Thursday, July 25, 2024

Solidarity With Quota Reform Movement In Bangladesh and Down with the Fascist Hasina-Awami League Regime


 Facebook

Lal Morich
Lalmorichnews@gmail.com

 JULY 25, 2024



We are Lal Morich, a Bangladeshi anti-oppression mass base organization supporting genuine democratic movements just like the students in the quota reform movement who are fighting for something they genuinely believe. We educate, mobilize, and organize the Bangladeshi diaspora on the issues in our desh. Let us update you all on the current situation in Bangladesh since July 15.

Lal Morich stands with the students and masses who are waging a genuine anti-fascist movement against the Hasina-Awami League regime. Since early July, students have taken to the streets to courageously demand reform to the discriminatory civil service job quota system. The protesters are calling for a logical quota system that solely considers gender-oppressed, disabled, and indigenous people and removes the 30 percent quota for the children and grandchildren of freedom fighters, which mainly favors loyalists of the current fascist government.

The Hasina-Awami government initially responded to the protests by calling the protestors “razakars”. This furthered violence against protesters from the ruling party’s student wing, the Chatro League. A few days ago, the government dispatched the military.

The people of Bangladesh are now subjected to military curfew, checkpoints, and shoot-on-sight orders. The government shut down internet access and all but selective state-affiliated media is being censored. The media shutdown makes it difficult to gauge an accurate death toll but reports point to more than 170 deaths and more than 2500 injured by Chatro League, police, BGB, the armed force, and the US-UK trained paramilitary death squad RAB. There are accounts from families that agents from the Indian Intelligence agency, RAW, are carrying out activities in select areas.

The High Courts came to a decision on July 21 to scrap the quota system and create a new quota system, lowering the 30 percent quota for descendants of freedom fighters to 5 percent, and the remaining quotas down to 2 percent. This will open up the remaining 93 percent of jobs for all other Bangladeshis.

However, after the government’s brutal response on the protestors, different sections of students and youth have come to the realization that this is not just a battle for a logical quota system anymore but a fight against Awami League fascism. This is why Lal Morich rallied the Bangladeshi diasporas in Brooklyn, New York to do a mass teach-in on the root causes of the Quota reform movement.

On Saturday, July 20, in Kensington, Brooklyn, Lal Morich held a solidarity action and teach-in about the ongoing quota reform movement. The NYPD surrounded us immediately when we began our protest, attempting to herd and corral us. We responded by pointing to connections between the Bangladeshi police, NYPD and US military. There was a small group of community members, affiliated with the non-profit organization Desis Rising Up and Moving or DRUM, who confronted us in defense of the NYPD. The group began derailing our event, snatching mics from our organizers, and interrupting the march. They insisted that the issue is unrelated to the police in the United States and it’s solely about the police in Bangladesh. However, we understand these struggles are interconnected and our struggles are not isolated from one another. The faster we grasp this, the stronger our unity will be in the long run. The first question for any revolutionary movement is to understand: who is the friend of the people and who is the enemy?

The police exploited the situation and targeted Comrade Moh for Disorderly Conduct as they were using a microphone and criticizing the pro-American police element that drenches our community. Mid Speech and without warning, the comrade was arrested with physical force. Comrade Moh was taken to the 66th precinct where he faced humiliation. He was ordered by police to take off the lace from their pants before going inside the cell. The lace was not coming off so the cops cut the lace holding up his pants. The comrade recalls his pants fell off and he stood exposed for several seconds, while the officer made a joke while touching the comrade in a sexual manner without permission. These sexual and psychological abuse tactics are similar to what Bangladeshi police utilize on protestors to silence them. Additionally, these tactics are no different to tactics used by the IOF on Palestinians.

Let us repeat:

We do not work with cops.

We do not work with politicians.

We will not fall into NGOism.

Regretfully, this disruption derailed us from finishing our teach-in. We did not have the chance to fully highlight the brutal assaults and murders by the Awami League goonda. We did not get to honor the more than 170 martyrs with the vigil they deserved. We want to reiterate our solidarity and our commitment to this fight till the end.

We will not let our genuine solidarity with the mass movements against the fascist Awami regime in Bangladesh be co-opted by supporters of equally reactionary political such as the BNP and Jamaat. We will not tolerate NGOs attempting to cease momentum and misdirect the community’s rising revolutionary consciousness with state-approved pacification. We will continue to help build a movement by the masses for the masses, for a true liberation of the people of Bangladesh and its diasporas.

The fascist regime recognizes that the movement is no longer just about the Quota system, which is why they are doing everything in their power to weaken it. They have kidnapped and tortured leaders of the central movement. They have arrested over 500 people and filed over 60,000 reports against dissenters. Hasina is currently going on a PR tour to appease the foreign powers she sells the livelihood of the Bangladeshi masses to. If it was not enough for the Awami government to opportunistically posture against the genocide in Gaza, despite purchasing Israeli spyware, the Bangladesh Ministry of Information and Broadcasting is now taking a page out of the Israeli toolkit to accuse opposition parties of using student protestors as “shields”.

We must fight the tyranny of the fascist Sheik Hasina and Awami League. We must not let this fight end in yet another regime change between Awami League and its equally Fascist counterparts. We must build a united front against fascism, in all its forms, in Bangladesh.

We call for the resignation of the Hasina-Awami League and the call to build an anti-fascist front in Bangladesh against Awami-Hasina Fascism.

Bangladesh: The defiance continues (plus statements from South Asian left)

Published 
Bangladesh protests

First published at Asian Marxist Review. Edited for clarity by LINK International Journal of Socialist Renewal.

Despite the state crackdown on protesting students and shutdown of all educational institutions throughout the country, on July 17 hundreds of students gathered in Dhaka University to pay their respect at the public funeral of six fellow students who had fallen the previous day. At least 105 protestors have been killed so far by state and paramilitary forces. Videos being shared on social media depict a civil war-like situation emerging in the country.

Students across Bangladesh are grieving, but their anger and grief is fueling a heroic movement of resistance and defiance. As these lines are being written, protesters are setting fire to the state broadcasting station, moments after despotic prime minister Sheikh Hasina Wajid appeared on state television. In another incident, the Rapid Action Battalion police force reported rescuing 60 policemen from Canadian University via helicopter. Such is the extent of rage and the will to fight the brutal Hasina dictatorship.

As reported by the Guardian, the government has now declared a national curfew and announced plans to deploy the army to tackle the country’s worst unrest in a decade, after student protesters stormed a prison and freed hundreds of inmates. On July 12, a communications blackout was imposed across the country, with mobile internet access and social media blocked by the government.

Over the past weeks, students in Bangladesh have been protesting the Supreme Court’s restoration of an unfair and politically motivated quota system in government jobs [first introduced in 1972]. The new wave of protests is the continuation of the 2018 protest movement — which resulted in more than 250 casualties — against the same quota system. At the time, Hasina was forced to revoke the controversial quota system. However, after six years she was able to reinstate it through the conventional backdoor of the capitalist state: the higher judiciary.

According to the quota system, 56% of government jobs are reserved, with 30% allocated to the grandchildren of veterans of the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War and 26% set aside for women, disabled individuals, ethnic minorities and those from backward districts. Students are primarily calling for the revocation of the 30% reserved for freedom fighters’ grandchildren, while supporting the limited retention of quotas for the other categories.

The quota was originally established to honour and support the families of veterans who had died or were injured during the liberation war. However, contrary to the original intent, the quota system has gradually become a political tool for Hasina and her Awami League to maintain their control over the state by filling key posts with loyal supporters, rewarding stooges at the expense of the deserving, corrupting the youth, and sowing seeds of division among the working masses.

In Bangladesh, first and second-tier government jobs are among the few decent employment opportunities available for youth, particularly new university graduates. Other important sectors include the agriculture, garments and information technology industries. However, employment opportunities in these sectors are fairly limited. Moreover, working conditions are horrible and wages are terrible. Most workers are grossly underpaid and overworked to the extent of exhaustion.

According to official sources, 41% of youth in Bangladesh are inactive. This means they are neither in education or employment, nor receiving job training. Moreover, up to 66% of university graduates are unemployed. So much for the economic miracle of Bangladesh under Hasina’s administration being touted everywhere by the apologists of neoliberalism!

Junior employees at workplaces often face abuse from higher-ups, which can include physical mistreatment and sexual harassment. A vast majority of private sector employees fail to make a decent living for themselves and their families. Rising unemployment since the COVID crisis — 5.1% in 2023, up from 4.5% in 2018 — has made conditions even worse. The actual situation on the ground is obviously far more unpleasant than official unemployment figures. The gap between labour supply and demand not only suppresses wages but also contributes to an overall social environment of underemployment, precarious working conditions, uncertainty and insecurity.

The situation is expected to worsen as the crisis of global capitalism lingers on. Economic indicators for Bangladesh from the last few quarters depict a decline in economic growth. In these conditions, government employment presents a significant attraction for young graduates, despite the relatively modest pay, because of its job security and few additional benefits.

Like other South Asian countries, Bangladesh possesses a youth bulge with 65% of the population under 35, including 45 million or 30% aged 15-24. With only about 1.2% of the population being university graduates, a vast majority is already excluded from competing for relatively decent jobs. Of the few who are included, only about 10% — mostly from the few urban isles in a mostly underdeveloped country — are employed in multinational corporations or their local counterparts, and are therefore able to earn a somewhat reasonable living to afford comparatively decent shelter, food, electricity and other basic needs. For the rest, there are almost no opportunities for upward social mobility, and no hopes for improvement in living standards.

Moreover, the promise of “growth” and “progress” has been oversold to the youth, who now realise that such promises will not materialise for a vast majority of them. In this regard, the current protests are mostly emerging from layers of youth belonging to the middle class or upper crusts of the working class, who see their future plunging into darkness and despair.

Another significant reason for the protests has been the suffocating dictatorship imposed by the Awami League’s government, in power since 2009 and getting more authoritarian with time. Hasina — the 75 years old daughter of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, founding father and first president of the country who was assassinated in a 1975 military coup a few years after taking office — has emerged as another authoritarian figure of neoliberalism in the past decade and a half.

The government frequently attacks dissent on and off campuses, arrests and detains those who criticise its policies, and pursues a policy of repression to the extent of imprisoning teenagers for alleged defamation of the prime minister on social media. The notorious Digital Security Act, adopted in 2018, allows the police to arrest anyone without a warrant. Under this draconian law, numerous political workers and rights activists have been detained and tried merely for speaking out against the regime.

The opposition boycotted the January general election after more than 20,000 of its activists were arrested, allowing Hasina to “win” with virtually no opposition. In this regard, democracy in the country has turned into a façade even according to bourgeois standards.

However, the scenes of brutal state oppression being witnessed in Dhaka and other urban centres, along with the marvellous resistance being offered by Bangladeshi students, are not something unseen and unheard of in the country’s history. The glorious history of rebellion and resistance by the Bengali masses in recent times goes back to the very inception of the country.

Incidentally, the Bangladesh Liberation War against the Pakistani state — now officially being used as a pretext to insult the protesting students by labelling them as Pakistani agents — began with an uprising of students. In November 1968, students in East Pakistan (today’s Bangladesh) and West Pakistan, outraged by the police murder of a fellow student, began protesting against the military dictatorship of Ayub Khan, a lackey of US imperialism. Soon afterwards, workers and peasants across the country — disgusted by the extremely exploitative and repressive state capitalist policies of the regime, which were resulting in ever sharpening class antagonisms — joined the movement, turning it into a popular uprising which not only overthrew the Ayub dictatorship but started challenging the relations of ownership. However, the absence of a revolutionary party with a vibrant program of socialist transformation meant that the state was able to divert the revolutionary movement into the channels of elections and civil war.

In 1970, Mujibur’s left-nationalist Awami League swept the general election in East Pakistan, while Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s radical-left Peoples Party emerged as the biggest electoral party in West Pakistan. Nevertheless, the Awami League was denied the right of forming government by the martial law administration of Yahya Khan. The situation rapidly deteriorated due to a brutal military operation in East Pakistan. The military along with Islamic fundamentalist militias consisting of “Razakars” (“volunteers”) — the label Hasina now uses for protesting students— initiated a frenzy of rape and murder throughout East Pakistan, with estimates of victims ranging between 300,000 and 3,000,000.

In the ensuing civil war, Bengali students, especially from Dhaka University, were at the forefront of struggles for national and class emancipation. The mass revolt, mainly organised through revolutionary people’s militias, defeated the state forces, resulting in the emergence of Bangladesh as an independent country. Yet, the system of class oppression and exploitation was not overthrown, and continued to torment the Bengali masses with ever-increasing intensity, ultimately leading to the current scenario.

The current movement poses an existential threat to Hasina's regime, which may ultimately be forced to offer some concessions and reforms to protesting students. Students, on the other hand, must recognise that reforms, no matter how significant, will eventually be reversed under the worsening crisis of capitalism. The ruling classes, whether represented by Hasina or someone else, will always find ways to counter previous reforms with more vicious attacks. This happened with the victory won by the 2018 protest movement.

History also shows that while students are often the first to rise against oppression and exploitation, their efforts can only go so far without the active participation of the working masses in class struggle. In recent years, the workers of Bangladesh have proven their revolutionary potential through numerous strike and protest movements on burning issues. In this regard, the present movement, by shaking the consciousness of the working masses, could expand in its scope both qualitatively and quantitatively, inevitably putting the question of leadership on the agenda and possibly resulting in new political formations. Advanced layers of the youth with revolutionary aspirations and outlook will have a vital role to play in these political and social processes.

All over the globe, the exploited masses — particularly the youth belonging to the toiling classes, whether students, young workers or unemployed — are going through the most difficult times of the past 70 years or so. Most of them are struggling just to survive, let alone entertain the hopes of a prosperous future. In the post-2008 world, even in developed countries, the new generation is living a life below the standards enjoyed by their parents. This is happening for the first time since World War II, and depicts a deep systemic crisis of capitalism being reflected in protest movements and rebellions in one country after the other.

The current movement in Bangladesh, ongoing mass protests in Kenya, worldwide resistance against the Zionist genocide of Palestinians and the victorious struggle of the masses in Pakistan-administered Jammu Kashmir, along with many similar cases, represent an emerging revolutionary process on an international scale, which will only be able to achieve victory in overthrowing the obsolete capitalist order under a revolutionary leadership.


All-India Students’ Association stands with student protestors in Bangladesh

First published at AISA's website.

When thousands of students hit the universities and streets of Bangladesh demanding a complete strike down of the discriminatory quota system in government jobs, they were met with violent state repression, not just by the police, but also the Bangladesh Chhatra League, the student wing of the ruling party Awami League, who have attacked students with rods, sticks and rocks.

The students and youth are protesting against a job quota system that allows for 30% reservation in government jobs for the children of freedom fighters of the 1971 war of independence. While there are reservations for women, indigenous communities, people with disabilities and others, the students are specifically opposing the quota for children of war veterans, terming it to be discriminatory and not based on merit. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has arrogantly labelled those opposing the quota as “Razakar” — a term used for those who allegedly collaborated with the Pakistani army during the 1971 war — prompting more widespread protests.

Bangladesh, which has failed to generate more secure and dignified government jobs, pushed its youth to the brink when it introduced this policy in 2018, which was met with protests at the time and came to be challenged before court. The Bangladesh High Court recently upheld this discriminatory policy, which triggered the protests.

The lack of dignified jobs and unemployment resonates with the students and youth of India, who too are facing unprecedented challenges such as unemployment, lack of recruitment, paper leaks, massive privatisation, contractualisation of jobs, sale of PSUs, among others.

We stand in absolute solidarity with the fighting students and youth of Bangladesh, especially the student leaders of the Socialist Students’ Front, who are being hounded and arrested in their just demand to strike down discriminatory employment policy and ensure dignified and secure employment.

NIlasis Bose, National President
Prasenjeet Kumar, General Secretary


Radical Socialist (India): On the raging student movement in Bangladesh

First published at International Viewpoint.

Right now, Bangladesh has been functionally turned into a prison and a graveyard. Students have observed a nationwide strike across Bangladesh on Thursday (18th July 2024) which have been called “Bangla blockade”.

What is the reason behind this movement? Is this primarily a movement of traitors, Razakars? Is this protest just against quotas?

This movement was sparked off by the recent judgement of the country’s high court that has ruled to bring back the quota system which was halted in the year 2018. Government education and jobs in Bangladesh are 56% under quota, out of which 30% consists of the freedom fighter quota. The Bangladeshi system is not a quota system for marginalized or deprived peoples, which we are used to in the Indian reservation system.

Rather, this is an attempt by Awami League to permanently create a voter bank for themselves through the creation of a privileged class that receives preferential treatment. It is worth noting that this time many descendants of freedom fighters have spoken in support of the movement.

In 2018, the government under pressure from a mass movement was forced to order a halt this quota. This order was challenged in court. Why had the government not passed a clear cut law regarding the same issue where affirmative action for genuinely deprived peoples is initiated and separated from the “muktijoddha quota” (freedom fighter quota)?

In 2018, students had demanded a reform of the 30% quota for the families of freedom fighters. The Hasina government completely removed the 26% reservations kept for marginalized and deprived peoples along with these quotas.

When the same was taken to court, the quota system in its entirety was brought back. It is not impossible that some people in the movement are conservative, and some are against quotas for women.
However, the arrowhead of the movement is pointed at the freedom fighter quota.

This movement is so strong because under late capitalism there are very few jobs in underdeveloped Bangladesh, resulting in hundreds of thousands of young people hopefully applying annually for a few thousand secure government jobs.

The Bangladeshi government does not look after the interests of the many. They serve international capital, including big capitalists of China and India and look to line the pockets of the ruling party and political leaders with profit. One of the slogans of the student movement is “Bhuya! Bhuya!” (Fake! Fake!). The underlying meaning is that “freedom fighter family” is often a bogus label given to those close to the Awami League.

Sheikh Hasina has tried to label this movement as one of Razakars. In 1971, Razakars assisted the Pakistanis and were traitors to the Bangladeshi cause. The protesters have responded with the slogan “Ami ke? Tumi ke? Rajakar! Rajakar! Ke bolechhe? Ke bolecche? Shwoirachar! Shwoirachar!” (Who am I? Who are you? Rajakar! Rajakar! Who says so? Who says so? Who says so? Dictator! Dictator!) The word Razakar from the mouth of Sheikh Hasina is similar to the utterance “antinational” or “terrorist” from the mouth of [Indian Prime Minister] Narendra Modi.

Masses of students have joined this movement in Bangladesh. As of 6pm on July 18, 64 people have been martyred. But this movement has not been able to organise itself in a clear leftist direction. Organisations like Jamaat-e-Islami exist in Bangladesh.

Haseena has labelled the movement as one completely of Razakars in order to exploit the presence of these organizations. This is, of course, a failure of left organisations that have not been able to create a strong counter pole in their favour. Out of these, the Workers’ Party (known to be close to the Communist Party of India-Marxist) and sections of the JASAD/JSD [Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal, or National Socialist Party] are completely subservient to Hasina. Others are supportive of the movement but we cannot claim that they are giving any direction to it.

We support the democratic movement of Bangladesh against unjust quotas and, at the same time, support the system of reservation directed at removing social discrimination. We support the democratic movement of the people against the authoritarian Bangladeshi government and support the demand for democratic and free and fair elections, which was raised by a united left in 2023.

It is an important task in India to stand in solidarity with the movement in Bangladesh for history will read the progressive movements of both countries as intertwined.

We also strongly condemn the actions of the Kolkata police who detained protesters in solidarity with Bangladesh and sent them to Lalbazar (HQ of Kolkata police). May the democratic movement of the people stand strong against the union of dictators!

Radical Socialist, July 19, 2024.




Disneyland strike averted as unions agree tentative deal



By AFP
July 24, 2024

Hundreds of Disneyland employees gathered for a protest in a parking lot outside the Disneyland theme parks in Anaheim, a suburb of Los Angeles - Copyright AFP/File Frederic J. Brown

Unions representing Disneyland theme park employees in California reached a tentative deal with the company on Wednesday, averting a major strike at the “happiest place on Earth.”

The unions, which represent some 14,000 Disneyland Resort employees, had been in negotiations with the giant entertainment company over wage increases and other benefits since April.

“We are proud to announce we have reached a tentative agreement with Disney that we will recommend to our fellow cast members,” said a statement from organizers, using a term for Disneyland employees.

After last year’s writers and actors strike paralyzed Hollywood, another major labor movement within Disney would have been historic.

Employees at its California theme parks have not gone on strike since 1984, according to the Los Angeles Times.

But their grievances included low wages and allegations of intimidation used by managers, prompting a complaint filed with the National Labor Relations Board.

The union claims that over 500 employees have been reprimanded, threatened or warned about disciplinary action for wearing a union pin, which depicts a Mickey Mouse glove raised in the shape of a fist.

Last week, hundreds of Disneyland employees protested outside the theme parks in Anaheim, a suburb of Los Angeles. Some 99 percent of members voted in favor of the strike authorization.

“We have shown Disney that we are the true magic makers of the park and today proves that when workers stand together for what they deserve, we win,” said the unions’ statement.

The deal includes a three-year contract with “significant wage increases for all cast members, seniority increases and the retention of premiums.”

It also addresses “issues that will make the attendance policy work better for cast members,” said a statement from the United Food and Commercial Workers union.

The tentative agreement still requires approval from union members, who will vote on Monday.

Disney confirmed the agreement in a statement Wednesday.

“We care deeply about the wellbeing of our cast members and are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement… that addresses what matters most to our cast while positioning Disneyland Resort for future growth and job creation,” it said.

R
Typhoon Gaemi


Philippine tanker carrying 1.4 mln litres of oil capsizes off Manila


By AFP
July 25, 2024


A handout photo from the Philippine Coast Guard shows part of MT Terra Nova oil tanker after it capsized in Manila Bay - Copyright Philippine Coast Guard (PCG)/AFP Handout
Pam CASTRO

A Philippine-flagged tanker carrying 1.4 million litres of industrial fuel oil capsized and sank off Manila on Thursday, authorities said, as they raced to contain a spill.

The MT Terra Nova was heading for the central city of Iloilo when it capsized in Manila Bay, nearly seven kilometres (4.3 miles) off Limay municipality in Bataan province, near the capital, in the early hours.

The vessel went down as heavy rains fuelled by Typhoon Gaemi and the seasonal monsoon have lashed Manila and surrounding regions in recent days.

An oil spill stretching several kilometres has been detected in the busy waterway.

“We are racing against time and we will try to do our best to contain it immediately and stop the fuel from leaking,” Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Rear Admiral Armando Balilo said at a briefing.

He warned that if all the oil in the tanker were to leak, it would be the biggest spill in Philippine history.

“There is a big danger that Manila will be affected, even the shoreline of Manila, if the fuel will leak, because it is within Manila Bay,” Balilo said.

Thousands of fishermen and tour operators are dependent on the waters for their livelihoods.

Transport Secretary Jaime Bautista said 16 of the 17 crew members had been rescued from the stricken vessel.

A search was underway for the missing crew member, but Bautista said strong winds and high waves were hampering response efforts.

Four of the crew were receiving medical treatment.

A photo released by the coast guard showed the MT Terra Nova almost entirely submerged in rough seas.

– Investigation ordered –


An oil slick stretching about 3.7 kilometres was being carried by a “strong current” in an easterly, north-easterly direction, the coast guard said in a report.

Coast guard Commandant Admiral Ronnie Gavan said he ordered a probe into the incident.

Marine environmental protection personnel have been mobilised to help contain the slick.

“It will definitely affect the marine environment,” Balilo said, describing the amount of oil on the ship as “enormous”.

One of the worst oil spills in the Philippines was in February 2023, when a tanker carrying 800,000 litres of industrial fuel oil sank off the central island of Mindoro.

Diesel fuel and thick oil from that vessel contaminated the waters and beaches along the coast of Oriental Mindoro province, devastating the fishing and tourism industries.

The oil dispersed over hundreds of kilometres of waters famed for having some of the most diverse marine life in the world.

Thousands of fishermen were ordered to stay ashore, and swimming was banned.

In 2006, a tanker sank off the central island of Guimaras spilling tens of thousands of gallons of oil that destroyed a marine reserve, ruined local fishing grounds and covered stretches of coastline in black sludge.


Ship sinks off Taiwan, 9 sailors missing as typhoon heads towards China


By AFP
July 25, 2024


A motorcyclist rides past fallen trees due to strong winds caused by Typhoon Gaemi in Keelung - Copyright AFP I-Hwa CHENG

Typhoon Gaemi swept towards southern China on Thursday after killing at least two people in Taiwan, with nine sailors missing after their cargo ship sank in stormy weather.

The typhoon — the strongest to hit Taiwan in eight years — had already forced authorities on the island to shutter schools and offices, suspend the stock market and evacuate thousands of people.

On its path to Taiwan, Gaemi also exacerbated the seasonal rains in the Philippines, triggering flooding and landslides that killed six, and a tanker carrying 1.4 million litres of oil sank off Manila on Thursday with authorities racing to contain a spill.

By Thursday morning, the typhoon had weakened and “the centre has moved out to sea” at around 4:20 am (2020 GMT), said Taiwan’s weather authorities.

Taiwan’s fire agency said it received a report early Thursday that a cargo ship had sunk off the island’s southern coast, forcing its nine Myanmar crew members to abandon ship in life jackets.

“They fell into the sea and were floating there,” said Hsiao Huan-chang, head of the fire agency, adding that rescuers contacted a nearby Taiwanese cargo ship to assist them.

Hsiao did not specify when the Tanzania-flagged ship sank, but said the rescue vessel arrived in the area at 8:35 am (0035 GMT).

“(When the Taiwanese ship arrived) the visibility at the scene was very low and the winds were too strong,” he told reporters.

“When the weather permits, we will immediately dispatch ships or helicopters to rescue but at the moment it is not possible.”

Another official at the agency told AFP after the briefing that the sailors were missing.

Gaemi made landfall in Taiwan on Wednesday night with sustained wind speeds of 190 kilometres (118 miles) per hour at its peak.

More than 200 people were injured and at least two were confirmed killed — a motorist in the southern Kaohsiung city was crushed by a tree, and a woman in eastern Hualien died after part of a building fell on her.

Several cities, including Taipei, announced a second consecutive day off, with schools, government offices and the stock market closed, while hundreds of domestic and international flights were cancelled.

In the south, Kaohsiung residents saw their streets transformed into rivers, with some households flooded with rainwater.

– ‘Mountain torrents’ –


The storm is now tracking towards China’s Fujian province, which suspended all train services and put in place the second-highest flood warning alert level.

The national water resources ministry warned the day before that extremely heavy rains were expected to swell rivers and lakes in Fujian and the neighbouring province of Zhejiang.

In the Philippines, clean-up efforts were under way Thursday in the capital Manila as residents and business owners dumped soaked mattresses, bags of rubbish and other debris on muddy streets.

Street vendor Zenaida Cuerda, 55, said the food she had been selling had washed away and her house in Manila was flooded.

“All my capital is gone,” Cuerda told AFP. “I have nothing now, that’s my only livelihood.”

The region sees frequent tropical storms from July to October, but experts say climate change has increased their intensity, leading to heavy rains, flash floods and strong gusts.

burs-dhc/sco




Climate activists halt traffic at Frankfurt airport


By AFP
July 25, 2024

Climate protesters cut their way onto the tarmac at Germany's busiest airport in Frankfurt - Copyright AFP Daniel ROLAND

Lea PERNELLE with Hui Min NEO in Berlin

Police on Thursday arrested climate activists who glued themselves to the tarmac at Frankfurt airport, Germany’s busiest, compelling it to temporarily suspend arrivals and departures.

Traffic was halted during the busy summer holiday season for two hours before the first of the airport’s landing runways was able to operate again at 0502 GMT, said a spokesman at the airport.

Passengers were advised to check the status of their flights while the airport ramped up its operations again.

Seven of the activists had managed to reach the runway where they glued themselves onto the tarmac, a police spokesman said. The eighth was still trying to get through the perimeter fence when he was detained.

The police operation to clear activists off the airport’s restricted grounds was ongoing, added the spokesman. All eight were arrested.

According to climate activist group “Letzte Generation” (Last Generation) which claimed the civil disobedience action, its members had used pincers to cut openings in the wire fence before making their way “by foot, with bicycles and skateboards to different points around the runways”.

A photo circulated by the group depicted a protester sitting on the tarmac with an orange banner “oil kills”.

The group is pushing for a binding international accord that would lead to an end in oil, gas and coal use by 2030.

Transport Minister Volker Wissing condemned the protests Thursday as “criminal” action and demanded tough penalties against the activists.

“The climate activists are apparently seeking to bring about maximum damage. The legislators must react with maximum severity,” he told German media, calling for prison terms of up to five years in jail for those who storm airports.

“Anyone who violently forces their way into airports, occupies runways and blocks airplanes is endangering human lives,” he said.


– Concerted action –


Thursday’s protest action came a day after similar operations across several European airports.

Activists from Letzte Generation disrupted traffic at Cologne-Bonn airport for several hours on Wednesday by glueing themselves on the tarmac.

Several climate protesters were also arrested at London’s Heathrow airport.

The protest organisers are part of the A22 Network of groups committed to non-violent climate protests, which said it was planning to disrupt airports in several countries in the coming months.

Protests were planned in Britain, Austria, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Canada, United States and Norway, UK-based activists from the alliance told AFP earlier in July.

Global aviation is responsible for around 2.5 percent of global carbon emissions, more than the annual carbon footprint of Brazil and France combined.

Last Generation is known for mounting eye-catching protests — from throwing mashed potatoes at paintings in museums to glueing themselves on busy roads.

Their tactics, which have proved deeply divisive, have led to some of their members being convicted.

“Instead of seeking tougher sentences, politicians should seriously take the scale of the disaster that they are themselves fuelling,” said Lisa Johnson, spokeswoman of the group.

“Prison sentences won’t shield us from heatwaves, droughts, floods and dramatically rising sea levels,” she warned.

Letzte Generation has said it would hold protests from September 25 against planned government subsidies for Kassel-Calden airport.




July 22 second day in row to break global heat record: EU monitor


By AFP
July 24, 2024

Climate change is causing longer, stronger and more frequent extreme weather events like heatwaves and floods - Copyright AFP Anthony WALLACE
Nick Perry

Earth withered through a second-straight day of record-breaking temperatures on July 22, the EU’s climate monitor said Wednesday, as parts of the world suffer devastating heatwaves and wildfires.

Preliminary data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) showed the daily global average temperature was 17.15 degrees Celsius (62.9 degrees Fahrenheit) on Monday, the warmest day in recorded history.

This was 0.06C hotter than the day before on July 21, which itself broke by a small margin the all-time high temperature set only a year before.

“This is exactly what climate science told us would happen if the world continued burning coal, oil and gas,” said Joyce Kimutai, a climate scientist from Imperial College London, on Wednesday.

“And it will continue getting hotter until we stop burning fossil fuels and reach net zero emissions.”

Copernicus, which uses satellite data to update global air and sea temperatures close to real time, said its figures were provisional and final values may differ very slightly.

It anticipated daily records could keep toppling as summer peaks in the northern hemisphere, and the planet endures an extraordinary stretch of unprecedented heat on the back of the hottest-ever year.

The monitor on Tuesday said global temperatures were expected to drop soon though there could be further fluctuations.

Global warming is causing longer, stronger and more frequent extreme weather events, and this year has been marked by major disasters across the globe.

The historic heat has been felt on many continents including Asia, North America and Europe, where heatwaves and wildfires have torn a path of destruction in recent weeks.

Fires have also ripped through the Arctic, which is warming much faster than elsewhere on the planet, while winter temperatures were well above normal in Antarctica.

– ‘Horrific temperatures’ –


Copernicus said it was less the fact daily temperature records were being rewritten than a broader pattern of never-before-seen warming that greatly worries climate scientists.

Every month since June 2023 has eclipsed its own temperature record compared to the same month in previous years, something never before seen.

The heat witnessed on Sunday and Monday only slightly exceeded the July 2023 record, but was far above the previous high of 16.8C set in August 2016.

Copernicus said that 16.8C record has been smashed 57 times since July 2023, around the time global temperatures began a steady rise into what scientists have called unchartered territory.

“The much used term ‘unprecedented’ no longer describes the horrific temperatures we are experiencing,” Christiana Figueres, a former head of the UN’s climate change body, said on Wednesday.

Copernicus records go back to 1940 but other sources of climate data such as ice cores, tree rings and coral skeletons allow scientists to expand their conclusions using evidence from much deeper in the past.

Climate scientists say the period being lived through right now is likely the warmest the earth has been for the last 100,000 years, back at the start of the last Ice Age.

The burning of fossil fuels is the primary driver of climate change and emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases keep rising despite global efforts to slow rising temperatures.

Copernicus on Tuesday said 2024 could pass 2023 as the hottest year on record but it was “too early to predict with confidence”.

In Rio, G20 finance ministers to mull taxing the super-rich


By AFP
July 25, 2024

Brazil's leftist president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, has brought social justice issues to the forefront of G20 discussions - Copyright AFP Pablo PORCIUNCULA

Faced with growing global inequality, G20 finance ministers meeting Thursday in Rio de Janeiro will tackle the thorny issue of taxes for the super-rich, a topic that has divided member states.

It is a key priority of Brazil’s leftist president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who this year heads the grouping of the world’s major economies, the European Union and African Union, which will discuss taxing billionaires in an afternoon session.

“Some individuals control more resources than entire countries,” Lula said Wednesday at the launch of an initiative to fight world hunger, another project topping his G20 agenda.

“At the top of the pyramid, tax systems are no longer progressive, but regressive.”

Global inequality has continued to widen in recent years according to a study by the NGO Oxfam published Thursday: the richest one percent of the world have earned more than $40 trillion in a decade, but their taxation is at “historically” low rates.

French economist Gabriel Zucman, a consultant with the G20 on taxation issues, estimates that the tax rate for billionaires represents 0.3 percent of their wealth.

In a recent report commissioned by the G20, he called for super-wealthy individuals to be taxed the equivalent of two percent of their fortune.

However, not all G20 countries are keen on the idea.


– ‘Irrelevant’ –

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen opposed international negotiations on the subject during a G7 finance meeting held in May in Italy.

Germany’s finance ministry considers the idea of a minimum wealth tax to be “irrelevant.”

The initiative is backed by France, Spain, South Africa, Colombia and the African Union.

In addition to international taxation, G20 finance ministers will also discuss the global economic situation in their last meeting before a summit on November 18 and 19.

On Friday, the ministers will tackle the financing of the climate transition and debt.

Founded in 1999, the Group of 20 assembles 19 of the world’s largest economic powers, as well as the European Union and the African Union.

The organization was originally focused on global economic issues but has increasingly taken on other pressing challenges — even though member states do not always agree on what should be on the agenda.

Brazil’s presidency said in a statement that some members of the G20 considered that crises such as the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza “have an impact on the global economy and should be addressed at the G20, while others believe that the G20 is not the place to discuss these issues.”

Divisions within the G20, of which Russia is also a member, has made drafting a joint communique at the outcome of meetings a challenge.

The last meeting of finance ministers in Sao Paulo failed to issue such a statement.

Brazil hopes to publish three texts after the meeting, said Tatiana Rosito, a senior official at the economy ministry.

Aside from a joint final communique, this would include a document on “international cooperation in tax matters” and a separate communique from Brazil on geopolitical crises.

“It is likely, based on my experience of previous G20s,” that future ministerial-level meetings will publish separate statements in this manner, European Commissioner for International Partnerships, Jutta Urpilainen, told reporters Wednesday.

Aiming for a single text “would not allow us to adopt anything,” she said.


















World’s richest 1% gained $40 tn in a decade: Oxfam


ByAFP


PublishedJuly 24, 2024


The world's richest one percent increased their fortunes by a total of $42 trillion over the past decade, Oxfam says - Copyright AFP/File ADEK BERRY

The world’s richest one percent increased their fortunes by a total of $42 trillion over the past decade, Oxfam said Thursday, ahead of a G20 summit in Brazil where taxing the super-rich tops the agenda.

Despite this windfall, taxes on the rich had plummeted to “historic lows”, the NGO added, warning of “obscene levels” of inequality with the rest of the world “left to scrap for crumbs”.

Brazil has made international cooperation on taxing the super-rich a priority of its presidency of the G20, a group of countries representing 80 percent of the world’s GDP.

At this week’s summit in Rio de Janeiro, the group’s finance ministers are expected to make progress on ways to raise levies on the ultra-wealthy and prevent billionaires from dodging tax systems.

The initiative involves determining methodologies to tax billionaires and other high-income earners.

The proposal is due to be fiercely debated at the summit on Thursday and Friday, with France, Spain, South Africa, Colombia and the African Union in favour, but the United States firmly against.

Oxfam dubbed it a “real litmus test for G20 governments”, urging them to implement an annual net wealth tax of at least eight percent on the “extreme wealth” of the super-rich.

“Momentum to increase taxes on the super-rich is undeniable,” said Oxfam International’s head of inequality policy, Max Lawson.

“Do they have the political will to strike a global standard that puts the needs of the many before the greed of an elite few?”

Oxfam said that the $42 trillion figure was nearly 36 times more than the wealth accumulated by the poorer half of the world’s population.

Despite this, billionaires “have been paying a tax rate equivalent to less than 0.5 percent of their wealth” across the globe, the NGO said.

Nearly four out of five of the world’s billionaires call a G20 nation home, Oxfam noted.


US sees no need for global deal to tax super-rich: Yellen

Rio de Janeiro (AFP) – The United States sees no need to negotiate an international agreement on taxing the super-wealthy, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Thursday on the sideline of a G20 finance ministers' meeting.


Issued on: 25/07/2024 - 
Yellen said the US preferred for individual countries to tackle the issue of taxing the super-rich  OR NOT
© Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP

The topic is a key priority of Brazil's leftist president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who this year heads the grouping of the world's major economies, the European Union and African Union.

Yellen's remarks highlighted the divisions among G20 members on the issue.

"Tax policy is very difficult to coordinate globally," Yellen told a press conference in Rio de Janeiro.

"We don't see a need or really think it's desirable to try to negotiate a global agreement on that. We think that all countries should make sure that their taxation systems are fair and progressive."

Yellen said Washington was "strongly supportive of progressive taxation, and making sure that very wealthy high income individuals pay their fair share."

She highlighted policies proposed by US President Joe Biden, such as a billionaires' tax, which she described as "a very worthwhile initiative."

"It makes sense for most countries to take this approach of progressive taxation."

Brazil's search for a global agreement on taxing the richest of the rich is backed by France, Spain, South Africa, Colombia and the African Union.

The meeting of finance ministers in Rio opened with a session on the global economy, as inflation slows in many parts of the world after a surge fuelled by the war in Ukraine and other factors.

On Friday, the ministers will tackle the financing of the climate transition and debt in their last meeting before a G20 summit on November 18 and 19.

© 2024 AFP

 

Climate finance top priority, says COP29 President-Designate


19 July 2024


Mukhtar Babayev, president-designate of the UN's COP29 summit taking place in Azerbaijan in November, says the top negotiating priority is agreeing a "fair and ambitious" goal on climate finance "adequate to the urgency and scale of the problem, taking into account the needs and priorities" of developing countries.

(Image: COP29)

In a letter to parties and constituencies Babayev has set out the principles to focus on "to present the COP29 Presidency’s vision to enhance ambition and enable action, outline the key presidency milestones, lay out the pathways that we must follow to turn our vision into a reality, and highlight collaborative networks for complementary action".

He says: "Growing geopolitical tensions and uncertainty in the international environment must not distract us from the imperative to collaborate and address climate change as the greatest transnational challenge of the century ... our actions should be guided by the latest science and informed by the outcomes of the Global Stocktake, agreed by Parties at COP28, with its roadmap for keeping 1.5°C within reach, while leaving no one behind."

He adds: "All countries must strive for the highest possible ambition, in line with the Paris Agreement and informed by the Global Stocktake. We also know that support for developing countries will allow for higher ambition in their actions. We now need to increase the overall flow of climate finance substantially and help developing countries that need support to realise their full potential."

The Global Stocktake agreed at COP28 in Dubai called for a transitioning away from fossil fuels and an acceleration of zero- and low-emission technologies, including nuclear. This was the first time that nuclear has been specifically included in a COP agreement as one of the solutions to climate change.

The COP29 presidency's aim is to agree a "fair and ambitious New Collective Quantified Goal on climate finance adequate to the urgency and scale of the problem, taking into account the needs and priorities of developing country parties".

The New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) is a global finance goal which was a key element of the 2015 Paris Agreement and aims to provide more than the 2009-set goal of USD100 billion per year as part of efforts to hold the increase in the global average temperature rises to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, by supporting developing countries' ability to adapt to climate change and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions without threatening food production and development.

According to the World Economic Forum, "the NCQG must be ambitious yet realistic, balancing the financial capacities of developed countries with the urgent needs of developing nations. The donor base is also unclear, with the status of some countries, including China and Saudi Arabia, still being hashed out. To get the NCQG off the ground, these questions must be answered before and during" COP29. Other issues include "the need for robust monitoring and accountability mechanisms" to avoid the new goal facing "the same challenges as its predecessor", such as the amount of the money which flows back to donor countries.

In his letter setting out the COP29 priorities, Babayev writes: "Strengthening multilateral financial institutions and climate funds will also be an important contribution to creating the international enabling environment for success, and we are working towards fully mobilising the private sector and philanthropy for climate action."

Adaptation and mitigation financing "require a substantial increase", he says, with negotiations continuing ahead of the summit - "climate finance has been one of the most challenging topics in the negotiations and climate diplomacy more broadly, and the politically complex issues will not be solved by negotiators alone ... we have heard clearly from the Parties that there are disagreements on key elements that will require political direction and we must focus high-level discussions on these points ... The COP29 Presidency is now intensifying political engagement ... the NCQG will be amongst key issues to be addressed at the Heads of Delegation retreat in Azerbaijan in July."

His letter concludes: "We are optimistic that together we can make real progress. When the world comes to COP29 in Azerbaijan, we want everyone to focus on our moral duty and collective interest to confront the climate crisis."

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

 Putin meets Assad amid calls to defuse Turkey-Syria tensions



By AFP
July 25, 2024

Moscow is Syria's most important ally - Copyright AFP Hoang Bon

President Vladimir Putin held talks with Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad in Moscow amid calls for Russian mediation to cool tensions between Turkey and Syria.

Wednesday’s talks between the pair — the first since since March 2023 — come after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan flagged the potential of a three-way meeting to discuss normalising ties between Ankara and Damascus.

Putin highlighted his concerns over the situation in the Middle East, which he said was “tending to escalate,” in opening remarks between the pair which were aired on state television Thursday.

Moscow is Syria’s most important ally, having effectively saved Assad’s government through its military intervention in 2015 during a civil war.

“I am very interested in your opinion on how the situation in the region as a whole is developing. Unfortunately, it is tending to escalate, we see this. This concerns Syria directly,” Putin said.

Assad said his visit to Moscow was a “very important” opportunity to discuss “events that are taking place today in the world as a whole and in the Eurasian region”, according to a translation into Russian.

Neither mentioned Turkey or the conflict in Syria in the televised remarks.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to say whether a possible meeting between Putin, Erdogan and Assad was discussed in private talks.

“The situation in the region was discussed in a broad context,” he told Russian state media on Thursday.

– ‘Improving relations’ –

Turkey originally aimed to topple Assad’s regime when the Syrian conflict erupted with the violent suppression of peaceful protesters in 2011.

Turkey then backed rebels calling for Assad to be removed and Erdogan has also branded the Syrian leader a “murderer
.”

As Damascus regained territory, however, Erdogan reversed course and has lately prioritised the prevention of what in 2019 he called a “terror corridor” opening up in northern Syria.

Since 2022, top Syrian and Turkish officials have met for Russia-mediated talks.

Erdogan has long said he could reconsider ties with Assad as his government is working to ensure safe and voluntary return of Syrian refugees.

“Now we have come to such a point that as soon as Bashar al-Assad takes a step towards improving relations with Turkey, we will show him the same approach,” Erdogan said at a regional summit in Kazakhstan earlier this month.

In a complex multi-sided conflict, Turkey has launched a string of offensives in Syria since 2016 targeting Kurdish militias, Islamic State group jihadists and forces loyal to Assad.

Pro-Turkish forces in Syria now control two vast strips of territory along the border.

Moscow has complicated, but generally pragmatic and warm relations with NATO member Turkey, with Putin and Erdogan speaking regularly.

Analysts have said any rapprochement between Turkey and Syria is likely to be gradual due to the complex set of thorny issues between the two sides.



Turkey and Russia discuss state of nuclear projects

19 July 2024


The first unit at the Akkuyu nuclear power plant is being prepared for the loading of dummy fuel, and with three more units under construction, the two sides discussed the potential of collaborating on a second nuclear power plant in Turkey.

(Image: Rosatom)

Rosatom CEO Alexei Likhachev, pictured above, left, and Turkey's Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar, above, right, held their talks in Istanbul, focusing on progress with the Akkuyu project.

Likhachev said: "The main efforts are focused on preparing for the launch of the first power unit - we are actively conducting full-scale commissioning work, we are currently preparing the reactor installation for loading fuel simulators. We understand how important it is for the Turkish side to launch the 'first nuclear electricity' into the Turkish energy system as soon as possible."

Bayraktar said: "We discussed the current status of the Akkuyu NPP site and the roadmap for commissioning the first power unit of the plant. We are working intensively to commission the first power unit as soon as possible. At the same time, the construction of the other three power units is ongoing."

According to a statement from Rosatom, Russia's state nuclear corporation, the two also discussed the possibility of Rosatom also being commissioned to build Turkey's proposed second nuclear power plant, in Sinop.

Akkuyu, in the southern Mersin province, is Turkey's first nuclear power plant. Rosatom is building four VVER-1200 reactors, under a so-called BOO (build-own-operate) model. According to the terms of the 2010 Intergovernmental Agreement between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Turkey, the commissioning of the first power unit of the nuclear power plant must take place within seven years from receipt of all permits for the construction of the unit.

The licence for the construction of the first unit was issued in 2018, with construction work beginning that year. Nuclear fuel was delivered to the site in April 2023. Turkey's Nuclear Regulatory Agency issued permission for the first unit to be commissioned in December, and in February it was announced that the reactor compartment had been prepared for controlled assembly of the reactor - and the generator stator had also been installed in its pre-design position.

The aim is for unit 1 to begin supplying Turkey's energy system in 2025. When the 4800 MWe plant is completed it is expected to meet about 10% of Turkey's electricity needs, with the aim that all four units will be operational by the end of 2028.

In March, Bayraktar was reported to have said that Turkey was talking to Russia and South Korea about the Sinop plant and was also in talks with China about plans for a third nuclear power plant, in the Thrace region in the country's northwest. He was also quoted as saying that despite there being some issues relating to sanctions to overcome they remained on track for all units being online by 2028.

Last week, according to the Tass news agency, Likhachev told Rossiya-1 television that sanctions had hampered its "legal entities, our banks, causing many problems" but said that, nonetheless, construction continued, adding "the dogs bark, but the caravan goes on".

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

 

Transfer of exploration licence for Niger uranium deposit

18 July 2024


USA-based African Discovery Group (AFDG) has signed a letter of intent to acquire the uranium exploration licence for the Ouricha-3 deposit in Niger from Central Global Access International Niger (CGAIN). Meanwhile, GoviEX plans to seek damages for the withdrawal of its mining rights to the Madaouela deposit.

A map of the Ouricha-3 deposit (Image: CGAIN)

As part of the transaction, AFDG is expected to issue shares to CGAIN - an international company operating in several sectors and industries - and the existing operating team. The transaction is expected to result in the existing AFDG shareholders retaining majority ownership of the company. The government of the Republic of Niger is expected "to retain a working interest in the operations of the Niger licence after cost recovery".

The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2024, subject to shareholder approval, customary due diligence and documentation.

Delaware-based AFDG, which is dedicated to the development of the African continent, said it expects to change its name to African Uranium in conjunction with the closing. The company intends to hire a Chief Executive Officer with extensive geological experience in uranium exploration in West Africa, with the existing exploration team expected to retain their current roles.

AFDG said the transaction would create a uranium exploration company "with a focus on creating value around Africa's under explored basins of uranium. After close of the transaction, AFDG will dedicate itself to uranium exploration going forward on the African continent. By working in concert with the government of Niger, African Uranium will create local skills to develop the highly promising nuclear industry on the continent".

"We are highly enthusiastic to move forward in such a paradigm-changing venture for our company and our shareholders," said AFDG Chairman Alan Kessler.

Ouricha-3 is located within the northern Agadez region of Niger. It is 35 km northwest of Global Atomic's Dasa project, Africa's highest grade uranium deposit, and 20 km south of Orano's Imouraren uranium mine, one of world's largest uranium reserves. The deposit straddles the Arlit fault, a key structure for uranium mineralisation at Imouraren and the mines in Arlit.

Historic exploration on and around Ouricha-3 began was started in 1977 by France's Cogema. More than two-thirds of the Ouricha-3 permit is located in the Afouday perimeter, which was the subject of exploration by Areva in 2006.

GoviEx contests Madaouela decision


In July last year, a coup d'état occurred in Niger, during which the country's presidential guard removed and detained president Mohamed Bazoum. Subsequently, General Abdourahamane Tchiani, the Commander of the Presidential Guard, proclaimed himself the leader of the country.

Since then, Nigerien authorities have withdrawn the operating permit for Orano's Imouraren uranium mine, which was issued to its subsidiary Imouraren SA in 2009. Also, Canada's GoviEx Uranium has recently had its mining rights to the Madaouela deposit withdrawn.

In a 17 July letter to stakeholders, GoviEx Uranium Executive Chairman Govind Friedland said the withdrawal of its mining rights for Madaouela is "especially perplexing". Any future developers would effectively need to "start from scratch", he said.

"The necessity to conduct a new drilling campaign, environmental assessments, social studies, metallurgical test work, etc - tasks into which we have already invested millions - will inevitably lead to significant project delays," Friedland said. "Such delays are contrary to the government's stated objectives for rapid development and economic progress in the region."

According to GoviEx, the decision to withdraw its mining rights did not follow the withdrawal procedure prescribed under the applicable mining code. "We are fully prepared to pursue all necessary legal avenues to defend our rights and protect our investments and have formally written to the Ministry of Mines to contest the decision and to initially seek an amicable solution as per Niger's Mining Convention," Friedland said. "We are starting the process to secure independent assessments of damages related to the withdrawal of our mining rights."

The company said it now intends to concentrate on the development of its Muntanga uranium project in Zambia, which it has been working to develop since 2016. The project, it said, has "massive potential, poised to become a cornerstone of our company".

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

BWXT considers locating TRISO plant in Wyoming

18 July 2024


BWX Technologies Inc has signed a cooperation agreement with the Wyoming Energy Authority to evaluate locations for a potential new TRISO nuclear fuel production facility in the state.

A vial of the finished TRISO fuel particles (Image: BWXT)

Under the agreement, BWXT will evaluate the requirements for siting a fuel fabrication facility in Wyoming. The roughly 18-month effort will evaluate such matters as potential factory locations, product specifications, facility design and engineering, estimated capital expenditures and operating costs, staffing and worker skill requirements, supply chain necessities, licensing and other requirements.

"This new effort will help establish the baseline for facilities necessary to meet anticipated demand for this specialised nuclear fuel and includes establishing the scale necessary for economic viability," the company said.

TRISO fuel comprises spherical kernels of enriched uranium oxycarbide (or uranium dioxide) surrounded by layers of carbon and silicon carbide, giving a containment for fission products which is stable up to very high temperatures. High-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU) TRISO fuels are being considered as the preferred fuel in several advanced reactor designs currently under development.

"BWXT owns and operates the only two Nuclear Regulatory Commission Category 1-licensed commercial nuclear facilities in the United States, and we also manufacture fuel for the highly successful Canadian nuclear power market," said Joe Miller, president of BWXT subsidiary BWXT Advanced Technologies LLC. "For approximately 40 years, BWXT has furnished nuclear fuel across numerous government and commercial markets, giving the company a unique and highly credible background from which to draw on as we review options for a potential new facility."

"This is an exciting step forward for Wyoming's growing nuclear industry and another example that Wyoming is not sitting idle in this competitive market," said Rob Creager, executive director of the Wyoming Energy Authority. "Evaluating the potential to fabricate fuel on Wyoming soil will bring us closer to creating a viable full nuclear industry that will add value to our already robust energy portfolio."

BWXT is the only US company to manufacture irradiation-tested uranium oxycarbide TRISO fuel using production-scale equipment. As a participant in the US Department of Energy's Office of Nuclear Energy's Next Generation Nuclear Plant programme for more than 15 years, BWXT has developed the expertise to manufacture TRISO-coated kernels. Under the DOE's Advanced Gas Reactor Fuel Development Program, BWXT has manufactured and certified TRISO-coated kernels and fuel compacts in production-scale quantities at its Specialty Fuel Facility in Lynchburg, Virginia.

BWXT has been heavily engaged with the State of Wyoming in evaluating options for constructing and deploying micro-reactors in the state since 2023. The company is currently working on a contract with the Wyoming Energy Authority to assess the viability of deploying small modular reactors in the state as a source of resilient and reliable energy to augment existing power generation resources. It has also signed agreements with Wyoming-based businesses such as L&H Industrial, Tata Chemicals Soda Ash Partners LLC and others in support of the goal of micro-reactor deployment in the state.

"As part of our all-of-the-above energy strategy, the possibility of a nuclear fuel fabrication facility here in Wyoming is exciting," Governor Mark Gordon said. "As the world's energy demands continue to rise, Wyoming must stay focused on protecting our core industries while continually augmenting our sources of energy. Wyoming has it all. Nuclear has been a stalwart in our energy portfolio, and like coal, can start with raw materials mined in Wyoming, processed in Wyoming, and used in Wyoming. A true trifecta."

Researched and written by World Nuclear News