Global cooperation ‘flatlined’ amid rising conflicts: WEF report

Global cooperation ‘flatlined’ amid rising conflicts: WEF report
Borge Brende, president and CEO of the WEF, and Bob Sternfels, global managing partner at McKinsey & Co. urge international cooperation in the face of a complex world. (Screenshot: WEF)
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Updated 23 January 2025

Global cooperation ‘flatlined’ amid rising conflicts: WEF report

Global cooperation ‘flatlined’ amid rising conflicts: WEF report
  • Multilateral bodies failing to resolve wars, says WEF’s Borge Brende
  • Deaths at highest in 30 years, record 122m people displaced in 2024

DUBAI: Geopolitical tensions and rising conflicts in the Middle East, Ukraine and Sudan have caused global cooperation to stall after a period of growth, according to a report from the World Economic Forum.

The second edition of the Global Cooperation Barometer was launched on Tuesday, ahead of the WEF’s annual meeting in Davos from Jan. 20 to 24.

The report, developed in collaboration with McKinsey & Co., found that cooperation was increasing positively over a decade, surpassing pre-COVID-19 levels but stagnated over the past three years due to geopolitical instability.

However, collaboration has continued in various other areas including vaccine distribution, scientific research and renewable energy development, the report stated.

“The concern with a stalled level of cooperation is that as the world enters the second half of the decade, with critical global deadlines ahead, progress is not where it needs to be,” said Borge Brende, president and CEO of the WEF, during the report’s online launch event.

This rise in global security issues and record levels of humanitarian crises were due to the inability of multilateral institutions to prevent and resolve conflicts in recent years, the report found.

According to UN figures, the number of conflict-related deaths has risen to the highest levels in 30 years, with a record number of 122 million people displaced as of 2024, double the number from a decade ago.

Brende urged the international community to unify and address the mounting geopolitical tensions and competition as leaders approach a highly “complex and uncertain” world.

“The Barometer is being released at a moment of great global instability and at a time when many new governments are developing agendas for the year, and their terms, ahead,” Brende said.

“What the Barometer shows is that cooperation is not only essential to address crucial economic, environmental and technological challenges, it is possible within today’s more turbulent context.”

The Barometer uses 41 indicators to measure global cooperation between 2012 and 2023 across five pillars: trade and capital flows, innovation and technology, climate and natural capital, health and wellness, and peace and security.

Positive momentum in climate finance, trade and innovation offered hope, the report stated.

“Advancing global innovation, health, prosperity and resilience cannot be done alone,” said Bob Sternfels, global managing partner at McKinsey & Co.

“Leaders will need new mechanisms for working together on key priorities, even as they disagree on others, and the past several years have shown this balance is possible.”

He urged world leaders to embrace “disordered” cooperation, as well as develop adaptive and solutions-driven decision-making to navigate a turbulent global landscape.

“By pivoting towards cooperative solutions, leaders can rebuild trust, drive meaningful change and unlock new opportunities for shared progress and resilience in the complex years ahead,” he said.

According to the UN, just 17 percent of the Sustainable Development Goals are on track to meet the 2030 deadline.

The advancement of cooperation in innovation in 2023 drove the adoption of new technologies that benefited multiple areas of life. However, the WEF warned that emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence was reshaping the global landscape, raising the possibility of an “AI arms race.”

“Cooperative leadership and inclusive strategies will be key to harness its vast potential while tackling risks,” according to experts quoted in the report.

The report found that cooperation on climate goals improved over the past year, with increased finance flows and higher trade in low-carbon technologies such as solar, wind and electric vehicles. Yet, urgent action was still required to meet net-zero targets as global emissions continue to rise.

According to UN figures, global temperatures have risen to record levels, with 2024 being the hottest year on record.

Health outcomes, including life expectancy, continued to improve post-pandemic, but overall progress was slowing compared to pre-2020. Brende warned that forging collaboration in a highly fragmented world was crucial to address cross-border challenges.

Seven million people died from COVID-19, while the US has reported the first human death linked to bird flu on Tuesday. Cybercrime cost the world $2 trillion in 2023, he added.

“With pandemics, there is no other way than using the tools we have for early warnings. We have to come together and put all resources to move much faster than we did.

“COVID-19 was the worst pandemic we had seen in 100 years, but I don’t think it will take 100 years before we see the next pandemic,” warned Brende.

The report revealed that although cross-border assistance and pharmaceutical research and development have declined, and cooperation on trade in health goods and international regulations stalled, various health metrics including child and maternal mortality remained strong.

Goods trade declined by 5 percent, driven largely by slower growth in China and other developing economies, while global fragmentation continued to reduce trade between Western and Eastern-aligned blocs. However, Brende said a 3 percent increase in global trade is expected this year.

Despite this, the report found global flows of services, capital and people showed resilience. Foreign direct investment surged, particularly in strategic sectors including semiconductors and green energy, while labor migration and remittances rebounded strongly, surpassing pre-pandemic levels.

“There should be enough common interest to collaborate even in a competitive world. So I hope that this Barometer will then be a useful tool for leaders around the world to know where we stand today, as well as the risks and opportunities we face,” he said.

The WEF’s annual meeting will convene global leaders under the theme “Collaboration for the Intelligent Age.” The meeting aims to foster new partnerships and insights in an era of rapidly advancing technology.


Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza
Updated 12 October 2025

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza
  • Egyptian Red Crescent says 400 trucks carrying medical supplies, tents, blankets, food, and fuel to Palestinian enclave

CAIRO: Preparations were underway on Sunday for a ramp-up of aid entering the war-battered Gaza Strip under a new ceasefire deal that many are hoping will signal an end to the devastating 2-year-long war between Israel and Hamas.
The Israeli defense body in charge of humanitarian aid in Gaza, COGAT, said the number of aid trucks entering the Palestinian territory was expected to increase on Sunday to around 600 per day, as stipulated in the agreement.
Egypt said it is sending 400 aid trucks into Gaza on Sunday. 
The trucks will have to be inspected by Israeli forces before being allowed in.

FASTFACT

The UN has said it has about 170,000 metric tons of food, medicine, and other humanitarian aid ready to enter once Israel gives the green light.

Associated Press footage showed dozens of trucks crossing the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing. 
The Egyptian Red Crescent said they carried medical supplies, tents, blankets, food, and fuel. 
The trucks will head to the inspection area in the Kerem Shalom crossing for screening by Israeli troops.
Expanding Israeli offensives and restrictions on humanitarian aid have triggered a hunger crisis, including famine in parts of the territory.
The UN has said it has about 170,000 metric tons of food, medicine, and other humanitarian aid ready to enter once Israel gives the green light.
Abeer Etifa, a spokeswoman for the World Food Program, said workers were clearing roads inside Gaza on Sunday to facilitate delivery.
The fate of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli- and US-backed contractor that replaced the UN aid operation in May as the primary food supplier in Gaza, remains unclear.
Food distribution sites operated by the group in the southernmost city of Rafah and central Gaza were dismantled following the ceasefire deal, several Palestinians said on Sunday.
Israel and the US had touted GHF as an alternative system to prevent Hamas from taking over aid. 
However, its operations were mired in chaos, and hundreds of Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire while heading to its four sites. 
The Israeli military has said its troops fired warning shots to control crowds.
A GHF representative said in a statement that there might be “tactical changes in GHF operations and temporary closures of some distribution sites” during the transfer of hostages to Israel, but “there is no change to our long-term plan.”
Palestinians continued to move back to areas vacated by Israeli forces on Sunday, although many were returning to homes reduced to rubble.
Satellite photos analyzed by The Associated Press showed a line of vehicles traveling north to Gaza City. 
The photos taken on Saturday showed a line of vehicles on Al Rashid Street, which runs north-south along the Gaza Strip’s coastline on the Mediterranean Sea.
Tents along the coast also could be seen near Gaza City’s marina. 
Many people have been living along the sea to avoid being targeted in the Israeli bombardment of the city.
Armed police were seen in Gaza City and southern Gaza patrolling the streets and securing aid trucks driving through areas from which the Israeli military had withdrawn, according to residents. The police force is part of the Interior Ministry.
The war has destroyed large swaths of Gaza and displaced about 90 percent of its 2 million residents. It has also triggered other conflicts in the region, sparked worldwide protests, and led to allegations of genocide that Israel denies.
While both Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza welcomed the initial halt to the fighting and plans to release the hostages and prisoners, the longer-term fate of the ceasefire remains murky. 
Amjad Al Shawa, who heads a Palestinian organisation coordinating with aid groups, estimated that 300,000 tents would be needed to house 1.5 million displaced Gazans temporarily.
"We couldn't believe the destruction we have seen," Rami Mohammad-Ali, 37, said by phone after walking 15 km with his son from Deir Al-Balah to Gaza City.
"We are joyful to return to Gaza City but at the same time we have bitter feelings about the destruction," he said, describing seeing human remains scattered along roads.
Key questions about the governance of Gaza and the post-war fate of Hamas have yet to be resolved.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a post on X that he had instructed the Israeli military to prepare to begin destroying the network of tunnels built by Hamas under Gaza “through the international mechanism that will be established under the leadership and supervision of the US” once the hostages are released.

 


Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’
Updated 12 October 2025

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’
  • Madeleine Habib was arrested along with other activists when Israel intercepted her ship on Wednesday
  • The captain of the ship Conscience was held in Ketziot prison where she reportedly refused to sign a waiver

LONDON: The Australian captain of a Gaza aid flotilla ship has been moved from an Israeli prison four days after her vessel was intercepted in international waters.

Madeleine Habib was taken Sunday morning to the border with Jordan along with other activists from the flotilla, The Guardian reported.

Habib, who captained the ship Conscience, was detained on Wednesday along with more than 140 activists when their nine ships were intercepted by the Israeli military.

Known as the Freedom Flotilla Coalition and Thousand Madleens to Gaza, the vessels were attempting to break Israel’s blockade of the territory.

Habib, from Tasmania, was taken along with other activists to Israel’s high-security Ketziot prison in the Negev desert.

Reports said she had refused to sign a waiver that acknowledged she had sought to illegally break Israel’s naval blockade.

Australian consular officials who visited her were told she would stay in Israel “indefinitely” unless she signed the document.

Habib previously told Australian officials that she had experienced “degradation but no physical abuse” in custody.

An Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it had raised the treatment of Australians detained in Israel with Israeli officials.

A spokesperson said: “For some time, we have warned against attempts to breach the naval blockade and strongly advised Australians not to do so because of the risks to their safety. We repeat our call on Israel to enable the sustained, unimpeded flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.”

Another flotilla of more than 40 ships was intercepted by Israel as it tried to reach Gaza earlier this month.

At least 470 people were arrested, including the Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg. Most were released in the days that followed, with many claiming they were mistreated.

Habib’s ship Conscience left from Italy in early October carrying 100 volunteers and aid supplies for Gaza, where Israel’s two-year military campaign has killed nearly 68,000 people and led to famine.

A ceasefire pushed through by US President Donald Trump took effect on Friday, with the release of Israeli and Palestinian prisoners expected on Sunday.


Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family
Updated 12 October 2025

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family
  • Israel has drawn up a list of 250 names of Palestinian prisoners expected to be released on Monday
  • The Shamasneh family in Qatanna village is ready to welcome home two sons jailed for the past 34 years

QATANNA: A stone’s throw from the wall separating Israel and the occupied West Bank, the Shamasneh family is ready to welcome home two sons jailed for the past 34 years.
Abdel Jawad and Mohammed are expected to be among the Palestinians freed from Israeli detention under the terms of the ceasefire agreement approved last week.
“Today I’m so happy the world feels too small for my joy,” declared their elated mother, 83-year-old Halima Shamasneh.
“People called us and said: ‘Their names are on the list — they’re out, they’re registered’,” she said.
Israel has drawn up a list of 250 names of Palestinian prisoners expected to be released on Monday in exchange for the remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza.
Halima and her husband Yusef gathered their children and grandchildren in the family home in the West Bank village of Qatanna just north of Jerusalem, to celebrate the news.
On the house’s walls, the many photos of the brothers before their arrest have faded in color.
Their clothes reflect the 1980s, the decade in which the two men were arrested. Abdel Jawad is now 62 and Mohammed in his late 50s.
For the celebration, Halima wore her tabriz dress with a traditional Palestinian embroidery.
Yusef wore a suit, his head adorned with a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf secured with an agal ring.

Pushback in Israel

In the living room, two large posters printed in the 1990s by the Palestinian Authority-linked “Prisoners Club,” show the two brothers and urge their release.
“I was nine when my father was imprisoned — now I’m 44, with four children of my own. To be deprived of your father is a tragedy,” Ajwad Shamasneh, Abdel Jawad’s son, told AFP as his son played nearby.
Like all of Abdel Jawad’s 17 grandchildren, he has never seen his grandfather.
“To hug your father after 34 years... it’s indescribable,” he said, while his brothers around him fought back tears.
Ajwad, who works as a day laborer in Israel, said he had not been able to see his father for the past eight years after prison authorities stopped allowing visits.
No one at the celebration evoked the reasons for Abdel Jawad and Mohammed’s imprisonment.
Abdel Jawad’s file shared by Israel in the list of prisoners to be released reads that he was committed to a life sentence for murder, attempted murder and conspiracy.
Prisoner release deals between Palestinians and Israelis are often decried by families of murder victims who challenge the deals in the country’s supreme court.
The court rejected such a petition on Friday, ruling that “matters of war and peace, including the government’s agreements with the enemy regarding a ceasefire and its conditions, are not judicial.”

‘Real hope’

In January 2025, a six-week truce saw hundreds of Palestinians released in exchange for hostages, but not the Shamasneh brothers.
“I had hope, but it didn’t come true back then. Today, though, it’s real hope,” said Yusef of his sons.
“People have been calling me non-stop,” Yusef said with emotion, before being called by relatives congratulating him.
There is one cloud of doubt over the celebration. If his sons are freed, they could be exiled abroad, as sometimes happens to high-profile prisoners.
“I hope they come here. I really hope so. If they go abroad, I won’t be able to see them — neither I nor their mother,” Yusef said.
Israel and Hamas have agreed on the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire and hostage-prisoner exchange deal, based on a 20-point plan proposed by US President Donald Trump.
According to the plan, Israel will release 250 prisoners and around 1,700 Gazans detained since the war began following Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Asked what she’ll cook her sons upon their return home, Halima answers without hesitation that it will be a typical lamb and yoghurt Palestinian dish.
“Mansaf! We’ll slaughter a sheep and cook a feast — for them and for the people who will visit,” she said.
“Tonight, we won’t sleep — we’ll stay up celebrating, welcoming everyone who comes, one after another,” she added, before breaking off into song.


Syrian and Turkish armies to cooperate in counterterrorism, border control

Syrian and Turkish armies to cooperate in counterterrorism, border control
Updated 12 October 2025

Syrian and Turkish armies to cooperate in counterterrorism, border control

Syrian and Turkish armies to cooperate in counterterrorism, border control
  • Turkish foreign minister says ‘we do not view Syria’s security as separate from Turkey’s security’
  • Talks focused on common issues in counterterrorism, border control, enhancing regional stability, and bilateral cooperation

LONDON: The Syrian Arab Republic and Turkiye will collaborate on counterterrorism along their shared border to enhance military cooperation between the two countries.

On Sunday, Syrian Foreign Minister Assaad Hassan Al-Shaibani discussed these issues with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, Defense Minister Yasar Guler, and General Intelligence Chief Ibrahim Kalın.

Syria’s Defense Minister Maj. Gen. Murhaf Abu Qasra and General Intelligence Chief Hussein Al-Salama also joined the high-level delegation that visited the Turkish capital, Ankara.

The talks focused on common issues in counterterrorism, border control, enhancing regional stability, and bilateral cooperation. They discussed joint training to improve coordination between Turkiye and Syria, the SANA news agency reported.

“We discussed the joint steps that can be taken to ensure Syria's full security while preserving its territorial integrity,” Fidan wrote on X.

“The Syrian administration possesses the determination and resolve to overcome the challenging trials it faces. We do not view Syria’s security as separate from Turkey’s security,” Fidan added.

Abu Qasra described the meetings with his Turkish defense counterpart and officials as “a significant new milestone” in strengthening cooperation between the two armies. He said in a post on X that such collaboration will “contribute to establishing security and stability in the region.”

Ankara has strengthened its relations with Damascus since December, after the collapse of the Assad regime last year, which was an ally of Iran and opposed Turkiye for supporting rebel groups.


Israeli forces raid houses of Palestinian prisoners ahead of release in Gaza deal

Israeli forces raid houses of Palestinian prisoners ahead of release in Gaza deal
Updated 12 October 2025

Israeli forces raid houses of Palestinian prisoners ahead of release in Gaza deal

Israeli forces raid houses of Palestinian prisoners ahead of release in Gaza deal
  • Israeli soldiers issued threats to prisoners’ family members, warning them against holding any celebrations after their release
  • Nearly 1,950 Palestinian prisoners and detainees are set to be freed on Monday in exchange for 48 Israeli captives

LONDON: Israeli forces conducted raids on several homes of Palestinian prisoners who are expected to be released as part of the captive exchange deal between Israel and Hamas early on Sunday.

Israeli soldiers entered the homes of prisoners due for release, tampered with their belongings, and issued threats to family members, warning them against holding any celebrations, according to the Wafa news agency.

Homes in Nablus, the Balata and Askar Al-Jadid refugee camps, as well as the towns of Salem to the east, Aqraba, and Zeita Jamma’in to the south, were raided. Similar raids were conducted in Hebron and the nearby Deir Samet, where one prisoner from the village is scheduled to be released on Monday, the Wafa added.

Nearly 1,950 Palestinian prisoners and detainees from the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip are set to be freed on Monday in an exchange deal for 48 Israeli captives, 20 of whom are alive.

Late Thursday, the Israeli government approved a ceasefire in Gaza proposed by US President Donald Trump. The deal includes a prisoner and captive swap, an end to hostilities in the Gaza Strip, a gradual withdrawal of Israeli forces from the territory, and the entry of humanitarian aid.