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England-Fans auf dem Trockenen: «Wir wollen ja nur zwei Bier – keinen Vollsuff»

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:42
BlickTV berichtet täglich im Fussball-Magazin «Katar kompakt» über News und Hintergründen von der WM 2022 in Katar.
Categories: Swiss News

Amerikanisches Erntedankfest: Diese Weine passen zu Thanksgiving

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:38
Nächsten Donnerstag ist es wieder so weit: Die Amerikaner feiern das Thanksgiving Erntedankfest. Wer traditionsbewusst anstossen möchte, entscheidet sich für amerikanische Tropfen.
Categories: Swiss News

Why 14.5% is the bare minimum energy efficiency target for 2030

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:36
A 14.5% energy efficiency target for 2030 would deliver significant economic, social and environmental benefits, according to recent research, writes Arianna Vitali Roscini.
Categories: European Union

Spéculation illicite sur le lait : 2 individus condamnés à Cherchell

Algérie 360 - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:35

Depuis maintenant des mois, l’Etat a lancé une vraie chasse aux sorcières contre les spéculateurs illégaux des produits alimentaires de bas. En effet, les procès s’enchainent et les peines de prison aussi pour les coupables. Hier, dimanche 20 novembre 2022 le tribunal de Cherchell dans la wilaya de Tipaza a condamné deux personnes à 7 […]

L’article Spéculation illicite sur le lait : 2 individus condamnés à Cherchell est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

Mehrere 100'000 Fr Sachschaden in Oberneunforn TG: Feuer zerstört Bauernhaus

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:30
Aus noch unbekannten Gründen brannte in Oberneunforn TG ein Bauernhaus. Es entstand Sachschaden von einigen hunderttausend Franken, verletzt wurde niemand.
Categories: Swiss News

Thomas Gottschalk brauchte einen Spickzettel: Das hat man bei «Wetten, dass..?» nicht gesehen

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:29
Am Samstagabend ging die zweite «Wetten, dass..?»-Ausgabe seit dem Comeback über die Bühne. Doch dem TV-Zuschauer wurde nicht alles gezeigt.
Categories: Swiss News

Sorgen um Nati-Keeper vor WM-Auftakt: «Nicht der Yann Sommer, wie man ihn kennt»

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:28
Vor dem ersten WM-Spiel gegen Kamerun gibt es in der Nati ein grosses Fragezeichen: Yann Sommer. Im «Blick Kick» bei Steffi Buchli diskutieren Andreas Böni, Otto Pfister und Christoph Spycher.
Categories: Swiss News

Ex-Präsident muss zurück in den Knast: Haft-Entlassung von Zuma rechtswidrig

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:23
Die Haftentlassung aus medizinischen Gründen des früheren südafrikanischen Präsidenten Jacob Zuma war rechtswidrig. Das entschied das Oberste Berufungsgericht am Montag. Zuma solle ins Gefängnis zurückkehren, hiess es in dem Urteil.
Categories: Swiss News

Commission: New wastewater rules will not jeopardise access to medicines

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:11
The EU Commission rejected a warning from pharmaceutical companies that extended producer responsibility (EPR) under the proposed revision of the wastewater directive could jeopardise access to medicines.
Categories: European Union

EU Council discusses cross-border removal orders to fight child pornography

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:03
A new compromise text by the Czech EU Council presidency has expanded the original proposal for tackling online child sexual abuse material to include a mechanism for dealing with cross-border content removal.
Categories: European Union

Définition pénale du viol: La pression monte pour le principe «seul un oui est un oui»

24heures.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 14:03
Une pétition signée par plus de 40’000 personnes appelle le Parlement à privilégier le consentement dans la définition du viol en Suisse.
Categories: Swiss News

Russia’s war on Ukraine: People with disabilities

Written by Marie Lecerf and Micaela Del Monte.

More than 8 months into Russia’s war on Ukraine, there is no end in sight. The invasion has forced millions of people to flee Ukraine or seek refuge in other parts of the country, causing a European humanitarian crisis of enormous proportions. The chaos created by the conflict has increased the risk of violence and exploitation exponentially, especially for the most vulnerable people, such as those with disabilities. Estimates show that around 2.7 million people with disabilities in Ukraine face a disproportionate risk of violence or death, and lack access to medical support; this number will most likely increase as the conflict goes on. Since the war began, the European Parliament has been drawing attention to the needs of people with disabilities.

The humanitarian situation of people fleeing or being displaced within Ukraine

As of 8 November 2022, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimated that over 7.8 million people had fled from Ukraine to neighbouring countries since the start of the conflict; more than 4.6 million of them had registered for temporary protection or similar national protection schemes in Europe. As of 14 November, 16 631 civilian casualties (6 557 killed and 10 074 injured) were recorded in Ukraine, though the figures could be higher owing to the ongoing hostilities and ensuing difficulties in reporting. The raging conflict keeps increasing the numbers of casualties and the extent of the destruction and displacement within Ukraine, thus causing one of the greatest European humanitarian crises of recent times.

Specific risks facing Ukrainians with disabilities in times of conflict

People with disabilities (PWDs) in Ukraine were already extremely vulnerable prior to the Russian invasion. Taking this into account, the European Commission’s 2021-2027 action plan on integration and inclusion mentioned that migrants with disabilities may face discrimination. It stressed the special educational needs of children with disabilities and also pointed to the difficulties migrants with disabilities face in accessing the labour market. During armed conflicts, the needs and vulnerabilities of PWDs are amplified, as is the risk of discrimination towards them. The war in Ukraine is no exception: the mass displacement and chaos triggered by the conflict have raised serious concerns about violations of human rights inside and outside the country, in particular those of vulnerable people, such as women, children, LGBTI people, Roma and PWDs. In April 2022, the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) warned that 2.7 million PWDs in Ukraine were at risk of being abandoned in their homes or in residential care, with ‘no access to life-sustaining medications, oxygen supplies, food, water, sanitation, support for daily living and other basic facilities’. June 2022 estimates show that more than 143 000 PWDs have been displaced since the outbreak of the war.

Furthermore, the conflict has exposed PWDs to a disproportionate risk of death or injury and hampered their access to emergency information. PWDs often have no way to reach shelters or safe places, and because of mass displacement they have been disconnected from their support networks. The UN ‘Report on the human rights situation in Ukraine, 1 February to 31 July 2022′ pointed to a lack of ‘access to bomb shelters, evacuation trains, necessary medication and adequate housing suited to their needs’ for PWDs. Another UN report stressed that Ukrainian children ‘with visual, hearing, developmental or intellectual disabilities’ are at higher risk of danger because ‘they may not have learned about or understood what was happening’ or were removed from or abandoned in their institutions without appropriate support. Non-governmental organisation (NGO) Inclusion Europe reported that before the war, around 261 000 people in Ukraine had disability status due to intellectual and psychosocial disorders. The sirens, explosions and alarms, in addition to the bombing and shelling, have caused them stress, depression and anxiety, in some cases exacerbating their chronic disease. Moreover, Inclusion Europe points to the difficulty such people face in accessing medical services, psychological assistance and psychiatric care, and to the fact that autistic people cannot stay in overcrowded bomb shelters.

Similarly, the World Economic Forum stresses that PWDs are facing a ‘crisis within a crisis’ not only because civilian infrastructures, including hospitals and residential care facilities, are under shelling but also because people in wheelchairs or who are visually or otherwise impaired are facing unprecedented challenges in trying to escape the hostilities. This is why the NGO Humanity and Inclusion has highlighted the urgent need to ensure that the specific needs of PWDs are identified and taken into account in humanitarian measures. Likewise, UN experts call ‘for urgent action to protect Ukrainian children with disabilities in residential care institutions’. Stakeholders, such as the European Disability Forum and the European Association of Service providers for Persons with Disabilities (EASPD), are also closely monitoring the situation of PWDs who are in Ukraine or have fled the country.

International and European Union initiatives

A September 2022 UNCRPD report on the situation of PWDs in Ukraine points to states’ obligations regarding PWDs in the context of armed conflict. It refers to Article 11 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which requires states parties to ensure the inclusion of PWDs when meeting their obligations under international law, including international humanitarian and human rights law. At the time of writing, there were 185 states parties to the convention; it was ratified by both Russia (2012) and Ukraine (2010).

Since the war began, the EU has activated its Temporary Protection Directive, coordinated the largest EU Civil Protection Mechanism operation to date and stepped up its financial assistance to Ukraine (the EU and its Member States have disbursed €1.4 billion in humanitarian aid to Ukraine since 2014). The EU has also arranged for the cohesion funds to be used to help Member States welcome fleeing Ukrainians. In March 2022, a Commission communication on welcoming those fleeing war in Ukraine stressed the need to pay particular attention to vulnerable categories, including children with special needs or disabilities and PWDs in general. It pointed out that the European Social Fund Plus can support community-based services and accommodation, especially for those with special needs or disabilities, and also for children and the elderly.

This year, the Commission, together with the European Disability Forum, is organising the annual conference to mark the European Day of Persons with Disabilities. The conference will focus on: issues faced by young people with disabilities; the international instruments available in support of PWDs; and the escalation of violence in Ukraine, which has affected PWDs particularly badly. In line with EU operational guidance on the inclusion of PWDs in EU humanitarian aid, the needs of PWDs are mainstreamed in EU actions to foster a disability-inclusive humanitarian response. Similarly, EU-funded projects in Ukraine, run by partners such as Humanity and Inclusion and the World Health Organization, target and prioritise PWDs in terms of protection, psychosocial support, hygiene, health and shelter.

The European Parliament’s position

In its resolution of 1 March 2022, Parliament recalled that ‘attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure as well as indiscriminate attacks are prohibited under international humanitarian law and therefore constitute war crimes’. It called on the Commission, EU Member States and UN agencies to offer humanitarian assistance to the civilian population. Parliament stressed the needs of ‘vulnerable groups, minorities, and women and children, since they are particularly affected in conflict situations and need special protection and support, in particular children in institutional care, unaccompanied children, and children with disabilities and other serious illnesses’ and highlighted the need to ‘ensure that they continue to receive the necessary care and life-saving treatment and are immediately evacuated to safety’. In its resolution of 7 April 2022, Parliament called for the promotion of mechanisms to relocate refugees among the Member States, including fast coordinated transportation of refugees, in particular unaccompanied children and children with disabilities. Members reiterated their concern about PWDs in a resolution of 19 May 2022, underlining the importance of offering specialised protection and care to PWDs coming from Ukraine, and a resolution of September 2022 calling on Member States to ‘address the plight of vulnerable groups, including … people with disabilities in EU public statements about forcible transfers, and to support activists and NGOs on the ground who are trying to take care of them and facilitate their safe return’.

Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Russia’s war on Ukraine: People with disabilities‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.

Categories: European Union

Affaire Melnitchenko: Voici comment un oligarque échappe aux sanctions en Suisse

24heures.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:59
Berne permet à une épouse d’oligarque sanctionnée de rester en partie propriétaire et en partie bénéficiaire d’une firme valant plusieurs milliards.
Categories: Swiss News

Catastrophes naturelles: En cas de séisme majeur, les proprios passeront à la caisse

24heures.ch - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:58
Le projet avait été accepté l’année dernière au parlement fédéral. En cas de séisme massif, Berne exigera que ceux qui possèdent des bâtiments payent en partie pour la reconstruction.
Categories: Swiss News

RTE confirme le retard de maintenance du parc nucléaire, avec un risque faible de coupures d’électricité

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:45
RTE réactualisait vendredi ses perspectives sur le réseau électrique pour la saison automne hiver. Le risque de tensions sur le réseau est « peu probable » pour les prochaines semaines, mais reste prégnant pour janvier en raison de l'aggravation de la faible disponibilité nucléaire.
Categories: Union européenne

Mercato d’hiver : Farès Chaïbi dans le viseur d’un cador anglais

Algérie 360 - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:43

Considéré comme l’une des grandes révélations de la Ligue 1 Uber Eats cette saison, Farès Chaïbi attise d’ores et déjà les convoitises. Un grand club anglais et autre espagnol suivraient de près les performances du milieu de terrain franco-algérien. A peine 20 ans, Fares Chaïbi est entrain de réaliser un début de saison remarquable en […]

L’article Mercato d’hiver : Farès Chaïbi dans le viseur d’un cador anglais est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Afrique

L’UE doit constituer une alternative à la Russie et à la Chine, selon Josep Borrell

Euractiv.fr - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:28
L’UE doit éviter de créer de nouvelles « dépendances » et offrir une alternative aux pays partenaires alors qu’elle remodèle son approche diplomatique à la suite de l’invasion de l’Ukraine par la Russie. C’est ce qu’a confié Josep Borrell, le chef de la diplomatie du bloc, à EURACTIV.
Categories: Union européenne

Czech presidency seeks Council’s position on Chips Act with reduced budget

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:18
With six weeks before the end of its EU Council presidency, Prague is trying to set the outstanding differences among member states in the European chip legislation by reducing the budget by €400 million and opening up funding allocation to different contractual arrangements.
Categories: European Union

GOALSCORE: What can sports do against gender violence?

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:13
Violence against women remains a major social problem, worldwide and across the EU. In an effort to take active prevention, GOALSCORE and its partners believe sports and more specifically football, can play an important role in tackling gender violence among...
Categories: European Union

Un projet de budget de 64,5 milliards de FCFA en 2023

24 Heures au Bénin - Mon, 11/21/2022 - 13:10

63 milliards 571 millions 118 mille francs CFA. C'est le montant du projet de budget 2023 du Ministère de l'intérieur et de la sécurité publique. Il a été présenté par le ministre Alassane Seidou, vendredi 18 novembre 2022, aux députés membres de la Commission des finances.

Le projet de budget 2023 du ministère de l'intérieur et de la sécurité publique a connu un accroissement de 6,18 %. Il s'établit à 63 milliards 571 millions 118 mille francs CFA contre 59.853.766.284 en 2022.
« Ce budget va permettre de réaliser des infrastructures, de construire et d'équiper des commissariats. Il va aussi nous permettre de recruter les agents de Police, les former et les positionner sur différents fronts. Ce budget va également nous permettre d'équiper en général la Police surtout en matériel roulant et au ministère de fonctionner », a indiqué Alassane Seidou, ministre de l'intérieur et de la sécurité publique, vendredi 18 novembre 2022, lors de la présentation du projet de budget 2023 à la commission des finances de l'Assemblée nationale.
Il servira également à financer cinq (5) programmes : Pilotage et soutien aux services ; Programme sécurité publique ; Programme protection civile ; Programme affaires intérieures et Programme Gestion intégrée des espaces frontaliers.
Pour l'année 2023, le Ministère de l'intérieur et de la sécurité publique prévoit 51 milliards 626 millions 356 mille francs CFA de dépenses ordinaires. Les dépenses en capitale se chiffrent à la somme de 11 milliards 944 millions 762 mille francs CFA.
Les députés membres de la Commission des finances ont présenté plusieurs doléances au ministre de l'intérieur et de la sécurité publique. Ils ont souligné le manque de célérité dans la construction des commissariats de Police, l'insuffisance de moyens roulants pour certains commissariats, les mesures particulières à prendre pour la sécurisation des élections et surtout la lutte contre le terrorisme.
Marc MENSAH

Categories: Afrique

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