catholic Church’s pro-life teachings, in comments that drew heated backlash from some prominent conservative Catholics.
The White House has said Trump was elected based on his many promises, including to deport criminal illegal aliens.
One of the letters given to the pope on Wednesday, shared with Reuters, described a family with two members who did not have legal permission to stay in the US and who were afraid to leave the house for fear of deportation.
“I believe the Pope should speak out openly against the raids and the unfair treatment the community is experiencing,” read the letter, written in Spanish.
Leo also met privately with a group of about 100 American Catholics involved in ministry with migrants on Tuesday evening, thanking them for their work.


Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of ‘actively’ preparing for war

Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of ‘actively’ preparing for war
Updated 23 min 49 sec ago

Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of ‘actively’ preparing for war

Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of ‘actively’ preparing for war
ADDIS ABABA: Ethiopia has accused Eritrea of joining forces with a hard-line opposition faction in preparing to launch a war, according to a letter from the foreign affairs ministry obtained by AFP on Wednesday.
The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which dominated Ethiopian politics for some 30 years, has been banned from political activity.
Relations have been extremely strained for several months between the two neighbors, more than 30 years after Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia after a decades-long armed struggle.
Ethiopia’s foreign minister wrote in the letter to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres that “the collusion between the Eritrean government and the TPLF has become more evident over the past few months....”
“The hard-liner faction of the TPLF and the Eritrean government are actively preparing to wage war against Ethiopia,” it added.
The government in Addis Ababa also accuses its counterpart in Asmara and the TPLF of “funding, mobilizing and directing armed groups” in the Amhara region, where the federal army has been facing rebels for several years.
Eritrea’s Information Minister Yemane Ghebremeskel and the TPLF have so far not responded to AFP’s requests for comment on the accusations.
After independence in 1993, a bloody border war erupted between the two Horn of Africa countries from 1998 to 2000, leaving tens of thousands dead.
Relations thawed in 2018 after Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power and signed a peace deal with President Isaias Afwerki, who has ruled Eritrea with an iron fist since independence.
The peace agreement earned Abiy a Nobel Peace Prize in 2019.
Eritrean troops backed Ethiopian federal forces during the bloody war in the northern Tigray region between 2020 and 2022, which left an estimated 600,000 people dead, according to the African Union.

- Sea access dispute -

Since the conflict ended, relations have again turned frosty, with Asmara accusing its landlocked neighbor of eyeing the Assab port on the Red Sea in southeastern Eritrea.
Abiy has repeatedly reiterated his desire for Ethiopia to regain sea access, lost legally after Eritrea’s independence.
Ethiopian foreign minister Gedion Timothewos in the letter said Addis Ababa wants “to engage in good faith negotiations with the government of Eritrea.”
He accused Asmara of trying “to justify its sinister machinations against Ethiopia by claiming that it feels threatened by Ethiopia’s quest to gain access to the sea.”
In June, a report by a US monitoring group accused Eritrea of rebuilding its army and destabilising its neighbors.
Ghebremeskel, Eritrea’s information minister, criticized the report by the NGO The Sentry and blamed “the new tension in the region” on Ethiopia.
Eritrea, one of Africa’s least populated countries with about 3.5 million people, has in recent months strengthened ties with Egypt, which also has strained relations with Ethiopia.

Madagascar protesters reject president’s offer of talks

Madagascar protesters reject president’s offer of talks
Updated 24 min 47 sec ago

Madagascar protesters reject president’s offer of talks

Madagascar protesters reject president’s offer of talks
  • Demonstrations sparked by water and power shortages
  • Threat of national strike looms after ultimatum by protesters

ANTANANARIVO: Youth protesters in Madagascar on Wednesday rejected an offer to join President Andry Rajoelina’s “national dialogue” with various groups, accusing his government of repression after weeks of demonstrations in the African island nation.
Inspired by similar “Gen Z” movements in Kenya and Nepal, the protests that started on September 25 pose the biggest challenge to Rajoelina’s government since his re-election in 2023, giving voice to widespread discontent over rampant poverty and high-level corruption.
Rajoelina fired his cabinet last week in a bid to quell the unrest, appointing a new prime minister and announcing plans for a national dialogue due to commence on Wednesday afternoon. He said the talks would be attended by spiritual leaders, students, youth representatives, and others.
But the moves have failed to ease public anger, and the so-called Gen Z movement said they would not hold talks with the government as long as authorities respond to their demonstrations with force.
“We reject this mockery of dialogue,” the protesters said in the statement posted on their verified Facebook page.
“We refuse the president’s invitation to talks. We will not engage in dialogue with a regime that represses, assaults, and humiliates its youth in the streets.”
University students were expected to take to the streets again on Wednesday following a 48-hour ultimatum issued by the protesters on Monday night for Rajoelina to agree to their demands or face a national strike.
Although the demonstrations were initially sparked by water and electricity shortages, demands have now expanded to include calls for Rajoelina to leave office, apologize to the nation, and dissolve the senate and the election commission.
At least 22 people have been killed while 100 others have been injured in the unrest, according to the United Nations. The government has rejected those figures, without offering any of its own.
Late on Tuesday Rajoelina appointed new ministers for defense and public security and asked them to restore public order.
“Do not tolerate the incitement of unrest,” he said, without elaborating further on possible measures.
Madagascar’s protests are taking place at a vulnerable time for its export-reliant economy. While the country is best known for producing most of the world’s vanilla, other exports, including of nickel, cobalt, textiles and shrimp – are also vital to foreign earnings and employment.
The country’s per capita GDP plunged by 45 percent between 1960 and 2020, according to the World Bank.


WHO seeks clarification from India if cough syrup linked to deaths was exported

WHO seeks clarification from India if cough syrup linked to deaths was exported
Updated 46 min 24 sec ago

WHO seeks clarification from India if cough syrup linked to deaths was exported

WHO seeks clarification from India if cough syrup linked to deaths was exported
  • WHO to assess the need for a Global Medical Products Alert on Coldrif syrup
  • Cough syrup linked to deaths of at least 17 children younger than five years old in India

LONDON: The World Health Organization was seeking clarification from New Delhi on whether a cough syrup linked to deaths in India has been exported to other countries, the global health agency told Reuters on Wednesday.
The WHO said it will assess the need for a Global Medical Products Alert on Coldrif syrup once it receives official confirmation from the Indian authorities.
At least 17 children younger than five years old have died in India in the past month after consuming cough medicine that contained the toxic compound diethylene glycol in quantities nearly 500 times the permissible limit, officials say.