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‘Demoralising and scary’: UK women react to US abortion decision

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‘Demoralising and scary’: UK women react to US abortion decision

From Olivia Rodrigo to Lily Allen, Kendrick Lamar to Billie Eilish, musicians and artists at Glastonbury, devastated and livid, condemned the US Supreme Court docket’s controversial reversal of Roe v Wade – a 1973 courtroom case that granted US girls a constitutional proper to abortion.

Whereas abortion is authorized within the UK, some girls at the moment are involved concerning the potential influence of the US resolution on abortion rights in Europe.

“Time will inform,” says artist and historical past scholar Elise Batchelor, 19, raised in Brussels and London, overwhelmed by latest occasions as she tries to navigate her subsequent steps as a college scholar in Cambridge.

The emotional blow, although, has been clear. “It is demoralising and scary for the ladies in my life and me,” Batchelor provides.

She says that the US Supreme Court docket’s resolution is about controlling girls by their reproductive rights and refusing them the correct to bodily autonomy.

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“It’s a highly effective and painful instance of the deep-rooted patriarchal society within the US,” Batchelor stated.

Within the UK, American anti-abortion teams are influencing protests and harassing girls outdoors abortion clinics. They’re utilizing the overturning of the case to construct help, specialists and pro-choice advocates say.

Stella Creasy, Labour MP for Walthamstow in East London, wrote in British Vogue in June that UK parliamentarians celebrating the reversal of Roe v Wade have made it clear that additional makes an attempt to suppress entry to abortion, will come.

On the finish of final month, 61 Conservative MPs voted towards extending abortion entry in Northern Eire, together with Jacob Rees-Mogg and a number of other different ministers.

“It’s a reminder of the patriarchal society that exists right here within the UK and in Europe and the way that straight impacts me and my friends,” Batchelor stated.

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Assault on rights

“They’re already attempting to assault our rights within the UK,” warns Kerry Abel, Chair of the UK’s pro-choice marketing campaign Abortion Rights.

“We all know that the anti-abortion activists have a worldwide community and are emboldened once they get a win, particularly the entire rollback of abortion rights that the overruling of Roe v Wade represents,” Abel stated.

Dr Ann Olivarius, a feminist and British American Senior Accomplice at McAllister Olivarius, stated the US Supreme Court docket’s resolution was foreseeable.

“For 50 years the intense proper have stated that is what they will do and now they’ve finished it.”

When Hillary Clinton warned a couple of risk to abortion rights earlier than Donald Trump was elected, she was ridiculed, humiliated and degraded. Former US President Barack Obama was so assured there could be no risk to the rights, so he did nothing, similar to Biden, Olivarius stated.

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So there ought to be no shock right here, stated Olivarius, including, “Within the UK, I hear folks say it might by no means occur over right here similar to we stated within the US.”

In most circumstances, the 1967 Abortion Act made being pregnant terminations authorized in Nice Britain for as much as 24 weeks. Nonetheless, it didn’t lengthen to Northern Eire.

Abortion remains to be criminalised within the UK

The issue with abortion within the UK and the hazard is that it isn’t laborious to come back by. However girls don’t have any proper to make knowledgeable choices about their replica, Olivarius stated.

Ideally, Abel believes abortion ought to be a human proper. As an alternative, it nonetheless sits within the legal code in Victorian-dated laws from 1861.

Whereas the Abortion Act of 1967 was designed to guard girls’s well being, it didn’t decriminalise abortion in England and Wales. It merely stated medical practitioners wouldn’t be responsible of a criminal offense in the event that they carried out the abortion in response to sure standards, Olivarius stated.

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To have an abortion in England, Wales and Scotland, two docs should agree that being pregnant poses a grave harm to the mom’s bodily and psychological well being, she added.

Solely Northern Eire has decriminalised abortion since October 2019 however it’s only permitted within the first 12 weeks of being pregnant.

The European Union’s parliament overwhelmingly known as for safeguards to be enshrined within the EU’s basic rights constitution following the US resolution.

In a 324-155 vote with 38 abstentions, European Parliament lawmakers adopted a decision that crystallised the anger seen in most of the EU’s 27 member nations because the US Supreme Court docket handed down its ruling on June 24.

“It teaches us a lesson: Girls’s and women’ human rights can by no means be taken as a right, and we should all the time struggle to defend them,” Swedish politician Helene Fritzon, vp of the parliamentary alliance of Socialists and Democrats, stated.

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Abortion shouldn’t be a lady’s problem, it’s everybody’s problem

Abel stated that working-class girls are disproportionately affected. She is urging employers to step up and scale back the stigma and permit girls and pregnant folks time to make their appointments, with out shedding their shift funds or having to e-book extra childcare.

“There may be nonetheless a postcode lottery and girls are nonetheless travelling for remedy or dealing with harassment outdoors clinics and that is unacceptable,” Abel says.

The profiles of girls who’ve abortions on this nation, Olivarius emphasises are married girls, girls in long-term relations who have already got a toddler. They decide with their associate concerning the lack of sources and that’s 61 per cent of the inhabitants.

A survey carried out by the charity Pregnant Then Screwed on 1,630 girls up to now 5 years discovered that 60.5 per cent stated that the childcare prices within the UK influenced their resolution to terminate a being pregnant.

Creasy, who has been vocal about abortion rights within the UK for years, and was focused by an anti-abortion group, stated on Twitter she is going to desk an modification to the British Invoice of Rights to ensure girls’s proper to an abortion.

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Olivarius wish to see the abortion act upgraded to Abortion Act 2023 the place girls can stroll right into a surgical procedure and get an abortion with out having to show a psychological well being problem, rape, sexual assault and so on.

“It’s not only a girls’s problem, it truly is everybody’s problem,” she added.

She is looking for extra girls to talk up, develop into actively engaged in debates and protests on abortion rights and publicise their constructive tales on abortion.

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Fight for control of Yemen's banks between rebels, government threatens to further wreck economy

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Fight for control of Yemen's banks between rebels, government threatens to further wreck economy

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Yemen’s Houthi rebels and its internationally recognized government are locked in a fight for control of the country’s banks that experts warn is threatening to further wreck an economy already crippled by nearly a decade of war.

The rivalry over the banks is throwing Yemen’s financial system into deeper turmoil. Already, the Houthis who control the north and center of the country and the government running the south use different currency notes with different exchange rates. They also run rival central banks.

The escalating money divide is eroding the value of Yemen’s currency, the riyal, which had driven up prices for clothing and meat before the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha started on Sunday.

For weeks, Yemenis in Houthi-controlled areas have been unable to pull their money out of bank savings accounts, reportedly because the Houthi-run central bank, based in the capital, Sanaa, has stopped providing liquidity to commercial and government banks. Protests have broken out in front of some banks, dispersed by security forces.

Yemen has been torn by civil war ever since the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels took over Sanaa and much of Yemen’s north and center in 2015. The Saudi-backed internationally recognized government and its nominal ally the Southern Transitional Council, a group supported by the United Arab Emirates, govern the south and much of the east, centered in the southern port city of Aden.

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Yemen was already the Arab world’s poorest country before the war began. Punitive actions by each side against the other’s banks over the past week now threaten to undermine merchants’ ability to import food and basic commodities and to disrupt the transfer of remittances from Yemenis abroad, on which many families depend, said Edem Wosornu, director of operations and advocacy for the U.N. humanitarian coordination office known as OCHA.

“All these factors will likely deepen poverty, worsen food insecurity and malnutrition, and increase reliance on humanitarian assistance,” she told a U.N. Security Council briefing on Thursday. The dispute could escalate to the point that banks in Houthi-run areas are barred completely from international financial transactions, which she said would have “catastrophic ramifications.”

The internationally recognized government moved the central bank to Aden in 2016, and since then began issuing new banknotes to replace worn-out riyals. Houthi authorities, which set up their own central bank in Sanaa, banned the use of the new money in areas under their control.

In March, the Houthi-controlled central bank announced it was rolling out its own new 100-riyal coins. The international community and Yemen’s recognized government denounced the move, saying the Houthis were trying to set up their own financial system and warning it will deepen Yemen’s economic divide.

Adding to the confusion, the bills have different exchange rates — riyals issued in Sanaa go for about 530 to the dollar, while those from Aden are around 1,800 to the dollar.

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In response, the Aden-based central bank gave banks 60 days to relocate their headquarters to the southern city and stop operating under Houthi policies, or else risk facing sanctions related to money laundering and anti-terrorism laws.

The central bank was “forced to make these decisions, especially after the Houthi group issued their own currency and took unilateral steps towards complete independence from the internationally recognized Central Bank in Aden,” said Mustafa Nasr, an economic expert and head of the Studies and Economic Media Center SEMC.

No banks met the deadline — either because they needed more time or because they feared Houthi sanctions if they moved, Nasr said.

When the deadline ran out last week, the central bank in Aden banned dealing with six banks headquartered in Sanaa, meaning currency exchange offices, money transfer agencies and banks in the south could no longer work with them.

In retaliation, the Houthi-run central bank in Sanaa banned all dealings with 13 banks headquartered in Aden. That means people in Houthi-controlled areas can’t deposit or withdraw funds through those banks or receive wire transfers made through them.

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Even as the fight for control is going on, both sides are facing a cash crunch. The Houthi government has few sources of foreign currency and its new coins aren’t recognized outside its territory.

In January, the United States designated the Houthis as a global terror group in response to the rebels’ attacks on shipping in the Red Sea and Arabian Sea. The Houthis say the attacks are in retaliation for the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. Because of the U.S. decision, banks around the world might be concerned and reluctant to continue any financial dealings with banks that have headquarters under Houthi control, said Youssef Saeed, a University of Aden economic professor.

The economy in Aden isn’t significantly better. The government’s revenues have been hit hard ever since Houthi attacks on oil ports in late 2022 forced a halt in oil exports, the main earner of foreign currency.

Since March, depositors in Houthi-run areas have been unable to pull money out of their accounts. The central bank in Sanaa hasn’t announced any formal restrictions, but several economists told The Associated Press that it has informally stopped releasing funds that individual banks have put in its coffers — in part because of a lack of liquidity.

At one bank that saw protests by depositors last month, the International Bank of Yemen, a note hung in the lobby said, “In coordination with the Central Bank, withdrawals from old accounts have been suspended until further notice.”

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Um Ahmed, a 65-year-old woman who was among those protesting outside the bank, said that she was trying to withdraw money to help her son buy a motor scooter for work, but the bank refused.

“I served this country as a teacher for 35 years and saved every penny and deposited my money at the bank, but they took it all,” she said. “This money belongs to my husband and me and our children.”

___

Fatma Khaled reported from Cairo.

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At 28, Jordan Bardella shakes up French politics: 'People across France have woken up'

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At 28, Jordan Bardella shakes up French politics: 'People across France have woken up'

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FRANCE — Jordan Bardella is shaking things up in French politics. He’s young. He’s handsome like a male fashion model, and since 2022, he’s been president of the National Rally, the new name for the National Front party founded in 1972 by controversial far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen. The party has moved on from its far-right roots, becoming more of a populist party under Le Pen’s daughter, Marine. 

“Jordan Bardella, the right-wing 28-year-old without a college degree, could be the French prime minister in a few weeks,” says Thomas Corbett-Dillon, a former adviser to former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and adviser to other European politicians. “This is great news for the French people that have suffered relentless attacks on their culture by left-wing Macron and the millions of migrants he imported.”

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Bardella was born into a family of Italian immigrants and excelled in school before attending the country’s top university, the Sorbonne. However, he dropped out before earning a degree to pursue a career in politics. His parents divorced at an early age, and he was largely brought up by his mother in a working-class neighborhood in the Paris suburbs.

EUROPEAN VOTERS REJECT SOCIALISM, FAR-LEFT POLICIES IN EU PARLIAMENT ELECTIONS: ‘POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE’

Rassemblement National President and electoral list leader Jordan Bardella poses for a selfie with supporters during a campaign rally for the upcoming European elections in Montbeliard, eastern France, March 22, 2024.  (Patrick Hertzog/AFP via Getty Images)

The reason Bardella has a chance at being the next French prime minister is due to the country’s electorate swing to the populist right in the European Union elections at the beginning of the month. France led the way with the National Rally snagging 31.5% of the votes, making it the most popular French political block in the election.

That led President Emmanuel Macron to call a snap parliamentary election for the end of the month.

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“[Macron] called an urgent election to try and surprise the National Rally party before they were ready,” Corbett-Dillon says. “The people across France have woken up and are sick of the left-wing policies.”

Still, there are other changes that might seem to make Bardella and National Rally more popular to the French. Specifically, Bardella and Marine Le Pen, daughter of Jean-Marie, have a different way of doing things compared to Marine’s father, says French-born Veronique de Rugy, a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University in Virginia. 

Jordan Bardella poster

Women pose in front of a poster of the head of the Rassemblement National far-right party, Jordan Bardella, during the launching event of the movement “Les Jeunes avec Bardella” (Youth with Bardella) in Paris, Jan. 27, 2024. (Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images)

“Jean-Marie’s demeanor was not fitting in with the French elite,” de Rugy says. “When I see Marine and Jordan, they fit very well.” 

In addition, neither Bardella nor Madame Le Pen push antisemitic rhetoric as did Mr. Le Pen. 

“They are not Jean-Marie,” de Rugy says. She also notes the usual “far right” description of the National Rally isn’t quite accurate. Yes, the party does have an anti-immigrant and protectionist stance on imported goods, which are both far right, she says. But on domestic issues, the party is quite different. 

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“These guys are more inclined to big government programs,” she says. Such things include the hefty cost of state-funded pensions and other social safety nets.

GERMANY’S CONSERVATIVES FINISH FIRST IN EU ELECTION, AS FAR-RIGHT MOMENTUM SENDS FRANCE’S LEADER SCRAMBLING

Another thing drawing voters to the National Rally is the high unemployment of young people between 15 and 24. Recent data shows that the so-called youth unemployment rate was running at 17.8%, according to data from April. That’s up from 16.8% at the beginning of last year. 

That high youth unemployment rate may be due to a lack of education or skills, says Ivo Pezzuto, a Paris-based professor of global economics and competitiveness at the ISM Business School. 

“There are a lot of jobs but only for the people with the new skills,” Pezzuto says. “Those most likely to get jobs would include people with digital know-how.”

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Marine Le Pen

Marine Le Pen, center, and deputies, including Sebastien Chenu to her left and Jordan Bardella, president of the National Rally, to her right, participate in a march against antisemitism from the Esplanade des Invalides to the Senate Nov. 12, 2023, in Paris. (Antoine Gyori/Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

However, Bardella and the National Rally face some huge challenges. First, winning a majority in the French parliament isn’t the most likely outcome, says Mujtaba Rahman, Eurasia Group’s managing director for EuropeInstead, he says the likelihood of a victory is “non-negligible” with a 30% chance of the National Rally winning a majority of the parliamentary seats.

If Bardella beats the odds and gets a parliamentary majority, it still won’t be easy to pursue new policy programs, Rahman says. Part of that block will likely be President Macron, who some say leans a tad to the left. That means there will likely be a clash of policy goals between the president and the prime minister.

“Never have we had a co-habitation of such big ideological differences,” Rahman says.

There’s also the potential for problems with government spending. Notably, as a European Union member, France is obliged to stick to limits on how much of a fiscal deficit it runs as a percentage of GDP. The issue that Rahman sees popping up is Macron trying to constrain spending by Bardella. 

“It’s not clear [Macron would] be able to do that,” Rahman says. “I think there would be a period of experimentation and uncertainty resulting in the constitution being tested.” 

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The result could put France’s finances in the spotlight, and that may already be beginning.

Jordan Bardella campaigning

National Rally lead candidate Jordan Bardella delivers a speech at the party election night headquarters June 9, 2024, in Paris. (AP Photo/Lewis Joly)

Investors have shown their concerns over the past few days since Macron called the snap vote. The Paris CAC index (roughly the French equivalent of the Dow Jones index) had subsequently dropped 4% last week. And its finances are stretched. The country had a debt of 111% of its GDP at the end of last year. 

And the same year, its deficit rose to 5.5% of GDP. The EU requires member states to run deficits no higher than 3%. 

“The new government will have a severe fiscal constraint,” says Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at currency specialist Bannockburn Global Forex. In other words, whoever gets a majority in the French parliament, there won’t be much wiggle room. 

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Chandler also sees an increased risk of France leaving the EU. 

“It’s a tail risk, but the tail has gotten a bit bigger,” he said.

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Swiss summit demands 'territorial integrity' of Ukraine

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Swiss summit demands 'territorial integrity' of Ukraine

In joint communique 80 countries at the summit agree that the ‘territorial integrity’ of Ukraine must be the basis of any peace agreement.

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Eighty countries jointly called on Sunday for the “territorial integrity” of Ukraine to be the basis for any peace agreement to end Russia’s war, though some key developing nations did not join in.

The joint communique capped a two-day conference at the Burgenstock resort in Switzerland marked by the absence of Russia, which was not invited, but that many attendees hoped could join in on a roadmap to peace.

About 100 delegations, mostly Western countries but also some key developing nations, were on hand for the conference — and experts were on watch to see how and if at all they might line up behind the outcome document.

Participants India, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were among those that did not sign onto the final document, which focused on issues of nuclear safety, food security and the exchange of prisoners.

The final document said the U.N. Charter and “respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty” can and will serve as a basis for achieving a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine.”

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Analysts say the two-day conference will likely have little concrete impact toward ending the war because the country leading and continuing it, Russia, was not invited — for now. Its key ally, China, which did not attend, and Brazil, which was on hand at the meeting as an observer, have jointly sought to plot alternative routes toward peace.

The meeting also endeavoured to return a spotlight to the war at a time when conflict in Gaza, national elections and other concerns have seized global attention.

The three themes of nuclear safety, food security and prisoner exchanges featured in the final statement. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said they amounted to “minimum conditions” for negotiations with Russia, alluding to how many other areas of disagreement between Kyiv and Moscow will be harder to overcome.

Qatar’s prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, noted a day earlier how his rich Gulf country hosted talks with both Ukrainian and Russian delegations on the reunification of Ukrainian children with their families that has so far resulted in 34 children being reunited.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, speaking to reporters at the resort on Saturday, said it’s “going to take work” and countries stepping up to build on efforts by nations like Qatar.

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“It’s going to take a spotlight from the international community, not just from only voices from the United States or Europe, but from unusual voices as well to say what Russia has done here is more than reprehensible and must be reversed,” he said.

The Ukrainian government believes that 19,546 children have been deported or forcibly displaced, and Russian Children’s Rights Commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova has previously confirmed that at least 2,000 were taken from Ukrainian orphanages.

Montenegro Prime Minister Milojko Spajic told the gathering Sunday: “As a father of three, I’m deeply concerned by thousands of Ukrainian kids forcibly transferred to Russia or Russia-occupied territories of Ukraine.”

“We all at this table need to do more so that children of Ukraine are back in Ukraine,” he added.

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