More

    World Meteorological Organisation recognizes new Arctic temperature record of 38⁰C

    A temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) in the Russian town of Verkhoyansk on 20 June 2020 has been recognized as a new Arctic temperature record by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). The temperature befits the Mediterranean more than the Arctic.

    A temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) in the Russian town of Verkhoyansk on 20 June 2020 has been recognized as a new Arctic temperature record by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

    The temperature, more befitting the Mediterranean than the Arctic, was measured at a meteorological observing station during an exceptional and prolonged Siberian heatwave last year. Average temperatures over Arctic Siberia reached as high as 10 °C above normal for much of last summer, fueling devastating fires, driving massive sea ice loss and playing a major role in 2020 being one of the three warmest years on record.

    “This new Arctic record is one of a series of observations reported to the WMO Archive of Weather and Climate Extremes that sound the alarm bells about our changing climate. In 2020, there was also a new temperature record (18.3°C) for the Antarctic continent,” said WMO Secretary-General Prof. Petteri Taalas.

    “WMO investigators are currently seeking to verify temperature readings of 54.4°C recorded in both 2020 and 2021 in the world’s hottest place, Death Valley in California, and to validate a new reported European temperature record of 48.8°C in the Italian island of Sicily this summer. The WMO Archive of Weather and Climate Extremes has never had so many ongoing simultaneous investigations,” said Prof. Taalas.

    Both Polar regions are now represented

    The Arctic is among the fastest warming regions in the world and is heating more than twice the global average. The extreme temperature and ongoing climate change prompted a WMO panel of experts to add a new climate category “highest recorded temperature at or north of 66.5⁰, the Arctic Circle” to its international Archive of Weather and Climate Extremes.

    The Archive of Weather and Climate Extremes includes the world’s highest and lowest temperatures, rainfall, heaviest hailstone, longest dry period, maximum gust of wind, longest lightning flash and weather-related mortalities.

    The creation of the new category means that both Polar regions are now represented. Since 2007, the WMO has listed temperature extremes for the Antarctic region (polar regions at or south of 60⁰S, corresponding to the land and ice shelf areas included in the Antarctic Treaty.

    Verkhoyansk is about 115 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle and the meteorological station has been observing temperatures since 1885. It is located in the northern part of Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), is in a region of Eastern Siberia which has an extreme very harsh dry continental climate (very cold winter and hot summer).

    “Fundamentally, this investigation highlights the increasing temperatures occurring for a climatically important region of the world. Through continued monitoring and assessment of temperature extremes, we can remain knowledgeable about the changes occurring in this critical region of the world, the polar Arctic,” said Professor Randall Cerveny, Rapporteur of Climate and Weather Extremes for WMO.

    Climate Snapshots

    As with all WMO evaluations of extremes (e.g., temperature, pressure, wind, etc.), the extremes presented before the WMO for adjudication are ‘snapshots’ of our current climate. It is possible, indeed likely, that greater extremes will occur in the Arctic region in the future. When such observations are made, new WMO evaluation committees will be formed to verify the status of such observations as extremes.

    “The record is clearly indicative of warming across Siberia,” said the noted UK climatologist and committee member Dr Phil Jones.

    “Verifying records of this type is important in having a reliable base of evidence as to how our climate’s most extreme extremes are changing,” said Dr Blair Trewin from Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology and another member of the evaluation committee.

    Detailed verification

    The committee of experts conducted an in-depth analysis of available data and metadata, including the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts interim (ERA5) reanalysis.

    They determined that observations taken at Verkhoyansk were consistent with surrounding stations and that the equipment, siting and logistics were certified by the Yakutia Department of Roshydromet. Weather conditions – with a very strong upper-level ridge sitting over the region – were also consistent with the record temperature.

    Since this was a new climate category for the WMO Archive, the committee requested that climate data be checked for other possible past Arctic extremes of comparable value.
    Historical research established from the national records of Arctic countries that there were no known temperatures of 38 °C or above at any Arctic locations. Specifically, after rigorous analysis the committee concluded that no past observations within Canada exceeded that value.

    Pakistan’s ghost villages limp back to peace and life

    About 38 villages in the Kurram district of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were razed to the ground during the sectarian violence in 2007. Now, a few villagers are daring to return to their homes, more than a decade after the villagers fled fearing for their lives.

    Wasim Sajjad

    People on Kurram’s streets say that the city’s weather is as unpredictable as the mind of a trigger-happy gunman. The fear of a renewed vortex of sectarian killings is a reality in the small city in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region of Pakistan, bordering Afghanistan.

    On 6 April 2007, a gunman opened fire on a gathering in Parachinar town of Upper Kurram using an automatic weapon, leaving more than 40 people dead and more than 150 people wounded. Military strategists called the sectarian feud the Kurram Agency War.

    The humanitarian impact of that sectarian strife numbed the world. 38 villages were razed. First it was Bilyamin. Munda was the next. And then Muzaffar Kot, followed by Makhizai, Sharqi Makhizai, Upper Mandori, Haji Abid Ullah, Makai, Khewas, Selozan Tangai, Mandori….. 38 villages in all. All village people fled. These were called Kurram’s ghost villages.

    Story of vengeance in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

    It was a story of vengeance. The Shias lived in fear where the Sunnis dominated. It was the other way around in other places, where the Shias outnumbered the Sunnis. Nobody wanted to return to the villages. They feared that anything could spark off a new spiral of violence.

    Amid the war, around 100,000 people fled Kurram. The figures dished out by community leaders reflects the turmoil the strife has left behind. Shia elders peg the count of their kinmen killed at around 4,500. They don’t count the “others”. The Sunnis put the number at 2000 deaths and 3000 injuries on their side.

    Courageous first steps towards peace in Kurram’s ghost villages

    Today, these uninhabited hamlets, till recently known as Kurram’s 38 ghost villages, are slowly beginning to buzz with life as a handful of their residents have summoned the courage to return to their villages.

    Yet, the overwhelming ghost of the past persists. Those who have returned to the villages have taken strong measures to guard their villages from the rival groups. Everyone is armed. Pashkas (fortifications in the local language) made of stone boulders cemented with clay have come up. In some places, there are walls of concrete. People take turns to watch over the walls and guard against strangers.

    “The biggest loss of this war is the hate among the friends and locals who have lived together for ages,” says local journalist Nabi Jan. “Friends who lived, studied and played together in a multi-ethnic society have become enemies. In the best case, they feel concerned.”

    Nabi says there trust deficit. “People fear the other and try to avoid approaching rival villages. Small scale skirmishes happen and people don’t hesitate pulling out their guns.

    Daunting road to peace

    The road to peace in Kurram’s once ghost villages is a daunting one. Haji Abid Ullah, one of the few who dared to return to his village says it is a life of hurdles and fear. He says he didn’t have another option as his displaced family stared at poverty. He still has the option to return to Peshawar in the event of violence flaring up once again.

    Haji Abid Ullah says that when he returned to nothing. “There was nothing left of the village — even the trees were gone,” he says. There were only 15 ramshackle structures he saw upon his return.

    Those who have returned to have had sleepless nights, fearing a fresh war would disturb their lives again. Haji wants to see his children playing, fighting, dancing and going to school with the children of the rival community as he did in his childhood. But he thinks that is impossible.

    Wasim Sajjad is a journalist based in Peshawar, Pakistan.

    Are cops ready for Jharkhand’s new anti-mob lynching law?

    Four years since the court’s judgement, Jharkhand is only the fourth state (after Manipur, Rajasthan and West Bengal) to have passed a legislation to combat mob-lynching and violence.

    On 21 December, lawmakers in Jharkhand passed The Jharkhand (Prevention of Mob Violence and Mob Lynching) Bill, 2021 into a law. The opposition BJP opposed the law. The credit for the legislation in the state, of course, goes to Chief Minister Hemant Soren.

    The law follows on an important judgement of the Supreme Court of India in the Tehseen S. Poonawalla v. Union of India. To reproduce parts of the judgement, the court observed, “Lynching is an affront to the rule of law and to the exalted values of the Constitution itself. We may say without any fear of contradiction that lynching by unruly mobs and barbaric violence arising out of incitement and instigation cannot be allowed to become the order of the day.”

    The apex court directed the home ministry to initiate work in co-ordination with state governments for sensitising law enforcement agencies and by involving all stakeholders to identify the measures for prevention of mob violence and lynching.

    Hate crimes as a product of intolerance

    The court also recommended legislatures to make a special law to deal with the offence of lynching and provide adequate punishment for the same.

    Lawmakers, it seems, have turned a deaf ear to what the supreme court said. Almost four years since the court’s judgement, Jharkhand is only the fourth state (after Manipur, Rajasthan and West Bengal) to have passed a legislation to combat mob-lynching and violence.

    The apex court had propounded guidelines for the State to deal with mob-lynching and vigilante violence. It emphasised on the preventative part of dealing with mob-lynchings when it said, “Hate crimes as a product of intolerance, ideological dominance and prejudice ought not to be tolerated; lest it results in a reign of terror. Extra judicial elements and non-State actors cannot be allowed to take the place of law or the law enforcing agency. A fabricated identity with bigoted approach sans acceptance of plurality and diversity results in provocative sentiments and display of reactionary retributive attitude transforming itself into dehumanisation of human beings.”

    A diligent state police hold the key

    State governments have been directed to designate a senior police officer as a nodal officer to prevent mob violence and lynching by procuring intelligence reports about people who are likely to commit such crimes or are involved in spreading hate speeches, making provocative statements and spreading fake news.

    The Jharkhand law, does justice to the guidelines issued by the Supreme Court. The Act incriminates any act of violence on grounds of religion, race, sex, place of birth, language, eating habits, sexual orientation and political affiliation. It further makes it a statutory duty of the Police to prevent lynchings (Section 6 of the Act).

    The Act provides for heavy punishment to offenders – including rigorous imprisonment for life with a fine of up to Rs. 20 lakhs for causing death by an act of lynching. Even causing hurt by an act of lynching can be punishable for up to three years (and a fine in excess of Rs. One lakh).

    The law also makes it the duty of all hospitals to provide free first aid and medical treatment and provides for compensation by the state government to all victims of mob lynching and violence.

    In toto, the legislation provides for preventive, remedial and punitive measures as directed by the apex court. What remains to be seen now is the effective enforcement and implementation of the law, and the diligence of the state police to fulfil their duties as laid down in the Legislation.

    Is climate change really SouthAsia’s raw nerve?

    Talk of climate change in SouthAsia has been pending since the last SAARC summit held in Kathmandu in 2014. SAARC nations have not met since then. The gains made over years of hard work towards climate diplomacy in the region seem to have been lost.

    At his meeting with the SAARC Secretary General Esala Ruwan Weerakoon in Islamabad on December 24, Pakistan Prime Minister exploited the inertia on regional climate talks to the hilt. Speaking of the need to discuss climate change as a block, Khan said he hoped to be able to host the next SAARC summit in Pakistan.

    In 2008, the SAARC Environment Ministers Dhaka Declaration on Climate Change included a three-year action plan that urged the international community to promote partnership and provide additional finance to address climate change.

    The 25th year of SAARC concluded with the 2010 Thimphu Declaration on Climate Change. The document set an ambitious goal for SouthAsia to lead the world in furthering renewable energy, cutting carbon emissions, and reducing poverty while strengthening resilience to climate change.

    The 2014 SAARC summit had member countries’ commitment to work together against climate change. But the 2016 summit, planned to be hosted by Pakistan, was postponed indefinitely due to friction between India and Pakistan following the Uri attack. This has also brought dialogue on climate change in the region to a stand-still. Bangladesh, Bhutan and Afghanistan had also declined to participate in the Islamabad meet.

    Little has moved since then. There have been ministerial level discussions but no statements have been made. The gains made over years of hard work towards climate diplomacy in the region seems lost.

    A climate crisis in the making

    Mountains are warming up to 0.7°C faster than the global average. Glaciers are unable to take the heat any longer and the threat of glacial lake outburst floods is a twenty-first century reality. Yet, a regional approach has been missing even though all SAARC member states face climate change risks. Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, and Nepal share river basins.

    The World Bank’s ‘Climate Change Action Plan 2021-2025 — South Asia Roadmap’ released days before the Glasgow Climate Change Conference put the number of vulnerable people living in climate change hot-spots in SouthAsia at over 800 million.

    It said that by 2030, the annual economic losses from climate change in the region will average USD 160 billion and that, by 2050, South Asia could see climate migrants totaling over 40 million.

    Bangladeshi environmentalist and academician, Ahmad Kamruzzaman Majumder feels that the need for South Asian solidarity to combat the effects of climate change is now more urgent than ever.

    “SouthAsian countries have not been able to sit together, discuss common issues, and come up with a unified vision,” Majumder told the Nepali Times newspaper. “Doing so would make it easier to pressure developed countries in the international forum.”

    “Climate issues have been overshadowed by geopolitical issues,” the newspaper quoted Majumdar as saying. “Pakistan also does not seem interested in holding talks with India.”

    A report by the environment advocacy group, Germanwatch in early 2021 said that Bangladesh is the seventh-most climate crisis impacted country in the world. It is followed by Pakistan at the eighth position and Nepal at the tenth position.

    Neither did the SAARC raise the climate issue as a single block at the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26).

    UN Special Envoy calls for New Year’s ceasefire in Myanmar

    The UN Special Envoy on Myanmar has appealed for a New Year’s ceasefire following weeks of escalating violence in the country.

    United Nations Special Envoy on Myanmar, Noeleen Heyzer has said in a statement that said she is deeply concerned by increased violence in Kayin state and other areas, which has displaced thousands of civilians, many of whom have fled the country for protection and assistance.

    Demonstrations have been taking place in Myanmar ever since the military seized power in February, and security forces have responded with bloody crackdowns.

    Silence the guns

    Some opponents of the junta have taken up arms, some of whom have linked up with ethnic minority groups fighting for self-determination, according to media reports.

    “The people of Myanmar have already suffered tremendously and the socio-economic and humanitarian situation has been compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Ms. Heyzer.

    “Those inflicting suffering on its own people need to silence their guns and protect people in time of great need.  The future of Myanmar’s children counts on this”.

    Seek a peaceful solution

    The Special Envoy echoed the UN Security Council’s call for all parties to exercise utmost restraint and seek a peaceful solution in the interests of the people.

    The Association of Southeast Asian States (ASEAN) has also appealed for an immediate cessation of the violence, she recalled.

    Ms. Heyzer urged all parties to act in the greater interest of the nation and to fully respect their obligations under international law to protect civilians, ensure free movement towards safety, and allow humanitarian access to those in need.

    “To this end, she appeals for a New Year’s ceasefire throughout Myanmar,” the statement said.

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres appointed Ms. Heyzer as his Special Envoy on Myanmar back in October. She succeeded Christine Shraner Burgener, who had served since April 2018.

    Consult all stakeholders

    Since beginning her assignment earlier this month, Ms. Heyzer said she has been actively consulting all stakeholders with a view to supporting a Myanmar-led process.

    “The Special Envoy, supported by her Office, will engage directly with and listen carefully to all those affected by the ongoing crisis that has become multi-faced with serious regional implications”, the statement said.

    “In this respect, the Special Envoy will continue to focus on mobilizing coherent international support grounded on regional unity”.

    UN humanitarian chief calls for probe into ‘grievous’ attack on civilians
    Meanwhile, authorities in Myanmar must investigate a deadly attack against civilians in Kayah state, the UN humanitarian affairs chief Martin Griffiths said in a statement on Sunday.

    Mr. Griffiths said he was “horrified” by reports that at least 35 people, including at least one child, were killed in the attack, which occurred on Friday. They reportedly were forced from their vehicles, killed and burned.

    Two humanitarian workers from the aid organization Save the Children remain missing, he added, having been caught up in the violence. Their private vehicle was attacked and burned.

    “I condemn this grievous incident and all attacks against civilians throughout the country, which are prohibited under international humanitarian law,” said Mr. Griffiths.

    He urged the government to immediately launch “a thorough and transparent investigation into the incident so that perpetrators can be swiftly brought to justice.”

    Protect civilians from harm

    Mr. Griffiths also called on the Myanmar army, as well as armed groups, to take all measures to protect civilians from harm.

    “Millions of people in Myanmar remain in dire need of humanitarian support,” he said, adding that the UN and its humanitarian partners remain committed to providing help throughout the country.

    The UN continues to monitor developments in Myanmar in the wake of the military coup in February.

    Earlier this month, the UN human rights office, OHCHR, said it was appalled by the alarming escalation of grave human rights abuses.

    Spokesperson Rupert Colville said serious violations are “reported daily of the rights to life, liberty and security of person, the prohibition against torture, the right to a fair trial, and freedom of expression.”

    SouthAsia leads with the highest burden of tuberculosis

    WHO’s 2021 Global TB Report reveals that years of efforts made to prevent and control TB have been reversed in the wake of tackling COVID-19 as tuberculosis deaths rise for the first time in more than a decade. SouthAsian countries have fared badly.

    A study on the quality of tuberculosis care in urban India, led by the World Bank between 2014 and 2017, suggested that about two-thirds of India’s 2.75 million new tuberculosis patients were treated at private health facilities every year. The grim pointer to the dearth of public-funded medical care accompanied yet another revealing number: only 35 per cent of these patients were provided the correct treatment.

    Nothing has improved in the three years gone past.

    A majority of TB patients continue to receive wrong treatment. People are not being diagnosed timely; patients are prescribed the wrong drugs; many are dying; and new strains of drug resistant tuberculosis bacteria are playing havoc. The public health system, in disarray, or worse, in a shambles, remains the record-keeper of the dead: illustrating clearly how, with all attention diverted to COVID-19 in the past year, TB is taking a heavier toll than ever before.

    But the government continues to celebrate the private sector. Former Union Health Minister, Dr Harsh Vardhan, actually put in a word of appreciation in his foreword message accompanying the India TB Report 2021. “The private sector is a critical partner in the fight against TB and has worked tremendously in provision of high-quality people-centred care,” his message reads.

    In fact, the India TB Report 2021 admits that the National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme is challenged by discrepancies in human resource staffing. District level vacancies in some states are as high as 30 per cent. “The situation is worse where vacancies among different cadre of staff range from 12 per cent to 75 per cent,” it says.

    Double whammy

    COVID-19 dealt the next whammy. The diagnosis and treatment of life-threatening diseases like Tuberculosis, HIV AIDS, and Malaria took a backseat as global healthcare resources and intelligentsia were engaged in generating a COVID-19 response, according to the World Health Organisation’s 2021 Global TB Report.

    Globally, tuberculosis deaths have risen for the first time in more than a decade. Experts have conveniently blamed this rise on the COVID-19 pandemic. WHO report does not criticise governments, particularly the government of India, for neglecting its public health care. It does not say that governments, like India’s, or Indonesia’s, or the Philippines or China’s could have done more, especially since the annual report has consistently pointed to the need to do more.

    WHO’s report this year puts the onus of the record number of tuberculosis deaths of fewer people getting diagnosed or receiving TB prevention services. The number of newly diagnosed TB patients and those reported to national governments fell from 7.1 million in 2019 to 5.8 million in 2020. The maximum number of new TB cases reported in 2020 occurred in the WHO South-East Asian Region, with over 43 per cent of the new cases.

    SouthAsia home to most people living with TB

    India led all countries with a 41 per cent drop in TB notification between 2019 and 2020, way ahead of Indonesia (14 per cent), the Philippines (12 per cent), and China (8 per cent).

    As per the 2021 list, the highest disease burden lay mainly in 30 countries that accounted for over 86 per cent cases. South-Asian countries like India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Nepal are among the top 20 in terms of the absolute number of incidents. With an average decline of 23 per cent in TB case finding and enrollment in treatment, Nepal has also entered the list of the worst-hit countries.

    Besides a dip in diagnostics, hindrance in access to facilities due to lockdowns and reallocation of financial and human resources to cope with the aftermath of COVID-19 and vaccinations, are also responsible for the burgeoning cases.

    It could get worse

    WHO’s Global TB Programme has monitored the impact of the pandemic on TB services and provided guidance and support since the declaration of COVID-19 as a public health emergency of international concern.

    Projections by the global health organisation suggest the count of people developing tuberculosis and dying from the disease could be much higher in 2021 and 2022. The bleak prognosis raises the curtains on what can get worse.

    “This report confirms our fears that the disruption of essential health services due to the pandemic could start to unravel years of progress against tuberculosis,” WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a press statement put out by the organisation.

    Be prepared for outbreak of new pandemics, UN chief urges global community

    As the Omicorn strain of COVID-19 spreads across the globe, the UN chief António Guterres has urged the global community to be prepared for the outbreak of new pandemics.

    The COVID-19 pandemic will not be the last for humankind and the global community needs to be prepared for new challenges, UN Secretary-General António Guterres has stated.

    “COVID-19 will not be the last pandemic humanity will face,” the UN chief said on his Twitter account. “As we respond to this health crisis, we need to prepare for the next one.”

    “On this International Day of Epidemic Preparedness, let’s give this issue the focus, attention, and investment it deserves,” he added.

    COVID-19 continues to demonstrate how quickly “an infectious disease can sweep across the world”, pushing health systems to the brink and upending daily life for all of humanity, Guterres said.

    “It also revealed our failure to learn the lessons of recent health emergencies like SARS, avian influenza, Zika, Ebola and others”, he said.

    “And it reminded us that the world remains woefully unprepared to stop localized outbreaks from spilling across borders, and spiraling into a global pandemic”.

    Building global solidarity

    Noting that infectious diseases remain “a clear and present danger to every country”, Guterres maintained COVID-19 would not be the last pandemic for humanity.
    Even as the world responds to this health crisis, he spelled out the need to prepare for the next one.

    “This means scaling-up investments in better monitoring, early detection and rapid response plans in every country — especially the most vulnerable”, he said.

    “It means strengthening primary health care at the local level to prevent collapse… ensuring equitable access to lifesaving interventions, like vaccines for all people and…achieving Universal Health Coverage”,

    The Secretary-General upheld that by building global solidarity, every country would have a fighting chance “to stop infectious diseases in their tracks”.

    Cause for hope

    Earlier in the month, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, welcomed the decision of a special session of the World Health Assembly (WHA) – the UN agency’s top decision-making body – to develop a new global accord on pandemic prevention and response.

    While acknowledging a long road ahead, he described the decision as “cause for celebration, and cause for hope”.

    “There are still differences of opinion about what a new accord could or should contain”, he said, but the consensus has proven that “differences can be overcome, and common ground can be found”, the WHO chief said.

    Meanwhile, as cases of the new Omicron variant continue to spread like wildfire, 70 per cent of COVID-19 vaccines have been distributed to the world’s ten largest economies, and the poorest countries have received just 0.8 per cent, according to the UN, calling it “not only unjust” but also a threat to the entire planet.

    To end this cycle, the Organization underscored that at least 70 per cent of the population in every country must be inoculated, which the UN vaccine strategy aims to achieve by mid-2022.

    Although this will require at least 11 billion vaccine doses, it is doable so long as sufficient resources are put into distribution.

    “An outbreak anywhere is a potential pandemic everywhere”, the Secretary-General added.

    Spreading like wildfire

    Meanwhile, as cases of the new Omicron variant continue to spread like wildfire, 70 per cent of COVID-19 vaccines have been distributed to the world’s ten largest economies, and the poorest countries have received just 0.8 per cent, according to the UN, calling it “not only unjust” but also a threat to the entire planet.

    To end this cycle, the Organization underscored that at least 70 per cent of the population in every country must be inoculated, which the UN vaccine strategy aims to achieve by mid-2022.

    Although this will require at least 11 billion vaccine doses, it is doable so long as sufficient resources are put into distribution.

    “An outbreak anywhere is a potential pandemic everywhere”, said the Secretary-General.

    Chinese grotto temples to forge closer links with counterparts in Pakistan

    In what is evidently part and parcel of China’s Belt-and-Road initiative, China’s National Cultural Heritage Administration has sought closer links between Chinese grotto temples and their overseas counterparts along the ancient Silk Road.

    China’s National Cultural Heritage Administration said that closer links would be forged between Chinese grotto temples and their overseas counterparts along the ancient Silk Road.

    Earlier this year, the national administration signed cooperation agreements with its counterparts in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran to improve cross-border exchanges on the conservation of grotto temples. (China’s Belt-and-Road Initiative pivots largely on these countries in Asia.)

    “This would improve people-to-people connectivity,” Director of China National Administration Li Qun projected while addressing a conference, China Daily reported.

    A total of 635 grotto temples have been newly found across China in the first nationwide investigation on the status of these ancient sites.

    According to the study launched in September 2020, there are 5,986 grotto temple sites in the country.

    In the list, 288 sites have been registered as national-level key heritage sites, and 417 were under provincial-level protection. The investigation was conducted by over 2,400 researchers in 28 provincial-level regions.

    Silk road connection

    Grotto temples, which are religious sites carved into mountains or rock, were introduced to China along the ancient Silk Road in the 3rd century, and gradually became a key form of Chinese Buddhist art in the following millennium.

    In 2019 and 2020 on various occasions, Chinese President Xi Jinping emphasized the importance of the study and preservation of such sites to demonstrate their philosophy and values, as well as the history of Sino-foreign cultural communication.

    In October last year, China’s State Council released the country’s first national-level guidance for the protection of grotto temples. A blueprint to protect and study grotto temples in China during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) was released by the National Cultural Heritage Administration earlier this month.

    According to Li Qun, 14 provincial-level administrative regions had also drafted their own detailed plans for the protection of grotto temples since 2020. A group of new institutions and academies overseeing the sites had been newly established in provinces such as Sichuan and Shaanxi.

    The wide geographic distribution of the sites, many of which are in remote areas, and their age make the efforts to protect them all the more challenging.

    For example, in Sichuan, over one-third of the province’s grotto temples face the potential hazard of unstable rocky foundations.

    Lack of care

    A lack of facilities and personnel taking care of and studying these sites is another problem. In Sichuan, research academies have been established to deal with just five sites, and only 112 grotto temples across the country have dedicated security facilities.

    In most provinces, no more than 10 percent of their grotto temples are regularly supervised by teams of professionals.

    As many as 3,361 grotto temples, over the half of the total, have not been registered as any level of key protected units.

    Li vowed that the protection and conservation of the medium- and small-scale grottoes will be a focus during the 14th Five-Year Plan period. A national-level database to oversee the registered sites is also due to go online.

    In addition, protection of these sites can also be part of the broader effort to revitalize rural areas through tourism.

    Bangladesh’s Indigenous Forest Dwellers Fear Losing Ancestral Land as Officials Grapple with Land Grabs

    Many indigenous families were evicted from the Madhupur Forest during the 2007 to 2008 period when a caretaker government was in office.

    By Rafiqul Islam / IPS

    When the Bangladesh Forest Department felled Basanti Rema’s banana orchard, Rema, a Garo indigenous forest-dweller of Madhupur Forest, felt she was living a nightmare.

    Rema, from Pegmari village in Madhupur, Tangail district, had cultivated the banana plants on half an acre in the Madhupur Forest. But the Forest Department claimed that the land on which the bananas were cultivated belonged to the department.

    Rema’s story is not an unusual one as in the past the Garo and other indigenous minorities have been evicted from their ancestral land because of a lack of land rights.

    “Land dispute is the main problem as the government declared 9,145 acres of land of Madhupur Forest as ‘absolute reserved forest’, putting our living in our ancestral land at risk,” Jonajetra, a member of the Garo community living inside the forest, told IPS.

    He said the Forest Department often filed false cases against the indigenous people for allegedly felling trees. Even children as young as seven and eight years old were being sued

    In a gazette notification from Feb.15, 2016, the Ministry of Environment and Forests declared the land of Madhupur Forest as a forest reserve under Section 20 of the Forest Act-1927.

    “The Garo people have been facing various problems in the forest. The Forest Department frequently files false cases against us,” Eugin Nokrek, president of Joyenshahi Adivasi Unnayan Parishad, an indigenous peoples’ organisation, told IPS.

    “If we want to build a new house and dismantle our old one, the department obstructs our works. If we want to plant banana or pineapple orchards on our fallow land, we get objections from the Forest Department,” Nokrek said.

    Fear of eviction

    Despite living in the Madhupur Forest for generations, the indigenous Garo and other minorities have no right to the forest land. And drives by the Forest Department to recover land that has been lost to agriculture and land grabbing, has instilled a fear among indigenous community of losing their ancestral land.

    “We are on the verge of eviction from our ancestral land as the government has declared the Madhupur Forest as an ‘absolute reserved one’. We can be evicted from the forest anytime,” said Nokrek, who is also a member of the indigenous Garo minority.

    Decades ago, Madhupur Garh, in Tangail district, used to have 122,876 acres of traditional shal forest. It was broken down as follows:

    45,565 acres in Madhupur,
    47,220 acres in Sakhipur,
    21,855 acres in Ghatail,
    7,576 acres in Mirzapur and,
    669 acres in Kalihati upazila.
    Of these, 55,476 acres were reserved forests.

    According to officials at the Tangail Forest Department, about 80,000 acres of the forest have already disappeared because of indiscriminate tree felling and forest grabbing. The process of land grabbing continues, officials said.

    Tangail Divisional Forest Officer Dr. Mohammad Jahirul Haque said the department would continue its drives to recover forest land from grabbers. However, he assured IPS that there was no plan to evict the indigenous people from the forest and they would remain on their ancestral land.

    According to Sanjeeb Drong, General Secretary of the Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples’ Forum, legally the Madhupur Forest is under the jurisdiction of the Forest Department but the indigenous people claim it as their ancestral land and had evidence to this effect.

    Drong said the Madhupur Forest was home to the Garo, Barman and Koch ethnic minorities and they had been living there for generations.

    Keeping a promise

    While the country’s current government is considered friendly to the rights of the indigenous population — the 2008 election manifesto of ruling Awami League announced that once elected it would form an independent commission to resolve the land disputes of indigenous minorities — a fear of the actions of past governments still haunt the indigenous community here.

    Nokrek said many indigenous families were evicted from the Madhupur Forest during the 2007 to 2008 period when a caretaker government was in office. Nokrek was concerned if there was a change in power, a new, controversial government could evict them.

    “We are the forest dwellers and we demand legal rights to our land where we have been living for generations. We want legal recognition of our ancestral land so that nobody can evict us,” Nokrek said.

    “If we have legal recognition, we will get compensation once the government want to acquire our ancestral land for greater interest,” he added.

    Land owners are compensated when their land is acquired for government projects. But, the Garo and other indigenous minorities cannot receive compensation as they have no legal proof of ownership of the land.

    “The long-dispute over the land right of ethnic minorities is yet to be resolved… the government has not formed the commission yet. The policymakers should take decisions on how to give the ethnic people’s rights to their ancestral land,” Drong said.

    In 1956, the then Pakistan government declared the forest a national park and evicted indigenous people to acquire the forest land. And, upon Bangladesh’s independence in 1971, the Madhupur Forest was declared a national forest or reserved forest.

    “Although Garo people had long been living in the forest, the land lords did not give land rights to them after the East Bengal State Acquisition and Tenancy Act was passed in 1950. That is why they lost their rights to their ancestral land,” Drong told IPS.

    Shrinking Shal Forest thanks to Land Grabs

    “The majority portion of the Madhupur Forest has already been grabbed by influential people and local encroachers,” Drong pointed out.

    Nokrek said the Forest Department was planting Acacia saplings, instead of traditional shal trees, under the social afforestation programme. “If any such project is implemented, the Forest Department, politicians and influential people find business there,” he said.

    Noting that due to the pressure of an increasing population, the forest area was dwindling day by day, the indigenous leader said in recent years, factories and industries were established on forest land through the falsification of documents.

    Divisional Forest Officer Haque said there was a total of 122,000 acres of traditional shal forest in Madhupur Garh, of which a vast area was occupied by local grabbers and influential people.

    The Forest Department has so far recovered about 19,000 acres of grabbed forest land, he said.

    As the forest is shrinking fast in Madhupur Garh, the forest official said, the government has taken a bigger initiative to restore the traditional shal forest and the fallow forest land will be brought under green coverage with the planting of new shal saplings.

     

    This piece has been sourced from Inter Press Service

    Public health emergencies are our past, our present, and we will face them again

    Never before has the need for a localised approach to crises been so evident.

    Jagan Chapagain

    As we end this year, I would like to pay tribute to the brave and invaluable contributions of frontline responders. For the past two years, they have helped to detect and slow the spread of COVID-19, to treat and support those most affected, and dispel myths and rumours about the virus, vaccines and the wider response. They continue to support our communities worldwide. While some literally gave their lives to keep others safe, governments struggled, and are still struggling, to pull together a global coordinated and inclusive response.

    Never before has the need for a localized approach to crises been so evident, but it cannot fall on the shoulders of local responders alone. The international community can, and must, do better by them. Unique opportunities to put communities at the centre of the response are laid before us in 2022, from the upcoming White House COVID-19 summit and the launch of Global Vax to the reconvening of Member States to agree on an international instrument to strengthen preparedness and response to pandemics. We urge decision-makers to strengthen recognition of, and support to, community engagement and feedback mechanisms, community health systems and community surveillance and preparedness programs.

    Public health emergencies are our past, our present, and we will face them again. Based on the IFRC’s years of experience in responding to health crises around the world, and on our network’s mandate to assist Governments with legal preparedness for disasters and public health emergencies, we stand ready to continue to support communities and respond to their needs.

    Jagan Chapagain is the Secretary General of the International Federation of Red Cross