الكاتب: kafej

  • Burning trash to stay warm, displaced Syrians struggle to survive winter | Syria’s War News

    Burning trash to stay warm, displaced Syrians struggle to survive winter | Syria’s War News

    Burning trash to stay warm, displaced Syrians struggle to survive winter | Syria’s War News

    Kafr Yahmul, Syria – As winter sets in, the inhabitants of an informal camp just north of the city of Idlib are bracing themselves for the months ahead.

    Fateem al-Yousef watched the sky anxiously as clouds gathered and she thought about what she and her family will be facing once the rains start. “I am afraid that water will seep into the tent and that my children will get sick,” she told Al Jazeera.

    Fateem, 40, has been displaced since the early years of the war in Syria, which began in 2011. She left her village south of Idlib and moved from one village to another. Four years ago, she, her husband, Khaled al-Hassan, and their nine children finally settled in the Kafr Yahmul camp, where 70 families live on rented land.

    Fateem al-Yousef, 40, with three of her children in front of the tent they share in Kafr Yahmul camp north of Idlib, the capital of Idlib province [Ali Haj Suleiman/Al Jazeera]

    The memory of their first day in the camp is still fresh in her mind, Fateem said, because it was accompanied by rain. She had recently given birth, and water leaked into the family’s tent. “The situation was very difficult because we were not adapted to it,” Fateem said. “We felt that there was water everywhere, and we did not have heating for our young children.”

    These days, displaced people in northwest Syria are burning pistachio shells, hazelnuts, olives, odd bits of firewood and charcoal as well as scraps of plastic, nylon and cardboard to stay warm because the price of diesel has soared, but even these options are expensive for camp residents.

    About 2.7 million people in Syria are in urgent need of aid this winter, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

    Syrians are facing a high cost of living, unemployment, inflation – prices have doubled since the start of 2023 – continued displacement and the ongoing effects of February’s earthquakes.

    A severe shortage of funding for humanitarian projects in Syria will also compound the suffering of hundreds of thousands of people in 2024, OCHA warned.

    A tent in Kafr Yahmul, which, like most camps for displaced people in northwest Syria, is prone to flooding. Hundreds of camps are expected to flood this winter as their residents struggle to stay warm [Ali Haj Suleiman/Al Jazeera]

    Burning waste, damaging health

    Fateem said she and her family can barely make ends meet even though most of them work. Her eldest daughter, who is 15, and her 14-year-old son work as farm labourers while the younger children collect scrap from roadsides. Her husband, 47, has no mobility in one hand but works whenever he has the opportunity. Even so, the family can’t afford everything they need to make it through the winter. Most adults earn less than $1 a day – hardly enough to provide for a family.

    Living close by is Wadha al-Yousef, 36, who is not directly related to Fateem but is from the same village. She, her husband, Ahmed al-Sattouf, 42, and their five children, aged one to seven, have been living in Kafr Yahmul for five years. She told Al Jazeera that her family relies on collecting scraps of cardboard, plastic and nylon from the sides of the roads during the summer to be able to keep warm in the winter but burning comes at a cost.

    “The hideous smell and smoke spreads throughout the camp, but people tolerate each other because they all have no other choice for heating,” Wadha said.

    Burning plastic and nylon is damaging the family’s health. Wadha said her children suffer from constant illnesses caused by the smoke, and they find themselves making visits to health centres and clinics throughout the winter as a result.

    Wadha al-Yousef inspects her family’s tent, which she suspects will flood when it rains [Ali Haj Suleiman/Al Jazeera]

    Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres, or MSF) warned this month of the dangers of burning such waste because they give off harmful fumes, which can cause respiratory diseases and infections, especially for children and the elderly.

    The autumn rain clouds came a bit later than usual this year, but the cold and flooding are likely to be as bad as ever if not worse, according to forecasts. Last year, 306 refugee camps in northwestern Syria flooded during the winter. This year, OCHA said, 874 camps out of 1,525 in the region have been classified as “vulnerable” to flooding during the winter. Seventeen of them are “catastrophically” vulnerable, 240 are “extremely” vulnerable and the rest are “severely” so.

    According to OCHA, the camps house about 2 million people, and at least 15,000 new tents are needed to each winter, but most of the existing tents have not been replaced for years and do not include the insulation needed to provide protection from the rain and cold. Neither Fateem nor Wadha have anything more than a thin nylon cover, sewn into the tents to insulate them and keep them dry. But this has not been enough to withstand even the first light rainfall of the year, which came a few days ago.

    “I spent the night standing, holding the shade so that the water would not fall on my young children while they were sleeping,” Wadha said. She said her family is unable to afford more suitable insulation, which would cost about $70.

    Children look out of a tent housing a family at Kafr Yahmul camp [Ali Haj Suleiman/Al Jazeera]

    ‘Cannot do more with less’

    David Carden, UN deputy regional humanitarian coordinator for the Syria crisis, told Al Jazeera that the most effective solution to help the displaced is by moving them from tents to dignified shelters that offer more durability, privacy and protection against flooding and harsh weather.

    If a family’s tent is replaced every six months, a shelter can last for five years, Carden said, adding that replacing tents frequently is “one of the most cost-effective investments”. However, only one-third of the funding pledged by donor nations for 2023 has actually been received, he added. This compares with just more than half the required funding being provided in 2022.

    As a result of the lack of money for OCHA’s Syria Humanitarian Response Plan, only 26,000 families have been provided with caravans or housing units. According to the UN, about 800,000 people are still living in tents.

    “We simply cannot do more with less,” Carden said. “But we fear the worst is yet to come next year.”

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    Burning trash to stay warm, displaced Syrians struggle to survive winter | Syria’s War News

  • Baltic foreign ministers pull out of OSCE summit over Russia invite | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Baltic foreign ministers pull out of OSCE summit over Russia invite | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Baltic foreign ministers pull out of OSCE summit over Russia invite | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Ministers of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania say presence of Sergey Lavrov risks legitimising Russian war in Ukraine.

    The foreign ministers of three Baltic states have announced that they will boycott a meeting of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) after Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was invited to the event.

    In a statement on Tuesday, the officials from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania said that a decision to invite Lavrov to attend the summit in Skopje risked legitimising Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    “We deeply regret the decision enabling the personal participation of Russian Foreign Minister S. Lavrov at the 30th Session of the OSCE Ministerial Council in Skopje,” the statement reads.

    “It will only provide Russia with yet another propaganda opportunity.”

    Separately, Oleh Nikolenko, spokesman for the Ukrainian foreign ministry, wrote in a statement on Facebook that the Ukrainian delegation would not take part in the meeting.

    Nikolenko said Russia had abused the rules of consensus in the organisation, resorted to “blackmail and open threats” and had also been holding three Ukrainian OSCE representatives in prison for 500 days.

    “In such conditions, the presence of a Russian delegation … at minister-level for the first time since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine will only deepen the crisis into which Russia has driven the OSCE,” he said.

    There was no immediate comment from the Russian foreign ministry.

    The move comes as Ukraine’s Western allies sought to rally more support for Kyiv, as fighting continues with no clear end in sight.

    Speaking before a gathering of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg urged members to “stay the course” in their support for Ukraine, as both the United States and European Union struggle to agree on further military aid.

    The OSCE, a 57-member organisation first started during the Cold War with the goal of lowering tensions between East and West, has a rotating presidency currently held by North Macedonia, whose foreign minister invited Lavrov to the summit that is set to begin on Thursday.

    Lavrov said on Monday that he would attend, in what would be his first trip to a NATO member since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

    Speaking to reporters at NATO headquarters on Tuesday, North Macedonia’s Foreign Minister Bujar Osmani defended the decision and argued that the OSCE should be seen as a neutral forum.

    “Lavrov is not coming to Skopje, in a way. Lavrov is coming to the OSCE just as he went to [the] UN in New York a few months ago,” Osmani said. “I won’t be meeting him as the foreign minister of North Macedonia, but as the OSCE chairman in office.”

    However, Osmani also took a firm stance on Ukraine, saying that he would tell Lavrov that “we have turned [the] OSCE into a platform for political and legal accountability of the Russian Federation for its deeds in Ukraine, and we will continue to do so”.

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    Baltic foreign ministers pull out of OSCE summit over Russia invite | Russia-Ukraine war News

  • Evan Gershkovich: Russia extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter | World News

    Evan Gershkovich: Russia extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter | World News

    Evan Gershkovich: Russia extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter | World News

    Evan Gershkovich: Russia extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter | World News

    A court in Russia has extended the detention of Wall Street Journal reporter, Evan Gershkovich, until 30 January 2024.

    Mr Gershkovich, a US citizen, was detained by the Federal Security Service (FSB) on 29 March on charges of espionage that carry up to 20 years in prison.

    He is the first US journalist to be detained on spy charges in Russia since the Cold War.

    The reporter denies all the charges but will remain in prison until his trial.

    Ukraine war latest: Follow live

    Russia claims that Mr Gershkovich was caught “red-handed” and the FSB, the main successor to the Soviet-era KGB, said he was trying to obtain military secrets.

    The extended pre-trial detention – which was ruled upon by Moscow’s Lefortovo district court on Tuesday – was for “up to 10 months,” but the court set the deadline for 30 January in 63 days’ time.

    Image:
    Mr Gershkovich in court on Tuesday. Pic: Moscow General Jurisdiction Courts Press Service

    The decision prompted backlash from The Wall Street Journal, which said that Russia’s continued imprisonment of Mr Gershkovich was a “brazen and outrageous attack” on a free press.

    It called for his immediate release.

    “Evan has now been unjustly imprisoned for nearly 250 days, and every day is a day too long,” the Journal said in a statement.

    “The accusations against him are categorically false and his continued imprisonment is a brazen and outrageous attack on a free press, which is critical for a free society. We continue to stand with Evan and call for his immediate release.”

    President Joe Biden has previously called Mr Gershkovich’s detention “totally illegal” while the US embassy in Moscow said it was “deeply concerned” by the court’s latest decision.

    Read more:
    Nothing gives me hope, says mother of Evan Gershkovich
    White House calls espionage charges against reporter ‘ridiculous’
    Wall Street Journal reporter’s appeal against pre-trial detention rejected

    Diplomats suspect that Mr Gershkovich was detained as part of broader efforts by Russia to build up a number of arrested US citizens who could be swapped for Russian citizens – and convicted spies – detained in the West.

    But Russia has said there could be no exchange involving the reporter until a verdict is reached in his case.

    A date for his trial is yet to be announced.

    Image:
    Mr Gershkovich has appeared in the glass cage numerous times in Russian court

    Born to Soviet migrants and raised in New Jersey, Mr Gershkovich moved to Moscow in late 2017 to join the English-language Moscow Times, and subsequently worked for the French news agency Agence France-Presse.

    He joined The Wall Street Journal in 2022.

    He has appealed against his detention several times, each time appearing in the glass cages used for suspects in Russian courts, but they have all been rejected.

    The US State Department has repeatedly told all citizens to leave Russia immediately due to “the potential for harassment and the singling out of US citizens for detention by Russian government security officials”.

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    Evan Gershkovich: Russia extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter | World News

  • Former WWE star Tammy ‘Sunny’ Sytch jailed for 17 years for fatal car crash | US News

    Former WWE star Tammy ‘Sunny’ Sytch jailed for 17 years for fatal car crash | US News

    Former WWE star Tammy ‘Sunny’ Sytch jailed for 17 years for fatal car crash | US News

    Former WWE star Tammy 'Sunny' Sytch jailed for 17 years for fatal car crash | US News

    Former WWE star Tammy “Sunny” Sytch has been jailed for more than 17 years for a car crash that killed a 75-year-old man.

    Sytch, 50, had pleaded no contest to the fatal collision that killed Julian Lasseter in March 2022.

    She was behind the wheel of a Mercedes-Benz car which collided with a Kia that was stopped at a traffic signal, police said.

    Image:
    Tammy Sytch was jailed for 17 years. Pic: Volusia County Corrections

    The WWE Hall of Famer was alleged to have had a blood alcohol content three-and-a-half times the legal limit, according to reports.

    The former wrestler appeared in court in Florida in an orange jumpsuit with handcuffs on and broke down in tears while addressing the room.

    Sytch said: “A precious life was lost that tragic day and I’m so incredibly sorry for that. I would ask that you give me the opportunity to atone for what I’ve done.”

    At one point, she reportedly addressed the victim’s family saying: “I know my words are not enough but please know that I think about you every day.”

    Read more:
    WWE star Bray Wyatt dies aged 36
    Five ‘revelations’ from controversial new book on Royal Family
    Which famous artefacts has the UK been urged to give back?

    Known as “Sunny” in the ring, Sytch is widely considered to have been the WWE’s first “diva” – the term used by the organisation to describe female performers.

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    Former WWE star Tammy ‘Sunny’ Sytch jailed for 17 years for fatal car crash | US News

  • India tunnel collapse: First 10 workers rescued after group trapped for 17 days in Uttarakhand | World News

    India tunnel collapse: First 10 workers rescued after group trapped for 17 days in Uttarakhand | World News

    India tunnel collapse: First 10 workers rescued after group trapped for 17 days in Uttarakhand | World News

    India tunnel collapse: First 10 workers rescued after group trapped for 17 days in Uttarakhand | World News

    The first 10 workers have been rescued from a tunnel in India after being trapped for more than two weeks, NDTV has reported.

    The labourers became stuck after a highway tunnel in Uttarakhand state collapsed on 12 November.

    So-called rat miners were brought in to drill through rocks and gravel by hand after a large drilling machine broke down.

    Once the men had been reached, three teams of four rescuers were due to enter the area they were trapped in.

    Workers being rescued from tunnel in India – follow live updates

    Image:
    An ambulance waiting to carry workers to hospital. Pic: AP

    Their job was to prepare the workers to be pulled through a pipe to safety, said Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain from the National Disaster Management Authority.

    “We have been involved in this for more than 400 hours and are taking all safety precautions until the end,” he told reporters in New Delhi.

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    India tunnel collapse: First 10 workers rescued after group trapped for 17 days in Uttarakhand | World News