The Abraham Accords should be expanded and promoted to more Arab countries despite regional “enemies of peace,” leaders from Israel and Arab nations said in the Middle East Peace Initiative

‘We should have the courage to take the lead’

Washington, DC, April 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Media Contact: Larry Moffitt
media@us.upf.org
202-669-0387

Israeli and Arab Leaders Seek Wider Alliance for Abraham Accords
‘We should have the courage to take the lead’

The Abraham Accords should be expanded and promoted to more Arab countries despite regional “enemies of peace,” leaders from Israel and Arab nations said in the Middle East Peace Initiative, a project of the Universal Peace Federation (UPF).

“We have to understand that in our region there are enemies of peace and those who will try to undermine what we are doing, but we should have the courage to take the lead,” United Arab Emirates (UAE) National Council Member Ali Rashid Al Nuaimi said at the forum.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, former Israeli Knesset Deputy Speaker Hilik Bar, former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich also addressed the March 31, 2022 forum’s online event, which can be viewed at https://youtu.be/2hlG859q3Kk

Mr. Olmert and Mr. Bar said they saw signs of unity and respect growing in the Middle East since the Abraham Accords were signed in 2020 under the Trump Administration. Mr. Gingrich praised the accords for their potential to secure stability in the entire region.

Mr. Harper described the Abraham Accords as, “by far, the most positive news” that humanity received during the entire period of the COVID-19 pandemic. “This positive move in the Middle East stands out against what is otherwise a terrible degeneration in the global geopolitical landscape,” Mr. Harper said, citing the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Dr. Michael Jenkins, president of UPF International, said UAE and Bahrain are to be commended for developing the Abraham Accords with Israel and support from the US. “This vital step is increasing trade and friendly cooperation between these nations, which brings hope to the region. We also commend Morocco and Sudan for normalizing relations with Israel; we see the likelihood of many more nations in the Middle East and Africa following their example.”

The Middle East Peace Initiative promotes peace through dialogue, people-to-people diplomacy, fact-finding trips, interfaith pilgrimages and conferences.

UPF, founded in 2005 by the late Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon and his wife Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, is a respected NGO in General Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC). It has chapters in 159 countries.

Article on the online Middle East Peace Initiative webinar by The Washington Times
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/mar/31/arab-israeli-leaders-say-abraham-accords-show-regi/

Larry Moffitt
Universal Peace Federation USA
202-669-0387
media@us.upf.org

Hisense L9G Laser TV Unveiled at the World Cup Final Draw, #PerfectMatch World Cup Global Marketing Campaign Officially Launched

QINGDAO, China, April 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The Final Draw for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ was held in Doha on April 1st, FIFA, Qatar Government, Hisense and many organizations attended the event. As the official global sponsor for two consecutive FIFA World Cup tournaments, Hisense showcased its widely praised L9G TriChroma Laser TV at the event and announced the upcoming #PerfectMatch World Cup Global Marketing Campaign.

Hisense L9G Laser TV Widely Praised at the Event

FIFA’s senior management team and representatives from various soccer associations visited Hisense’s booth during the event. Fatma Samoura, Secretary-General of FIFA, was deeply impressed by the immersive viewing experience of Hisense L9G Laser TV. A renowned football coach stated that Hisense Laser TV is great for watching football matches at home.
Mr. Jason Ou, President of Hisense Middle East and Africa, highlighted that Hisense L9G Laser TV was designed as eye-friendly and recently certified Low Blue Light (Hardware Solution) by TÜV Rheinland. “The perfect home entertainment system and cinema-quality sound can provide the ultimate immersive match viewing experience to consumers when watching the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™. From the product strategy development perspective, Hisense will continue to promote the technological breakthrough of the product structure, to create premium and high-quality products. Hisense’s premium products will become the first choice of consumers in the future.” Jason Ou added.

#PerfectMatch World Cup Global Marketing Campaign Officially Launched

During the event, Hisense launched a global World Cup marketing campaign with the tagline “Perfect Match”, which means the World Cup will be a perfect football event, and Hisense products will be the best choice for football fans to watch matches at home.
As a reliable home appliances brand, Hisense shouts out to the world through the FIFA World Cup platform with the determination to present each Perfect Match to the global audience. Hisense will also create perfect matches for consumers and fans through a series of marketing campaigns across the FIFA World Cup journey, including the Disappearing Football Pitches CSR project, Super Brand Week, etc.

Hisense Increased Investment in Middle East, Consolidating Global Market Position

The Middle East is one of Hisense’s fastest-growing markets. At present, Hisense’s first global flagship store has been opened in the Middle East, and Hisense has won tremendous recognition through incredible technology and product quality. In the future, Hisense will leverage the “Qatar” World Cup sponsorship rights and continue to accelerate the strategic implementation of the Middle East market. To achieve this, Hisense will invest more in creating premium hi-tech products; Meanwhile, Hisense will also increase the overall investment in establishing factories to fulfill the integration of R&D, manufacturing, and sales.

Moving forward, Hisense aims to achieve globalization and enhance the brand’s global competitiveness through the success of the Middle East market and sports marketing, to become a global renowned technology brand worldwide.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1779322/Hisense.jpg
Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1779323/Hisense_2.jpg
Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1779324/Hisense3.jpg

DRC: Conviction of 13 youth activists is a shameful act to suppress dissent

The activists – who have already been held arbitrarily for five months – were sentenced to a further 12 months in prison for their participation in a peaceful demonstration in November last year.

“The conviction of these 13 activists simply for having exercised their right to freedom of peaceful assembly is another shameful attempt to suppress dissent in DRC,” said Flavia Mwangovya, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes Region.

“The sentence must be quashed, and these activists must be immediately and unconditionally released. Congolese authorities should address these activists’ legitimate demands for effective protection of civilians in the conflict, instead of preventing them from speaking out.

“President Tshisekedi must lift abusive restrictions on civic space under the pretext of the state of siege, and completely revoke the power given to military courts to judge civilians, in accordance with international human rights standards.”

Background:

The 13 Lucha activists were arrested on 11 November 2021 in Beni during a peaceful protest to denounce the authorities’ failure to protect civilians against deadly attacks by armed groups, despite the ongoing state of siege.

They have been arbitrarily detained since November 2021, with at least three of them falling seriously ill due to the trauma of their brutal arrest and poor prison conditions. They have not received appropriate medical attention. The 13 activists were accused of “provocation to disobey the laws” and faced three years in prison.

President Félix Tshisekedi declared a ‘state of siege’ in North-Kivu and Ituri provinces in May 2021 with the declared aim of reducing attacks on civilians. However, the implementation has resulted in flagrant human rights violations, including the transfer of political and administrative powers to the military and police, a blanket ban on protests, and the transfer of criminal jurisdiction over civilians to military courts. All of these constitute a violation of the Congolese Constitution, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which the DRC is a party.

Amnesty International has documented dozens of cases of arbitrary arrests and unlawful detention of peaceful activists, journalists, and at least three provincial MPs in the two provinces since May 2021

Source: Amnesty International

The Darien, a Gap between Hope and Despair

San Vicente, With a bag full of hopes and dreams, Iriana Ureña, a 32-year-old Venezuelan mother of two, arrived at a Migrant Reception Station (ERM) in San Vicente, at the edge of the Darien Gap. The look in her eyes showing the pain of a mother who would do anything to protect her children.

Iriana and her husband Eduardo decided to take the journey north from Venezuela through the jungle with their two children in search of better opportunities. The decision to leave their country, home, family, friends, and a life’s work to start all over again was a difficult but necessary one for them and many other migrants. They were hungry, dehydrated, and exhausted upon arrival at the station.

“The road was not easy, I felt that our lives were in danger. It was challenging because we saw very ugly things along the road, things that I would never think I would see in my life,” said Iriana.

According to statistics from Panama Migration Services, nearly 134,000 people, 80 per cent of whom were Haitians, risked their lives through the dense jungle in 2021. This is a record number of people crossing the 10,000 square mile rectangle of trackless jungle, rugged mountains, turbulent rivers, swamp, and deadly snakes that spans both sides of the border between Colombia and Panama. Today, the journey through the gap is made more perilous by criminal groups and smugglers who control the region, often extorting and sometimes sexually assaulting migrants.

However, the dynamics are changing as the jungle no longer sounds Creole. The Haitians, who used to cross this dangerous trail in masses are no longer the majority. They are still trying to get from Colombia to the United States, but Spanish and the resounding “panas” of the Venezuelan migrants now prevail on the trail.

The numbers of Venezuelans crossing the Darien Gap in the first two months of 2022 (some 2,497) almost reached the entire total for 2021 (2,819), becoming the main group crossing the heart of the rainforest. But this list also includes Cubans, Haitians, Senegalese, and Uzbek nationals, among others.

Scaling up aid

Emerging from the gap, most migrants pass through the Bajo Chiquito or Canaan Membrillo communities before making their way on foot or by community boats along the muddy waters of the Chucunaque River. The probability of suffering physical and psychological violence is very high throughout the whole journey.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) works with the government in coordination with other agencies to provide assistance to people in transit and host communities.

“Responding to the needs of migrants transiting irregularly through Panama poses significant challenges mainly related to funding,” says Santiago Paz, Chief of IOM Panama and Head of the Panama Global Administrative Center (PAC). “In this sense, there is an urgent need to redouble coordination between governments and international cooperation to respond to the humanitarian needs of the population in transit.”

In recent years, the Panamanian government has put in place infrastructure to temporarily house the population in transit and attend to the humanitarian needs of this growing migrant population. With technical support from the IOM and other international organizations, Panama has installed three ERMs, where migrants find lodging and food, and where potential cases of COVID-19 are monitored.

Among the newly arrived migrants is Johainy, a Venezuelan mother, and her one-year-old baby.

“We faced a lot of difficulties, we were robbed, and saw dead people along the way. Though we prepared ourselves as much as we could watching many videos about the route, nothing could totally prepare us for what we experienced in the forest.”

Mariel Rodriguez, Cultural Promoter for IOM Panama based in Darien, works with the migrants. She walks around the centre to provide migrants orientation and information. “The migrants we assist in the ERM are in a situation of extreme vulnerability and have very varied needs, from knowing in which country they are arriving, to medical assistance, clothes or basic hygiene products. The IOM team responds to these needs and coordinates with other government agencies and institutions to ensure access to available services.”

With a population of around 7,000 people, Meteti town has swollen in recent years with migrants – mostly Venezuelans, like Iriana, as well as Cubans, South Americans, Africans, South Asians, and others, all aiming for the United States or Canada.

IOM has balanced the needs of both migrants and host communities at the Panama-Colombian border with financial and policy support. This has reduced migrants’ vulnerability and assisted those who welcome them.

Getting beyond the gap in search of a better life

For thousands of migrants around the globe the perilous, roadless jungle becomes a path of desperate hope to the north in search of a better life. A babel of languages mixes in the vast jungle, from where some never emerge alive, though the death toll is unclear. They come from Haiti, Venezuela, Cuba, but also many countries in Africa and Asia. Many often passed through South American countries after working for months or even years.

Migrants continue to stream through the Darien Gap, many with stories or signs of trauma, like Shahzad from Pakistan (“We found dead bodies and skulls during the walk”) or Esther, who arrived extenuated, with blood-blistered feet, and hand carried by other people.

Others arrived with stories of hope. “The hike was extremely hard. I went into labour and I had my baby Hamdi in the middle of the forest with the only help of my husband. I had to drink water from the river for days. However, the newcomer gave all the family a renewed sign of hope I did not expect,” said Bijou Ziena Kalunga, 33, from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Or tears of joy as families are reunited after several days apart in the jungle, like Venezuelan William, Jorgeis and a six-month-old baby. “I was really sad, and I kept praying for my husband to arrive. I can´t say how happy I am to have him back,” Jorgeis said.

In the reception station, migrants crowd around every available electrical socket, charging their phones while they type on WhatsApp to loved ones back home. They talk about their hazardous way through the forest and their plans and hopes for the future.

Serigne Nor Sarr, 33, has modest ambitions. “My hope for the future is to work, start a family and lead a very simple life,” he said, standing outside his temporary shelter. The young Senegalese man has already spent more than four years in Brazil where he worked to get enough money for the trip. “We were treated well there,” he said, “but I always planned to leave someday for my dream destination in the United States.”

It’s a dream shared by thousands who arrive in Meteti – a place where some of the world’s hardest stories meet some of the world’s kindest hearts. “The risk is worth it, if it means that I can reach the United States and start over a new life with my family,” whispered Iriana with a hopeful look.

*The San Vicente ERM was built by the Government of Panama with support from international cooperation, intergovernmental organizations, civil society, and the private sector. San Vicente provides dignified conditions in which physical separation and other biosecurity measures can be maintained to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.

Source: International Organization for Migration

UN pays tribute to 8 peacekeepers killed in DRC helicopter crash

GOMA (DR Congo), UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUSCO) paid a final tribute Saturday to the eight peacekeepers who died during a helicopter crash Tuesday in northeastern DRC.

The memorial service took place in Goma, capital of North Kivu province, in the presence of the UN Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix.

“The remains of our departed peacekeepers are on their way back home. Once more we salute their courage and sacrifice in the service of peace,” said Khassim Diagne, the deputy special representative for protection and security at MONUSCO.

The helicopter was on a reconnaissance mission in Tshanzu, near Goma, where there have been clashes between the March 23 Movement (M23) rebel group and the DRC military in recent days. All eight peacekeepers – six Pakistanis, a Russian and a Serbian – who were on board the helicopter died after the chopper crashed.

The DRC military said Tuesday that the UN helicopter was shot down by M23 rebels, which is yet to be confirmed by the United Nations.

On Friday, the UNITED NATIONS Security Council expressed their deep concern over the crash and expressed their deepest condolences to the families of the victims, to their countries — Pakistan, Russia and Serbia, and to the United Nations.

The council members, noting ongoing efforts in this regard, urged the UN secretary-general, the UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) and the Congolese authorities to conduct swift, thorough and transparent investigations into the crash. They called on the Congolese authorities to bring any perpetrators to justice and to keep the relevant troop-contributing countries informed of the progress.

They condemned in the strongest terms all attacks and provocations against MONUSCO. They underlined that deliberate attacks targeting peacekeepers may constitute war crimes under international law.

The council members expressed concern about the increase in armed group activities in the eastern provinces of the DRC. They expressed their deep concern over the resurgence of the March 23 Movement, which has led to the displacement of hundreds of civilians and a deteriorating humanitarian situation.

They stressed the importance of MONUSCO having the necessary capacities to fulfill its mandate and promote the safety and security of the UN peacekeepers and its operations.

Source: Nam News Network

Swedish govt paves way for extradition of Genocide suspect Micomyiza to Rwanda

STOCKHOLM, The government of Sweden has given the green light to the extradition of Jean-Paul Micomyiza, 49, to Rwanda where he is accused of involvement in the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.

This comes three months after a top Swedish Court on Dec 21, 2021, found no reason why the Rwandan arrested in the Nordic country in 2020 should not be extradited to Kigali where he is wanted for crimes he allegedly committed during the 1994 Genocide.

Reports in Swedish media indicate that the government of the Nordic country decided to grant Kigali’s request for Micomyiza’s extradition on March 31.

Micomyiza is accused of leading a militia and mutilating, murdering and raping during the genocide in 1994. His Swedish lawyers, it is reported, will now turn to the European Court of Justice.

He was detained on Nov 17, 2020.

In December 2021, reports from Sweden indicated that the Supreme Court there saw no legal obstacle to extraditing Micomyiza to Rwanda.

His lawyers, Thomas Bodström and Hanna Larsson Rampe were against the court’s ruling, claiming that the legal system in Rwanda has serious shortcomings, a claim advanced by most defenders of suspected mass murderers elsewhere.

The suspect has lived in Gothenburg, a major city in Sweden situated off the Göta Älv River on the country’s west coast, for 15 years.

He was arrested as a result of Rwanda’s request for his extradition, on suspicion of involvement in the 1994 Tutsi Genocide.

Micomyiza applied but was denied citizenship in Sweden because he is politically active.

During the Genocide committed against Tutsi in 1994, Micomyiza was a second year student at the then National University of Rwanda, in the Faculty of Applied Sciences. As a university student, he was also a member of a committee called Comité de Crise that was instrumental in committing the Genocide.

According to sources, evidence gathered during investigations shows the participation of the suspect in crimes committed in Ngoma Commune, in the former Butare Préfecture (Currently in Huye District, in the Southern Province), at the campus of the University campus and its surroundings.

Micomyiza is accused of: committing Genocide by killing members of the Tutsi ethnic group, complicity in Genocide and crimes against humanity (rape).

Sweden is home to other Genocide suspects including Théodore Rukeratabaro who was, in mid-2018, given a life sentence there for his role in the 1994 Genocide.

Apart from Rukeratabaro, on February 15, 2017, the Svea Court of Appeal in Stockholm, upheld the life sentence imposed on Claver Berinkindi, a Rwandan who acquired Swedish citizenship in 2012. Berinkindi was found guilty of Genocide, a crime he committed in the former Prefecture of Butare. Another is Stanisilas Mbanenande who was handed a life sentence on June 20, 2013.

Source: Nam News Network

Kenya’s Jeptum breaks women’s record at Paris marathon

Paris, Judith Jeptum of Kenya broke the Paris marathon record while Deso Gelmisa of Ethiopia won the men’s race on Sunday.

Jeptum finished the 42.2-kilometer (26.2-mile) race in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 48 seconds in chilly conditions with a temperature of 2 degrees Celsius (36 degrees Fahrenheit) at the start of the event.

The 2021 Abu Dhabi marathon winner pulled away in the 28th kilometer to run a personal best and break the course record of 2:20:55 set by Purity Rionoripo of Kenya in 2017, reports AP.

Fantu Jimma of Ethiopia was second, more than three minutes behind Jeptum. Her compatriot Besu Sado, a former 1,500-meter runner, completed the podium.

American runner Lindsay Flanagan, who was seventh in the 2019 Chicago marathon, finished 10th in 2:26:54, a personal best.

In the men’s race, Gelmisa outsprinted fellow countryman and 2021 Chicago marathon winner Seifu Tura to finish in 2:05:07.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Pope Evokes Malta’s Welcome of St. Paul In Migrant Appeal

VALLETTA, MALTA — Pope Francis visited the grotto Sunday where St. Paul lived after washing up on Malta, recalling the welcome the apostle received and urging better treatment of modern-day arrivals on the Mediterranean island.

On the final day of his weekend trip to Malta, the 85-year-old pontiff will also hold open-air mass before visiting a migrant center that will soon host refugees from the Ukraine war.

According to Christian tradition, Paul was shipwrecked on Malta in 60 AD while en route to Rome and performed several miracles in his three months there.

Following in the footsteps of former popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI, Francis visited the holy grotto in Rabat, lighting a candle and saying a prayer.

He recalled how Paul and his fellow travelers were welcomed, even though “no one knew their names, their place of birth or their social status.”

He called on God to “help us to recognize from afar those in need, struggling amidst the waves of the sea, dashed against the reefs of unknown shores” and grant that “our compassion be more than empty words.”

The pope, who last summer underwent colon surgery and canceled an event in February due to acute knee pain, appeared to have trouble walking during the visit, where he also met the sick and disabled at the connected Basilica of St. Paul.

Safe harbor

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has overshadowed the pope’s first trip to Catholic-majority Malta, a voyage delayed two years by coronavirus.

Addressing politicians and diplomats Saturday, he warned that “some potentate, sadly caught up in anachronistic claims of nationalist interests, is provoking and fomenting conflicts” in a thinly veiled accusation against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Asked by a reporter about a possible trip to Kyiv, he said a visit to Ukraine’s capital was “on the table.”

The war has caused the worst refugee crisis in Europe since World War II, which feeds into a key theme of Francis’ nine-year papacy — the need to welcome those fleeing war, poverty or the effects of climate change.

Malta is on the frontline of the route from North Africa into Europe and thousands of people who risked the crossing in overcrowded boats have ended up here.

But charity groups have accused Malta of turning a blind eye to desperate people in its waters, and the pope on Saturday reminded the archipelago of its status as a “safe harbor”, while adding that other countries must also step in.

“The growing migration emergency — here we can think of the refugees from war-torn Ukraine — calls for a broad-based and shared response,” he said.

‘Very tired’

After visiting the grotto, the pope headed to Floriana, near the capital Valletta, where he was set to conduct mass for a 10,000-strong crowd of followers.

Awaiting him among the crowd was 67-year-old Anna Balzan from the nearby city of Qormi and her extended family. Over her shoulders was draped a Vatican flag she purchased during John Paul II’s visit in 1990.

“I’ve seen Benedict and John Paul when they came to Malta,” she said, expressing concern for the current pope’s health.

“I saw him as very tired yesterday… I think he is suffering.”

Later Sunday, Francis will return to the theme of migrants by visiting the John XXIII Peace Lab, a center inspired by the pope of that name, which is preparing for the arrival of Ukrainian refugees.

Run for the past five decades by a Franciscan friar, now 91, it already hosts around 55 young men from different parts of Africa who arrived in Malta without any legal papers.

Source: Voice of America