World
Record high food prices to rise further as Ukraine war weighs in

When the Russian military launched its assault in opposition to Ukraine on 24 February, meals costs worldwide have been already at document highs. The conflict is more likely to push them even increased.
World meals costs hit a document excessive in February, climbing 24% increased than the place they have been on the similar interval a 12 months earlier, following a 4% month-on-month rise.
The euro space has not been spared with costs for meals, alcohol and tobacco rising by 4.1% month on month in February, following a 3.5% enhance in January.
These sharp rises have been attributed to a wide range of elements, primarily vitality and transport. The associated fee for each of those has shot up over the previous 12 months with demand for pure gasoline and transport far outstripping provide as economies world wide shook off their COVID-19-induced stupor.
Then Russia invaded its neighbour — falsely claiming the assault was vital to forestall genocide by Ukrainian authorities within the east of the nation — and the response on the markets was speedy.
Wheat costs jumped 50%.
Ukraine and Russia are collectively generally known as the breadbasket of the world, producing about 30% of meals commodities similar to wheat and maize. Ukraine alone — the nation is 28 occasions smaller than Russia — gives 16% and 12% of the world’s wheat and maize respectively.
Two weeks into the battle, Kyiv took the choice to ban exports of meals staples, prioritising feeding its inhabitants as a humanitarian disaster — exacerbated by repeated ceasefire violations making it unattainable for help convoys to succeed in key cities — set in.
Russia has since adopted swimsuit, banning exports of wheat to some neighbouring counties till the top of June.
No empty cabinets in Europe
“I do not assume we’ll see empty cabinets for any meals merchandise in Europe, and the reason being, initially, we’re not importing wheat from Ukraine or Russia, or at the least not in massive portions,” Dr. Matin Qaim, Professor of Worldwide Meals Economics and Rural Growth on the College of Bonn, informed Euronews.
“We’re importing maize from Ukraine and it’s primarily used as animal feed so that’s one thing we could also be feeling,” he added.
Moreover, our meals manufacturing is closely mechanised, so the value of commodities play a smaller position within the value of the completed product.
“An industrially-baked loaf of bread that you could be purchase at a grocery store, the share of the wheat within the value of the ultimate loaf of bread could also be lower than 10%,” Dr Qaim defined.
“So which means if the wheat value will increase, you will note the loaf of bread changing into a number of cents costlier,” he added.
However that will not defend Europeans from increased meals costs.
“Clearly, there are numerous different parts, similar to vitality, and labour prices, the price for the equipment, the price for the transport, the price for the branding, the packaging of the merchandise — all of that is flowing into it. And which means when the wheat value doubles — and it’s now double on the degree it was once two years in the past — that does not imply the bread value will double in our context,” he pressured.
However ‘very excessive meals costs’ coming
Moreover, meals costs are set internationally and with Ukraine and Russia each pulling their exports for now it will proceed to have an effect. How lengthy the impression will probably be will depend upon the size of the conflict and the state of the infrastructure as soon as the mud settles.
Ukrainian authorities have accused Russia of deliberately targeting agricultural equipment and Black Sea ports — a key commerce hub for wheat — have already been badly broken.
There may be additionally uncertainty over what Russia will export. Will commerce sanctions imposed by Western international locations stop main exports? And can Russia’s management even permit the exports to undergo somewhat than prolong its ban to extra international locations and thru the 12 months?
“Meals costs are so excessive and wheat and wheat bread are the principle staple meals for the Russian inhabitants. Individuals in Russia are fairly poor and if the bread costs actually go up, then there could also be unrest. And that is one thing that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin actually tries to keep away from,” Qaim highlighted.
Additional uncertainty over what different international locations will do to both defend their very own inhabitants from rising costs or to learn from their spike is more likely to compound the difficulty. As an illustration, Argentina, one of many world’s largest exporters of soybean merchandise, has already introduced it’s halting exports.
All of that “means on this 12 months 2022, we’re probably going to reside with excessive and really excessive meals costs,” Qaim pressured.
EU ‘should construct meals methods resilience’
The European Central Financial institution has already up to date its inflation forecast for the 12 months, now anticipating inflation for 2022 to succeed in 5.1%. It flagged that vitality costs are anticipated to stay excessive and that different commodities together with meals and metals “may additionally be severely affected by the battle given the position of Russia and Ukraine in international provides of those commodities.
It warned that meals inflation will “stay excessive all through 2022, owing to excessive commodity costs and extraordinary will increase in gasoline and electrical energy costs, which account for round 90% of the entire vitality prices of the processed meals business and are an vital issue for the manufacturing of fertilisers.”
Some European business gamers have already sounded the alarm, together with France’s Nationwide Affiliation of Meals Industries (ANIA) which demanded earlier this month that the federal government gives help to the sector to mitigate the impression the conflict has on costs and provides.
An EU spokesperson conceded to Euronews that “the approaching months are more likely to elevate challenges to our agri-food system.”
“At this stage, there is no such thing as a speedy risk to meals safety within the EU because the EU is an enormous producer and a web exporter of cereals. The speedy impression somewhat lies within the enhance of prices all through the meals provide chain, the disruption of commerce flows from and to Ukraine and Russia, in addition to to their impacts on international meals safety.
“Within the short-term, the problem comes from elevated enter costs similar to vitality, fertilizer and feed and the impression of accelerating meals costs on society. Within the medium-term, we’d like a sustainable, productive, and resilient agriculture – constructing on the Farm to Fork and Biodiversity methods,” they added.
The Fee is at the moment engaged on figuring out quick and longer-term measures it may implement to construct up the resilience of the bloc’s meals methods. A Communication to that impact is tentatively deliberate for 23 March.
‘Poorest folks will endure essentially the most’
However whereas the conflict will hit Europeans’ pursestrings, it’s more likely to have devastating penalties elsewhere.
“The scenario goes to look fairly completely different in poorer elements of the world,” Qaim underlined. “The poorest international locations and the poorest folks will probably be struggling essentially the most.”
Going again to the loaf of bread, in international locations the place “wage charges are low and there’s a lot of hand-making, not an excessive amount of equipment, the value of bread is way nearer correlated with the value of the particular grain,” he defined.
So a 50% rise within the value of wheat may result in a pointy enhance within the value of the ultimate product.
Their very own agriculture might be impacted in addition to Russia and Belarus collectively present 30% of the world’s exports of potassium fertilizers and Western sanctions on each international locations may additionally hit these exports.
“If these international locations can not use fertilizers both as a result of it is utterly missing or as a result of costs are too excessive that farmers can not afford them, then after all, that may result in decrease yields at a time after we would really want increased yields with the intention to make up for the lacking meals portions from Ukraine and Russia,” Qaim flagged.
The World Meals Programme (WFP) has already introduced that increased costs imply the UN organisation will probably be feeding fewer folks.
“Ukraine’s the breadbasket of the world and now we’re handing out bread inside Ukraine. I by no means thought that may occur. If this conflict rages on for an additional six months, this might be catastrophic all around the world with provide chain disruptions, elevated meals prices,” WFP chief David Beasley told the BBC earlier this week.
The shutdown of Ukrainian farming methods and provide chains coupled with hikes in vitality costs as a result of sanctions on Russia “will restrict entry to meals for a number of the most weak folks on the earth, a lot of whom are already dealing with super-high inflation,” he additionally mentioned.

World
Early human ancestors used their hands to both climb trees and make tools, new study shows
WASHINGTON (AP) — Our hands can reveal a lot about how a person has lived – and that’s true for early human ancestors, too.
Different activities such as climbing, grasping or hammering place stress on different parts of our fingers. In response to repeated stress, our bones tend to thicken in those areas.
To study how ancient humans used their hands, scientists used 3D scanning to measure and analyze the bone thickness of fingers.
They focused on the fossil hands of two early human ancestor species recovered from excavations in southern Africa, called Australopithecus sediba and Homo naledi. The individuals lived around 2 million years ago and around 300,000 years ago, respectively.
Both ancient human species showed signs of simultaneously using their hands to move around – such as by climbing trees – as well as to grasp and manipulate objects, a requirement to being able to make tools.
“They were likely walking on two feet and using their hands to manipulate objects or tools, but also spent time climbing and hanging,” perhaps on trees or cliffs, said study co-author and paleoanthropologist Samar Syeda of the American Museum of Natural History.
The research was published Wednesday in Science Advances.
The findings show there wasn’t a simple “evolution in hand function where you start off with more ‘ape-like’ and end up more ‘human-like,’” said Smithsonian paleoanthropologist Rick Potts, who was not involved in the study.
Complete fossil hands are relatively rare, but the specimens used in the study gave an opportunity to understand the relative forces on each finger, said Chatham University paleontologist Erin Marie Williams-Hatala, who was not involved in the study.
“Hands are one of the primary ways we engage with world around us,” she said.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
World
UN revisits 'killer robot' regulations as concerns about AI-controlled weapons grow

Several nations met at the United Nations (U.N.) on Monday to revisit a topic that the international body has been discussing for over a decade: the lack of regulations on lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS), often referred to as “killer robots.”
This latest round of talks comes as wars rage in Ukraine and Gaza.
While the meeting was held behind closed doors, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres released a statement doubling down on his 2026 deadline for a legally binding solution to threats posed by LAWS.
“Machines that have the power and discretion to take human lives without human control are politically unacceptable, morally repugnant and should be banned by international law,” Guterres said in a statement. “We cannot delegate life-or-death decisions to machines,” he later added.
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres speaks during a Security Council meeting during the 79th United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York City on Sept. 27, 2024. (Reuters/Eduardo Munoz)
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International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) President Mirjana Spoljaric delivered a statement to nations participating in Monday’s meeting. Spoljaric expressed the ICRC’s support for efforts to regulate LAWS but warned that technology is evolving faster than regulations, making threats posed by the systems “more worrying.”
“Machines with the power and discretion to take lives without human involvement threaten to transform warfare in ways with grave humanitarian consequences. They also raise fundamental ethical and human rights concerns. All humanity will be affected,” Spoljaric said.

The picture shows the unmanned aerial vehicle of China captured at the Zhuhai Air Show on Nov. 7, 2018. (Costfoto/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
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Artificial intelligence is not necessarily a prerequisite for something to be considered an autonomous weapon, according to the U.N., as not all autonomous systems fully rely on AI. Some can use pre-programmed functions for certain tasks. However, AI “could further enable” autonomous weapons systems, the U.N. said.
Vice President of the Conservative Partnership Institute Rachel Bovard, however, says that while regulation of autonomous weapons is necessary, the U.S. needs to be cautious when it comes to the development of international law.
“AI is the wild west and every country is trying to determine the rules of the road. Some regulation will be imperative to preserving our humanity. When it comes to international law, however, the U.S. should proceed with caution,” Bovard told Fox News Digital. “As we have learned with everything from trade to health, subjecting our national sovereignty to international dictates can have lasting unintended consequences. If existing international law is sufficient at the moment, that is what should govern.”

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024 at U.N. headquarters. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
Countries in the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons have been meeting since 2014 to discuss a possible full ban on LAWS that operate without human control and to regulate those with more human involvement, according to Reuters.
In 2023, more than 160 nations backed a U.N. resolution calling on countries across the globe to address the risks posed by LAWS. However, there is currently no international law specifically regulating LAWS.
World
Maldives parliament removes two Supreme Court judges

The Parliament of the Maldives has impeached two judges of the country’s Supreme Court, deepening a political crisis triggered by President Mohamed Muizzu’s push to amend the constitution and strip legislators of their seats if they switch political parties.
The Parliament, where the governing People’s National Congress holds a supermajority, voted on Wednesday to remove Justices Azmiralda Zahir and Mahaz Ali Zahir on allegations of abuse of power.
The vote, which passed 68 – 11, took place as dozens of opposition supporters rallied outside the Parliament House, calling for Muizzu’s resignation and an end to what they called the intimidation of judges.
The move comes more than two months after the judicial watchdog, dominated by Muizzu’s allies, suspended the two judges and their colleague, Justice Husnu al-Suood. At the time, the seven-member Supreme Court bench had been holding hearings into a petition challenging the anti-defection amendments.
Suood later resigned from the top court, accusing Muizzu and Attorney General Ahmed Usham of intimidating all the judges of the Supreme Court to secure a judgement in their favour.
The president and his lawyer deny the charges.
“I do not interfere with the judiciary,” Muizzu told reporters during a 14-hour news conference on May 3. “I have never done so. I do not control the [the judicial watchdog].”
The crisis has brought the Maldives’s Supreme Court to a near halt, pausing hearings in all ongoing cases, including on the constitutional amendments. It has also raised fears of renewed instability in the Indian Ocean honeymoon destination, which held its first multiparty elections in 2008, but has been roiled by political turmoil since, including a coup d’etat, disputed elections, and the killings and jailing of dissidents.
‘Attack on judiciary’
Azmiralda and Mahaz denounced their impeachment.
“This is an attack on the Maldivian judiciary. It is no ordinary matter to bring the Maldives Supreme Court to a halt,” Azmiralda said in a statement. “My hope is that one day, when the rule of law is established in this country … all of the various officials who took part in destroying the Supreme Court are held accountable.”
The case against the two judges stems from the arrest of Azmiralda’s husband, Ismail Latheef, during a police raid on a spa where he was receiving a massage in the Maldivian capital, Male, on December 4 of last year.
The incident happened two weeks after Muizzu ratified the anti-defection measures.
The controversial amendments stipulate that legislators elected on a political party ticket would lose their seat if they switch parties, or if they resign or are expelled from their party. The provisions effectively allow Muizzu to maintain his supermajority in Parliament, where his party controls 79 of the chamber’s 93 seats.
The president has argued they are necessary to “improve political stability”, but opponents say they would destroy the country’s system of checks and balances.
At the time of Latheef’s arrest, a former member of parliament had filed a petition at the Supreme Court challenging the legality of the amendments, but the bench had yet to decide to take up the case.
Latheef was held overnight for more than 12 hours, on charges of soliciting a prostitute, but was released by a judge at the Criminal Court. In the ruling, the judge noted that the masseuse treating Latheef was fully clothed at the time of the raid, and that the room they were in was unlocked.
The prosecutor’s office later shelved the case against Latheef, citing a lack of evidence.
But after the Supreme Court began reviewing the constitutional amendments in February, the watchdog Judicial Services Commission (JSC) took up a separate case against Azmiralda and Mahaz, claiming the two judges had unlawfully lobbied lower court judges to secure Latheef’s release.
The JSC recommended that the Parliament impeach them last month.
‘No ulterior motives’
The judges have denied the charges, with lawyers for Azmiralda saying that the case was “manufactured by top government officials to suspend” them “in order to influence the outcome of the constitutional case before the Supreme Court”.
Usham, the Attorney General, has told Al Jazeera that the government “categorically denies these allegations”.
“There is absolutely no truth to the claim that the executive branch had any hand in the JSC’s [the judicial watchdog’s] decision,” he wrote in an email. “The suspension was pursuant to law and… any suggestion of ulterior motives is firmly rejected by the Government.”
The case, however, has drawn criticism from the United Nations and rights groups.
Margaret Satterthwaite, the UN’s special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, expressed grave concern last month over the action against the three judges, saying they appear to be aimed at undermining the Supreme Court’s judicial review of the anti-defection measures.
“The disciplinary proceedings brought against three of the Supreme Court’s Justices appear to violate the principle that judges can only be dismissed on serious grounds of misconduct or incompetence and in accordance with fair procedures guaranteeing objectivity and impartiality as provided for by the Constitution or the law,” she wrote. “The pressure of suspensions, disciplinary proceedings and investigations may amount to an interference in the independence of this institution.”
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