A Dance for the Children of Gaza – and all of Humanity

Artistes of various cultural backgrounds came together on August 29 to express solidarity with children in a conflict-ridden world.

New Delhi: “Every child deserves to feel the extraordinary joy and privilege that it is to simply be alive,” says Aranyani Bhargav, Bharatanatyam dancer and teacher.

And yet, children have increasingly been victims of conflict around the world, conflicts in which they are “neither the orchestrator nor the perpetrators of violence”, adds Aranyani.

Deeply affected by this dissonance, Aranyani and South African dance scholar Donovan Roebert started the “Indian Dancers for Gazan Children” (IDGC) initiative as a way to mobilise the Indian dance community to come together against the violence against children around the world – Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan or any other conflict zone. They have launched several solidarity events throughout India and the world to raise awareness about and funds for children in Gaza, emphasising their humanitarian rather than political approach to raising awareness.

On August 29, the IDGC organised ‘Insāniyat: An evening of cultural performances’ in Delhi, an event in solidarity with children in a conflict-ridden world. Various performers, including Aranyani, were part of the even.

Diya Vyas performs Kathak.

The evening commenced with Diya Vyas’s Kathak performance, where she presented a ‘Ram Bhajan’, a traditional composition praising the Hindu deity Ram and calling for peace and prosperity. The performance helped remind people of the universal nature of values, such as peace, across religions and cultures.

Saanvi Banerjee does the Odissi.

Saanvi Banerjee performed ‘Rageshree Pallavi’, a graceful and intricate expression of pure dance in Odissi. Through this performance, she hopes that one day the children of Gaza will also be free “to dance. Just dance”, according to Aranyani.

Paromita Dolui and Nimisha Devi perform the Bharatnatyam and Odissi.

Paromita Dolui and Nimisha Devi presented ‘Maitriyam’, a celebration of unity through dance. The elegance of Odissi was showcased in ‘Shankaravaranam Pallavi’, with movements reflecting a flower’s bloom, followed by the dynamic energy of Bharatanatyam in ‘Paras Tillana’, with its brisk tempo and intricate footwork. The presentation concluded with ‘Maitriyam Bhajata’, a serene dance symbolising peace and friendship through the union of two dance forms.

Arnav Ajana and Kimaya Singh do a Spectrum-Based Movement.

Two 15-year-olds, Arnav and Kimaya, told the story of Orpheus and Eurydice from Ovid’s Metamorphosis and traced their journey from the tender moments of their marriage, Orpheus’ agonising temptation to look back and the heart-wrenching finale where love becomes the hero of the story.

Ayana Mukherjee, with Charulata Mukherjee, presented ‘Whispers of the Unseen, Yashoda’s Eternal Lament’, a commentary on the universal pain of loss and the silent cries of children caught in the crosshairs of violence.

Himani Khurana, Ankita Alemona and Vivek Nainwal, with Jasmeet Rekhi and Ratika Bhandari on handpan and vocals, do the Kalaripayattu.

The event continued with ‘Samvit‘, a powerful Kalaripayattu presentation by Himani Khurana, Ankita Alemona, and Vivek Nainwal, accompanied by Jasmeet Rekhi and Ratika Bhandari on handpan and vocals. Through evocative lines like “Holding hope in my arms, I will guard, I will march” and “I surrender for my kids; surrender for the hope you bring,” the performance explored themes of inner strength and surrender.

Reflecting on the idea that the true battle is within us, ‘Samvit’ took the audience on a journey to conquer fear and ego, seeking truth and a shared purpose to create a peaceful society.

Tushti Som at the Kathak.

Tushti Som presented ‘Rudrashtakam‘, a Sanskrit hymn dedicated to the Hindu deity Shiva, known for its spiritual depth and ability to invoke a sense of peace and enlightenment. The Kathak performance aimed to use this hymn as a means to seek spiritual enlightenment and peace for all. The hymn serves as a source of hope and strength, invoking Shiva’s compassion to offer relief, guidance, and support to those enduring pain and adversity.

 

Nitisha Nanda and Aakriti Gandhi do an experimental routine.

Nitesha Nanda and Akriti Gandhi presented ‘Aikyam’, an evolving experimental piece of art that delved into the tension of duality.  ‘Aikyam’ asks – What if we realised that we are all part of a single, shared existence, that everything within and around us is a part of the same whole? Wars, both within ourselves and between us, will cease to exist and we will all be one, it says.

 

Aranyani Bhargav at the bharatanatyam.

The conflict in Gaza has claimed countless innocent lives, including many children, long before October 7, as far back as the Nakba in 1948. A poignant reminder of this is Faiz Ahmad Faiz’s poem, ‘A Lullaby for a Palestinian Child.’

IDGC’s co-founder Aranyani embodied this poem through movement in ‘Lori’ (lullaby) to try to depict the devastating reality for many Palestinian people right now. The Bharatnatyam performance sought to help children brutalised and orphaned by war make sense of its horrors, offering consolation by suggesting that their lost loved ones are now in a better place of dreams and peace.

Rachna Yadav and her ensemble presented ‘Rise, to urge all of us to rise with courage, grit and resilience. Through a Kathak performance, they urged each of us to rise and support those in Palestine who fight for survival against all odds.

Karan Gangani at Kathak.

Karan Gangani presented an electric Kathak performance, ‘Sargam’ – a musical section of Hindustani classical music sung with the musical notes ‘Sa Re Ga Ma’.

 

Aditi Mangaldas and group (Faraz Ahmed, Ashish Gangani, Anindita Acharjee, Anjana Singh, Deepannita Sarkar, Diksha Tripathi, Gourav Jawda. Harendra Kumar Bhushan, Rachana Yadav, Shubhi Johari, Siddhant Purohit) at the Kathak, with poetry by Sudeep Sen and impromptu installation by Manish Kansara

Aditi Mangaldas and group presented the final performance of the event, ‘Weeping Red’. It was an extempore performance that combined dance, poetry, music, and art. It reflected the horror of targeted violence against children and shattered humanity. The ensemble, featuring Kathak and contemporary dance based on Kathak, was inspired by Sudeep Sen’s poem ‘Gaza’ and Refaat Alareer’s ‘If I Must Die’, while also incorporating an art installation by sculptor Manish Kansara.

Palestinian Ambassador to India, Adnan Abu Al-Hija, congratulating and thanking the artistes.

‘Apathy’

Aranyani discussed with The Wire how her initiative aimed to ignite the inner convictions of artistes against violence towards children in India. She expressed being deeply “rattled” and “shaken” by the widespread “apathy” towards the numerous reports and instances of child abuse resulting from conflicts.

Aranyani emphasised the fundamental injustice of involving children in conflicts: “Wars are supposed to be meant to be fought between armies. They’re not meant to be involving children at such large scales”. She and Donovan focused on Palestinian children due to their dire need and limited global support.

The importance of art

Aranyani talked about how seeing reels and news about killings of children would disturb her soul, making dancing difficult and feeling pointless. While art can be for entertainment, an artiste has the responsibility to make a statement – such as the one that she felt compelled to make. Aranyani talked about how any dance form can be used in “expressing pain and conflict and loss and devastation, if the person who is the carrier of that art form is sensitive enough to do it”. The rich variety of techniques and technical ‘Nritta’, as well as the wealth of ‘Abhinaya’, meaning the stories and emotions capable through different Indian dance forms all enable performers to express the solidarity with children as well as their opposition to violence, she highlighted.

Aditi Mangaldas of the Aditi Mangaldas Dance Company and the Drishtikon Dance Foundation mentioned the how artistes need to “breathe in the now”, which has increasingly become a bleak reality. As a Kathak practitioner, she describes her role as a ‘Kathakar‘, or storyteller, conveying tales of the present and reflecting reality. In her words, Kathak is and must be “a living art form. It’s not dead in a museum and stories change. That’s the only thing permanent in our lives is change. So, if we don’t look at that change, then we are not really true artists”.

Malvika Saini described how wars in which children are targets are not “just wars” but are about making “statements”. Roshni Soni, who danced with her, added how through their performance, they wanted to be able to convey the emotions of those in suffering to the viewers to be make them ‘rise’.

For Nikhil Bohra, Bharatanatyam and Odissi dancer, the performing arts are not just about entertainment but about enlightenment, and therefore an important way to open people’s eyes to the injustices faced.

Taliban Bans UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Afghanistan

While the Islamist regime denied entry to Richard Bennet on grounds of spreading “propaganda”, The UN has accused the Taliban of creating a system of “gender apartheid” in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan’s de facto rulers, the Taliban, have barred UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights Richard Bennett entry into the country.

The Taliban said he had been banned “because he was appointed to Afghanistan to spread propaganda and he is not someone whose words we can trust.”

Bennett condemned the decision, saying, “I have consistently sought to engage transparently with the de facto authorities (….) I urge the Taliban to reverse their decision and reiterate my willingness and availability to travel to Afghanistan.”

He labelled the ban “retrograde,” vowing that it would not keep him from documenting the human rights situation in the country.

“The Taliban’s public announcement that they will no longer grant me access to Afghanistan is a step backward and sends a concerning signal about their engagement with the United Nations and the international community on human rights,” Bennett said in a statement.

Taliban accused of ‘Gender Apartheid’

The group, which adheres to an ultraconservative interpretation of Islamic law, has turned back the clock on gender equality since regaining control of Afghanistan three years ago in August 2021, effectively banning women from sight and shutting them out of society.

Women in Afghanistan face restrictions on attending school or work.

Such antiquated policies have kept the international community from recognising the Taliban as legitimate rulers.

The country’s central bank assets have been frozen since the Taliban returned, for instance, and many of the group’s leaders are banned from traveling internationally.

In June, top UN officials, alongside representatives from 25 countries, met with Taliban leaders in Qatar in an attempt to forge an approach to dealing with the group. The meeting was roundly criticized as Afghan women and civic representatives were barred at the Taliban’s request.

UN rapporteur vows to continue documenting abuse

Among others, Bennett has been a constant critic of the regime since he was appointed rapporteur on May 1, 2022, though the Taliban has repeatedly scoffed at outside criticism of its human rights record.

Bennett, noting that he took his responsibilities as a UN-appointed expert seriously, said his work, “includes always acting in an independent capacity, offering an impartial assessment of facts based on internationally recognized human rights standards and methodologies, and upholding the highest standards of efficiency, competence and integrity.”

On Wednesday, Bennett said, “I will also continue to document human rights violations and abuses and advocate for improvements.”

Special rapporteurs are independently appointed by the UN Human Rights Council, are not considered UN employees and do not speak on behalf of the international body.

Beyond the special rapporteur, the UN maintains a mission to Afghanistan, where it monitors human rights abuses from Kabul.

This article first appeared on DW.

The Overshoot Myth: Scientists of the Future Cannot Get Us Back to 1.5°C

Global climate action is increasingly detached from reality, relying on speculative technologies to get back to an overshot 1.5°C target. This approach risks catastrophic climate change and deepens global suffering instead of addressing the root causes.

Record breaking fossil fuel production, all time high greenhouse gas emissions and extreme temperatures. Like the proverbial frog in the heating pan of water, we refuse to respond to the climate and ecological crisis with any sense of urgency. Under such circumstances, claims from some that global warming can still be limited to no more than 1.5°C take on a surreal quality.

For example, at the start of 2023’s international climate negotiations in Dubai, conference president, Sultan Al Jaber, boldly stated that 1.5°C was his goal and that his presidency would be guided by a “deep sense of urgency” to limit global temperatures to 1.5°C. He made such lofty promises while planning a massive increase in oil and gas production as CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company.

We should not be surprised to see such behaviour from the head of a fossil fuel company. But Al Jaber is not an outlier. Scratch at the surface of almost any net zero pledge or policy that claims to be aligned with the 1.5°C goal of the landmark 2015 Paris agreement and you will reveal the same sort of reasoning: we can avoid dangerous climate change without actually doing what this demands – which is to rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from industry, transport, energy (70% of total) and food systems (30% of total), while ramping up energy efficiency.

A particularly instructive example is Amazon. In 2019 the company established a 2040 net zero target which was then verified by the UN Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) which has been leading the charge in getting companies to establish climate targets compatible with the Paris agreement. But over the next four years Amazon’s emissions went up by 40%. Given this dismal performance, the SBTi was forced to act and removed Amazon and over 200 companies from its Corporate Net Zero Standard.

This is also not surprising given that net zero and even the Paris agreement have been built around the perceived need to keep burning fossil fuels, at least in the short term. Not do so would threaten economic growth, given that fossil fuels still supply over 80% of total global energy. The trillions of dollars of fossil fuel assets at risk with rapid decarbonisation have also served as powerful brakes on climate action.

Overshoot

The way to understand this doublethink: that we can avoid dangerous climate change while continuing to burn fossil fuels – is that it relies on the concept of overshoot. The promise is that we can overshoot past any amount of warming, with the deployment of planetary-scale carbon dioxide removal dragging temperatures back down by the end of the century.

This not only cripples any attempt to limit warming to 1.5°C, but risks catastrophic levels of climate change as it locks us into energy and material-intensive solutions which for the most part exist only on paper.

To argue that we can safely overshoot 1.5°C, or any amount of warming, is saying the quiet bit out loud: we simply don’t care about the increasing amount of suffering and deaths that will be caused while the recovery is worked on.

A key element of overshoot is carbon dioxide removal. This is essentially a time machine – we are told we can turn back the clock of decades of delay by sucking carbon dioxide directly out of the atmosphere. We don’t need rapid decarbonisation now, because in the future we will be able to take back those carbon emissions. If or when that doesn’t work, we are led to believe that even more outlandish geoengineering approaches such as spraying sulphurous compounds into the high atmosphere in an attempt to block out sunlight – which amounts to planetary refrigeration – will save us.

The 2015 Paris agreement was an astonishing accomplishment. The establishment of 1.5°C as being the internationally agreed ceiling for warming was a success for those people and nations most exposed to climate change hazards. We know that every fraction of a degree matters. But at the time, believing warming could really be limited to well below 2°C required a leap of faith when it came to nations and companies putting their shoulder to the wheel of decarbonisation. What has happened instead is that the net zero approach of Paris is becoming detached from reality as it is increasingly relying on science fiction levels of speculative technology.

There is arguably an even bigger problem with the Paris agreement. By framing climate change in terms of temperature, it focuses on the symptoms, not the cause. 1.5°C or any amount of warming is the result of humans changing the energy balance of the climate by increasing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This traps more heat. Changes in the global average temperature is the established way of measuring this increase in heat, but no one experiences this average.

Climate change is dangerous because of weather that affects particular places at particular times. Simply put, this extra heat is making weather more unstable. Unfortunately, having temperature targets makes solar geoengineering seem like a sensible approach because it may lower temperatures. But it does this by not reducing, but increasing our interference in the climate system. Trying to block out the sun in response to increasing carbon emissions is like turning on the air conditioning in response to a house fire.

In 2021 we argued that net zero was a dangerous trap. Three years on and we can see the jaws of this trap beginning to close, with climate policy being increasingly framed in terms of overshoot. The resulting impacts on food and water security, poverty, human health, the destruction of biodiversity and ecosystems will produce intolerable suffering.

Also Read: There’s a Right Path and a Wrong Path to Net-Zero. Which One Are We On?

The situation demands honesty, and a change of course. If this does not materialise then things are likely to deteriorate, potentially rapidly and in ways that may be impossible to control.

Au revoir Paris

The time has come to accept that climate policy has failed, and that the 2015 landmark Paris agreement is dead. We let it die by pretending that we could both continue to burn fossil fuels and avoid dangerous climate change at the same time. Rather than demand the immediate phase out of fossil fuels, the Paris agreement proposed 22nd-century temperature targets which could be met by balancing the sources and sinks of carbon. Within that ambiguity net zero flourished. And yet apart from the COVID economic shock in 2020, emissions have increased every year since 2015, reaching an all time high in 2023.

Despite there being abundant evidence that climate action makes good economic sense (the cost of inaction vastly exceeds the cost of action), no country strengthened their pledges at the last three COPs (the annual UN international meetings) even though it was clear that the world was on course to sail past 2°C, let alone 1.5°C. The Paris agreement should be producing a 50% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, but current policies mean that they are on track to be higher than they are today.

 

Representative image. Photo: Unsplash

We do not deny that significant progress has been made with renewable technologies. Rates of deployment of wind and solar have increased each year for the past 22 years and carbon emissions are going down in some of the richest nations, including the UK and the US. But this is not happening fast enough. A central element of the Paris agreement is that richer nations need to lead decarbonisation efforts to give lower income nations more time to transition away from fossil fuels. Despite some claims to the contrary, the global energy transition is not in full swing. In fact, it hasn’t actually begun because the transition demands a reduction in fossil fuel use. Instead it continues to increase year-on-year.

And so policymakers are turning to overshoot in an attempt to claim that they have a plan to avoid dangerous climate change. A central plank of this approach is that the climate system in the future will continue to function as it does today. This is a reckless assumption.

2023’s warning signs

At the start of 2023, Berkeley Earth, NASA, the UK Met Office, and Carbon Brief predicted that 2023 would be slightly warmer than the previous year but unlikely to set any records. Twelve months later and all four organisations concluded that 2023 was by some distance the warmest year ever recorded. In fact, between February 2023 and February 2024 the global average temperature warming exceeded the Paris target of 1.5°C.

The extreme weather events of 2023 give us a glimpse of the suffering that further global warming will produce. A 2024 report from the World Economic Forum concluded that by 2050 climate change may have caused over 14 million deaths and US$12.5 trillion in loss and damages.

Currently we cannot fully explain why global temperatures have been so high for the past 18 months. Changes in dust, soot and other aerosols are important, and there are natural processes such as El Niño that will be having an effect.

But it appears that there is still something missing in our current understanding of how the climate is responding to human impacts. This includes changes in the Earth’s vital natural carbon cycle.

Around half of all the carbon dioxide humans have put into the atmosphere over the whole of human history has gone into “carbon sinks” on land and the oceans. We get this carbon removal “for free”, and without it, warming would be much higher. Carbon dioxide from the air dissolves in the oceans (making them more acidic which threatens marine ecosystems). At the same time, increasing carbon dioxide promotes the growth of plants and trees which locks up carbon in their leaves, roots, trunks.

Friedlingstein et al. 2023 Global Carbon Budget 2023. Earth System Science Data.

All climate policies and scenarios assume that these natural carbon sinks will continue to remove tens of billions of tons of carbon from the atmosphere each year. There is evidence that land-based carbon sinks, such as forests, removed significantly less carbon in 2023. If natural sinks begin to fail – something they may well do in a warmer world – then the task of lowering global temperatures becomes even harder. The only credible way of limiting warming to any amount, is to stop putting greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere in the first place.

Science fiction solutions

It’s clear that the commitments countries have made to date as part of the Paris agreement will not keep humanity safe while carbon emissions and temperatures continue to break records. Indeed, proposing to spend trillions of dollars over this century to suck carbon dioxide out of the air, or the myriad other ways to hack the climate is an acknowledgement that the world’s largest polluters are not going to curb the burning of fossil fuels.

Direct Air Capture (DAC), Bio Energy Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS), enhanced ocean alkalinitybiocharsulphate aerosol injectioncirrus cloud thinning – the entire wacky races of carbon dioxide removal and geoengineering only makes sense in a world of failed climate policy.

Over the following years we are going to see climate impacts increase. Lethal heatwaves are going to become more common. Storms and floods are going to become increasingly destructive. More people are going to be displaced from their homes. National and regional harvests will fail. Vast sums of money will need to be spent on efforts to adapt to climate change, and perhaps even more compensating those who are most affected. We are expected to believe that while all this and more unfolds, new technologies that will directly modify the Earth’s atmosphere and energy balance will be successfully deployed.

What’s more, some of these technologies may need to operate for three hundred years in order for the consequences of overshoot to be avoided. Rather than quickly slow down carbon polluting activities and increasing the chances that the Earth system will recover, we are instead going all in on net zero and overshoot in an increasingly desperate hope that untested science fiction solutions will save us from climate breakdown.

We can see the cliff edge rapidly approaching. Rather than slam on the brakes, some people are instead pushing their foot down harder on the accelerator. Their justification for this insanity is that we need to go faster in order to be able to make the jump and land safely on the other side.

We believe that many who advocate for carbon dioxide removal and geoengineering do so in good faith. But they include proposals to refreeze the Arctic by pumping up sea water onto ice sheets to form new layers of ice and snow. These are interesting ideas to research, but there is very little evidence this will have any effect on the Arctic let alone global climate. These are the sorts of knots that people tie themselves up in when they acknowledge the failure of climate policy, but refuse to challenge the fundamental forces behind such failure. They are unwittingly slowing down the only effective action of rapidly phasing out fossil fuels.

That’s because proposals to remove carbon dioxide from the air or geoengineer the climate promise a recovery from overshoot, a recovery that will be delivered by innovation, driven by growth. That this growth is powered by the same fossil fuels that are causing the problem in the first place doesn’t feature in their analysis.

The bottom line here is that the climate system is utterly indifferent to our pledges and promises. It doesn’t care about economic growth. And if we carry on burning fossil fuels then it will not stop changing until the energy balance is restored. By which time millions of people could be dead, with many more facing intolerable suffering.

Major climate tipping points

Even if we assume that carbon removal and even geoengineering technologies can be deployed in time, there is a very large problem with the plan to overshoot 1.5°C and then lower temperatures later: tipping points.

The science of tipping points is rapidly advancing. Late last year one of us (James Dyke) along with over 200 academics from around the world was involved in the production of the Global Tipping Points Report. This was a review of the latest science about where tipping points in the climate system may be, as well as exploring how social systems can undertake rapid change (in the direction that we want) thereby producing positive tipping points. Within the report’s 350 pages is abundant evidence that the overshoot approach is an extraordinarily dangerous gamble with the future of humanity. Some tipping points have the potential to cause global havoc.

Also Read: ‘We’re Approaching Critical Climate Tipping Points’

The melt of permafrost could release billions of tons of greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere and supercharge human-caused climate change. Fortunately, this seems unlikely under the current warming. Unfortunately, the chance that ocean currents in the North Atlantic could collapse may be much higher than previously thought. If that were to materialise, weather systems across the world, but in particular in Europe and North America, would be thrown into chaos. Beyond 1.5°C, warm water coral reefs are heading towards annihilation. The latest science concludes that by 2°C global reefs would be reduced by 99%. The devastating bleaching event unfolding across the Great Barrier Reef follows multiple mass mortality events. To say we are witnessing one of the world’s greatest biological wonders die is insufficient. We are knowingly killing it.

We may have even already passed some major climate tipping points. The Earth has two great ice sheets, Antarctica, and Greenland. Both are disappearing as a consequence of climate change. Between 2016 and 2020, the Greenland ice sheet lost on average 372 billion tons of ice a year. The current best assessment of when a tipping point could be reached for the Greenland ice sheet is around 1.5°C.

This does not mean that the Greenland ice sheet will suddenly collapse if warming exceeds that level. There is so much ice (some 2,800 trillion tons) that it would take centuries for all of it to melt over which time sea levels would rise seven metres. If global temperatures could be brought back down after a tipping point, then maybe the ice sheet could be stabilised. We just cannot say with any certainty that such a recovery would be possible. While we struggle with the science, 30 million tons of ice is melting across Greenland every hour on average.

The take home message from research on these and other tipping points is that further warming accelerates us towards catastrophe. Important science, but is anyone listening?

It’s five minutes to midnight…again

We know we must urgently act on climate change because we are repeatedly told that time is running out. In 2015, Professor Jeffrey Sachs, the UN special adviser and director of The Earth Institute, declared: “The time has finally arrived – we’ve been talking about these six months for many years but we’re now here. This is certainly our generation’s best chance to get on track.”

In 2019 (then) Prince Charles gave a speech in which he said: “I am firmly of the view that the next 18 months will decide our ability to keep climate change to survivable levels and to restore nature to the equilibrium we need for our survival.”

“We have six months to save the planet,” exhorted International Energy Agency head Fatih Birol – one year later in 2020. In April 2024, Simon Stiell, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change said the next two years are “essential in saving our planet”.

Either the climate crisis has a very fortunate feature that allows the countdown to catastrophe to be continually reset, or we are deluding ourselves with endless declarations that time has not quite run out. If you can repeatedly hit snooze on your alarm clock and roll over back to sleep, then your alarm clock is not working.

Or there is another possibility. Stressing that we have very little time to act is intended to focus attention on climate negotiations. It’s part of a wider attempt to not just wake people up to the impending crisis, but generate effective action. This is sometimes used to explain how the 1.5°C threshold of warming came to be agreed. Rather than a specific target, it should be understood as a stretch goal. We may very well fail, but in reaching for it we move much faster than we would have done with a higher target, such as 2°C. For example, consider this statement made in 2018: “Stretching the goal to 1.5 degrees Celsius isn’t simply about speeding up. Rather, something else must happen and society needs to find another lever to pull on a global scale.”

What could this lever be? New thinking about economics that goes beyond GDP? Serious consideration of how rich industrialised nations could financially and materially help poorer nations to leapfrog fossil fuel infrastructure? Participatory democracy approaches that could help birth the radical new politics needed for the restructuring of our fossil fuel powered societies? None of these.

The lever in question is Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) because the above quote comes from an article written by Shell in 2018. In this advertorial Shell argues that we will need fossil fuels for many decades to come. CCS allows the promise that we can continue to burn fossil fuels and avoid carbon dioxide pollution by trapping the gas before it leaves the chimney. Back in 2018, Shell was promoting its carbon removal and offsets heavy Sky Scenario, an approach described as “a dangerous fantasy” by leading climate change academics as it assumed massive carbon emissions could be offset by tree planting.

Since then Shell has further funded carbon removal research within UK universities presumably in efforts to burnish its arguments that it must be able to continue to extract vast amounts of oil and gas.

Shell is far from alone in waving carbon capture magic wands. Exxon is making great claims for CCS as a way to produce net zero hydrogen from fossil gas – claims that have been subject to pointed criticism from academics with recent reporting exposing industry wide greenwashing around CCS.

But the rot goes much deeper. All climate policy scenarios that propose to limit warming to near 1.5°C rely on the largely unproven technologies of CCS and BECCS. BECCS sounds like a good idea in theory. Rather than burn coal in a power station, burn biomass such as wood chips. This would initially be a carbon neutral way of generating electricity if you grew as many trees as you cut down and burnt. If you then add scrubbers to the power station chimneys to capture the carbon dioxide, and then bury that carbon deep underground, then you would be able to generate power at the same time as reducing concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Unfortunately, there is now clear evidence that in practice, large-scale BECCS would have very adverse effects on biodiversity, and food and water security given the large amounts of land that would be given over to fast growing monoculture tree plantations. The burning of biomass may even be increasing carbon dioxide emissions. Drax, the UK’s largest biomass power station now produces four times as much carbon dioxide as the UK’s largest coal-fired power station.

Five minutes to midnight messages may be motivated to try to galvanise action, to stress the urgency of the situation and that we still (just) have time. But time for what? Climate policy only ever offers gradual change, certainly nothing that would threaten economic growth, or the redistribution of wealth and resources.

Despite the mounting evidence that globalised, industrialised capitalism is propelling humanity towards disaster, five minutes to midnight does not allow time and space to seriously consider alternatives. Instead, the solutions on offer are techno fixes that prop up the status quo and insists that fossil fuel companies such as Shell must be part of the solution.

That is not to say there are no good faith arguments for 1.5°C. But being well motivated does not alter reality. And the reality is that warming will soon pass 1.5°C, and that the Paris agreement has failed. In the light of that, repeatedly asking people to not give up hope, that we can avoid a now unavoidable outcome risks becoming counterproductive. Because if you insist on the impossible (burning fossil fuels and avoiding dangerous climate change), then you must invoke miracles. And there is an entire fossil fuel industry quite desperate to sell such miracles in the form of CCS.

Four suggestions

Humanity has enough problems right now, what we need are solutions. This is the response we sometimes get when we argue that there are fundamental problems with the net zero concept and the Paris agreement. It can be summed up with the simple question: so what’s your suggestion? Below we offer four.

1. Leave fossil fuels in the ground

The unavoidable reality is that we need to rapidly stop burning fossil fuels. The only way we can be sure of that is by leaving them in the ground. We have to stop exploring for new fossil fuel reserves and the exploitation of existing ones. That could be done by stopping fossil fuel financing.

At the same time we must transform the food system, especially the livestock sector, given that it is responsible for nearly two thirds of agricultural emissions. Start there and then work out how best the goods and services of economies can be distributed. Let’s have arguments about that based on reality not wishful thinking.

2. Ditch net zero crystal ball gazing targets

The entire framing of mid and end-century net zero targets should be binned. We are already in the danger zone. The situation demands immediate action, not promises of balancing carbon budgets decades into the future. The SBTi should focus on near-term emissions reductions. By 2030, global emissions need to be half of what they are today for any chance of limiting warming to no more than 2°C.

It is the responsibility of those who hold most power – politicians and business leaders – to act now. To that end we must demand twin targets – all net zero plans should include a separate target for actual reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. We must stop hiding inaction behind promises of future removals. It’s our children and future generations that will need to pay back the overshoot debt.

3. Base policy on credible science and engineering

All climate policies must be based on what can be done in the real world now, or in the very near future. If it is established that a credible amount of carbon can be removed by a proposed approach – which includes capture and its safe permanent storage – then and only then can this be included in net zero plans. The same applies to solar geoengineering.

Speculative technologies must be removed from all policies, pledges and scenarios until we are sure of how they will work, how they will be monitored, reported and validated, and what they will do to not just the climate but the Earth system as a whole. This would probably require a very large increase in research. As academics we like doing research. But academics need to be wary that concluding “needs more research” is not interpreted as “with a bit more funding this could work”.

4. Get real

Finally, around the world there are thousands of groups, projects, initiatives, and collectives that are working towards climate justice. But while there is a Climate Majority Project, and a Climate Reality Project, there is no Climate Honesty Project (although People Get Real does come close). In 2018 Extinction Rebellion was formed and demanded that governments tell the truth about the climate crisis and act accordingly. We can now see that when politicians were making their net zero promises they were also crossing their fingers behind their backs.

We need to acknowledge that net zero and now overshoot are becoming used to argue that nothing fundamental needs to change in our energy intensive societies. We must be honest about our current situation, and where we are heading. Difficult truths need to be told. This includes highlighting the vast inequalities of wealth, carbon emissions, and vulnerability to climate change.

The time for action is now

We rightly blame politicians for failing to act. But in some respects we get the politicians we deserve. Most people, even those that care about climate change, continue to demand cheap energy and food, and a constant supply of consumer products. Reducing demand by just making things more expensive risks plunging people into food and energy poverty and so policies to reduce emissions from consumption need to go beyond market-based approaches. The cost of living crisis is not separate from the climate and ecological crisis. They demand that we radically rethink how our economies and societies function, and whose interests they serve.

To return to the boiling frog predicament at the start, it’s high time for us to jump out of the pot. You have to wonder why we did not start decades ago. It’s here that the analogy offers valuable insights into net zero and the Paris agreement. Because the boiling frog story as typically told misses out a crucial fact. Regular frogs are not stupid. While they will happily sit in slowly warming water, they will attempt to escape once it becomes uncomfortable. The parable as told today is based on experiments at the end of the 19th century that involved frogs that had been “pithed” – a metal rod had been inserted into their skulls that destroyed their higher brain functioning. These radically lobotomised frogs would indeed float inert in water that was cooking them alive.

Promises of net zero and recovery from overshoot are keeping us from struggling to safety. They assure us nothing too drastic needs to happen just yet. Be patient, relax. Meanwhile the planet burns and we see any sort of sustainable future go up in smoke.

Owning up to the failures of climate change policy doesn’t mean giving up. It means accepting the consequences of getting things wrong, and not making the same mistakes. We must plan routes to safe and just futures from where we are, rather where we would wish to be. The time has come to leap.

James Dyke is an academic, writer, and author. He is an Associate Professor in Earth Systems Science, and Assistant Director of the Global Systems Institute at the University of Exeter, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a Fellow of the European Geosciences Union, and serves on the editorial board of the journal Earth System Dynamics.

Robert ‘Bob’ Watson is a physical chemist specialising in atmospheric science issues and a leading authority on the science of climate change due to human activity. His research on halogen and hydroxyl free-radical reactions significantly informed models of how chlorofluorocarbons and other manmade chemicals deplete the Earth’s ozone layer.

Wolfgang Knorr has more than 25 years of experience as a climate scientist, publishing on a broad range of sub-fields. He is a Senior Researcher Scientist at Lund University, Sweden, where he works on fire ecology under demographic and climatic changes, atmospheric chemistry and air pollution, as well as measuring CO2 fluxes from terrestrial vegetation and human activities.

This article was originally published on The ConversationRead the original article.

‘Take Immediate Steps to Save Journalism’: Press Bodies Write to MPs, Issue 13-Point Charter

The open letter, containing a 13-point charter, outlines several critical issues concerning press freedom and the working conditions of journalists in India.

New Delhi: The National Alliance of Journalists (NAJ), Delhi Union of Journalists (DUJ), Andhra Pradesh Working Journalists Federation (APWJF) and other press bodies have appealed to the members of parliament to “take immediate steps to save journalism in view of increasing threats to press freedom and the rights of journalists”.

In an open letter to MPs, the press bodies say, “We all know that media and journalism have a constructive role in every democracy. Unfortunately, for the last 10 years, we have seen an increase in the attacks against freedom of expression and freedom of the press. Despite a decisive verdict by the people to re-establish our democratic traditions, the attack on media is continuing unabated.”

The open letter, containing a 13-point charter, outlines several critical issues concerning press freedom and the working conditions of journalists in India.

Firstly, the charter calls for the reinstatement of full media access to parliament, urging the government to lift the restrictions on journalists’ movement that were imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic but continue to this day.

Also Read: Remove Restrictions on Mediapersons Covering Parliament

The charter raises concerns about the Broadcasting Services (Regulation) Bill, 2023, which it describes as “draconian.” The bill threatens the freedom of smaller content creators and online platforms by giving the government heavy control over media content through a bureaucratically dominated Broadcasting Advisory Council and a government-prescribed Programme Code. The unions demand public, expert, and parliamentary scrutiny of this bill.

Also Read: Broadcasting Bill is an Effort to Censor Voices of the People Who Use Technology to Speak Truth to Power

The issue of language discrimination in parliamentary proceedings is also highlighted, with the charter criticising the Lok Sabha Secretariat for providing simultaneous interpretation in only 10 out of the 22 languages recognised in the 8th Schedule of the Constitution, thereby marginalising speakers of other languages.

Also Read: Non-Hindi Language Speeches in Parliament Drowned in Hindi Voice-Over Amounts to ‘Censorship’: MPs

The charter strongly opposes the amendments to the IT Rules, 2021, which allow government ministries to censor news, particularly targeting small independent digital media under the vague clause of “anything against the security of the State.” They demand the review and repeal of all laws relating to Sedition, Defamation and prolonged detention laws such as UAPA which have been misused against journalists.

Additionally, the unions call for a law to protect journalists from arbitrary arrests and malicious prosecution, a growing concern in recent times. The charter also calls for guidelines to prevent the abuse of several internet shutdowns, one of the highest in the world, a review of laws misused against journalists, and legal protections for freelance journalists.

Also Read: India Has Seen At Least 134 Violations of Free Speech in 2024: Free Speech Collective

To address the challenges facing the media industry, the unions propose the creation of a common Media Council for print, electronic, and digital media, alongside a Media Commission to study the industry’s issues in the context of globalization and the deteriorating conditions of media workers.

On the economic front, the charter demands the formation of a new Wage Board, interim relief, and fast-track courts for wage-related cases, given that the last Wage Board was constituted 13 years ago. Other demands include the repeal of the four Labour Codes, restoration of earlier pro-labor laws, improved insurance and pension schemes for journalists, and a relief package for the financially struggling United News of India (UNI).

New Delhi Is Witnessing the Theatre of the Absurd

Buildings collapse at regular intervals, electric wires are hanging dangerously in most parts of old Delhi, encroachments in lanes make even walking impossible and young and old are often run over by two-wheelers in the national capital.

Act I, Scene 1: Students preparing for one of the most prestigious exams in India die of electrocution or drowning. Water floods into dungeons that function as libraries and have no escape outlet. Pumps to drain out water barely function, fire services seem helpless. Residents run around bewildered.

Scene 2:  Students begin to protest; local politicians sit and plan their blame game. Each party must blame the other. It does not matter which party is in power today. Each of them has been in power over the years. It’s forgotten that a city of 40 lakh people, 50 years ago, has grown to around 3 crores people now. The objective is to embarrass the other party and take political advantage of the crises. After all, the local state assembly elections are just a year away. They must be won at any cost. Therefore, let’s plan protests, decide all. The ruling party will protest against the Lieutenant Governor (LG) who is a symbol of the Union government. The main opposition will protest against the apathy of the elected government. Its laziness, apathy, lack of control over officers must be exposed. As discussions end, the politicians retire to the comforts of their air-conditioned homes for a tough next day.

Scene 3: Senior civil servants go into a huddle. They need to prepare for harsh questioning by the LG, the press and politicians baying for their blood. Replies are quickly prepared, after all these officers are well trained to prepare replies to even the toughest of questions for Parliament and Assemblies. The standard reply to most parliament or assembly questions, “question does not arise”, will not work here. There is a need to show desilting work has been done diligently. Some sewers may have escaped attention and these are the ones that caused the back flow that impacted the whole of Delhi. To supplement replies, it is decided to suspend a few technical/supervisory staff. This will demonstrate the will to act. How does it matter, says one, that these chaps will be reinstated after a few months. It’s the perception that we mean business that matters.

Scene 4: A minister (Delhi does not know which minister is in charge of this situation) announces a committee to investigate the whole affair. It’s a different matter that just a few days back ministers were circulating videos of senior officers not amenable to their “humble request” to accompany them for inspecting some areas with complaints of water logging. But it’s the announcement that matters after all.

In another part of the stage the LG sets up another committee. It’s the officers themselves who will make the Terms of Reference (TOR). To them it is clear – the TOR shall be so framed that senior officers are protected. Let the blame go at the level of executive engineers or equivalent administrative staff. Suspend a few. Some heads must roll. Perceptions matter.

Scene 5: Delhi police cannot be left behind. But there is no crime, theft or murder. However, they must demonstrate action, say senior officers. They swing into action and arrest a driver who drove through the flooded street and claim his drive pushed the waters that broke the gates of the coaching centre that got flooded. The suggestion receives due applause from senior officers as the matter is taken to court. The judge takes a serious view and denies bail to the hassled driver. Neither the driver, his wife, nor his lawyer know the nature of this most unique crime of driving through a flooded street. No one thought that the whole of Delhi, including its VIP areas, were in a similar state and therefore all cars must stop moving till the waters recede.

Scene 6: The elected chief minister sits despondent in jail. His lawyers have struggled to get him bail. The investigating authorities, convinced of his involvement in corruption, fight tooth and nail to prevent bail. He is sick. His party men claim his condition is deteriorating. The jail doctors deny this. The chief minister insists on staying in his chair despite knowing that functionality from within jail is not possible. It’s now a battle of wits and stamina between him, the investigating agencies and the judges. All three sit in different parts of the stage and discuss this situation.

The curtains fall in a scene of laughter – all dramatis personae are happy! Enquiries have been ordered, politicians have demonstrated, police have pleased one and all by firing water cannons on protestors of all parties. After all, there is an abundance of water in Delhi. There is laughter and bonhomie.

The End

§

Here lies the crux of the problem. In the capital of India are a multiplicity of authorities – the LG’s office, the chief minister and his cabinet, and the three distinct municipal corporations. Article 239 of the Constitution deals with the Union territories. It makes clear that the administration of every Union territory shall be administered by the President acting through an administrator appointed by him. In Delhi, the responsibility for public order, police and land rests with the LG. All other subjects are with the elected government, except the management of civil services. The Supreme Court has referred the latter issue to a larger bench. 

The arrangements worked reasonably well until chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, fresh from his “andolan”, challenged these established conventions. This piece is not on the disputes between his government and other agencies. The question is, how to address the maladministration and confusion that exists in administering Delhi.

The most salient issue is the question of rampant corruption in the municipal corporations. Firstly, they should never have been divided into three. Barring the South Municipal Corporation, neither of the other two – North and East – are financially viable. In the latter two, staff are irregularly paid. Centred around disgust at not being paid regularly, there is gross maladministration and massive corruption. No work is done without monies being passed to dealing staff. In view of this, it’s hardly surprising that sewers are not cleaned, storm drains cannot be reached, because there are encroachments on them, and staff are paid off for every illegal act that takes place.

The unregulated coaching industry is only a symbol of all that is around. Buildings collapse at regular intervals, electric wires are hanging dangerously in most parts of old Delhi, encroachments in lanes make even walking impossible and young and old are often run over by two-wheelers.

Delhi had its first LG in 1966. At the time, the population of Delhi was under 30 lakhs – one tenth of the population today. Since the 1970s, there has been debate whether Delhi should remain a Union territory or if it should be given the status of a full state. In 1989, the Balakrishnan Committee submitted its report that Delhi should continue as a Union territory but be provided by a Legislative Assembly with appropriate powers to deal with matters of concern to the common man. In 1990, the population of Delhi was under 1 crore. The administrative arrangements worked, with minor hiccups, till the Kejriwal phenomenon challenged the system and demanded greater powers for the elected government. Kejriwal left no stone unturned to prove that the existing system was not working and demanded change.

Thus, the question today is whether, given its complex administrative structure, rapidly growing population, and the expectations of its residents, it is not time to reassess the existing systems and Constitutional provisions. It is not my case to say that the system demands a change but one can certainly say that the system needs a relook.

New Delhi, as the capital, cannot be left to flounder under questions raised on the effectiveness of the existing systems. It is perhaps time for the Union government to once again set up a committee of seasoned experts and examine the matter holistically to suggest remedial measures.

Najeeb Jung is a former civil servant and LG of Delhi.

Madhya Pradesh Police Detains Tamil Nadu Farmers En Route to Delhi Over Cauvery Water Dispute

“The citizens of India have the liberty to move from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, as per the Indian Constitution. The police had no right to stop us from moving,” farmers’ association president P. Ayyakannu said.

Bhopal: The Madhya Pradesh police on Sunday (July 28) detained nearly 100 Tamil Nadu farmers in Madhya Pradesh’s Narmadapuram district who were aboard a train headed to the national capital.

The police halted the train at Narmadapuram station and forcibly detained the farmers, including the National South Indian River Link Farmers Association Tamil Nadu President P. Ayyakannu, among others. The farmers were travelling to Delhi to agitate for their demands regarding the Cauvery water dispute.

This is not the first time that Madhya Pradesh police have detained aggrieved farmers. In February this year, farmers from Karnataka were detained at the Bhopal railway station while they were on their way to join protestors in Delhi.

Cauvery is one of the major rivers flowing through Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. The dispute between states, regarding the allocation of water, dates back to the 19th century. A meticulously planned monthly schedule regulates the water distribution between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu which share the Cauvery basin. Tamil Nadu chief minister M.K. Stalin in an all-party meeting on July 15 condemned the Karnataka government for not releasing one thousand million cubic feet or 11,000 cusecs of Cauvery water to the state.

In an attempt to mount pressure on the Union government, the farmers on July 28 boarded a train to Delhi to demand their share of water.

Train halted for over an hour 

P. Ayyakannu boarded the Grand Trunk Express with his 100 companions on July 27. The next day, the train stopped at around 6 p.m. at Narmadapuram railway station, only 10 kms away from Itarsi.

“We are the Cauvery Delta farmers who boarded the train to agitate in Delhi for our demands regarding the release of Cauvery water. It was a peaceful journey until 400 police personnel turned the Narmadapuram railway station into a cantonment and forcibly detained us. They took us to a nearby wedding hall in three buses and kept us there overnight. I immediately gave a letter to the Superintendent of Police to provide a reason for our detention who promised a reply in a day. They took us to the railway station on the morning of July 29 sending us back to Tamil Nadu,” said Ayyakannu while speaking to The Wire on the phone.

Local media reported that the city magistrate did not know who the people were that had to be deboarded from the train. The Delhi police were tracking them from Chennai, acting on an intelligence input that farmers might stage a protest in the national capital. City magistrate Asmaram Chiraman said, “We only received a message to take some passengers off the train and transport them to Shrikunj Garden. I have no further information.”

‘The police had no right to prevent us from moving’: Ayyakannu

Ayyakannu said, “We did not commit any offence and we told the same to the SP. They stopped the train and kept all of us waiting, troubling the thousand other passengers [on the train], to detain my companions. [This is] a democratic country. We are neither extremists nor armed with weapons. The citizens of India have the liberty to move from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, as per the Indian Constitution. I had obtained an order from the Madras high court, that we were allowed to agitate and could be arrested if we make any mistake. The Delhi high court also permitted me to agitate anywhere in Delhi. The police had no right to prevent [us] from moving,” he said.

Ayyakannu alleged the officials had said that they “can’t disobey the Delhi office”.

“Whose orders and which office [have] they followed? Our only request is that Karnataka must release water every month. They can keep 60% and release 40% to us if there is a shortage of water but they must abide by the Supreme Court’s order. Union home minister promised to inter-link Godavari and Cauvery. However, he did not sanction funds for it. What do we do if not agitate?” Ayyakannu said.

In response to All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) MP M. Thambidurai’s question in the Rajya Sabha in July 2023, former Union minister Bishweswar Tudu had said that the Union government had made efforts to reach a consensus among states on water sharing. However, he emphasised that the states themselves must ultimately agree.

Detention is arbitrary and unconstitutional 

Kisan Sangharsh Samiti National President Dr Suneelam said that the farmers were only traveLling to Delhi to serve a memorandum on the Cauvery water dispute. They had tickets and were still arbitrarily detained in a wedding hall. “In a conversation with police officers, they informed that Sections 172 of BNSS (Bhartiya Nagrik Suraksha Sanhita) consists of a provision that any individual can be detained if there is a law and order issue, without citing any reason. This is why farmers were detained and sent back via another train,” Suneelam said.

According to the Business Standard, “The BNSS, which replaced the British-era Code of Criminal Procedure, has introduced “a new insertion as Clause 172 in ‘Preventive Action of the Police'”.

It states that people must conform to directions of the police issued in the course of preventing the commission of a cognizable offence, officials said. The provision allows a police officer to detain such person and produce them before a magistrate or, in petty cases, release the person as soon as possible within 24 hours, they said.

“The entire process was unconstitutional. Though the officials did not provide any written order, they informed us that the orders of detention were from Delhi. It must be from the home ministry. The Union government has been doing this for years. The Madhya Pradesh Police has well experimented with the new criminal laws on farmers. It speaks to the volume of danger these laws have for civilians.”

“The farmers’ suicide rate is one of the highest in Madhya Pradesh but they take fake medals of highest production. Six farmers were killed in Mandsaur and they are yet to get justice. All police officers were protected by the Shivraj government. Are they not murderers?”

Six farmers were killed in police firing during an agitation in Mandsaur, for better price of production, in June 2017. As per the National Crime Record Bureau report from 2022, at least one farmer committed suicide every 12 hours in Madhya Pradesh in 2020. The suicide rate increased by 35% as 735 farmers committed suicide in that year. 154 farmers and daily-wage labourers die by suicide in India every day, the NCRB report said.

Taliban Sever Ties with Afghan Embassies in the West

The Taliban announced the severing of ties with Afghan embassies in the UK, Germany, and Canada, citing diplomats’ loyalty to the former Afghan government. These embassies have faced operational difficulties since the Taliban’s 2021 takeover.

The Taliban government on Tuesday said it was cutting ties with a slew of Afghan embassies in Western countries. The Taliban accused the diplomats of being loyal to the country’s former democratic government.

The 2021 takeover of Kabul by the Taliban has left many staffing Afghanistan‘s foreign missions in limbo. Few governments recognize the Taliban as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan, though they have been able to install some new ambassadors in friendly countries such as Russia and China.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has repeatedly urged the Afghan political and consular missions in European countries to engage with Kabul,” a statement said.

“Unfortunately, the actions of most of the missions are carried out arbitrarily, without coordination and in explicit violation of the existing accepted principles.”

The Taliban Foreign Ministry also said that it bears “no responsibility” for passport and visa issues faced by Afghan staff abroad if they refuse to acknowledge Taliban legitimacy.

Also Read: International Community Must Isolate, Expose Countries Harbouring Terrorists: India at SCO Summit

Embassies struggle to keep lights on

The embassies affected by the decision include those in the UK, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, France, Italy, Greece, Poland, Sweden, Norway, Canada and Australia.

Cut off from Kabul financially, these embassies have struggled in recent years to pay staff and their bills. In some Western countries, such as Spain and the Netherlands, the Afghan embassy staff have begun engaging with the Taliban government.

Many foreign countries as well as the United Nations have refused to deal with the Taliban over their repressive treatment of women.

This report originally appeared on DW

Venezuelan President Maduro Secures Third Term Amid Skepticism over Elections

Global skepticism surrounds Maduro’s victory in the Venezuelan elections, where he secured 51% of the vote. Many have called for a review of the election process, with Panama even cutting diplomatic ties.

Venezuela‘s National Electoral Council (CNE) formally declared incumbent Nicolas Maduro to be the winner of the country’s disputed presidential election on Monday, officially securing a third six-year term with 51% of the vote.

But opponents as well as a regional and global leaders expressed doubts over the validity of the vote count, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Washington has “serious concerns that the result announced does not reflect the will or the votes of the Venezuelan people.”

Maduro’s main rival, Maria Corina Machado, had been barred from running but claimed that her surrogate, Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, had won 70% of the vote. The CNE, which is loyal to the government, said that he had garnered only 44%.

“We want to say to all of Venezuela and the world that Venezuela has a new president-elect and it is Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia,” Machado told journalists, adding: “We won.”


[Translation: We stay in the centres!! Witnesses, voters and everyone to witness the counting paper by paper, until you have the record in hand!]

As the US-based Carter Centre, an independent election observer, called on the CNE to “immediately publish the presidential election results at the polling station level,” Maduro claimed that “an attempt is being made to impose a coup d’état in Venezuela again of a fascist and counterrevolutionary nature.”

He added: “We already know this movie, and this time, there will be no kind of weakness.”

Meanwhile, Venezuela’s attorney general accused Machado of being involved in an attempted hack of the country’s elections system, after she disputed the election result.

Latin American countries demand review

In response to the result, the Organization of American States (OAS) called for an urgent meeting to table a resolution “to protect the will of the people in our region in accordance with the democratic charter and the foundational principles of democracy.”

In the OAS statement, the governments of Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Dominican Republic and Uruguay expressed their concern over the conduct of the election and demanded “a comprehensive review of the results in the presence of independent electoral observers in order to guarantee respect for the will of the Venezuelan people who took part in the election peacefully and in large numbers.”

On Monday, Panama officially withdrew its diplomats from Venezuela and suspended diplomatic ties with Caracas pending a complete review.

“Out of respect for the history of Panama, the thousands of Venezuelans who chose to live in our homeland, and my democratic convictions, I cannot allow my silence to become complicity,” said right-wing President Jose Raul Mulino.

“Regimes that do not respect human rights and violate freedoms do not deserve diplomatic recognition,” he added.

Peruvian Foreign Minister Javier Gonzalez-Olaechea also announced that Lima was recalling its ambassador to Caracas for consultations over the election result.

Chilean President Gabriel Boric said: “Maduro’s regime must understand that the results are hard to believe. The international community and especially the Venezuelan people, including the millions of Venezuelans in exile, demand total transparency … From Chile, we will not recognize any result that is not verifiable.”

Even ahead of the vote, Javier Milei, the president of Argentina, had said his country “will not recognize another fraud and hopes that this time the Armed Forces will defend democracy and popular will.”

 


[Translation: MADURO DICTATOR, OUT!!! Venezuelans chose to end the communist dictatorship of Nicolás Maduro. The data announce a crushing victory for the opposition and the world is waiting for it to recognize defeat after years of socialism, misery, decadence and death. Argentina is not going to recognize another fraud, and hopes that the Armed Forces this time will defend democracy and the popular will. Freedom Advances in Latin America.]

Global community voices ‘concerns’ about ‘irregularities’

Globally, in addition to the United States, the United KingdomGermanySpain and Italy also expressed doubts and concerns over the vote.

“We call for the publication of detailed results for all polling stations and access to all voting and election documents for opposition and observers,” the German Foreign Ministry said on X, formerly Twitter.

The UK said it was “concerned” by allegations of vote “irregularities.”

“We call for the swift and transparent publication of full, detailed results to ensure that the outcome reflects the votes of the Venezuelan people”, the foreign office said in a statement.

The government of Spain urged “total transparency” about how the vote was conducted, with top diplomat J​ose Manuel Albares asking Maduro to release verifiable and detailed data.

Albares’ Italian counterpart Antonio Tajani said his government was “perplexed” and did not think Maduro claiming victory mirrored “the will of the people.”

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that “ensuring full transparency in the electoral process, including detailed counting of votes and access to voting records at polling stations, is vital,” and otherwise the will of the Venezuelan people is not being respected.

Regional leaders, allies congratulate Maduro

However, other regional leaders more ideologically aligned with Maduro offered their congratulations on winning a third term, as did the president’s allies from beyond Latin America.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel called the result a “historic election triumph” for Maduro.

“We have closely followed this democratic festival and we welcome the fact that the will of the Venezuelan people at the polls has been respected,” said Bolivia’s President Luis Arce.


[Translation: I thank brother President Luis Arce and the people of Bolivia for their support and support. We continue together as a people in brotherhood, friendship, cooperation and solidarity. Union will always be our path. A big hug!]

Honduran President Xiomara Castro offered her “special congratulations … and revolutionary greetings” to her Venezuelan counterpart for the “unobjectionable triumph.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin offered his “warmest congratulations” in a letter published by the Kremlin.

“Russian-Venezuelan relations have the character of a strategic partnership. I am convinced that your actions at the head of state will continue to enable progressive development in all directions,” Putin continued.

China also congratulated the Latin American country for “smoothly holding its presidential election,” and Maduro, “on his successful re-election,” said foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian.

“China stands ready to enrich our all-weather strategic partnership and better benefit the peoples of both countries,” he said. “China and Venezuela are good friends and partners who support each other.”

This article was first published on DW.

Retrieving Lost Aadhaar Remains a Flawed System: Report

The Road Scholarz account on X has reported the story of one Sangeeta Kumari from Jharkhand, who lost her Aadhaar card and was unable to retrieve it easily.

New Delhi: The Aadhaar continues to pose roadblocks for those most in need of it, a recent thread on X has revealed once again.

The Road Scholarz account on X has reported the story of one Sangeeta Kumari from Jharkhand, who lost her Aadhaar card and was unable to retrieve it easily. UIDAI’s remedies for what is a common issue, a lost card, were unhelpful.

Posting on their X account, they reported that when Sangeeta first contacted the UIDAI helpline for Aadhaar retrieval, she was asked for specific information, including her date of birth. Unable to provide this detail, Sangeeta could not verify her identity to access social benefits. This situation is particularly paradoxical as Aadhaar is not intended to serve as proof of birthdate.

The user interface of the re-enrolment webform was unhelpful, giving vague reasons for rejecting the re-enrolment request. They noted that the helpline assistant even scolded Sangeeta for not being able to explain the reason for the rejection, despite the rejection message being meaningless. The confusing message suggested she should re-enrol again, even though this was precisely the process which the message was rejecting.

Rejection Message when trying to Re-Enrol. Photo: Screengrab from post by @roadscholarz

Ultimately, an Aadhaar operator suggested that one of the few ways to resolve this issue might be to present the rejection slip at the UIDAI’s Regional Office in Ranchi and potentially pay Rs 1,200. Even if Sangeeta decided to spend the time and money traveling to Ranchi, there was no guarantee that the issue would be resolved.

This story mirrors another account in the Indian Express written by economist Jean Drèze, back in 2021, where Reena Devi from Bihar similarly lost her Aadhaar, which was her key to the social benefits she was guaranteed and needed. After months of calls, visits, and running in circles, despite help from educated English-speaking college graduates, only through the big-heartedness of a Ranchi UIDAI regional officer was she able to retrieve her Aadhaar number. The regional officer, even then, commented on the common nature of the problem of lost Aadhaar cards. Sangeeta’s case reflects the fact that the issue endures.

Sangeeta was unable to get her Aadhaar for weeks. The Road Scholarz account reached out to UIDAI through their post, and while the UIDAI did respond and request contact information for Sangeeta it is unclear if the matter was resolved.

This account also underscores the problems associated with linking basic social benefits to a number on a card, whether for MGNREGA wages, pensions, ration or other social services. While Digital India and Aadhaar were promoted as solutions to inefficiencies in the social benefits system and aimed at inclusivity, these narratives reveal the systemic exclusion faced by the poor working class.

Incessant Rains Put Mumbai Under Red Alert as City Grapples With Waterlogging, Delayed Flights

A Red Alert has been issued in Mumbai as the financial capital braces for heavy rains across the Konkan coast. Residents are already reeling from waterlogging.

New Delhi: The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issued a red alert today, July 25, for Mumbai and the entire Konkan Coast region until July 26, with the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) urging citizens to stay indoors.

The Regional Weather Forecasting Centre forecasts heavy to very heavy rainfall in the greater city, with possibility of extremely heavy rainfall at isolated places and occasional gusty winds reaching 60-70 kmph.

The city is already facing significant waterlogging, resulting in traffic jams and disruptions to daily commutes, causing inconvenience for residents.

As reported by NDTV, multiple flights were delayed and cancelled in Mumbai due to the heavy rain, with Indigo, SpiceJet, and Air India informing passengers of potential delays.

The Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) announced school holidays in Thane in response to the orange alert yesterday.

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation reported the overflowing of four reservoirs—Vihar, Tulsi, Tansa, and Modaksagar—that supply water to Mumbai. Waterlogging was also observed in nallahs in the Kalyan region.

As reported by the Deccan Herald, Western Railways stated that local train services were running normally on Monday morning, although commuters reported delays of 5 to 10 minutes. Central Railway also announced that local services on all four corridors were normal, but commuters noted train traffic issues between Kalyan and Thakurli stations during the morning rush hour due to a signal problem.

Despite the authorities’ warnings and the previous orange alert, some residents of the financial capital continued with their daily routines, even as the heavy rains as part of the red alert are expected to persist until at least the 26th.