Wednesday, May 03, 2023

More than 100 000 refugees flee Sudan amid intense fighting

accreditation
  • Thousands of refugees are crossing the border to leave Sudan.
  • The UN estimates that up to 800 000 may flee the country.
  • So far, 436 civilians have died in the conflict.


A United Nations refugee official said on Tuesday that more than 100 000 refugees have now crossed from Sudan to neighbouring countries to escape the conflict that erupted last month.

"Over 100 000 refugees are estimated to be among those who have now crossed to neighbouring countries, including Sudanese refugees," Olga Sarrado, spokesperson at United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, told reporters at a briefing in Geneva.

Reuters reported that people may flee Sudan as a result of the ongoing conflict, the UN refugee agency said, including Sudanese nationals and thousands of existing refugees living temporarily in the country.

"In consultation with all concerned governments and partners, we've arrived at a planning figure of 815 000 people that may flee into the seven neighbouring countries," Raouf Mazou, UNHCR assistant high commissioner for refugees, told a member-state briefing in Geneva, Switzerland.

Some 73 000 have already left Sudan, he added.

READ | The UN now fears 800 000 people may flee Sudan, if things don't change fast

Mazou's estimate includes approximately 580 000 Sudanese, while the others are refugees who had settled in the country for safety.

Smoke billows over residential buildings in Kharto
Smoke billows over residential buildings in Khartoum as deadly clashes between rival generals' forces have entered their third week.

UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi later said the planning figure was indicative. 

"We hope it doesn't come to that, but if violence doesn't stop we will see more people forced to flee Sudan seeking safety," he said in a tweet.

The international body has said a catastrophic humanitarian situation has already been unfolding since the fighting that erupted on 15 April.

Hundreds have been killed and thousands wounded in the clashes between Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

17 hours ago2:06
Canadian ambassador feared for his life while helping people escape Sudan

Millions of Sudanese, unable to afford the inflated prices required to escape the battles, have sheltered in their homes with dwindling food and water and frequent power cuts.

The UN and other aid organisations have cut services, though the World Food Programme said it was resuming operations in more secure areas on Monday after staff were killed early in the war.

"It is expected that, over the following days, these operations would extend to El-Gadarif, Gezira, Kassala, and the Blue Nile," Al Jazeera's Biesan Abu-Kwaik said, reporting from UN headquarters.

United Nations aid chief Martin Griffiths warned the country was at "breaking point" and that the international body fears the war's effect both on Sudan and the broader region.

He said:

The scale and speed of what is unfolding in Sudan is unprecedented.

Griffiths is scheduled to visit Sudan on Tuesday.

Al Jazeera's Fadel Abdelrazzaq, reporting from Adré at the Chadian-Sudanese border, said that between 10 000 and 20 000 Sudanese refugees arrived in Chad since the beginning of the conflict, according to Chadian authorities and UNHCR.

Jame' Noor, reporting from near Djibouti airport, said evacuation operations were under way. 

"In the past few days, there were a lot of Canadian nationals coming through. Most of those evacuated were Sudanese with dual citizenship. They flew from Djibouti to Kenya and then to Canada," he said.

A ferry transporting some 1 900 evacuees docks nea
A ferry transporting some 1 900 evacuees docks near a Saudi warship after it travelled across the Red Sea from Port Sudan to the Saudi King Faisal navy base in Jeddah during mass evacuations from Sudan.
This handout satellite photograph shows a major cr
This handout satellite photograph shows a major crossing point at the Sudanese border of Argeen with Egypt, as buses wait in line to evacuate passengers into Egypt. Fighting raged in Sudan on 28 April, despite rival forces agreeing to extend a truce aimed to stem nearly two weeks of warfare that has killed hundreds and caused widespread destruction.
A ferry transporting some 1 900 evacuees docks nea
A ferry transporting some 1 900 evacuees docks near a Saudi warship after it travelled across the Red Sea from Port Sudan to the Saudi King Faisal navy base in Jeddah during mass evacuations from Sudan.
This handout satellite photograph shows a major cr
This handout satellite photograph shows a major crossing point at the Sudanese border of Argeen with Egypt, as buses wait in line to evacuate passengers into Egypt. Fighting raged in Sudan on 28 April, despite rival forces agreeing to extend a truce aimed to stem nearly two weeks of warfare that has killed hundreds and caused widespread destruction.

Ethiopian authorities officially announced the arrival of 6 000 people from 46 nationalities via the Gallabat-Metemma border.

Al Jazeera's Hiba Morgan, reporting from Khartoum, said air raids on Monday hit the northern and eastern parts of the capital Khartoum despite numerous ceasefire attempts.

"In the early hours of the afternoon, around 12 local time [10:00 GMT], air strikes were launched by the Sudanese army around what residents say are RSF positions including a fuel tanker," Morgan said.

Heavy artillery was used in proximity to the presidential palace, which is under the control of the RSF.

The correspondent said:

The Sudanese army wants to regain control of the palace because it is near the general command of the army headquarters.

Morgan added the fighting had caused a fire to break out in one of the buildings near the palace.

Al Jazeera's Haitham Uweit said that fighting also extended to new areas, including Al-Jerif East in the eastern part of the Blue Nile to the east of Khartoum.

"The most violent confrontations were in Khartoum Bahri, specifically in Al-Halfaya, Shambat, North Kafouri, and the industrial area," he said.

Uweit added that according to UN envoy to Sudan Volker Perthes, the two warring sides have agreed to send representatives for UN negotiations.

"No definite information is available on the when and where of the negotiations," Uweit said.

According to the Sudan Doctors Syndicate, 436 civilians are dead so far, and 2 175 have been injured.

TEHRAN, May 02 (MNA) – The UN refugee agency has warned that bloodshed in Sudan could cause 800,000 people to leave for neighboring countries.

The United Nations has warned of an influx of refugees fleeing to Sudan's neighboring countries, as the fighting continues between the country's top military generals, DW reported.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said late on Monday that the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) was bracing, alongside governments and partners, "for the possibility that over 800,000 people may flee the fighting in Sudan for neighboring countries."

"We hope it doesn’t come to that, but if violence doesn’t stop we will see more people forced to flee Sudan seeking safety," Grandi said on Twitter.

Following air strikes in the capital of Khartoum, on Sunday the UN and other international interests appealed yet again for Generals Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Daglo to agree to a 72-hour ceasefire for another three days.

The situation in Sudan escalated amid disagreements between the army chief, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who also heads the ruling Sovereignty Council, and the head of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (known as Hemedti), who is al-Burhan’s deputy on the council.

The main points of contention between the two military organizations are related to the timeline and methods of forming unified armed forces of Sudan, as well as who should become the commander-in-chief of the army: a career military officer, which is the option supported by al-Burhan, or an elected civilian president, as Dagalo insists.

On April 15, clashes between the two structures erupted near a military base in Merowe and in the capital, Khartoum, and continued on Tuesday despite an earlier ceasefire. According to the country’s health ministry, more than 600 people have been killed in the country since the conflict broke out.

AMK/PR

Natural gas fueled the fatal Pa. chocolate factory explosion, preliminary report finds
2023/05/02
Rubble at the site of the R.M. Palmer chocolate factory in West Reading, Pennsylvania, on March 27, 2023. - Steven M. Falk/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS

PHILADELPHIA — A natural gas-fueled explosion destroyed a West Reading chocolate factory building in March, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report Tuesday. Seven people were killed and 11 were injured in the R.M. Palmer blast that rocked the tight-knit borough of about 4,500 people.

The source of the likely gas leak was not laid out Tuesday, and will be a focus of the ongoing investigation, according to the NTSB report.

Still, the preliminary information laid out by investigators forms the clearest picture of what happened the day of the explosion, just 65 miles northwest of Philadelphia.

According to investigators, 35 office staff and 70 production employees were working in two R.M. Palmer buildings that shared a block with an apartment building.

Employees from “Building 2,” which was flanked by an apartment building and another Palmer building, told investigators they smelled natural gas before the blast. Employees from the building next door said they smelled rotten eggs.

The explosion occurred shortly before 5 p.m., destroying Building 2 and causing “significant structural damage” to the Palmer building next door. Three families in the neighboring apartment building were displaced as a result of the explosion.

UGI Corporation serviced the Palmer buildings with natural gas coming through two mains adjacent to the accident site, but reported that there had been no known work in the area, nor a pressure spike in gas use ahead of the explosion.

In a statement, the company said it supports the ongoing investigation.

“We remain focused on providing accurate, timely and comprehensive information to the NTSB to assist them in analyzing and understanding the events of that day,” read the statement.

Employee interviews collected by NTSB investigators echo claims made in news reports and in a lawsuit against Palmer and UGI in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.

“The gas leak at the factory and the horrific explosion it caused was foreseeable, predictable, and preventable,” reads the wrongful death suit filed by a family member of one of the victims.

The suit alleges workers reported a natural gas smell to the company to no avail.


Six of the people killed in the blast are believed to have died from blast injuries, according to the Berks County Coroner’s Office. Investigators believe the seventh victim died from thermal burns. Their ages ranged from 30 to 63.

The rest of the investigation and final report could take up to 24 months to complete and will also focus on “related industry practices and federal regulations.”

With the NTSB no longer needing access to the explosion site, West Reading officials said the Palmer properties and others on the block will return to their respective owners, who will be responsible for clean-up efforts.



CNN Faces Calls for Boycott Over Including Trump in Town Hall
ON 5/1/23 

CNN Announces New Hampshire Town Hall With Donald Trump


CNN is facing widespread pushback after announcing its presidential town hall in New Hampshire next week will feature former President Donald Trump.

The network announced Monday that the event, which will take place May 10 at St. Anselm College in Goffstown, New Hampshire, and moderated by CNN This Morning anchor Kaitlan Collins. Trump will be funneled questions from Republican and undeclared voters who plan to vote in the 2024 GOP primary election, where New Hampshire is set to be one of four early voting states for the Republican National Committee.

According to CNN, this will be the first time Trump has appeared on the network since his 2016 presidential campaign. Trump has enjoyed a favorable lead in many early hypothetical GOP matchups for the 2024 election despite facing a list of legal troubles that has the potential to cloud his reelection bid.

Former President Donald Trump waves as he's introduced at the CNN presidential debate on December 15, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Trump is scheduled for a CNN town hall May 10, triggering calls for a boycott of the network.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES


CNN's announcement sparked criticism on social media, with phrases like "#BoycottCNN" trending over Twitter Monday evening. Several users argued that giving Trump a live platform could be ill-considered given the former president's history of lying during 2020 election events about issues like mail-in voting and COVID-19.

Political commentator Keith Olbermann described CNN's decision as "committing journalistic suicide," arguing that it was "irresponsible" to give Trump a national audience.

"If there was ONE consensus about 2024 it was that 'covering' Trump the way they did in 2016 (handing him live blocks of free airtime with no fact-checking possible) was irresponsible," Olbermann wrote. "And CNN's doing it."

Democratic fundraiser Scott Dworkin tweeted that CNN had "learned absolutely nothing" from past election coverage, adding, "No one should watch this trash."

"This is absolutely ludicrous," Dworkin said. "There is no reason to give the biggest pathological liar in politics a platform to spread his bull****. Trump doesn't belong on television. He belongs in prison."

Former DNC delegate Victor Shi added on his Twitter account that CNN's town hall would give Trump "a free & national platform to spew lies."

"They've learned absolutely nothing & they're exactly why our media is failing us & our democracy," Shi said, referring to CNN.

During the 2020 election, several outlets practiced fact-checking the former president during live events, such as providing context to statements made during presidential debates between Trump and President Joe Biden. Others, including Newsweek, often provided context to assertions made by both candidates following debates and campaign events.

A spokesperson for CNN told Newsweek Monday evening that the town hall "is part of a longstanding CNN tradition of hosting leading presidential candidates for Town Halls and political events as part of the network's robust campaign coverage." Trump's town hall will also be "the first of many in the 2024 election cycle," the spokesperson said.

Despite facing criminal charges in New York City in connection to alleged hush money schemes made during his 2016 presidential campaign, Trump has remained a consistent front-runner in preliminary GOP polling since announcing his 2024 election bid. His popularity, particularly among deep conservatives, could set him up for a rematch against Biden in 2024, who announced his official reelection campaign last week.

If Trump is the GOP nominee, he will likely get several more live coverage opportunities in the next election cycle, and as independent journalist Brian Krassenstein wrote on Twitter, news organizations are tasked "to show Americans both sides of the picture."

"To attack a news organization for questioning a former president, who wants to be president again, in a town hall setting, is simply insane in my opinion," Krassenstein said. "Americans are smart enough to listen to his answers and make their own decision. They don't need news organizations deciding what they should or should not see."

"Information is never bad," he continued. "If Trump lies, CNN can call him out. Everything doesn't have to involve outrage and boycotts."

IBM CEO among the first major executives to say they'll replace jobs with AI

Illustration of a delete key fashioned as a briefcase.

Illustration: AĂ¯da Amer/Axios

IBM's CEO is setting his sights on using artificial intelligence to eliminate thousands of jobs in one of the first acknowledgments by a major company that it plans to reduce its workforce with AI.

Why it matters: AI has the potential to fundamentally reshape the workforce, much like the industrial revolution and the digital age caused enormous opportunity, upheaval and uncertainty throughout the economy.

Threat level: IBM CEO Arvind Krishna told Bloomberg that the company plans to pause hiring on back-office functions, where the company has about 26,000 workers.

  • “I could easily see 30% of that getting replaced by AI and automation over a five-year period," he said.
  • That amounts to some 7,800 positions, part of which would involve not replacing jobs after workers leave, the company told Bloomberg.

Be smart: What was unusual about Krishna's comments is that he openly admitted that he'll use AI to slash IBM's workforce.

  • To this point, corporate executives have largely been more circumspect about their plans — insisting that AI will simply supplement their workforce or enhance their employees' ability to do their jobs.

Meanwhile, Geoffrey Hinton, known as the "godfather of AI," told the New York Times that he left Google so that he could raise red flags about AI.

  • Among them: that it will wipe out jobs like paralegals, personal assistants and translators.
  • “It takes away the drudge work,” Hinton told the Times. “It might take away more than that.”

The intrigue: American workers believe that AI will disrupt jobs in general — but they tend to think it won't affect their job.

  • 62% "think the use of AI in the workplace will have a major impact on workers generally over the next 20 years," the Pew Research Center reported in a survey published in April.
  • But only 28% "believe the use of AI will have a major impact on them personally" — with a full half of Americans saying it won't have any impact on their jobs at all or that it'll be minor.

The bottom line: The AI revolution will lend new urgency to the "anything you can do I can do better" mindset — because if you can't do it better than AI, you'll be at risk of being replaced.

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Samsung bans employees from using AI tools like ChatGPT and Google Bard after an accidental data leak, report says

Sawdah Bhaimiya
May 2, 2023, 
Samsung has banned the use of AI tools in the workplace.
Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images


Samsung has banned employees from using ChatGPT in the workplace, per Bloomberg.
This comes after Samsung engineers accidentally leaked internal source code to ChatGPT in April.
Other companies including Amazon, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs have restricted AI use.

Samsung has introduced a new policy banning employees from using generative AI tools like Open AI's ChatGPT and Google Bard in the workplace, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.

In an internal memo viewed by Bloomberg, the company expressed concerns about data being shared on AI platforms and ending up in the hands of other users.

The new policy comes after Samsung engineers accidentally leaked internal source code by uploading it into ChatGPT in April, the memo said.

Staff are now banned from using generative AI tools on company-owned devices including computers, tablets, phones, and internal networks, per Bloomberg.

"We ask that you diligently adhere to our security guidelines and failure to do so may result in a breach or compromise of company information resulting in disciplinary action up to and including termination of employment," Samsung wrote in the memo.

It added that the company is reviewing its security measures to "create a secure environment" for employees to use AI but at present it's "temporarily restricting the use of generative AI."

Samsung, OpenAI, and Google did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment about the ban.

Wall Street Banks including Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan were among the first companies to restrict employee use of ChatGPT over concerns about third-party software accessing sensitive information.

These banks also feared that the chatbot could share financial information that could lead to regulatory action.

Tech giant Amazon similarly warned staff against using ChatGPT because of instances of the chatbot's responses resembling internal Amazon data, Insider's Eugene Kim reported in January.

OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, introduced new measures in April to address concerns about managing data on the chatbot. This included giving users the ability to disable chat history.

"When chat history is disabled, we will retain new conversations for 30 days and review them only when needed to monitor for abuse, before permanently deleting," the company said.

OpenAI is also working on a ChatGPT Business subscription for professionals and businesses who want greater control over how their data is used and stored.

Google said it helps Bard improve by selecting a "subset of conversations and use automated tools to help remove personally identifiable information," according to its website.

"These sample conversations are reviewable by trained reviewers and kept for up to 3 years, separately from your Google Account."