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  • Q&A: Afrobeats is ‘one of Africa’s biggest cultural exports’

    Q&A: Afrobeats is ‘one of Africa’s biggest cultural exports’

    In 2022, songs classed as Afrobeats, the trendy genre that has kept millions on their feet in the last dozen years and spurred the introduction of an African music category at the Grammy Awards only two weeks ago –  cumulatively reached 13 billion streams on streaming platform Spotify.

    Since 2017, listenership has grown by 550 percent, with streams coming from all over the globe.

    The milestone is an acknowledgement of the road travelled by Afrobeats, a loose grouping of many sounds within Africa with influences by the Black diaspora, that has now spread from dancefloors in Lagos to elsewhere in West Africa and beyond the continent.

    Al Jazeera spoke to Jocelyne Muhutu-Remy, MD for Spotify in Sub-Saharan Africa on what this means for the continent and the company’s plans to further push African acts to new audiences.

    Al Jazeera: How has Afrobeats influenced the music scene in Africa and around the world in recent years?

    Jocelyne Muhutu-Remy: It’s fair to say that Afrobeats is probably one of Africa’s biggest cultural exports right now, and it is definitely influencing the music being made both on the continent and elsewhere in the world. By its very nature, Afrobeats is an amalgamation of sounds, which is lending itself beautifully to fusions with other musical styles, as well as collaborations with artists from the continent and around the world.

    The most streamed Afrobeats song of all time on the Spotify platform is Rema’s Calm Down collaboration with Selena Gomez, for instance. But if you look at Davido’s collaboration with an Amapiano producer like Focalistic, for instance, you can see how the music is really crossing borders and breaking boundaries.

    The recent introduction of an African music category at the Grammys is probably also, in large part, due to the massive popularity of genres like Afrobeats and Amapiano across the world right now.

    Beyond just influencing the music, however, we are also seeing the impact that genres like Afrobeats are having in exporting other aspects of culture, from fashion to food and even language.

    Al Jazeera: In your opinion, what distinguishes Afrobeats from other music genres and what are some of its unique characteristics?

    Muhutu-Remy: I think the answer is in the name really- the beat is the thing that distinguishes Afrobeats. That unique 3-2 or 2-3 rhythm forms the basis of the music, and then it’s layered with various musical influences like hip-hop or R&B and then the lyrics which often incorporate West African languages like Pidgin, Yoruba, and Twi. It’s not just music for the sake of music, it’s culture, too.

    Al Jazeera: What is it about Afrobeats that has made it so popular globally and appealing to a wider audience?

    Muhutu-Remy: The African diaspora and the desire to connect with some part of home has played a part in how this genre has spread, but its popularity also has a lot to do with its feel-good nature. Most of the music classified as Afrobeats is up-beat and is associated with good times and celebrations – think weddings and clubs.

    The genre is also constantly evolving and its fusion with other genres from across Africa and around the world – like trap, UK garage, reggae, among others – means that it appeals to people across the world, growing its audience even further.

    Collaboration is another important driver of the genre’s growth – we’ve seen Afrobeats artists collaborating with big international names like Justin Bieber, Ed Sheeran and Selena Gomez to name a few, which, coupled with the power of streaming, is allowing Afrobeats artists to connect with audiences across the globe.

    Al Jazeera: How has Spotify been part of that journey, in promoting Afrobeats and African music generally?

    Muhutu-Remy: Our newly launched Afrobeats site, which tells the story of Afrobeats, is just one example of how we are doing this.

    Streaming provides a global platform so that artists can find audiences anywhere in the world. [We have] various artist support programmes such as EQUAL, which is aimed at raising the profile of talented female artists, RADAR our programme aimed at supporting emerging artists, and Fresh Finds which is aimed at independent artists.

    Spotify playlists, like Amapiano Grooves and African Heat as well as Spotify features like the Made for You hub also help to drive discovery, enabling listeners to find music that they love, and artists to connect with new fans.

    We’ve also announced a number of new features which will allow fans to not only see where and when their favourite artists are performing, but to also buy tickets and merch, giving artists the opportunity to earn multiple income streams.

    Spotify also works with artists and their teams on a number of different projects to help market their music in a way that drives discovery and enables them to thrive. This includes the use of our billboard in New York’s Times Square, which has featured a number of African artists. Beat School, a three-part video series, which explores various African genres with local artists, Music that Moves a documentary about the rise of South Africa’s amapiano, and Spotify Talks which hosts discussions with local artists like Kenya’s Them Mushrooms.

    Al Jazeera: What are some of the challenges that African artists or the Afrobeats genre face when entering the global market?

    Muhutu-Remy: The world has really sat up and taken notice of Afrobeats, so a lot of the challenges of the genre being unknown, are starting to dissipate for artists looking towards that global stage, and streaming has had an important role to play here.

    But, for emerging artists, independent artists or women who are finding their feet in an industry that is still very male-dominated, there will be challenges which is why we are so committed to providing programmes and support that will help artists grow their audiences and build their careers.

    Another aspect I think is important to focus on is the business aspect of being a career musician. For many creatives, this may not be their strong suit, so learning the skills, finding mentors and choosing teams that are able to help them navigate the business aspects of the music is very important.

    Al Jazeera: Are there any upcoming Afrobeats artists or producers that we should keep an eye on?

    Muhutu-Remy: Our EQUAL artist for June, Qing Madi is definitely one to watch. At only 16, she’s already combining Afrobeats with Soul and R&B and breaking new ground.

    Our Nigerian RADAR artist for 2023, Ria Sean is another one to watch. Women played such an important role in the origins of Afrobeats, and going forward, we’re going to see more and more women standing alongside the giants of the genre.

    Al Jazeera: How do African listeners compare in their music listening habits to other global regions in terms of genre, artist, and consumption patterns?

    Muhutu-Remy: One thing we noticed from our Wrapped data released last year, was that many of our key markets in sub-Saharan Africa saw an increase in streams of local music, so that is a really promising trend.

    Our data has shown us some really interesting patterns around Afrobeats specifically. For instance, one would think that Nigeria is the biggest consumer of the genre, but in fact, both the USA and the UK are out-streaming them. South Africa, while not a top 10 market for Afrobeats, is, however, seeing massive growth and streaming of the genre has grown by over 2,000 percent since 2018. When it comes to growing markets, we’re seeing markets like Mexico, The Netherlands, and India loving Afrobeats.

    This interview has been edited for style and clarity.

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  • Stuck in limbo: Despair and frustration at the Sudan-Egypt border

    Stuck in limbo: Despair and frustration at the Sudan-Egypt border

    A man sits against a solitary concrete pillar at an abandoned construction site, his head hunched forward, gazing at the dusty ground in quiet desperation as he prepares to leave the small sliver of shade.

    A few metres away, under the skeletal concrete frame of an unfinished building, dozens of people lie contorted around bricks and building material as they steal a little respite from the unrelenting sun overhead.

    This is Wadi Halfa, a once quiet town, rich in antiquities from Nubia and a commercial thoroughfare located on Sudan’s border with Egypt.

    Sudan descended into chaos in mid-April after months of rising tensions exploded into an open conflict between rival generals in the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) who are seeking to control the country. Thousands of Sudanese have been trapped between the violent clashes and the increasingly dire conditions at the congested border crossings.

    The mood at Wadi Halfa oscillates between fervent activity as crowds of people gather, hopeful that they can successfully process their visas at the Egyptian consulate, to scenes of subdued resignation as groups cower in what little shade they can find after facing another rejection.

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  • The planet’s burning. Can the Global South save it?

    The planet’s burning. Can the Global South save it?

    Climate change headlines are rarely positive, but even against that yardstick, the World Meteorological Organization’s (WMO) latest global warming predictions unveiled in mid-May marked a poignant moment for human civilisation.

    In the next five years, the WMO warned, the world is likely to see an increase of more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming over average pre-industrial levels for the first time.

    While the weather events forecast by the United Nations’s weather body capture outlier spikes in temperatures, they serve as ominous portents of just how hard it will be for the world to achieve its hope of limiting the average temperature increase to 1.5C by 2100.

    Yet, the warning signs have been around for a while and have been mounting.

    Barbeques are no longer the only smoky markers of the start of summer. Devastating wildfires, like the ones that ravaged Canada earlier this month, signal the onset of rising temperatures with deadly regularity. Meanwhile, cyclones like Biparjoy, which slammed into western India in mid-June, are wreaking havoc with increasing frequency.

    Eight years after global leaders gathered in a northeastern Paris suburb to seal the landmark 2015 climate agreement, no country is meeting the emissions cut goals needed to limit the global temperature rise to 1.5C, according to the independent research platform Climate Action Tracker.

    So is it all a lost cause? Or is there still hope? Are there any countries that are doing better than the rest in trying to mitigate the worst effects of climate change for future generations? And if so, what are they doing right?

    The short answer: Most developed countries are falling far behind their climate pledges. But some developing nations – such as The Gambia, Costa Rica, Morocco and Mali – are taking bold steps to fight a crisis that, though not of their making, often hits them the hardest.

    They are harnessing the power of the sun and innovating with agriculture in ways that serve as examples for others. But their journeys also reveal the limitations of how far they can wage this battle alone, without the Global North truly stepping up.

    The mangroves of the Gambia River in Serrekunda on September 26, 2021. The Gambia and parts of Senegal gained a 51 percent increase in mangrove cover between 1988 and 2018 [Leo Correa/AP]

    Gambian gambit

    Nfamara Dampha remembers his first brush with an extreme weather event as if it had happened yesterday.

    It was 1999 and 10-year-old Dampha stood with his parents and siblings on the verandah outside their house. A sudden torrent of rain caused by a thunderstorm – so intense that such phenomena are colloquially called “rain bombs” – had hit their village in The Gambia, the smallest country in mainland Africa. They were “too scared to be inside the house due to the uncertainty of whether its walls would survive or collapse”, Dampha said.

    The storm had ripped off the roofs of most houses around them; walls of buildings lay collapsed and fallen trees blocked the roads. Dampha’s house survived but the fence was destroyed. As he waded through the water the next morning, the scale of the devastation hit him even harder: furniture, mattresses, clothes and books floated along water-logged streets.

    Now a research scientist and senior climate change consultant at the World Bank, Dampha relived some of those memories when another rain bomb exploded on the West African country in July last year, affecting nearly 40 percent of the population and displacing thousands of people.

    Yet today, the country is on the front lines of not just the global climate crisis, but also efforts to combat its most devastating effects. Dampha created a Household Disaster Resilience Project (HELP-Gambia) in 2017 to gather financial resources to support local resilience efforts such as climate change awareness, adapting agricultural practices to survive the growing vagaries of weather patterns and supporting green businesses, specifically for the most vulnerable communities in The Gambia.

    His initiative is one among a series of similar climate-driven local movements across the country that have collectively turned the West African nation into a rare success story in the global fightback against climate change. In 2021, The Gambia was the only country in the world briefly on track to meet its Paris climate change commitments.

    Central to The Gambia’s strategy is the concept of agroforestry. Traditionally, agriculture and forests have often been viewed as competitors for land, with increased food demands leading to deforestation. Agroforestry, on the other hand, involves land use practices in which trees and forests coexist. The county unveiled a national agroforestry strategy in 2022 that set the target of restoring 7,000 hectares (17,300 acres) of degraded forests in a decade.

    This builds on longstanding reforestation efforts that saw The Gambia regain 6.6 percent of its forest cover between 1990 and 2005. Research also suggests a 51 percent increase in mangrove cover – which helps curb erosion and reduce the intensity of floods – across The Gambia and parts of Senegal between 1988 and 2018. All of this is aimed at cutting the country’s net carbon emissions to net zero by 2050.

    As the rain bombs have shown and as the nation’s long-term strategy document says: “The Gambia has no choice.”

    A thermosolar power plant is pictured at Noor II Ouarzazate, Morocco, November 4, 2016. Picture taken November 4, 2016. REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal
    A thermosolar power plant at Noor II Ouarzazate, Morocco, November 4, 2016. Morocco is increasingly supplying solar power to Europe [Youssef Boudla/Reuters]

    Power of the sun

    To the east of The Gambia, much-bigger and landlocked Mali has a power crisis: 83 percent of its population lacks access to electricity.

    Until recently, the country’s solution lay in decentralised diesel-powered mini-grids – sets of small electricity generators – to supply rural areas. Now, it is converting those into small solar grids.

    It has already deployed one such system, with support and a $9m loan from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (ADFD). The 4MW solar mini-grid system is designed to supply clean energy to 123,000 people across 32 villages. It could help Mali cut total carbon dioxide emissions by 5,000 tonnes – a thousand such mini-grids could almost wipe out the country’s carbon footprint.

    And this project is part of a broader trend. Between 2010 and 2019, Mali doubled the number of people connected to renewable mini-grids using solar, hydro and biogas technologies, reaching 11 million people – or more than half the country’s population – in 2019. If these grids now serve up the power they can, the county could dramatically reduce its energy access problem.

    But that is not all. Tania Martha Thomas, a researcher at the Paris-based Climate Chance Observatory, an international group that monitors trends on climate and biodiversity, said these solar mini-grids – which store electricity in batteries for local use – save thousands of women hours of labour. They would previously need to travel long distances to collect water, which can now be pumped using electricity.

    Further north, Morocco is leading a North African solar revolution that could serve not just the region’s energy needs but also those of Europe across the Mediterranean at a time when Russia’s war in Ukraine has disrupted oil and gas supplies.

    Morocco’s giant solar farms already export electricity to Spain through two undersea cables. But last year, as  the war in Ukraine intensified, the country struck a deal with the European Union to ramp up exports further. The biggest of the new projects on the horizon involves laying what will be the world’s longest high-voltage submarine cables, taking solar power from Morocco’s Sahara desert past Portugal, Spain and France all the way to the United Kingdom. The target is to provide up to 8 percent of the UK’s total energy needs by 2030.

    Egypt and Tunisia are also hoping to export solar power to Europe.

    Yet, if the world is to truly neutralise global warming, it will need more than the export of energy. It will need countries to learn how to turn things around from the brink of disaster.

    Costa Rica, a tiny country in Central America, could offer valuable lessons.

    A frog named "rana azul" or "rana de cafetal" (Agalychnis annae) climbs a branch in a protected forest on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Costa Rica went from having one of the world's highest deforestation rates in the 1980s to a nation centered on ecotourism, luring world travelers with the possibility of moving between marine reserves and cloud forest in a single day. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
    A frog climbs a branch in a protected forest on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica, Wednesday, August 24, 2022. Costa Rica went from having one of the world’s highest deforestation rates in the 1980s to being a nation centred on ecotourism, luring world travellers [Moises Castillo/AP Photo]

    Green beacon of hope

    Today, Costa Rica routinely ranks among the world’s greenest countries.

    That wasn’t always the case. In the 1940s, three-fourths of the country was covered in rainforests before loggers ravaged the landscape, using trees to mint their fortunes. By 1987, forest cover was down to only 21 percent.

    “It’s a super bio-diverse country that used to be a poster child for environmental destruction,” Stanford University researcher Kelley Langhans told Al Jazeera.

    Over the past 35 years, she said, the country has adopted “a suite of innovative conservation finance and policy mechanisms” that have today made it a role model among environmental policymakers – giving it a reputation very different from the one it had until the 1980s.

    More than half the country is now once again lush with forests. Costa Rica is one of only nine countries – Morocco and The Gambia are also on this list – whose steps to mitigate climate change are “almost sufficient”, according to Climate Action Tracker.

    Under a key policy that has helped with this dramatic turnaround, Costa Rica pays communities and landowners that preserve the environment, including its tree cover, biodiversity and water cleanliness. This initiative is funded by taxes collected on fossil fuels.

    The country has relied almost entirely on renewable energy since 2014. More than 7 percent of all passenger vehicles are electric, higher than in the US, Canada and the rest of Latin America. Electric vehicles are exempt from taxes and import duties, and owners have a range of other benefits – including free parking in designated spots as well as a waiver on annual road permit payments.

    That impressive track record made Langhans and her colleagues decide to study whether Costa Rica could implement its reforestation strategy even better.

    “We know that Costa Rica is interested in reforestation, so we wanted to know how, given limited land and money to achieve conservation goals, the country might be able to target reforestation to areas where it could provide people and ecosystems with the largest benefits,” she said.

    She and her team found that reforesting an area 10 metres (33 feet) wide along the banks of Costa Rica’s rivers – which would roughly be equivalent to 1 percent of the country’s total land area – could significantly improve water quality by reducing sedimentation as well as nitrogen and phosphorus pollution. It would also assist carbon sequestration efforts – capturing carbon from the atmosphere.

    These gains could be further amplified, the researchers found, if these reforestation efforts are concentrated in areas where people depend on rivers for drinking water.

    But if showing success against climate change is hard, maintaining it is even harder – as The Gambia is learning.

    FILE - Somalis who fled drought-stricken areas carry their belongings as they arrive at a makeshift camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia, June 30, 2022. Tens of millions of people are being uprooted by natural disasters due to the impact of climate change, though the world has yet to fully recognize climate migrants or come up with a formalized mechanism to assess their needs and help them. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File)
    Somalis who fled drought-stricken areas carry their belongings as they arrive at a makeshift camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia, June 30, 2022 [Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP]

    Can’t do it alone

    Burdened with ever-increasing development needs, which are in turn exacerbated by extreme weather events, many developing nations are struggling to meet their climate goals alone.

    Soon after The Gambia drew global headlines as the only country whose plans to combat climate change were considered compatible with the goals set in the 2015 Paris Agreement, Climate Action Tracker downgraded it a notch, to “almost sufficient.” This was after the country submitted its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) plan – its blueprint to reduce carbon emissions.

    Such plans have two components. One lays out what the country can do on its own, while the other outlines the steps the country wants to take – but that depends on international support. According to Climate Action Tracker, while The Gambia’s domestic efforts are still on track to meet Paris targets, it is falling behind on plans that need global help.

    As the developed world is yet to meet its promise of $100bn annually in climate financing to developing nations – even for a single year since the 2009 pledge – the World Bank now estimates that $1 trillion will be needed each year for mitigation and adaptation.

    Meanwhile, countries like The Gambia must fight crises in the present while preparing for the future.

    The World Bank’s Dampha was previously the director of administration at The Gambia’s National Disaster Management Agency, where he saw closely how extreme weather events kill people, destroy livelihoods and leave behind a trail of destruction.

    A 2020 study by Dampha concluded that most people leaving the country’s island capital city of Banjul are climate migrants.

    “Earlier studies revealed that our capital city Banjul will be underwater by 2100 if the world’s mean sea level rises by just a metre,” he said. “If current conditions remain the same, Banjul’s loss to sea level rise could result in a total governance or state failure.”

    Banjul is not just The Gambia’s administrative centre but also its economic hub.

    During the COP27 conference in Egypt last year, countries agreed to a new fund to cover loss and damage suffered by vulnerable countries affected by climate disasters. Following the announcement of this new fund, African “expectations are high in view of the magnitude of the stakes around climate change”, said Mélaine Assè-Wassa Sama, a climate action project officer at Climate Chance Observatory.

    Research suggests that in sub-Sarah Africa, as many as 86 million people could be displaced by climate change within their own countries by 2050, and 19 million in North Africa. Cyclone Freddy, which hit Southern Africa in March 2023, forced nearly 660,000 people in Malawi to move.

    Without outside help, Sama told Al Jazeera, vulnerable African countries will struggle to fight against the effects of climate change for which they have little historical responsibility – no matter how hard they try with their limited domestic resources.

    Dampha agreed. Currently, international financial support is negligible. “The estimated cost of the July 2022 rainfall event was more than the total climate finance received by The Gambia in 2018,” he said.

    “Climate reparation or financing is not development aid or charity to those disproportionately impacted by the climate catastrophe,” Dampha said. “It is our moral obligation.”

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  • Inside look: Discover Financial Services’ approach to responsible AI | Bank Automation News

    Inside look: Discover Financial Services’ approach to responsible AI | Bank Automation News

    Vetting new technology and jumping through compliance hoops is nothing new for financial institutions — and implementing AI should be no different. In theory. As technology advances and large language models (LLM) improve daily, financial institutions (FI) are finding new applications for it. The AI tech once known as the magic behind chatbots and streamlined […]

    Whitney McDonald

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  • ‘Layers of vulnerability’: The children growing up in urban war

    ‘Layers of vulnerability’: The children growing up in urban war

    Marwa, an activist who advocates for vulnerable communities, describes the terror of growing up during the war in Yemen at an event on protecting children in urban warfare organised by the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

    She described having to live under air raids, never going to school without feeling anxiety or ever playing outside without the watchful eyes of her concerned mother on her.

    “When the war erupted, I was 11 years old. Frankly, I don’t remember much other than the fear and crying,” she said of the conflict, which started about eight years ago.

    “Nothing can save you from an air strike. The missile can kill you and all your family members while asleep at home, and there’s nothing you can do to avoid dying under the rubble of your own home,” she said.

    Child-specific harms of urban warfare

    In a report published late last month, the ICRC tries to address what it calls a gap in knowledge about the child-specific harms caused in increasingly urbanised conflicts – from Gaza to Syria and Ukraine – that it says can help better respond to children’s needs in these complex environments.

    The aid group said the report is the first holistic study dedicated specifically to children’s experience of urban warfare, drawing on existing literature in addition to dozens of interviews with experts and witnesses. It called the report necessary because an estimated one out of six children worldwide must navigate war as part of their lives.

    It points out that children need to be assessed differently in war scenarios because they are less able than adults to accurately assess risks, are more vulnerable due to their physiology, will experience reverberating effects on their health in case essential services like water are disrupted and will undergo profound mental health changes that impact the rest of their lives.

    Their experiences of urban warfare also vary based on criteria such as sex, age, disabilities and migration status while children could find their education disrupted in many ways, could be separated from their families in minutes, face displacement, or be subject to detention or even recruitment into armed groups.

    The ICRC report also details how economic downturns caused by urban warfare can cause children and their families to adopt harmful survival strategies, such as child labour, early marriages, or relying on their children for things like evading checkpoints or picking their way through rubble.

    ‘The most vulnerable’

    Another urban war has erupted since mid-April in Sudan, where two generals are fighting for control of the country and many ceasefires have failed to stop the conflict.

    The deadly power struggle has triggered a significant humanitarian crisis with more than 1.2 million people displaced internally and another 400,000 fleeing into neighbouring states.

    Children walk along a street in Khartoum on June 4, 2023 [AFP]

    One of those states is Chad, Sudan’s western neighbour, which has seen tens of thousands of refugees – many of them children – pour over its border on foot. Some have been placed in UN-organised camps, but many continue to live in dire conditions, unsure of their future.

    Witnessing the situation firsthand in Adre, Chad, Al Jazeera’s Zein Basravi described how he saw a mother fleeing war, carrying a boy who did not look older than one but was suffering from developmental issues and severe body contortions.

    “There’s no way that he is in the right place to get the kind of help that he needs, the kind of help that the most vulnerable of the vulnerable need. There’s no way they can get the kind of help they need in a place like an impromptu camp in Chad,” he said.

    “So, there are layers and layers of vulnerability. Things are only getting worse. These kids are going to continue to fall through the cracks and nobody knows when it’s going to bottom out.”

    According to Basravi, children in Sudan and their families are facing a “generational uprooting” that is happening with increasing frequency and intensity compared with the past few decades and are being traumatised over and over again.

    “We saw a child in the camp yesterday who lost a leg below the knee in fighting last year, and now he’s been displaced from Darfour entirely into Chad,” he said.

    He also reported seeing children who were traumatised by seeing their fathers beaten, their mothers sexually assaulted and feeling certain they would die at checkpoints. That is not to mention the lack of clothing, food and water and exposure to diseases.

    “When the kids arrive, they are completely shell-shocked, constantly crying,” Basravi said.

    ‘Perpetual state of fear’

    Aside from constantly exposing children to bodily harm, urban conflicts could severely impact their mental health.

    Children in these settings have regularly reported insomnia, stress, anxiety, panic attacks, grief, bedwetting, fear of loud sounds and nightmares, the ICRC report said.

    It cited a 2013 study about the civil war in Syria that found 84 percent of adults and nearly all children considered the bombing and shelling as the main cause of psychological stress in children’s lives.

    A 2022 study in Gaza found that children lived in a “perpetual state of fear, worry, sadness and grief” and that more than half of Gaza’s children have thought about suicide while three out of five reported practising self-harm.

    To improve the situation, the ICRC sets out recommendations for states, fighting groups and humanitarian actors and for data collection and analysis concerning children in urban warfare settings.

    It calls on states to put in place robust domestic legal frameworks and to implement higher standards as a matter of policy while drawing up recommendations for evacuations and for health and educational services and in connection with the detention of children.

    It says armed actors should specifically address the protection of children in their urban warfare doctrine while calling on humanitarian actors to develop a fuller understanding of the risks and strengthen their capabilities in preventing and reducing harm to children.

    Ukraine winter
    Refugee children fleeing Ukraine are given blankets by Slovakian rescue workers at the Velke Slemence border crossing on March 09, 2022, in Slovakia [Christopher Furlong/Getty Images]

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  • Photos: Ethiopian quest to re-create ancient manuscripts

    Photos: Ethiopian quest to re-create ancient manuscripts

    Armed with a bamboo ink pen and a steady hand, Ethiopian Orthodox priest Zelalem Mola carefully copied text in the ancient Ge’ez language from a religious book onto a goatskin parchment.

    This painstaking task is preserving an ancient tradition, all the while bringing him closer to God, the 42-year-old said.

    At the Hamere Berhan Institute in Addis Ababa, priests and lay worshippers work by hand to replicate sometimes centuries-old religious manuscripts and sacred artwork.

    The parchments, pens and inks are all prepared at the institute, which lies in the Piasa district in the historic heart of the Ethiopian capital.

    Yeshiemebet Sisay, 29, who is in charge of communications at Hamere Berhan, said the work began four years ago.

    “Ancient parchment manuscripts are disappearing from our culture, which motivated us to start this project,” she said.

    The precious works are kept mainly in monasteries, where prayers or religious chants are conducted using only parchment rather than paper manuscripts.

    “This custom is rapidly fading. … We thought if we could learn skills from our priests, we could work on it ourselves, so that is how we began,” Yeshiemebet said.

    ‘It’s hard work’

    In the institute’s courtyard, workers stretch goatskins tightly over metal frames to dry under a weak sun.

    “After the goatskin is immersed in the water for three to four days, we make holes on the edge of the skin and tie it to the metal, so that it can stretch,” Tinsaye Chere Ayele said.

    “After that, we remove the extra layer of fat on the skin’s inside to make it clean.”

    With two other colleagues, the 20-year-old carried out his task using a makeshift scraper, seemingly oblivious to the stench emanating from the animal hide.

    Once clean and dry, the skins will be stripped of their goat hair and then cut to the desired size for use as pages of a book or for painting.

    Yeshiemebet said most of the manuscripts are commissioned by individuals who then donate them to churches or monasteries.

    Some customers order small collections of prayers or paintings for themselves to have “reproductions of ancient Ethiopian works”, she said.

    “Small books can take one or two months. If it is a collective work, large books can take one to two years.

    “If it’s an individual task, it can take even longer,” she said, leafing through books clad in red leather, their texts adorned with brightly coloured illuminations and religious images.

    Sitting in one of the institute’s rooms with parchment pages placed on his knees, Zelalem patiently copied a book titled Zena Selassie (History of the Trinity).

    “It is going to take a lot of time,” the priest said. “It’s hard work, starting with the preparation of the parchment and the inks. This one could take up to six months to complete.”

    “We make a stylus from bamboo, sharpening the tip with a razor blade.”

    The scribes use different pens for each colour used in the text – black or red – and either a fine or broad tip. The inks are made from local plants.

    ‘Talking to saints and God’

    Like most other religious works, Zena Selassie is written in Ge’ez.

    This dead language remains the liturgical language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and its alpha syllabic system – in which the characters represent syllables – is still used to write Ethiopia’s national language Amharic as well as Tigrinya, which is spoken in Tigray and neighbouring Eritrea.

    “We copy from paper to parchment to preserve [the writings] as the paper book can be easily damaged while this one will last a long time if we protect it from water and fire,” Zelalem said.

    Replicating the manuscripts “needs patience and focus. It begins with a prayer in the morning, at lunchtime and ends with prayer.”

    “It is difficult for an individual to write and finish a book, just to sit the whole day, but thanks to our devotion, a light shines brightly within us,” Zelalem added.

    “It takes so much effort that it makes us worthy in the eyes of God.”

    This spiritual dimension also guides Lidetu Tasew, who is in charge of education and training at the institute, where he teaches painting and illumination.

    “Spending time here painting saints is like talking to saints and to God,” the 26-year-old said.

    “We have been taught that wherever we paint saints, there is the spirit of God.”

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  • Ready, set, pay: Prepping for FedNow | Bank Automation News

    Ready, set, pay: Prepping for FedNow | Bank Automation News

    The launch of FedNow is finally around the corner and it’s been a long time coming, industry experts told Bank Automation News. “The launch reflects an important milestone in the journey to help financial institutions serve customer needs for instant payments to better support nearly every aspect of our economy,” Tom Barkin, president of the […]

    Whitney McDonald

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  • Greece’s conservatives campaign on ‘firm but fair’ refugee policy

    Greece’s conservatives campaign on ‘firm but fair’ refugee policy

    Athens, Greece – When Notis Mitarakis took the job of migration minister, he received a baptism of fire.

    In January 2020, even before he was sworn in, Mitarakis visited his constituency of Chios.

    There were 100,000 asylum seekers in Greece, and half of them lived on the five eastern Aegean islands that had Reception and Identification Centres, including Chios. On average, there were almost 10,000 monthly new arrivals from Turkey.

    A crowd of angry islanders greeted him outside the town hall, where he was to attend a special municipal council on what to do about thousands of refugees who had overflowed from the official camp and were living in squats on the beach and in town.

    Mitarakis’s bodyguards ushered him inside the building and tried to close the doors, but the crowd pushed them open, smashing the glass.

    It was a similar tale on Samos a few days later.

    “We want them off the island. We don’t want them here,” a woman told Mitarakis as he tried to reason with a jeering congregation.

    After that, Mitarakis did not even try visiting Lesvos, the north Aegean island that has absorbed about half of the asylum seekers crossing over from Turkey for the past 10 years.

    But on May 12 this year, it was a very different story.

    ‘Exceptionally proud’

    Mitarakis and Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis stood on a makeshift stage amid the ruins of Moria camp on Lesvos, once one of the largest refugee camps in Europe, along with the island’s mayor.

    Before dozens of local dignitaries, the mayor thanked them and presented them with gifts.

    “Ι am exceptionally proud that I kept my commitment to local communities to solve this issue,” said Mitsotakis.

    “We implemented a firm but fair policy on migration. We protected our country’s borders both on land and at sea, and reduced irregular arrivals by 90 percent. We proved that the sea has borders, and those borders can and must be guarded,” he said, his last words drowned out by applause.

    The mayor of Lesvos presents Prime Minister Mitsotakis with gifts, thanking him for the government policy of moving refugees away from the island’s capital, Mytilene [John Psaropoulos/Al Jazeera]

    Mitarakis put numbers on that policy.

    “During the government of Syriza [2015-19], 643,000 asylum seekers arrived on Lesvos, whereas since 2019, arrivals were 11,630,” he said.

    The ruling New Democracy conservatives face a tough re-election on May 21, and see migration policy as one of their strong suits.

    Greece has implemented a tough border policy many humanitarian groups and search-and-rescue watchdogs have said amounts to illegal pushbacks of potential asylum seekers at sea.

    Under the Geneva Convention of 1951, supplicants may not be turned back at the border if they are seeking protection from political or religious persecution.

    The Greek Border Guards and the coastguard often have not bothered to ask them, say critics.

    Beating, detention, theft

    Al Jazeera has reported on firsthand accounts of beatings, arbitrary detention and theft of personal belongings.

    It had not always been this way. While refugee numbers were manageable, Lesvos was hospitable.

    The mayor turned over a summer camp for school children and a driving school to be used as refugee housing.

    A network of volunteers, formed during the post-2008 global financial crisis to help Greek families that went hungry, gathered food, medicine and clothing for refugees instead.

    By 2020, the islands with reception centres had begun to feel they were pawns in a political power game between Turkey and the European Union.

    When New Democracy fast-tracked new asylum applications, applicants who had been waiting for years marched through the capital of Lesvos, Mytilene, fuelling a movement among locals to shut down Moria, just 4km (2.4 miles) away.

    The turning point for Greek policy came in March 2020, when Turkey unilaterally withdrew from an agreement with the EU to hold back irregular migrants.

    Thousands attempted to storm the Greek land border at the Evros River, nearly overwhelming Greek police.

    Security crisis

    Greece saw Turkey’s move as a test of its reflexes, and thenceforth treated refugees as a security crisis more than a humanitarian one.

    In September of that year, Moria was set ablaze. Police arrested a dozen Afghan refugees on charges of arson, but some islanders suspect that locals put them up to it.

    “[Some people] created problems to mobilise others against them. They said these people brought AIDS, brought Ebola, they will sleep with your women. And it worked, and they turned the population against them,” Christos Moumtzis, a jeweller, told Al Jazeera.

    “They are trying to assimilate the [migrants] in Greece, to have relationships, children, a mixed-up situation, a sort of marriage [of populations],” said shop owner Thanos Mitropoulos.

    “I see many [refugees] with Greek girls, walking hand in hand, in a relationship.”

    Many local businesses have profited from the cash handouts the EU has been giving asylum applicants while their claims are being processed, but they have had a souring effect on many.

    “I think that many of them are lazy, they get subsidies, and they’ve learned to live with that. They pose for photographs … They don’t aspire to something more … I on the other hand have opened this shop, I have to keep it in business,” Mitropoulos said.

    About 2,400 refugees remain on Lesvos today, a 10th of the number that lived in Moria, as the government moved most to the mainland and hired more lawyers to process their asylum applications.

    Where Moria camp once stood, the government plans to build a conference centre, student housing and an innovation centre for the University of the Aegean, a music school and a sport centre. The summer camp and driving school, too, have been returned to the municipality.

    The new refugee camp under construction at Greece's Vastria, capable of holding 5,000 people
    The new refugee camp under construction at Greece’s Vastria can hold 5,000 people [John Psaropoulos/Al Jazeera]

    In their place, the government is constructing a vast new camp 40km (25 miles) away in the middle of a pine forest, well out of walking distance of Mytilene.

    The camp at Vastria will have better amenities than Moria, or the current makeshift camp set up on an artillery range at Mavrovounio, but it will be surrounded by a patrolled, double chainlink fence topped with barbed wire – all paid for by the EU.

    The policy on other islands has been similar, with former camps near urban centres being turned over to local authorities and replaced by more efficient, distant facilities.

    Yet, such is the sensitivity over the presence of even the out-of-sight Vastria camp that Mitsotakis did not visit it, apparently not wishing to draw attention to it.

    This government reflects the complete change in Europe’s refugee policy over the past few years.

    It proudly proclaims that it has prevented 700,000 irregular entries during its term, protecting Europe’s open internal borders and abolishing the status of these east Aegean islands as Europe’s buffer zones.

    Not everyone agrees with the new Greek – and EU policy.

    “We can’t choose between the disgrace of Moria, or the prison of Mavrovounio, or the even worse camp at Vastria,” Communist MP Maria Komninaka told Al Jazeera.

    “We believe that people should quickly receive their papers and move from the islands to the mainland and from there to the countries they’re trying to get to.”

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  • ‘My dog works, too’: The 73-year-old vending on Lima’s streets

    ‘My dog works, too’: The 73-year-old vending on Lima’s streets

    A vendor in Peru’s capital and his cocker spaniel find ‘life’ on the city's streets as they work hard to earn a living.

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  • Malaysia’s Ramadan bazaars draw crowds, but some tighten belts

    Malaysia’s Ramadan bazaars draw crowds, but some tighten belts

    Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – It is late afternoon in Kuala Lumpur and despite the oppressive heat, a crowd of people is wandering along a street lined with food stalls.

    The air is filled with the aroma of barbecued chicken and fried fish as buyers – most of them ethnic Malay Muslims looking for food with which to break their Ramadan fast – search out their favourite foods.

    The mood is festive even though this year’s prices are higher than usual. The country’s central bank said in February that while inflation was likely to moderate, it was likely to remain “elevated”.

    “The rising cost of living impacts the affordability of food and other items sold at the bazaar. We see a significant increase in the price which leads to people being careful with their spending,” Aiedah Khalek, a senior lecturer at Monash University Malaysia and an expert in Muslim consumer behaviour, told Al Jazeera.

    Ramadan bazaars can be found in almost every corner of Malaysia, which is mostly ethnic Malay but also has large minorities of ethnic Chinese, Indian and Indigenous people.

    Many are drawn to the markets in the capital Kuala Lumpur, where they can also visit traditional shopping areas around Jalan Tuanku Abdul to buy new outfits in anticipation of Eid, known as Hari Raya Aidilfitri in Malaysia, which falls at the end of Ramadan.

    Ramadan bazaars are popular with Malaysians of all ages and ethnicities [Bhavya Vemulapalli/Al Jazeera]

    The bazaars usually open in the early afternoon so people have time to buy their food ready for the breaking of fast at sunset.

    Aiedah has been researching halal communal dining and its effect on the social cohesion of multi-religious communities.

    “What makes the Ramadan bazaars special is that they offer different types of food, especially food that is rarely available outside the Ramadan month,” she said.

    “Now we can see huge Ramadan bazaars, especially in the urban areas, unlike 20-25 years ago.”

    Keeping prices down

    With the high cost of living, this year some small traders have joined the government’s Rahmah Ramadan Bazaar initiative, which is designed to ensure food for buka puasa (the breaking of fast) is sold at reasonable prices.

    Nur Mastura has a Menu Rahmah sticker at her stall, which means the price of the 13 types of rice cake she sells is capped at 10 Malaysian ringgit ($2.26) each.

    “Ramadan bazaars are a way to celebrate so many cultural cuisines. I’ve been selling putu bambu, an Indonesian kueh (cake) at bazaars for four years now. People keep coming for the taste of it,” the 19-year-old told Al Jazeera.

    She is studying for a diploma in banking but helps out on her family’s stall at the Masjid Jamek Ramadan bazaar in the centre of Kuala Lumpur.

    Vendor selling Malaysian popular Putu Bambu (green rice cake) at Ramadan bazaars.
    Mastura selling her putu bambu. The traditional rice cake is filled with palm sugar, flavoured with pandan and steamed over bamboo coals [Bhavya Vemulapalli/Al Jazeera]

    Traditionally, Malaysians prefer to break their fast with dishes that will be gentle on their stomach following the long hours without food or water.

    One such traditional dish is bubur lambuk, which is made by cooking the ingredients together in a single pot, translated as scattered porridge.

    At most mosques, the dish is given out free of charge during Ramadan. The porridge is usually made with meat, onions, garlic, coconut oil and several spices like cinnamon sticks, fennel seeds, star anise, cloves and fenugreek.

    “Everyone has their own secret recipe. It depends on the budget and ingredients,” said Saiful Azrul, as he and his brothers – all full-time hawkers – stir their porridge in large pots on the side of the road in preparation for the evening bazaars. “We enjoy cooking together and donating half of what we cook.”

    They only sell bubur, which they start cooking in the morning, during Ramadan.

    Saiful Azrul (L), and his brothers cook three pots of Bubur Lambuk (Malaysian Porridge)—one for charity, and two for selling.
    Saiful Azrul (left) and his brothers cooking three pots of bubur lambuk — one is for charity and the other two to sell [Bhavya Vemulapalli/Al Jazeera]

    Malaysian food is often spicy and melds styles and flavours from across the world.

    “I was surprised by the large variety of food options as there was also some food I had never seen before in Malaysia,” said Anne Hilbert, a 23-year-old exchange student visiting Malaysia from a Dutch university. “I felt a strong feeling of community among the people at the bazaars.”

    They have been sampling the Thai-style skewers made by Adlin Ahmad and her sister at a Ramadan bazaar along the river in the centre of Kuala Lumpur.

    “My elder sister and I sell grilled skewers and noodle soup. Everyone comes together during Ramadan to sell their specialities,” said 29-year-old Adlin, who graduated from university in 2015 and now sells snacks for a living.

    Vendors at Ramadan bazaars Malaysia.
    Adlin Ahmad (left) and her sister Awatif Ismail’sell their food at a Ramadan bazaar along the river in Kuala Lumpur. Usually, they sell their food in Bachok in northeastern Kelantan [Bhavya Vemulapalli/Al Jazeera]

    “We pay 600 Malaysian ringgit ($135) for the month to put up our stall,” the Ahmad sisters told Al Jazeera. “Due to the increase in raw material prices after COVID-19, the food prices increased as well.”

    The higher prices have meant slower sales for some, adding to food waste, which was rising even before the COVID-19 pandemic hit. As well as bazaars, Ramadan in Malaysia also sees hotels and restaurants putting on sometimes lavish buka puasa buffets.

    The amount of solid waste, including food, collected during Ramadan rose to 252,521 tonnes last year, compared with 208,143 tonnes in 2019, according to deputy local government development minister Akmal Nasrullah Nasir.

    “The amount increases every year and in the past five years, we have seen an increase of up to 21 percent,” he told reporters after launching a Hari Raya event on April 10. Food made up 44.5 percent of the waste, he added.

    Local vendors say they try to donate the leftovers so they do not have to throw away large quantities of food on a slow day. They are also more careful about the amount they make in the first place.

    “Usually there aren’t a lot of leftovers as we got used to cooking correct quantities over the years. Snacks like ours stay fresh over a week. If not, I usually donate the rest at my brother’s school,” Adlin said.

    A man paying the vendor for the food he purchased that was packed in a plastic carry bag at a Ramadan bazaar in Malaysia.
    The bazaars offer a dizzying amount of food choices [Bhavya Vemulapalli/Al Jazeera]

    By early evening, the bazaars are winding down as Malays head home to wait until the sunset prayer when they can start eating together.

    The bazaars will operate until April 21, the eve of Hari Raya Aidilfitri.

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  • The Egyptian traditions endangered by rampant inflation

    The Egyptian traditions endangered by rampant inflation

    Multiday weddings, the bereaved feeding the poor, and households taking pride in having the best homemade bread are all becoming things of the past in rural Egypt as centuries-old traditions are squeezed by a punishing economic crisis.

    Up and down the country, more and more Egyptians – crushed under the weight of 33.9 percent annual inflation, as of March – are having to abandon once-cherished rituals of celebration and mourning.

    In the Nile Delta, grooms once threw elaborate bachelor parties before their weddings, erecting large traditional tents, hiring bands and butchering cattle to feed guests from far and wide.

    “Hardly anyone does it any more,” 33-year-old engineer Mohamed Shedid told AFP news agency from his home town of Quwesna in Menoufia, 70km (43 miles) north of Cairo.

    “We used to blame it on COVID, but then immediately afterwards everyone was hit by the economic crisis,” which has pushed the price of meat beyond the reach of most families.

    A groom dances with his father and guests at his wedding in Quwesna, Menoufia [Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters]

    Even before the current crisis – worsened by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, which destabilised crucial food imports – 30 percent of Egyptians were living under the poverty line, and the same number were vulnerable to joining them, according to the World Bank.

    Not in a party mood

    In the Nubian south at the other end of the country, “soaring costs mean our weddings and funerals aren’t what they once were”, said Omar Maghrabi, a 43-year-old Nubian language teacher.

    “Things are really hard, families need the money we once spent on these events just to keep households running.”

    In a year, the Egyptian pound has lost nearly half of its value, pushing consumer prices to more than double in the import-dependent country.

    Weddings in Nubian villages are no longer three-day, nine-meal affairs to which the entire town is invited.

    “A few months ago, there was a kind of agreement among the villages to make weddings more affordable,” Maghrabi told AFP.

    “Now the hosts only have to offer a light dinner” instead of the old festivities, which used to last “up to a week for the richest families”.

    top view of a wedding on the street
    Guests gather between corn fields for a wedding in Shamma, Menoufia [File: Mohamed el-Shahed/AFP]

    With everyone keeping an iron grip on their purse strings, brides have also grown less discerning when it comes to wedding rings.

    “Rings had to be a certain weight of gold before,” the teacher said, but they have now grown finer and lighter.

    With newlyweds unable to keep up with skyrocketing gold prices, the highest Muslim authority in Egypt said in March there was no religious objection to swapping gold for cheaper alternatives, namely silver.

    Communal grief, downsized

    In the tightly-knit agricultural villages of Upper Egypt, which extend southwards from Cairo along the narrow green strip of the Nile Valley, funerals are a communal affair.

    With each death, families rush to bring convoys of food trays to the deceased’s relatives, who quickly run out of storage space and call on neighbours and guests to help rid them of the feasts.

    But now, “it’s agreed that only the immediate family will cook for the bereaved”, former parliamentarian Mohamed Refaat Abdel Aal, 68, told AFP from his village of el-Adadiya in Qena, five hours south of Cairo.

    “Some families are also suggesting that we limit ourselves to just the funeral, and forgo the wake,” which at the bare minimum means serving drinks to guests offering condolences.

    a tuk-tuk (motorised rickshaw) drives along a road past a funeral memorial service in the northern suburb of Shubra
    A tuk-tuk drives past a funeral memorial service in Shubra, Cairo [Amir Makar/AFP]

    No commodity has been left undisturbed by price hikes, including coffee and – catastrophically for rural families who cherish their baking skills – flour.

    Egyptian baladi bread is a staple on every table in every village, town and megacity. In Upper Egypt, it was a source of pride for families always to make their own.

    “It used to be shameful for families in villages to go and buy bread from a bakery. It would mean the house had grown lazy and complacent,” Abdel Aal said.

    But with the cost of grain rising 70 percent in a year, he added that “everyone is lining up outside bakeries” run by the government.

    At least they can get subsidised bread there – even if it tastes nothing like what they would make at home.

    trays of freshly-baked bread at a bakery
    A young worker stacks trays of freshly-baked bread at a bakery in Cairo [Khaled Desouki/AFP]

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  • Deposit security through technology | Bank Automation News

    Deposit security through technology | Bank Automation News

    The fall of Silicon Valley Bank has bank clients looking to financial institutions for deposit security, and banks must have the technology to bring peace of mind to clients.  “The thing that really hurt SVB is … the depositors lost faith in the viability of the institution,” Will Robinson, chief executive at Encapture, told Bank […]

    Brian Stone

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  • ‘More freedom’: Why a Cameroonian man returned to Ukraine

    ‘More freedom’: Why a Cameroonian man returned to Ukraine

    Lviv, Ukraine – Nelly Nelson, a Cameroonian entrepreneur and English teacher, had not wanted to leave his adopted hometown of Lviv in western Ukraine when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of the country in February last year.

    “I was not that scared,” the 29-year-old recalls. “Where I am from, there is an expression: don’t run from what you don’t know.”

    Nelson, who was born and raised in the city of Buea, in southwest Cameroon, first came to Ukraine in late 2018 to visit his older sister who was studying at a medical university in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city in the northeast of the country. He initially found it “cold and bleak”, but a second visit the following year during the warmer months to Lviv, where his sister had moved for further studies, drastically changed his view of the country. It appeared much friendlier and warmer than on his first visit, and he decided to stay and look for work.

    “Lviv is the best city in Ukraine,” he says as he sips on a juice in one of the city’s trendy cafés. His warm, welcoming nature is immediately apparent as he politely places an order from the waitress in Ukrainian. “You can start a conversation with anyone. If you are lost, people will walk you to where you need to go.” He recalls once asking a middle-aged man for directions in Kharkiv. “He just avoided me, so I had to call a taxi.”

    In Lviv, Nelson began working as an online English tutor, earning roughly $700 a month, enough to lead a comfortable life. He also rented an apartment – near to his sister, her husband, and his three-year-old niece – from a friendly landlord, Roman, who would become a “father figure” to Nelson.

    In January 2022, he met his current girlfriend, a Ukrainian who had grown up near Lviv, on a dating app. Surrounded by people he cared about and with a regular income, he felt settled. He had found his new home.

    Nelson outside his apartment in a residential area situated in the hilly outskirts of Lviv, and standing in front of the Ford Sedan he travelled in to leave Ukraine [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    ‘Leave now!’

    Then, on February 14, 2022, the US closed its embassy in the capital, Kyiv. Nelson, who had been following the news closely, says he knew “this meant something was going to happen”.

    With more than 100,000 Russian troops amassed around Ukraine’s border and talk of a looming invasion, he paid Roman three months’ worth of rent in advance so he and his girlfriend were guaranteed a roof over their heads in the event of war and stocked up on essentials like water and canned food.

    Ten days later, on February 24, the invasion began. Throughout the day his sister received a series of anxiety-inducing calls from her friends in Kharkiv. They spoke of terrifying explosions and a mass exodus from the city as Russian troops laid siege to the surrounding areas.

    Nelson tried to convince her not to panic. Lviv was only 70km (43 miles) from the Polish border – if Russian troops came to the city, they would simply jump in their cars and drive to the border, he explained.

    But later that day, their father called and scolded him for planning to remain in the country. “Are you stupid? Leave now!” he said.

    “In our culture, you respect your elders, even if they are a day older. I have three siblings and am the youngest. That was that,” he explains.

    Nelson, his girlfriend, and two friends crammed into his red Ford sedan and set off for the border. “I only packed a few things, some clothes, my computer. I knew I would return,” he recalls.

    A photo of a very long line of cars on the left side of the road with cars moving on the right.
    On the left, a queue of cars leading to the Polish border in March 2022 [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    Fifteen kilometres (nine miles) from the border they arrived at the city of Yavoriv, home to a military base that would be destroyed by Russian missiles a few weeks later.

    There they met a traffic jam that snaked all the way up to the border and signalled what Nelson describes as “one of the most difficult situations in my life”.

    He recalls seeing parents hunched under the weight of enormous bags, their sleep-deprived children walking behind them, while others were carrying elderly relatives on their backs as they passed the seemingly never-ending line of cars. The queue would edge forward a few metres every few minutes. The constant stop-start was exhausting for Nelson who was driving, and they worried they would never reach the border. Some people who had given up hope of reaching the border left their vehicles abandoned by the side of the road.

    As he sat in the driver’s seat, Nelson spotted a heavily pregnant woman walking alongside her husband who was struggling to carry two heavy bags and their young son. He sprung out of the car, and told them they had space for the woman. The husband peered into the car. He was reluctant to trust four strangers but eventually warmed to Nelson’s friendly demeanour. The two men exchanged details as Nelson’s partner and the other passengers welcomed their guest into the car.

    Finally, after three days in the vehicle, they crossed the border. Their passenger was overjoyed to be reunited with her husband and child who had made it over by foot 24 hours earlier and expressed heartfelt gratitude to Nelson and his friends.

    A photo of the border crossing at Medyka in Poland with lots of people standing around with suitcases with a ship in the background and a couple of umbrellas.
    The border crossing at Medyka in Poland in March 2022 where Nelson and his partner were given SIM cards with free internet for a week [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    ‘What makes your life good?’

    Exhausted, the group set off for Krakow, Poland’s picturesque second-largest city, where Nelson’s friend, who was also an English tutor, had a student who had offered them a place to stay.

    After staying in Poland for a week, the group decided to move on, travelling through several countries, including Germany and Belgium, before eventually deciding to stop in Basel, Switzerland. Nelson had a friend in the city who could help them settle in. He also wanted to be close to his sister who had moved there from Ukraine as she felt it would be safe for her child.

    They spent about a week in a centre for refugees. Nelson describes the place as a “prison”, shaking his head as he recalls the experience. “You had to show ID constantly, before you went out, even when you would have breakfast, lunch or dinner.” He also says there were tensions as Syrian refugees expressed frustration that the “process for Ukrainian refugees was smoother than for other refugees escaping war”.

    After more than a week of processing their documents, Nelson and his girlfriend were housed in an apartment and provided roughly $400 dollars per month for expenses.

    Although he is grateful for this set-up, he says that it was not enough for life in Switzerland which has one of the most expensive costs of living in Europe. He realised he would need to find another job just to cover basic expenses – his previous income from online tutoring would not be enough if they planned to stay for the long term. So, he applied for jobs for almost two months, using vital savings on expensive internet data, and struggling to adapt to a new, strict system with many jobs requiring a special permit and fluency in German. He barely received a response, leaving him feeling disheartened and dejected. Nelson, who is fluent in French, applied to the State Secretariat for Migration to be transferred to a French-speaking canton but his request was rejected.

    One day in late April, he finally snapped.

    “There comes a point when you have to think what makes your life good? Is it really just safety? I know people who are in Germany now, they are safe but they are not happy,” he explains.

    “In Ukraine, I felt there is more freedom,” he says. “You can work and live more comfortably with your salary. In the rest of Europe, people always struggle with endless taxes, mortgages, internet prices, etc.”

    A photo of Nelly Nelson from the side, driving a car.
    For Nelson, heading back to Lviv, his adopted city, was a matter of having ‘more freedom’ [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    ‘Going home’

    He spoke to his partner, sister, brother-in-law and niece and explained how he felt and that he wanted to return to Ukraine. Everyone felt the same way. They missed home and work had been difficult to come by. With Lviv remaining relatively safe, they decided together to return home and the five of them set off on the 14-hour drive to the border. On the way, he called Roman and told him he wasn’t happy in Switzerland and would like to extend his rental contract. “No problem, just bring me some Swiss chocolates!” came the reply.

    Nelson laughs as he recalls the moment he handed his Cameroonian passport to a stern-faced Ukrainian border guard who, for many stress-filled weeks, had been stamping the passports of foreign residents fleeing the country. Now, faced with a foreign resident voluntarily returning to wartime Ukraine, she did not know how to react.

    “She was so confused and asked in English, ‘Where are you going?’” Nelson recalls.

    Nelson, who speaks conversational Ukrainian, replied that he was “going home”.

    She continued to ask him for more details, until his three-old niece who was standing behind him blurted out “Slava Ukraini”, a national salute once banned in the Soviet Union, which means “Glory to Ukraine”.

    The border guard’s expression softened and she began to speak to the young girl in Ukrainian and chat with the family. By the time they crossed back into Ukraine, the guard had exchanged telephone details with Nelson’s sister and invited his niece to meet her daughter.

    A photo of Nelly Nelson in a parking lot laughing with someone.
    Nelson shares a joke with his neighbour in Lviv, Ukraine [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    ‘They enjoy life more’

    Nelson is now happy to be settled back into life in Ukraine where he has set up a flourishing side business developing websites for an eclectic array of clients, including a falconry business in Dubai.

    His experience in Basel has made him appreciate the quality of life he enjoys in Lviv even more.

    “Switzerland is not lively,” Nelson reflects. “You have so many rules, you get fines everywhere you park. People just work and sleep. It’s the same routine. Here [in Lviv] people want to have fun, they enjoy life more.”

    Nelson says other Africans, many of whom were studying there, are returning to Ukraine.

    For now, he is not scared for his family’s safety in Lviv.

    “War is just politics,” he says wistfully, citing his home country’s past conflict with Nigeria over the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula, ceded to Cameroon in 2008, as one example. “I don’t know that much about Ukrainian or Russian history, but I know Russia is trying to take Ukrainian territory. This is very similar to what Nigeria was doing to Cameroon,” he says.

    He believes that Russia’s President Vladimir Putin is “too proud” to give up and that the war, and the political deadlock surrounding it, look set to continue for some time. However, he has no intention of leaving his home again. “I just have two countries in my life now. Cameroon and Ukraine,” he says firmly.

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  • Bitter taste of kiwis: Indian fruit pickers in Italy allege abuse

    Bitter taste of kiwis: Indian fruit pickers in Italy allege abuse

    Editor’s note: In collaboration with Danwatch, IRPI Media and The Wire, this investigation took place in Italy, India and Denmark – and was made possible with the support of the EU Journalism Fund.

    The 12 armed men appeared just before sunrise, as darkness hung thick over the remote farm outside Borgo Sabotino, south of Rome.

    It was March 17, 2017, a date Balbir Singh will never forget.

    “I was really scared. The farm owners shouted for me to run away. But I did not,” said Singh, a decision he is happy to have made.

    The 12 men were Italian police in plain clothes, and kindly asked him to come along.

    “My clothes were filthy. My state was dreadful. I had deep wounds on my hands and feet, and my nails were bleeding. But it was a big day. In the minutes before we left, I saw that the police had arrested the farm owner and his wife.”

    Singh, a former English teacher and longtime farm worker who hails from the Punjab region known as India’s breadbasket, said he suffered six years of exploitation in Italy, citing violence, death threats, theft, lack of pay, hunger and deprivation.

    Like other Indian workers in Italy, Singh arrived and could not understand the Italian language, had little money and no knowledge of his rights.

    For long periods, Singh had no food. He lived on the stale bread he found in the farming family’s rubbish bin or leftovers they had thrown out to feed pigs and chickens.

    He lived in an old caravan without gas, electricity or heating.

    No one heard his cry for help, until one day, the Italian sociologist and researcher Marco Omizzolo was notified by a fellow Indian worker – and asked local police to intervene.

    Balbir Singh reflects on his treatment on an Italian kiwi farm [Stefania Prandi/Al Jazeera]

    Singh is one of the few migrant workers who has taken his former employer to court.

    He sought justice for the humiliations to which he was subjected and wanted raise awareness of the conditions of migrants.

    In 2018, he became the first immigrant in Italy to be granted a residence permit “for reasons of justice”.

    The trial is continuing.

    Farming’green gold’ plantations

    During the past 30 years, Indian workers – mostly from Punjab – have come to Agro Pontino, an area south of Rome, but few dare to speak out, especially to foreigners and journalists, about the abuse they have endured.

    According to Omizzolo, of the 30,000 Indian residents in Italy, most are employed as labourers in the Italian fruit-and-vegetable sector.

    Agro Pontino is one of the country’s most productive growing regions and its flagship products include kiwis, locally known as “green gold”.

    Between July and December, many Indian labourers work in kiwi plantations.

    Italy produces 320,000 tonnes of kiwis annually, mostly in Lazio, and exports to 50 countries, making it the main European producer and the third-largest in the world after China and New Zealand.

    It is a market worth more than 400 million euros ($431m), led by Zespri, a multinational company.

    Zespri is best known for the yellow-fleshed variety – one of their patents – the SunGold.

    From the fields of small and medium-sized farms, the kiwis are taken to the cooperatives’ large warehouses, where they are packed and branded with the Zespri logo, before being marketed throughout Europe.

    The rules for harvesting Zespri kiwis are strict; cotton gloves are mandatory and delicate, precise manoeuvres are required to preserve the fruit.

    Workers described being forced to work in the fields seven days a week, 10-11 hours a day, and are paid no more than six euros ($6.50) an hour. Adequate toilets and taking breaks are out of reach for many, while several workers told Al Jazeera that they were not regularly given compulsory protective equipment such as gloves and masks.

    In addition, the impermanence of the jobs make them seem perilous – without a regular work contract, it is not possible to renew a residence permit and live legally in Italy.

    To get to Italy, workers pay up to 15,000 euros ($16,200) to Indian intermediaries and incur in debts in India.

    Many take on loans from acquaintances and relatives, or sell land, cows, and family jewellery.

    But staying at home is not an option – the monthly salary of those who do manual labour in Punjab is usually between 80 and 120 euros ($87 to $120). In Italy, an Indian labourer receives an average 863 euros ($934) per month.

    Italy is the main European kiwi producer and the third-largest in the world after China and New Zealand [Stefania Prandi/Al Jazeera]

    Gurjinder, whose name has been changed to protect his identity, worked for three years for a company that sells kiwis to Zespri.

    With a low voice, hunched shoulders, and tearful eyes, he remembered when a supervisor who scolded him, shouting as soon as he stopped working for a few moments.

    “She insulted me and threatened to beat me up.”

    In the fields, the supervisor filmed him three times with her mobile phone as he stopped to drink and something got into his eyes.

    The videos served as “proof” of his lack of efficiency and were handed over to the head of the company in an episode seen as a “warning” to other workers.

    When asked why he did not leave the company immediately, Gurjinder held his head in his gnarled hands and burst into tears.

    “I had no choice, I had to earn for my four children and my wife. They stayed in India, I haven’t seen them for 13 years.”

    Zespri told Al Jazeera that while most employers in the kiwifruit industry “care for their people, a small minority may be failing to do so”.

    The company added, “Any exploitation of workers is unacceptable and we are committed to holding those people involved to account, and to continuing to improve our compliance frameworks to help us do so. We take the allegations made extremely seriously and have commenced an investigation into this, including how we can best support affected workers.”

    It works with more than 1,200 growers in Italy who are required to have the Global Gap GRASP (Global Risk Assessment On Social Practice) certificate, an independent and international certification system that outlines criteria for the safety, health, and welfare of workers, Zespri said.

    Its suppliers who package the product are registered with Sedex, a third-party certification body that monitors workers’ conditions for Italian suppliers of SunGold Kiwifruit.

    Zespri said it has contacted both third-party certification bodies and its suppliers “to make them aware of the alleged unfair practices” alleged in this investigation and “to try to obtain more information” about them.

    At present, there are no formal complaints against the consortia that sell kiwis to Zespri, or against the multinational company itself.

    Back in India for a visit to attend his son’s wedding, Singh said he now feels like a “free soul”.

    “I am waiting for my compensation and the closure of the case. Then I want to take my wife to Italy, where I have decided to build a house. I can’t wait for good days to come,” he said.

    “Life is a struggle and one must fight, but I would never want even the worst of my enemies to face the problems I faced. Even today, when I remember that time, I get goosebumps.”

    Workers who farm Italy’s fruit plantations live in makeshift homes with little comfort [Stefania Prandi/Al Jazeera]

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  • Will ChatGPT take your job — and millions of others?

    Will ChatGPT take your job — and millions of others?

    It is the whiz-kid of the artificial intelligence (AI) world that others are trying to emulate.

    In the four months since its November 30 launch, ChatGPT has shown the ability to perform a wide range of tasks, from cracking the bar and medical licensing exams in the United States to writing emails and songs, building apps, and more.

    The fact that it is freely available for public use has opened up a plethora of opportunities previously thought beyond the realm of possibility of AI — even though the app’s makers have faced criticism for opacity around the programming they have used to train it.

    Developed by OpenAI, a company backed by Microsoft, ChatGPT became the fastest-growing consumer app in the world two months after its launch, with more than 100 million users by January.

    That early success has prompted Microsoft to integrate its Bing search engine and Edge browser with the technology running ChatGPT in the hope of improving the experience of users. Last week, Google launched a similar AI app, known as Bard, after unveiling a preview of the platform in February.

    Also in mid-March, China’s tech giant Baidu announced its answer to the US app — a platform called Ernie. Both Bard and Ernie have suffered from early stumbles as the AI arms race heats up.

    Meanwhile, OpenAI has launched GPT-4, an upgraded version of the technology behind ChatGPT. The new platform can analyse images and more extensive texts of up to 25,000 words, create a website from a hand-drawn sketch and recreate games within seconds.

    Companies are now rushing to launch products built entirely on ChatGPT in sectors ranging from customer service to financial analytics.

    At a time when the International Labour Organization already estimates that 208 million people will be unemployed in 2023, will this new wave of AI dramatically increase joblessness? Which jobs would these tools potentially replace? What is the future of work?

    The short answer: ChatGPT and its rival AI models could dramatically disrupt the labour market, including replacing routine jobs in some sectors. But overall, the technology could enhance productivity and complement human workers, instead of leading to unemployment, experts told Al Jazeera.

    Teacher Donnie Piercey, using ChatGPT in an exercise in class at Stonewall Elementary in Lexington, Kentucky, US, on Monday, February 6, 2023 [Timothy D Easley/AP Photo]

    Hey, teacher, (don’t) leave that app alone

    What makes ChatGPT and other similar platforms fundamentally different from previous generations of AI is the GPT — which stands for generative pre-trained transformer — bit.

    Simply put, these tools use a technique known as deep learning to produce and analyse text, answer questions and perform other language and speech-related tasks in ways that can mimic human beings better than ever before.

    “The impact of the generative-AI on the labour market will be really substantial,” Laura Nurski, fellow and lead of the Future of Work team at Brussels-based think tank Bruegel, told Al Jazeera. “It is being widely used as an improved search engine for gathering information, for rough drafting of texts, and for producing text in a specific writing style. This is really applicable to a lot of jobs, and in pretty much every sector.”

    Yet the very nature of these AI platforms and their focus on tasks related to  language interpretation means that some professions will be affected more than others, Nurski said.

    A new study by researchers at Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania and New York University has found that telemarketers and teachers could be most affected.

    The researchers used a benchmark known as the AI Occupational Exposure to evaluate how much services like ChatGPT could disrupt different professions. They concluded that even within the education sector, post-secondary teachers of languages and literature, history, law, philosophy, religion, sociology, political science and psychology would be most affected.

    Yet that disruption does not necessarily mean that AI will take away millions of teaching jobs, the researchers behind that study and other analysts point out. These new tools could instead help teachers in some of their tasks — from assisting them in catching cheating and plagiarism to aiding them in developing teaching materials. “It will certainly automate some tasks but it doesn’t mean that the AI can do all your jobs,” Nurski said.

    Meanwhile, AI’s limitations might keep a check on its ability to meaningfully replace humans. ChatGPT has been producing errors alongside its successes — a fact acknowledged by its creators who feel the technology is still “flawed and limited”. For instance, it has failed at basic math calculations and logic.

    To be sure, some jobs could become redundant.

    “Studies that have looked at the displacement effect have found that routine jobs, such as language translators or phone operators, will be easier to be displaced by the AI,” Georgios Petropoulos, a researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Stanford University who studies the implications of new technologies on labour markets, told Al Jazeera.

    But AI also has the “potential to create jobs,” Nurski said. Indeed, the World Economic Forum concluded in October 2020 that while AI would likely take away 85 million jobs globally by 2025, it would also generate 97 million new jobs in fields ranging from big data and machine learning to information security and digital marketing.

    “What can be said with certainty is that it will change the way we work,” Nurski said.

    Workers complete an electric car body on the assembly line of the Volkswagen plant in Zwickau, Germany on February 25, 2020.
    Workers complete an electric car body on the assembly line of the Volkswagen plant in Zwickau, Germany, on February 25, 2020. The arrival of automobiles once threatened jobs related to horses — but eventually ended up creating more jobs. AI could do the same, according to experts [Jens Meyer/AP]

    Making work more efficient

    That change will show, in part, in improved productivity, according to economists and tech analysts. There is already early evidence of this.

    A new study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, conducted by two researchers at the MIT showed that ChatGPT substantially increased productivity for college-educated professionals performing mid-level professional writing tasks.

    The researchers asked 444 writers, consultants and human resource professionals to write press releases, short reports, analysis plans, and delicate emails. Half of them used ChatGPT. The study found that low-skilled workers in particular benefitted from the tool, which helped reduce the time they took — and shrunk the difference in quality between their work and more skilled workers.

    That is no surprise to Petropoulos. His work has shown that in past industrial revolutions too, the displacement of jobs might have dominated in the short run, but in the long term, when the markets adapt to the automation shock, increased productivity actually sets the stage for more employment opportunities.

    For instance, the arrival of automobiles reduced the importance of those whose employment depended on horses. But within a few years, the automobile industry’s success meant a demand for more and more cars — and the new jobs that came as a result.

    In addition to education, the study that examined the jobs likely to be most affected by tools like ChatGPT identified legal services and securities, commodities, and investments as sectors that could be disrupted. Morgan Stanley, one of the world’s biggest investment management firms, is already developing its own ChatGPT-based AI tool.

    Yet as with teachers, that effect on productivity could also simply mean that AI takes over some of the more mundane tasks in affected professions rather than replacing a workforce wholesale, experts said.

    AI, they said, will not be able to replace non-routine and essential jobs, such as a lawyer who has to argue in a court, or the sensitive role of a pharmacist who has to sell prescribed drugs.

    “Although you could use the assistance of a tool like ChatGPT to draft legal notes, a lawyer will still have to go to the court to defend their client,” Petropoulos said.

    Ultimately, the economy — and individual companies — will need a balance, integrating human and AI labour, he said.

    As he pointed out, even Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk, not known to concede errors easily, “admitted some years ago that the excessive automation of Tesla was a mistake and how human labour needs to complement technology”.

    And there are professions where AI might struggle to have any meaningful effect at all.

    Teachers are seen behind a laptop during a workshop on ChatGpt bot organised for by the School Media Service of the Public education of the Swiss canton of Geneva, on February 1, 2023.
    A workshop on ChatGPT bot organised for teachers by the School Media Service of the Public education of the Swiss canton of Geneva, on February 1, 2023 [Fabrice COFFRINI/AFP]

    No silver bullet

    The study that examined industries most likely to be affected by ChatGPT determined that jobs requiring physical labour, such as textile workers, brick masons and carpenters, will largely remain unaffected.

    Most experts believe high-skilled roles are also unlikely to see as much disruption as middle-skill jobs — where expertise can at least somewhat be emulated by AI.

    “Machine learning has not yet reached a level where it will necessarily replace the top-skilled jobs,” Guy Michaels, associate professor of economics at the London School of Economics, told Al Jazeera. “We are witnessing replacements for workers in the middle rung of the skill distribution.”

    Nurski of Brugels said workers whose industries are affected might also be able to upgrade their skills, including by understanding and adapting to using tools such as ChatGPT.

    Yet for all of its promise — and threat of disruption — AI’s ultimate success or failure might be determined not by technology but, ironically, by people.

    At the end of the day, the impact of language model tools like ChatGPT will depend upon how consumers respond to services delivered by these platforms instead of humans, Michaels said. “Consumers may not find true value in machine-generated contents,” he said.

    In 2020, a team of researchers in the US and China surveyed 670 online shoppers about their experience with AI customer service. Most said that they liked the fact that AI could respond to their questions more quickly, round-the-clock and more objectively. But a majority also felt humans were more likely to give them more accurate and comprehensive information.

    Another study, also in 2020, sampled hotel customers in Australia. It concluded that the customers preferred dealing with human beings.

    In other words, while AI-fuelled change is upon us, what that might look like is unclear.

    “We have seen other technological breakthroughs in the past ranging from the invention of the engine to the introduction of computers at workplaces. We are still working, it’s just that the nature of our job has changed,” Nurski said. “Even though technology can be disruptive, we are not looking at the end of work.”

    “This is not the first technological change nor will it be the last.”

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  • ‘Dance like there is no tomorrow’: Ukraine’s wartime music scene

    ‘Dance like there is no tomorrow’: Ukraine’s wartime music scene

    Listen to this story:

    Lviv and Kyiv, Ukraine – Boghdan Sulanov, the fast-talking vocalist of a heavy metal rock band called YAD, traverses a crammed backstage area. He edges past a guitarist who has just finished a high-octane, adrenaline-fuelled set, leaving him drenched in sweat, and reaches a small table piled with audio equipment, tea and biscuits. From underneath the table, he fishes out a rucksack with the clothes he will soon wear onstage.

    The concert hall, an intimate venue in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, is covered in music posters and on a night in early February, it is packed with several hundred rock enthusiasts eagerly awaiting the next performance. The atmosphere is electric, and Sulanov is excited.

    “Young people didn’t appreciate music in the same way before the war,” says the 33-year-old, referring to Russia’s full-scale invasion of his native Ukraine on February 24, 2022.

    “Our band always sing about our problems, and right now, it is that we want to survive,” says Sulanov, as he takes in the frenetic backstage atmosphere.

    Boghdan Sulanov, the lead signer of YAD, says his band these days sings about wanting to survive the war [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    During the weekdays, Sulanov works as a software developer, but in his free time, he’s a rock star. “We all need to work, but we also need energy, and this can come from music!” he says, before politely excusing himself to prepare for his set.

    On stage, Bohdana Nykyforchyn, a 35-year-old singer with shoulder-length dyed red hair, screams into a microphone while her bandmate pounds away on a drum set.

    Nykyforchyn transports the room through a range of emotions, alternating between soft melodic tones and more aggressive, fast-paced vocals. At one point, her voice cracks, and she looks like she might cry. After her set, she explains why. “I am eight months pregnant, and my dream was to climb this stage,” she says. “When the second song came on, I felt all my emotions bubble up. My hormones are everywhere!”

    Bohdana Nykyforchyn, who is eight months pregnant, performs in Lviv
    Bohdana Nykyforchyn, who is eight months pregnant, performs in Lviv [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]

    Backstage, Sulanov has transitioned into his on-stage persona, dressed all in white. His eyes peer through a balaclava with the words “not nice” emblazoned on it.

    The members of YAD run out onto the stage, and the audience, ranging from fresh-faced teenagers to grey-haired middle-aged rockers, erupts in excitement. The people standing in the front row scream out the words to their songs, including a young boy who looks to be about 10 years old. The guitarist briefly stops strutting around the stage when he spots the boy and gives him a heartfelt thumbs-up.

    Marichka Chichkova, the event organiser who is helping out at the bar, admits that although heavy metal is not her preferred music genre, she is happy to see all the people enjoying themselves. She looks up at the stage and remarks, “It’s also a release for musicians; this is very important, too”.

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  • Inside look: Truist Innovation and Technology Center | Bank Automation News

    Inside look: Truist Innovation and Technology Center | Bank Automation News

    Stepping off the elevator into the Truist Innovation and Technology Center, I was greeted by a futuristic space equipped with virtual-reality simulators, a 3D-printing area, countless workflow- and idea-filled whiteboards and even a self-service, fully digital snack shop. The Charlotte, N.C.-based ITC, located inside the $548 billion bank’s headquarters, brings together its digital, innovation, developer, […]

    Whitney McDonald

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  • Interested in booking a campsite in Alberta’s mountains? Parks Canada has some tips  | Globalnews.ca

    Interested in booking a campsite in Alberta’s mountains? Parks Canada has some tips | Globalnews.ca

    Parks Canada has begun opening up bookings for national parks in Alberta using its updated online reservation system.

    “The updated platform that we’re running with functioned very well and as expected,” said Pamela Clark, who runs visitor experience for Jasper National Park. “The queuing, the site selection and the payment process operated very smoothly, even with the increased volumes that we experienced.”

    Demand for campsites continues to increase and has been going up significantly for the last three or four years.

    “When we launched (the Parks Canada online reservation system) back in 2015, we had about 1,800 reservations on launch day,” Clark said of Jasper. “Now, fast-forward to 2023, we’re over 20,000 reservations on launch day.


    Whistlers Campground in Jasper National Park summer 2022.


    Supplied: Parks Canada

    “People know we have a reservation system. They understand it’s the best way of ensuring that they have a site that meets their needs,” she said.

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    “What we’ve seen in the last four or five years, when it really started to pick up in 2019 and 2020 — even the use of our national parks — is people are gravitating towards the outdoor opportunities and just the natural escapes.”

    Read more:

    Jasper opens backcountry camping reservations Monday

    For Jasper National Park, reservations for front-country (serviced) sites launched March 16. Bookings for back-country sites launched March 20.

    “When users logged in at 8 a.m. last Thursday morning, there were about over 22,000 people in our waiting room but we were able to manage those volumes, and the average wait time was about 30 minutes,” Clark said.


    Click to play video: 'Parks Canada’s new reservation system opens March 13'


    Parks Canada’s new reservation system opens March 13


    The phased approach to site bookings reduces overall volume and helps the reservation site operate more smoothly. Clark said Parks Canada uncoupled backcountry reservations for Banff and Jasper because the combined volumes created issues in the booking system.

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    “The older system really wasn’t able to keep up with the volumes that we’ve been experiencing, especially in the last three or four years, volumes have increased substantially,” Clark said. “Even from last year to this year, we experienced a volume increase for reservations of over 6,000.”


    Click to play video: 'Banff and Lake Louise encouraging visitors to take transit to the mountains this summer'


    Banff and Lake Louise encouraging visitors to take transit to the mountains this summer


    For Banff National Park, reservations for front-country sites launch on Thursday, March 23. Back-country bookings opened Wednesday morning.

    As other areas open up, Clark has some tips for people looking to book a spot.

    “They should get onto our website — Parks Canada reservations — and look through all the tips on there. They should open up a profile if they don’t have one yet or update their profile if they’ve been on the system before. And they should get acquainted with the areas they want to be camping in.

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    “Have a plan. Have a couple backup plans, that’s really important.”

    Jasper National Park has more than 2,000 campsites, the second-largest inventory of campgrounds managed under one park in North America, Clark said. Together, the mountain national parks have about 5,000 campsites. Despite an “abundant” inventory, there’s just so much demand in July and August.


    Whistlers Campground in Jasper National Park summer 2022.


    Supplied: Parks Canada

    Serviced, front-country campsites in Jasper National Park for dates in those peak months get snapped up within hours.

    “After our launch day, there really is no availability in July and August, but there’s still lots of availability in May, June, September for campers who are looking and can be a little more flexible in their departure dates and aren’t looking for serviced sites.

    “At this point, for service sites, you’re looking at October. There’s really no availability in serviced sites from May until September,” Clark said. “They’re really popular.”

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    Read more:

    Environmental groups welcome Parks Canada buyout of Jasper Park backcountry lodges

    If you were unable to book a campsite in the area you want at the time you were hoping for, Parks Canada suggests looking at less-peak times or staying just outside the national parks.

    “There are also campgrounds on the outskirts of the (Jasper National) park — in Mt Robson Provincial Park, also in the Hinton area.”

    Alberta Parks opens provincial campsite bookings 90 days before the scheduled stay. For instance, on March 22, reservations would be open for a late June camping trip.

    “And, if you really have these dates in mind, you can check back to see if there are cancellations because from time to time there are, and you might be the fortunate one who gets a cancellation.”


    Click to play video: 'Outdoor blogger reacts to Moraine Lake parking ban'


    Outdoor blogger reacts to Moraine Lake parking ban


    For the more adventurous camper, backcountry sites are an option too.

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    “There’s still availability along some of the lesser-known backcountry trails,” Clark said. “The ones that quickly get booked up are the iconic classics — so Skyline and Maligne — there is no availability left for the summer. But there is availability in almost all the other trail areas that we manage.”

    Read more:

    ‘Loved to death’: Balancing recreation and conservation in Alberta’s mountain parks

    And one more great tip for anyone visiting a park in Alberta?

    “When they’re coming to a national park, they take on the stewardship of these areas, they follow the special rules, they put the garbage where it belongs and they follow that wildlife-watching etiquette,” Clark said.

    “It’s really super important that we all share in taking care of these wild spaces.”

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Emily Mertz

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  • Alberta art exhibit uses virtual reality to explore who we are as digital beings  | Globalnews.ca

    Alberta art exhibit uses virtual reality to explore who we are as digital beings | Globalnews.ca

    Why are people interested in virtual reality and what can it tell us about who we are and what we might become in a digital world?

    “As an artist, it’s a question I’ve been asking for decades,” said artist and media arts professor Marilene Oliver. “Now with virtual reality, when we really are completely immersed in the digital, I wanted to ask that question.”

    In addition to her teaching work, Oliver is the co-curator of an art exhibit at the University of Alberta’s Fine Arts Building gallery called Know Thyself As a Virtual Reality.

    “It’s based on a Greek maxim: Nosce te Ipsum, which was used in the Temple of Apollo in Delphi. In that time, it was: ‘To know your place within a social hierarchy.’

    “Later you find it in anatomical engravings, where it’s: ‘To know thyself as a divine work of God.’ And now, the more we’re becoming digital, the more we’re creating these huge data sets of everything we do, we now need to know ourselves, I believe, as digital objects and subjects,” Oliver explained. “This is what we are called to do now to understand ourselves.”

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    Read more:

    Ottawa unveils new rules for use of personal data, AI in privacy bill

    There are seven artworks that use virtual reality to explore different aspects of data and the digital aspects of human life. The works brought together many different disciplines including fine art, radiology, engineering, music, digital humanities and computing science.

    Oliver explains one focus of the exhibit as: “Can we find a way to visually communicate what we’re becoming as digital beings?”

    That’s where the virtual reality comes in. Donning a headset and hand controls, a person is immersed in data — the information, how it looks, sounds and feels — and can interact with it.

    “In one of the projects that I was part of, called My Data Body, we try to create a body which you can take apart and dissect,” Oliver explained.

    “It has many different data bodies in it. It has my MRI scan, all my social media data, my Google data, banking data, my data cookies and it’s put it in kind of this vessel that you can then take apart in an attempt to try and see it, to try and hold it, because how else can we see all this data that we’re generating?”


    Click to play video: 'New exhibit ‘transformé’ hits Montreal’s Palais des congrès'


    New exhibit ‘transformé’ hits Montreal’s Palais des congrès


    Know Thyself artworks

    Where are You? 

    Story continues below advertisement

    “aAron Munson has made a work called Where Are You? and that makes us think about how social media is changing the way our brain works and where we place our attention,” Oliver said.

    Munson compared fMRI scans of their brain: neutral, after meditating and after using social media. People can use the VR headset to experience the three different brain scans.

    Read more:

    The dark side of social media: What Canada is — and isn’t — doing about it

    a vessel, a body, a home

    “Chelsey Campbell has made a piece that is very peaceful and restful,” Oliver said. “It makes us think about how much work we constantly feel we need to be doing all the time. She stands against that and has created a very quiet space where you should just lay and enjoy the beauty of the room.”

    In the VR experience, the user is transported to a domestic bedroom space.


    Click to play video: 'How lines between information sharing and feeding anxiety are blurring during the pandemic'


    How lines between information sharing and feeding anxiety are blurring during the pandemic


    Ancestry & Me

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    “We have another piece by Lisa Mayes, which actually isn’t with an MRI scan, but with her DNA data,” Oliver said.

    “She sent off a sample to Ancestry and found out about her family history. She talks about how the scientific data recording somehow legitimized all the conversations that had been had in her family about her ancestral roots, which come from Ireland, from France, Scotland and Ghana.”

    Read more:

    Are ancestry DNA tests private? What you’re giving away with a tube of spit

    The Nearest Window

    “We have another artist who is presenting bodies that aren’t normally present in digital works, which are MTurk workers,” Oliver said.

    Artist Dana Dal Bo looks at Mechanical Turk (MTurk) crowdsourcing.

    “If you don’t know, Amazon has a service which allows you to employ, for a very little amount, this invisible labour,” Oliver explained. “People do surveys, they do a lot of AI processing … labelling data sets.”

    The artist asked MTurk’s anonymous workers to take a picture of what they could see out of their nearest window and send it to her.

    A mirror with no reflection

    “We have the artist Nicholas Hertz, who’s made a work which is really about the experience of being scanned and the sense of feeling that data is taken from you and then not recognized, not really recognizing the results of those data,” Oliver said.

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    Using VR, audience members can experience MR scans, the sounds and feelings they produce and the images they create.

    Hertz also questions just how “non-invasive” this procedure is and what it’s like to see yourself reflected in this way.


    Click to play video: 'Social Media Hygiene to Manage Stress'


    Social Media Hygiene to Manage Stress


    “We tried to create an exhibition which has many different perspectives,” Oliver said. “Maybe it makes people think: ‘OK, what would I do? How would I treat my data if I were making a VR artwork?”

    She hopes the art makes people think personally and relationally.

    “I hope firstly that they will think about all the bodies of data they have and how responsible they are for it and also how they interact with others.”

    Know Thyself as a Virtual Reality

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    FAB Gallery, University of Alberta

    8807 112 Street NW

    Feb. 21 – March 18, 2023

    Tuesday – Friday: 12 p.m. – 5 p.m.

    Saturday: 2 p.m. – 5 p.m.

    Free 


    Click to play video: 'Virtual reality technology allows long-term care residents to experience anything and everything their heart desires'


    Virtual reality technology allows long-term care residents to experience anything and everything their heart desires


    Emily Mertz

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  • Photos: The lasting scars and pain of the war in Darfur

    Photos: The lasting scars and pain of the war in Darfur

    Twenty years ago, conflict broke out in the western Sudanese state of Darfur as non-Arab tribes rose up against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum.

    After Omar al-Bashir came to power through a military coup backed by the National Islamic Front in 1989, tensions grew as non-Arab tribes accused the government of marginalising and underfunding them.

    In 2002, the Darfur Liberation Front (later called the Sudan Liberation Movement) was formed, and on February 26, 2003, it claimed responsibility for an attack on Golo in the Jebel Marra area of Darfur. The group was joined by the Justice and Equality Movement, and a rebellion was launched.

    Khartoum’s response was to support and arm local Arab militia known as the Janjaweed to support its forces in fighting the African tribes. The Janjaweed were later absorbed into Sudan’s official forces by al-Bashir.

    Hundreds of thousands of people were killed, and more than two million were displaced, both internally and over the border in neighbouring Chad.

    While a peace agreement was signed in 2020, the people of Darfur still have a long, painful journey ahead of them to heal from the conflict.

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