‫”الصرف الصحي والمياه للجميع” في مؤتمر الأمم المتحدة للتغير المناخي لعام 2021 (COP26)

نيويورك، 29 أكتوبر — / PRNewswire / “الصرف الصحي والمياه للجميع” شريك لـ جناح المياه من أجل المناخ الذي تم إنشاؤه لأول مرة على الإطلاق في 26th مؤتمر الأمم المتحدة السادس والعشرون للتغير المناخي للأطراف (COP26)وسوف يسلط الجناح -برعاية 33 منظمة- الضوء على الدور الحيوي للمياه في العمل المناخي التحويلي وتقديم مشورة علمية رائدة حول التخفيف والتكيف مع صانعي القرار بشأن المناخ.

قالت كاتارينا دي ألبوكيرك، المديرة التنفيذية لشراكة “الصرف الصحي والمياه للجميع” التي تستضيفها الأمم المتحدة، “تشير التقديرات إلى أن 90٪ من المشاكل الناجمة عن تغير المناخ مرتبطة بالمياه، مما يؤدي إلى الجفاف والفيضانات وغيرها من الظواهر الجوية القاسية.  نحن بحاجة إلى صانعي القرار لإعطاء الأولوية لحقوق الإنسان فوق جميع الاستخدامات الأخرى، وضمان استراتيجيات وخطط وميزانيات المياه والصرف الصحي التي تتسم بالمرونة المناخية، وخاصة بالنسبة للفئات الأكثر ضعفًا وتهميشًا”. “يُعَد جناح المياه الأول من نوعه فرصة غير مسبوقة لمواءمة سياسات المناخ والمياه بحيث يتم إعمال حقوق الإنسان، والحد من مخاطر المناخ، وهناك المزيد من الأموال المتاحة من أجل التكيف.  دعونا نغتنم هذه الفرصة للعمل معًا والوفاء بالتزاماتنا – لصالح الجميع”.

في COP26 والأحداث والأماكن الرئيسية الأخرى، يدعو شركاء SWA الحكومات إلى:

·   تحسين الاستخدام الفعال لموارد المياه وإعطاء الأولوية لتخصيصها بين الاستخدامات المتنافسة بطريقة تعطي الأولوية لإعمال حقوق الإنسان.

·  ضمان حصول الفئات المهمشة، بما في ذلك النساء والأطفال، على المياه الجارية والصابون والمراحيض من أجل صحتهم وكرامتهم، وهو جزء أساسي من بناء المرونة المناخية.

·  العمل مع الشركات والمؤسسات المالية الدولية من أجل تسريع الاستثمار في البنية التحتية والخدمات المائية ذات المرونة المناخية – خاصة بالنسبة للبلدان التي تواجه أوضاعًا هشة.

تشمل الأحداث الافتراضية من “جناح المياه” ما يلي:

 التمويل المناخي لدعم تكييف الخدمات الأساسية وبناء المرونة المجتمعية: المياه، والصرف الصحي، والنظافة الشخصية 

 الثلاثاء 2 نوفمبر، 9:00 صباحًا بتوقيت جرينتش.  يتوفر مزيد من المعلومات هنا.

 السياسات، والمساءلة، والمراقبة للمياه والصرف الصحي والنظافة الشخصية التي تتسم بالمرونة المناخية: الانتقال من الالتزام إلى التقدم 

السبت 6 نوفمبر، 11:30 صباحًا بتوقيت جرينتش.  يتوفر مزيد من المعلومات هنا.

 قائمة بأحداث “جناح المياه” الأخرى .

الشعار – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1441352/Sanitation_and_Water_for_All_Logo.jpg

Greg Norman Named CEO Of LIV Golf Investments

NORMAN PENS LANDMARK 10-YEAR DEAL WITH ASIAN TOUR AS FIRST ORDER OF BUSINESS REPRESENTING A TOTAL COMMITMENT OF OVER $200M

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Oct. 29, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Former world #1 and World Golf Hall of Fame member, Greg Norman, has today been announced as CEO of a newly formed company, LIV Golf Investments, a move which will set in motion a number of momentous developments for professional golf worldwide.

Norman’s first order of business is the announcement of a ground-breaking series of 10 new marquee events to be staged annually on the Asian Tour over the next 10 years, representing a total commitment of over $200m to support playing opportunities and prize funds. The move represents one of the single biggest investments in the history of professional golf.

The series will be added to the Asian Tour schedule from 2022 onwards, with new events across Asia, the Middle East and Europe. It has been designed to drive greater engagement amongst fans, attract new commercial interest and to help stabilize professional golf following a sustained period of worldwide disruption and uncertainty.

“This is only the beginning,” commented Norman. “LIV Golf Investments has secured a major capital commitment that will be used to create additive new opportunities across worldwide professional golf. We will be a cooperative and respectful supporter of the game at every level, and today’s announcement alongside the Asian Tour is the first example of that.

“I have been a staunch supporter and believer in playing and developing golf in Asia for more than four decades. The Asian Tour is a sleeping giant and we share ambition to grow the series and unlock what we believe is significant untapped potential. We see our promotion of these new events as a vital first step in supporting emerging markets, creating a new platform, rich with playing opportunities that create valuable player pathways.”

LIV Golf Investments has been established with group companies in the USA, UK, with Asian offices to follow. Several high-profile C-Suite executives have already been appointed, with further announcements to follow in due course. PIF, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds with a diverse international investment portfolio, is the majority shareholder in the new company. Plans are in place to introduce further investment partners, who share the passion and belief in how new opportunities in professional golf can create widespread benefit for fans and players.

“This is the single biggest development in the history of the Asian Tour and a major milestone for professional golf,” said Cho Minn Thant, Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer, Asian Tour. “The opportunity will secure unprecedented new playing opportunities, establish new player pathways, allow us to compete commercially with other sports, and enhance our social agenda.

“We are particularly excited at the prospect today’s landmark announcement brings to the amateur game, providing new inspiration to aspiring players through a new level of top-flight professional competition in the region.”

The series will add to the Asian Tour’s backbone of established events to comprise a 25-event season, expected to represent a record-breaking combined prize-fund in 2022. Each of the 10 new events will be broadcast live across the globe, with plans to attract an international field of headline talent through an open eligibility category regardless of Tour affiliation so opportunities are available to the broadest cross section of players.

Today’s announcement closely follows the striking of a new 10-year partnership between the Asian Tour and Golf Saudi, the organisers of the Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers, which will see the event become the flagship tournament on the Asian Tour, featuring an impressive increased prize fund of $5m. The Saudi International will not be one of the 10 new events to feature as part of the new series but will itself provide enhanced exemption requirements.

Further signals of increased prosperity for the Asian Tour also came recently with the announcement that competitive play will soon recommence following a postponement due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Its suspended 2020/21 season will draw to a close with the staging of two new tournaments in Thailand in November and December 2021, and two further tournaments planned for Singapore in January 2022.

The new series of 10 events will take place throughout 2022, with all full-field events contributing towards the Order of Merit ranking.

Further details on the new series, including a reveal of the brand and series name, will follow in the near future.

About The Asian Tour
As the official sanctioning body for professional golf in Asia, the Asian Tour leads the development of professional golf across the region, enhancing the careers of its members while maintaining a commitment to the integrity of the game. The Asian Tour, through its membership of the International Federation of PGA Tours, is the only recognised pan-Asian professional golf tour in Asia. The Tour is officially recognised by the Official World Golf Ranking and provides its events with valuable ranking points for participants to be recognised on the world stage. It is also an affiliate of The R&A. Tour Partners include Rolex (Timekeeper), Habitat for Humanity (Sustainable Development Partner), Titleist (Web Partner) and FootJoy (Tour Supplier). The corporate headquarters of the Asian Tour is based in Sentosa, which is the home of Asian Golf while Sentosa Golf Club is part of an exclusive network of properties under the Asian Tour Destinations. The Tour also has an office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

About LIV Golf Investments
LIV Golf Investments is a newly formed company, with group companies in the USA and UK, with Asian offices to follow. Its remit is to holistically improve the health of professional golf on a truly global scale and support existing stakeholders to help unlock the sports’ untapped potential. Greg Norman is the first and founding CEO of LIV Golf Investments. PIF, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds with a diverse international investment portfolio, is the majority shareholder in LIV Golf Investments.

Deaths Reported in Sudan as ‘March of Millions’ Demands Restoration of Civilian Rule

Three people were shot dead by security forces during Saturday demonstrations against a military coup in Sudan.

The Sudan Doctors Committee had initially reported two protesters were shot and killed, but confirmed that a third person died when security forces fired into crowds in Omdurman, Khartoum’s sister city.

Twelve people have been killed in demonstrations since the military seized power and deposed the prime minister on Monday.

Saturday’s demonstrations have drawn hundreds of thousands of people in the capital, Khartoum, as well as major cities throughout the country.

Protests began Monday, when General Abdel-Fattah Burhan declared a state of emergency and announced the dissolution of a landmark transitional government established in 2019. But Saturday’s “March of Millions” is expected to be the largest coordinated demonstration yet.

Images and video footage from Khartoum and other cities throughout the country show crowds carrying Sudanese flags and banners denouncing the military government. Chants and songs that were sung in 2019 when protesters demanded the ouster of dictator Omar al-Bashir have been revived in this week’s protests as well.

“I see people everywhere, from each direction, thousands of young people, women, old men, children, everyone,” Walaa Salah, an activist in Khartoum, told VOA’s English to Africa.

“Khartoum, the entire city, is outside protesting, calling for the fall of the military rule, calling for the fall of the coup, calling for the end of this partnership,” she said. “People are chanting against the military.”

Witnesses reported heavy military security in Khartoum, especially by the Rapid Special Forces, notoriously for fatally shooting dozens of protesters in 2019.

Earlier this week, security forces killed at least nine people by gunfire and wounded at least 170 others during the protests, according to the Sudan Doctors’ Committee. Experts and demonstrators had expressed concern that Saturday’s protests could be violent.

Despite mobile internet and some WIFI being blocked throughout the country, organizers were able to coordinate demonstrations. Netblocks, which monitors internet cuts around the world, has reported that with the exception of one four-hour window, mobile internet has been cut throughout Sudan since Tuesday’s military takeover.

“We can’t call or text. We have no idea what’s going on, on the other side of the city,” Salah said.

Volker Perthes, the special representative of United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, said in a statement Friday that he “remains in constant contact with all sides to facilitate a political solution in line with the Constitutional Document. UNITAMS (the U.N. Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan) is actively coordinating with mediation efforts currently underway to facilitate an inclusive dialogue, which remains the only path toward a peaceful solution to the current crisis.”

The United States had urged the military leaders of Monday’s coup to refrain from “any and all violence” against peaceful protesters.

The appeal to Sudan’s military leaders came from a senior U.S. State Department official who was briefing reporters on condition of anonymity.

Saturday will be “a real indication of what the military intentions are,” the official had said.

The military takeover occurred after weeks of escalating tensions between military and civilian leaders over Sudan’s transition to democracy. The coup threatens to derail the process, which has slowly progressed since the army ousted longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir, ending a popular uprising in 2019.

But even after the landmark power-sharing agreement in August of 2019, in which now-deposed Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok was named the country’s leader, protests have continued. Demonstrators, who often used the word “Medaniya,” or civilian, to call for a civilian government, opposed any military control in the transitional government.

Burhan said Tuesday the army’s overthrow of the country’s transitional government was necessary to avoid a civil war.

Source: Voice of America

Sudanese Anti-Coup Protesters Barricade Streets

KHARTOUM —

Sudanese anti-coup protesters on Sunday manned barricades in Khartoum a day after a deadly crackdown on mass rallies, as a defiant civil disobedience campaign against the military takeover entered its seventh day.

Tens of thousands turned out across the country for Saturday’s demonstrations, marching against the army’s October 25 power grab, when top General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan dissolved the government, declared a state of emergency and detained Sudan’s civilian leadership.

The move sparked a chorus of international condemnation, with world powers demanding a swift return to civilian rule and calls for the military to show “restraint” against protesters.

At least three people were shot dead and more than 100 people wounded during Saturday’s demonstrations, according to medics, who reported those killed had bullet wounds in their head, chest or stomach. It takes the death toll since protests began to at least 11.

Police forces denied the killings, or using live bullets.

“No, no, to military rule,” protesters carrying Sudanese flags chanted as they marched around the capital and other cities, as forces fired tear gas to break them up.

More than 100 people were also wounded on Saturday, some suffering breathing difficulties from tear gas, the independent Central Committee of Sudan’s Doctors said.

Sudan had been ruled since August 2019 by a joint civilian-military council, alongside Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok’s government, as part of the now derailed transition to full civilian rule.

Soldiers on the streets

Hamdok and other top leaders have been under military guard since then, either in detention or effective house arrest.

U.S. President Joe Biden has called the coup a “grave setback”, while the African Union has suspended Sudan’s membership for the “unconstitutional” takeover.

The World Bank and the United States froze aid, a move that will hit hard in a country already mired in a dire economic crisis.

But Burhan — who became de facto leader after hardline ex-president Omar al-Bashir was ousted in 2019 following huge youth-led protests — has insisted the military takeover was “not a coup.”

Instead, Burhan says he wants to “rectify the course of the Sudanese transition.”

Demonstrations on Saturday rocked many cities across Sudan, including in the eastern states of Gedaref and Kassala, as well as in North Kordofan and White Nile, witnesses and AFP correspondents said.

As night fell Saturday, many protests in Khartoum and the capital’s twin city of Omdurman thinned out. But on Sunday morning protesters were back on the streets, again using rocks and tyres to block roads.

Shops remain largely shut in Khartoum, where many government employees are refusing to work as part of a nationwide protest campaign.

Soldiers from the army and the much-feared paramilitary Rapid Support Forces were seen on many streets in Khartoum and Omdurman.

Security forces have set up random checkpoints on the streets, frisking passers-by and randomly searching cars.

Phone lines, which were largely down on Saturday, were back apart from intermittent disruptions. But internet access has remained cut off since the army’s takeover.

Sudan has enjoyed only rare democratic interludes since independence in 1956 and spent decades riven by civil war.

Burhan was a general under Bashir’s three decades of iron-fisted rule, and analysts said the coup aimed to maintain the army’s traditional control over the northeast African country.

Source: Voice of America

G-20 Summit Kicks Off With Focus on Global Minimum Tax, Pandemic Preparedness

ROME —

The G-20 Summit hosted by Italy kicked off Saturday in Rome, where leaders from the world’s major economies discussed issues of mutual concern, including pandemic recovery and climate change.

The red carpet was rolled out at “La Nuvola,” Rome’s convention center, as Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi welcomed U.S. President Joe Biden and other leaders amid strict COVID-19 protocols.

This weekend’s summit is the leaders’ first face-to-face meeting in two years, following last year’s virtual summit hosted by Saudi Arabia. Notably absent are Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. They will join virtually, citing pandemic concerns at home.

Global minimum tax

On day one, G-20 leaders voiced their support for a global corporate minimum tax deal agreed to by finance ministers from 136 countries earlier this month after four years of negotiations led by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The deal would mean a sweeping overhaul of international tax rules. Under the deal, countries will apply a minimum global corporate tax rate of 15% for companies with annual revenues of more than $870 million, while large multinational companies must pay taxes where they operate, not just where they are headquartered.

“The president emphasized the importance of this historic deal during his intervention,” a senior administration official said.

“G-20 members are right to celebrate this deal,” said Matthew Goodman, senior vice president for economics at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. The question is whether and how soon G20 members can implement the agreement within their respective domestic legal frameworks.

“That’s going to be, frankly, quite challenging in the United States and several other countries,” said Goodman.

Pandemic response and prevention

On Friday, G-20 health and finance ministers released a communique committing to bringing the pandemic under control globally as soon as possible, and strengthening collective efforts to prepare for, prevent, detect, and respond to future pandemics. The communique says the G-20 will take all necessary steps needed to advance global goals of vaccinating at least 40% of the population in all countries by the end of 2021 and 70% by mid-2022, as recommended by the World Health Organization.

The ministers announced the formation of a new panel to improve the global response to future pandemics but did not specify any funding for the task force. They could not reach agreement on a separate financing mechanism proposed by the U.S. and Indonesia to prepare for future pandemics.

“We’re looking for not the ultimate final product of a financing mechanism or the ultimate final product of a taskforce or a board that would operate as kind of a global coordinating body going forward,” White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told VOA aboard Air Force One on Thursday. “So the hope is to have in the communiqué a statement of intent that we will work towards these two outcomes.”

Climate change

On Sunday, G-20 leaders will shift their focus to climate change. From Rome, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres called the summit an opportunity to “put things on track” ahead of the UN COP26 climate conference in Glasgow that G-20 leaders will participate in following their Italy meeting.

“There is a serious risk that Glasgow will not deliver,” Guterres said. “The current nationally determined contributions — formal commitments by governments — still condemn the world to a calamitous 2.7-degree increase,” he said referring to the pledge made at the 2015 Paris Climate Accord to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, ideally to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Countries are expected to announce more emissions reduction pledges to reach the target of net-zero emissions by around mid-century. But some analysts are skeptical of these voluntary commitments that come without enforcement mechanisms.

“There’ll be pledges, the best-case scenario something along the lines of what we saw in Paris,” said Dalibor Rohac, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

Rohac added that to make progress on climate change, the world needs tangible actions. “Rather than to proceed with this habit of looking for a Big Bang multilateral solution, to pursue sound domestic policies that accelerate decarbonization.”

A key issue to watch is whether G-20 members can agree on coal. The U.N. has called for wealthy countries to phase out coal by 2030, but G20 environment ministers have failed to agree on a timeline.

Guterres also called on wealthy nations to uphold commitments to provide funding to help developing nations mitigate the impacts of climate change. Under the 2015 Paris Climate Accord, wealthy nations pledged a minimum of $100 billion per year in climate funding to lower-income countries. Much of that money has not been delivered. enario something along the lines of what we saw in Paris,” said Dalibor Rohac, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

Rohac added that to make progress on climate change, the world needs tangible actions.

“Rather than to proceed with this habit of looking for a big-bang multilateral solution, to pursue sound domestic policies that that accelerate decarbonization,” he said.

A key issue to watch is whether G-20 members can agree on coal actions. The U.N. has called for wealthy countries to phase out coal by 2030, but G-20 environment ministers have failed to agree on a timeline.

Guterres also called on wealthy nations to uphold commitments to provide funding to help developing nations mitigate the impacts of climate change. Under the 2015 Paris Climate Accord, wealthy nations pledged a minimum of $100 billion per year in climate funding to lower-income countries. Much of that money has not been delivered.

Source: Voice of America

Zimbabwe President Mnangagwa to Attend COP26 Conference

BINDURA, ZIMBABWE —

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa says he will attend COP26, becoming the first Zimbabwe leader to visit the United Kingdom since Zimbabwe was accused of human rights abuses and election rigging. Mnangagwa also said a U.N. rapporteur had proved his government was right about the sanctions issue.

Winding up an annual conference of the ruling ZANU-PF party Saturday in Bindura, 80 kilometers north of Zimbabwe’s capital, Mnangagwa said he was looking forward to attending the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP26, in Scotland, which begins Sunday.

“I wish to inform the conference that tomorrow morning (Sunday) I travel to Glasgow, United Kingdom, after over two decades have passed without Zimbabwe leadership going to United Kingdom. I have been invited by [British Prime Minister] Boris Johnson, and [he] has indicated he might meet me; one on one, as well as other leaders like India prime minister and others, we are meeting them,” he said.

Mnangagwa also said he was happy about a report by U.N. Special Rapporteur Alena Douhan after a two-week visit to Zimbabwe. The Belarus national urged the U.S. and other Western governments to lift sanctions they imposed on Zimbabwe nearly two decades ago and for alleged election-rigging and human rights abuses.

Source: Voice of America

Tigrayan Forces Say They Have Seized Strategic Town ?n Ethiopia’s Amhara Region

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA —

Tigrayan forces said on Saturday they had seized the strategic town of Dessie in Ethiopia’s Amhara region where tens of thousands of ethnic Amharas have sought refuge from an escalation in fighting, but the government denied this.

The fighters pushed Ethiopian government forces from Dessie and were headed towards the town of Kombolcha, Getachew Reda, spokesperson for the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), told Reuters by satellite phone from an undisclosed location.

He said Tigrayan forces had captured numerous Ethiopian soldiers.

Legesse Tulu, the government spokesperson, told Reuters in a text message that the town was still under the control of the Ethiopian government and said claims by the Tigrayan forces were “fabricated propaganda.”

Ethiopian military spokesman Colonel Getnet Adane referred Reuters to the federal government. Legesse Tulu, the government spokesperson, Abebe Gebre Mesqel, the mayor of Dessie and a spokesperson for the town did not respond to requests for comment.

Reuters could not independently verify the TPLF’s account of developments and phone lines in Dessie appeared to be down as of Saturday afternoon.

The capture of Dessie would be a strategic gain for the Tigrayan fighters against the central government forces who are trying to dislodge them from the Amhara region.

The large town is some 385 km from the capital, Addis Ababa, and is the furthest south in Amhara that the TPLF has reached since pushing into the region in July.

War broke nearly a year ago between federal troops and the TPLF. Thousands of people have been killed and more than 2 million people have been forced to flee.

Tigrayan forces were initially beaten back, but recaptured most of the region in July and pushed into the neighboring Amhara and Afar regions.

In mid-October, the Tigrayan forces said the military had launched a ground offensive to push them out of Amhara. The military said on Thursday there was heavy fighting there, but accused the Tigrayan forces of starting it.

Source: Voice of America

Velorex on Track for Q4 2021 Release of Cryptocurrency ATM, Software & Smart Debit Cards

Creators of $VEX Digital Currency Keeping to Promised Schedule to Ship Products that Will Help Merchants Accept Digital Currency

ATHENS, GREECE / ACCESSWIRE / October 29, 2021 / Finance and technology company Velorex, the company behind the $VEX digital currency, today announced that they are on track to release their Cryptocurrency ATM, Digital Banking Software, and Smart Debit Card. The Velorex Bankless ATMs are network enabled, one and two-way, standalone terminals that allow retailers to exchange a customizable selection of crypto currency with any fiat currency. Their revolutionary software is open-source and allows the easy exchange of crypto and fiat currencies to anyone using the Velorex Bankless ATM. The software can be hosted from a remote server, accessed worldwide, and interacts directly with global decentralized exchanges. Then comes the Velorex Smart Wallet, which is currently under development and the targeted time frame for it’s release is Q4 2021 – Q1 2022. It will have many unique and innovative features which will be announced by the Velorex Team as it’s development progresses. The last part of this integrated digital currency solution is their Smart Debit Card. This secure financial solution completes the system offered by the company by allowing users to pay for transactions using their $VEX cryptocurrency.

All three of these products tie together to offer an integrated solution to merchants and end users, enabling them to smoothly transition between crypto and government backed currencies. By tying the system together in a single network enabled solution, financial transactions are immediate and secure. No one must wait to get paid or convert their digital currency to real world money. In both the physical and virtual form, the Smart Debit Card gives users a unique sense of freedom, removing the need to check their digital wallet to complete transactions. In addition, anyone can own a Velorex Cryptocurrency ATM, and generate passive income from transaction fees.

Velorex COO Thanos Lampropoulos is excited about the company’s impending product release, “Velorex continues to usher in a new era of cryptocurrency ATM’s by releasing our Cryptocurrency ATM & Software, Smart Wallet, and Smart Debit Card. By keeping to the schedule laid out in our recent whitepaper, we are making it easier for bankless and underbanked people to get ownership of their financial life. Our decentralized system aims to ease the control banks have over people, allowing them to access their funds anytime.”

ABOUT VELOREX

Velorex is the creator of the $VEX cryptocurrency, and a decentralized finance and technology company located in Europe. Launched in May 2021, $VEX is a fully decentralized BEP-20 token on the Binance Smart Chain (BSC). The token is part of an experimental protocol and decentralized finance ecosystem. $VEX resides on supercharged block speeds and the cheapest transaction rates, is hyper-deflationary, and fitted with an auto-staking system that gainfully rewards investors. The company also provides hardware and software solutions to manage crypto and fiat currency. Their mission is to bring about greater literacy and adoption of cryptocurrency by creating fair, safe, and well-designed tools such as ATMs, debit cards, and smart wallets. The primary goal at Velorex is to empower the communities where they operate by providing tools and services that function as hubs for financial and social development. By design, the Velorex Distributed Bankless ATM Network (VDBAN), represents a paradigm shift in modern finance because it restores autonomy and access to individuals by connecting them to the independent flow of capital across blockchains. Velorex products and services connect people and help reestablish local economies destabilized by the unilateral movement and concentration of power and capital. It is their sole purpose to bring technology that is paired with anonymized, decentralized cryptocurrency management capabilities that favor local economies and the end user to all markets around the world. This of course is especially true for developing and emerging markets where the demand is immense, in economies that have been ruined by exploitation and greed. They believe that these new financial tools and services are needed to unshackle us and relieve us of unnecessary middlemen and the financial establishment’s abdications.

Take a look at this video to see what the Velorex ATM look like!

CONTACT: Thanos Lampropoulos
WEBSITE: Velorex.net
EMAIL: support@velorex.net
TELEGRAM: https://t.me/velorex_net

SOURCE: Velorex