It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Gukesh Dommaraju surveys the board during his round nine game against the Azerbaijan team at the 44th Chess Olympiad on August 7, 2022.
Arun Sankar/AFP/Getty Images
A 17-year-old from India will become the youngest player to challenge for the World Chess Championship crown after winning a major tournament in Canada.
Gukesh Dommaraju will face reigning champion Ding Liren from China for another piece of history, after being the youngest player to win the prestigious Candidates Tournament. "I'm just so relieved, so happy following this crazy game," Gukesh said following his landmark triumph in Toronto on Sunday.
"I was in the right mindset throughout the event. From start to end, I was in good spirits, fully motivated and I really wanted to win the event." A grandmaster since he was 12, he is now set to be the "youngest World Chess Championship challenger in history", the International Chess Federation said.
Asked how he felt about his history-making feats, the teenager said: "I don't really care about youngest and all these records, but it's a nice thing to say.
"Right now I'm mostly just happy about winning the tournament."
Gukesh became India's youngest grandmaster when he was just 12 years, seven months and 17 days old, but missed being the world's youngest by 17 days, according to Indian media.
Eight players competed from April 4 in Toronto, but without the Norwegian multiple world champion Magnus Carlsen.
"India is exceptionally proud of Gukesh on becoming the youngest-ever player to win the FIDE Candidates!" Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote on X.
"Gukesh's remarkable achievement at the Candidates in Toronto showcases his extraordinary talent and dedication.
"His outstanding performance and journey to the top inspires millions."
The date and location of the world championship showdown have yet to be announced.
'Early-stage' AI begins to make waves at China sex toy expo
China manufactures around 70 percent of the world's sex toys, most of it the 'hardware' on display at the expo, including realistic dolls (STR)
Among the rows of vibrators, rubber torsos and leather harnesses at a Chinese sex toys exhibition in Shanghai this weekend, the beginnings of an AI-driven shift in the industry quietly pulsed.
China manufactures around 70 percent of the world's sex toys, most of it the "hardware" on display at the fair -- whether that be technicolour tentacled dildos or hyper-realistic personalised silicone dolls.
But smart toys have been rising in popularity for some time. Many major European and American brands already offer tech-enhanced products that can enable long-distance love, monitor well-being and even bring people one step closer to an ultimate sci-fi fantasy -- sex with robots.
Integrating artificial intelligence has become more popular in the last two years, according to Hannes Hultman, Europe sales manager for Chinese sex toy firm Svakom.
"But it's still very early-stage for a lot of this," he told AFP on Friday.
Svakom, one of the better-known Chinese brands overseas, is among those venturing further into the field of teledildonics, using networked toys to create virtual sexual encounters.
One of its masturbators can sync with video to replicate the actions on screen -- either with preprogrammed content via Svakom's app, or with an AI plug-in that watches a video on approved sites in real-time and mimics it.
The company has also partnered with firms that offer AI chatbot "fantasy partners".
"You can ask the AI to control your toy," said Hultman. "You create your own girlfriend and actually interact. And now you can basically touch your body through the toy."
Sistalk Technology, a Beijing-based company that made phone software before pivoting to the adult industry, also has a feature on its app that allows an AI "girlfriend" to control a toy.
A salesperson told AFP that demand from China's younger generation, with more disposable income and higher standards, was changing the market.
"Although we make sex toys, we're trying to change the mindset of our community and make (the focus) less pornographic," he said.
Sistalk's app can function as a social media platform, with users socialising and sharing their hobbies and likes.
They can also choose to virtually hook up and control each other's sex toys.
"It's definitely a new trend, in Europe it's quite developing -- many customers ask for it," said Malgorzata Zasada, of company Oninder, named to sound like dating app Tinder and imitates the way users swipe to find matches.
"In Asia, in China, it's not so popular right now. But it's changing and I think it will be a new hit."
Realistic sex robots, meanwhile, seemed a long way off -- the few on display moved jerkily, with limited and badly synced speech. - Enlarging the market -
Experts have flagged the many unanswered ethical questions around the growing use of AI for intimacy.
At the moment, in China, the pool of people engaging is still small -- Sistalk's domestic app only has around 500 users, minuscule in terms of China's population. The Asia-Pacific region is seen as a key growth market for sex toys though.
At the stall of a company named Wet Stuff, representative Ye Pei showed AFP the Australian company's Chinese-targeted lubricant flavoured with baijiu, a popular local alcohol.
Attitudes towards sex have changed drastically in recent years, mused the 40-year-old.
"When I was 20, when I went to buy condoms at the drugstore I would immediately stick them in my pocket and run off. But now... the saleswoman might tell me that these condoms are ultra-thin, these ones make you last longer, these ones have raised dots," he laughed.
Another change has been the rise in "women's power", said a representative from BeU, a brand that focuses exclusively on toys for women.
"Everyone has become more and more able to accept (adult products), rather than feeling ashamed about it," she said.
Toys now use tech to incorporate aspects of well-being as well as pleasure.
One vibrator on display at the expo was advertised as being able to predict ovulation by measuring internal temperature, as well as help train pelvic floor muscles.
Others are said to recognise when their user is climaxing and remember the pulse patterns that led them there.
The sleek silicone products drew a stark contrast with more traditional stalls, many of which featured walls of life-like, often enormous, plastic genitals that involved no tech at all.
"I think there's a lot of things changing in the industry," said Svakom's Hultman.
"The technology aspect, the AI... it's growing so fast, it will be very interesting to see where all this goes. But we have big plans."
Kremlin-linked Truth Social investor linked to dangerous 'sex pills' operation: report
This photo illustration shows an image of former President Donald Trump reflected in a phone screen displaying the Truth Social app, in Washington, D.C., on Monday, Feb. 21, 2022.
- STEFANI REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images North America/TNS
A Russian entrepreneur who loaned millions to Donald Trump's social media platform was behind a series of websites that pushed potentially dangerous "sex pills" that sparked warnings from health regulators about dangerous ingredients, according to a report.
The product, called VMax, promised improved sexual function for those who take it and sparked warnings from the FDA that its ingredients could cause serious health defects.
The sites where the product was sold have been traced to 40-year-old Anton Postolnikov, who reportedly has family links to the Kremlin, according to The Daily Beast which reported he has a history of "success in niche online businesses such as providing financial services to porn stars and camgirls."
Postolnikov, who has donated to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, is suspected by the U.S. government of making nearly $23 million in 2021 from alleged insider trading on Truth Social, the social media platform owned by Trump. Although he hasn't been charged in the case, the FBI's investigation found he participated in the scheme, according to the Beast's report.
"Before his alleged foray into Florida high finance, Postolnikov was involved in the selling of Vimax, which was sold via offshore companies in the U.S., Cyprus, and Mauritius, according to the products’ websites," The Beast reported.
"New Century Beauty LLC, the company which was described as owner and operator of vimaxtrialoffer.com on the site, is registered at the California address of Postolnikov’s mother, Lyudmila Postolnikova, aged 73. Izef LLC which listed Postolnikov as an administrator, handled sales of Vimax for a period, according to archived snapshots of the sales websites," The Beast's report stated.
The sex pills were marketed as being a "100% natural product," but the FDA says they contain the ingredient tadalafil, which could lower blood pressure and negatively interact with other drugs. But according to Andrei Octav Moise, whose company trademarked the product, the FDA only examined counterfeit versions of the product.
“The FDA did indeed find knockoffs of Vimax sold by a Chinese company without any authorization from nor relationship to the Vimax brand. Essentially the knockoff products did contain illegal substances and were investigated by the FDA who ultimately held that they were not authentic Vimax products and had nothing to do with Vimax per se,” he said according to The Beast.
U.S. prosecutors are looking at Postolnikov over the way he structured the loan to Truth Social through an obscure entity called “ES Family Trust.”
"Wire transfer documents show that Trump Media received $2 million from Paxum Bank and another $6 million from ES Family Trust. Documents obtained by the authors show that the trustee for ES Family Trust is Angel Pacheco, who reportedly listed himself as an employee of Paxum Bank on LinkedIn."
A joint fundraising committee for President Joe Biden returned a $50,000 donation from Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced CEO of now-defunct cryptocurrency exchange FTX, according to a Raw Story review of new federal records.
The Biden Victory Fund surrendered the Bankman-Fried donation to the U.S. Marshals Service in January, Federal Election Commission records indicate.
Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried arrived at a bail hearing at Manhattan Federal Court on Aug. 11, 2023. (Photo by\u00a0Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
The Biden Victory Fund is composed of Biden’s reelection campaign and more than 50 other Democratic political committees. It raised more than $280.9 million between January 1, 2023, and March 31 2024, according to the FEC.
Biden’s own campaign ended March with $85.5 million in cash on hand, while former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, had $45 million in cash, according to The New York Times.
Biden’s campaign committee did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.
Raw Story first reported in April 2023 that the U.S. Marshals Service began collecting money donated to prominent politicians and political committees by Bankman-Fried and other former FTX executives — an all-but-unprecedented occurrence for the federal agency best known for hunting down fugitives.
By September, the Marshals had collected upwards of $1.35 million from more than 150 political campaigns and committees, Raw Story reported.
Now, the Marshals have collected more than $2.35 million in FTX donations, according to Raw Story’s review of a new batch of Federal Election Commission records, which include financial information from early 2024.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Marshals did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.
Another recent FTX-related disgorgement came from the campaign of Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA). Her principal congressional campaign committee, Spanberger for Congress, sent a $2,900 donation from former FTX executive Nishad Singh.
Singh, FTX’s director of engineering, pleaded guilty in February to charges of wire fraud, securities fraud, money laundering and campaign finance violations, the New York Times reported.
Spanberger announced in November that she would not seek reelection and would instead run for Virginia governor in 2025.
Spanberger’s congressional office did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.
Last month the Democratic National Committee and an associated joint fundraising committee surrendered $765,000 from FTX, Raw Story reported.
Republican committees forfeited five and six-figure donations, too, including the National Republican Senatorial Committee ($109,500) and the Republican National Committee ($25,000).
Campaigns for prominent politicians ranging from House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) to House Republican Conference Chair Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) also sent the Marshals money from FTX-related executives.
Bankman-Fried donated more than $40 million to political causes during the 2022 election cycle, according to a CBS News analysis.
Thousands take to streets in Canary Islands to protest over-tourism
Tens of thousands of demonstrators hit the streets across Spain's Canary Islands to demand changes to the model of mass tourism they say is overwhelming the Atlantic archipelago. "We Canarians are fed up with being second and third class citizens, we are fed up with overcrowding, with institutional mistreatment, with low salaries, with our heritage being destroyed," says Nieves Rodrigues Rivera, a teacher and writer.
02:14Thousands take to streets in Canary Islands to protest over-tourism (2024)
Czechs 3D-print Eiffel Tower from ocean waste for Olympics
Prague (AFP) – A Czech company is 3D-printing a giant Eiffel Tower model for a local Olympics event, using recycled ocean waste as the primary material.
The 14-metre-high (46-foot) model will be installed at an Olympic festival in the north of the Czech Republic, where the public can try different Olympic sports during the Paris Games in July and August.
Jan Hrebabecky, the owner of the 3DDen printing farm, uses printing filament made from ocean waste.
"The material for the Eiffel Tower comes from the shores of Thailand," he told AFP.
"It has excellent mechanic and chemical qualities, great UV resistance, and it is practically immortal."
Collected by Thai fishermen, the plastic waste is sorted, cleaned, desalinated and dried.
A Swiss company turns the waste into granules which a Czech company then processes into 3D-printing filaments.
Hrebabecky had to build a new printer to cope with the material.
"It can crystallise in the printer and destroy it immediately," Hrebabecky said.
But advantages prevail, including the price which is lower than that of traditional filaments.
"There are huge deposits of this priceless material, and anybody can come and take it," said Hrebabecky.
Plastic Eiffel Tower
With more than 200 printers, his company has so far printed key rings, miniature sculptures, medals and USB keys.
"But my goal is to print really large things, so we're making furniture and interior decorations as well," Hrebabecky said.
His printers are now busy with the Eiffel Tower, a puzzle of 1,600 3D-printed pieces fortified with steel rods, which Hrebabecky says will be solid enough to hold a helicopter.
He said the two-tonne structure, made from material equivalent to 800,000 plastic bottles, would stand next to the Most lake in northern Czech Republic, which will host the Olympic festival on July 26-August 11.
Nada Cerna, a Czech Olympic Committee manager in charge of the event, said it would allow people to try 52 Olympic sports, watch the Games on large screens and meet Czech athletes in person.
The structure will be displayed at an Olympic festival in northern Czech Republic
Ahead of Treaty Negotiations, Hundreds March to ‘End the Plastic Era’
"As adults who come to Ottawa to negotiate the plastic treaty, you must protect our rights to live in a healthy and safe environment," one young activists said.
Frontline community members and environmental groups marched in Ottawa, Canada, on Sunday, April 21, 2024 to demand an ambitious Global Plastics Treaty. (Photo: Ben Powless/Survival Media Agency)
Days before national delegates gather for the fourth and penultimate negotiations to develop a Global Plastics Treaty in Ottawa, Canada, around 500 Indigenous and community representatives, members of civil society and environmental groups, and experts and scientists gathered for a “March to End the Plastic Era” on Sunday.
The protesters, organized under the banner of Break Free From Plastic, called for a treaty that significantly reduces plastic production and centers the frontline communities most impacted by the plastics crisis.
“Delegates must act like our lives depend on it—because they do,” Daniela Duran Gonzales, senior legal campaigner with the Center for International Environmental Law, said in a statement. “Our climate goals, the protection of human health, the enjoyment of human rights, and the rights of future generations all rest on whether the future plastics treaty will control and reduce polymers to successfully end the plastic pollution crisis.”
“Short-sighted business interests must be out of the room because the only way to achieve equitable livelihoods is when we have a healthy planet.”
The official meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) to craft a “international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution, including in the marine environment,” will run from April 23 to 29 in the Canadian capital.
Break Free From Plastic called the negotiations a “make or break” moment for the treaty, which is supposed to be completed in late 2024 in Busan, South Korean. However, civil society groups have expressed concern that oil-producing countries and the plastics industry will water down the agreement and steer it toward waste management and recycling, which has been revealed to be a false solution to plastic pollution knowingly promoted by the industry for decades.
The last round of negotiations concluded in late 2023 in Nairobi, Kenya, with little progress made after 143 fossil fuel and chemical lobbyists attended.
Salisa Traipipitsiriwat of Thailand, who is the senior campaigner and Southeast Asia plastics project manager for the Environmental Justice Foundation, said ahead of Sunday’s march that it was “crucial for world leaders to step up and put the people and planet at the forefront.”
“Short-sighted business interests must be out of the room because the only way to achieve equitable livelihoods is when we have a healthy planet,” Traipipitsiriwat added.
On Sunday, marchers gathered for a press conference at 10:30 am ET before marching at around 11:30 am from Parliament Hill to the Shaw Center, were negotiations will begin on Tuesday. Crowds began to disperse around 1:30 pm. Participants carried large banners with messages including, “End the plastic era,” “End multigenerational toxic exposure,” and pointing out that 99% of plastics came from fossil fuels. The gathering featured live music and art, including a giant tap pouring out plastics and a “Plastisaurus rex” with the message “Make single-use plastic extinct.”
(Photo: Break Free From Plastics)
“Now’s the time to be bold and push for a treaty that cuts plastic production and holds polluters accountable,” Julie Teel Simmonds, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a pre-march statement. “I’m inspired to be joining so many advocates in Ottawa, standing up against the enormous harm the fossil fuel and petrochemical industries are causing to people’s health and the planet. I hope to see countries showing ambition this week, and I urge them to remember what’s at stake for future generations.”
Civil society groups have compiled several demands for an ambitious and effective treaty. These are:
Centering human rights, especially those of Indigenous communities, young people, and workers most impacted by plastic pollution;
Protecting the rights of Indigenous peoples throughout the treaty process;
Dealing with plastics across their entire lifecyle;
Reducing production as a “nonnegotiable” part of the treaty;
Eliminating toxic chemicals and additives from plastics;
Bolstering reuse systems for plastics that are non-toxic;
Prioritizing first prevention, then reuse, recycling, recovery, and disposal when managing plastic waste;
Ending “waste colonialism” by strengthening regulations for trading plastics;
Guaranteeing a “just transition” for people employed across the plastics lifecycle;
Including “non-party” provisions in the treaty;
Establishing a mechanism to fund countries so they can fully implement the treaty; and
Enshrining conflict-of-interest policies as a protection against plastics industry lobbying.
The coalition emphasized the need to tackle the problem of plastic from cradle to grave.
“Plastic doesn’t just become pollution when it’s thrown away,” said Jessica Roff, the U.S. and Canada plastics and petrochemicals program manager for the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives. “Plastic is pollution, from the moment the fossil fuels are extracted from the ground to the eternity of waste it spawns.”
Chrie Wilke, global advocacy manager for the Waterkeeper Alliance, said “Clearly the crux of the plastic pollution crisis is too much plastic being produced. There is no way to recycle our way out of this. We must face the fact that plastic and petrochemicals, at current production levels, endanger waterways, communities, and fisheries across the globe. Cutting production and implementing non-plastic alternatives and reuse systems is essential.”
(Photo: Ben Powless/Survival Media Agency)
Activists also emphasized the environmental justice implications of plastic pollution, and how some communities and groups are more burdened than others, both from the dangers of the production process and from waste disposal.
“Children and youth like me suffer the most and are recognized as a vulnerable group,” said Aeshnina ‘Nina’ Azzahra, the founder of River Warrior Indonesia. “My playground and my future are at risk. We all want our environment to be plastic-free, but please don’t put your burden on the other side of the world—this is NOT fair. As adults who come to Ottawa to negotiate the plastic treaty, you must protect our rights to live in a healthy and safe environment.”
Jo Banner, co-founder and co-directer of The Descendants Project, said:”Frontline community members, such as myself, are participating in these treaty negotiations with heavy hearts as our communities back home are struggling with sickness and disease caused by the upstream production of plastic.”
“Although our hearts are heavy, they are full with passion urging negotiators to aim for an ambitious treaty that caps plastic production,” Banner added. “Areas such as my hometown, located in the heart of Louisiana’s Cancer Alley, need a strong treaty now. There is no more time to waste.”
The French start-up using enzymes to break down and recycle plastic
Over the last 60 years, around seven billion tons of plastic has been produced, according to a UN report, but less than 90 percent has been recycled. AS the world marks Earth Day this Monday April 22, France 24 looks at one initiative hoping to help reverse this trend: A French start up that says it has discovered an enzyme capable of breaking down plastic waste.
Gaza health system 'completely obliterated': UN expert
Geneva (AFP) – Israel's war in Gaza has from the start been a "war on the right to health" and has "obliterated" the Palestinian territory's health system, a UN expert said on Monday.
Issued on: 22/04/2024 -
Israel's siege reduced Al-Shifa, Gaza's largest hospital, to rubble and ashes
Tlaleng Mofokeng, the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to health, accused Israel of treating human rights as an "a la carte menu".
Just days into the war that has been raging in Gaza since Hamas's unprecedented attacks inside Israel on October 7, "the medical infrastructure was irreparably damaged", she told reporters in Geneva.
Amid the unrelenting Israeli bombardment of Gaza, healthcare providers had for months been working under dire conditions with very limited access to medical supplies, she said.
"This has been a war on the right to health from the beginning," said Mofokeng, who is an independent expert appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but who does not speak on behalf of the United Nations.
"The health system in Gaza has been completely obliterated and the right to health has been decimated at every level".
There has been growing global opposition to Israel's offensive in Gaza, which has turned vast areas of the densely populated territory into rubble and sparked a dire humanitarian crisis including warnings of famine.
The Israeli offensive began after the October 7 attack, which killed 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 34,000 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. 'Intentionally imposing famine'
Its hospitals, which are protected under international humanitarian law, have repeatedly come under attack.
Israel has accused Hamas of using them as command centres and to hold hostages abducted on October 7, claims denied by the militants.
On Sunday, Gaza's civil defence said its teams had discovered 50 bodies buried in the courtyard of the Nasser Medical Complex in Gaza's main southern city of Khan Yunis.
And the World Health Organization said earlier this month that Al-Shifa, Gaza's largest hospital, had been reduced to ashes by an Israeli siege, leaving an "empty shell" with many bodies.
"The destruction of healthcare facilities continues to catapult to proportions yet to be fully quantified," said Mofokeng, a medical doctor from South Africa.
In Gaza, Israel has repeatedly attacked hospitals, which are protected under international humanitarian law
The expert said she had received no response from Israel to the concerns she had raised about the situation, and that she had not been able to visit the Palestinian territory, nor Israel.
But she said it was obvious that Israel was "killing and causing irreparable harm against Palestinian civilians with its bombardments".
"They are also knowingly and intentionally imposing famine, prolonged malnutrition and dehydration", the expert added, accusing Israel of "genocide".
The current situation in Gaza, she said, "is completely incompatible with the right to health".
UNRWA ‘Neutrality’ issues found at UN agency for Palestinians, but no terrorism proof
By AFP April 22, 2024 The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) remains 'irreplaceable and indispensable to Palestinians' human and economic development' said the 54-page report, which was led by French diplomat Catherine Colonna
- Copyright AFP/File ANGELA WEISS
An independent review group on the UN agency for Palestinians found some “neutrality-related issues,” its much-anticipated report said Monday, but it noted Israel had yet to provide evidence for incendiary allegations that staff were members of terrorist organizations.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) remains “irreplaceable and indispensable to Palestinians’ human and economic development” added the 54-page report, which was led by French diplomat Catherine Colonna.
The review group was created following allegations made by Israel in January that some UNRWA staff may have participated in the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks. In the weeks that followed, numerous donor states suspended or paused some $450 million in funding.
Many have since resumed funding, including Sweden, Canada, Japan, the EU and France — while others, including the United States and Britain — have not.
Congress passed a bill signed into law by President Joe Biden last month that blocks US funding until March 2025.
The freezes to the main aid organ in Gaza come as months of Israeli military operations have turned the territory into a “humanitarian hellscape,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guteres said recently, with its 2.3 million people in desperate need of food, water, shelter and medicine.
Colonna’s team was tasked with assessing whether UNRWA was “doing everything within its power to ensure neutrality,” while Guterres activated a second investigation to probe Israel’s allegations.
Despite a robust framework for ensuring it upheld the humanitarian principle of neutrality, the review found that “neutrality-related issues persist,” including instances of staff sharing biased political posts on social media and the use of a small number of textbooks with “problematic content” in some UNRWA schools.
But it added “Israel has yet to provide supporting evidence” for its claim that UNRWA employs more than 400 “terrorists.”
“What needs to be improved will be improved,” Colonna, who was the French foreign minister until January, told reporters during a briefing.
“I’m confident that implementing these measures will help UNRWA deliver on its mandate, and I would strongly encourage the international community to be side-by-side with the agency so it can perform its mission.”
“The Secretary-General accepts the recommendations contained in Ms. Colonna’s report,” Guterres’ spokesperson said.
– Social media posts – The review found that the majority of neutrality breaches related to social media posts, often following incidents of violence affecting colleagues or relatives, the review found.
“One preventive action could be to ensure that personnel are given space to discuss these traumatic incidents,” said the report, which was co-authored with three Nordic rights groups.
It praised the progress made by UNRWA in preventing biased texts from being used in its schools, which are critical to educating hundreds of thousands of Palestinian children.
But it cited a recent assessment that found 3.85 percent of textbook pages contained content of concern.
These included “the use of historical maps in a non-historical context, e.g. without labeling Israel” referring to Israel as the “Zionist occupation” and “naming Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine.”
The authors also identified concerns over the politicization of staff unions, which have “resisted management disciplinary actions” including on neutrality, and are male-dominated, despite the agency itself being gender-balanced.
They offered a number of recommendations including expanding the review of school texts, increasing meetings with donors to improve transparency, and increasing the number of senior international staff working in the field.
But dismantling UNRWA, as sought by Israel, would accelerate Gaza’s slide into famine and doom generations of children to despair, the organization’s head Philippe Lazzarini warned last week.
UNRWA began operations in 1950 and provides services to nearly 6 million people across Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
EU threatens to suspend TikTok Lite app's 'addictive' rewards
Brussels (Belgium) (AFP) – The EU on Monday launched a probe into TikTok's spinoff Lite app and threatened to suspend an "addictive" feature on it that rewards users for watching and liking videos, amid child-safety concerns.
Issued on: 22/04/2024
The app TikTok Lite arrived in France and Spain in March
TikTok Lite arrived in France and Spain in March allowing users aged 18 and over to earn points that can be exchanged for goods like vouchers or gift cards through the app's rewards programme.
The European Commission said in a statement it has concerns about the app's "risks of serious damage for the mental health of users", including minors.
TikTok Lite is a smaller version of the popular TikTok app, taking up less memory in a smartphone and made to perform over slower internet connections.
TikTok last week failed to provide a risk assessment for the spinoff app by an April 18 deadline, the commission said, demanding the company now hand it over by Tuesday.
It is threatening to impose interim measures including suspending the rewards programme in the European Union "pending the assessment of its safety".
TikTok, owned by China's ByteDance, has until Wednesday to present a formal defence against such a measure.
The commission also warned if TikTok failed to reply to the request, it could impose fines of up to one percent of its total annual income or of its global turnover and periodic penalties up to five percent of its average daily income or annual turnover worldwide.
TikTok said it would continue discussions with the commission but insisted the programme was not available to minors.
"We are disappointed with this decision -- the TikTok Lite rewards hub is not available to under 18s, and there is a daily limit on video watch tasks," a TikTok spokesperson said in a statement.
Second TikTok probe
The probe is the EU's second against TikTok under a sweeping new law, the Digital Services Act (DSA), that demands digital firms do more to police content online.
"We suspect TikTok 'Lite' could be as toxic and addictive as cigarettes 'light'," said the European Commission's top tech enforcer, Thierry Breton.
"Unless TikTok provides compelling proof of its safety, which it has failed to do until now, we stand ready to trigger DSA interim measures including the suspension of TikTok Lite features," Breton said.
The commission also quizzed TikTok about its measures to mitigate "systemic risks" in its Lite app and gave the platform until May 3 to respond.
TikTok Lite users can win rewards if they log in daily for 10 days, if they spend time watching videos (with an upper limit of 60 to 85 minutes per day) and if they undertake certain actions, such as liking videos and following content creators.
The commission said it believes TikTok launched the app "without prior diligent assessment of the risks it entails, in particular those related to the addictive effect of the platforms, and without taking effective risk mitigating measures".
TikTok is among 22 "very large" digital platforms, including Amazon, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, that must comply with stricter rules under the DSA since August last year.
The law gives the EU the power to slap companies with heavy fines that could reach as high as six percent of a digital firm's global annual revenues.
Repeat offenders can even see their platforms blocked in the 27-country European Union.
In February, the commission opened a formal probe into TikTok under the DSA over alleged violations of its obligations to protect minors online.
It has separately launched other investigations into X, formerly known as Twitter, and Chinese internet retailer AliExpress.
TikTok is also being squeezed across the Atlantic.
The US House of Representatives passed a bill on Saturday that would force TikTok to divest from ByteDance or face a nationwide ban in the United States, where it has around 170 million users.