World
Arctic Security Concerns Resurface in Canada’s Territories Amid Russian War
For the higher a part of subsequent week, residents in Canada’s Northwest Territories might even see a better navy presence and plane whirring about.
It’s a part of a routine coaching train by NORAD, the North American Aerospace Protection Command, a partnership between Canadian and American navy forces for monitoring and alerting in opposition to aerial and marine assault.
Some other time, the routine coaching wouldn’t be a trigger for concern. However Russia’s struggle in Ukraine has drastically shifted the view that the Arctic is a “zone of peace,” a time period coined by the previous Soviet chief Mikhail S. Gorbachev in a speech he made two years earlier than the top of the Chilly Conflict.
Premiers within the three northern territories co-signed a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on March 2, expressing their rising concern about Arctic protection and safety in gentle of Russia’s struggle. The sense of alert in Canada’s North has been heightened, a lot in order that Premier Caroline Cochrane, of the Northwest Territories, posted on Twitter to “guarantee residents” that the NORAD coaching train was not related to the battle in Ukraine.
“Curiosity within the Arctic has been growing as a result of local weather change and the opening of Arctic waters, and it’s paramount Northerners are concerned in choices that affect the North,” Ms. Cochrane mentioned in an emailed assertion.
In comparison with its neighbors, Russia has the longest Arctic shoreline and has seen the thawing Arctic ice as a chance to advance its ambitions on vitality safety by creating northern vitality sources and assist its backside line by creating shorter commerce routes that may save prices on transport cargo to the West.
On the identical time, the nation has undergone a gentle Arctic navy enlargement that, within the context of struggle in Ukraine, has made diplomacy efforts paramount.
However as I reported this week, a key discussion board for Arctic coverage collaboration dissolved final week with the suspension of exercise within the Arctic Council, the main diplomatic group for the area, in response to what Canada’s international ministry has referred to as an “unprovoked invasion” of Ukraine.
The Arctic Council, made up of eight nations, is one in all no less than 4 diplomatic organizations which have suspended their work or stopped collaboration with Russia in current days.
[Read: Arctic Diplomacy Upended By Russian Invasion]
Michael Byers, a professor in political science on the College of British Columbia who researches Arctic sovereignty, mentioned that the Arctic just isn’t monolithic and that international locations within the European Arctic had been extra possible than Canada to be feeling a better menace.
“The North American Arctic nonetheless has numerous sea ice,” he mentioned. “It additionally has little or no infrastructure and a really sparse inhabitants, and it’s a good distance from Russia,” he added. “If I had been Norwegian, I’d be watching Russia very intently proper now.”
On the bottom. Russian forces, battered by the native resistance, have stepped up their bombardment throughout Ukraine, focusing on places removed from the entrance traces. Satellite tv for pc imagery of a convoy north of Kyiv means that Russia is repositioning its forces for a renewed assault there.
Russia-Ukraine Conflict: Key Issues to Know
The Yukon premier, Sandy Silver, mentioned that whereas there was not a right away menace to Canada’s North, the panorama’s bodily modifications, given the political shifts and the melting of polar ice on account of local weather change, bore renewed focus from the federal authorities.
Canadians “are so used to looking at a North American-specific image of the globe,” Mr. Silver informed me, including that within the Arctic area, folks don’t try this. “Our maps have a middle piece of the North Pole, and round that you’ve got eight nations which are all looking at receding glacial development.”
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For this week’s Saturday Profile, I spent a while with Hazel McCallion, the previous mayor of Mississauga, Canada’s seventh-largest metropolis. Ms. McCallion celebrated her 101 birthday in February.
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Alex Ovechkin, one in all Russia’s most well-known athletes, is thought to be a detailed buddy and supporter of his nation’s president, Vladimir V. Putin. Mr. Ovechkin’s hockey crew, the Washington Capitals, confronted off this week in opposition to the Oilers in Edmonton, Alberta, a metropolis that’s house to 160,000 folks of Ukrainian descent.
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A poutine store proprietor in central Quebec, who can also be a veteran of the struggle in Afghanistan, modified the identify of his enterprise due to the similarity of the French pronunciation of “poutine” to that of Putin.
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Ontario’s chief medical officer of well being introduced that the province would finish most indoor masks necessities later this month.
Vjosa Isai is a Canada information assistant at The New York Instances. Observe her on Twitter at @lavjosa.
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World
Los Angeles wildfire economic loss estimates top $50 billion
US private forecaster AccuWeather said on Wednesday that estimated damage and economic loss from the California wildfire, already one of the worst in history, is over $50 billion at a preliminary level.
Raging wildfires in Los Angeles killed at least two people, destroyed hundreds of buildings and stretched firefighting resources and water supplies since they began on Tuesday, with fierce winds hindering firefighting operations and fueling the fires.
AccuWeather, which estimates the loss between $52 billion and $57 billion, added that if the fire spread to densely populated neighborhoods the current estimates for loss would have to be revised upward.
“Should a large number of additional structures be burned in the coming days, it may become the worst wildfire in modern California history based on the number of structures burned and economic loss,” AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jonathan Porter said.
World
23-year-old hiker found after surviving for 2 weeks in Australian mountain range
A 23-year-old medical student who was missing in a remote Australian mountain range for two weeks has been located.
Hadi Nazari from Melbourne went missing on Dec. 26, 2024, when he separated from two hiking companions to take photos in the Kosciuszko National Park in the Snowy Mountains in New South Wales state, the Associated Press reports.
He survived on two muesli bars, foraged berries and creek water, police said on Wednesday.
His rescue came after he approached a group of hikers on Wednesday afternoon, telling them he was lost and thirsty, Police Inspector Josh Broadfoot said.
UTAH BROTHERS SURVIVE AVALANCHE AFTER ONE PULLS OTHER OUT OF SNOW BURIAL
“This is the fourteenth day we’ve been looking for him and for him to come out and be in such good spirits and in such great condition, it’s incredible,” Broadfoot said, according to Reuters, adding that Nazari was in “really good spirits.”
The hiker had traveled more than six miles across steep and densely wooded terrain from where he was last seen. More than 300 people had searched for him in the national park that is home to the 7,310-foot Mount Kosciuszko.
2 DEAD AFTER SEARCH FOR SASQUATCH IN WASHINGTON NATIONAL FOREST
Nazari was reunited with his two hiking friends on Wednesday before he was flown to a hospital for a medical assessment, Broadfoot said. Video showed them in a deep embrace prior to his departure.
Weather conditions are mild during the current Southern Hemisphere summer.
Searchers had been optimistic that Nazari would be found alive. He was an experienced hiker equipped with a tent. Searchers had found his campfire, camera and hiking poles in recent days, suggesting that he was continuing to walk.
Ambulance Insp. Adam Mower said Nazari only needed treatment for dehydration.
“He’s in remarkable condition for a person who’s been missing for so long,” Mower said.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
World
Three Gaza hospitals face imminent closure as latest Israeli raids kill 50
The United Nations warns that a lack of fuel supply in Gaza threatens to shut down more medical facilities across the besieged territory, putting the lives of patients and newborns at “grave risk”.
The UN’s condemnation of the “deliberate and systematic” attacks on Gaza hospitals came as relentless Israeli strikes killed more than 50 more Palestinians in the last 24 hours.
Gaza health officials on Thursday said Al-Aqsa, Nasser and the European hospitals are at risk of imminent closure, after repeated Israeli bombardment and blockade of supplies, as they face the same fate as Kamal Adwan, Indonesian and Al-Awda hospitals.
Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud, reporting from Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir el-Balah, said the facility was now “overstretched” given an influx of more injured civilians, many of them women and children, who had now faced a genocide for 15 months.
“Doctors are reporting about the acute shortage of basic supplies, including surgical tools, antibiotics and painkillers,” he said.
Dr Bushra Othman, general surgeon and a volunteer at the hospital, said the situation is being assessed every 24 hours, as officials attempt to replenish supplies.
“At any time during the day, power and electricity will cut out, and certain areas should be protected such as the operating theatres, the intensive care unit, including the neonatal unit,” she told Al Jazeera.
At Nasser Hospital, Doctors Without Borders warned that the lives of 15 newborns in incubators were at risk due to a shortage of fuel for generators that provide electricity to the facility.
“Without fuel, these newborns are at risk of losing their lives,” said Pascale Coissard, MSF’s emergency coordinator.
Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum, also reporting from Deir el-Balah, said the atmosphere in the Palestinian territory “is quite charged with tension and fear”.
“What we have seen over the past 24 hours has been very bloody. The death toll from the past day has really been staggering,” he said.
On Thursday, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) renewed its call for a ceasefire. “More humanitarian aid must come into Gaza and a ceasefire is more critical than ever,” the group wrote on X.
Despite the UN’s appeal, Israel continued its bombardment across the Gaza Strip.
Medical sources told Al Jazeera Arabic at least six Palestinians were killed in attacks at dawn in central and southern Gaza, while at least eight others were killed in Jabalia in northern Gaza.
Wafa news agency reported that four Palestinians, including three children, were killed at Nuseirat refugee camp while several others remained missing under the rubble.
Wafa said Israeli strikes killed at least 51 civilians and injured 78 others in the past 24 hours.
Since October 7, 2023, Israel has killed 46,006 Palestinians and wounded at least 109,378 others, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health.
Meanwhile, Pope Francis on Thursday stepped up his criticisms of Israel’s military campaign as “very serious and shameful”.
In his yearly address to diplomats delivered on his behalf by an aide on Thursday, the pope appeared to reference deaths caused by the cold weather in Gaza, where there is almost no electricity.
“We cannot accept that children are freezing to death because hospitals have been destroyed or a country’s energy network has been hit,” the text of his address said.
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