Thursday, November 04, 2021


The AP Interview: Justice Dept. conducting cyber crackdown

By ERIC TUCKER

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco speaks to The Associated Press during an interview at the Department of Justice in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. Monaco told the AP that the public should expect to see more arrests and law enforcement action as the Justice Department deals with the threat of ransomware. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is stepping up actions to combat ransomware and cybercrime through arrests and other actions, its No. 2 official told The Associated Press, as the Biden administration escalates its response to what it regards as an urgent economic and national security threat.

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said that “in the days and weeks to come, you’re going to see more arrests,” more seizures of ransom payments to hackers and additional law enforcement operations.

“If you come for us, we’re going to come for you,” Monaco said in an interview with the AP this week. She declined to offer specifics about who in particular might face prosecution.

The actions are intended to build off steps taken in recent months, including the recent extradition to the U.S. of a suspected Russian cybercriminal and the seizure in June of $2.3 million in cryptocurrency paid to hackers. They come as the U.S. continues to endure what Monaco called a “steady drumbeat” of attacks despite President Joe Biden’s admonitions last summer to Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin after a spate of lucrative attacks linked to Russia-based hacking gangs.

“We have not seen a material change in the landscape. Only time will tell as to what Russia may do on this front,” Monaco said.

But Monaco added: “We are not going to stop. We’re going to continue to press forward to hold accountable those who seek to go after our industries, to hold our data hostage and threaten national security, economic security and personal security.”

Another official, National Cyber Director Chris Inglis, painted a rosier picture, telling lawmakers Wednesday that the U.S. had seen a “discernible decrease” in attacks emanating from Russia but that it was too soon to say why.

Monaco is a longtime fixture in Washington law enforcement, having served as chief of staff at the FBI to then-Director Robert Mueller and as head of the Justice Department’s national security division. She was a White House official in 2014 when the Justice Department brought a first-of-its-kind indictment against Chinese government hackers.


Monaco’s current position, with oversight of the FBI and other Justice Department components, has made her a key player in U.S. government efforts against ransomware. That fight has defied easy solutions given the sheer volume of high-dollar attacks and the ease with which hackers have penetrated private companies and government agencies alike. How much lasting impact the latest government response will have is also unclear.

Though not a new phenomenon, ransomware attacks — in which hackers lock up and encrypt data and demand often-exorbitant sums to release it to victims — have exploded in the last year with breaches affecting vital infrastructure and global corporations.

Colonial Pipeline, which supplies roughly half the fuel consumed on the East Coast, paid more than $4 million after a May attack that led it to halt operations, though the Justice Department clawed the majority of it back after identifying the virtual currency wallet of the culprits, known as DarkSide. The public should expect to see more such seizures, Monaco said.

JBS, the world’s largest meat processor, said in June that it had paid $11 million following a hack by a Russian group known as REvil, which weeks later carried out a massive ransomware attack that snarled businesses around the world.

The splashy attacks elevated ransomware as an urgent national security priority while the administration scrambled to stem the onslaught.

Inside the Justice Department, officials in April formed a ransomware task force of prosecutors and agents, and they’ve directed U.S. attorney offices to report ransomware cases to Washington just as they would terrorism attacks.

It has also tried prosecutions, extraditing from South Korea last month an accused Russian hacker, Vladimir Dunaev, who prosecutors say participated in a cyber gang whose malicious software — known as “Trickbot” — infected millions of computers.

“You’re going to see more actions like you saw last week in the days and weeks to come,” Monaco said.

Still, holding foreign hackers accountable in the U.S. is notoriously difficult, and ransomware gangs are abundant. Even if recent attacks haven’t generated the same publicity as the ones last spring, Monaco said there’s been no discernible change in behavior by opportunistic hackers still targeting a range of industries with attacks that threaten to paralyze crucial business operations — or force multimillion-dollar payouts.

Monaco said she’s sympathetic to the hard decisions companies must make, in part because she’s had experience confronting criminals’ monetary demands.

As homeland security and counterterrorism adviser in the Obama administration, she helped craft new policy on Americans held hostage overseas. The policy reiterated that ransom payments for hostages were discouraged and illegal, but also made clear that prosecutors didn’t plan to criminally charge families who made such payments.

“What it reflects, and frankly what the whole endeavor reflected, was a sense on Lisa’s part that this was an area where you needed an extraordinary balance between policy and humanity,” said Joshua Geltzer, the Biden administrator’s deputy homeland security adviser who worked with Monaco in the Obama White House.

The U.S. government has publicly discouraged ransomware payments but Monaco — who during the Obama administration faced criticism from hostage families about the government’s response to their plight — says the administration is trying to listen to and work with victimized companies.

Officials have shown no interest in prosecuting companies that pay ransom to hackers, though Monaco did announce last month that the department was prepared to sue federal contractors who fail to disclose that they’ve been hacked or who fail to meet cybersecurity standards.

“We have experienced where companies do not pay the attention they need to on this front,” Monaco said.

Ransomware attacks have flourished even as the federal government grapples with more old-fashioned, albeit sophisticated, cyber espionage. The Justice Department was among the agencies hit hard by the SolarWinds breach, in which Russian government hackers exploited a supply chain vulnerability to gain access to the networks of federal departments and private companies.

The Justice Department has said more than two dozen U.S. attorneys’ offices had at least one employee whose email account was compromised during the hacking campaign.

It was a reminder, she said, that no one is immune from a sophisticated breach.

“We need to practice what we preach and be doing the same type of vigilance on our cybersecurity that we are asking companies to do,” she said.

____

Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/etuckerAP.


US offers $10 mn bounty for DarkSide hackers

Issued on: 05/11/2021 -
















US authorities have offered a bounty for the identification of the leaders of ransomware gang DarkSide OLIVIER DOULIERY AFP/File

Washington (AFP) – The United States announced a $10 million reward Thursday for help finding leaders of the high-profile ransomware gang DarkSide, authorities' latest try at combating spiking cyber-extortion attacks.

Washington blamed the Russia-based group for the online assault that forced the shutdown of the largest oil pipeline in the eastern United States in May.

Cyber-extortion heists involve breaking into a company or institution's network to encrypt its data, then demanding a ransom, typically paid via cryptocurrency in exchange for the digital key to unlock it.

"In offering this reward, the United States demonstrates its commitment to protecting ransomware victims around the world from exploitation by cyber criminals," said a US State Department statement.

Washington also offered a $5 million bounty for information leading to the arrest or conviction in any country of anyone who tries to join in an attack with DarkSide.

Despite the temptation potentially provoked by the sums, not all cyber-security experts were convinced the rewards would be effective in unmasking hackers.

"Absent a bounty hunter willing to travel to their jurisdiction, put their unconscious body in a bag and dumping it at the nearest US embassy, I doubt this will have much of an impact," said John Bambenek at Netenrich, an IT and security operations company.

"To be fair, it certainly won't hurt either," he added.

Cyber crimes have been booming, with new data out in October showing $590 million in ransomware-related payments were reported to US authorities in the first half of 2021 alone.

The figure is also 42 percent higher than the amount divulged by financial institutions for all of 2020, the US Treasury report said, and there are strong indicators the true cost is likely in the billions.

Companies and institutions face intense pressure to pay up in order to get their data unlocked, but also to keep the attack from potentially angry clients and authorities who issue stern warnings not to give cash to criminals.

© 2021 AFP
US to cover costs for journalists under legal pressure


US Agency for International Development Administrator Samantha Power said the United States will cover the costs incurred by journalists abroad who face frivolous lawsuits meant to silence them
Jim WATSON AFP

USAID HAS BEEN A CONDUIT FOR THE CIA IN THE PAST

Issued on: 04/11/2021 - 

Washington (AFP) – The United States will devote funding to help journalists overseas survive frivolous lawsuits meant to silence them, USAID chief Samantha Power announced Thursday.

In a wide-ranging speech, the US Agency for International Development administrator also promised to increase sharply how much American aid is channelled to local groups, vowing to make such assistance more inclusive and effective.

Power, herself a former reporter, said that President Joe Biden's administration was setting up a "global defamation defense fund" for journalists as part of his democracy promotion agenda.

"We will offer the coverage to survive defamation claims or deter autocrats and oligarchs from trying to sue them out of business in the first place," she said at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service.

Power said her talks with international journalists showed that autocratic regimes were increasingly using the "crude but effective tactic" of filing lawsuits to bankrupt news outlets and kill stories they do not like.

"As autocrats grow savvier in their attempts to control and manipulate people, we need to help support a free and fair global press to hold leaders to account," she said.

She did not outline how the fund would work or whether it would support journalists in countries allied with the United States.

Biden plans next month to hold a summit to back democracy, seeking to show a sharp change from his predecessor Donald Trump who embraced autocratic leaders and persistently denounced the role of independent media.

Critics will likely point to Washington's continued to extradite from Britain the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who considers himself a journalist and faces the rest of his life in prison for the leak of classified US documents.

© 2021 AFP
WHY HONDURANS MIGRATE
Honduras presidential candidate arrested on murder, drug-trafficking charges

Issued on: 04/11/2021 - 

Presidential candidate Santos Rodriguez is escorted by Honduran authorities following his arrest over money laundering 

Handout AGENCIA TECNICA DE INVESTIGACION CRIMINAL de Honduras/AFP

Tegucigalpa (AFP) – Honduran authorities on Thursday arrested presidential candidate Santos Rodriguez over accusations of money laundering related to drug-trafficking and homicide, including the murder of a DEA informant.

His arrest comes less than a month ahead of presidential elections in which the main candidates all face accusations of either corruption or drug trafficking.

Outgoing President Juan Orlando Hernandez has himself been accused of drug-trafficking, while his brother Tony Hernandez was in March sentenced to life in prison in New York for the same crime.

Rodriguez, a retired army captain, was not among the favorites for the November 28 election.

According to the public ministry he is wanted for "money laundering."

A protected witness also claimed that when Rodriguez carried out operations in his army role and found money or drugs, he "did not declare them in their entirety, keeping part of what was seized and the confiscated weapons were taken to a criminal group."

"According to witnesses he is also involved in the death of many people including an informant" for the US Drug Enforcement Agency, said the ministry.

The public prosecutor's office said that Rodriguez is accused of organizing the delivery of drugs that had been stolen from other criminal organizations, adding that the money for illicit operations was brought to his wife and mother-in-law, both of whom have been arrested.

The public ministry said analysis of the detainees' bank accounts showed activity that was "inconsistent" with their declared earnings.

Already in 2016, the US Embassy in the Honduras capital Tegucigalpa said Rodriguez was "under investigation for alleged links to drug-trafficking and corruption."

The favorites in the presidential election are Tegucigalpa Mayor Nasry Asfura from the governing National Party, and leftist Xiomara Castro, the wife of former president Manuel Zelaya.

Having already served two terms as president, Hernandez cannot run for office again.

He insists the accusations against him and his brother are "false" and are retaliation by drug lords his government helped extradite to the United States.

© 2021 AFP
Racism, misogyny claims made in report on NBA Suns owner

Issued on: 04/11/2021 -

Phoenix Suns team owner Robert Sarver faced allegations of racism and misogyny in an ESPN story released Thursday on the network's website, claims Sarver denied last week and to ESPN through his lawyers
 Christian Petersen GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Los Angeles (AFP) – Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver faced allegations of racism and misogyny on Thursday after an ESPN report detailed claims of a toxic and hostile workplace during his 17-year tenure.

Sarver issued a pre-emptive denial of the allegations last month, saying the then-unpublished story was based upon "lies, innuendo, and a false narrative" designed to "attack our organization."

The story, released on ESPN's website, stemmed from interviews with more than 70 current and former Suns employees, most of them not identified, who said Sarver repeatedly used racially insensitive language and detailed conduct seen as misogynistic and inappropriate.

"The level of misogyny and racism is beyond the pale," an unidentified Suns co-owner told ESPN about Sarver. "It's embarrassing as an owner."

Sarver supposedly used a racial insult in a conversation with a Black coach, talked about sex with his wife as he showed a photo of her in a bikini and asking a woman if he "owned" her when inquiring if she worked for the Suns.

ESPN said Sarver, through attorneys, denied using the racial slur more than once, declaring, "The N-word has never been a part of my vocabulary."

The report said Sarver's conduct contributed to a workplace culture that impacted how other managers treated employees.

Suns general manager James Jones and team president Jason Rowley defended Sarver to ESPN, Rowley saying the story was "completely outrageous and false" and Sarver "is not a racist and he's not a sexist."

NBA spokesman Mike Bass told ESPN the league has not "received a complaint of misconduct at the Suns organization" while NBA players union executive director Michele Roberts told ESPN she was unaware of any reports from players regarding misconduct by the Suns.

ESPN quoted an unidentified business department employee as saying, "If the commissioner comes in and investigates (he) would be appalled."

Multiple Suns staffers recalled Sarver using racist language in conversations, ESPN reported, also quoting Sarver as saying, "I don't like diversity" when it came to the organization.

Proven allegations of racist behavior or use of racist language could have serious implications for any NBA team owner.

In 2014, then Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling was fined $2.5 million and banned for life from the NBA after being recorded using racist language. The league later forced the sale of the team to new owners.

Sarver, 59, bought the Suns in 2004 for $401 million. The franchise is now worth an estimated $1.55 billion.

The Suns reached last season's NBA Finals, where they lost to the Milwaukee Bucks, but one unnamed current executive told ESPN that despite the on-court success "the culture is lower than it has ever been."

© 2021 AFP


Grieving families of killed Sudanese protesters demand justice

A Sudanese protester writes "leave" in Arabic next to a painting of General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, amid ongoing demonstrations against a military coup (AFP/-)More

Thu, November 4, 2021

Young labourer Gamal Shazly first joined Sudan's street protests demanding full democracy almost three years ago, but in the end his desire for freedom cost him his life.

Shazly, 20, was among the more than one dozen demonstrators killed by security forces in violence that has shaken the capital since a military coup early last week.

"How could they confront peaceful protesters with weapons?" asked his bereaved father Abdelnasser Shazly about the death of his youngest son. "He was just calling for civilian rule."

Speaking at his home in southern Khartoum, the grieving father said that "when I went to the morgue to see him, I couldn't recognise him at first. His left eye was bulging out of his face.

"He was hit by three bullets, which seemed to have been fired at close range," he said, describing two gunshot wounds to the head and one to the stomach.

One side of his son's body appeared to have been mangled by a heavy vehicle, the father said.

Despite his young age, Shazly was already a veteran of the unprecedented, nationwide mass rallies that in April 2019 brought down Sudan's long-time president Omar al-Bashir.

Shazly had earned the nickname "Jawaya", or "airforce", since he had manned a protest roadblock near the building of that wing of the armed forces at Khartoum military headquarters in 2019.




- Fears of 'escalation' -

Those protests led Sudan's generals to topple and jail Bashir, and set the Northeast African country on a fragile transition period under a joint civilian-military government.

Tensions however simmered in the country, deepened by economic crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.

They exploded on October 25 when the de facto leader, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, ousted the civilian leadership.

Burhan, who had risen through the ranks under Bashir's three-decade rule, insisted that it "was not a coup" but simply a move "to rectify the transition".

Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok was detained and then placed under house arrest, sparking international condemnation and outrage on the streets, where security forces once more confronted protesters.

The Central Committee for Sudanese Doctors, an independent union of medics, said security forces fired tear gas canisters and rubber-coated bullets, but also live rounds.

Amnesty International has said that security forces used "lethal force" and voiced fears about a looming "escalation in human rights violations".

- 'Persecution and repression' -


Sudan has a long history of military coups, enjoying only rare interludes of democratic rule since winning independence in 1956.

The end of the Bashir era brought hope for many who had suffered under his autocratic reign, marked by decades of bloody internal conflict, international isolation, mismanagement and economic hardship.

"I have long lived under military regimes ... which are all about persecution and repression," said Abdelsalam Anwar -- another father who lost a son to the most recent crackdowns.

He recounted how 21-year-old Mohamed Anwar -- another participant of the anti-Bashir protests, nicknamed "Mido" -- was severely wounded in a demonstration on the day of the putsch.

The young man was among protesters who manned makeshift barricades and set car tyres ablaze in Khartoum-North, the capital's twin city, according to his brother, Osama.

Security forces then "fired tear gas" and targeted protesters, he said.

"They starting shooting heavily, and I was too scared to go out," Osama said.

"By the time it stopped, they told me my brother was shot and taken to the hospital."
















- 'We're tired' -


The young man was treated for severe wounds close to his heart, and to the side of his body. He succumbed to his injuries two days later, his family said.

His sister Dalia said that, amid Sudan's years of turmoil, Mohamed had "still held onto hopes for this country, and that's why he joined the protests".

Despite the violence and cuts to internet and phone lines, anti-coup protesters have still rallied, with tens of thousands turning out last Saturday. Small rallies continued on Thursday.

Sudan's interior ministry has lambasted reports that protesters were killed as "inaccurate", and denied that security forces fired live rounds.

Local and international actors have sought to mediate between the civilians and the military.

Abdelsalam Anwar said he only wants justice for his son, and an end to military rule.

"We're tired," he said. "And the people will not stay still. It's a repressive regime in all respects. I don't want my son's blood to have been wasted."

bur/fz/pjm
DIWALI
Indians celebrate festival of light amid COVID-19 fears

By KRUTIKA PATHIy

1 of 11
People light lamps on the banks of the river Saryu in Ayodhya, India, Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021. Millions of people across Asia are celebrating the Hindu festival of Diwali, which symbolizes new beginnings and the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness. The celebrations were especially spectacular in Ayodhya city in northern Uttar Pradesh state, where over 900,000 earthen lamps were lit at the banks of the Saryu River as desk fell Wednesday. Hindus believe the city is the birthplace of god Ram. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)

NEW DELHI (AP) — Indians across the country began celebrating Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, on Thursday amid concerns over the coronavirus pandemic and rising air pollution.

Diwali is typically celebrated by socializing and exchanging gifts with family and friends. Many light oil lamps or candles to symbolize a victory of light over darkness, and fireworks are set off as part of the celebrations.

Last year, celebrations in India were upended by a renewed spike in COVID-19 infections, but festivities this year seem to be back. Even though the government has asked people to avoid large gatherings, markets have been buzzing ahead of Diwali, with eager crowds buying flowers, lanterns and candles.

As dusk fell on Wednesday, over 900,000 earthen lamps were lit and kept burning for 45 minutes in the northern city of Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh state, retaining the Guinness World Record it set last year. As part of the Diwali celebrations, the city last year lit 606,569 oil lamps.





Firecrackers light up the sky over lamps lined on the banks of the river Saryu in Ayodhya, India, Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021. Over 900,000 earthen lamps were lit and were kept burning for 45 minutes as the north Indian city of Ayodhya retained its Guinness World Record for lighting oil lamps as part of the Diwali celebration – the Hindu festival of lights. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)


The lamps were lit at Ram ki Pauri, at the banks of Saryu River, a stunning spectacle for thousands of visitors who thronged its shores while ignoring coronavirus social distancing norms. A laser and fireworks show followed, illuminating the city’s lanes and river banks. Thousands of city residents also lit lamps at their houses and temples.

The festival is being celebrated at a time when India’s pandemic crisis has largely subsided.

On Thursday, the country recorded over 12,000 new coronavirus cases and 461 deaths, a far cry from earlier this year when India buckled under a few hundred thousand new infections every day. Overall, it has recorded more than 35 million infections and over 459,000 deaths, according to the Health Ministry. These figures, as elsewhere, are likely undercounts.

Even states where infections were swelling a few weeks ago, such as Kerala along the tropical Malabar Coast, have seen a sustained decline. India also celebrated administering its billionth COVID-19 vaccine dose last month, further boosting confidence that life is returning to normal.

Still, experts have warned that the festival season could bring a renewed spike in infections if COVID-19 health measures aren’t enforced.

There are also worries over air pollution, which typically shrouds northern India under a toxic grey smog at this time as temperatures dip and winter settles in.

On Diwali night, people also lit up the sky with firecrackers — their smoke causing pollution that takes days to clear.

While there is no nationwide ban on bursting firecrackers, a number of states have imposed restrictions to stem the pollution, with some allowing their residents to light green crackers for a certain number of hours. Green crackers produce lesser emissions than normal firecrackers. In the past, similar bans have often been flouted.



___

Associated Press writer Biswajeet Banerjee in Lucknow, India, contributed to this report.

 In photos: Diwali marked in Asia with celebrations, prayers

Millions of people across Asia are celebrating the Hindu festival of Diwali, which symbolises new beginnings and the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness.

The festival is celebrated mainly in India, but Hindus across the world, particularly in other parts of Asia, also gather with family members and friends to socialize, visit temples and decorate houses with small oil lamps made from clay. The festival is also marked by raucous parties and fireworks displays, often throughout the night.

Like every year, India has been lit up in a dazzling display of lights and colours. Brightly coloured rangoli designs are drawn at the entrances of homes and offices, which are decked in fairy lights.

The celebrations were especially spectacular in Ayodhya city in northern Uttar Pradesh state, where over 900,000 earthen lamps were lit on the banks of the Saryu River as desk fell Wednesday. Hindus believe the city is the birthplace of the god Ram.

NIRANJAN SHRESTHA/AP
A Nepalese woman puts marigold petals on a police dog during Tihar festival celebrations at a kennel division in Kathmandu, Nepal. The festival is marked as Tihar, also known as Deepawali, in Nepal. On Wednesday, devotees celebrated dogs that are regarded as the guardian of the Hindu death god Yama.

READ MORE:
Diwali's 'Festival of Lights' offers a moment for reflection, faith and hope
A taste of Diwali: Recipes to celebrate the festival of light

MAHESH KUMAR A/AP
A girl lights firecrackers as she celebrates Diwali, the festival of lights, in Hyderabad, India.

In eastern Ahmedabad city in Gujarat state, devotees worshipped their account books as the festival also marks the start of the new Hindu financial year.

The day was marked as Tihar, also known as Deepawali, in neighboring Nepal. There, the five-day celebrations began Tuesday and people thronged markets and shopped for marigold flowers, which hold huge cultural significance during the festival. On Wednesday, devotees celebrated dogs that are regarded as the guardian of the Hindu death god Yama.



VINCENT THIAN/AP
Hindu devotees climb the coloured stairs to pray at the Batu Caves temple during the 
Hindu festival of lights, Diwali, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

In Malaysia, Hindu devotees prayed at temples and lit clay oil lamps. Some climbed the coloured stairs to pray at the Batu Caves temple just north of Kuala Lumpur to pay homage to their deity, Lord Muruga.

People also celebrated with friends and families in Indonesia, Japan and Taiwan.

Diwali marks Hindu god Ram’s return to his kingdom after 14 years in exile. Hindus believe that during Diwali the goddess of wealth, Lakshmi, will visit their homes if they are illuminated and decorated.

ALTAF QADRI/AP
A woman and her daughter make a rangoli, a traditional decoration, at the entrance
 to their home during Diwali celebrations in New Delhi, India.

The Diwali festival is also observed among Jains, Sikhs and Buddhists. While each religion marks the festival with different historical events and legends, they all represent the victory of good over evil.

ERANGA JAYAWARDENA/AP
An ethnic Tamil woman prays holding a tray of oil lamps during Diwali in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
BINSAR BAKKARA/AP
Devotees pray during Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, at the Sri Mariamman Temple
 in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia.
BIKAS DAS/AP
A roadside vendor displays garlands of marigold flowers, popularly used as offering
 to Hindu deities, during Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, in Kolkata, India.
RAJESH KUMAR SINGH/AP
People light lamps on the banks of the river Saryu in Ayodhya, India.
FAREED KHAN/AP
Hindu women attend a ceremony at a temple in Karachi, Pakistan.
MAHESH KUMAR A/AP
Children play with firecrackers during Diwali celebrations in Hyderabad, India.
CHIANG YING-YING/AP
An artist applies henna on the hand or a woman in Taipei, Taiwan.
VINCENT THIAN/AP
Hindu devotees light clay oil lamps in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
KIN CHEUNG/AP
Hindu devotees pray at a temple in Hong Kong.
VINCENT THIAN/AP
A Indian man prays with lit coconut as an offering outside a temple in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
SAKCHAI LALIT/AP
A devotee prepares fruits and flower offerings to Hindu Goddess Lakshmi in Bangkok, Thailand.
NIRANJAN SHRESTHA/AP
A Nepalese woman picks marigold flowers to make garlands to sell for the upcoming
 Tihar festival on the outskirts of Kathmandu, Nepal.
HIRO KOMAE/AP
Pathik Bhalodiya, 4, gets help from his mother Shital, members of an Indian family living in Japan.
ALTAF QADRI/AP
Children play with firecrackers during Diwali celebrations in New Delhi, India, 
Thursday, Nov. 4, 2021. Diwali, the festival of lights, is one of Hinduism's most
 important festivals dedicated to the worship of Lakshmi, the Hindu goddess
 of wealth. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
ALTAF QADRI/AP
People watch a firecracker light up during Diwali celebrations in New Delhi, India.
AJIT SOLANKI/AP
Traders perform rituals during Chopada Pujan, or a mass prayer ceremony
 dedicated to the worship of account books, at the Swaminarayan Gurukul in Ahmedabad, India.
UK unveils Mahatma Gandhi commemorative collectors coin

Indian independence movement leader, Mahatma Gandhi, has been featured for the first time on an official UK coin, launched on the same day as Hindus celebrate Diwali.



Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi outside 10 Downing Street in 1931

The UK unveiled a special 5-pound ($6.80; €5.90) collectors coin to celebrate the life of Indian independence movement leader Mahatma Gandhi on Thursday, the same day as the Indian festival of Diwali.

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, announced the launch of the commemorative coin, saying he was proud to have unveiled the coin on the festive occasion.

"As a practicing Hindu, I am proud to unveil this coin during Diwali," Sunak said.

"Mahatma Gandhi was instrumental in the movement for Indian independence and it is fantastic to have a UK coin commemorating his remarkable life for the first time," Sunak added.

Indians typically exchange gifts, which include gold metal and coins, during the festive week of Diwali.

Gandhi appears on UK coin for the first time

The commemorative coin features an image of India's national flower, the lotus, and is part of the Royal Mint's wider Diwali collection. There's also a famous quote from Gandhi on the coin: "My life is my message."

It is the first time Gandhi has been commemorated on an official UK coin. It will be available in both gold and silver.

SEE IT HERE Our Coins | The Royal Mint

Though the coin is legal tender, it is not being designed for general circulation. It will be on sale from Thursday, along with gold bars, including the first gold bar of the UK depicting Lakshmi, the Hindu goddess of wealth.

Sunak commissioned a new "Diversity Built Britain" 50-penny coin last year as part of a campaign to fairly represent the minority community's contributions across all walks of life.

rm/rt (Reuters, AP)

Norway's largest pension fund divests from 14 arms firms

KLP has stopped investing in companies with ties to nuclear and regular arms production. It's not the first time the fund has made such a move on humanitarian grounds.



Raytheon, one of the firms behind the Patriot missile launcher, is among the firms that KLP has divested from


Norway's largest pension fund said on Thursday that it has divested from 14 nuclear and regular arms-producing companies.

Oslo-based KLP said it made the decision after reviewing its ethical criteria on weapons.

"This will primarily mean companies that produce certain types of weapons which, by their nature, violate fundamental humanitarian principles,'' the fund said in a statement.

"The criterion applies mainly to nuclear weapons and cluster munitions, as well as anti-personnel mines," it said in a statement.

Which companies is KLP divesting from?

As of this month, KLP won't do business with companies including Britain's Rolls Royce Holdings PLC, Massachusetts-based Raytheon Technologies Corp. and France's Thales.

KLP is also divesting from UK-based Babcock International, China Shipbuilding Industry, Dassault Aviation, Elbit Systems, General Dynamics, KBR, L3Harris Technologies, Larsen & Toubro, Leidos Holdings, Leidos Inc and Leonardo.

Two of the companies — Elbit Systems and Leonardo — have already been excluded by KLP for other reasons.

The exclusions mean that KLP has sold shares worth just over 1 billion Norwegian crowns ($117.50 million, €101.8 million) and debt securities in the form of bonds worth about 200 million crowns, the company said.



What are KLP's new grounds for divestment?


KLP has expanded its ethical exclusion criteria to include makers of key components used for nuclear and regular arms and providers of key support services.

"Companies do not need to produce the actual weapons components themselves," Kiran Aziz, KLP's head of responsible investment, told news agency Reuters.

"We are now taking a slightly more stringent line with producers of aircraft and vessels that have been developed, produced or adapted to launch nuclear weapons."

KLP said that Rolls Royce produces components for a number of vessels capable of launching nuclear weapons. Its ethical guidelines said "production of such delivery platforms constitutes grounds for exclusion."

The fund said Raytheon Technologies Corp. develops missiles that can carry nuclear warheads and called it the world's largest producer of guided missiles. Raytheon had previously been excluded from KLP investment because it produces components for nuclear weapons and cluster munitions but was added back last year.

Thales develops and produces components for nuclear missiles. It also produces delivery platforms exclusively intended for such weapons, KLP said.

What is KLP?

KLP manages more than 300 billion kroner for municipal employees in Norway.


This is not the first time that KLP has taken steps to divest on ethical grounds. Earlier this year, the fund divested from 16 companies that operated in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

The firms appeared on a UN list of 112 companies that it said were complicit in violating the human rights of Palestinians by operating in the West Bank.
COP26 report: COVID stimulus packages fail to address climate change adaptation

Developing countries face a massive funding shortfall in preparing for inevitable climate change. But governments could use COVID-19 recovery funds to create long-term sustainable climate adaptation measures.


A new UN report has found that financing for climate adaptation measures falls far short of what is needed

Developing countries need to spend up to 10 times more public money than current levels to implement climate adaptation measures that would minimize harm caused by more frequent droughts, flooding and other weather extremes, according to a United Nations report published on Thursday.

Up to $300 billion (€260 billion) will be needed annually by 2030, and $500 billion a year by 2050 to deal with imminent hazards. But in 2019, climate financing to developing countries for mitigating emissions, adaptation, planning and implementation was $79.6 billion, according to "The Gathering Storm: The Adaptation Gap Report 2021." The study assesses shortfalls in finance, knowledge and implementation in climate change adaptation.

At the same time, governments are missing an opportunity to use pandemic recovery packages to invest in green growth and deal with the current and future impacts of climate change, stated the report.
COVID-19 conundrum

The pandemic set back attempts to adapt to climate change, exacerbating existing problems and stretching economic and disaster response capacities in the face of extreme weather, as was seen during the April 2020 tropical cyclone that hit South Pacific islands such as Fiji.

But the vast financial stimulus packages that came in the wake of the pandemic could be targeted to adaptation measures, including storm early warning systems and flood defenses.

"COVID, in principle, presents a huge opportunity for building back better, for developing new structures for international coordination and collaboration that is currently not being used to the degree that we believe would be possible and also necessary," Henry Neufeldt, chief editor and contributing author of the report, told DW.
 

From locusts to drought: Farmers need to adapt to climate change


Vast sums of money — $16.7 trillion — are being spent as part of fiscal stimulus packages around the world, but only a tiny portion of that has gone to adaptation projects.

"There is a need for more finance to go into this and the pandemic is an opportunity to galvanize the transformational change that we need to see happening," said Neufeldt.

The report cites the World Bank's "Build Back Better" approach, which helps to identify sustainable long and short-term adaptation measures, such as building more resilient urban development, that would reduce a country's vulnerability to climate shocks.

Koko Warner, who manages the UNFCCC's Environmental Migration, Social Vulnerability and Adaptation Section, and was not involved in the report, said adaptation measures take many forms, but are vital to people's survival.

"All over the world people are feeling the adverse impacts of climate change — unexpectedly harsh winter storms, severe drought, locust swarms that destroy crops, life-threatening heat domes, progressive sea level rise that threaten coastal communities," Warner told DW from the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland.

"These risks require society to adjust and shift. We all rely on stable, safe environments for our survival."

A beacon of hope?


For the first time, the report was able to track significant changes from year to year in adaptation progress. And while financing remains a problem, such projects are slowly picking up steam, the report found.

Countries are gradually paying more attention to adaptation, with 79% now having introduced some sort of planning instrument to prepare for climate change, such as new laws, or policies or strategies. That's an increase of 7% on 2020, and other countries are in the process of building up a plan.

The Wildlife Conservation Society, which funds adaptation projects to protect wildlife, said the report largely reflected the reality on the ground.

"There is some progress on financial investment in adaptation and country-level adaptation planning, but those efforts must be bolstered and expanded to meet the growing risks that both people and nature face from a changing climate," Molly Cross, science director for the WCS Climate Adaptation Fund, told DW.

Cross said one critical aspect of helping humans adapt to climate change is the protection and restoration of intact and healthy ecosystems.

"We must make significant investments in actions that help people and nature cope with and adapt to climate change-related impacts that are already underway," Cross said.

One flagship adaptation project cited in the report is Gambia's efforts across four regions to rehabilitate degraded farmland, savannas and forests with native species, while developing locally managed natural resource-based economies. Another cited project is the restoration of Albania's Kune-Vain Lagoon system, to prevent flooding in surrounding areas and to build associated livelihoods.


7 WAYS AFRICA IS ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE
Feeding frenzy
Locusts, boosted by drought, heavy rains and warm temperatures, have devastated crops in East Africa. Pesticides can help, though they're not exactly environmentally friendly. Scientists in Nairobi have experimented with fungi and other microbes to make safer poisons. They've also used the locusts' unique smell, which changes as they mature, to break up swarms and even drive them to cannibalism.
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Momentum building, but financing barriers remain


According to the UNFCCC's Warner, as more adaptation projects demonstrate their success, more momentum will build to ensure wide-scale adaptation.

"When people see good results from these efforts and when their communities expect them to be part of the adaptation effort, then we will see change at a massive scale," she said.

"There is every reason to be optimistic because the future is ours to imagine and build. What we collectively achieve here at COP26, and what we do with our families, our peers, our institutions will help ensure stability, safety and well-being of people and nature as climate change unfolds."

Still, the report found that the world needed to spend more on direct investment, as well as remove barriers to private sector involvement.

It also called for debt relief for developing countries, finding this was limiting their ability to adapt to climate change.

"Freeing up the financial squeeze that developing countries have is really important. And this is where developed countries' advanced economies can help significantly," Neufeldt said.

Funding for adaptation and mitigation must go hand-in-hand, because even if the world halts emissions and keeps to the 1.5-degree Celsius (2.7-Fahrenheit) threshold, regions will have to deal with a changed climate.

"Climate change is going to have impacts over many hundreds of years. But what we can say is that by taking urgent action in terms of mitigation, we can minimize these future impacts considerably. But we're not going to get rid of all the impacts. Adaptation can also reduce that risk considerably," said Neufeldt.


INDIA: TOWNS DEVASTATED AS KERALA BRACES FOR MORE HEAVY FLOODING
Low-pressure system triggered rains
The off-season torrential rains are the result of a low-pressure system over the Arabian Sea. A total of 13 out of Kerala's 14 districts received much more rainfall than predicted over the past week as a result, according to the Indian government's Meteorological Department. Between October 7 and 13, around 73 millimeters of rain was predicted, but over 194 mm of rain fell — a difference of 166%.
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