Tag: General News

  • Interactive: The European approach to stopping Libya migration

    Every day last year, more than four people on average died attempting to cross the central Mediterranean from North Africa to Europe, and around 90 were intercepted by the EU-supported Libyan Coast Guard – returned to detention centres where they face a cycleof torture, extortion, and sexual abuse.

    This year, with crossings guaranteed to increase in the warm summer months, more than 8,200 people have already been intercepted by the Libyan Coast Guard and nearly 700have died or gone missing at sea.

    Year after year, the deaths and interception follow a well-established, predictable pattern. But instead of saving lives or protecting the human rights of asylum seekers and migrants, “European countries have engaged in a race to the bottom to keep people in need of our protection outside our borders,” Dunja Mijatović, the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, wrote in a March 2021 report.

    Intercepted & returned in 2021

    That race has involved withdrawing European navy and coast guard assets from rescue activities in the central Mediterranean, obstructing the operations of rescue NGOs, and funding the implementations of border management projects in Libya and Tunisia aimed at preventing people from crossing the sea.

    The system that has been created by this process is “one of the most glaring examples of how bad migration policies undercut human rights law and have cost the lives of thousands of human beings”, according to Mijatović’s report.

    Asked for comment, Peter Stano, the European Commission’s lead spokesperson for foreign affairs, told The New Humanitarian via email: “Our top priority is saving lives at sea and we will continue our work to prevent these risky journeys from taking place.”

    Below, we show how straightforward search and rescue at sea can be. Then, explore the interactive storyline to see how the EU-backed migration control system in the central Mediterranean facilitates more interceptions by the Libyan Coast Guard and reduces search and rescue capacity – increasing the likelihood of shipwrecks and deaths.

    How maritime search and rescue is supposed to work:



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  • APC To Appeal Verdict Disqualifying Sylva From Bayelsa Gubernatorial Election

    apc-flag-logo.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has announced its intention to appeal a court judgment that disqualified Timipre Sylva from running in the upcoming Bayelsa State governorship election.

    The Federal High Court on Monday, in a judgment delivered by Justice Donatus Okorowo, ruled that Sylva, who had been sworn in twice and governed Bayelsa for five years, would be in violation of the constitution if allowed to contest again.

    But Perry Tukuwei, the Director of Media and Publicity for the APC Bayelsa Gubernatorial Campaign Council, expressed confidence that the court of appeal would overturn the trial court’s verdict in a statement issued on Tuesday.

    Tukuwei said, “This reassurance is in reaction to a judgment which has the Peoples Democratic Party and its candidate written all over it by a Federal High Court in Abuja in an already failed bid to dash the hopes of Bayelsa people to have their preferred candidate, Chief Timipre Sylva as the next helmsman at Creek Haven by Feb. 14, 2024.

    “Sections 29 and 84 of the 2022 Electoral Act state that only persons who contested primaries of a political party that has the locus standi to file a pre-election matter to challenge the qualification of the party’s candidate in any election hence the suit filed by one Chief Demesuoyefa Kolomo who is not a member of the APC and didn’t contest our party’s governorship primaries do not have the locus standi to sue in the matter.

    “Section 285 of the 1999 Nigerian constitution enjoins any aggrieved party to file an election matter within 14 days of the occurrence of the event but this case was filed on the 13th of June 2023 whereas INEC published the names of the governorship candidates for Bayelsa, Imo and Kogi on May 12.”

    He further argued that the case is time-barred as it was filed beyond the 14-day window. He emphasized that Bayelsa residents should not be discouraged by the court’s decision.

    He said, “To perfect their sinister act, the case was filed in Abuja. Is Abuja Bayelsa?

    “Subsequently, the Bayelsa APC can smell the coffee and sinister moves by Gov. Douye Diri to go through the back door which is his usual practice having realised that our governorship candidate is coasting home to victory already following unrivalled acceptance across the state.”

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  • Mario Lopez, restructure what’s essential

    CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Jodi Lyn O’Keefe, 45; Mario Lopez, 50; Wendi McLendon-Covey, 54; Nora Roberts, 73.

    Happy Birthday: Designate time and energy to help a cause or to rectify a concern you want to amend. Refuse to let domestic situations interfere with your purpose. A couple of financial adjustments will put your mind at ease and encourage you to restructure what’s essential and how you plan to do your part. Don’t waste energy on people or situations that don’t fit your plans. Prioritize. Your numbers are 9, 13, 22, 29, 31, 36, 42.

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): Listen, assess and move along. Don’t waste time on someone or something that has no future. Look for solid opportunities and put a contract that protects you, your ideas and your long-term goals in place. When opportunity knocks, open the door. 3 stars

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t share too much information. Mull over what you hear, verify facts and use what you learn to secure your position. Follow your heart and take advantage of an opportunity that offers a shift in how you use your skills to dominate the competition. 5 stars

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Making moves based on emotion will leave you confused. Think before you put more energy into restructuring your lifestyle and professional goals by picking up knowledge and skills to help you advance. Networking functions will reveal what’s available. Protect against illness or injury. 2 stars

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Stick to what you know and do best. An unexpected offer will put you at ease and help you decide where or how you choose to live. A change will offer security and prompt you to spend less time with people who don’t have your best interests in mind. 4 stars

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Concentrate on detail and expense involved before making a move, investment or contractual shift. Get your facts straight and find out if any updated information can help you make a difference in how well you communicate and get along with others. 3 stars

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take a look at your current situation and consider the changes that will rectify whatever isn’t working for you. Find a unique way to use your money and skills to make a difference in where or how you live. Make a meaningful relationship a priority. 3 stars

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Put on your adult pants and make a stance. How you use your skills and connections to make your community better will have a stabilizing effect on what matters to you. Participation will capture attention and encourage others to do their part. 4 stars

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Revisit your options, choose and follow through. Express your desires, and don’t back down under pressure. Change is necessary, but it must align with your long-term plans. Refuse to let anyone railroad you into something you do not want. 4 stars

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take the path that offers the freedom to follow your heart’s desire. Refuse to let anyone infringe on you or your plans. Use your intellect to pick and choose who you confide in and what you pursue. Don’t let personal issues collide with financial stability. 2 stars

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take inventory before taking on something new. Don’t fall for someone’s investment plan. Stick to what you know and do your own thing. Build a strong base, make changes at home conducive to your needs and empower yourself. 5 stars

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Reach for the stars. Believe in yourself and structure your day to elaborate on a plan that supports saving, improved lifestyle and contractual protection. Don’t let someone interfere or enforce changes on you that aren’t necessary or in your best interest. 3 stars

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your discipline will pay off. Look for an opportunity to partner with someone who can fill in the blanks regarding the skills or experience you lack so that you can focus on what you do best. Put everything in writing to avoid setbacks. 3 stars

    Birthday Baby: You are talkative, forceful and changeable. You are unique and assertive.

    1 star: Avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes. 2 stars: You can accomplish, but don’t rely on others. 3 stars: Focus and you’ll reach your goals. 4 stars: Aim high; start new projects. 5 stars: Nothing can stop you; go for gold.

    Visit Eugenialast.com, or join Eugenia on Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn.

    Want a link to your daily horoscope delivered directly to your inbox each weekday morning? Sign up for our free Coffee Break newsletter at mercurynews.com/newsletters or eastbaytimes.com/newsletters. 

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  • Top food exporter Argentina confronts rising hunger and poverty

    On 22 December, two days after jubilant fans thronged the streets of Buenos Aires to welcome their World Cup-winning football team, a very different crowd took over Avenida 9 de Julio, a main artery of the Argentine capital, to demand a “Christmas Without Hunger”. They camped out in front of the Ministry of Social Development, calling for food for soup kitchens and decrying cuts to social programmes.

    Argentina is Latin America’s third-largest economy. It is an agricultural powerhouse. It is a key producer and exporter of soybean, corn, and wheat. Yet a growing number of Argentinians are struggling to eat and falling into poverty.

    Around 17 million people, or 43% of the country’s 46 million population, are living below the poverty line, and that number could rise to 50% without more support, said a report published in December from the Social Debt Observatory at the Catholic University of Argentina.

    Up-to-date data on food insecurity is difficult to come by, but the latest UN report, based on surveys in 2021, found that more than one in three reduced the quantity and quality of the food they eat and skipped a meal, while one in eight were unable to eat on one or more days.

    “These indicators have doubled in the last five years,” Jorge Meza, interim representative in Argentina and Uruguay for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), told The New Humanitarian.

    It is highly likely hunger levels have increased since. Argentina ended 2022 with prices climbing 95%, the highest in three decades even in a country inured to economic instability. On 3 February, the government announced a new 2,000 peso bill – double the previous largest note, yet only worth $5 on the alternative markets most people use. Officially, it is equivalent to $11.

    Economists have blamed the latest crisis on a combination of a lack of strategic vision by policymakers, a history of distorted agricultural policies, three consecutive years of drought, and rising global prices.

    But growing poverty and inequality, the industrialisation of food production focused on exports, the deterioration of agricultural ecosystems, and Argentina’s high vulnerability to climate change also play significant roles, said Rikke Olivera, a senior technical specialist with the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). Nutritious diets are costly partly because specialisation and industrialisation “fails in providing accessible, affordable, and diverse food to the local Argentinian food systems”, she added.

    As the country prepares for polls in October, Valeria Piñeiro, an Argentine economist and acting head of Latin America for the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), is asking the international community not to neglect Argentina and Latin America. In the decade up to 2015, the region was hailed for outperforming others in reducing hunger and poverty, but it saw a 30% jump in the number of hungry people between 2019 and 2021. 

    Economists have blamed the latest crisis on a combination of a lack of strategic vision by policymakers, a history of distorted agricultural policies, three consecutive years of drought, and rising global prices.

    “It’s hard to get funding or support from donors for the region because most people have the perception it only has middle-income countries and think they’re doing fine,” Piñeiro told The New Humanitarian. “But [it] includes a number of poor countries like Haiti or Guatemala, and the region is not doing fine. They’ve been really affected by all the three Cs – conflict, COVID-19, and climate change.”

    ‘A vicious cycle’

    “At the beginning of the year, with 6,000 or 7,000 pesos, you could buy enough for 15 days,” said Victoria Crapanzano, a 34-year-old nutritionist and divorced mother-of-two in Buenos Aires. “Now, you buy three things and spend 15,000 pesos on a purchase that is enough for maybe a week.”

    Irupe, a 41-year-old photographer and journalist who declined to give her surname, told The New Humanitarian she and her friends are looking for second jobs because they’re unable to make ends meet.

    “The current situation is a growing challenge. Hunger is worsening,” said Lorena Troncoso, executive director of Fundación Banco de Alimentos Mendoza, a food bank operating out of Mendoza, the heart of Argentina’s world-famous wine region.

    Set up in the aftermath of Argentina’s worst-ever financial crisis in 2001, it supports 80 local organisations serving more than 37,000 people. Another 16 groups with 7,500 people in need are on the waiting list.

    The food bank is helping 5,000 more people now compared to 2019, but the resources haven’t kept up. Food donations have remained the same, but “not enough to meet the demand we have”, Troncoso said.

    Piñeiro called what is happening “a vicious cycle”. The government has set price controls to keep a lid on food costs, but inflation continues to rise because it is also printing money to cover its chronic fiscal deficit.

    “Inflation is going up, but because you have a big informal sector their wages are not catching up. That’s why an increasing number of people are not able to afford food,” said Piñeiro, who is also concerned about longer-term impacts on nutrition as people turn to lower quality diets. 

    Argentina, once one of the wealthiest nations in the world, already has some of the highest levels of overweight and obesity in South America. Nearly 13% of children under five are overweight and more than one in four adults (28.3%) are obese, compared to the regional average of 8.2% and 23% respectively.

    “This indicates that food is not balanced or diets are not healthy, at least for a quarter of the country’s population,” said the FAO’s Meza.

    But it is “much more expensive” to eat better, protested Maricel Santin, a 44-year-old writer who has been struggling with various health issues, including allergies and stomach problems.

    With a husband who is also a writer, their income is unstable and she lives in constant fear of becoming jobless, an anxiety she believes she is passing on to her 14-year-old daughter: “The other day we celebrated my daughter’s birthday in a little bar, and I realised that she didn’t want to ask for anything.” 

    Can agroecology help?

    Proponents say agroecology, which applies ecological principles to agriculture by shunning synthetic fertilisers and pesticides, caring for the soil, and placing greater weight on social values and local knowledge could be a solution to the twin problems of rising prices and low nutrition. 

    In La Plata, a city some 50 kilometres southeast of Buenos Aires and known as the country’s horticultural belt, 48-year-old Eulalia Ortega gave up growing flowers and turned to producing fruits and vegetables using no chemicals, primarily to improve her ex-husband’s deteriorating health.

    “The poison made him very ill. He had an allergy in his eyes. He coughed. Every time he sprayed poison, he had this problem,” Ortega told The New Humanitarian during an afternoon break from farm work.

    However, the switch is also helping her weather the hyperinflation pushing food out of reach of many Argentinians.

    “We don’t buy any vegetables. We eat everything we grow,” she said. “Recently, things are more difficult, whether you use agroecological or conventional [methods].”

    Finances are still tight, especially now that the task of looking after the farm and their four children fell to her. They have cut back on meat, potatoes, and regular family barbecues.

    But their income is steady and “still enough to be able to eat and live well”, added Ortega, who sells her produce directly and through stores run by UTT, which stands for Unión de Trabajadores de la Tierra (The Union for Rural Workers).

    UTT has 380 points of sale across the country and a membership of 22,000 families. It started encouraging farmers to practise agroecology in 2013. For Santin, the writer, this is the one place she goes for healthy affordable food, when her health allows. “At UTT, the prices are really friendly,” she said. “I find the price-quality ratio convincing.” 

    Irupe, the photographer, is also a fan.

    Hundreds of UTT families using nearly 850 hectares of land have made the switch, including Ortega and her neighbours Javier Paniagua, 41, and Josué Trujillo, 43, all of whom said they used to produce pesticide-laden flowers.

    Like Ortega’s husband, Bolivia-born Trujillo and his brothers said they suffered side-effects from the use of pesticides. They had rashes on their bodies, and their skin used to burn when they showered, recounted Trujillo.

    The change has been both physically and financially beneficial, he said.

    “In the conventional sector, the cost is double or triple because of the products used. A carafe of bromide (pesticide) for two greenhouses costs around 140,000 pesos. It is very expensive. In agroecology, we make the [alternatives] ourselves,” he said, sitting in the vegetable storage area of his farm.

    Trujillo now produces more than a dozen vegetables all year round, which means he has income throughout the year. Their own diet has also become more varied, he said.

    Paniagua, originally from Paraguay, now trains other farmers. He said he was driven by a desire to produce food that is healthy for both consumers and farmers.

    “Doctors tell you to eat fruits and vegetables, but how these foods are produced is another matter,” he said, sipping on a mate, a traditional Argentinian herbal drink.

    “Agroecology is diverse – you have to care about everything. You are living on the same planet – you have to take care of the soil, the water, the environment, yourself, and others.”

    But for all its promise, agroecology in Argentina is still small-scale. Only 150 of the 6,500 farming families in La Plata are engaging in agroecology, said UTT. And according to the latest agricultural census published in 2021, the same is true for only 2,300 farms out of nearly 250,000 holdings across Argentina.

    This could change in the future. In 2022, IFAD started a programme with the Argentine government to encourage small-scale farmers to adopt agroecological practices and sell their produce directly to consumers. 

    Difficult future ahead 

    For decades, Argentina relied heavily on farming for export earnings – agricultural products accounted for nearly 66% of total exports in 2020, data from the World Trade Organization showed. 

    But experts are warning that this may be difficult to sustain, especially in light of climate change, and because government policies are choking the sector and will continue to further drive up the country’s hunger and poverty levels. 

    “The keyword to explain [Argentina’s] economic problems is distortions,” said IFPRI’s Piñeiro. 

    She pointed to a multitude of measures – export restrictions, subsidies, quotas, price caps, and different export taxes for different products and commodities – that make it impossible for farmers to have a clear idea of their future.

    “You’re making the producers decide which commodity to produce, and how much of it, based on all these constraints that are imposed on them,” she said. “And these constraints aren’t even stable. They change quite frequently.” 

    Eliminating these distortions could go a long way towards reviving the sector, and should be done fast because productivity is already going down and will only worsen with climate change, she added.

    Droughts are already slashing the country’s agricultural productivity, but losses could worsen if they become more frequent and severe, sowing trouble not only in Argentina but also in other countries that depend on its production. 

    Argentina’s model of intensive, industrial agriculture is also contributing to global warming. Agriculture, livestock, forestry, and other land use are responsible for 39% of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions, according to the World Bank. In addition, farming is a primary cause of 22% forest loss from 1990 to 2015, the OECD said. 

    The National Agricultural Technology Institute (INTA) has also warned that monoculture, changes in land use, and overgrazing in dry regions are taking a toll on soils that are crucial for food production. 

    For vegetable farmers like Ortega, Paniagua, and Trujillo, policymakers need to stop seeing food just as a commodity to be traded and sold. “The way in which food is being produced… in which we are feeding ourselves, is very bad,” said Paniagua.

    Natalia Favre reported from Buenos Aires. Thin Lei Win reported from Turin, Italy.

    Edited by Andrew Gully.

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  • Troops Arrest 13 Kidnapping Suspects, Recover 279 Rustled Cows

    Nigerian-Troops

    The Special Military Task Force, Operation Safe Haven (OPSH) has arrested 13 suspects over alleged kidnapping, banditry, rustling and other criminal offences.

    The operation was aimed at maintaining peace in Plateau and parts of Kaduna and Bauchi States, according to a statement signed by James Oya, the Media Officer of OPSH.

    Oya noted that the troops also recovered 279 rustled cows and arms and ammunition.

    Oya explained that OPSH recorded the breakthrough in an operation it conducted between October 2 and 9, adding that the suspects were arrested in some communities within its areas of responsibility.

    ‘’Between Oct. 2 and Oct. 9, our troops arrested 13 criminal suspects in connection with kidnapping, prison break, peddling illicit drugs and rustling.

    ‘’We also recovered illegal arms and ammunition.

    ‘’Troops recovered a total of 279 cows and six sheep over destruction of crops on farmlands across Bokkos, Mangu, Riyom and Zango Kataf Local Government Areas (LGAs) of Plateau and Kaduna states respectively, ‘’he said.

    The troops also foiled attempts by gunmen to attack Washina and Razak communities in Mangu and Barkin Ladi LGAs of Plateau.

    Oya called on the residents in the area to support its efforts toward stemming crime and criminality while urging them to be law-abiding at all times.

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  • Fact Check: Video that predates Hamas October 2023 attack mischaracterized amid violence

    News outlets have published video footage that appears to show Hamas militants using motorized paragliders to land amid a music festival in Israel on Oct. 7.

    On social media, though, another video is being mischaracterized as some users claim it shows that event. 

    “Hamas paraglided amongst Israeli citizens and proceeded to massacre them,” reads the text over the video which shows paragliders landing among crowds in a city. 

    An Oct. 8 Instagram post sharing this video was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Hamas militants launched an Oct. 7 attack on Israeli towns. 

    But the video shared on Instagram has been online since September. 

    Searching the TikTok account of the handle that’s visible in the clip, we found the video posted Sept. 27 on that platform.  A second video shows the paragliders landing on a field, and the third shows adults and children running toward them. This doesn’t track with news reports of “festivalgoers fleeing the attack” in Israel or gunmen opening fire on a “crowd of young people.”

    A YouTube account that has the same user name as the TikTok account also posted the video there Sept. 29, with an Arabic caption that, translated to English, said: “Parachute forces in Heliopolis.” 

    Heliopolis is a city in Egypt.

    We rate claims this video shows Hamas militants paragliding into Israel as False.

     



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  • Our No. 1 pick ranks among best horror movies of all time – Paradise Post

    The horror movie genre has been a bit of a mixed bag in 2023.

    On one hand, fright fans witnessed the release of one of the most thrilling horror films in years.

    On the other hand, viewers got a bunch of sequels — including a goodly number worth watching — as well as some fairly fresh takes on old ideas.

    And on yet the other hand — since we are taking horror here and monsters can have as many hands/claws as they want — there was a seemingly never-ending parade of (at best) macabre mediocrity and (more often than not) horribly bad films.

    I’ve combed through a huge number of these flicks and have come up with a list of some of the top horror releases from 2023.

    The timing, of course, is pegged to the Halloween season, when even non-horror fans seem to like a good jump scare or two.

    All 10 of my picks were released widely in 2023, although some may have premiered earlier, most likely at film festivals.

    So, try mixing some of these new offerings in with your old favorites (“Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” “Let the Right One In,” “Zoltan Hound of Dracula,” etc.) during your own scary movie marathons in the days and nights leading up to Halloween.

    I limited my picks to ones that are all available to stream/rent/download, which means some of the more recently released gems won’t be found here. Also, the picks are ranked from (very, very) best to, yeah, possibly still worth your time if you don’t have any other plans.

    1. “Talk to Me”

    I simply can’t get enough of this low budget Australian horror film, having already seen it a record (for me) five times in theaters and looking forward to even more viewings via streaming in the near future.

    Obviously, I’m not alone, as “Talk to Me” — which premiered at the Adelaide Film Festival in October 2022 — has been a surprise hit at the box office.

    Everything about this film works – from the writing and acting to the special effects and convincing scares – in this tale of a group of teenagers who find they can contact the dead with the use of a freaky embalmed hand.

    The result is more than just the finest horror film of 2023. It’s simply one of the best horror movies of all time.

    2. “M3GAN”

    Although the film premiered back in December 2022 (obviously for Oscar consideration purposes), it wasn’t released theatrically until early January and, thus, is fair game for this list.

    “M3GAN” is a wonderful update on the “Chucky” premise, as a child in need of a forever friend is given an extraordinary doll with a taste for blood. Only this time around, the resulting killing spree can’t be credited to a serial killer who has transferred his soul (via voodoo, of course) into a doll, but rather must be blamed on faulty programming.

    So 2023, right?

    The film is fun, clever and menacing, with a killer doll who already seems to have achieved icon status. Further following in Chucky’s footsteps, M3GAN seems destined to be a highly successful horror movie franchise.

    3. Meg 2: The Trench

    Nobody beats up sharks — especially deadly prehistoric sharks that are roughly the size of 18-wheelers — quite like Jason Statham.

    And he’s back at it again in this sequel that’s even better than the original model from 2018. OK, maybe it’s not technically better — in terms of quality writing, fine acting and all those other things that aren’t all that important in a film like this. But it’s certainly more fun — and way more over the top — and that translates to a shark tale that is very worth your time this Halloween season.

    4. “Viking Wolf”

    The title is reminiscent of one of those goofy Syfy channel numbers — like “Ghost Shark” or “Ice Spiders” — where you spend more time scoffing at the special effects than actually being afraid.

    Yet, “Viking Wolf” is anything but a laughing matter. Instead, this Norwegian horror film — which was released on Netflix in early 2023 — ranks as one of the most chilling werewolf epics to come around in years.

    The story kicks off more than a thousand years in the past, when Vikings discover a wolf cub during a raid in Normandy. They decide to take the cub with them back to Norway — a decision that proves costly for generations to come.

    The feature grows increasingly intense as the rest of the tale unfolds, doubling down on cool creature moments and big scares. Yet, “Viking Wolf” is also a film with a ton of heart — which is what’s really likely to stick with viewers long after the end credits roll.

    5. “The Boogeyman”

    The film is wonderfully unsettling, slowly building a nightmare scenario that feels both surreal and right around the corner. It’s based on a 1973 Stephen King short story of the same name. And when it comes to the wildly varying quality of King adaptations, “Boogeyman” is closer to “It’ than “Dreamcatcher.”

    It’s not, however, recommended late-night viewing for all parties, given that the film might leave you questioning whether you’re actually hearing something moving in your bedroom closet as you turn off the light and rethinking whether you need to check under the bed just one more time.

    I actually got a bit of the shivers just from writing that last paragraph, which further underscores the effectiveness of this Rob Savage-directed supernatural horror flick addressing the thing “that comes for your kids when you’re not paying attention.”

    6. “The Blackening”

    I tend to steer clear of the intentionally funny horror-movie lampoons — including most of the “Scary Movie” flicks — preferring instead to get laughs from horror films that aren’t trying to be funny. That’s why “Children of the Corn III: Urban Harvest” is by far my favorite in that franchise.

    Yet, this lampoon, specifically skewering how Blacks have long been portrayed in horror films, is a definite keeper. The film, which tells of a reunion of friends for a Juneteenth getaway in a cabin the woods, is smart, funny, well-acted and produces more legitimate scares than one typically gets in these types of horror lampoons.

    7. “Evil Dead Rise”

    I’m part of the camp that will always have a hard time with any “Evil Dead” film that doesn’t star the great Bruce Campbell. Yet, I still enjoyed this latest chapter in the seemingly never-ending tale of the dastardly Deadites.

    It’s a wholly intense film, which gets off to a incredibly strong start and then just continues to ratchet up the menace, blood and gore as we move from a lakeside cabin to the home of what’s about to be a very unhappy family.

    Ellie, the possessed mom played by Alyssa Sutherland, is nothing short of the stuff of nightmares.

    8. “Cocaine Bear”

    “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” were quite likely the only films in 2023 to scare up more advance buzz than “Cocaine Bear,” which brought the Internet to its knees with its amazing coming attractions trailer.

    The Elizabeth Banks-directed film then lived up to its advance hype, offering up equal amounts of ludicrous humor and horror as it tells the story of a forest creature who is certainly willing to fight for its right to party.

    It’s worth seeing for many reasons, not the least of which being the chance to witness the late great Ray Liotta — in one of his last performances — do what only Ray Liotta could.

    9. “Renfield”

    There’s something to be said about having low expectations, which is exactly what I had after watching just a few seconds of Nicholas Cage overact (yet again) in the trailer for this film. Yet, I try to be somewhat of a horror completist, and I had a few hours to kill in Los Angeles before going to see Phish at the Hollywood Bowl, so I plopped down the money for a matinee screening.

    It turned out to be a very good idea, given that the Chris McKay-directed film is a really fun action/horror/comedies. Nicholas Hoult is superb in the title role, playing a supernaturally powerful servant to Dracula who is looking to make a career change. And, yes, Cage overacts in the role of Dracula – but in all the right ways.

    10. “Scream VI”

    Did we need another “Scream” movie? Absolutely not. But I’m still glad we got one as fun as this sixth installment, which now finds Ghostface terrorizing folks in New York City. Most of the main characters from the classic run of “Scream” films are now gone, except for unstoppable talk show host Gale Weathers (played by Courteney Cox), but the new crew — introduced in the previous “Scream” flick — and some old friends help move the story forward in a way that does justice to Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson’s creation.

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  • Four ways ChatGPT could help level the humanitarian playing field

    A few years ago, I spent months helping to create materials to help local organisations navigate the overcomplicated global humanitarian system. Today, the same tools can be researched and drafted in mere minutes using ChatGPT.

     

    With a few back-and-forth exchanges, the artificial intelligence chatbot can quickly summarise funding opportunities for local humanitarians, explain complex grant requirements, and even draft passable project proposals. 

     

    This made me wonder: How else could this technology be used to build a more transparent and accessible humanitarian system? 

     

    Decolonising aid is one of the humanitarian sector’s greatest challenges – it would be naive to think that the solution lies in the internet’s latest AI fixation. But ChatGPT’s potential as an equalising force in humanitarian action shouldn’t be dismissed. 

     

    What ChatGPT does reasonably well – transmit, clarify, and simplify information – are precisely the areas where hyper-technical aid industry requirements for funding have failed and excluded grassroots humanitarians around the world. 

     

    If we refuse to pay attention to this new technology, we may miss out on opportunities to harness it for change. 

     

    Here are four simple ways local and international aid organisations can use ChatGPT to help balance the humanitarian playing field.

     

    Create content to amplify local voices 

    Good communications and media content can be a golden ticket to new advocacy and funding opportunities in the humanitarian world, but locally led organisations often lack the resources to invest in these materials. With so little core funding available to support overhead costs for grassroots groups, staffing communications-related positions is a real challenge. 

     

    ChatGPT can help fill some basic gaps. It can draft social media posts, media pitches, press releases, and articles with surprising efficiency. For overworked and understaffed groups, this can help get out critical fundraising calls and awareness-raising information in the earliest moments of an emergency. 

     

    Of course, a chatbot will never be a real replacement for social media experts or skilled press officers – nor an alternative to providing the flexible funding grassroots organisations need to truly amplify their voices over the long term. But in the meantime, it can throw a lifeline of writing support when activists most need to be heard and seen. 

     

    Navigate complex funding mazes

    ChatGPT could also be helpful for local organisations looking to gather information about funding opportunities. Not only are financing options limited, they are also often difficult to find, understand, and compile – often requiring hours of research to even scratch the surface of what is available and relevant. 

     

    ChatGPT can do some of the early legwork: Typing in “explain Canadian funding opportunities for local organisations in Ukraine,” for example, generates some of this information in language that is often more comprehensible than the complex requests for proposals that humanitarians must sift through if they want to access the global funding system.

     

    To be clear, the international community’s priority should be to streamline more nimble partnerships with local groups. But until that happens, ChatGPT can make it easier to complete onerous applications, proposals, and reporting requirements. Some expert users have already shown how artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT can draft logframes – and other essential documents used for project monitoring and evaluation – that are comparable to “real” ones.  

     

    Minimise legal and administration costs that slow action 

    ChatGPT and similar AI programmes could help with the burdensome legal and administrative processes that still cause unnecessary delays for local humanitarian responders. 

     

    Grassroots groups are often bogged down by the paperwork from onerous financial and contractual requirements – the product of a risk-averse system in which local groups aren’t trusted to manage resources effectively, or are even assumed to be corrupt.

     

    Outside of the humanitarian sector, ChatGPT has already been shown to draft contracts, indemnity clauses, non-disclosure agreements, and checklists for GDPR privacy regulations.  While streamlining these processes based on mutual trust must be the aid sector’s first priority, exploring how artificial intelligence tools can reduce precious administrative costs at local NGOs may ease some of the burden.  

     

    Identify local organisations in crisis response

    For international groups, the first step to supporting local counterparts is knowing who’s there. While some good resources for tracking local NGOs exist, they are still often under-utilised and incomplete – especially when it comes to identifying more specific subgroups of grassroots organisations, like those focused on women and girls.   

     

    Enter prompts to find “grassroots humanitarian organisations in Somalia”, or “local human rights groups in Iran”, and ChatGPT will generate a list that might otherwise take hours of research to compile from multiple sources. 

     

    Even more detailed instructions, for example, to list “women-led local organisations in Syria”, generate helpful results. ChatGPT adds a caveat in each of these cases – a reminder that the situation is “volatile” and “changing”, so to “check with local authorities for the latest information” – but its findings are still a starting point to help identify potential partners for crisis response. 

     

    There are other caveats and limitations. Like all artificial intelligence, ChatGPT comes with biases that are formed by its training, so how it defines concepts like “women-led”, or even “grassroots” may be shaped by its own assumptions. 

     

    Searching for “local humanitarian organisations in Haiti”, for example, brings up a list of international groups that aren’t locally led but have a significant enough web presence to be picked up by ChatGPT’s algorithms. This likely means that truly local organisations that lack search-engine optimised websites or social media accounts may get left behind.

     

    However, at a time when many international organisations still forgo these partnerships altogether because this research is seen as too time-consuming or resource-intensive, ChatGPT provides a launch pad – and no excuses. 

     

    Make no mistake: ChatGPT is not the silver bullet that rectifies the aid sector’s power imbalances, or that drives its stalled localisation reform promises.

     

    Real change can only come from real people who hold real power – and the willingness to give up some of that power. 

     

    But ignoring ChatGPT altogether is a missed opportunity. If humanitarians are serious about creating more just and effective emergency responses, we can use all the help we can get – real or artificial.

     

    Aanjalie Roane is director of communications at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Canada but is writing this in a personal capacity.

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  • Bayelsa Poll: Federal High Court Disqualifies APC Governorship Candidate, Sylva

    The Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has disqualified the Bayelsa State All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate in the November 11 governorship election, Timipre Sylva.

    Justice Donatus Okorowo ruled that Chief Sylva, having been sworn in twice and ruled for five years as governor of Bayelsa would breach the 1999 constitution as amended if allowed to contest again.

    This was sequel to the suit number FHC/ABJ/CS/821/2023 filed on June 13, 2023 by Deme Kolomo, a member of the APC seeking disqualification of Sylvia, who was Minister of State for Petroleum Resources in the administration of Muhammadu Buhari.

    The judge also declared that Sylva was not qualified to run in the November poll because if he wins and is sworn in, he would spend more than eight years in office as governor of the state.

    Citing the case of Marwa vs Nyako at the Supreme Court, Okorowo noted that the drafters of the country’s constitution stated that nobody should be voted for as governor more than twice and that the parties to the suit agreed that Sylva was voted into office two times.

    He further stated that the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Marwa vs Nyako that nobody can expand the constitution or its scope.

    So, if Sylva is allowed to contest the next election, it means a person can contest as many times as he wishes.

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  • Fact Check: Video clip of aircraft shot down is from video game, not Israel-Hamas conflict

    These days, military conflict is often accompanied by misinformation that bills fictitious scenes from video games as real depictions of fighting.

    The conflict between Israel and Hamas is no exception. 

    The caption on an Oct. 7 Facebook video says the footage shows “Palestinian freedom fighters shot down 4 Israelis fighter jets.” 

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    (Screenshot from Facebook)

    But scrutiny of the video reveals it is a simulation, with a few Facebook commenters saying the clip is from a video game and one describing the video as “terrible cgi” (computer generated imagery).

    Those commenters have strong fact-checking instincts, and their observations are correct. 

    The same clip was shared Oct. 3 on YouTube, titled, “Two combat helicopters shot down by anti aircraft defense – Arma” — four days before Hamas launched its attack on Israel. 

    “This not representative of reality it is just a simulation in the video,” read part of the YouTube video’s description. One hashtag on the video read “#arma3.”

    (Screenshot from YouTube)

    Arma 3 is a video game that describes itself as “a combined arms military game set in a massive military sandbox.” On X, formerly Twitter, Arma 3 says it offers players “true combat gameplay in a military sandbox.”

    PolitiFact has debunked many claims that clips from video games showed real war footage, several following Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. In many instances, those clips were also traced back to Arma 3. 

    We rate claims that this footage shows “Palestinian freedom fighters shot down 4 Israelis fighter jets” False.

    RELATED: Video that predates Hamas October 2023 attack mischaracterized amid violence

    RELATED: Airstrike video predates October Hamas attack on Israel



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