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Majdal Shams, home to the Druze, perches uneasily at the edge of war

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 12:05
Druze community in the Golan Heights grapples with identity under Israeli occupation.

Fury vs Usyk 2: Fight time, undercard, ring walk, prize money, how to watch

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:48
Al Jazeera's guide to the heavyweight boxing rematch as Oleksandr Usyk defends three world titles against Tyson Fury.

Mayotte toll still unknown as French territory reels from Chido devastation

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:38
Authorities fear hundreds or more could have been killed as number of victims unclear several says after cyclone.

Parents and pupils protests over staff-cuts plan

Education - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:24
The trust running two high schools is proposing to cut up to 30 staff due to "financial challenges".

Video: Mangione charged with ‘act of terrorism’

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:24
Luigi Mangione, the man suspected of killing health insurance CEO Brian Thompson has been charged with murder.

What will happen to al-Assad’s Captagon empire now?

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:22
The trade of the illegal drug has flourished over the past decade in Syria. What happens to it now?

We are part of nature – not apart from it | All Hail

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:00
Anthropocentrism - why we presume to control the world, trying to bend it to our every will and convenience.

EU research funds flow to Israel despite outrage over Gaza war

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 09:59
Israeli organisations, some linked to the military, have received more than $250m since the war on Gaza began.

Antetokounmpo leads Bucks to NBA Cup tournament title over Thunder

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 09:37
A triple-double by Giannis Antetokounmpo allowed Milwaukee to defeat the favoured Oklahoma City Thunder by 16 points.

Gaza ceasefire talks heat up again amid deadly Israeli attacks

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 09:18
Israel has said it will maintain military control over Gaza just like in the occupied West Bank even if there is a deal.

Search continues for missing after DRC boat capsizing kills at least 25

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:56
Dozens of people are missing after an overcrowded boat capsized in central DRC on Fimi river.

Russia detains suspect over murder of General Igor Kirillov

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:35
Investigative Committee says 29-year-old Uzbek national suspected of carrying out attack on instructions of Ukraine.

Mary Jane Veloso, Filipina nearly executed in Indonesia, arrives home

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:18
Mother of two, who became a poster child for anti-trafficking groups, now awaits potential pardon in a Manila prison.

India’s Ashwin retires from international cricket after Brisbane Test draw

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 07:37
Veteran spinner calls time after rain forces an early end to the third Test, with the five-match series tied 1-1.

Trump sues Des Moines Register newspaper, claiming ‘election interference’

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 05:53
US president-elect's lawsuit comes days after reaching defamation settlement with ABC News.

Vanuatu earthquake death toll rises to 14 as rescuers search for survivors

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 03:38
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs says one-third of population affected by 7.3-magnitude quake.

Rashford says he’s ready for new challenge amid Man United exit rumours

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 02:42
Marcus Rashford responds to being dropped in Manchester derby by admitting Old Trafford exit could loom large.

Real Madrid’s Vinicius Junior and Barcelona’s Bonmati win FIFA Best awards

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 02:34
Real Madrid, Brazil forward Vinicius Junior and Barcelona midfielder Aitana Bonmati claim top FIFA Best awards.

Congo files criminal complaints against Apple in Europe over conflict minerals

Technology - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 01:50
Paris — The Democratic Republic of Congo has filed criminal complaints against Apple subsidiaries in France and Belgium, accusing the tech firm of using conflict minerals in its supply chain, lawyers for the Congolese government told Reuters.  Congo is a major source of tin, tantalum and tungsten, so-called 3T minerals used in computers and mobile phones. But some artisanal mines are run by armed groups involved in massacres of civilians, mass rapes, looting and other crimes, according to U.N. experts and human rights groups.  Apple does not directly source primary minerals and says it audits suppliers, publishes findings and funds bodies that seek to improve mineral traceability.  Apple last year said it had "no reasonable basis for concluding" its products contain illegally exported minerals from conflict-hit zones. The tech giant has insisted it carefully verifies the origin of materials in its output.  Its 2023 filing on conflict minerals to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said none of the smelters or refiners of 3T minerals or gold in its supply chain had financed or benefited armed groups in Congo or neighboring countries.  But international lawyers representing Congo argue that Apple uses minerals pillaged from Congo and laundered through international supply chains, which they say renders the firm complicit in crimes taking place in Congo.  In parallel complaints filed to the Paris prosecutor's office and to a Belgian investigating magistrate's office on Monday, Congo accuses local subsidiaries Apple France, Apple Retail France and Apple Retail Belgium of a range of offenses.  These include covering up war crimes and the laundering of tainted minerals, handling stolen goods, and carrying out deceptive commercial practices to assure consumers supply chains are clean.  "It is clear that the Apple group, Apple France and Apple Retail France know very well that their minerals supply chain relies on systemic wrongdoing," says the French complaint, after citing U.N. and rights reports on conflict in east Congo.  Belgium had a particular moral duty to act because looting of Congo's resources began during the 19th-century colonial rule of its King Leopold II, Congo's Belgian lawyer Christophe Marchand said.  "It is incumbent on Belgium to help Congo in its effort to use judicial means to end the pillaging," he said.  The complaints, prepared by the lawyers on behalf of Congo's justice minister, make allegations not just against the local subsidiaries but against the Apple group as a whole.  France and Belgium were chosen because of their perceived strong emphasis on corporate accountability. Judicial authorities in both nations will decide whether to investigate the complaints further and bring criminal charges.  In an unrelated case in March, a U.S. federal court rejected an attempt by private plaintiffs to hold Apple, Google, Tesla, Dell and Microsoft accountable for what the plaintiffs described as their dependence on child labor in Congolese cobalt mines.  Minerals fuel violence  Since the 1990s, Congo's mining heartlands in the east have been devastated by waves of fighting between armed groups, some backed by neighboring Rwanda, and the Congolese military.  Millions of civilians have died and been displaced.  Competition for minerals is one of the main drivers of conflict as armed groups sustain themselves and buy weapons with the proceeds of exports, often smuggled via Rwanda, according to U.N. experts and human rights organizations.  Rwanda denies benefiting from the trade, dismissing the allegations as unfounded.  Among the appendices to Congo's legal complaint in France was a statement issued by the U.S. State Department in July, expressing concerns about the role of the illicit trade in minerals from Congo, including tantalum, in financing conflict.  The statement was a response to requests from the private sector for the U.S. government to clarify potential risks associated with manufacturing products using minerals extracted, transported or exported from eastern Congo, Rwanda and Uganda.  Congo's complaints focus on ITSCI, a metals industry-funded monitoring and certification scheme designed to help companies perform due diligence on suppliers of 3T minerals exported from Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda.  Congo's lawyers argue that ITSCI has been discredited, including by the Responsible Minerals Initiative (RMI) of which Apple is a member, and that Apple nevertheless uses ITSCI as a fig leaf to falsely present its supply chain as clean.  The RMI, whose members include more than 500 companies, announced in 2022 it was removing ITSCI from its list of approved traceability schemes.  In July, it said it was prolonging the suspension until at least 2026, saying ITSCI had not provided field observations from high-risk sites or explained how it was responding to an escalation of violence in North Kivu province, which borders Rwanda and is a key 3T mining area.  ITSCI criticized the RMI's own processes and defended its work in Congo as reliable. It has also rejected allegations in a 2022 report by campaigning group Global Witness entitled "The ITSCI Laundromat," cited in Congo's legal complaint in France, that it was complicit in the false labeling of minerals from conflict zones as coming from mines located in peaceful areas.  Apple mentioned ITSCI five times in its 2023 filing on conflict minerals. The filing also made multiple mentions of the RMI, in which Apple said it had continued active participation and leadership but did not mention the RMI's ditching of ITSCI.  In its July statement, the U.S. State Department said flaws in traceability schemes have not garnered sufficient engagement and attention to lead to changes needed.  Robert Amsterdam, a U.S.-based lawyer for Congo, said the French and Belgian complaints were the first criminal complaints by the Congolese state against a major tech company, describing them as a "first salvo" only.  Some information for this report came from Agence France-Presse. 

US lawmakers urge Biden administration to halt offensive weapons to Israel

Around The Globe - Wed, 12/18/2024 - 01:45
Twenty Democrats call for upholding US laws that prohibit arming countries that block humanitarian assistance.

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