Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Vitalising Pakistan’s mineral industry
by Naba Fatima




RECENTLY, Pakistan hosted its first mineral summit, “Dust to Development: Investment Opportunities in Pakistan.” Organised under the auspices of the newly established Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), the summit aimed at attracting foreign investors to exploit Pakistan’s $6 trillion worth of minerals. According to the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP), the mineral industry contributes only $1.18 billion to the GDP, i.e., only one percent of the national GDP. During the summit, Pakistan set the target of increasing its mineral contribution to GDP by up to 5 percent. However, to channel the mineral resources into the national economy, Pakistan must break the Gordian knot of infrastructural and security challenges.

Mineral is a capital-intensive industry; based on mining, refining, production, and transport. Being a developing country, Pakistan lags in the infrastructural demand of the mineral industry. Through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), it was predicted that these infrastructural demands would be fulfilled as Special Economic Zones (SEZs), railway lines, and ports would be established under this project. However, political instability and economic turmoil badly affected the estimated potential of CPEC. Among the transportation projects, only six out of twenty-four are complete and five are under construction. Similarly, out of nine SEZs, only four are launched. These delays concomitant a declineof44 per cent in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). International mineral corporations also seem hesitant to invest in SEZs after the Saindak and Reko Diq disputes.

Furthermore, the global outlook for non-traditional security threats undermines the growth of SEZs in Balochistan and KPK. For twenty years, Pakistan fought the war on terrorism, which negatively affected its global image. Incidents like the Dasu bus attack, the lynching of non-Muslims, and separatist movements overshadow the economic potential of Pakistan. For instance, the Katlang Economic Zone has the potential to encourage investors to establish refining industries for gemstones like topaz and quartz. Similarly, Bostan SEZ is an ideal site for the chromite and ceramic industries. However, foreign investors seem reluctant to invest in these security-challenged areas.

Keeping in view these economic and security challenges, Pakistan needs to draft an inclusive national mineral policy to attract foreign investment in the mineral industry. Currently, Pakistan is exporting 53 out of 170 types of indigenous minerals in raw form to the international market, including Himalayan salt, jade, nephrite, and aragonite. In contrast, developing countries like Chile and Brazil add up to $30 billion to their economies by exporting their valuable mineral products. Pakistan should invest in establishing a local refining industry in SEZs to add value to its mineral products for export, as it did in Mianwali SEZ by signing a $200 million agreement with an American company to start a pink salt refining plant. Meanwhile, Pakistan should also expand its mining horizons from salt to other minerals.

In addition, Pakistan needs to promote its small and medium enterprises for marketing high-value indigenous mineral products to attract foreign investors. Pakistan is estimated to have 1600 million tons of unexploited gold reserves, along with copper and coal. To vitalise Pakistan’s mineral industry, it could promote small-scale mining, like China, that earns about US$200 million annually by exploiting its gold at small scale. Similarly, in sub- Sahara Africa, gold and gemstones are mined at small scale that contributes US$1 Billion to its economy. However, to promote small-scale mining, Pakistan needs to boost local small and medium enterprises. For this purpose, Pakistan could use the framework of Uzbekistan that expanded its SMEs by creating Export Promotion Fund for Small Business and Private Entrepreneurship in 2013. This programme resulted in SMEs contribution to GDP up to 56.9 percent.

There is no denying that Pakistan is currently in a huge economic crisis. However, by incorporating the mineral industry into the national economy, Pakistan could boost its economic growth. As the second phase of CPEC is in the mid of completion, it is a golden opportunity for Pakistan to attract foreign investors. The first mineral summit is a constructive measure to achieve this target. Therefore, Pakistan should now invest in rebranding its global image by mitigating security challenges and promoting local SMEs.

The writer is a researcher at the Centre for Aerospace and Security Studies (CASS), Lahore, Pakistan.
Email: nabafatima.1996@gmail.com
BRI and roadmap for next decade

by Dr Mehmood Ul Hassan Khan



DURING the recently concluded 3rd Belt and Road Forum, Chinese President Xi Jinping outlined a comprehensive strategic roadmap for the development of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in the next decade. This roadmap is based on eight action plans and is expected to support high-quality Belt and Road cooperation.

In this regard, building of a multidimensional Belt and Road connectivity network, speeding up of high-quality development of the China-Europe Railway Express, participation in the trans-Caspian international transportation corridor and hosting of the China-Europe Railway Express Cooperation Forum will be started to strengthen further trans-regional connectivity through rails, ports and integrated transport systems in all the member countries of the BRI.

Moreover, China will build a new logistics corridor across the Eurasian continent which will be linked by direct railway and road transportation. Integration of ports, shipping and trading services under the ‘Silk Road Maritime,’ will accelerate the building of the New International Land-Sea Trade Corridor and the Air Silk Road. Thus intensified trans-regional connectivity will be initiated which will be mutually beneficial for all the member countries of the BRI in the next decade.

China’s support for an open world economy will be peacefully pursued which will increase its total trade in goods and services expected to exceed US$ 32 trillion and US$ 5 trillion respectively in the 2024-2028 period. Establishment of pilot zones for Silk Road e-commerce cooperation and enter into free trade agreements and investment protection treaties with more countries will be initiated in the next decade.

Furthermore, the removal of all restrictions on foreign investment access in the manufacturing sector, along with further advancement in high-standard opening up in cross-border service trade and investment, expansion of market access for digital and other products, and deepening reforms in areas including state-owned enterprises, the digital economy, intellectual property, and government procurement will be introduced, institutionalized, and rigorously implemented in the next ten years. This will significantly enhance the scope, utility, and potential of the BRI in all member countries and the world.

In this connection, financial support for BRI projects on the basis of market and business operation through the China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China will each set up a 350 billion RMB (48.75 billion U.S. dollars) financing window, and that an additional 80 billion RMB will be injected into the Silk Road Fund. It will generate projects helping the countries and communities overcome their socio-economic problems and elimination poverty and generate new jobs.

Further promotion of development through extended and deepening cooperation in areas such as green infrastructure, green energy and green transportation and stepping up support for the BRI International Green Development Coalition will be mantra of the Chinese policy makers which will be people and environment friendly and will mitigating the spill-over ramifications of the global warming in the BRI’s member countries.

In this context, regular holding of the BRI Green Innovation Conference, and establishing of dialogue and exchange mechanisms for the solar industry and a network of experts on green and low-carbon development will be started creating mutually beneficial propositions for all the member countries.

Hopefully, China’s implementation of the Green Investment Principles for the Belt and Road, and provision of 100,000 training opportunities for partner countries by 2030 will be game changer to achieve the desired goals of greening the BRI in the future.

China’s strong commitment to advance scientific and technological innovation, the Belt and Road Science, Technology and Innovation Cooperation Action Plan, and holding of the first Belt and Road Conference on Science and Technology Exchange will facilitate science and technology in the BRI’s member countries.

The Global Initiative for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Governance will increase exchanges and dialogue with other countries and jointly promote the sound, orderly and secure AI development in the world. It will be a giant step towards digitalization and e-commerce removing all barriers of technological backwardness in the BRI’s member countries and will provide an ideal platform for greater socio-economic, industrial and artificial intelligence transformation in the next decade.

People-to-people exchanges will be further facilitated and strengthened. China will host the Liangzhu Forum to enhance dialogue on civilizations with BRI partner countries. Thus it will increase China’s soft diplomacy in these countries.

The holding of Silk Road International League of Theatres, the Silk Road International Arts Festival, the International Alliance of Museums of the Silk Road, the Silk Road International Alliance of Art Museums and the Silk Road International Library Alliance, Silk Road Scholarship and the International Tourism Alliance of Silk Road Cities will be a regular feature of the BRI in next ten years.

China pledges to promote integrity-based Belt and Road cooperation and share the Achievements and Prospects of Belt and Road Integrity Building and the High-Level Principles on Belt and Road Integrity Building. It will establish the Integrity and Compliance Evaluation System for Companies Involved in Belt and Road Cooperation, which will promote genuine scientific research and development in these countries.

Last but not the least, further strengthening of the institutional building for international Belt and Road cooperation covering energy, taxation, finance, green development, disaster reduction, anti-corruption, think tank, media, culture and other fields will be right step in right direction for achieving the optimal levels of close liaison, policy consultation, formation and implementation of the respective national policies of these countries which will further increase financial integration, good governance, fight against looming threat of climate change, formation of Corridor of Knowledge, multiculturalism and meaningful media cooperation in the member countries.

In summary, the new eight action plans of the Chinese President Xi Jinping are new “Magna Carta” of immense trans-regional connectivity and socio-economic integration. It is new “Global Constitution” of green development. It is “new Global Chapter” of economic cooperation and social freedom. It is new “Das Capital” of a just world, economic equality, economic globalization and cooperation. It is the new version of “Political Treatise, The Prince” promoting pure multiculturalism and removing all kinds of discriminations. It is indeed a “New Codes of Global Governance” based on Xi’s Global Development, Global Security, Global Civilizational and Global Artificial Intelligence (AI) Governance crating mutually beneficial propositions for all the BRI’s countries and the world alike


Dr Mehmood Ul Hassan Khan


CPEC: Driving Regional and International Growth and Development

by Dr Asif Channa


The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a transformative initiative set to reshape the economic landscapes of China, Pakistan, and the broader region. This extensive project encompasses infrastructure, energy, and industrial development, acting as a catalyst for growth, connectivity, and collaboration. In this comprehensive overview, we’ll explore CPEC’s regional and international impact, focusing on its effects on China, Pakistan, neighbouring countries, and the global community.

I.CPEC and Regional Integration:

CPEC has significantly bolstered regional connectivity, creating a network linking China, Pakistan, and neighbouring countries. The Gwadar Port, a pivotal component of CPEC, serves as a gateway to the Arabian Sea, offering trade potential for landlocked Central Asian nations. Enhanced connectivity and trade facilitate economic integration and propel regional development. Infrastructure projects, including highways, railways, ports, and airports, improve transportation networks, trade facilitation, and economic growth.

II.Socio Economic Development:

CPEC offers significant employment opportunities and job creation across various sectors, leading to reduced unemployment and poverty. Special Economic Zones (SEZs) promote industrial cooperation, foreign investment, and technology transfer, spurring economic diversification in agriculture, textiles, manufacturing, and information technology.

III. China-Pakistan Relations:

CPEC deepens China-Pakistan relations, reinforcing their long-standing friendship and strategic partnership. The collaboration fosters political cooperation, economic ties, and people-to-people exchanges, strengthening the bond between the two nations. This collaboration also enhances Pakistan’s security and stability, contributing to regional peace and countering various security challenges.

IV. Regional Impact:

CPEC acts as a bridge between Central and South Asia, promoting regional connectivity and cross-border trade. It provides neighboring countries, such as Afghanistan and Iran, with opportunities for enhanced trade and access to international markets. This regional economic integration promotes economic development, peace, and stability across the region.

V. International Significance:

CPEC has gained international attention due to its potential to reshape global trade dynamics. It offers an alternative route for China’s trade with Europe, bypassing the traditional sea route. This diversification serves as a vital pillar of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), fostering international economic integration. CPEC also emphasizes sustainable development in the energy sector, promoting renewable energy sources and reducing reliance on fossil fuels.

VI. Challenges and Mitigation Strategies:

The successful implementation of CPEC faces security challenges due to regional conflicts and terrorist activities. Pakistan and China must work closely to address these concerns by strengthening security measures and promoting stability. Additionally, addressing potential socioeconomic disparities is crucial to ensure inclusive growth and equitable distribution of wealth.

VII. The Way Forward: Collaboration and Cooperation:

Policy coordination among participating countries is essential to fully harness the potential of CPEC and maximize its benefits. Engaging all stakeholders, including local communities, civil society organizations, and private sector entities, is crucial for sustainable and inclusive development under CPEC. Investing in human capital development and skill training programs is vital to create a competent workforce that can contribute effectively to the implementation and management of CPEC projects.

VIII. Global Economic Impact and Belt and Road Initiative (BRI):

CPEC holds immense significance in promoting trade expansion and economic integration on a global scale. By providing an alternative trade route between China and Europe, it reduces transportation costs and enhances efficiency, benefiting not only China and Pakistan but also countries along the CPEC route. CPEC is a crucial component of China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), showcasing its potential to promote regional and international growth.

IX. Regional Collaboration and Harmonious Development:

CPEC promotes the principles of shared benefits and win-win cooperation among participating countries. It encourages joint ventures, technology transfer, and knowledge sharing, fostering collaborative efforts for mutual growth. Cultural exchange initiatives under CPEC contribute to people-to-people connectivity, fostering understanding, respect, and friendship among diverse cultures.

X. CPEC and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):

CPEC’s focus on infrastructure development, poverty alleviation, energy security, and sustainable practices aligns with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). By actively addressing these goals, CPEC contributes to global efforts to eradicate poverty, ensure inclusive and sustainable economic growth, and combat climate change.

Xl. Green Initiatives and Environmental Sustainability:

CPEC is committed to promoting sustainable development, placing a significant emphasis on the energy sector’s environmental responsibility. The initiative actively fosters the development of renewable energy sources, including wind, solar, and hydro power. By encouraging the adoption of clean and sustainable energy alternatives, CPEC aims to reduce the region’s reliance on fossil fuels and contribute to global efforts to combat climate change.

The integration of green energy initiatives within CPEC underscores a forward-thinking approach to environmental sustainability. Embracing these renewable energy sources not only diminishes the carbon footprint but also addresses environmental degradation. Moreover, this strategic shift towards sustainable energy aligns with international goals to transition to cleaner and greener energy options.

Through the promotion and utilization of renewable energy technologies, CPEC paves the way for a greener and more sustainable future. By advocating for environmentally responsible practices and investing in clean energy infrastructure, this initiative sets an example for collaborative efforts towards a healthier planet. CPEC demonstrates that economic growth and environmental stewardship can go hand in hand, showcasing a pathway to sustainable development and a better quality of life for all.

XlI. Future Outlook:

The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) stands as a testament to the transformative power of regional cooperation, economic integration and sustainable development. With its potential to drive regional growth, enhance connectivity and foster collaboration among countries, CPEC is a pathway towards a prosperous and interconnected future.

As CPEC continues to unfold, it will be crucial to address the challenges that may arise, such as security concerns, socioeconomic inequalities, and environmental impact. By implementing appropriate mitigation strategies, fostering stakeholder involvement, and strengthening policy coordination, these challenges can be overcome, ensuring the successful realization of CPEC’s vision.

Looking ahead, the success of CPEC hinges on continued collaboration, transparent governance, and inclusive development practices. By capitalizing on the opportunities presented by CPEC, participating countries can harness its potential to uplift economies, improve infrastructure, promote sustainable practices, and foster a climate of peace and stability.

CPEC serves as an inspiration for other regions and countries aspiring to achieve similar progress through regional collaboration and international partnerships. As the world witnesses the unfolding of CPEC’s immense potential, it becomes evident that this endeavour not only transforms the fortunes of China and Pakistan but also contributes to regional and global economic growth, connectivity and sustainable development.

Dr Asif Channa
Years after fire engulfed scuba dive boat killing 34 people, captain's trial begins

Federal prosecutors are seeking justice for 34 people killed in a fire aboard a scuba dive boat called the Conception in 2019

BySTEFANIE DAZIO Associated Press
October 24, 2023

Defendant Jerry Boylan, right, captain of a scuba dive boat called the Conception, arrives in Federal court in Los Angeles, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2023. Federal prosecutors are seeking justice for 34 people killed in a fire a...Show more
The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- By the time the scuba dive boat sank off the Southern California coast after catching fire, 34 people had been killed in the deadliest maritime disaster in recent U.S. history.

The Labor Day tragedy in 2019 spurred changes to maritime regulations, congressional reform and civil lawsuits. Four years later, a federal trial for the Conception's captain, Jerry Boylan, was underway Tuesday with jury selection in federal court in Los Angeles. Boylan watched as the judge questioned potential jurors.

It's been a long, frustrating wait for the families of the dead.

“The past four years have been like living in a nightmare that you don’t wake up from,” said Kathleen McIlvain, whose 44-year-old son Charles was killed.

The 75-foot (23-meter) boat was anchored off the Channel Islands, 25 miles (40 kilometers) south of Santa Barbara, on Sept. 2, 2019, when it caught fire before dawn on the final day of a three-day excursion, sinking less than 100 feet (30 meters) from shore.


The National Transportation Safety Board blamed Boylan for the tragedy, saying his failure to post a roving night watchman allowed the fire to quickly spread undetected, trapping the 33 passengers and one crew member below.

Those on board included a new deckhand who’d landed her dream job and an environmental scientist who did research in Antarctica, along with a globe-trotting couple and a Singaporean data scientist.

Susana Solano Rosas lost her three daughters Angela, Evan and Nicole Quitasol, who were onboard the Conception with their father, Michael Quitasol, and his wife, Fernisa Sison. Solano Rosas waited with other relatives for jurors to be chosen.

“We’ve been waiting for this for a long time,” she said. “We want to start some healing.”

U.S. District Judge George Wu on Oct. 12 granted Boylan's request to bar most if not all references to “victims” — which the captain's attorneys say is a prejudicial term that jeopardizes his right to a fair trial. It was the latest setback for the prosecution.


A grand jury in 2020 initially indicted Boylan on 34 counts of a pre-Civil War statute colloquially known as “seaman’s manslaughter” that was designed to hold steamboat captains and crew responsible for maritime disasters. Each count carries up to 10 years in prison in a conviction, for a total of 340 years.

Defense lawyers sought to dismiss those charges, arguing the deaths were the result of a single incident and not separate crimes. Prosecutors got a superseding indictment charging Boylan with only one count.

Then in 2022, Wu ruled the superseding indictment failed to specify that Boylan acted with gross negligence, calling that a required element to prove the crime of seaman’s manslaughter. He dismissed that indictment, forcing prosecutors to go before a grand jury again.

Boylan is now charged with one count of misconduct or neglect of ship officer. The single count means he faces only 10 years behind bars if convicted.

He has pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing. His federal public defenders did not return The Associated Press' repeated requests for comment, and a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office declined to comment.

Some of the dead were wearing shoes, prompting investigators to believe they were awake and trying to escape. Both exits from the below-deck bunkroom were blocked by flames. Coroner’s reports list smoke inhalation as the cause of death.

What exactly started the fire remains unknown. Early official scrutiny appeared to focus on a spot where divers plugged in phones and other electronics. But a Los Angeles Times story, citing a confidential report by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said the blaze began in a plastic trash can on the main deck. An official cause remains undetermined.

Boylan and four crew members sleeping in the upper deck told investigators they tried to save the others but were ultimately forced to jump overboard to survive. Boylan made a mayday call before abandoning ship.

Dozens of family members have since formed “Advocacy34” to push for strengthened boating regulations. While seeking answers, they’ve comforted each other during loved ones’ missed birthdays and mourned each anniversary.

“We have no idea when we’ll get those answers, or if we ever will,” McIlvain said.


The NTSB faulted the Coast Guard for not enforcing that requirement and recommended it develop a program to ensure boats with overnight passengers have a watchman.

Victims’ families have sued the Coast Guard in one of several ongoing civil suits.

At the time of the fire, no owner, operator or charterer had been cited or fined for failure to post a roving patrol since 1991, Coast Guard records showed.

The Coast Guard has since enacted new, congressionally mandated regulations regarding fire detection systems, extinguishers, escape routes and other safety measures.

Three days after the inferno, Truth Aquatics Inc., which belongs to the Conception’s owners, Glen and Dana Fritzler, filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles under a pre-Civil War provision of maritime law that allows it to limit its liability to the remains of the boat, which was a total loss. The time-tested legal maneuver has been successfully employed by the owners of the Titanic and other vessels, and requires the Fritzlers show they were not at fault.

The couple's attorneys did not respond to requests for comment.

In response to the families' outcry, federal lawmakers last year updated the Limitation of Liability Act of 1851 so owners could be held liable for damages regardless of the boat’s value afterward. The law is not retroactive, however, and will not apply in the Conception fire.

__

Associated Press Photojournalist Damian Dovarganes in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

 

New Zealand’s cricket squad calls on the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala

The visit comes days before a key match with Australia at a nearby scenic stadium.
By RFA Tibetan
2023.10.24

 New Zealand’s cricket squad calls on the Dalai Lama in DharamsalaNew Zealand’s Kane Williamson practices at Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala, India, Oct. 21, 2023.Credit: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

The Men’s Cricket World Cup – one of the world’s most popular sporting events – has touched down in Dharamsala.

On Tuesday, the New Zealand cricket team and their families visited the Dalai Lama at his residence in the city at the edge of the Himalayas that serves as the seat of the Tibetan government in exile.

The visit comes ahead of Saturday’s match between New Zealand and Australia. The winner should have the inside track on making it to the final next month in Ahmedabad.

The game will be held at Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium in Dharamsala, one of the most picturesque cricket stadiums in the country. 

Located at an altitude of 1,450 meters (4,760 feet), it features a stunning view of the snow-capped Dhauladhar range. 

ENG_TIB_Cricket_10242023.2.jpg
Members of the New Zealand cricket team have their photo taken with the Dalai Lama at his residence in Dharamsala, India, on Oct. 24, 2023. Credit: Office of His Holiness the Dalai Lama

Thousands of pilgrims come to visit the head of Tibetan Buddhism at his residence every year. On Tuesday, smiling team members filed past a seated Dalai Lama, said hello and shook his hand one-by-one.

New Zealand’s team captain noted that it was a quick interaction, but he nonetheless felt “fortunate to meet him and be in his presence.”

Casually dressed and enjoying the mild weather, the players later posed for a group photo.

“It was pretty cool to be around His Holiness as you hear a lot of stories about him,” said Rachin Ravindra, one of the youngest members of New Zealand’s squad.

Edited by Matt Reed.

Nigerians Praise Court Ruling in Multibillion-Dollar Gas Deal

October 24, 2023
Timothy Obiezu


ABUJA, NIGERIA —

Nigerian authorities are praising a London high court ruling Monday that overturned $11 billion in damages stemming from a collapsed gas project between Africa's largest economy and a private company.

In a statement, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu lauded the London Business and Property Court’s ruling in the 2010 gas deal, calling it a victory for what officials termed the “long exploited” African continent.

“Nation states will no longer be held hostage by economic conspiracies between private firms and solitary corrupt officials,” Tinubu said.

Nigeria and Process and Industrial Developments, a firm based in the British Virgin Islands, signed the contract to construct a gas processing plant in Nigeria’s oil-rich region.

The deal, however, fell through, and P&ID took the Nigerian government to court in Britain.

In 2017, an arbitration tribunal ordered Nigeria to pay a $6.6 billion contract award and interest to P&ID.

The government appealed that decision.

The court on Monday said the company had in 2010 paid a bribe to a Nigerian oil ministry official in connection with the deal.

The court also said that P&ID did not disclose that information when the deal failed to materialize and that two British lawyers defending the company stood to benefit if the court ruled in favor of the firm.

Nigerian political analyst Rotimi Olawale said the decision is a relief for Africa’s biggest economy.

"Nigeria literally dodged a major bullet, knowing the foreign exchange issues the country is facing at the moment," Olawale said. "Getting a judgment of $11 billion would've been a big blow to Nigeria's financial situation."

The company's lawyers say they're disappointed by the outcome and are considering next steps. The firm has denied the fraud allegations and accused Nigeria of incompetence.

Nigeria's economy has been struggling with spiraling inflation and mounting debts for years. More recently, government reform policies have seen Nigeria's foreign exchange reserve dwindle significantly, increasing the scramble for U.S. dollars and weakening the local tender.

The $11 billion would have been about one-third of Nigeria's foreign exchange reserves.

Ebenezer Oyetakin, founder of the Anti-Corruption Network, said the ruling couldn't have come at a better time.

"It is an example of how many African countries have been mortgaging their economy,” he said. “Definitely it would be of huge help to the dwindling Nigerian economy as we're witnessing currently. But we should not rest on our oars. We should continue to absolutely stand against corruption."

Olawale said Nigeria and all of Africa must address institutional corruption.

"The judgment should also give us an opportunity to tidy our home front,” Olawale said. “I feel that Nigeria, like many developing countries, goes into all kinds of dubious contracting. It is on us as a nation to ensure that we do our due diligence and that we harmonize the process in which we do contracting with other parties."

Reports say the London court could decide to send the case back to arbitration or abandon it without delay.
California hits pause on GM Cruise self-driving cars due to safety concerns

Decision is latest instance of regulatory agencies expressing concern over safety of autonomous vehicles.

A Cruise AV, General Motors's autonomous electric Bolt EV, on display in Detroit, Michigan, United States, 2019 [File: Paul Sancya/AP Photo]

Published On 24 Oct 2023

The United States state of California has suspended testing of Cruise self-driving cars developed by General Motors (GM), citing safety concerns after a series of accidents and mishaps.

California’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) announced on Tuesday that it had suspended the deployment of GM self-driving vehicles and driverless testing permits, the latest regulatory agency to express concerns over their safety.

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“When there is an unreasonable risk to public safety, the DMV can immediately suspend or revoke permits,” the department said in response to an inquiry from the news outlet AFP.

Self-driving cars have been met with mixed reactions from the public, some of whom see them as an exciting technological development while others view them as a nuisance or a hazard.

The suspension follows a series of accidents involving Cruise vehicles and marks a serious setback for GM’s efforts to break into the autonomous vehicle industry. Cruise said in a statement that it would be “pausing operations” in San Francisco.

Automakers such as GM have bet on self-driving cars becoming an important part of the industry’s future but some have struggled to make headway or overcome concerns from the public and government agencies.

GM previously called Cruise a “giant growth opportunity”. In June, CEO Mary Barra doubled down on a prediction that Cruise would generate $50bn in annual revenue by 2030.

The company reported on Tuesday that it had lost more than $720m on Cruise in the third quarter of this year.

On October 2, a woman in San Francisco was struck by a car in a hit-and-run that thrust her into the path of an oncoming autonomous vehicle operated by Cruise. A spokesperson for the company told the news outlet AFP at the time that the car had “braked aggressively to minimize the impact”.

The car then stayed in place on top of the woman, leaving her pinned under the vehicle until paramedics arrived. Barra has maintained that self-driving cars have a better safety record than those operated by humans.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Polish Bishop Resigns After Diocese Is Rocked by Sex Scandal

A priest in the bishop’s diocese was accused of holding a sex party in his church apartment that involved a male prostitute who lost consciousness.

Blessed Virgin Mary of the Angels, in the town of Dabrowa Gornicz, Poland.

By Andrew Higgins
Reporting form Warsaw
NEW YORK TIMES
Oct. 24, 2023

A Polish bishop whose diocese has been badly tarnished by reports of a gay orgy involving priests and a prostitute resigned on Tuesday, the latest in a long series of sexual and financial scandals in Poland’s Roman Catholic Church.

Grzegorz Kaszak, the bishop of Sosnowiec in southwestern Poland, announced his departure after one of his priests was placed under criminal investigation in connection with reports last month that he had organized a sex party during which a male prostitute lost consciousness from an overdose of erectile dysfunction pills.

Gazeta Wyborcza, a liberal daily newspaper, reported in September that one of the priests at the gathering, held in a building belonging to the parish of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Angels in the town of Dabrowa Gornicza, had called an ambulance. Others at the party prevented paramedics from tending to the unconscious man, the paper reported, but the paramedics called the police and the priests relented.

The priest who organized the gathering in his church apartment, identified by the diocese only as Father Tomasz Z., gave a statement last month to Polish media that disputed details of what had happened, quibbling over the number of priests present at the time of the alleged sex party and saying that “it is worth reading what the definition of an orgy is.”

He dismissed the uproar over events in his apartment as “an obvious attack on the church, including the clergy and believers,” and claimed that nobody would have raised a fuss if “something similar had happened” to a person outside the clergy.

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The diocese, in its own statement last month, said that the “participation” of Father Tomasz “in what happened on the night of Aug. 30-31 is not in doubt.” It said he had been barred from celebrating Mass, stripped of all other functions and “sent to live outside the parish.”

Announcing that the church had set up a commission to investigate “the scandalous event” reported by the press, the diocese asked media outlets to keep in mind that “almost all” priests in the parish were good and had themselves, by reporting what had taken place, “become victims due to this deplorable crime.”

Bishop Kaszak announced his departure Tuesday in a message posted on his diocese’s website but gave no reason. The Vatican said on Tuesday that it had accepted the bishop’s resignation. It, too, gave no explanation.

The departing bishop has not been accused of taking part in the reported orgy but is held responsible for the behavior of priests in his diocese.

“I ask everyone to forgive my human limitations,” he wrote in his farewell message. “If I have offended anyone or neglected something, I am very sorry.”

The resignation came less than a month after the Polish Catholic Church, in a lengthy report on the state of its affairs, warned that priests needed to get a grip on “crimes of sexual abuse of minors by some clergy” and other misbehavior.

“The church’s internal difficulties constitute an excellent breeding ground of accelerating trends of secularization,” the report, Polish Church 2023, said.

Trust in the church, according to experts, has also been damaged by its close alliance with Poland’s nationalist governing party, Law and Justice. In a critical general election on Oct. 15, the party lost its majority in Parliament to centrist and liberal opponents who have often criticized the church for aligning with right-wing political forces in pursuit of its agenda on abortion and other issues.

Law and Justice in 2018 banned Sunday shopping, and in 2020 pushed through a near-total ban on abortion, a move that delighted the church but alienated many young people, who mostly no longer attend Mass and voted overwhelmingly for parties opposed to Law and Justice.

Long seen as a Catholic stronghold that, in contrast to Ireland and Spain, had managed to hold back a tide of secularization that has swept across most of Europe, Poland has over the past decade seen a sharp decline in church attendance, though most still declare themselves Christians. Enrollment in seminaries has also plummeted, forcing several to shut down.

Lamenting that a process previously referred to by experts as “creeping secularization” was now “galloping,” the church report warned that “the church in Poland is entering a rather dangerous ‘twist’ in its history. Much depends on how it will be able to defeat this.”

Anatol Magdziarz contributed reporting.

Andrew Higgins is the bureau chief for East and Central Europe based in Warsaw. Previously a correspondent and bureau chief in Moscow for The Times, he was on the team awarded the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting, and led a team that won the same prize in 1999 while he was Moscow bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal. More about Andrew Higgins
Review – Artificial Intelligence and International Relations Theories

Amelia C. Arsenault
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Oct 24 2023 •

Image by Palgrave Macmillan Singapore


Artificial Intelligence and International Relations Theories
By Bhaso Ndzendze and Tshilidzi Marwala
Palgrave Macmillan Singapore, 2023

Rapid and substantial advances in machine learning, computer processing, and ‘Big Data’ have triggered an explosion of global interest and investment in artificial intelligence (AI). AI’s allure stems from the prevailing belief that it will radically transform life as we know it, with implications for a wide range of sectors, from healthcare, education, and transportation to defense, weapons development, and cybersecurity. As states scramble to procure this emerging technology, scholars have begun thinking about its implications for the field of international relations (IR). While some scholars are hopeful that AI may be used to improve global health outcomes and facilitate trade, others are more pessimistic, warning of escalation towards conflict and the erosion of democratic norms. Artificial Intelligence and International Relations Theories, contributes to this debate by exploring whether the “world-transforming development” of AI will challenge, undermine, or validate the key assumptions and ideas that form the basis of IR theory (p.8).

The authors begin by identifying the central frameworks and paradigms that have defined the field of IR, providing a brief overview of its intellectual history and inter-paradigmatic debates. Ndzendze and Marwala make the important observation that IR theory has historically ‘evolved’ alongside major developments or shocks to the international system, suggesting that the ‘age of AI’ could prompt the field to revisit its theoretical foundations.

To appeal to a wide, non-technical audience, the authors provide a sketch of the basic systems, algorithmic processes, and logic behind AI, and outline its trajectory from the 1950s to the contemporary era of ‘Big Data’. Here, the authors make two important clarifications about AI’s potential implications for IR. First, they differentiate between ‘narrow’ AI, which refers to algorithms that can ‘learn’ a specific task, and artificial ‘general’ intelligence, a hypothetical phenomenon where AI could apply lessons learned in one scenario to an entirely different set of problems (p.36). The authors make the point that the systems currently being deployed are ‘narrow’ AI; and as such, they do not warrant fears of a dystopian near future where super-intelligent AI replaces traditional actors. This distinction cautions against the type of hyperbolic thinking that experts fear could misinform policy. Second, the authors maintain that scientific development and innovation have always been informed by global politics, pointing to early innovations in AI during the Cold War and the current competition between the US and China (p.39). This brief history clarifies that the politicization of emerging technologies is not unique to the current day and age.

Having provided readers with the necessary context, the remainder of the book is organized by paradigm, each chapter examining how the proliferation of AI challenges or supports its theoretical underpinnings. Throughout these core chapters, the authors make several astute observations about the risks, opportunities, and limitations of this technology and its influence on global politics. Indeed, they should be applauded for achieving what is undoubtedly an ambitious task — probing a field’s intellectual history to “comprehensively articulate the implications of the growing ubiquity of AI in international relations” (p.7). However, Ndzendze and Marwala’s analysis includes notable gaps that reveal a lack of breadth and depth. While the authors cannot be expected to cover every minute detail of IR theory, readers may find themselves searching for more — more nuance, more examples, and more interpretation of the leading intellectual debates about AI’s relevance for the field. Important ideas at the core of IR theory are mentioned in passing, with no real consideration of whether the concepts aptly describe the current state of international politics in the ‘era of AI’, or whether rethinking is in order. The remainder of this review will outline a few illustrative examples.


The chapter on realism makes meaningful points about AI’s role in the “balance-of-power rationale” and the offense-defense calculus. However, it misses opportunities for a more thoughtful summary of the potential threats that AI poses to some of realism’s principal assumptions. Most notably, the authors overlook ongoing debates about the rise of automated decision-making and the concept of ‘agency’. Indeed, scholars such as Kiggins (2017) have argued that the heightened autonomy and decision-making capabilities of weapons systems and other processes require that IR reconsider precisely what constitutes an international ‘actor’. The question of how to characterize agency has serious implications for realism; it challenges both the classical realist emphasis on the role that ‘human nature’ plays in humanity’s proclivity for conflict as well as structural realists’ claim that unitary states are the central, “nearly exclusive” actors in IR (p.59). To their credit, the authors do note that ‘Big Tech’ companies, responsible for developing the most cutting-edge applications of AI, are playing an increasingly important role in global politics. Further, AI is not currently capable of independent action beyond its programmed instructions, and therefore cannot be said to have ‘agency’. The authors should be commended for their refusal to anthropomorphize AI. Yet, by failing to consider whether forms of non-human agency could eventually challenge the realist assumption that states are the primary actor in international relations, the authors neglect urgent philosophical debates about the realist conception of ‘power’ in an era of enhanced machine autonomy.

Perceptions of AI as a valuable instrument of economic and military power have spurred competition for this technology, seemingly validating the realist claim that states are ultimately motivated to pursue relative gains. Given that AI can bolster countries’ status, the authors develop a model that measures and predicts the “AI balance of power” using states’ innovation scores, their total number of AI patents, and technology exports relative to rivals (p.66). The intuition behind this model accurately reflects the role that domestic industry can play in access to emerging technologies. However, this model obscures the distinct characteristics that undermine the utility of simple quantification through the counting of AI ‘outputs’. The immateriality and invisibility of advanced algorithms and software differentiate these tools from conventional arms and industrial goods, which are largely material and therefore receptive to quantification. In the case of AI, however, patents and applications, including those with industrial and military applications, can reveal very distinctive purposes and capabilities; that is, not all AI patents or innovations are equal. By downplaying AI’s unique characteristics, the authors miss an opportunity to demonstrate precisely why states and non-state actors view AI as particularly concerning — from attribution problems associated with autonomous weaponry to the covert usage of algorithms for nefarious purposes, it is the immateriality of AI that complicates efforts to predict states’ AI capabilities.

The chapter on liberalism encounters similar issues. For instance, the authors note that the proliferation of AI is occurring alongside broader challenges to the ‘liberal international order’, where “democracy and artificial intelligence appear to be having a negative correlation with one another” (p.76). While this correlation is certainly plausible, the authors do not identify the mechanisms that explain why or how AI is poised to challenge democracy. This omission will strike readers familiar with this topic as odd, given the large body of literature linking AI to repression, surveillance, inequality, and disinformation. Further, the authors maintain that democratic and authoritarian regimes will differ in their approaches to AI, but they do not specify how. Again, this is an important differentiation — variation in authoritarian and democratic approaches to AI could tip the balance towards, or away from, a world marked by ‘digital authoritarianism’. Finally, the authors mention AI within the context of international trade, but ignore a rich body of literature linking this technology to the neoliberal emphasis on the pursuit of efficiency, profit, and ‘progress’ (Lyon 2014; Dimitrijević 2023; Bourne 2019). In doing so, they miss the opportunity to highlight linkages between narratives that frame data-centric policies as ‘rational’, or ‘objective’ and neoliberal logic.

These shortcomings continue throughout the second half of the text. The chapter on dependency theory makes no mention of the exploitation of workers hired to do the precarious work of training AI systems, the near-monopoly of US-based ‘Big Tech’ firms on the global tech market, or the risk of instability should automation yield massive and rapid changes in employment. The section on constructivist perspectives makes few references to machine-human interaction, the role of local history and context in technological development, or the mutually constitutive relationship between technological and societal change. It would normally be unfair to criticize a book solely on what it omits. However, in the context of these well-established theories, the omission of core concepts such as identity, norms, and contingency is striking.

Ultimately, Ndzendze and Marwala convince readers that IR scholars must take AI seriously. Just as competition and balance-of-power politics have influenced scientific development and innovation, AI’s diffusion will have significant impacts on the field’s intellectual trajectory. The concluding chapter emphasizes that no single paradigm can comprehensively capture the entirety of AI’s implications for war, trade, and international order, and thereby encourage inter-paradigmatic discussion, or ‘analytical eclecticism’. This recommendation aligns with skepticism about the utility of stark divides for theory-building and testing, and as such provides scholars with a pragmatic way forward.

This book’s most significant impact will be felt by scholars unfamiliar with the politics of AI or those embarking on new projects that may consider emerging technologies. It is not that it puts forth incorrect, misleading, or unsubstantiated arguments. Instead, its major shortcoming is that it leaves the reader looking for a more comprehensive and thorough analysis of its subject matter. Despite AI’s wide-ranging applicability and relevance for world politics, this book only scratches the surface.

References

Birhane, Abeba. 2020. “Algorithmic Colonization of Africa.” SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology and Society 17(2): 389–409.

Bourne, C. 2019. “AI Cheerleaders: Public Relations, Neoliberalism and Artificial Intelligence.” Public Relations Inquiry 8(2): 109–25.

Brundage, Miles et al. 2018. “The Malicious Use of Artificial Intelligence: Forecasting, Prevention, and Mitigation.”

“China Is Striking Back in the Tech War With the U.S. | Time.” https://time.com/6295902/china-tech-war-u-s/ (September 29, 2023).

Dimitrijević, Lazar A. 2023. “Smart City Development Strategies: Data Determinism and Technological Sovereignty.” Социолошки преглед 57(1): 76–101.

“FEATURE-AI Boom Is Dream and Nightmare for Workers in Global South.” 2023. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/global-tech-workers-idAFL5N2XI2X8 (September 29, 2023).

Feldstein, Steven. 2019. “The Road to Digital Unfreedom: How Artificial Intelligence Is Reshaping Repression.” Journal of Democracy 30(1): 40–52.

Fletcher, John. 2018. “Deepfakes, Artificial Intelligence, and Some Kind of Dystopia: The New Faces of Online Post-Fact Performance.” Theatre Journal 70(4): 455–71.

Jajal, Tannya D. 2020. “Distinguishing between Narrow AI, General AI and Super AI.” Mapping Out 2050. https://medium.com/mapping-out-2050/distinguishing-between-narrow-ai-general-ai-and-super-ai-a4bc44172e22 (September 29, 2023).

Kiggins, Ryan David. 2018. “Big Data, Artificial Intelligence, and Autonomous Policy Decision-Making: A Crisis in International Relations Theory?” In The Political Economy of Robots: Prospects for Prosperity and Peace in the Automated 21st Century, ed. Ryan Kiggins. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 211–34. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51466-6_10.

Lake, David A. 2011. “Why ‘Isms’ Are Evil: Theory, Epistemology, and Academic Sects as Impediments to Understanding and Progress.” International Studies Quarterly 55(2): 465–80.

Leavy, Susan, Barry O’Sullivan, and Eugenia Siapera. 2020. “Data, Power and Bias in Artificial Intelligence.”

Lyon, D. 2014. “Surveillance, Snowden, and Big Data: Capacities, Consequences, Critique.” Big Data and Society 1(2).

Miller, Claire Cain, and Courtney Cox. 2023. “In Reversal Because of A.I., Office Jobs Are Now More at Risk.” International New York Times. https://proxy.library.cornell.edu/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsgin&AN=edsgcl.762153334&site=eds-live&scope=site.

O’Shaughnessy, Matt. “How Hype Over AI Superintelligence Could Lead Policy Astray.” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. https://carnegieendowment.org/2023/09/14/how-hype-over-ai-superintelligence-could-lead-policy-astray-pub-90564 (September 29, 2023).

Sil, Rudra, and Peter J. Katzenstein. 2010. “Analytic Eclecticism in the Study of World Politics: Reconfiguring Problems and Mechanisms across Research Traditions.” Perspectives on Politics 8(2): 411–31.

“The Dangers of the Global Spread of China’s Digital Authoritarianism.” https://www.cnas.org/publications/congressional-testimony/the-dangers-of-the-global-spread-of-chinas-digital-authoritarianism (September 29, 2023).
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)
Amelia C. Arsenault is a PhD student at Cornell University’s Department of Government, in the IR subfield. Her research explores the implications of emerging technology on international relations, with a particular focus on AI, surveillance, and ‘smart city’ technologies. She has previously published a chapter in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of AI Governance, which explores AI’s impact on international politics. Her doctoral research has received funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Fellowship.

PRISON NATION U$A

Colorado prisons vulnerable to natural disasters but may be ill-prepared

prison
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Three-quarters of Colorado prisons are likely to experience a natural disaster in the coming years, but due to aging infrastructure and outdated policies, many are ill-equipped to keep residents safe, suggests new University of Colorado Boulder research.

The study, published in the journal Natural Hazards Review, comes on the heels of one of the hottest summers on record and as U.S. lawmakers are calling for an investigation into a rash of what are believed to be  in the nation's prisons.

In other research, including interviews and focus groups with 35 formerly incarcerated Coloradans, the researchers found that most had already suffered from climate-related hazards, experiencing everything from "brutally hot" or "ice cold" cells to  related to wildfire smoke and lack of toilet facilities during floods.

"We showed that the incarceration infrastructure in Colorado is highly vulnerable to climate- related hazards and that incarcerated people who are Black and Hispanic are at even greater risk," said Shideh Dashti, associate professor of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, and co-author on both studies. "This is a serious racial justice and environmental justice issue that needs to be addressed."

Prisoners among the most vulnerable

Researchers have long known that marginalized communities, including  and people with disabilities, are more vulnerable to climate change. But those behind bars face added risk, as they can't leave or adapt their space to escape threats.

Facilities tend to be old, with poor insulation and outdated heat, ventilation and air-conditioning systems. Colorado's oldest prison opened in 1871. About 40% of incarcerated individuals have a mental health diagnosis, and many take medication that impairs their ability to regulate body temperature.

"When coupled with the extreme temperatures, wildfire smoke and floods that climate change brings, these conditions and lack of agency render incarcerated people extremely vulnerable," said co-author Ben Barron, a Ph.D. candidate and research assistant in the CU Boulder Department of Geography.

Until recently, little research had been done in this area.

To address the gap, the interdisciplinary research team gathered  on 110 Colorado facilities, including prisons, jails and juvenile detention and immigration detention centers. They used GIS mapping software and climate modeling data to calculate whether each facility was at low, medium or high risk of wildfire, heatwaves, floods and landslides.

They found that 74.5% of facilities housing 83% of Colorado's incarcerated population have either moderate or high exposure to at least one hazard, and 17% percent are at risk of two.

One third of facilities, housing about 12,700 people, are at medium to high risk of wildfire.

Fifteen are at risk of flooding while, notably, 26 had no FEMA flood risk data available at all.

About half of facilities are at risk of extreme heat.

The study also found that incarceration facilities are more than twice as vulnerable to flooding than Colorado schools are. That's relevant, the authors said, because unlike prisoners, students are free to leave when flood risk arises.

Black people are significantly more likely than whites to be jailed in a facility at risk of extreme heat, while Hispanic or Latino people are at greater risk of experiencing a flood while incarcerated, the study found.

'We're dying in here'

Dashti said the team had trouble getting information from many facilities about their engineering or architectural elements, but interviews with the formerly incarcerated painted a disturbing picture.

"It's truly horrifying to listen to," said Barron, who conducted nine interviews and four focus groups for a separate paper that has not yet been published.

Some interviewees recalled temperatures soaring into the upper-90s inside their cells.

"We just want the doors open because we're dying in here,'" one told researchers.

When  was turned on, it was often left on full blast into the cooler months, making it so frigid that ice formed inside cell windows.

Other formerly incarcerated people described being awakened in the night by wildfire smoke and stuffing clothing over vents and windows to keep ash out of their cell. Some had to wait outside in long lines in triple-digit temperatures to get their medications.

"I remember people just burning," recalled one 46-year-old man, describing his cell mate. "He was out there all day. And he was so purple, and he had edema on his head so bad you could put your thumb in his forehead, and it would just stay."

'Cruel and unusual punishment'

Due to lack of emergency planning, prisoners in other states have been infamously left behind when natural disasters hit.

In 2005, during Hurricane Katrina, thousands were locked inside the Orleans Parish Prison for days, submerged in deep, sewage-tainted water and without power. In 2020, during wildfires in California, a wildfire came within a few miles of two state prisons. While neighbors were evacuated, prisoners were left in place.

Colorado prisons have been evacuated at least two times: In 2013, a fire forced evacuation of 900 people from Territorial Correctional Facility in Cañon City. In Barron's interviews, a person evacuated that day described it as "chaos." In May 2023, hundreds at the Delta Correctional Center were evacuated due to the threat of flooding.

Dashti said that, as an engineer, she has been horrified to learn of what she equates to "cruel and unusual punishment" in U.S. prisons. She hopes the findings will encourage governments to update building codes and policies to ensure that facilities are more resilient and humane in the face of more frequent and severe natural hazards expected as a result of climate change.

"But we can't simply engineer out way out of the problem," she said.

The U.S. has the highest rate of incarceration in the world, imprisoning 700 out of every 100,000 people, compared to 115 out of 100,000 for its peer nations. In Colorado alone, about 31,000 people are currently behind bars.

Dashti, Barron and their interdisciplinary research team believe more support should also be provided for education, mental health care, public housing and other means to keep people from committing crimes or help rehabilitate them when they do.

Some prisons should be closed, they argue.

"It's not enough to say we'll just retrofit and add air conditioning," said Barron. "We need to stop putting so many people in jail."

More information: Sara Glade et al, Hazards and Incarceration Facilities: Evaluating Facility-Level Exposure to Floods, Wildfires, Extreme Heat, and Landslides in Colorado, Natural Hazards Review (2023). DOI: 10.1061/NHREFO.NHENG-1556

 Cuba

Cuban children harmed by U.S. economic blockade

Luanda, October 24, 2023.- Arelys Santana, president of the Commission of Attention to Youth, Children and Equal Rights of Women of the Cuban Parliament, denounced today the damages caused by the US blockade.

During the debate on a proposed resolution on The role of parliaments in the fight against child trafficking in orphanages, as part of the 147th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, the Cuban representative said that Cuba supports the document that seeks to prevent this phenomenon.

In Cuba nothing is more important than a child, Santana stressed, who remarked that although this is not an issue that occurs in Cuba, the nation supports all efforts in this regard and remains vigilant about possible manifestations.

She pointed, however, to the U.S. economic blockade policy as the main obstacle to the full development of children in Cuba, as it limits the lives of Cubans in all areas.

She expressed her gratitude to the parliamentarians of the world who year after year accompany Cuba at the United Nations to condemn this cruel policy from Washington, which for more than six decades has had an impact on the human rights of the Cuban people.

(Cubaminrex-PL)