World
EU strikes clean energy deals to counter China global investment plan
The EU has announced a raft of new investment agreements as part of a two-day forum on Global Gateway, the bloc’s infrastructure partnership plan to rival China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
The new EU initiatives include agreements on critical raw materials with the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia and on green hydrogen with Namibia, as well as cooperation on clean energy with Bangladesh and Vietnam.
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen hosted over 40 leaders and ministers of EU partner countries in Brussels on Wednesday for the first in the two days of the summit, where she pitched the EU as a “better choice” for financing and building clean infrastructure.
“Global Gateway is about giving countries a choice, and a better choice,” von der Leyen said, adding that investment options often come at a “high price” for the environment, workers’ rights and sovereignty.
“No country should be faced with a situation in which the only option to finance its essential infrastructure is to sell its future,” she added.
Global Gateway earmarks up to €300 billion to support projects spanning critical raw minerals, green energy and transport corridors, in a bid to boost the EU’s trade and investments across the globe.
The bloc aims to offer an alternative to Beijing’s global ‘Belt and Road’ investment programme, vowing to channel quality investments without undermining countries’ sovereignty.
Last week, Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and Taliban representatives to celebrate his Belt and Road Initiative, which at $1 trillion (€900 billion) triples the budget of the EU’s plan.
Critics say Beijing is pursuing a policy of ‘debt-trap diplomacy’, making developing countries shoulder unsustainable debt levels and increasing their strategic reliance on China. Eighteen of the EU’s member states are also part of China’s initiative.
EU ministers absent
Countries including Armenia, Namibia, Mauritania and Senegal were represented in the Global Gateway forum by heads of state, while Albania, Bangladesh, Egypt, Georgia and Morocco were among the countries represented by their prime ministers.
But EU countries failed to match in diplomatic weight, with Germany sending its climate secretary and France its development secretary.
Tunisia was among the North African countries not represented in the forum, following a spat over a cooperation agreement that has seen Tunisia wire back €60 million in EU funds and prohibit the entry of EU officials into its territory.
In response to Tunisia’s no-show, a European Commission spokesperson said on Wednesday that “with Tunisia, in any case, we continue working under the MoU”, referring to the memorandum of understanding signed in July.
The Commission was also grilled on Wednesday on the inclusion of Energias de Portugal (EDP), a 20% Chinese-state owned energy company, on Global Gateway’s business advisory group. The EU executive is pursuing a plan to ‘de-risk’ its supply chains and investments to reduce strategic dependencies on China.
“There is no criteria preventing a company in which a minority stake may be owned by a non-European country from actually joining the business advisory group”, a spokesperson said.
The business advisory group includes 60 companies tasked with guiding the Commission on its strategic investments.
The Commission also rebuffed on Wednesday the notion that the plan was a response to China’s Belt and Road initiative.
“Global Gateway is the EU’s offer to develop intelligent, useful infrastructure and make other investments in our partner countries. That doesn’t mean that it’s directed against anybody else,” a spokesperson on behalf of the European Commission said.
While Global Gateway has been hailed as an ambitious plan to step up the EU’s global investments in clean technologies, a study on the programme presented this week before the European Parliament criticised the plan for lacking a “clear idea of how the GG functions and how they can participate in it.”
World
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World
Man in India regains consciousness before his cremation on funeral pyre: reports
A 25-year-old man who was declared dead and about to be cremated in India this week was found to be still alive by witnesses, according to reports.
Rohitash Kumar, 25, who was deaf and mute, was declared dead at a hospital in the state of Rajasthan in the northwestern part of India without a post-mortem examination, according to The Times of India.
Once it was clear Kumar was alive at his cremation on Thursday afternoon, his family reportedly took him back to a hospital where he died early Friday morning.
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Three doctors involved in declaring Kumar dead at the Bhagwan Das Khetan district hospital have since been suspended, the newspaper reported.
Kumar had suffered an epileptic seizure and was declared dead after he flatlined while doctors were performing CPR on him, the Daily Mail reported, citing the AFP news service.
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“The situation was nothing short of a miracle,” a witness at the funeral pyre told local news outlet ETV Bharat. “We all were in shock. He was declared dead, but there he was, breathing and alive.”
Ramavtar Meena, a government official in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu district, called the incident “serious negligence.”
“Action will be taken against those responsible. The working style of the doctors will also be thoroughly investigated,” he said.
Meena added that a committee had been formed to investigate the incident.
World
Thousands march across Europe protesting violence against women
Violence against women and girls remains largely unreported due to the impunity, silence, stigma and shame surrounding it.
Thousands marched across France and Italy protesting violence against women on Saturday – two days before the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
Those demonstrating protested all forms of violence against women – whether it be sexual, physical, psychological and economic.
The United Nations designated 25 November as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The goal is to raise awareness of the violence women are subjected to and the reality that the scale and nature of the issue is often hidden.
Activists demonstrated partially naked in Rome, hooded in balaclavas to replicate the gesture of Iranian student Ahoo Daryaei, who stripped in front of a university in Tehran to protest the country’s regime.
In France, demonstrations were planned in dozens of cities like Paris, Marseille and Lille.
More than 400 organisations reportedly called for demonstrations across the country amidst widespread shock caused by the Pelicot mass rape trial.
Violence against women and girls remains one of the most prevalent and pervasive human rights violations in the world, according to the United Nations. Globally, almost one in three women have been subjected to physical and/or sexual violence at least once in their life.
For at least 51,100 women in 2023, the cycle of gender-based violence ended with their murder by partners or family members. That means a woman was killed every ten minutes.
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