Sunday, May 23, 2021

Foreign aid arrives amid Israel-Hamas ceasefire

Palestinian security officers loyal to the Palestinian Authority check drivers' documents at gate of Kerem Shalom crossing, a main passage point for goods entering Gaza, in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah. File Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI | License Photo

May 22 (UPI) -- Humanitarian aid began to arrive in Gaza on Saturday, the day after a cease-fire began in the 11-day conflict between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas.

The Israel Security Cabinet agreed to the Egyptian-brokered deal on Thursday, which took effect Friday, with both sides of the conflict claiming victory.

Since the truce, Israel has reopened the Kerem Shalom crossing, which allowed various aid agency trucks Saturday to deliver medicine, food and fuel in to Gaza, hard hit by the conflict, BBC News reported.

Palestinian officials told the BBC the impoverished enclave -- also struggling with the COVID-19 pandemic -- will need tens of millions dollars to rebuild.

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The United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees added that it was seeking $38 million in aid to help with its focus on identifying and helping tens of thousands of displaced people.

The Israeli bombing on Al-Wahda Street on May 16 killed more than 40 Palestinians, and leveled or damaged every third building, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Across the Gaza Strip, bombings damaged thousands of buildings throughout the 11-day conflict.
RELATED Hundreds gather at Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C., to protest Gaza airstrikes



"The damage inflicted in less than two weeks will take years, if not decades to rebuild," Middle East Director for the International Committee of the Red Cross Fabrizio Carboni tweeted Friday. "Root causes must be addressed."

The fighting began May 10 as Hamas began firing rockets at Israel over intention to forcibly displace Palestinian families from their East Jerusalem homes. The Israel bombing campaign in response killed more than 230 people, and at least 12 people in Israel were killed by retaliatory Hamas rocket fire.

The United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, urging a "humanitarian pause" prior to the cease-fire, said fighting displaced some 75,000 people, including 47,000 seeking shelter in U.N. schools across Gaza and 28,700 staying with foster families.
RELATED U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan is up to 20% complete amid Gaza violence



Scenes from fighting in Israel, Gaza


Palestinians chant as they carry bodies of members of the Ezz-Al Din Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, during their funeral in Khan Younis in Gaza on Friday. Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI | License Photo

Turkey to ban plastic waste imported from Britain, Germany



A mound of recyclables in China. That country banned the importation of plastics in 2018, diverting much plastics waste to Turkey. UPI/Stephen Shaver | License Photo

May 19 (UPI) -- The Turkish government has banned the importation of most types of plastic waste.

The ban comes after a Greenpeace investigation revealed improper dumping of recyclables from Britain and Germany.

Turkey has been a popular destination for plastics after China banned importation in 2018. In its investigation, Greenpeace found plastic shopping bags from the United Kingdom in dumps and burned on beaches across the southern city of Adana.

Following the findings the Turkish Minister of Trade removed several polymers from the waste products that were allowed in the country.

Despite a recycling rate of only 12 percent, Turkey has been importing more plastic waste than any other country, 209,642 tons alone in 2020, including 30% of the total plastic waste exports from the United Kingdom. About 241 trucks of plastic waste come to Turkey every day from all over Europe, 20 times more than was imported in 2016.

Investigators found plastic packaging from Tesco, Asda, Co-op, Aldi, Sainsbury's, Lidl and Marks & Spencer discarded, left in bags or burned as well as plastics from retailers such as B&Q, Debenhams, Poundland and Spar.

Greenpeace called the images it obtained "shocking."


German plastics uncovered in the dump included bags from Rossmann, Snack Wurfel, Ja! and peach water packaging.

On the Mediterranean coast, researchers found scattered British plastic, including toilet paper wrappers.

"People have been appalled to see images of U.K. household waste dumped and burned in Turkey. The U.K. government must put a stop to our plastic waste impacting other countries," Sam Chetan-Welsh, the political campaigner at Greenpeace U.K. said.

In 2020, the U.K. exported nearly 198,000 tons of plastics.

 



New technology turns plastic trash into jet fuel



Plastic waste could one day be repurposed into jet fuel, according to a process outlined in a study published on Monday. Photo b
ayLeeRosario/Pixab

May 17 (UPI) -- Researchers at Washington State University have developed a new method for converting plastic waste into jet fuel.

The technique, detailed Monday in the journal Chem Catalyst, can be tweaked to turn plastic waste into a variety of in-demand hydrocarbon products.

Importantly, the conversion method is highly efficient, working at moderate temperatures and converting nearly 90 percent of the input material.

The technique is also fast, taking less than an hour from start to finish.

"In the recycling industry, the cost of recycling is key," lead researcher Hongfei Lin said in a news release.

"This work is a mile stone for us to advance this new technology to commercialization," said Lin, an associate professor of chemical engineering at the Washington State University.

The accumulation of plastics in ecosystems across the globe remains one of the planet's most pressing environmental problems.

As larger pieces of plastic trash -- like bags, bottles and synthetic clothing -- get broken down, these tiny pieces of plastic, or microplastics, can filter into bodies of water or get blown into the atmosphere and deposited in faraway places.

Research suggests tiny bits of plastic are being consumed by coral and mollusks, and are even being ingested by deep sea creatures living a few thousand feet below the ocean surface.

When plastic is discarded instead of recycled, it doubly harms the environment.

RELATED Plastic particles proliferate globally, spread by ocean waves and through the air

In addition to causing direct ecological harm, the discarded plastic ensures new plastic must be generated to meet commercial demands -- and plastic production remains a carbon intensive process.

Converting plastic waste into usable products can help shrink the plastic industry's carbon footprint.

Typically, recycled plastic is simply melted and remolded, but the recycling process reduces the plastic's quality and structural integrity.

Plastic waste can also be converted into usable chemicals, but conversion methods are currently too expensive and energy intensive. As a result, just 9 percent of plastic waste is recycled in the United States.

In the lab, scientists deployed a ruthenium on carbon catalyst and a common solvent to trigger the depolymerization process and turn plastic waste into the components used to make jet fuel.

The conversion technique worked at temperatures of approximately 428 degrees Fahrenheit, much lower than temperatures used for other conversion methods.

"Before the experiment, we only speculated but didn't know if it would work," Lin said. "The result was so good."

Researchers showed that by tweaking the conversion time and temperature, or the amount of catalyst used, they were able to fine-tune the process to yield desirable plastic-derived materials.

"Depending on the market, they can tune to what product they want to generate," Lin said. "They have flexibility. The application of this efficient process may provide a promising approach for selectively producing high-value products from waste polyethylene."

upi.com/7096720


Microbes could help remove microplastics from the environment




While larger plastics can, theoretically, be easily collected and disposed of, the bits they leave behind, called microplastics, are much harder to get out of the environment -- but researchers say biofilms could help to do it. File Photo by Jennifer Lavers/IMAS/EPA


April 28 (UPI) -- Researchers in Hong Kong have developed a new way to remove microplastics from the environment.

Their method uses biofilms, large mats of microorganisms, to trap microplastics, which can then be collected for processing and recycling.

On Wednesday, researchers presented the new technique to virtual attendees of the Microbiology Society's Annual Conference.

In the lab, scientists cultivated mats of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacteria species known to colonize microplastics. The bacteria species is quite common and adapted to a variety of environments.

When the biofilms colonized microplastics inside a bioreactor, researchers noted the tiny bits of plastics accumulate to form larger aggregates and sank to the bottom of the microbial mat.

"[This] allows convenient release of microplastics from the biofilm matrix, which is otherwise difficult and expensive to degrade, so that the microplastics can be later recovered for recycling," lead researcher Yang Liu, scientist at Hong Kong Polytechnic University, said in a news release.

The initial lab experiments showed that the microbial mat works as expected, but now scientists want to see if their method can perform in real world settings.

RELATED Plastic particles proliferate globally, spread by ocean waves and through the air

"We next plan to isolate and identify natural pro-biofilm forming bacterial isolates either from the sewage or from aquatic environments, where they display heightened abilities to colonize and form biofilms on microplastics," Liu said.

Eventually, researchers hope their technology can be deployed in wastewater treatment plants where it microplastics can be captured before they're carried into the ocean.

Previous surveys have found microplastic pollutant in a diversity of ecosystems.

RELATED Study: Mollusks have highest microplastics levels among seafood

Research suggests tiny bits of plastic are being consumed by coral and mollusks, and are even being ingested by deep sea creatures living a few thousand feet below the ocean surface.

Microplastics are formed from a variety of materials, including bags, bottles and synthetic clothing. When these larger items end up in the environment, they get broken down over time, releasing tiny bits of plastic into the environment.

Over time, many of these plastic particles filter into bodies of water. Some get blown into the atmosphere and deposited in faraway places, including mountain peaks and polar glaciers.

Biofilms are often the enemy of scientists and health professionals as the woven layers of microbes can protect harmful bacteria from antibiotics and other treatments.

But Liu and company hope their research will inspire other scientists to think about the potential advantages of biofilms for environmental cleanups and other applications.

"It is imperative to develop effective solutions that trap, collect, and even recycle these microplastics to stop the 'plastification' of our natural environments," Liu said.

New 'biodegradable' plastics actually

 degrade


Plastic modified by researchers, (L), breaks down after just three days in standard compost, (R), and breaks down entirely after two weeks, suggesting the new substance could be preferable to other plastics that biodegrade partially or not at all. Photo by Christopher DelRe/UC Berkeley


April 21 (UPI) -- Most plastics advertised as "biodegradable" aren't all that degradable. In fact, researchers estimate that most of these supposedly eco-friendly plastics end up in landfills and last just as long as forever plastics.

Scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a new method for composting biodegradable plastics -- one that actually works

Most compostable plastics are composed of a kind of polyester called polylactic acid, or PLA. In the lab, researchers deployed a combination of heat and water to degrade PLA plastics in record time.

The composting breakthrough, described Wednesday in the journal Nature, was enabled by the addition of polyester-eating enzymes during the plastic production process.


RELATED Scientists turn fish parts into environmentally friendly plastic

When exposed to heat and water, the enzymes free themselves from the surrounding polymer chains and begin munching away on PLA molecules. The enzymes turn the PLA into lactic acid, which is consumed by various microbes in the soil.

Other plastic degradation processes yield tiny plastic particles called microplastics. In recent years, surveys have found microplastic pollution in the organs of humans and animals, as well in some of the planet's most remote ecosystems.

The new composting method turns 98 percent of the PLA into simple molecules.

RELATED Products made from hemp-based plastics enter consumer market

The novel technology, which scientists have recently spun off into a start-up company, is years in the making.

One of the key innovations came in 2018, when researchers developed synthetic molecules called random heteropolymers, or RHPs, used to enwrap the plastic-eating enzymes and prevent them from falling apart during the plastic production process.

For the new study, researchers mixed thousands of these enzyme-enshrining RHPs with the plastic resin beads that jumpstart the plastic production process. Scientists liken the process to the addition of pigments to make colored plastics.

RELATED Spider silk, wood combination replicates material advantages of plastic

"If you have the enzyme only on the surface of the plastic, it would just etch down very slowly," co-author Ting Xu, professor of materials science and chemical engineering at Berkeley, said in a press release.

"You want it distributed nanoscopically everywhere so that, essentially, each of them just needs to eat away their polymer neighbors, and then the whole material disintegrates," Xu said.

Tests showed the addition of the nanoparticles did not impact the functionality of the plastic. The PLA material could still be melted and reformed into a variety of products, including extruded fibers.

In the lab, scientists degraded PLA fibers using different combinations of heat and water. At room temperature, 80 percent of the fibers degraded within a week. At 122 degrees Fahrenheit, all of the fibers degraded within six days.

Researchers suggest the plastics could be composted at municipal sites or at home.

"It turns out that composting is not enough -- people want to compost in their home without getting their hands dirty, they want to compost in water," Xu said.

"So, that is what we tried to see. We used warm tap water. Just warm it up to the right temperature, then put it in, and we see in a few days it disappears," she said.

Xu and her colleagues said they are now working on developing other types of enzyme nanoparticles than can be used to degrade other kinds of polyester materials.

Scientists in Japan develop decomposable plastic


Scientists in Osaka, Japan, say they have developed a new plastic that disintegrates at sea. File Photo by Keizo Mori/UPI | License Photo


April 7 (UPI) -- Japanese scientists say they have developed plastic that can disintegrate at sea within 30 days.

The Asahi Shimbun reported the plastic contains cassava, a raw material used to make tapioca, and cellulose found in wood pulp, originating from tropical climates.

The new material is the result of collaboration between an Osaka University-led engineering team and Japan Food Research Laboratories, according to the report.

The plant material is not expensive to make, scientists say. The starch and cellulose were dissolved in water, rolled out into a thin layer, and then turned into a transparent sheet after applying heat.

RELATED Scientists discover plastic-eating microbe

"We would first like to use it as food packaging materials, which are very familiar to people and are often contained in the waste in the sea," said Hiroshi Uyama, a professor of engineering at Osaka University. "I hope that this will be a part of the solution to the issue and raise the interest of people."

Japanese scientists also said the sheet, which measures about 100 micrometers in thickness, has twice the strength of plastics composed of polyethylene.

Marine microorganisms are key to decomposing the new plastic. When placed in seawater filled with microorganisms, the sheet had been torn apart in 30 days; the sheet was not destroyed in water with fewer microorganisms, however.

RELATED Researchers find new way to predict where ocean trash, seaweed will go

Regular plastic bags take about 20 years to decompose after being discarded into the ocean, and plastic bottles take as much as 450 years. About 8 million tons of plastic waste is thrown into the sea annually. The World Economic Forum has said micro-plastics would outweigh fish in oceans across the globe by 2050.

Japan is the second-biggest emitter of plastic waste per capita after the United States, according to The Guardian.

The country used to send 1.5 million tons of plastic waste to China annually, until Beijing banned waste imports in 2017.

Scientists turn plastic into moisture-

wicking textile



MIT engineers developed self-cooling fabrics from polyethylene, commonly used in plastic bags, that they say may be more sustainable than cotton and other common textiles. Photo by Svetlana Boriskina/MIT


March 15 (UPI) -- Scientists have developed a new strategy for turning plastic into wearable textiles. The breakthrough -- described Monday in the journal Nature Sustainability -- could help ease Earth's growing plastic pollution problem.

Attempts to make plastic textiles have previously faltered as a result of polyethylene's inability to wick away and evaporate moisture.

However, engineers at MIT have managed to weave polyethylene into fibers that absorb and evaporate water more quickly than cotton, nylon, polyester and other common textiles.

The authors of the new paper hope their technology will incentivize plastic recycling.


RELATED New radiation vest technology protects astronauts, doctors

"Once someone throws a plastic bag in the ocean, that's a problem," Svetlana Boriskina, mechanical engineer at MIT, told MIT News.

"But those bags could easily be recycled, and if you can make polyethylene into a sneaker or a hoodie, it would make economic sense to pick up these bags and recycle them," Boriskina said.

More than just a plastic pollution solution, researchers suggest plastic textiles could be more eco-friendly over the course of their life cycle than cotton and nylon textiles.

RELATED Scientists in Japan develop decomposable plastic

Polyethylene is the world's most common plastic. Its carbon-hydrogen molecules form Teflon-like chains that resist binding with water and other molecules.

"Everyone we talked to said polyethylene might keep you cool, but it wouldn't absorb water and sweat because it rejects water, and because of this, it wouldn't work as a textile," Boriskina said.

Researchers tried anyways, using standard textile manufacturing to turn polyethylene powder into thin fibers.

RELATED Plastic found in amphipods in Earth's deepest ocean trench

Scientists were surprised to find the fiber-fabrication process caused the polyethylene to become weakly hydrophilic -- attracting, not repelling, water molecules.

To create wearable textiles, researchers fed their fibers back into the extrude, fusing multiple fibers into threads that could woven together. The fused fibers yielded capillaries capable of absorbing and trapping moisture attracted to the thread's surface.

Both computer models and tweaks to the production process showed the thread's wicking abilities could be improved by altering its diameter and the arrangement of its fibers.

Though the material's wicking ability decreased after getting wet multiple times, scientists found that its wicking properties could be refreshed by both friction and UV light.

"You can refresh the material by rubbing it against itself, and that way it maintains its wicking ability," Boriskina said. "It can continuously and passively pump away moisture."

Researchers were able to color the threads by mixing colored particles with the polyethylene powder prior to the extrusion process. Authors of the new paper suggest the process is more eco-friendly than traditional textile dyeing processes.

Though the polyethylene fibers weakly attract and absorb water, they still don't bind with other molecules, which make them easier to clean -- saving energy that would be otherwise used to power longer, warmer wash cycles.

"It doesn't get dirty because nothing sticks to it," Boriskina said. "You could wash polyethyelene on the cold cycle for 10 minutes, versus washing cotton on the hot cycle for an hour."

Even if polyethylene textiles relied on newly produced plastic, scientists estimate the plastic-derived material would still be more eco-friendly than traditional textiles.

"Polyethylene has a lower melting temperature so you don't have to heat it up as much as other synthetic polymer materials to make yarn, for example," Boriskina said.

"Synthesis of raw polyethylene also releases less greenhouse gas and waste heat than synthesis of more conventional textile materials such as polyester or nylon. Cotton also takes a lot of land, fertilizer, and water to grow, and is treated with harsh chemicals, which all comes with a huge ecological footprint," Boriskina said.



20 companies behind more than half of global plastic waste, report says


Tuesday's report said single-use plastics account for the majority of plastic thrown away the world over: more than 130 million metric tons in 2019. File Photo by Pixabay/meineresterampe
Tuesday's report said single-use plastics "account for the majority of plastic thrown away the world over: more than 130 million metric tons in 2019. File Photo by Pixabay/meineresterampe

May 18 (UPI) -- According to an analysis Tuesday, a group of 20 companies are responsible for producing more than half of the world's single-use plastic waste that's helped accelerate the climate crisis and global pollution.

The Plastics Waste Makers index, created by the nonprofit Minderoo Foundation, said the companies produce a range of products, like face masks that have become mandatory during the COVID-19 pandemic, plastic shopping bags, water bottles and other items that are polluting oceans.

Tuesday's report said single-use plastics "account for the majority of plastic thrown away the world over: more than 130 million metric tons in 2019 -- almost all of which is burned, buried in landfill, or discarded directly into the environment."

"Of all the plastics, they are the most likely to end up in our ocean, where they account for almost all visible pollution, in the range of five to 13 million metric tons each year," the report states.

U.S.-based ExxonMobil and Dow and Chinese oil and gas company Sinopec are the ones producing the most single-use plastics. The study says those three companies alone account for 16% of all single-use plastic waste.

Other top producers of single-use plastics, according to the index, are Indorama Ventures, Saudi Aramco, PetroChina, LyondellBasell, Reliance Industries, Braskem and Alpek SA de CV.

Also on the list are Phillips 66 (No. 23), Chevron (27), Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation (31), Shell (51) and Petronas (83).

"Of approximately 300 polymer producers operating globally, a small fraction holds the fate of the world's plastics crisis in their hands," it says.

"Their choice to continue to produce virgin polymers, rather than recycled polymers, will have massive repercussions on how much waste is collected, is managed and leaks into the environment."

The report also blames investors and banks like the VanguardGroup, BlackRock and Capital Group for enabling companies by holding more than $300 billion in shares in their parent companies.

Tuesday's analysis calls for governments and world leaders to create policies encouraging the use of recyclable plastics, identify financial supporters of single-use plastic creators and seek laws that would penalize those who don't mitigate the waste.

 

Investigative report uncovers how 'dirty' soybeans enter supply chain

  
It was illegal to burn swaths of the rainforest after 2008 to make room to grow soybean crops. File Photo courtesy of Pixabay

May 19 (UPI) -- Farmers have illegally cleared swaths of the Amazon rainforest for years to grow soybeans that have made their way into so-called "clean" supply food chains throughout the word, an investigative report released Wednesday indicates.

The report -- a collaboration by the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism, Greenpeace's Unearthed journalism project and Repórter Brasil -- accused three major food companies of purchasing the soybeans and benefitting from illegal deforestation.

The investigation found that Chinese-owned Fiagril and multinational company Aliança Agrícola do Cerrado purchased soybeans from a Brazilian farmer who has been punished multiple times for burning down rainforest to make room to grow the crops. Three of the largest food companies -- Cargill, Bunge and Cofco -- then sourced the soybeans from the two businesses.

The report said Fiagril and Aliança have exported millions of tons of soybeans to countries around the world, including China, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands and Britain. The crop is often used in livestock feed.

"Deforestation of the Amazon has potentially dire environmental consequences for climate and biodiversity, with experts fearing the habitat might soon cross a point of no return," the report said. "Recent research suggests some parts now emit more carbon than they absorb."

The findings show how soybeans grown on illegally deforested land in the Amazon could enter the so-called "clean" international supply chains, despite a promise by major agribusinesses to only purchase the crop from areas in the Amazon deforested prior to 2008.

"Traders continue to make claims regarding sustainable soy while simultaneously turning a blind eye to suppliers like these that illegally deforest and set fires. And their customers continue to purchase from them," said Sarah Lake, a representative from Mighty Earth, an environmental group.

In December, a forecast published in the journal Environment, said the Amazon, the world's largest ecosystem, will collapse and largely become a dry, scrubby plain by 2064 because of climate change and deforestation.

Robert Walker, a University of Florida professor who wrote the report, told UPI that poverty and poor use of government resources ultimately drives much of the deforestation.

"The people there, they don't worry so much about biodiversity, the environment, when they have to worry about eating their next meal," he said.

The Amazon covers about 2.7 million square miles, a little less than the lower 48 U.S. states. But it has shrunk by about 20 percent since intense development began.


    Saturday, May 22, 2021


    BIPARTISANSHIP
    US Senate unanimously calls for Tigray ceasefire


    Resolution passes calling for end to hostilities and withdrawal of Eritrean troops from region

    A protester kneels during a demonstration against Ethiopia's war in Tigray. The US Senate resolution calls for the immediate cessation of hostilities in the region. Getty Images

    The US Senate has unanimously passed a non-binding resolution that calls for a ceasefire in Ethiopia’s Tigray region and the full withdrawal of Eritrean troops.

    James Risch of Idaho, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, introduced the resolution, which “calls for the immediate cessation of hostilities in the Tigray region of Ethiopia” and “condemns in the strongest terms all violence against civilians".

    The resolution, which was passed Wednesday, also “calls on the government of Eritrea to immediately and fully withdraw its military forces from Ethiopia and condemns in the strongest terms any human rights violations, murder, looting, rape and other crimes committed by the Eritrean military or any other forces in the Tigray region or elsewhere in Ethiopia".

    READ MORE


    US envoy calls for 'immediate withdrawal' of Eritrean forces from Tigray

    UN council calls for more aid to reach Tigray


    Eritrean forces agreed to withdraw from Tigray in March, but have failed to do so. The resolution refers to credible reports that the country's forces in Tigray have attacked civilians as well as looted and destroyed homes and religious institutions.

    Ethiopia has blocked telephone and internet access in Tigray while restricting journalists from entering and has also blocked the UN from providing humanitarian aid.


    Congress is also pushing the Biden administration to sanction Ethiopian and Eritrean officials involved in human rights abuses in Tigray under the Global Magnitsky Act.

    The Tigray Centre for Information and Communication is also lobbying the White House to levy the sanctions and is asking the House of Representatives to pass a similar resolution.

    The centre has hired Karl Von Batten, head of the consulting firm Von Batten-Montague-York, to make its case to the administration of President Joe Biden and to Congress.

    “We can’t stand by and watch innocent civilians raped, shot and massacred and killed,” Mr Von Batten told The National. “This was a vote for humanity and we call on the House to put out its own strong resolution.

    “We call on the White House to heed the Senate’s call and place sanctions on the actors, not as a country, but the bad actors who have committed these crimes,” he added.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who has said that “ethnic cleansing” is taking place in Tigray, personally called for the withdrawal of Eritrean forces during a phone call with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed last month.

    Multiple sources in Congress have told The National that the Biden administration is reviewing “all options” to respond to the Tigray crisis, including sanctions. However, the State Department has declined to comment on the possibility of enacting sanctions.

    Mr Biden’s envoy for the Horn of Africa, Jeffrey Feltman, visited the region last week, in part to mediate the Tigray crisis, and briefed the Senate on his trip behind closed doors on Monday.

    The Senate is also expected to have Biden administration officials publicly testify on the Tigray conflict next week.

    During his trip, Mr Feltman addressed the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. Egypt and Sudan have objected to the dam, arguing it will restrict their access to Nile River water.

    The Senate resolution notes the Tigray conflict “occurs within the context of complicated regional and global dynamics, including ongoing negotiations between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.”


    Updated: May 20, 2021 07:20 PM
    AFTER THEY FINISH RAPING TIGRAY
    Global consortium wins Ethiopia's telecom license for $850M
    Move will create jobs for 1.5M citizens, activate over $8B domestic investment







    Addis Getachew |22.05.2021

    ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia

    The Ethiopian government on Saturday awarded a telecom service license to the Global Partnership for Ethiopia, a consortium of telecom companies.

    The consortium, which includes Vodafone, Vodacom, Safaricom, Sumitomo Corporation, and the CDC Group, won the bid offering $850 million, two million dollars more than the second-highest bidder, the office of the prime minister said in a statement.

    The move will create jobs for 1.5 million citizens and activate over $8 billion in domestic investment, the statement said.

    “Global Partnership for Ethiopia has been selected as having the potential to provide high-quality telecom services to the people of Ethiopia," it added

    The country's Council of Ministers also unanimously decided to expedite tasks that would enable the issuance of the second telecom license through the Ethiopian Communication Authority.

    In mid-2018, Ethiopia floated the partial privatization of the country's giant telecom through sale of two licenses for prospective international operators.

    "The Council of Ministers has unanimously made a historic decision today allowing Ethiopian Communications Authority to grant a new nationwide telecom license to the Global Partnership for Ethiopia which offered the highest licensing fee and a very solid investment case," Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said on Twitter.

    "With over USD 8 billion total investment, this will be the single largest FDI [foreign direct investment] into Ethiopia to date. Our desire to take Ethiopia fully digital is on track. I would like to thank all that have taken part in this and for pulling off a very transparent and effective process!" Abiy added.
    Gaza's war is far from over for injured children clinging to life in hospital


    Over 500 children in Gaza were injured during the 11 day conflict with some needing specialist care and facing life-changing injurie



    At 2am on the 21st of May, Gaza’s eleven day nightmare ended after some of the heaviest Israeli airstrikes on the enclave.


    But for four year old Sarah, the war was far from over.

    Lying in a hospital bed in room number three of the Al Shifa hospital in Gaza city, she cried and refused any contact with her doctor, who was struggling to examine her, asking her to move her hand.

    He feared she may be suffering partial paralysis from her injuries.


    “She is crying all the time, she is afraid and she doesn’t want to talk to anyone,” Sara’s aunt Amal Al Mattrabi’y told The National.

    Sara was sleeping in her home when Israeli warplanes bombed the house, located at Al Thalatheni street in Gaza city. Sara and her mother were injured.

    “Sara unfortunately will suffer from lower hemiplegia, because of her injuries in her brain, and thoracic and cervical vertebrae,” Jordanian neurosurgeon and spinal surgery consultant Dr Rami Algroom told The National.

    “Doctors carried out a number of surgeries for her to stop the bleeding, and we will put a treatment plan in place to improve her condition,” he said.

    A Palestinian child, who was wounded in overnight Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip, receives treatment at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza city. Getty Images

    Dr Algroom arrived in Gaza a week ago to help treat a surge in injuries that was overwhelming hospitals as the conflict escalated.

    Sara’s family refuses to admit that she will have to continue her life in a wheelchair, and pray to God that a miracle can avert this outcome.

    “I have come to Gaza in the previous wars and treated wounded people, but this time I see most of the injuries affect children, in the brain and bone marrow. About one tenth of cases among children need to get treatment outside of Gaza,” Dr Algroom added.

    Marah Albahtiti, age five, was another child laying in the intensive care unit at Alshifa hospital. She was connected to a ventilator after doctors conducted several surgical operations to stabilise her condition.



    Marah came to the hospital seven days after her home was bombed by Israeli warplanes.

    “Marah came to the hospital with serious injuries, and in shock. We treated her immediately while she was awake but she did not react,” Dr Jamal Al Harazeen, general doctor at Alshifa hospital told The National.

    “She suffered a number of wounds to her abdomen, hands and legs. Four specialist doctors were inside the operation room, conducting a number of surgical operations, beside plastic surgery,” he added.

    Dr Al Harazeen said that Marah will require life support until she can breathe by herself.

    According to the heath ministry of Gaza, around 540 patients under 18 years old entered the hospital with different injuries. At least 232 Palestinians have died, 65 of them children and 39 of them women while more than 1,900 have been wounded.

    Ibraheem Jineed, age six year, was lying in room number five at Alshifa hospital, waiting to be transferred to Egypt to continue his treatment.



    A Palestinian girl takes selfie with her mobile amongst the rubble of the destroyed Al-Shorouq tower after a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza fighters, in Beit Hanun, northern Gaza Strip. EPA





    “Losing time is not good for him, his condition could worsen if he doesn’t leave Gaza for treatment,” said Sohaib Jineed, Ibraheem’s 22-year-old cousin to The National.

    Ibrahim suffered injuries to his bowels which have now become inflamed and he needs to get treatment immediately.

    Ibrahim was sitting in front of his home in Jabaliya camp, north of the Gaza Strip on the first day of the war when shelling killed his brother and injured another of his brothers.

    The ministry of health has launched a distress call asking international humanitarian organisations and relief institutions to aid the health sector.

    The ministry says $46 million will be needed initially to provide medicines and medical equipment, after supplies have become depleted following Israel’s blockade of the enclave.



    After 1,000 Israeli airstrikes, a truce came into effect on May 21 at 2am following intensive Egyptian mediation.

    The end of hostilities was greeted by thousands of Palestinians in Gaza taking to the streets in celebration, a cacophony of whistles and cheers as residents of the city welcomed the announcement of what local militants called a victory over the Israelis.

    Updated: May 22, 2021 07:07 PM

    The moral burden of being a Palestinian citizen of Israel
    Israeli forces detain a group of Palestinian Israelis in the mixed Arab-Jewish city of Lod on May 13, 2021, during clashes between Jewish far-right extremists and Arab residents. AFP     THE WOUND TO THE HEAD, BANDAGED, IS CONSISTANT WITH RUBBER BULLET WOUND

    My sister is a nurse at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. She felt unsafe going to work this week even though a few months ago, she and other Arab healthcare workers like her were applauded for their work in Israel during the pandemic. My two brothers, who work in Tel Aviv, are similarly afraid. Last week, the town in which my other sister lives, Jadeidi Al Makr, was sealed off by Israeli police. My nephew, who is three, is having nightmares because he was recently with his father in our hometown of Umm Al Fahm, near Haifa, when police started throwing tear gas at protesters. The targeting of Arabs by Jewish extremists in recent weeks, often as Israeli police stand by, gives my family good reason to be afraid.

    Although my family is Palestinian, we have Israeli citizenship. In the aftermath of the Arab-Israeli war in 1948, our land was included within the borders of the newly formed State of Israel. Today, about 21 per cent of the Israeli population is like us – Arabs, mostly Muslim but also some Christians and Druze. Many live in mixed cities, such as Haifa.

    Growing up in Umm Al Fahm, an overwhelmingly Muslim city that is proud of its Islamic identity and Palestinian heritage, I always had a strong sense of pride in my family’s ancestry and culture. But it also taught me what it feels like to be a second-class citizen. In Israel, Arab and Jewish children are segregated during their school years. As a child, I learned about how Arab houses were demolished by the Israeli state, which is viewed in my community as a mere continuation of the annexation of Arab land that preceded Israel’s establishment. I learned about how the Bedouins, the indigenous Arab residents of the Negev desert, live in “unrecognised” villages.

    I also remember the tyres burning at the entrance to Umm Al Fahm during the Second Intifada, when Arab citizens of Israel participated in protests in solidarity with other Palestinians. As young men from my town ran away from Israeli police, I felt frustration, anger and grief, and the sense that we really do not belong anywhere.
    An Israeli police car burns after a demonstration following the funeral of Mousa Hassouna, an Arab resident of Lod, on May 11, 2021. AFP

    But I haven’t always felt that way. There have been moments – albeit sometimes dark ones – when I have felt part of the Israeli experience. When I was 19, I left my childhood home to go to Beer Sheva, a primarily Jewish city, to study medical laboratory science at Ben Gurion University. It’s a unique university, because it houses Arab and Jewish students together. That was my first time having a direct connection to Israel’s Jewish community.


    It was also the first time I experienced how it feels to be under rocket attacks from Hamas, the militant group ruling Gaza, which is not far from Beer Sheva. I heard the warning sirens for the first time during Operation Cast Lead, as Israelis call the three-week war between Israel and Hamas in 2008-2009.

    The rocket attacks were constant, and the Jews and Arabs living in our dorm found themselves sharing bomb shelters – and awkward conversations about the Palestine-Israel conflict. In these moments, it was difficult not to understand the fear and frustration of Jewish Israelis. I felt, for a minute, like I was in their shoes.

    But I did remind my Jewish colleagues and neighbours frequently that the Palestinians who live in the West Bank and Gaza fear attacks, too, and they do not have the privilege of sheltering in a bunker. The majority of them are helpless civilians, including women and children, stuck in the crossfire. After all, the technology and weapons Israel uses are capable of causing more damage than any rocket launched by Hamas.

    One night, as I walked to a restaurant in Beer Sheva with a couple of friends, I was caught off guard by rocket fire, and panicked because we were in the middle of the street and didn’t know where to take shelter. We squatted behind a wall, listening to the explosions of the Iron Dome intercepting two Hamas rockets.


    The Jews and Arabs in our dorm found themselves sharing bomb shelters – and awkward conversations

    It occurred to me again that Gaza has no Iron Dome, and that even though I was Palestinian, if I had been born on the “wrong” side of the border, I would have had a very different experience in this conflict – one that is much less privileged than my experience of being born within the borders of the State of Israel. Suddenly, with that realisation, it became difficult for me to cling exclusively to my Palestinian identity and to forget about how my Israeli citizenship, and the socioeconomic and political effects that come with it, has influenced and amplified my opportunities in life.

    As much as I am a Palestinian, I am a second-class citizen of Israel, and as much as I am that, I am better off than other Palestinians. These are the layers of contradiction the conflict forces into my life and the lives of others in my community, and my awareness of them shifted my sense of identity from Palestinian to Palestinian-Israeli.

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    Ten years ago, I moved to the US to pursue graduate studies, and being there has further reinforced my dual identity. In America, I have encountered people from all backgrounds, and have found myself identifying as either Palestinian or Israeli, depending on what was most likely to avoid conflict. Even though I am an Arab Muslim, the US immigration and legal systems treat me as an Israeli. My Israeli passport either validates me or invalidates me in countries all over the world.

    Palestinian citizens of Israel are sometimes praised by others in the Arab world on the very rare occasions in which one of us participates in an attack on other Israelis. And yet there are so many Arab and Muslim countries I cannot visit, even as an Arab, because of my passport.

    A few years ago, I travelled to Turkey, and there I got another taste of how Israeli Jews are treated even in a country Israelis are allowed to visit. In Istanbul, the first thing my Turkish friends were told was not to tell anyone that I am from Israel and not to show my passport.

    The connections I developed with my Jewish roommates, friends, mentors and colleagues have been stronger than any feeling that either I or they were the “other”. These relationships have helped me, in fact, to put myself in the shoes of the Jewish “other” and to learn and understand their narratives, even when I do not agree with the way they explain or respond to the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis. But they have also reaffirmed my attachment to my own cultural identity as a Palestinian, and my empathy for my community across all of Palestine – inside and outside of what is now Israel. Whenever violence against Palestinians erupts in East Jerusalem, Gaza, the West Bank or in Israel, I feel it all over again.

    Dr Anwar Mhajne is a political scientist and assistant professor at Stonehill College

    Updated: May 21, 2021