Thursday, February 27, 2025

'Does not bode well': Doctor slams Trump's response as child dies in measles outbreak

Jennifer Bowers Bahney
February 26, 2025 
RAW STORY

Before the measles vaccine was introduced in 1963, the disease sickened an estimated three to four million Americans annually and killed hundreds (Johannes EISELE/AFP)

The Trump administration is hampering efforts to fight the measles outbreak that took the life of a an unvaccinated school-aged child this week in Texas, according to an MSNBC medical consultant Dr. Davita Patel.

The child's death was the first linked to an outbreak in West Texas that has infected more than 100 people. ABC News reported that most all of the cases "are in unvaccinated individuals or individuals whose vaccination status is unknown."

In an article Wednesday, Patel, a physician and health policy researcher, wrote, "The current Texas outbreak mirrors 2019’s surge in New York, where 1,274 cases nearly cost the U.S. its designation as a country that had eliminated the disease."

She continued, "Health experts stress that measles’ 90% transmission rate demands rapid, well-resourced responses. With hospitalizations rising and containment protocols delayed, the window to preserve this public health milestone is narrowing. Investment in immunization programs and disease surveillance remains critical to preventing measles from regaining endemic status.

However, the Trump administration's reluctance to encourage vaccines while simultaneously cutting public health outreach efforts, "does not bode well for the next four years," she wrote.

"In a normal presidency, this would be a time for action, with federal support for local public health programs or maybe the president using the bully pulpit to encourage people to get their children a safe and effective vaccine that prevents a brutal disease that can cause deafness, intellectual disabilities or even death," Patel wrote.

Patel also laid blame with President Donald Trump's own "vaccine skepticism" that led the president to reinstate military service members who refused the Covid vaccine during the pandemic. Trump has also echoed concerns about vaccines espoused by his Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has spread conspiracy theories about vaccine safety.

In the piece, Patel wrote that, "Vaccination rates continue to decline nationally, with exemptions reaching record highs in 12 states." And, although a push to vaccinate would certainly save more lives, Patel concluded, "Unfortunately, we will not get the kind of response we need from the Trump administration soon."

Read the MSNBC article here.

'Something unusual is happening': Expert singles out RFK Jr. over measles deaths

Tom Boggioni
February 27, 2025 
RAW STORY

MSNBC medical analyst Dr. Vin Gupta (MSNBC screenshot)

MSNBC medical contributor Dr. Vin Gupta called out newly installed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr on Thursday morning after the Donald Trump appointee tried to downplay the alarming growth of measles cases that has now resulted in children dying.

Addressing the outbreak that is devastating counties in parts of Texas where vaccination rates are low, Kennedy, who is not a medical professional, stated, "Incidentally, there have been four measles outbreaks this year in this country, last year there were 16. So it’s not unusual.”

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," a visibly fuming Gupta took issue with Kennedy's glib and purportedly uninformed comments.

king RFK, it's important to realize between the years 2020 and 2023, on average we saw about anywhere from 50 to 100 cases in total in those years between 2020 and 2023," the pulmonologist stated. "So, no, this is no just business as usual, this is unusual."

"We've seen 124 cases and its February 26th," he added. "So something unusual right now is happening and let's just also put a finer point on it. His former organization that he just resigned from is actively putting out information as we speak this week, stating that somehow the vaccine itself, because quote unquote, 'it's ineffective,' to use their words, is the reason why this is happening in Texas, this outbreak versus the low vaccine rate. "

"So this is happening," he accused. "This organization is putting out this information. I don't know a single credible doctor that you would want caring for your family or for your loved one that believes or wants any of this."

You can watch below or at the link.



'God help us all': Infectious disease experts panic after Trump FDA cancels vaccine meeting


REUTERS/Leah Millis
Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy reacts, on the day U.S. President Donald Trump hosts a business session with U.S. governors who are in town for the National Governors Association's (NGA) annual winter meeting, at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 21, 2025.

February 27, 2025
ALTERNET

Despite this being the worst flu season in 15 years, President Donald Trump's administration has abruptly cancelled a critical meeting that infectious disease experts were counting on to make sure the latest flu vaccine is the strongest.

NBC News reported Wednesday that a scheduled March meeting of a key Food and Drug Administration (FDA) vaccine committee has been scuttled without explanation, and no future date has been set. Members of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee were told about the cancellation in an email. Wednesday's announcement followed the news of a similar meeting hosted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) being unexpectedly delayed.

The meeting typically happens in the spring, so experts can decide which strains of the flu to include in the version of the vaccine that is normally ready for the public by the fall. Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist who chairs the New England Complex Systems Institute, noted in a Bluesky post that the FDA is under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which is run by anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

"Any delays will jeopardize next year’s vaccine supply chain," Dr. Feigl-Ding wrote. "God help us all."

The FDA's March meeting was slated to happen after the World Health Organization's (WHO) flu vaccine meeting this Friday, which typically influences what strains of the virus the FDA chooses to include in the updated vaccine. Even though Trump withdrew the United States from the WHO on the first day of his second term, officials from the FDA and the CDC will attend Friday's meeting.

"I feel like the world is upside-down," Dr. Paul Offit, a member of the FDA's vaccine committee, told Dr. Jeremy Faust's Inside Medicine Substack newsletter. "We aren't doing the things we need to do to protect ourselves."

According to NBC, 86 children and 19,000 adults have died from the flu this season alone. And the news of the vaccine committee meeting being called off comes on the heels of a school-age child in Texas dying of measles — the first measles-related death in a decade. The child was not vaccinated for measles.

READ MORE: 'I have no idea': RFK Jr.'s former staffers question his ability to run a federal agency

"It's a bad day for infectious diseases," Boston Children's Hospital's Dr. Ofer Levy, who has advised the FDA on vaccines, told NBC.

Click here to read NBC's report in full.

SHEA encourages rescheduling postponed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Meeting



Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America




The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) plays a crucial role in protecting childhood and adult health by developing vaccination recommendations based on scientific evidence. SHEA encourages timely rescheduling of the ACIP’s meeting that was scheduled for February 2025 to ensure patients and healthcare providers  are getting the most up to date recommendations based on the latest scientific evidence review regarding vaccination. 

The ACIP’s recommendations are foundational to public health, guiding pediatric and adult vaccine schedules that have significantly reduced the prevalence of highly communicable infectious diseases such a measles, mumps, rubella and pertussis. This is especially crucial for older adults, pregnant women, those with chronic conditions, and those that work in healthcare settings treating patients and interacting with caregivers.  ACIP recommendations acknowledge and accept religious exemptions and recognized medical contraindications as reasons for not receiving recommended immunizations.  The ACIP recommended updates to the vaccination schedule are important for medical insurance coverage of vaccines which is often contingent upon these recommendations.  Any perceived mistrust in the safety and effectiveness of vaccines leads to significantly lower immunization coverage and increases the chances of more outbreaks, hospitalizations, and deaths from serious, preventable diseases such as measles. Vaccines save lives and are an important tool in protecting the public, patients, and healthcare personnel.

About SHEA 

The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) works to advance the science and practice of healthcare epidemiology and infection prevention. Founded in 1980, SHEA promotes education, research, and advocacy to improve patient care and safety. For more information, visit www.shea-online.org.   

Contact: Lindsay MacMurray, lmacmurray@shea-online.org

Fears of U.S. public health crises grow amid falling vaccination rates

Agence France-Presse
February 25, 2025 

Before the measles vaccine was introduced in 1963, the disease sickened an estimated three to four million Americans annually and killed hundreds 


by Charlotte CAUSIT

Plummeting immunization rates, outbreaks of once-vanquished childhood diseases, and the appointment of a vocal vaccine skeptic as health secretary have U.S. experts sounding the alarm about a looming public health crisis.

Since the start of the year, nearly 100 cases of measles have been reported in Texas and neighboring New Mexico, raising fears that the highly contagious and potentially serious illness is making a comeback

"The measles is the canary in the coal mine," warned leading pediatrician and immunologist Paul Offit, highlighting the decline in vaccination rates since the Covid-19 pandemic.

Amid growing distrust of health authorities and pharmaceutical companies, more parents are opting not to vaccinate their children.

The proportion of preschool-aged children vaccinated against measles -- which is mandatory -- has dropped nationally from 95 percent in 2019 to less than 93 percent in 2023. Some regions show even steeper declines, such as Idaho, where rates have fallen below 80 percent.

Experts warn that this trend could worsen under the leadership of newly appointed Health Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr., who has repeatedly questioned vaccine safety and promoted misinformation.

"It is a disaster waiting to happen, and it will happen," Offit told AFP.

- Religious exemptions -

In Louisiana, whooping cough has resulted in the deaths of two children, according to local media. As with measles, experts attribute the resurgence to vaccine exemptions.

"This is already happening. Our immunization rates are already low enough that vulnerable children are getting these diseases," said Jennifer Herricks, a scientist and board member of the nonprofit Louisiana Families for Vaccines, in an interview with AFP.

Across much of the country, parents can opt out of mandatory vaccinations for reasons beyond medical contraindications.

Many states allow exemptions on religious grounds, while others permit "philosophical" objections -- or both.

"In Texas, you can just, pretty much say, I object," explained Terri Burke of the Texas-based Immunization Partnership.

The recent measles cases have been reported in a Texas county with a large Mennonite population -- a conservative Christian sect.

The situation is reminiscent of the 2019 measles outbreak, which saw more than 1,200 cases, primarily among unvaccinated Orthodox Jewish communities in New York and New Jersey.

While the reasons behind these exemptions vary -- ranging from religious beliefs and fear of side effects to distrust in health authorities or difficulties accessing health care -- there is an undeniable trend linked to a "pandemic backlash," said Richard Hughes, a health policy expert at George Washington University.

- Legislative offensives -

Mixed messaging on masking, frustration over lockdowns and Covid vaccine mandates -- some of which remained in place long after it was clear the shots didn't fully prevent transmission -- have eroded public trust, he said.

"We might have done better by just continuing to encourage people to be vaccinated than requiring it," Hughes added.

But any missteps were amplified by an overwhelming spread of misinformation, which thrived in the era of social media and podcasts.

These factors have turned vaccinations into a flashpoint in America's culture wars. Across the country, lawmakers are introducing bills aimed at either enshrining vaccine mandates at the local level, banning certain types of vaccines, or expanding exemptions.

The number of such bills has more than doubled compared to pre-Covid levels, said Herricks, who tracks the issue nationally.

Notable shifts include Montana's decision to halt vaccination statistics and Louisiana's cessation of vaccine promotion -- both signs of the growing marginalization of a practice that was once a cornerstone of public health policy.

According to Offit, Americans may soon face a harsh reality check.

Before the measles vaccine was introduced in 1963, the disease sickened an estimated three to four million Americans annually and killed hundreds.

It was declared eliminated in the United States by 2000, thanks to widespread immunization.

"People don't realize how sick and dead that virus can make you," he said.
Trump's latest move made U.S. 'irrelevant' on world stage: foreign policy expert


Brad Reed
February 27, 2025 


FILE PHOTO: Donald Trump attends a press conference, the day after a guilty verdict in his criminal trial over charges that he falsified business records to conceal money paid to silence porn star Stormy Daniels in 2016, at Trump Tower in New York City, U.S., May 31, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

Max Bergmann, the director of the Stuart Center at the Center for strategic and International Studies, told CNN's Sara Sidner on Thursday that President Donald Trump is increasingly making the United States irrelevant as an international power.

When asked about the mineral deal that Trump has reportedly reached with Ukraine, Bergmann downplayed it as more aspirational than a real contract.

"Frankly, I don't think it means very much," he said of the deal. "I think in some ways it's more of a symbolic deal... it's essentially a deal on paper. Right now, the minerals that this deal would capture, uh, aren't out of the ground... the mines would have to be built in Ukraine. That can take more than a decade and you're not going to start building those mines until the fighting stops. I think Ukraine initially offered this, this deal to the Trump administration, hoping it would entice the Trump administration to keep providing military support to Ukraine. That didn't work."

Bergmann then predicted that Trump would increasingly remove the United States from the conflict, but he also believed that Europe would start to step up.

"I think in some ways we're making ourselves fairly irrelevant in the entire conflict, because once you stop providing military aid, with the destruction of USAID, we've already stopped providing economic and development assistance to Ukraine," he said. "Ukraine was the largest recipient of our development aid. So, you know, we don't have that much leverage now over the Ukrainians... but there is this thing called Europe. They have resources. We've been wanting them to step up and do more and they have in response to this war. And they have the resources to ensure that Ukraine doesn't lose the war and can continue fighting. And i think that's what they're going to do."

Watch the video below or at this link.


Influencer Andrew Tate has left Romania for U.S.: airport sources

WELCOME HOME TO TRUMPLAND

Agence France-Presse
February 27, 2025 

Andrew Tate is under judicial supervision in Romania (Daniel MIHAILESCU/AFP)

by Ani SANDU

Influencer Andrew Tate, facing charges of human trafficking and rape in Romania, left for the United States on Thursday, airport sources told AFP.


Romanian prosecutors allege that former kickboxer Tate, 38, his brother Tristan, 36, and two women set up a criminal organization in Romania and Britain in early 2021 and sexually exploited several victims

The brothers, who have a British and American nationality, insist they are innocent.

The Romanian organized crime squad DIICOT said the two brothers, who left for the US together, remained "under judicial supervision" and had to "appear before the judicial authorities at every summons".

"Violation in bad faith of the obligations incumbent on them may lead to the replacement of judicial control with a higher custodial measure," DIICOT said.


Romanian aviation news media BoardingPass said "a Gulfstream G550 private jet took off from Bucharest, Romania, bound for Fort Lauderdale" just after 6:00 am (0400 GMT).

"The flight... will be operated non-stop and will last 12 hours," it added.

Four British women who have accused Andrew Tate of rape voiced concern last week that the US government might push Romania to ease their travel restrictions.


The Financial Times has said U.S. President Donald Trump's administration brought up Tate's case with Romanian authorities earlier this month, calling for Bucharest to return the brothers' passports.
- 'Gaslighting' -

Romanian Foreign Minister Emil Hurezeanu said Trump's envoy Richard Grenell raised the case with him at the Munich Security Conference earlier in February.


The four women, who are bringing a civil case against Tate at the High Court in the UK accusing him of rape and coercive control between 2013 and 2016, urged Washington not to get involved.

"These are women who are the victims of the most horrible and horrific alleged crimes," the victims' UK lawyer Matthew Jury told BBC Newsnight.

"And to see the most powerful man in the world support their alleged abuser is incredibly traumatizing. It's retraumatizing for them. It's gaslighting of a sort," he added.


Andrew Tate moved to Romania years ago after first starting a webcam business in the UK.

He leapt to fame in 2016 when he first appeared on the UK's "Big Brother" reality television show, but was removed after a video emerged showing him attacking a woman.

He then turned to social media platforms to promote his often misogynistic and divisive views on how to be successful.


Banned from Instagram and TikTok for his views, Tate is followed by more than 10 million people on X watching his homophobic and racist posts.

A Romanian court has granted a British request to extradite the Tates to Britain, but only after legal proceedings in Romania have concluded.

Last year, the Tates were sentenced in a tax fraud case in Britain.


© Agence France-Presse

U.S. to remove trans troops from military unless they obtain waiver

Agence France-Presse
February 27, 2025 

The Pentagon (Daniel SLIM/AFP)

The United States will remove transgender troops from the military unless they obtain a waiver on a case-by-case basis, the Pentagon said in a Wednesday memo.

The memo became public as part of a court filing in a case challenging President Donald Trump's late January executive order that was aimed at barring military service by transgender personnel.

"Service members who have a current diagnosis or history of, or exhibit symptoms consistent with, gender dysphoria will be processed for separation from military service," the memo said.

These troops may be "considered for a waiver on a case-by-case basis, provided there is a compelling government interest in retaining the service member that directly supports warfighting capabilities," it said.

To obtain such a waiver, troops must show that they have never attempted to transition, as well as demonstrate "36 consecutive months of stability in the service member's sex without clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning."

Another Pentagon memo issued earlier this month barred transgender people from joining the military and halted gender transition treatment for others who are already in uniform.


The latest memo also states that "applicants for military service... who have a current diagnosis or history of, or exhibit symptoms consistent with, gender dysphoria are disqualified for military service," as are those with "a history of cross-sex hormone therapy or sex reassignment or genital reconstruction surgery as treatment for gender dysphoria."
- Shifting US policies -

Disqualified applicants can also obtain a waiver if there is a "compelling government interest" in them joining the military and they are "willing and able to adhere to all applicable standards, including the standards associated with the applicant's sex."


Transgender Americans have faced a roller coaster of changing policies on military service in recent years, with Democratic administrations seeking to permit them to serve openly, while Trump has repeatedly sought to keep them out of the ranks.

The U.S. military lifted a ban on transgender troops in 2016, during Democrat Barack Obama's second term as president.

Under that policy, trans troops already serving were permitted to do so openly, and transgender recruits were set to start being accepted by July 1, 2017.


But the first Trump administration postponed that date to 2018 before deciding to reverse the policy entirely.

Trump's controversial restrictions on transgender military service -- which underwent changes in response to various court challenges -- eventually came into force in April 2019 following a protracted legal battle that went all the way to the nation's top court.

Trump's Democratic successor Joe Biden moved to reverse the restrictions just days after he took office in 2021, saying all Americans qualified to serve should be able to do so.


After returning to office in January, Trump issued an executive order executive order that again took aim at transgender troops, saying: "Expressing a false 'gender identity' divergent from an individual's sex cannot satisfy the rigorous standards necessary for military service."

Transgender issues have roiled US politics in recent years, as states controlled by Democrats and Republicans have moved in opposite directions on policies ranging from medical treatment to what books on the topic are allowed in public or school libraries.

© Agence France-Presse



















Not planning too far ahead: Generational divides and the world of work


By Dr. Tim Sandle
February 25, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Workers at the new underground main station in the Stuttgart 21 project - Copyright AFP THOMAS KIENZLE

How do those in work feel about their professional future once they are in their chosen field? The company Kickresume has set out to determine precisely what professionals think about this topic.

To do so, the firm asked over 1,500 workers how they feel about the future of their careers. The survey asked respondents how far into the future they have planned their careers. The largest percentage said they plan 2-4 years into the future (29%) followed by a year (20%). 15% plan five years (or more) years ahead and the same percentage plan months ahead.

The survey was conducted in January 2025, gathered insights from 1,584 global participants on workplace music attitudes and policies.

Job role

In terms of job role, C-suite and senior level professionals were likely to plan 2-4 years ahead, or 5+ years. While many mid level and entry level employees plan ahead, many also admitted they do not plan at all.

The survey also asked workers to pick the words that describe their feelings about their professional future, and the most common feelings were excitement (39%), hope (38%), and optimism (38%). However, 30% said they felt uncertain, and 24% said they felt anxious.

Continuing with themes of emotional intelligence, survey respondents were also asked about how fast they regain their sense of hope after a setback at work. 30% said they bounce back within a few hours, and for 26% it only takes a day – 22% recover immediately. 13% feel better after a week, and 9% it takes longer.

New career

Respondents were also asked if they would be happy if they were still in the same job in 10 years. 57% said no while 43% said they would. The most likely career level to say they would not be happy were mid level executives (60%), and C-suite executives were the most likely to say they would be happy to stay in their current role (48%).

Generational divides

The generational differences from the findings are interesting, with Baby Boomers planning their career the furthest ahead compared to Gen Zs who are only planning 1-2 years ahead. The generation differences on how far ahead they are planning their career, as well as other differences in outlook are drawn out from the data.

In terms of future prospects, Gen Z were the most hopeful, Millennials felt positive but also frustrated, and Gen X were the most likely to feel anxious. The same pattern was repeated across entry level, mid level and senior employees.

The survey also asked people whether they felt more or less positive about their professional future than they had a few years ago. Gen Z and Millennials’ outlook had improved the most, but while many Gen X workers felt more positive, this was the only age group where people were more likely to feel worse than have remained the same.

There were variations noted for recovery time: 36% of Gen Z feel better within a few hours time, making them the fastest to recover. Gen X were the most likely to take longer than a week to recover (11%) and were also the most likely to take a day (29%). Again, a similar pattern is reflected across career levels, perhaps because more established professionals who are likely to be older may deal with greater responsibility at work.




GANGSTA STATE

‘Extreme brutality’: UN, aid groups warn Haiti unrest soaring



By AFP
February 25, 2025


Thousands in Haiti have fled violence in recent weeks, joining an estimated million of displaced people in the country - Copyright AFP TORSTEN BLACKWOOD

Haiti has seen a “wave of extreme brutality” in recent weeks, with numerous killings and thousands forced to flee their homes, a consortium of UN agencies, NGOs and donors is warning.

“Entire families have been brutally wiped out in their homes, while others, including children and babies, have been shot dead as they tried to escape,” the group, organized by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said in a statement Monday.

Gangs control large portions of Haiti, including the majority of the capital, and violence has soared despite the arrival of hundreds of police personnel as part of a Kenya-led multinational security support mission (MSS).

“We are deeply alarmed and dismayed by the unacceptable and inhuman intensity of the violence raging in Haiti, a wave of extreme brutality which, since the end of January, has resulted in the loss of many lives,” the group said.

It said 4,000 people had been forced to flee the Kenscoff area of the capital, along with 2,000 more from the Delmas, Port-au-Prince and Petion-ville municipalities.

The group called on “all parties involved in this violence to break this cycle of terror and put an end to this uncontrolled spiral.”

Fresh attacks occurred late Monday nights, said residents of two neighborhoods in the capital.

“They set fire to our house with my father inside. It’s cruel,” a resident who managed to flee the area told AFP.

Another said the attack came early in the morning as vigilante security forces were resting. “The bandits attacked us by surprise,” she said.

Haiti, the poorest nation in the Americas, has long been mired in instability, but conditions severely worsened early last year when gangs launched coordinated attacks in the capital to force then-prime minister Ariel Henry to resign.

He handed power to an interim government, which along with the MSS has struggled to wrest back control from the gangs.

The UN-approved MSS has around 1,000 personnel from six nations, though mostly from Kenya, out of 2,500 initially expected. One Kenyan officer died after being shot on Sunday.

UN officials have repeatedly called for more support for the mission and a surge of resources to the nation, where an estimated one million people have been displaced by the violence.

Last week, the UN launched an appeal for over $900 million in aid for Haiti this year, a sharp increase from 2024, which was only 44-percent funded.

The UN recorded 5,600 deaths linked to gang violence last year, in a 20-percent increase compared to 2023, as well as 1,500 kidnappings, nearly 6,000 gender-based violence cases, 69 percent of which were instances of sexual assault.

On Monday, Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime said authorities were “at war” with the gangs.

“We are relentlessly committed to enabling the police, the army and MSS to put gangs out of action,” he promised in a speech to mark his 100 days in office.


Nauru sells citizenship to fund climate change mitigation


By AFP
February 25, 2025


Nauru was once one of the wealthiest places on the planet but lucrative supplies of phosphate deposits have long dried up
 - Copyright AFP TORSTEN BLACKWOOD


Laura CHUNG

Pacific microstate Nauru is selling citizenship to fund its retreat from rising seas, President David Adeang told AFP, opening a contentious “golden passport” scheme as other climate financing runs dry.

The low-lying island nation of around 13,000 residents is planning a mass inland relocation as creeping seas start to eat away at its fertile coastal fringe.

It will drum up funding by selling passports to foreigners for US$105,000 each, despite fears such schemes are ripe for criminal exploitation.

“For Nauru it is not just about adapting to climate change, but about securing a sustainable and prosperous future for generations to come,” Adeang said.

“This is about more than survival. It is about ensuring future generations have a safe, resilient and sustainable home. We are ready for the journey ahead.”

The island republic sits on a small plateau of phosphate rock in the sparsely populated South Pacific.

With a total landmass of just 21 square kilometres (eight square miles), it is one of the world’s smallest nations.

Unusually pure phosphate deposits — a key ingredient in fertiliser — once made Nauru one of the wealthiest places, per capita, on the planet.

But these supplies have long dried up, and researchers today estimate 80 percent of Nauru has been rendered uninhabitable by mining.

What little land Nauru has left is threatened by encroaching tides — scientists have measured sea levels rising 1.5 times faster than global averages.



– Golden passports –



Existing climate funding efforts are “not sufficient” to address the challenge, said Edward Clark, who runs Nauru’s new Economic and Climate Resilience Citizenship Program.

“Debt financing places an undue burden on future generations and there is not enough aid,” he told AFP.

Nauru’s government expects to reap US$5.7 million in the programme’s first year, equating to around 66 successful applications, Clark said.

It hopes this will gradually increase to US$43 million -– or about 500 successful applications — which would account for almost 20 percent of total government revenue.

Nauru officials believe 90 percent of the population will eventually need to move to higher ground.

The first phase of this mass relocation is estimated to cost more than US$60 million.

To pay the bill, Nauru has pinned its hopes on the new citizenship-by-investment programme.

Clark said it was a kind of “innovation”.

“It is well known that developing climate-vulnerable countries are disproportionately impacted by climate change, and there is therefore an urgent need to ensure they disproportionately benefit from climate innovation,” he said.

Nations such as Nauru “have both a need and a right to be prosperous”, Clark added.

Nauru claims its passport will provide visa-free entry into 89 countries, including the United Kingdom, Ireland, United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong.



– A ‘pioneering’ fix? –



More than 60 different nations offer some form of migration for investment schemes, Australia’s Lowy Institute has found.

Pacific nations such as Vanuatu, Samoa and Tonga have all dabbled in selling passports, according to the think tank.

Australian National University expert Henrietta McNeill said while these schemes helped bolster government revenue, they were also prone to exploitation.

She said criminals could use these documents to evade law enforcement, launder money or exploit visa-free entry rules.

A previous Nauru attempt to sell passports ended in disaster.

In 2003, Nauru officials sold citizenship to Al-Qaeda members who were later arrested in Asia, according to Australian broadcaster ABC.

Clark said this time Nauru would only offer passports to like-minded investors that passed “the strictest and most thorough due diligence procedures”.

“This programme isn’t just about acquiring another passport,” he said.

“It’s about joining a community dedicated to pioneering solutions for global challenges.”

Nauru has accepted millions of dollars from the Australian government since 2012 for housing migrants who had sought asylum in Australia.

But the scheme was gradually scaled back following 14 detainee deaths, multiple suicide attempts and at least six referrals to the International Criminal Court.

Nauru still held 87 people as of August 31, 2024, according to latest Australian government figures.



Trump proposes $5 million 'gold card' for wealthy investors, including Russians

By Andrew Naughtie with AP
Published on 26/02/2025 - 

The US's existing investor visa has already been flagged domestically as a fraud risk, but the new proposal did not come with any details of enhanced vetting for applicants.

US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he plans to offer a "gold card" granting wealthy applicants a path to citizenship at a price of $5 million (€4.76 million), replacing an investor visa that has existed for 35 years.

Describing the people he wanted to see apply, Trump told an Oval Office press conference: "They'll be wealthy and they'll be successful, and they'll be spending a lot of money and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot of people, and we think it's going to be extremely successful."

Asked whether Russian oligarchs would be eligible for the gold card, Trump responded: “Yeah, possibly. I know some Russian oligarchs that are very nice people.”

Two men publicly flogged in Indonesia for gay sex

LGBTQ RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS


By AFP
February 27, 2025


A man, found guilty of sexual relations with another man under the strict Islamic sharia law, is publicly flogged in Banda Aceh - Copyright AFP Zain JAAFAR

Two men were publicly flogged in Indonesia’s conservative Aceh province on Thursday after they were found guilty of sexual relations by a court operating under strict Islamic law.

While gay sex is not illegal elsewhere in Indonesia — the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation — it is outlawed in Aceh, which imposes a version of sharia, the Islamic legal code.

The flogging began before midday at a park in provincial capital Banda Aceh, with one man accused of instigating the relationship lashed 82 times and the second man 77 times.

Both were caned with a rattan stick as dozens watched on, according to an AFP journalist present.

The men’s sentences were reduced by three lashes for three months spent in detention.

In November, locals raided a rented room in Banda Aceh and found the two men — both students at a local university — together.

They were taken to sharia police for the alleged crime of sexual relations.

Rights advocates slammed the punishment as part of a wider trend of discrimination against LGBTQ people in the country.


“The intimidation, discrimination and abuses against LGBTQ individuals in Aceh are like a bottomless well,” Andreas Harsono, Indonesia researcher at Human Rights Watch, told AFP.

“The Aceh government should learn from these mistakes and review their Islamic criminal code.”

Amnesty International called the punishment a “horrifying act of discrimination” against the two men.

“Intimate sexual relations between consenting adults should never be criminalised, and no one should be punished because of their real or perceived sexual orientation,” Amnesty’s Deputy Regional Director Montse Ferrer said in a statement.


Two other men were flogged at the same park 34 and eight times respectively on Thursday for online gambling, according to prosecutors.

Medical services were on standby for all the men.

Caning retains strong support among Aceh’s population as a common punishment for a range of offences that include gambling, drinking alcohol and adultery.

The region started using religious law after it was granted special autonomy in 2001, an attempt by the central government to quell a long-running separatist insurgency.
























Rights decline but bright spots in South Asia: Freedom House

The non-profit group has planned layoffs after President Donald Trump froze money aimed at democracy promotion.

By AFP
February 26, 2025


A voter casts his ballot at a polling station during Bhutan's general elections in January 2024 - Copyright AFP/File Money SHARMA

Shaun TANDON

Freedom declined around the world last year with authoritarians solidifying their grip, but South Asia led a series of bright spots, Freedom House said Wednesday in its annual report.

The Washington-based pro-democracy research group elevated two countries to the status of “free” — Senegal, where the opposition triumphed after the outgoing president’s attempt to delay elections was defeated, and Bhutan, the Himalayan kingdom which consolidated a transition to democracy with competitive polls.

Tiny Bhutan gained the distinction of being the only South Asian country classified as free. But others in the region made strong gains in the index without changing categories — Bangladesh, where iron-fisted leader Sheikh Hasina fled in the face of a revolt, and Sri Lanka, where Anura Kumara Dissanayake was elected president on an anti-corruption platform after breaking the stranglehold of the two long-dominant parties.

The largest score improvement in the index, which tracks both countries and territories, was in Indian-administered Kashmir, which held elections for the first time since the Hindu nationalist government in New Delhi revoked the Muslim-majority region’s special status in 2019.

But Freedom House said India as a whole saw further deterioration as it pointed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s efforts to gain influence over judicial appointments. The group downgraded the world’s largest democracy from “free” to “partly free” in 2021.

Yana Gorokhovskaia, the co-author of the report, said it was the 19th consecutive year that freedom fell on a global level, but that 2024 was especially volatile due to the high number of elections.

“The big picture is that this was another year of the same trajectory of a global decline in freedom but because of all the elections, it was more dynamic than previous years,” she said.

She said that both Bangladesh and Syria, where Islamist-led fighters toppled longtime strongman Bashar al-Assad in December, saw immediate improvements in civil liberties — but that it would be a longer road to see gains in political representation.

Political rights largely “depend on institutions. And those are easy to destroy but very hard to build up,” she said.

– Four countries become ‘not free’ –


A rare bright spot in the Middle East was Jordan, which was upgraded from “not free” to “partly free.” Freedom House pointed to reforms that allowed more competitive elections in the kingdom.

On the other hand, four countries were downgraded from “partly free” to “not free” — Kuwait, Niger, Tanzania and Thailand.

Thailand — which has repeatedly shifted in the Freedom House categories — saw a court disband the party which won the most votes in elections and then dismiss the prime minister from the second-ranking party after an ethics complaint by senators backed by the powerful military.

Kuwait’s emir disbanded parliament after elections, while in Tanzania, Freedom House pointed to a crackdown on protesters under President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

Niger came under full grip of the military after a 2023 coup ousted elected president Mohamed Bazoum.

Tunisia, El Salvador and Haiti also saw steep declines. The only country given a perfect 100 score on freedom was Finland, with New Zealand, Norway and Sweden all right behind at 99.

Freedom House, founded in 1941 with bipartisan US support, receives US government funding but is independently administered. The non-profit group has planned layoffs after President Donald Trump froze money aimed at democracy promotion.


EU was born to ‘screw’ US, Trump says

TRUMP'S PARANOID  GEOPOLITICS 

By AFP
February 26, 2025


US President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House - Copyright AFP Roman PILIPEY

Shaun Tandon and Beiyi Seow

President Donald Trump said Wednesday that the European Union was born to “screw” the United States, laying bare his hostility to the longtime US partner as he detailed new tariffs.

Trump’s month back in the White House has been marked by soaring friction within the Western bloc, with the United States abruptly shifting gears on support for Ukraine and Germany’s likely next leader urging Europe to seek defense independence from Washington.

“Look, let’s be honest, the European Union was formed in order to screw the United States,” Trump told reporters as he gathered his cabinet for the first time.

“That’s the purpose of it, and they’ve done a good job of it. But now I’m president,” Trump said.

The United States for decades cheered on European integration, seeing the formation of the European Union in 1993 as a historic achievement to end conflict on a continent ravaged by two world wars.

Trump applauded Britain when it left the European Union and has taken a strident “America First” policy, vowing to pursue self-interest above any abstract concepts of partnership.

Trump said at his cabinet meeting that the European Union has “really taken advantage of us.”

The United States had a trade deficit to the 27-nation bloc of $235.6 billion last year, according to official US figures.

Asked if he had made a decision on tariff levels for the European Union, Trump added: “We’ll be announcing it very soon and it’ll be 25 percent, generally speaking.”

He said that cars would be among the products to be hit — grim news for Germany whose export-driven economy has been in a slump.

Trump has also slapped tariffs on US neighbors Canada and Mexico as well as rival China, citing issues including illegal immigration and fentanyl smuggling.



– EU meeting scrapped –



Trump, who has made the deportation of mostly non-Western undocumented immigrants a top priority, acknowledged his origins in Europe, saying wryly: “I guess I’m from there at some point a long time ago, right?”

But whatever the common heritage, tensions have risen sharply with the European Union on a series of issues starting with Ukraine.

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas was visiting Washington on Wednesday and had earlier announced that she would meet Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

The meeting was canceled, with a European Union spokesman citing “scheduling issues.” Trump, however, saw French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday and meets British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday.

On Monday, the United States sided with Russia and against nearly all European allies at the United Nations in backing a resolution that called for a swift end to the war without insisting on Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

Trump insisted Wednesday it was up to Europe, not the United States, to provide security guarantees to Ukraine, even as President Volodymyr Zelensky prepared to fly to Washington to sign an agreement giving US control of much of his country’s mineral wealth.

“We’re going to have Europe do that,” Trump said. “Europe is their next-door neighbor, but we’re going to make sure everything goes well.”

The winner of Germany’s election on Sunday, Friedrich Merz, is a longstanding supporter of the transatlantic alliance but has warned not to be under illusions about Trump.

Merz said that Europe must move quickly to “achieve independence” from the United States on defense matters.

Rubio, in an interview broadcast Wednesday with Fox News, said that the NATO alliance was “not in jeopardy” but that Europe needed to spend more on its own defense.

“We’re not saying do your own thing. We’re saying do more. It’s their continent, right?” he said.