Saturday, October 21, 2023

 The unsung hero of WW2: the De Havilland Mosquito

Norky celebrates the versatility and fighting capabilities of the ‘Mossie’ and remembers some of the wartime heroes of the RAF

THE RAF'S ANSWER THE GERMAN MESCHERSCHMIDT


If anyone is asked to name the most iconic allied aircraft of WW2, and of course if they had any interest at all, they may venture to suggest the Supermarine Spitfire, the Hawker Hurricane, the Avro Lancaster or even the Boeing B17.But I would throw my hat into the ring in support of the (Wooden Wonder) De Havilland Mosquito.

The Mossie was based on de Havilland’s Albatross airliner and was first proposed to the RAF as a fast light/medium bomber with no armament to save on weight. The lack of exterior gun turrets would also save on drag and be much less complicated and cheaper to produce.

The Mossie: light, fast and economical

The Air Ministry was at first sceptical about giving the go-ahead to a military aircraft with no defence capabilities. However, Geoffrey De Havilland was so confident with his new design that he put his own money and resources together and had the prototype built. During its first trials it proved to be faster than the Spitfire even though it was a much larger aircraft. The speed was not only the result of the lack of exterior drag, but it also had a lighter wooden frame, plywood skin and was propelled by two Rolls Royce Merlin engines.

The other benefits of constructing it out of wood was that it saved on the aluminium needed on other aircraft and it also employed the otherwise unused skills of joiners and cabinet makers, as there was very little call for drop-leaf dining tables, double adult wardrobes or wall-to-wall sideboards in wartime.

Versatile and in many ways superior to the Boeing B17

Its first flight was in November 1940 and the aircraft was commissioned into the RAF a year later. Because of its speed It was originally designed and used as a reconnaissance aircraft but it soon proved to be the most versatile of all aircraft in WW2. It was for a while the fastest aircraft in the sky, only passed by the later versions of the Spitfire and of course the German Messerschmitt ME262 jet fighter which was over 100 MPH quicker than all other aircraft but arrived when the German Luftwaffe had already been beaten.

The Mosquito was capable of carrying a similar bomb load as the huge American Boeing B17. The B17 was about the same size as our own Lancaster bomber but, being designed by Americans, it had to have lots and lots of guns.The later variants had 13: .50-inch Browning machine guns in six pairs, one at the front, back, underneath and top, two pairs in the waste, and even the radio operator had a single one to play with that fired upwards.

Eventually the B17 had a crew of ten and all their necessary big guns which meant that it had to sacrifice its bomb carrying capacity. To make use of all these guns, it had to be flown straight and level and in flying formation so that each aircraft could protect its neighbour. This also meant that it was a big lumbering target and vulnerable to both German fighters and to their excellent ground-based 88mm flak (flugabwehrkanone) guns, whereas the Mossie was too fast for the German fighters. Also, if they were shot down, there were only two potential casualties in the Mosquito but ten in the B17.

The most feared fighter

The two-man crew comprised the pilot and the navigator/bomb aimer.During the bomb runs, the bomb aimer had to crawl out into the Perspex bubble in the nose of the aircraft, which at times must have appeared like peering down into the jaws of hell while all the world was shooting back.The RAF carried out the night attacks while the Americans with their B17 defended with all their guns and the very capable Mustang P51 carried out daytime raids. The American P51 was yet another aircraft fitted with the Rolls Royce Merlin engine.

Eventually the full versatility of the Wooden Wonder was recognised, and the Perspex nose cone was removed and four Browning .303 machine guns and four 20-mm Hispano cannons were fitted. Almost overnight it became the most feared fighter and ground attack aircraft. It was also fitted with torpedoes, a six-pounder cannon, and rockets for its anti-shipping role.

In all, 7,781 were constructed between 1940 and 1950.

A special capacity for low-level flying

The role that the Mossie became best at was low-level target bombing. On many bombing raids it was used as marker and target spotter. Using its speed and low-level capabilities the crew would set off an hour or more after the main bombers and be over the target dropping different coloured bombs and flairs to show the target area before the main group arrived. The different colours denoted different target areas and were also to confuse the German defences who lit their own coloured flairs in the hope of confusing the allied bomb aimers.

The Mossie was also capable of flying 30 feet above the ground, targeting and menacing several Gestapo headquarters in occupied France by dropping bombs through their front doors.

de Havilland Mosquito and Lancaster bomber

Celebrating the Mosquito’s role in the Dambusters Raid

I took these two photos during the Dambusters 40th year celebrations over the Ladybower reservoir in 1983. The Lancaster bomber was used on the actual raid but the reason the Mosquito was at the celebrations was because that was the aircraft in which they practised their low-level flying.

This was the best free air show I have ever attended. There was an air-sea rescue demonstration, a flyover by a Hercules transport, the present 617 squadron flying their Tornadoes, and a very impressive Red Arrows display.

Guy Penrose Gibson: a complicated hero

Guy Penrose Gibson VC, DSO & Bar, DFC & Bar, LOM (USA) was the wing commander of the Dambusters Raid and proved himself to be an extremely brave and capable flyer, though unfortunately by many accounts he had a personality that was easy to dislike. Apparently, he was pompous, arrogant and treated his subordinates with disdain. He was killed while flying a Mosquito.

Following the Dambusters Raid, he became an overnight hero and was paraded around Canada and the USA for a year. On his return to active duty, he was posted to the elite 627 (pathfinder) squadron. According to the book Mosquito Men by David Price, published by Head of Zeus in 2022, he was given orders not to put himself in danger of capture, but being the character he was, there was no way he was going to be left out and, much to the surprise of the other target-marker crews, he was to be the flight co-ordinator for a forthcoming raid on Mönchengladbach.

His time away from combat activities and his arrogance in assuming he was up to the very complicated task of marking three targets simultaneously were likely to have been instrumental in his downfall. He crashed his plane in Steenbergen in the Netherlands during the return flight that he should not have been on. However, his death ensured his legacy as the brave, stiff upper lip, never say die British gentleman that many people will still regard as a hero.

Aircraft and airmen heroically defying nature

There were many other heroes in the RAF of course, one being the aircraft Mosquito LR 503 F for Freddie. It was flown on 213 missions in WW2 and survived, only to crash a few days after VE day.The pilot, F/LT Maurice Briggs DFC, and navigator, John C. Baker DFC & Bar, were carrying out low-level celebratory flights in aid of war bonds in Calgary, Canada, when they got it wrong and hit the flagpole on the control tower. F for Freddie was completely destroyed and both the crew were killed.

It takes a special person to fly an aircraft into the teeth of the enemy, men like Billy Bishop credited with 72 victories, George F. Beurling with 31 victories and of course the most famous of them all, Sir Douglas Bader with 22 victories.

These flyers don’t have a tree to hide behind or a hole to hide in. They are in the sky where at some point they are bound to be detected. Therefore, not only is the enemy on the ground hell bent on shooting them out of the sky, but nature is not really on their side either, for it has dictated for millions of years that if you don’t have feathers you shouldn’t be up there at all.

World Investment Forum 2023 ends with strong call for greater private and public investment

ABU DHABI, 21st October, 2023 (WAM) – UNCTAD's 8th World Investment Forum came to a close on 20th October in Abu Dhabi with a powerful call to public and private investors to play a pivotal role in reshaping the world economy, and seize the emerging opportunities offered by the energy transition, transformation of the agrifood and health sectors and the changing solutions for sustainable development.

The week-long event saw the convergence of 8,000 participants, including government officials, international organizations, policymakers, 700 CEOs and investors, sovereign wealth funds, sustainable stock exchanges and key capital markets actors.

Held against the backdrop of a fragmented global economy, the forum addressed the profound impact on trade and investment, with foreign direct investment experiencing a continued downturn as data from the first half of 2023 highlighted.

UNCTAD Deputy Secretary-General Pedro Manuel Moreno said the downturn “is of much concern as less investment means less economic growth and fewer means to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals – the SDGs.”

Notably, small island developing states, exemplified by the presence of Fiji's Deputy Prime Minister Manoa Kamikamica, called for the leveraging of blended financing and other “derisking” solutions to tackle funding shortages in countries that face debt distress, the challenging international investment climate, tightening financing conditions and persistent institutional and infrastructure shortcomings.

Foreign direct investment and COP28
In a bid to include the investment perspective in COP28 deliberations and finance a just transition, a call was made to bring investor conversations from the forum into discussions at the forthcoming climate summit, as countries prepare their new national climate action plans by 2025.

New investment policy instrument
The forum also unveiled a suite of new investment policy instruments, including the identification of 50 SDG model special economic zones, the launch of a multi-stakeholder platform on international investment agreements reform, and a collaboration with the UN World Tourism Organization to establish guiding principles for sustainable tourism investment.

Partnerships with UNCTAD to drive investment in developing countries
In addition, the forum saw the announcement of several strategic partnerships. These include collaborations with the African Sovereign Investors Forum, regional partnerships for sustainability reporting in Asia, the Gulf region and Eurasia, and an agreement between the stock exchanges of Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand to launch a central sustainability platform for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations region.

To kickstart investment, the forum introduced two new donor-funded technical assistance programmes. First, a funding partnership with the German International Climate Initiative and GIZ, the German development agency, to support sustainability reporting and climate disclosure in developing countries.

Second, a 2.8 million Euro partnership between Europe, the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States and UNCTAD, aimed at bolstering the capacity for investment facilitation in Angola, Gambia, Nigeria, Suriname, Vanuatu, Zimbabwe and the wider African, Caribbean and Pacific group of countries.

This partnership will provide essential support through digital government tools such as information portals and single windows, streamlining administrative procedures for investors and fostering inclusive development. The project, set to run from October 2023 to September 2025, reflects a commitment to advancing investment facilitation and contributing to the SDGs.

The 9th World Investment Forum will take place in 2025.

Tariq Al Fahaam
‘Embrace discomfort’ to save planet says N Macedonia pioneer

By AFP
October 21, 2023

Going back to the land: Dimche Ackov inside his circular home 
made from clay - Copyright AFP Hector RETAMAL

Darko DURIDANSKI

One day Dimche Ackov had enough of the stress and pollution of urban life and chucked in his job and headed out into the North Macedonia countryside for a fresh start.

Nearly 10 years later, Ackov has channelled his burnout into a fully-fledged mission to educate people about living closer to nature.

His home, constructed entirely from locally-sourced, natural materials, is now a kind of workshop and school, where hundreds visit every year to learn the ways of sustainable living.

“When I came here to live this way, I didn’t have any knowledge. I started to research natural building and I saw that those workshops for natural building were very expensive,” said Ackov, who lives near the former industrial town of Veles, once branded one of the most polluted in the world.

“I promised myself that if I ever learn to build those houses, I will share that knowledge for free.”

The journey has not been without its pitfalls, with a steep learning curve.

“I didn’t even know what a hoe was,” the dreadlocked Ackov said of his tentative attempts to live off the land.

But the effort paid off, and Ackov built himself a beehive-shaped home from bags of soil that is cosy in winter and cool in summer. It has its own well, solar panels, vegetable garden and a fridge made from clay.



– ‘Make one small change’ –




To share the knowledge he has accumulated along the way, Ackov has hosted more than 40 workshops in the last eight years.

After the workshops many people “see the environment with different eyes”, he told AFP. “Then you can’t destroy it anymore. You feel a part of it.”

Ackov believes in embracing the “discomfort” of living in nature.

The goal is “tĐľ give up something harmful, to make one small change. If today, millions of people don’t take a plastic bag, a huge change will be made,” he said.

Tiny North Macedonia, with a population of only 1.8 million people, is facing some steep environmental challenges.

Air pollution, inadequate waste treatment and illegal logging are major problems.

A recent international study found it had some of the worst air pollution in Europe, with almost two-thirds of people living in areas with more than four times the World Health Organization guidelines for dangerous air particles.

Despite the hurdles, Ackov believes “now is the time to fix what was damaged before”.

“We are now small streams, but we will all get together in one river and make huge changes. I am a big optimist, otherwise I wouldn’t live this way.”

 

Irish-linked spyware used in brazen attacks - report

IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,

Intellexa develops digital surveillance software

At a glance

  • The Irish-linked Intellexa alliance has been accused of letting its spyware "run wild across the world"

  • It is understood the government is to investigate Irish-registered affliate companies

  • A report from Amnesty International claims the Predator surveillance tool has been used in "brazen" attacks against journalists, politicians and civilians

  • The human rights body are calling on multiple governments to conduct investigations and revoke all export licences issued to Intellexa

  • Published

The Irish government is set to investigate a digital surveillance alliance that has been accused of letting its smartphone spyware "run wild across the world", BBC News NI understands.

It comes after Intellexa Limited and its parent company Thalestris were named in a damning report by a leading human rights body., external

The firms are registered at a building in north Dublin and are part of a wider Israeli group that sells Predator intelligence software.

According to Amnesty International, Predator is "invasive sypyware" that has been used in "brazen" attempted hacking attacks against politicians and journalists.

It can be used to turn a smartphone into a surveillance tool and has serious “human rights implications", Amnesty said.

The report has called on the Irish government, and others, to investigate and increase regulation on spyware firms.

The alliance, Amnesty said, was “a complex and often changing group of companies”, which advertised itself as “EU-based and regulated”, but had "done nothing to limit who is able to use this spyware and for what purpose".

In July, US officials placed Intellexa on a blacklist, external after determining its surveillance tools posed a threat to national security and foreign policy.

The Dublin-registered Intellexa office was set up in 2019, according to a European Parliament briefing paper.

Amnesty’s report called on Irish and other European governments to "immediately revoke all marketing and export licences issued to the Intellexa alliance”.

The report also called for governments to transparently investigate the alliance's practices and to enforce legislation "that requires all corporate actors to respect human rights".

'Robust' system in place

It is understood the Oireachtas (Irish parliament) justice committee will hold a hearing into the issue in January 2024.

A spokesperson for the Department of Justice said investigations were "a matter for the relevant competent authority" - the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (DETE) - and it would "not be appropriate" to comment on a possible hearing.

DETE said "while the company in question is an Irish registered company", it has not applied for a license for export authorisation.

The department also insisted that the Republic of Ireland has a "robust" export control licensing and compliance system in place.

Neither government department would respond to direct claims or further recommendations found in the report, citing the nature of any such investigation would be deemed sensitive.

IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,

It is claimed that Predator software can give unfettered access to a device's microphone, camera and data

What is Predator?

Amnesty has said that once a device was infiltrated with Predator software, the user had unfettered access to its microphone and camera and all its data, while the target was entirely unaware.

This sort of spyware is typically sold to governments for legitimate intelligence operations, however there are concerns it has been abused, as is claimed to have happened in the case of the Greek Watergate scandal.

A new report from the human rights body, in partnership with European Investigative Collaborations (EIC), claims the software has been used in "zero-click attacks" - meaning it can infiltrate a device without the user having clicked on a link.

It said those targeted included President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola, President of Taiwan Tsai Ing-Wen, French MEP Pierre Karleskind and several United States politicians.

IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,

The report claims President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola was targeted by the spyware

'Undermine human rights'

Amnesty has accused several EU governments of failing to thoroughly regulate Intellexa-linked companies.

"Instead, they are lining their pockets and ignoring the serious human rights implications at stake,” the report added.

"Intellexa alliance's products have been found in at least 25 countries across Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa, and have been used to undermine human rights, press freedom, and social movements across the globe.”

Multiple companies linked to Intellexa have been asked by the BBC for comment on the report's findings, but none of them have responded.

Intellexa Ltd is part of a complex international web of companies either fully or partly controlled by the Israeli businessman Tal Dilian.

On his website, Mr Dilian said Intellexa "developed and integrated technologies empowering law enforcement agencies and intelligence agencies to collect and analyse data in the most advanced methods”.

Intellexa has also been criticised in Ireland by European Parliament member Barry Andrews, who asked the Oireachtas Justice Committee in August to investigate the firm.

"I completely agree with the report by Amnesty International and applaud the work that they have done here - and, of course, I agree completely with the report, especially when it says that spyware is fundamentally incompatible with human rights," Mr Andrews told BBC News NI.

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The Fianna Fáil politican added: "I believe that the Irish government are beginning to take this seriously... I look forward to engaging with the justice committee on this as soon as it is on their agenda and I feel it should be much sooner rather than any later."

Amnesty International said it had also reached out to the entities involved, but received no response, while the European Investigative Collaborations network did hear from the main shareholders of the Nexa Group – part of the Intellexa Alliance.

It said the alliance no longer existed and its entities had “scrupulously respected export regulations”.


World needs US$ 360 billion in investment per year to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment by 2030: UN

ABU DHABI, 21st October, 2023 (WAM) – The world needs an additional US$ 360 billion in investment per year to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment by 2030, according to new UN report

Launched by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) and the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA), the UN Women and UN DESA in Abu Dhabi Friday, the “Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The gender snapshot 2023”, provides a comprehensive analysis of the current state of gender equality across all 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and highlights prevailing trends, gaps, and recent setbacks on the journey towards achieving gender equality by 2030.

“The gender snapshot 2023” underscores the urgent need for concrete efforts to accelerate progress towards gender equality by 2030, revealing that an additional US$ 360 billion per year is needed to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment across key global goals. The report also includes calls for an integrated and holistic approach, greater collaboration among stakeholders, sustained funding, and policy actions to address gender disparities and empower women and girls worldwide, concluding that failure to prioritize gender equality now could jeopardize the entire 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.''

This year’s report includes sex-disaggregated data on the intersections of gender and climate change for the first time, and projects that by mid-century, under a worst-case climate scenario, climate change may push up to 158.3 million more women and girls into poverty (16 million more than the total number of men and boys).

Further facts and figures highlighted in the report include:

Under a worst-case climate scenario, food insecurity is projected to affect as many as 236 million more women and girls, compared to 131 million more men and boys, due to climate change.
No country is within reach of eradicating intimate partner violence, and only 27 countries have comprehensive systems to track and make budgetary allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment.
The number of women and girls in conflict-affected contexts has risen significantly, with catastrophic consequences. In 2022, the number of women and girls living in such contexts reached 614 million, 50 per cent higher than the number in 2017.
Globally, at current rates of progress, an estimated 110 million girls and young women will be out of school in 2030.
The labour and earnings gap remains persistently high. For each dollar men earn in labour income globally, women earn only 51 cents. Only 61.4 per cent of prime working age women are in the labour force, compared to 90 per cent of prime working age men.

Tariq Al Fahaam
UK
Sunak’s retreat from Net Zero will be disastrous for both consumers and the planet. Can Labour reverse it?

Dorothy Smith deplores the Tories' back-tracking on crucial green policies

by  Dorothy Smith
21-10-2023 
in Environment, Politics, World


Rampion Wind Farm in the English Channel. Photo by Nicholas Doherty on Unsplash

In a welcome intervention at Labour’s recent conference, Shadow Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband set out plans for Britain’s clean energy future. By contrast, the speech by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak two weeks earlier (hastily arranged following leaks) had announced a “watering down” of the government’s green policies.

Fellow Tory Zac Goldsmith considered this abnegation of responsibility “a moment of shame”. The government had, in fact, already shown its true colours by signalling that it would grant hundreds more North Sea drilling licences.

To reach its net zero target, the UK needs to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels, which still make up 75% of our energy usage overall. Over 40% of our electricity came from fossil fuels in 2022. After a summer of extreme heat and wild-fires around the world, it beggars belief that the Prime Minister should take such a step, whether for ideological or electoral reasons, and should claim, falsely, that his measures would ease the burden on consumers.

Delay of ban on sale of new diesel and petrol cars

The UK car industry, heavily dependent upon trade with the EU, has been struggling since the Brexit referendum of 2016. The change announced by Sunak to delay the ban of new diesel and petrol cars from 2030 to 2035 will remove the incentive for consumers to make early purchase of electric cars. This is a blow to UK car makers like Jaguar, which have switched investment plans to EVs only.

Despite this, two days after Sunak’s announcement, the Department for Business and Trade confirmed that its “sales quota scheme”, requiring manufacturers to ensure that at least 22% of vehicles sold are EVs, will still be implemented from January 2024, with an expected target of 80% by 2030. If they fail, companies will face fines of up to £15,000 per car.

The lack of funding and guidance to local authorities from central government for the roll out of the charging infrastructure is yet another factor holding back demand for EVs.

Weakening the plan for phasing out gas boilers

The second item on Sunak’s agenda was a significant dilution of the 2035 target for a ban on new gas boilers, down to only an 80% phase-out and a delay of the ban on new oil boilers from 2026 to 2035. A fifth of households will be exempted altogether. The UK already lags behind Europe on this and the 2035 phaseout of new gas boilers was meant to provide an incentive for industry to come up with cheaper, smaller versions of electric heat pumps. This has failed to materialise. There are also major questions about how to manage the gas network viably and safely if there are fewer consumers using it.

Although Sunak announced a 50% increase in the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grants, limiting the change-over plan will simply reduce the incentive for consumers to change, and is likely to further delay investment in innovative alternative solutions.

Ending the UK’s dependence on gas heating is a considerable challenge. A comprehensive plan by government and industry is required for de-carbonising residential heating. Labour has also yet to indicate how it plans to achieve this.

Cancelation of landlords’ obligation to insulate


Insulation is often the “poor relation” when it comes to energy policy, despite being a “win-win” in policy terms. It delivers warmer houses, cheaper energy bills for consumers and less pollution of the planet. Sunak nevertheless saw fit to cancel energy efficiency regulations for the private rental sector, calling them “expensive insulation upgrades” for landlords. Ed Miliband got this right: “When Rishi Sunak tells renters they should be forced to live in damp, cold homes and landlords don’t need to insulate them, that won’t cut bills, it will raise them.”

Wind auction failure

Adding insult to injury, Sunak’s U-turn on clean energy came hard on the heels of the failure of the UK’s latest subsidy auction for offshore wind contracts, when no bids were made. Greenpeace called it “the biggest disaster for clean energy in almost a decade”. The government had ignored industry warnings that because of problems in the supply chain linked to the war in Ukraine, the cost of offshore wind turbines had jumped sharply. Less wind power will cost consumers dearly, as once built, wind turbines can provide power at a fraction of the cost of plants dependent on expensive fossil fuel imports.

Sunak’s speech was criticised by the government’s own advisors, the Climate Change Committee (CCC), as damaging to achieving net zero and keeping bills high for both consumers and motorists. The UK was the first major economy to enshrine a 2050 net zero target in law. Sunak’s unwise retreat will make it harder for his government to play a part in persuading emerging markets to use renewables, rather than polluting fossil fuels, to fund their development, in the run up to the COP28 conference in Dubai in late November.

By contrast Labour’s plan, influenced by the Inflation Reduction Act in the US, is to double onshore wind (which has effectively been banned under the Tories) and treble solar power (both these technologies are relatively cheap and quick to build). They will quadruple offshore wind, and invest in nuclear, hydrogen, carbon capture, tidal power, de-carbonisation of heavy industry and home insulation. This will lessen the UK’s dependence on imported, polluting, fossil fuels, but will also require significantly more investment in the National Grid.

Labour has made it clear its plans will need to comply with its target to reduce debt as a share of national income after five years. Sunak promised “comprehensive new reforms to energy infrastructure” – but no details as yet. Sunak’s undermining of the UK’s net zero strategy will maintain the high dependency of UK consumers on imported natural gas (which is also used for a significant proportion of electricity production) and oil. The cost-of-living crisis was sparked off by high gas prices on global markets, following the outbreak of war in Ukraine. Both Conservatives and Labour need to spell out in more detail how net zero will be achieved – but perhaps it will take a change of government to ensure the UK stays on track to achieve its net zero targets, to bring down prices for energy consumers and to play its part in fighting global climate change.

 


Dorothy Smith
Dorothy has been involved in the energy and telecoms sectors for many years, working with EU institutions in Brussels. She was previously the private secretary to a Labour cabinet minister. Returning to the UK in 2005, she settled in a small village at the foot of the South Downs and is partner in a Whitehall-based think-tank focusing on public policy issues.