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Zimbabwe moves 2,500 wild animals due to climate change

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Zimbabwe moves 2,500 wild animals due to climate change

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — A helicopter herds hundreds of impalas into an enclosure. A crane hoists sedated upside-down elephants into trailers. Hordes of rangers drive different animals into metallic cages and a convoy of vans begins a journey of about 700 kilometers (435 miles) to take the animals to their new house.

Zimbabwe has begun shifting greater than 2,500 wild animals from a southern reserve to 1 within the nation’s north to rescue them from drought, because the ravages of local weather change exchange poaching as the largest risk to wildlife.

About 400 elephants, 2,000 impalas, 70 giraffes, 50 buffaloes, 50 wildebeest, 50 zebras, 50 elands, 10 lions and a pack of 10 wild canine are among the many animals being moved from Zimbabwe’s Save Valley Conservancy to 3 conservancies within the north — Sapi, Matusadonha and Chizarira — in one in every of southern Africa’s greatest stay animal seize and translocation workouts.

“Challenge Rewild Zambezi,” because the operation known as, is shifting the animals to an space within the Zambezi River valley to rebuild the wildlife populations there.

It’s the primary time in 60 years that Zimbabwe has launched into such a mass inside motion of wildlife. Between 1958 and 1964, when the nation was white-minority-ruled Rhodesia, greater than 5,000 animals have been moved in what was known as “Operation Noah.” That operation rescued wildlife from the rising water attributable to the development of an enormous hydro-electric dam on the Zambezi River that created one of many world’s largest man-made lakes, Lake Kariba.

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This time it’s the shortage of water that has made it obligatory to maneuver wildlife as their habitat has develop into parched by extended drought, stated Tinashe Farawo, spokesman for the Zimbabwe Nationwide Parks and Wildlife Administration Authority.

The parks company issued permits to permit the animals to be moved to avert “a catastrophe from occurring,” stated Farawo.

“We’re doing this to alleviate strain. For years we now have fought poaching and simply as we’re profitable that struggle, local weather change has emerged as the largest risk to our wildlife,” Farawo instructed The Related Press.

“Lots of our parks have gotten overpopulated and there’s little water or meals. The animals find yourself destroying their very own habitat, they develop into a hazard unto themselves and so they encroach neighboring human settlements for meals leading to incessant battle,” he stated.

One possibility could be culling to scale back the numbers of wildlife, however conservation teams protest that such killings are merciless. Zimbabwe final did culling in 1987, stated Farawo.

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The results of local weather change on wildlife isn’t remoted to Zimbabwe. Throughout Africa, nationwide parks which are house to myriad wildlife species corresponding to lions, elephants and buffaloes are more and more threatened by below-average rainfall and new infrastructure initiatives. Authorities and specialists say drought has critically threatened species like rhinos, giraffes and antelope because it reduces the quantity of meals obtainable.

For instance, a current research carried out in South Africa’s Kruger Nationwide Park linked excessive climate occasions to the lack of crops and animals, unable to deal with the drastic situations and lack of water as a result of longer dry spells and warmer temperatures.

The mass motion is supported by the Nice Plains Basis, a non-profit group that works “to preserve and develop pure habitats in Africa via revolutionary conservation initiatives,” based on its web site. The group is working with the Zimbabwe Nationwide Parks and Wildlife Administration Authority, native specialists, the College of Washington-Seattle’s Middle for Environmental Forensic Science and Oxford College’s Division of Zoology, based on the web site.

One of many new houses for the animals moved in Zimbabwe is Sapi Reserve. the privately-run 280,000-acre personal concession is east of Mana Swimming pools Nationwide Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Web site identified for its splendid setting alongside the Zambezi River that varieties the border between Zimbabwe with Zambia.

Sapi “is the right answer for a lot of causes,” Nice Plains chief govt officer Dereck Joubert stated on the muse’s web site.

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“This reserve varieties the middle-Zambezi biosphere, totaling 1.6 million acres,” wrote Joubert. “From the Nineteen Fifties till we took it over in 2017, many years of looking had decimated wildlife populations in Sapi Reserve. We’re rewilding and restoring the wild again to what it as soon as was.”

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Ukraine's divisive mobilization law comes into force as a new Russian push strains front-line troops

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Ukraine's divisive mobilization law comes into force as a new Russian push strains front-line troops

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A divisive mobilization law in Ukraine came into force on Saturday, as Kyiv struggles to boost troop numbers after Russia launched a new offensive that some fear could close in on Ukraine’s second-largest city.

The legislation, which was watered down from its original draft, will make it easier to identify every conscript in the country. It also provides incentives to soldiers, such as cash bonuses or money toward buying a house or car, that some analysts say Ukraine cannot afford.

Lawmakers dragged their feet for months and only passed the law in mid-April, a week after Ukraine lowered the age for men who can be drafted from 27 to 25. The measures reflect the growing strain that more than two years of war with Russia has had on Ukraine’s forces, who are trying to hold the front lines in fighting that has sapped the country’s ranks and stores of weapons and ammunition.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also signed two other laws Friday, allowing prisoners to join the army and increasing fines for draft dodgers fivefold. Russia enlisted its prisoners early on in the war, and personnel shortages compelled Ukraine to adopt the new measures.

Russian troops, meanwhile, are pushing ahead with a ground offensive that opened a new front in northeastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv region and put further pressure on Kyiv’s overstretched military. After weeks of probing, Moscow launched the new push knowing that Ukraine suffered personnel shortages, and that its forces have been spread thin in the northeast.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday during a visit to China that the Russian push aims to create “a buffer zone” rather than capturing Kharkiv, the local capital and Ukraine’s second-largest city.

Still, Moscow’s forces have pummeled Kharkiv with strikes in recent weeks, hitting civilian and energy infrastructure and prompting angry accusations from Zelenskyy that the Russian leadership sought to reduce the city to rubble. On Friday, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said that Russian guided bombs killed at least three residents and injured 28 others that day.

Moscow denies deliberately targeting civilians, but thousands have died or suffered injuries in the more than 27 months of fighting.

The U.S. last week announced a new $400 million package of military aid for Ukraine, and President Joe Biden has promised that he would rush badly needed weaponry to the country to help it stave off Russian advances. Still, only small batches of U.S. military aid have started to trickle into the front line, according to Ukrainian military commanders, who said it will take at least two months before supplies meet Kyiv’s needs to hold the line.

Thousands of Ukrainians have fled the country to avoid the draft since Russia’s all-out invasion in February 2022, some risking their lives as they tried to swim across a river separating Ukraine from neighboring Romania and Hungary.

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Late on Friday, Ukraine’s border service said that at least 30 people have died trying to cross the Tisza River since the full scale-invasion.

Romanian border guards days earlier retrieved the near-naked, disfigured body of a man that appeared to have been floating in the Tisza for days, and is the 30th known casualty, the Ukrainian agency said in an online statement. It said the man has not yet been identified.

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Follow AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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An unusual autumn freeze grips parts of South America, giving Chile its coldest May in 74 years

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An unusual autumn freeze grips parts of South America, giving Chile its coldest May in 74 years

Chileans are bundling up for their coldest autumn in more than 70 years mere days after sunning in T-shirts — a dramatic change of wardrobe brought on this week by a sudden cold front gripping portions of South America unaccustomed to bitter wind chills this time of year.

CHILE SHUTS DOWN A POPULAR GLACIER, SPARKING DEBATE OVER CLIMATE CHANGE AND ADVENTURE SPORTS

Temperatures broke records along the coast of Chile and in Santiago, the capital, dipping near freezing and making this month the coldest May that the country has seen since 1950, the Chilean meteorological agency reported.

An unusual succession of polar air masses has moved over southern swaths of the continent, meteorological experts say, pushing the mercury below zero Celsius (32 Fahrenheit) in some places. It’s the latest example of extreme weather in the region — a heat wave now baking Mexico, for instance — which scientists link to climate change.

Footprints create the shape of a heart in a snow-covered rugby field in Santiago, Chile, Wednesday, May 8, 2024.  (AP Photo/Matias Basualdo)

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“The past few days have been one of the longest (cold fronts) ever recorded and one of the earliest ever recorded” before the onset of winter in the Southern Hemisphere, said Raul Cordero, a climatologist at Santiago University. “Typically the incursions of cold air from the Antarctic that drive temperatures below zero occur from June onwards, not so much in May.”

The cold front sweeping in from Antartica has collided with warm air pushing in from the northwestern Amazon, helping fuel heavy rainstorms battering Brazil, according to that country’s National Meteorological system.

Chile’s government issued frosty weather alerts for most of the country and ramped up assistance for homeless people struggling to endure the frigid temperatures on the streets. Snow cloaked the peaks of the Andes and fell in parts of Santiago, leading to power outages in many areas this week.

“Winter came early,” said Mercedes Aguayo, a street vendor hawking gloves and hats in Santiago.

She said she was glad for a boost in business after Chile’s record winter heat wave last year, which experts pinned on climate change as well as the cyclical El Niño weather pattern.

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“We had stored these goods (hats and gloves) for four years because winters were always more sporadic, one day hot, one day cold,” Aguayo said.

This week’s cold snap also took parts of Argentina and Paraguay by surprise.

Energy demand soared across many parts of Argentina. Distributors cut supplies to dozens of gas stations and industries in several provinces to avoid outages in households, , the country’s main hydrocarbon company, CECHA, said Thursday.

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Brussels, my love? Transparency over MEPs' side jobs

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Brussels, my love? Transparency over MEPs' side jobs

In this edition, we look at what lawmakers’ extracurricular activities mean for their core role.

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This week, we are joined by Sophia Russack, senior researcher from the Centre for European Policy Studies, Petros Fassoulas, secretary general of European Movement International and Anna Nalyvayko, senior project officer from the Wilfried Martens Center.

Panelists debate the ethical questions raised by MEPs who have side jobs. Those extra roles are legal, but the political earthquake caused by the Qatarargate scandal led to tighter rules and more transparency.

Is this enough to bridge the gulf between citizens and politicians, in today’s fractured political landscape?

“We see that they have improved rules when it comes to reporting requirements, to laying open your financial situation before and after the offers, and so on. But to be honest, none of these things will prevent another Qatargate,” said Sophia Russack, a think tanker who is an expert in EU institutional architecture, decision-making processes and institutional reform.

Despite these concerns, Petros Fassoulas said MEPs shouldn’t abandon contact with the real world altogether.

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“It’s important for them to have the opportunity to bring expertise from outside and engage also with the world outside of the chamber,” Fassoulas said. “An MEP or any parliamentarian should be in contact with the people that they regulate, the businesses that they have an impact on.”

Guests also discussed the reasons for the crisis of public confidence in politicians, and gave some ideas for solutions.

Watch “Brussels, my love?” in the player above.

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