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UN official says Iraqi Kurds ‘should agree on elections soon’ and end political deadlock

Dana Taib Menmy
english.alaraby.co.uk
The New Arab

11 August, 2022

The United Nation’s top official in Iraq has stressed that all Kurdish political parties should reach a settlement soon on the Kurdistan Region’s upcoming parliamentary elections.
 

UN Special Representative for Iraq Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert speaks during a press conference regarding the upcoming early general elections, on October 05, 2021 in Baghdad, Iraq. [Getty Image]

The United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) Special Representative Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert is reportedly concerned about the political deadlock in the Iraqi Kurdistan region with parties still unable to agree on upcoming parliamentary elections, a source has told The New Arab.
Hosted by the President of the Kurdistan Region, Nechirvan Barzani, five of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region’s main political parties convened for a third time in Erbil on Wednesday to discuss upcoming parliamentary elections scheduled for 1 October.
Plasschaert also attended the meeting and was unhappy about the current stalemate, the source said.
“Plasschaert expressed concern that the meetings are not yet fruitful and that the Kurdish political parties should settle their differences as soon as possible so that a new date [for voting] can be chosen after the postponement of parliamentary elections,” a source who attended the meeting told The New Arab.
“She also expressed concerns that if the Kurdish political parties did not reach a settlement soon, the situation in the Kurdistan region [could be as] destabilised as the rest of Iraq.”
 

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Plasschaert previously headed a meeting with top officials from the Kurdish political parties in Erbil on 26 May in a bid to seal an agreement on upcoming elections. She also participated in another meeting with the political parties on 9 June.
Key issues are impeding the chances of elections being held in October, including differences among Kurdish political parties over the composition of the electoral commission and calls for amending the region’s decades-old election law.
“Mrs. Plasschaert delivered a speech about the significance of the political parties reaching an agreement on the election issue and setting a date for the process to take place. She also expressed the full support of the United Nations for the elections to be held successfully,” the Kurdistan Region Presidency (KRP) said in a statement after the meeting.
“Furthermore, Mrs. Plasschaert stressed that all political parties should reach a conclusion soon, because of time constraints.
“It was decided that the last meeting will be held in early September to complete all discussions regarding the election issue and to solve the problems that face the process.”
The UNAMI did not comment on the source’s claims.
 

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Yassin Hama Ali, head of the elections commission at the Kurdish Movement of Change (Gorran), said it is unlikely that elections will be held in October and that a special committee will continue to work with parties to find a compromise on the postponement of the election.
“The political parties are still disagreeing on some contested issues, including the quota of the minorities, and how the region’s election commission will be reactivated,” Hama Ali told The New Arab.
“Unfortunately, there is a lack of trust among the political parties, the majority of them deem the activation of the commission to be conditional on the Kurdistan parliament guaranteeing  an amendment to the election law.”
Hama Ali said there are concerns that the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) might avoid amending the laws once a mandate for the current electoral commission is renewed by parliament.
The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Gorran, partners with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) joined by three main opposition parties – the New Generation Movement, the Kurdistan Justice Party (Komal), and the Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) – are asking the Kurdistan parliament to amend the election law.
They also want to divide the region into at least four electoral districts and the establishment of a new election commission.
Massoud Barzani’s KDP, which has a thin majority of 45 seats in the parliament, insists on upcoming elections being held under the current election law and to be supervised by the region’s election commission whose mandate has already expired.
Rival politicians claim that the KDP is opposing the electoral reforms since it fears its share of the vote will diminish if this is achieved.
The Kurdistan parliament includes 111 seats; women have a minimum quota of 30 percent, while 11 seats are allocated for parties that represent minority groups. The KDP, which has dominated the support of 11 lawmakers from minority groups, is considered a kingmaker in the Kurdish parliament.
The last parliamentary election, held in September 2018, saw a turnout of 57 percent and was marred by allegations of large-scale voter fraud by the KDP – which dominates Erbil and Duhok provinces – and the PUK – that controls Sulaimaniyah and Halabja provinces.

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Women’s rights group calls on Washington to redesignate Yemen’s Houthis as terrorists

“The Yemeni population suffers; they don’t get aid because it’s blocked by the Houthis, who use blackmail to get at least 50% of this humanitarian aid from the UN and the EU,” says Manel Msalmi, a Belgian-Tunisian academic, and founder and president of the NGO European Association for the Defense of Minorities.
 

By  Dmitriy Shapiro/JNS
Israel Hayom
 Published on  08-12-2022 08:23
Last modified: 08-12-2022 14:01

Houthi fighters hold up weapons during a gathering to mobilize more fighters in Yemen | File photo: EPA/Yahya Arhab

At the same time that US President Joe Biden traveled to the Middle East in July, a group of Yemeni women set off to Washington, DC, to encourage the reinstatement of the Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) designation for Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels. The group members, representing a human-rights NGO, met with officials from the Biden administration, Congress and think tanks as part of their week-long trip.
 
The group included professor of political science Wesam Basindawa, who is originally from Yemen but now resides in Cairo. Basindawa is the founding president of the Yemeni Coalition of Independent Women and the leader of the 8th March Yemeni Union Women.
Joining her on the trip was Manel Msalmi, a Belgian-Tunisian academic, and founder and president of the NGO European Association for the Defense of Minorities, who has advised the European Commission, the European Parliament and UNESCO; and New York-based human rights and national security attorney Irina Tsukerman.
Timed with their visit, the group wrote a letter to Biden, which included a list of human-rights organizations that work with Basindawa’s organization that could deliver humanitarian aid to Yemen’s population without going through the Houthis.
“The Yemeni population suffers; they don’t get the aid because it’s blocked by the Houthis, [which are] using blackmail by getting at least 50% of this humanitarian aid from the [United Nations] and the [European Union],” said Msalmi. “So what we are suggesting is a list of human rights organizations that can be also trustworthy to do the job, instead of, let’s say, negotiating with the Houthis, which is a terrorist organization.”
While they admitted that the aid would have trouble getting into Houthi-controlled territory, Basindawa noted that a majority of the country – around 75% is not under Houthi control.
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels took control of the country in a violent coup that deposed the government and took over the country’s capital, Sanaa, with its government institutions and airport.
“Continuing to allow the aid to flow through them only cements their control and the people’s dependency upon them,” said Elie Piperz, who was traveling with the group as spokesman. “So even in the short term, you can get aid [into the area by working with the Houthis]; long term, it’s actually going to only strengthen and keep the conflict going.”
‘Funding attacks on our allies’
Iran’s support of the Houthi rebels in Yemen expanded the scale of the war significantly, causing a coalition of Arab nations led by Saudi Arabia to intervene militarily in the conflict in 2015 at the request of then-Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi.
Former President Donald Trump placed sanctions on and designated the Houthis as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in November 2020.
Basindawa said that while this came with only three months left in his administration, it’s still better that it came late rather than not at all.
When Biden took office, his administration removed the Houthis from the list of FTOs within weeks, claiming that it was needed to ensure humanitarian aid is delivered to people in the occupied region.
Basindawa, however, said that nothing has changed in the region for the people, and worse, they are dependent on the Houthis for aid.
“It’s actually worse than that,” Tsukerman said. “They sold off the humanitarian aid … in order to consolidate control and to fill their war coffers. … We end up funding their attacks on our allies.”
Some of the most recent attacks by Houthis included drone attacks on the United Arab Emirates in January, followed by a drone attack in March on a fuel depot in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
But the group’s main mission for their visit to Washington is the protection of women in the Houthi-controlled territories as their human rights are severely curtailed by the strictly instilled Islamic laws.
While human rights for women are not ideal in the Middle East, Basindawa said that the Houthis target women specifically.
Msalmi added that women in the Houthi-controlled region “cannot have access to education, to work. They are forced to wear the hijab [Islamic headscarf], they cannot move [around in public] without a mahram, which means father, brother or husband.”
Unfortunately, said Msalmi, the United Nations and European Union only have access to information from NGOs that support the Houthi, or Muslim Brotherhood narrative, as opposed to the secular liberal perspective.
“We want to support these secular and liberal voices, human-rights activists, journalists – these people who are targeted by the Houthis, who are imprisoned, tortured and sometimes killed,” she explained. There are “a lot of human rights violations. [The NGOs advising the United Nations and European Union] do not mention these violations. So thanks to the work of Dr. Wesam and other NGOs, we have access to this narrative.”
Basindawa noted that “a lot of NGOs and international leaders talk about the Houthis as a policy movement. But they are not. They are a terrorist, racist, ideological movement. They are not a political movement.”
“They took over a political party, Ansar Allah, but it’s an extremist party that proposes extreme ideological solutions and is exploiting that abroad,” added Tsukerman. “It’s anti-American, anti-Israel, anti-Jewish. But also anti-anybody who is not Houthi, in general.”
Basindawa had recently participated in a dialogue at the European Parliament about women’s rights to support female leadership in Yemen, but she was one of only a few women. Msalmi said if any women are represented from Middle Eastern countries, they are usually wearing a head scarf and are not representative of modern ideals.
“So there is this kind of discrimination vis-à-vis women, which is the same ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood and the same ideology of the Houthis as well,” Msalmi said. “This is what the new leadership of women wants in the Arab world – to have free and liberal women.”
Basindawa, the niece of Yemen’s deposed Prime Minister Mohammed Basindawa, was raised in Yemen but studied in Egypt, where she got her PhD in political science. She became involved in NGOs after the Arab Spring in 2011 brought the Muslim Brotherhood into power.
She and her colleagues believed that the biggest problem in the region was not the political regimes, but the education and culture and founded the Arab Initiative for Education and Development. She moved full-time to Egypt after Yemen’s coup, as she became a target and cannot currently return to Yemen out of safety concerns.
‘Include women in this negotiation’
During the group’s visit to the US State Department, US Special Envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking was not available to meet, as he was in the Middle East preparing for Biden’s visit. Instead, the group met with Lenderking’s staff, including a senior policy and communications adviser.
The administration was not moved by their appeal, which the group felt was because it was worried about offending Iran, with whom they are negotiating to re-enter the 2015 nuclear deal. The administration was also focused on renewing the ceasefire, which was agreed to in April and renewed for an additional two months on Aug. 2.
“Humanitarian considerations continue to be an important factor in any decision regarding a Foreign Terrorist Designation of Ansar Allah,” a State Department spokesperson told JNS on background after the meeting. “We are currently focused on securing, extending and building on the UN truce in Yemen, which is having a tangible impact on millions of Yemenis and provides a credible opportunity for peace in Yemen. The parties need to continue to choose peace and move toward a permanent, nationwide ceasefire and the launch of an inclusive, comprehensive political process under UN auspices.”
Tsukerman stated that “the Houthis initiated this truce because they were being killed by the thousands, literally, by the Arab coalition, especially after the new government consolidated itself and became more united and started cracking down on some unhelpful politicians who were facilitating corrupt exchanges with the Houthis,” said Tsukerman. “So when they saw that the military battles were not going well for them, they started looking for a way to kind of divert attention while they were continuing missile shipments and preparing themselves for the next relaunch of this.”

Msalmi also pointed out that the dialogue to resolve the conflict did not include women; Basindawa is one of the few people around the world speaking from their perspective.
“Where are the women in this consultation and in this dialogue? They are not represented in NGOs. They’re not represented in political leadership,” said Msalmi. “So what we want then is also to include women in this negotiation, to include them in leadership positions, because women, they are targeted by the Houthis, they are eliminated, they don’t have access to work, they don’t have access to education. And this is part of the strategy and the ideology used by the Houthis – to completely exclude women.”
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In a little more than half a week that the group was in Washington, they met with officials in the State Department, prominent Washington think tanks and members of both parties in the US Senate and House of Representatives.
The group spoke with experts from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Heritage Foundation, before making a trip to Capitol Hill to meet with members of Congress. The group met with Reps. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY), Mike Waltz (R-Fla), Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich), Steve Scalise (R-La), Young Kim (R-Calif), Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas), Lisa McLain (R-Mich) and the Republican Study Committee. They also met with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev), and with the staff of Sens. Chris Coons (D-Del), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas).
Piperz said that every representative was enthusiastic about meeting them. The Republicans were all on their side, but even Slotkin had recently signed onto a letter calling for the Houthis to be re-designated as an FTO.
“Frankly, the goal was really to motivate those who already are like-minded, not necessarily to convince people who are on the fence,” Piperz said. “Let’s make sure that people understood this was an important issue. We’ve got to push them, we’ve got to use this time right now, and that we should not let this issue of the Houthis sort of fall on the wayside.”
Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

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Fight breaks out among Saudi-led coalition forces in Yemen’s Shabwah province

Control over the oil-rich southeastern province has been a central issue among the warring factions in Yemen. The Houthis claim that Saudi-backed groups are working with imperialist forces to loot the country’s resources  

August 11, 2022 by Peoples Dispatch

UAE-backed forces celebrate after seizing control of an entrance to Ataq in Shabwah province on August 10. (Photo: via Middle East Eye)

Intense fighting has been going on for the last three days between forces affiliated to the Islah party and those loyal to other factions of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the oil-rich Shabwah province in southeastern Yemen. At least 35 people have been killed and scores of others injured in the fight so far.
As per the reports in Xinhua, the fighting broke out immediately after the dismissal of an official affiliated to the Islah party on Monday, and continued despite the Saudi-backed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) based in Aden issuing a statement in support of the decision.
Rashad al-Alimi, president of the PLC, backed Shabwah Governor Awsad al-Awlaqi’s decision to dismiss the Islah official. The PLC later announced the removal of more officials considered to be affiliated to the Islah party and involved in the fight.
The Southern Transitional Council (STC), a significant faction in the Saudi-backed coalition, issued a statement on Wednesday supporting Al-Awlaqi’s decision. STC’s forces are considered to be participating in the fight against Islah.

 
The STC has been working for a separate South Yemen for a long time and has in the past fought against other Saudi-backed forces in Aden. It has an old rivalry with Islah, which is considered to be affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood and represents the country’s traditional ruling classes. The rivalry was fueled further after the war in the country broke out in 2015, due to the UAE’s backing. The ruling class in the UAE has led an international campaign against the Muslim Brotherhood.
Looting of Yemeni resources 
The oil-rich Shabwah province has been a center of the war in Yemen during the last seven years. Earlier this year, there was a fight for control over the province between the Houthis and the Saudi-backed coalition, in which the coalition was able to retain its control. The Houthis claim that coalition forces are helping Saudi Arabia and the US to loot the country’s resources and deprive Yemenis of a crucial source of economic sustenance.
Mahdi al-Mashat, head of the Houthi-backed government in Sanaa, has repeatedly pointed out the continued looting of Yemen’s resources by forces backed by Saudi Arabia and the US, and demanded that the issue be a part of the ceasefire negotiations.
“We denounce the [Saudi backed] mercenaries for plundering the Yemeni people’s national assets and depositing the proceeds in a Saudi National Bank (SNB) account,” Mashat said on Wednesday, reported Iranian Press Tv. He demanded that the money earned from Yemen’s resources should be used to pay the salaries of government employees and pensioners.
Violations of ceasefire deal 
Meanwhile, the UN-brokered ceasefire, which was extended at the last moment for another two months, continues to face new challenges. On Wednesday, the Yemeni Petroleum Company claimed that Saudi-backed forces have seized yet another fuel ship headed to the Hodeidah port. It termed this a blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement, Press tv reported.
The Saudi-led international coalition has imposed a comprehensive land, air and sea blockade of Yemen since 2015, depriving Yemenis of crucial life saving items such as medicines, food and fuel. The blockade was considered to be the central cause of the large-scale starvation and health emergencies in Yemen, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.
As per the terms of ceasefire which first came to effect in the beginning of April this year, Saudi Arabia agreed to allow limited movement of flights from Sanaa airport and ships to the Hodeidah port. However, the Houthi-backed administration has often complained of non-implementation of the agreement and repeated seizure of fuel ships by the Saudis.

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Egypt’s Media Observatory Mourns Death of Veteran News Anchor Nader Diab

 by H-Tayea
 6:44 PM August 9, 2022 – www.see.news

Egypt’s Media Observatory Mourns Death of Veteran News Anchor Nader Diab

On Tuesday, the Egyptian Observatory for Press and Media mourned the death of veteren TV news anchor Nader Diab, who passed away earlier today, after suffering health complications over the last days.
In a statement, the observatory staff extended their sincere condolences to the deceased family, asking Allah to bless him with his vast mercy and  to grant his family and relatives patience and solace.
Nada Diab’s daughter said on her official Facebook page: “My father passed away, and the funeral prayer will be held at noon in the Jamal Al-Din Al-Afghani Mosque.”
Egyptian journalist Nader Diab presented many different Egyptian political talk shows. Below are the most prominent talk shows presented by Diab during his media career:

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Campus femicides in Egypt revive calls to strengthen laws against gender-based violence

A 20-year-old female student was stabbed to death on Tuesday.

ByHatem Maher

August 11, 2022, 9:29 AM – ABCNews.go.com

On Location: August 12, 2022

CAIRO, Egypt — The latest murder of a young woman in Egypt who had allegedly rejected the advances of a fellow student has sparked outrage and renewed calls for Egyptian lawmakers to take action.
Islam Mohamed, a 22-year-old student at Al-Shorouk Academy in the Greater Cairo area, was detained early Wednesday on suspicion of killing his 20-year-old classmate, Salma Bahgat. He is accused of “repeatedly stabbing her with a knife” on Tuesday as she was leaving a building in Zagazig, northeast of Cairo, according to a statement from Egyptian prosecutors.
Prosecutors, citing accounts from witnesses and relatives, said Bahgat had had twice declined marriage proposals from Mohamed, who in turn made death threats against her. Bahgat’s parents told authorities that Mohamed’s proposals were rejected because of his “misbehavior and drug abuse,” according to prosecutors.
In a statement released Tuesday evening, Al-Shorouk Academy mourned the death of Bahgat, who was studying media, saying: “She was an example of a diligent and distinguished student, on the moral and scientific levels, throughout her four years at the academy.”

Bahgat’s killing marked the second such campus femicide to occur in Egypt within the past two months, prompting outcry on social media.

“Another woman killed for saying ‘No,’” one Twitter user wrote.
“I cant believe in this amount of time another incident like Nayera happened again,” another user said.
In June, 21-year-old Nayera Ashraf was stabbed to death in front of her university in Mansoura, north of Cairo, by a fellow student whose marriage proposal she had turned down. The gruesome incident, which was videotaped by bystanders, sent shockwaves across the North African nation.
Ashraf’s killer, 21-year-old Mohamed Adel, gained sympathy during his trial from some commentators on social media who called the murder a “crime of passion,” because they said he was left heartbroken.

“Misogyny is deep-rooted in Egyptian culture. A kid is raised watching his father beat his mother, for instance,” Said Sadek, a professor of political sociology at the American University in Cairo, told ABC News on Thursday.

“The media that frown upon any actress who wears revealing dresses and religious scholars who demand that women cover up from head to toe are also to blame for fueling such sentiments,” he added. “We turn the victim into a criminal and the harassers into heroes.”
Adel was ultimately convicted and sentenced to death last month. The court also took the unusual step of calling for changes to Egyptian law to allow executions to be broadcast live as a deterrent to others. Capital punishment in Egypt is rarely broadcast or carried out in public.
In Egypt, murder is punishable by death. More people were sentenced to death there last year than in any other country. In terms of the number of executions carried out, Egypt had the third highest, according to human rights group Amnesty International.
Nevertheless, critics argue that Egyptian law must be strengthened against gender-based violence, threats or blackmailing, which have been on the rise in recent years.

Sadek cited one example of a man who spent just a few weeks in prison after sexually harassing and beating up a woman in a Cairo shopping mall in 2015. Two years later, he attacked her with a knife, leaving a deep cut in her face, Sadek said.
According to a 2015 survey conducted by the United Nations Population Fund and the Egyptian government, about 7.8 million women in Egypt suffer from all forms of violence every year, “whether perpetrated by a spouse/fiancé or individuals in her close circles or from strangers in public places.”
Sexual violence is also rampant, with over 99.3% of Egyptian girls and women experiencing some form of sexual harassment in their lifetime, according to a U.N. report released in 2013.
Last year, the Parliament of Egypt approved tougher penalties for sexual harassment, making the crime punishable by a minimum of five years in prison. But women rights groups insist more should be done, calling on Egyptian Parliament to fast-track a draft unified law for combating violence against women. The proposed legislation has been in the works for several months.
In the wake of Bahgat’s killing, almost two dozen groups, including the Giza-based Center for Egyptian Women’s Legal Assistance, issued a statement Wednesday calling on Egyptian authorities “to take all the measures to protect women and girls, who have the right to live safely in their homeland.”
“Violence has become a culture nurtured by a societal complicity that justifies it, condemns the victim and sympathizes with the perpetrator,” they said. “We encourage women and girls to urgently report any threats they receive to authorities.”

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Egypt’s Ministry of Interior: Modern punitive policy being applied in reform, rehabilitation centers

Egypt Today staff

Thu, 11 Aug 2022 – 03:03 GMT – www.egypttoday.com

 
FILE: The Interior Ministry

CAIRO – 11 August 2022: The Egyptian authorities denied rumors reported by T.V. channels affiliated with the banned Muslim Brotherhood about the conditions of Egyptian prisons.
In a statement issued on Wednesday evening, the Ministry of Interior denied the reports issued by foreign media outlets affiliated with the banned group.
“These [rumors] contradict the documented reports and statements issued by the president and members of the National Council for Human Rights, the human rights committees of the House of Representatives and the Senate and many national human rights organizations, following their visits to a number of reform and rehabilitation centers,” the Ministry of Interior’s statement read.
“In the state’s reform and rehabilitation centers, a modern punitive policy is being applied in terms of international human rights standards,” the statement explained.
“All these allegations come as part of the desperate attempts of the terrorist Brotherhood and those who are looking for political gains to influence public opinion,” the statement added.
The statement was issued following the death of a remand prisoner in a police station in Alexandria, and some personnel of the Ministry of Interior were accused of “ill-treatment inside prisons.”

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Africa Women Innovation And Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF) Announces Stellar Speaker Line-up For AWIEF2022 Conference & Awards

August 19, 2022 / 4 minutes of reading / By 
Africa.com
URL: https://www.africa.com/africa-women-innovation-and-entrepreneurship-forum-awief-announces-stellar-speaker-line-up-for-awief2022-conference-awards/

Egypt’s Ministry of International Cooperation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Amazon Web Services to headline AWIEF2022
The Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF) has announced a stellar speaker line-up for its prestigious and benchmarking annual conference and awards taking place on 26 and 27 September on-site in Cairo, Egypt, and virtual.
AWIEF, which is celebrating the 8th anniversary of its award-winning conference, expo and awards, is heading to North Africa for the first time and has partnered with Egypt’s Ministry of International Cooperation (MOIC) and Egyptian Businessmen’s Association (EBA) for the hosting of this year’s event in Egypt.
More than 60 African and global thought leaders and industry experts across business, international development and government are set to share insights and thought leadership on the conference agenda.
The conference theme this year is, Advancing Africa through gender integration. The two-day event aims to promote and accelerate MSMEs and SMEs growth for Africa’s inclusive economic growth and brings together the African entrepreneurship ecosystem for discussions on entrepreneurship, leadership, technology and innovation, sustainability, intra-African trade, finance and investment, energy and infrastructure, and agriculture and food security.
The powerful and high-level global speaker faculty for AWIEF2022 includes: H. E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of International Cooperation, Egypt; Damilola Ogunbiyi, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General & CEO for SE4ALL and Co-Chair of UN-Energy; Elena Atanasova Panova, UN Resident Coordinator in Egypt; Solomon Quaynor, Vice-President for Private Sector, Infrastructure and Industrialization at the African Development Bank Group (AfDB); Sherif El Gabaly, Member of Parliament (MP) and Chairman of the African Affairs Committee in the Egyptian Parliament; Hon. Bogolo Kenewendo, Former Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry, Botswana; Ayoade Alakija, WHO Special Envoy for the ACT-Accelerator and Co-Chair of the African Union’s African Vaccine Delivery Alliance; Jackie Jones, Director and Chief of Staff, Gender Equality Division, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Dina Saleh, Regional Director, Near East, North Africa, Europe & Central Asia, IFAD; Uzoma Dozie, Founder and CEO, Sparkle Digital Bank, Nigeria; Ali Eissa, Chairman, Egyptian Businessmen’s Association (EBA); Patricia Obozuwa, Vice President, Government Affairs, Communications & Sustainability for Africa, The Coca Cola Company; Izabela Milewska, Digital Skills Global Leader, Amazon Web Services (AWS); Dalia Ibrahim, Chief Executive Officer, Nahdet Misr Publishing House and Founder of EdVentures; Amany Asfour, President, Africa Business Council; Chinyere Almona, Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI); and Marieme Esther Dassanou, Manager, Affirmative Finance Action for Women in Africa (AFAWA), African Development Bank Group (AfDB).
AWIEF2022 Sponsors are Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Amazon Web Services, Africa-Europe Foundation, Nedbank, Visa, Sparkle and AGRA.
AWIEF2022 Partners are Egypt’s Ministry of International Cooperation, the Egyptian Businessmen’s Association (local co-organizers), EdVentures (Edtech Community Partner), APO Group (AWIEF’s Principal Partner and Official Newswire); Africa.com (Media Partner), and Ethiopian Airlines.
The 2022 AWIEF Awards and Gala Dinner will take place on Tuesday, 27 September 2022, with Amazon Web Services as Headline Sponsor while Category Sponsors are Visa (Tech Entrepreneur Award) and Nedbank (Young Entrepreneur Award).
According to Minister Rania Al-Mashat, “The hosting of AWIEF2022 in Egypt reflects Egypt’s keenness and support for empowering women and enhancing their economic participation and important roles on innovation and entrepreneurship to achieve sustainable development. Such a step also reflects the state’s pivotal roles and national efforts on women empowerment to strengthen women’s contribution to the labour markets.”
Irene Ochem, Founder and CEO of AWIEF, says “The theme for this year’s AWIEF event is inspired by the fact that no conversation about empowerment or entrepreneurship can, or should, exclude either women or men. Gender diversity and inclusion is vital for Africa’s economic growth. A lot of progress has been made, but there is still a lot of work to be done, especially in relation to access to finance for women entrepreneurs, access to markets, skills training, and networks. Egypt is at the forefront of the African entrepreneurial and innovation ecosystem, and we are going to learn and connect with those driving this growing economy and other African economies.”
Book for #AWIEF2022 & #AWIEFAwards at: https://www.awieforum.org/awief-conference-2022/
WATCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mCS-V1G46k
Follow @AWIEFORUM:
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/awieforum/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/awieforum
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The United States is subsidizing Hezbollah’s human shields

A terrible war is looming in the Middle East, and American taxpayer dollars make it more likely.

(August 11, 2022 / JNS) On Aug. 5, 2022, the IDF launched “Operation Breaking Dawn,” aimed at taking out Iran-backed terrorists in the Gaza Strip. But while Israel and its allies are focused on the nation’s southern border, a larger fight looms in the north.
A great war is coming to the Middle East. It will emanate from Iran, which calls for Israel’s destruction, but its victims will span the region. And the United States is, albeit unwittingly, contributing to the devastation it will bring.

Iran, the International Atomic Energy Agency and others have warned, is closer than ever to producing a nuclear bomb. Israel has steadfastly proclaimed that the Islamic republic must not be allowed to become a nuclear power. History tells us that Israel means what it says. Jerusalem took out the nuclear programs of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq in 1981 and Bashar Assad’s Syria in 2007.
There are other indicators, as well. As CAMERA has highlighted, Israel has steadily increased its military capabilities, recently holding the largest military exercises in its history. In June, the IDF revealed that it can now fly F-35 fighter jets from Israel to Iran without refueling. The jets are also equipped with a bomb that “can be carried inside the plane’s internal weapons compartment without jeopardizing its stealth radar signature,” as the Jerusalem Post reported.
But unlike the strikes that took out the Iraqi and Syrian nuclear facilities, ending Iran’s nuclear ambitions will be more complicated. An attack on Iran’s nuclear program will necessitate a wider war—one that will be existential for both Israel and regime in Tehran. Further, the Islamic republic’s terrorist proxies surround the Jewish state and many are embedded in civilian populations.

Lebanon offers what is perhaps the best example of Iran’s strategy. The Levantine nation is de facto ruled by Hezbollah, a U.S.-designated terrorist group and Iran’s foremost proxy.
In underreported remarks in June, IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi warned that Hezbollah has turned “Lebanon into a country that has the potential to experience unprecedented damage, due to the way it has spread across Lebanon, from south to north, and through the way it attached its weapons and operatives to civilian areas. This is the reality the enemy created.”
That reality is looking nightmarish for many Lebanese.
The Alma Research and Education Center, an Israeli NGO, has thoroughly documented Hezbollah’s frightening use of human shields. In the area near the city of Nabatieh in southern Lebanon, the Alma Center has identified more than 200 villages that are part of what Hezbollah calls its “second line of defense.”
Hezbollah has established sites that are “located in buildings within the populated villages and areas close to villages,” which are “utilized by the missile and rocket array systems.” Many of the buildings are used to store “large quantities of explosives.” Indeed, some reportedly house Hezbollah’s engineering unit, which manufactures improvised explosive devices.
Nor is Hezbollah’s use of human shields confined to southern Lebanon. In September 2018, the IDF released footage of three underground facilities that were built by Hezbollah in populated neighborhoods of Beirut to improve its precision-guided missiles.
Storing explosives in civilian population centers has long been a favored tactic of Hezbollah and other Iranian proxies, like Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Perhaps most infamously, on Aug. 4, 2020, a large explosion ripped through Beirut, killing 218 people and leaving more than 300,000 Lebanese homeless. Strong evidence links Hezbollah to the improper storage of 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate that caused the explosion. Yet in one of many signs of the terrorist group’s control of the state, answers haven’t been forthcoming and many Lebanese express little optimism that an impartial and fair investigation will take place.
Hezbollah will go to great lengths to use civilians as cannon fodder. The terror group has even established several faux nonprofit organizations to provide their operatives with additional cover. As the Alma Center has documented, Hezbollah established the Peace Organization for Demining to “disguise” the terror group’s use of human shields. The organization worked to provide a cover story and disseminate propaganda after another weapons depot exploded in the southern village of Ain Qana in Sept. 2020.
Hezbollah has used other nonprofits to help hide its activities. As the Washington Institute for Near East Policy has highlighted, one such organization, Green Without Borders, has even collected intelligence for Hezbollah while posing as an environmental nonprofit. But it is the Lebanese state itself—specifically the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF)—which provide the terror group with essential aid.
The United States, among others, has funded, trained and equipped the LAF, hoping that it will serve as an “institutional counterweight” to Hezbollah, as one senior U.S. State Department person recently testified.
A new report by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a nonpartisan Washington D.C.-based think tank, argues that U.S. support for the LAF is not achieving this stated objective. Instead, the LAF has been actively colluding with Hezbollah.
FDD board member and counterinsurgency expert David Kilcullen charts numerous examples of the LAF working hand-in-glove with Hezbollah—sometimes against other terrorist organizations that challenge Hezbollah’s rule, and often against Israel, a chief U.S. ally. Far from being a “counterweight” to the Shiite terrorist group, the LAF actually “amplified Hezbollah’s influence.” Their intelligence and security services “reportedly share information and collaborate closely” with the Iranian proxy. Indeed, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has even praised the Lebanese Armed Forces for their assistance in taking down the group’s enemies.
Kilcullen argues that American assistance to the LAF isn’t working and that Lebanon’s dire economic situation presents the U.S. and its allies with leverage. The United States should use it. A war is coming, and Hezbollah is amassing human shields. American tax dollars should be working to make a bloodbath less, not more likely.
Sean Durns is a Senior Research Analyst for CAMERA, the 65,000-member, Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis.

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New South Wales MPs call on Australia government to condemn Azerbaijan aggression against Artsakh

12:02, 11.08.2022
Region:World NewsArmeniaKarabakhAzerbaijan
Theme: Politics
www.news.am

The convenors of the New South Wales Armenia-Australia Friendship Group appealed to Australia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon. Penny Wong, requesting the Federal Government publicly condemns Azerbaijan’s latest attacks against the indigenous Armenians of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), reported ( http://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/New-South-Wales-Parliamentary-Friends-of-Armenia-Call-on-Australian-Government-to-Condemn-Azerbaijani-Aggression ) the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU).
Member for Davidson and Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, the Hon. Jonathan O’Dea and Member of the Legislative Council, the Hon. Walt Secord––who are Chair and Vice-Chair of the Armenia-Australia Friendship Group––raised concern over the latest unprovoked ceasefire violation committed by Azerbaijan.
Their letter voiced the bipartisan group’s objection over the targeted attacks against civilian settlements in Martuni, and attempts by Azerbaijan to cross the predetermined line of contact as determined by the November 2020 trilateral agreement, violating several fundamental human rights, resulting in the death of two Armenian servicemen and leaving 19 wounded.
“The parliamentary group ask that your government seriously consider publicly condemning Azerbaijan’s recent illegal violations of the ceasefire agreement,” their letter added.
This new wave of aggression has resulted in the forced displacement and ethnic cleansing of thousands of Armenians from the villages of Berdzor and Aghavno, located inside the Berdzor (Lachin) corridor, which represents a clear violation of Article 7, Section 1(d) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, prohibiting the “deportation or forcible transfer of population.”

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Official: All conditions for media development available in Azerbaijan

11 August 2022 17:19 (UTC+04:00) – AZERNEWS.AZ

By Sabina Mammadli
Azerbaijan has every condition for the development of media, Prosecutor-General Kamran Aliyev has opined, Azernews reports.
He made the remarks at a conference on the information security of society in Baku, where media captains and NGO representatives were invited.
According to him, the improvement of modern societies can’t be viewed without media development.
“The media is evidently the fourth estate in Azerbaijan. During the Second Karabakh War, our journalists worked directly on the front line, keeping the whole world informed about Azerbaijan’s just struggle,” Aliyev stated.
The Azerbaijani parliament passed a new media law in December 2021. It establishes the general rules for organizing media activities, as well as the legal and economic foundations for those activities, as well as the receipt, preparation, transmission, production, and dissemination of information. The document is divided into nine chapters and 78 clauses.
It covers every detail, from increasing journalists’ professionalism to resolving their social issues. The document establishes the legal framework required for better information security protection in Azerbaijan.

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