Le bilan du Covid-19 à encore grimper en Algérie , 93 nouveaux cas confirmés de coronavirus et 08 décès ont été enregistrés durant les dernières 24 heures dans le dernier bilan du mardi 21 Avril 2020, communiqué par le porte-parole du Comité scientifique de suivi de l’évolution de la pandémie du Coronavirus, le professeur Djamel […]
L’article Coronavirus Algérie : Le bilan passe à 2811 cas confirmés dont 392 décès – 21 Avril 2020 est apparu en premier sur .
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Summary
Op-ed published at European Interest by Dr. Elona Gjebrea Hoxha (MP, Albania)
Only time will tell what the greatest impact of the COVID-19 pandemic will be, whether its effects on public health or on the economy are the most significant in the long run, but with unemployment rates soaring and many businesses closing, it is clear that the economic impacts will be profound to say the least.
In its April World Economic Outlook, the International Monetary Fund reported that the COVID-19 pandemic has sparked the worst recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s – far worse, they say, than the Global Financial Crisis of 2007-2008. Given the present uncertainties, predicting global economic trends is challenging and forecasts become outdated on a daily basis. But whatever percentage the economy contracts by, what we must remember is that the pandemic is already having an immediate and severe on impact the lives of millions of citizens.
Small business owners, the working poor, undocumented migrants, the underemployed, and those working in the gig economy are particularly vulnerable. In order to support those who are hit hard by this lockdown, and to prevent the recession from becoming a long-term depression, we need immediate and co-ordinated actions that utilize the world’s best economic practices and proven emergency measures to blunt the impact. Cooperation is needed between countries and within countries if we hope to emerge from this recession and prevent the worst effects from taking hold.
As a crisis that is still unfolding and one that is unprecedented in the modern era, there are too many unknowns regarding the COVID-19 pandemic that inhibit informed decision-making. Governments are at pains to pursue the right approach to fighting the virus and protecting the economy. But we must be clear in our rejection of the false choice between safeguarding the health of citizens on one side, and keeping the economy going on the other. In fact, both containment and economic support measures are needed to protect lives and jobs. The challenge is to find the right balance.
To better understand the short- and long-term repercussions of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is imperative that we share views on the expected impact of the measures being pursued by governments to mitigate the crisis.This is why as Rapporteur of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s committee on economic affairs, I am working with my colleagues in parliaments from North America, Europe and Central Asia to develop effective policies that prevent widespread company bankruptcies, mass layoffs, and system-wide financial strains.
Although we are unable to physically meet during this period, OSCE parliamentarians can share best practices in online forums and coordinate effective responses that place the needs of our citizens front and center. In the OSCE PA’s first webinar during this crisis, scheduled for 22 April, we will explore the contribution of parliaments and inter-parliamentary assemblies in responding to the challenges.
As parliamentarians, we understand that the role of national parliaments is more important than ever. Parliamentarians not only hold the power of legislation, but of oversight. It is up to us to make sure that laws and policies are adopted that target resources effectively, and to ensure that they are implemented properly. We must be vigilant against unscrupulous actors who would take advantage of this crisis to enrich themselves at the expense of others.
The long-term repercussions are yet to be fully comprehended, but it is likely that the crisis will affect regional security and cooperation. We saw last decade how the Global Financial Crisis sparked political instability in several countries, and even led to the collapse of some governments.
The current crisis has opened many eyes to the shortcomings of the global economy and the need to reconsider certain aspects of our current economic development system. While many are longing for things to go “back to normal,” we must ensure that we do not return to a “normal” that fails to protect the most vulnerable people. We must ensure in the future that our social safety nets are strong enough to ensure that nobody falls through. Here again, national parliaments should play an important role.
Many countries have already introduced emergency measures to counter the downward economic spiral, but to prevent the recession becoming a depression we need coordinated fiscal and anti-protectionist initiatives that fully appreciate the interconnectedness of the global economy.
Unfortunately, however, the COVID-19 pandemic and the Great Lockdown hit the world at a difficult time for international relations. There is a geopolitical reality that we cannot ignore, with competition rather than cooperation being the driving force in international affairs, and multilateral organizations being undermined at every turn.
The COVID-19 crisis could inflame this tension and exacerbate international competition, or it could bring us together in pursuit of a common response to the challenge. For the sake of this planet’s 7.8 billion people, let us work to make sure that it is the latter.
Dr. Elona Gjebrea Hoxha is a Member of Parliament from Albania and serves as Rapporteur of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s General Committee on Economic Affairs, Science, Technology and Environment.
To watch the webinar on “The Economic Security Fallout of the COVID-19 Pandemic,” featuring a presentation by Prof. Giovanni Tria, a former Italian Minister of Economy and Finance, please tune in to the OSCE PA’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/oscepa. The webinar takes place Wednesday 22 April 2020 from 15:00 to 17:00 (CET).
How to handle electronic evidence, and in particular, request electronic evidence across borders, to support counter-terrorism efforts was the focus of an online workshop held on 21 April 2020 that brought together national experts from 13 countries and several international organizations.
Organized by the Terrorism Prevention Branch of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the European Union, Interpol, and the Action against Terrorism Unit of the OSCE Transnational Threats Department, the workshop developed strategies and content for a new “Train-the-Trainers” course, which will be designed for relevant law enforcement and judicial training institutions.
The training module will be based on the Practical Guide for Requesting Electronic Evidence Across Borders produced by UNODC together with other partners, and translated into Russian and printed by the OSCE in 2019. The Guide provides practitioners with the necessary methods and skills to access the critical electronic evidence needed to prevent, investigate and bring to justice those who seek to undermine the rule of law.
Opening the workshop, Masood Karimipour, Chief of the UNODC Terrorism Prevention Branch, said: “Our interactive e-learning courses, global network of experts and virtual convening authority have continuously supported face-to-face activities. Now, in this unprecedented environment, online-conferencing and peer-to-peer platforms such as the UNODC’s Counter-Terrorism Learning Platform will take the lead, but the experience and subject matter expertise of UNODC remains the same.”
Alena Kupchyna, OSCE Co-ordinator to address Transnational Threats, added: “The very fact that we convene this event is clear evidence that the co-operation between international organizations in countering terrorism remains stable and effective even in the face of the unprecedented COVID-19 crisis. Building on our successful co-operation, we are keen to continue closely working together with UNODC and other international partners to support law enforcement authorities, prosecutors, and judiciaries in developing long-term, sustainable, and human-rights compliant approaches in handling electronic evidence.”
Hilde Hardeman, Head of the European Commission's Service for Foreign Policy Instruments, said: “People across the globe are joining forces to save lives and livelihoods. We cannot allow this situation to be exploited to stoke hatred and fear. The EU stands for solidarity in adversity. Through this project with UNODC and its partners, we make new tools available to exchange best practices in the fight against terrorism.”
Experts from law enforcement/criminal justice training academies and institutions from Bangladesh, Belize, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Côte d’Ivoire, El Salvador, Kazakhstan, Maldives, Mozambique, North Macedonia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan took part in the workshop. They were joined by high-level representatives from the UNODC, the UN Counter Terrorism Executive Directorate (UNCTED), the OSCE Secretariat, the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, Interpol, the EU, the European Commission and the Commonwealth.
The “Train-the-Trainers” is being developed after the Practical Guide received positive feedback from law enforcement authorities, prosecutors, and judiciary experts from the OSCE participating States.
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