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A museum of Islamic civilizations has opened in Turkey’s largest mosque

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has opened the Museum of Islamic Civilizations at the Grand Mosque of Chamlaca. It is the largest mosque in the country, which was recently built in the Uskudar district in the Asian part of Istanbul.

The Museum of Islamic Civilizations displays many relics of Islamic civilizations and unique artifacts that trace 1,200 years of Islamic history, many of which have never been exhibited before.

At the opening ceremony, Erdogan said: “Each of our ancient cities is an open-air museum. Istanbul, which is the pupil of the eye of this geography, is our largest museum. While all classical museums preserve only the past, Istanbul is a museum where the past and the present coexist. “

 “We present to you the newest pearl of Istanbul, the Grand Mosque of Chamladja, with its art gallery, library, conference hall, studios and museum. “This is our civilizational heritage – a sign of the richness of our geography,” he said.

Turkey has a very special geography that has played a leading role in history, as the cradle of many civilizations, he added.

 “Our mosque and complex, which we opened for worship about three years ago, is a work that adds value to the skyline of Istanbul. The Museum of Islamic Civilizations is one of the most important parts of our complex. “The works on display at the museum represent the millennial accumulation of Islamic civilization, which has brought a whole new face to these lands,” Erdogan said, adding that the museum exhibits valuable works, including the Prophet Muhammad and the first copies of the Qur’an.

The new 10,000-square-meter museum houses works selected from the Topkapi Palace and Palace Museums, the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Art, the Istanbul Archaeological Museum and more.

With nearly 800 exhibits reflecting the development of Islamic art from the seventh to the 19th century, the museum includes 15 thematic sections, including woven Turkish art, works of art by the Prophet Muhammad and architectural and decorative elements in Islamic art.

Visitors to the museum will have the opportunity to see many more works such as representative prints of the Prophet Muhammad, the curtain of the Holy Kaaba in Mecca, the Sultan’s caftans, the notebook from the childhood of Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror and Ottoman coins.

The Grand Mosque of Chamladza is the most modern complex of its kind in Turkey. The mosque has six minarets, which represent the six pillars of the Islamic faith. Four of these minarets, which have three balconies, are 107.1 m high, and the other two minarets have two balconies and reach 90 meters in height.

The main dome of the mosque is 72 meters high, symbolizing the 72 nations. The mosque has one of the largest gates in a place of worship in the world, with its main gate 5 meters wide, 6.5 meters high and weighing 6 tons.

The mosque also has an art gallery of 3,500 square meters, a library of 3,000 square meters, a conference hall with a capacity of 1,071 people, eight art studios and an indoor parking lot for 3,500 cars.

WHO welcomes initiative to combat noncommunicable diseases, responsible for 7 in 10 deaths worldwide

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WHO welcomes initiative to combat noncommunicable diseases, responsible for 7 in 10 deaths worldwide
The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday, welcomed the setting up of a new Heads of State and Government Group to get the world back on track to reduce premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases like diabetes, cancer, heart and lung disease, by a third – in line with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – and promote mental health and well-being.
The decision was taken at the inaugural International Strategic Dialogue on Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs) and the SDGs, held in Accra, Ghana, where a new Global Compact on NCDs was launched. The dialogue was co-hosted by WHO, together with Ghana and Norway. 

National leaders highlighted the urgency of what WHO refers to as the NCD pandemic, which kills 7 out of 10 people globally from risk factors like tobacco, alcohol, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and air pollution

7 million lives saved, at low cost

NCDs are largely preventable and treatable, nearly seven million lives could be saved for just US$ 0.84 per person per year from now until 2030, says the UN health agency.

This investment would realize more than $230 billion in economic and societal benefits and head off nearly 10 million heart attacks and strokes globally, by 2030. 

The group will now convene annually at the UN General Assembly, with the first meeting expected to take place in September 2022. 

The Compact will focus on five key areas: 

1) Saving the lives of 50 million people by 2030, who could die prematurely of NCDs by implementing the most cost-effective prevention measures.

2) Protecting 1.7 billion people living with NCDs by ensuring that they have access to the medicines and care they need during emergencies.

3) Integrating NCDs within primary health care and universal health coverage.

4) Comprehensive NCD surveillance and monitoring.

5)And finally, meaningfully engaging 1.7 billion people living with NCDs and mental health conditions in policy-making and programming.

Nana Addo Dankwa Afuko-Addo, President of Ghana, outlined his country’s success in implementing tobacco demand-reduction measures and introducing guidelines for NCD management, but also highlighted the challenges for lower-income countries in accelerating action.

“Tackling the phenomenon of NCDs requires leadership to provide visibility to NCD issues”, he said. “I ask my Heads of State colleagues to join hands…as we find solutions to NCDs with a roadmap of universal health coverage and the Sustainable Development Goals. In our time, this will be our legacy”.

Lives cut short

WHO chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said that apart from the death toll, “NCDs take a heavy toll on economies, cutting down people in their most productive years. Overcoming this challenge requires technical, financial, and above all, political commitment. I thank the Governments of Norway and Ghana for establishing the first Global Heads of State and Government Group on NCDs, and launching the Global NCD Compact”.

Norway’s Prime Minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, Prime Minister of Norway, said investing in stronger health systems, service delivery and the prevention of NCDs would make vulnerable populations more resilient to COVID-19 and future pandemics.

This is also vital for promoting universal health coverage. NCD prevention, and access to treatment and medicine must be a core component in the efforts to enhance pandemic preparedness and response, and in building back better in the post-pandemic recovery.” 

And Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, told the meeting that NCDs account for nearly a third of all deaths in Africa, “where they not only pose a grave threat to health and well-being, but also blunt socioeconomic development. The commitment reached today marks a crucial step in speeding up the progress against these diseases and their risk factors as well as the suffering and deaths they cause.”

A Universe Full of Magical Things: A Cosmic View Beyond the Myths of Religion and Scientific Materialism

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A Universe Full of Magical Things: A Cosmic View Beyond the Myths of Religion and Scientific Materialism

Would You Believe that the Reality We are Living Now is Just an Illusion? A Psychotherapist’s Eye-Opening Book of Thoughts and Facts

“The Universe is Full of Magical Things Patiently Waiting for Our Senses to Grow Sharper” —”
— William Butler Yeats.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES , April 12, 2022 /EINPresswire.com/ — Los Angeles, CA. — “… since we are experiencing something that feels physical, that feels real — but isn’t, we must be living in an illusion., like a virtual game or a holodeck drama.” this intriguing prose is one of the various thought-provoking facts backed with science and mind-grabbing pieces of evidence that highlights a notable psychotherapist, David Yeats’ book of facts titled A Universe Full of Magical Things: A Cosmic View Beyond the Myths of Religion and
Scientific Materialism. This must-read book offers an alternative in understanding the cultural views currently fostered by science and religion. It also slightly examines our current cosmology, along with exploring and describing the actions of the complicated quantum dynamics, and some of the various ways physicists have interpreted the story.

PRESS RELEASE | LA BOOK FAIR 2022
As far as our knowledge goes, we may come to understand quantum mechanics and find out, at its most minute, that what we thought was a physical and material basis of the world was rather more like a word full of a field with point-like excitations — like nano tornados. (packets of actions). The fundamental ‘stuff’ of the world is not solid, substantial, material things — it is much more like fields of vibrating energy or vortices in dynamic warps of space-time.

On the other hand, aside from the complex quantum mechanics and dynamics, this book also surveys our cosmos, Earth, ecosystem, illustrates intelligence in nature’s flora and fauna, and illustrates that the evolutionary process of the universe is “an intelligent dance between organism and environment,” a conscious process throughout. This book is perfect for science geeks and curious-minded individuals looking for answers to questions they have been asking all their life.

If you want to dig deeper into the hidden implications and secrets of the universe not taught by teachers nor read in the books, this thought-inducing book is a must-read.

David Yeats, author of A Universe Full of Magical Things is a psychotherapist and a self- proclaimed lay armchair philosopher of metaphysics. David’s love for his work and clients led him to write the book Co-Creating a Brilliant Relationship: A Journey of Deepening Connection,
Meaning, and Joy back in 2014. The last chapter of said book stimulated deeper questions related to “Well, what is all that is?” which resulted in A Universe Full of Magical Things. David was raised as a Catholic, evolving to agnostic, then atheist, then agnostic again, to finally an appreciator of the centrality of consciousness and other magical things. David has been married to Sheri for 39 years now, blessed with 5 adult kids and 9 grandkids.

A Universe Full of Magical Things: A Cosmic View Beyond the Myths of Religion and
Scientific Materialism
Written by: David Yeats
Kindle |
Paperback |

Book copies are available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other online book resellers.

Dana Reyes
Authors Press
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Cyprus: Rights experts call for urgent solutions for missing persons tragedy

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Cyprus: Rights experts call for urgent solutions for missing persons tragedy
A top UN-appointed human rights panel issued an appeal on Tuesday for faster progress towards finding the remains of those who disappeared during deadly violence that split the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, decades ago.
The UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances said it was urgent now to accelerate “excavations and the identification and return of the remains of the missing”.

The call from the delegation of independent experts came at the end of an official visit at the invitation of the Government of the Republic of Cyprus.

Fate of loved ones

“While recognizing the considerable achievements, notably due to the longstanding work of the bi-communal Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus, the search progress has slowed down in recent years, and significant challenges still remain,” they observed, in a press release from UN rights office, OHCHR.

The panel also noted that after the events of 1963-64 and 1974, which led to the island’s division into communities of Greek Cypriots in the south and Turkish Cypriots in the north, “too many relatives are passing away without knowing the fate and whereabouts of their loved ones”.

Depoliticise the issue

The Working Group emphasised that “it is essential to depoliticise the issue of missing persons in Cyprus and genuinely treat it as a human rights and humanitarian issue”.

They added that more effective results can only be achieved through “an unconditional commitment among all concerned stakeholders to fully cooperate towards its solution and to give the rights of victims and their relatives top priority. Time is running out.”

Underlining the need to leave mistrust and resentment behind, to “finally put an end to the anguish and pain of all families”, the panel said that bicommunal initiatives aimed at reconciliation and social cohesion, need to be given full and unconditional support.

Truth for the victims

The experts also noted some recent dialogue in Cyprus, especially within the civil society community, on the establishment of a truth-telling mechanism, which could clarify the facts and circumstances of the disappearances.

“Virtually all stakeholders we have met have underlined the importance to establish the truth for the victims, the relatives and the society as a whole”, they said, adding a recommendation to all stakeholders to give due consideration to this idea, which could also be conducive to reconciliation.

Truth and reparations paramount

The experts highlighted that “no progress has been made in relation to criminal investigations and prosecutions for human rights violations resulting in individuals going missing, including possible enforced disappearances”.

The panel pointed out that together with ascertaining the truth, reparations and honouring the memory of those who have disappeared, Cyprus needed to add accountability.

In relation to prevention of enforced disappearances, the Working Group expressed concern over information they had received “on pushbacks both at sea and at the Green Line”, the demilitarized zone dividing the two communities, since 1964.

While noting the challenges posed by an increased number of arrivals on the island, they recalled that “international law clearly prohibits the return of any person where there are substantial grounds to believe that they would be in danger of enforced disappearance.”

The experts further called for the creation of an adequate legal framework as a measure of prevention of enforced disappearances.

The experts who issued the statement were all appointed by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. The UN Working Group on the issue is composed of Luciano Hazan (Chair-Rapporteur), Aua Baldé (Vice Chair), Gabriella Citroni, Henrikas Mickevičius Mr. Tae-Ung Bai. The independent experts are neither UN staff, nor do they receive a salary from the Organization. 

From the EU’s Aim of Peace to European Citizenship

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Peace and citiznship - passport dove

Since 1950, Europe has developed its own brand of peace. The European communities were not born as the United Nations, as a fully formed machinery of peace. Instead, as Robert Schuman had recommended, they grew out organically and without a single plan, “through concrete achievements which create a de facto solidarity”. What emerged decades later, in 1992, was a European Union of states, which established a system of peaceful coexistence among its member-states.

Yet, has the EU truly achieved a union of its citizens? Part 2 of the Treaty of the Functioning of the EU establishes a European citizenship, with passports and civic rights; citizenship remains, however, largely an administrative notion. According to Eurobarometer, no actual “European public opinion” has emerged yet, as evidenced by the wide differences of perception by country.

Of course, creating a moral citizenry of the EU with a sense of loyalty and belonging to a ‘European common home’, does present a formidable set of challenges. One temptation would be to turn to the traditional nation-state model, built on a common language, a common culture, and the awareness of a common past, often exalted by a fight for independence against a foreign empire. Those methods of nation-building were applied in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century in all countries from France, Italy and Germany to Bulgaria and Romania. They relied on centralized education systems to homogenize the population by teaching one language in schools and by discarding others; they called for teaching a national history that glorified heroes (who were often military commanders).

Some attempts have been made, here and there, to reinvent a “European identity”, as a resistance fight against foreign invaders, allegedly Muslim enemies of Christianity. Such an identity would be contrived and controversial in the EU bloc, which is a supra-national entity with 24 official languages. This is not only because the historical existence of such a fracture line is highly dubious. Its primary liability is that it would introduce a normative definition of European citizenship based on religious affiliation or tradition. Taking that route would be plainly in contradiction with the EU’s values of diversity and non-discrimination and would violate the Charter of Fundamental Rights. It would also create a foreign policy problem in the EU’s neighbourhood: it would encourage ideological hostility against Turkey and neighbouring countries in Northern Africa and the Middle East, which would be incompatible with the pursuit of peace.

Indeed, the legal and administrative makeup of the EU aims to prevent the repetition of the evils of World War II, which were, in the words of Winston Churchill: “frightful nationalistic quarrels (…) which we have seen (…) wreck the peace and mar the prospects of all mankind.”

Furthermore, introducing a European identity would clash with the bloc’s motto United in Diversity. That term ‘identity’, taken literally, would imply that all Europeans should have common cultural or ethnic characteristics that set them apart from all other people of Earth and defines them against the rest of the world. In that case, which language, cultural norms, and physical traits should be selected as quintessentially ‘European’? Enforcing such standards could become an arbitrary act that would smack of ‘Brussel imperialism’ since it would violate the national identities of the member-states. Indeed, Robert Schuman stated in 1949: “But Europe cannot wait for definition, for the end of that controversy; she does, in fact, define its boundaries by the will of its peoples.”

This has occasionally led to the belief that the EU suffers from an identity deficit. The problem could be, however, with the concept of identity itself. Could there be a better way to create a sense of shared belonging that does not rely on a common, pre-existing ‘identity’?

I believe that, yes, that should be possible. The alternative would be to forge a European conscience as a grass-roots movement, which would be based on the EU’s aim of peace and its set of common values, which are not in the past but in the present and future. A commonly accepted definition for European conscience is “the awareness of the necessity to make Europe (in a political sense)”, and therefore to avoid future wars on the continent. This is something that might require extending the mantle of Pax Europeana further east, to countries such as Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova.

Needless to say, the real challenge would be to make that European conscience accessible to every European citizen of every country and social group. That would require a concerted effort at public outreach, as well as education of the new generations on the aim of peace.

The EU’s aim of peace is so powerful that it seems paradoxical that it has been neglected for so long in the communication from the EU to its citizens. Experience demonstrates that a history lesson with images of the ruins of Warsaw or Berlin in May 1945 could be sufficient to convince a young audience of why the European construction process had to be started in 1950. Similarly, the bombings of Mariupol or Karkhiv in 2022 are the best evidence of why the continued existence of a European Union remains the best guarantee of peace for half a billion people on this planet.

War in Ukraine: EU-wide operation targeting russian criminal assets

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the European flag and the Europol flag fly side by side - Parliament backs giving more powers to Europol, but with supervision
Parliament backs giving more powers to Europol, but with supervision

Operation Oscar to support the freezing of criminal assets owned by EU-sanctioned individuals and entities

Today, 11 April 2022, Europol, jointly with EU Member States, Eurojust and Frontex, launched Operation Oscar to support financial investigations by EU Member States targeting criminal assets owned by individuals and legal entities sanctioned in relation to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Operation Oscar will also aim to support criminal investigations by Member States in relation to the circumvention of EU-imposed trade and economic sanctions. Similar to operation Sentinel, which targets fraud against COVID-19 EU recovery funds, Operation Oscar is an umbrella operation that will continue for a period of at least one year and include a number of separate investigations. 

In the framework of Operation Oscar, initiated by Europol’s European Financial and Economic Crime Centre, Europol will facilitate partners’ exchange of information and intelligence and provide operational support in a number of financial investigations targeting criminal assets and circumvention of the EU economic sanctions related to the Russia’s military aggression towards Ukraine. Europol will centralise and analyse all information contributed under this operation to identify international links, criminal groups and suspects, as well as new criminal trends and patterns. Europol will further provide tailor-made analytical support to investigations, as well as operational coordination, forensics and technical expertise, and financial support to the relevant national authorities. 

Eurojust will be actively involved with the operation through the exchange of strategic and operational information. Eurojust will furthermore provide legal assistance and support and strengthen cooperation between national investigating and judicial authorities.

Frontex will contribute to the operation by enhancing the scrutiny of the persons who are crossing EU’s external borders and fall under the scope of the sanctions. Taking advantage of the large spectrum of the operational activities of Frontex, the task will be implemented in the all their domains – land, sea and air.

War in Ukraine: Hospitals in the firing line – a unacceptable reality

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Hospitals in the firing line – the unacceptable reality
WHO

WHO Europe

One of the largest hospitals in eastern Ukraine, providing specialized medical care to a population of 103 000 people, was used to dealing with the consequences of conflict even before the Russian military offensive began on 24 February 2022. Since 2014, the hospital had been playing a crucial role in treating wounded soldiers from the armed struggle in the nearby Donbas region, as well as caring for the 51 000 civilians displaced by the hostilities.

But now, this hospital is out of use.

“The hospital was critical for the entire area, because there was a resuscitation unit here and all the medical equipment needed to care for the civilian population, as well as the surgery and emergency facilities required for treating casualties of the conflict,” said Viktor, the head of the hospital.

In 2019, WHO installed an oxygen generator at the hospital to make sure there was no disruption to the life-saving care being provided to patients, and also donated equipment for washing and sterilizing medical devices.

The start of the war

Andriy, one of the hospital’s health-care workers, recalls the terrifying days following 24 February: “Intensive shelling and attacks on the city began the next day, February 25, and lasted for 10 days. Almost immediately our hospital received an influx of wounded people and we had to set up a bomb shelter in the hospital basement to protect the hundreds of civilians seeking refuge. Most patients and health-care workers were only evacuated from the hospital once the situation had got so bad that we were unable to continue providing medical care.”

After a week and a half of bombardment, the hospital was not just out of action, but so severely damaged that any chance of restarting services was impossible.

Health care #NotATarget

As of 6 April, WHO had verified 91 reports of attacks on health care in Ukraine, causing 73 deaths and 46 injuries. This is unacceptable.

Attacks on health MUST stop. Not only do they endanger lives, they deprive people of urgently needed care and break already-strained health systems.

Health systems, facilities and health workers should never be targets. They must remain protected, functional, safe and accessible to all who need essential medical services. In any conflict, attacks on health care are a violation of international humanitarian law.

Read more: WHO is working day and night to keep medical supply chains open and preserve Ukraine’s health system

UNODC Report – signs of increased opium production in Myanmar

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UNODC Report – signs of increased opium production in Myanmar
img 7169 jpg UNODC Report – signs of increased opium production in Myanmar

Bangkok (Thailand), 8 April 2022 – The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) opium survey for Myanmar has found that cultivation in Myanmar between September 2020 and January 2021 increased for the first time since a downwards trend started in 2014.

The report “Myanmar Opium Survey: Cultivation, Production and Implications” analyses data collected just before the February 2021 military take-over, showing an increase of 2% in cultivation area from 29,500 hectares (ha) to 30,200 ha, and an increase in yield of 4% to 423 metric tons (mt). While overall cultivation is far below 2013 and 2014 levels, and it is not clear if the change reflects a longer-term trend, it is a concerning development given the socio-economic crisis which began with the COVID-19 pandemic that has accelerated over the past year, and the general expansion of regional drug markets.

Click here to download the full report
Click here to download the full report

UNODC Regional Representative Jeremy Douglas remarked, “The data reflect the situation before 1 February 2021, but it has to be seen in the context of Myanmar’s ongoing crisis and deteriorating economy, and the instability faced by farmers in areas where the opium economy is a traditional and largely crisis-proof employer.”

Shan State has continued to be the location of the vast majority of poppy cultivation at 83% of the national total but only showed a small increase of 1% over previous years, while Kachin State bordering India and China showed an increase of 17% over the previous year.

Opium poppy cultivation in Myanmar, 1996-2020 (ha)
Opium poppy cultivation in Myanmar, 1996-2020 (ha)

In spite of the continuing regional shift towards the production, trafficking and use of synthetic drugs, Myanmar’s opium economy generates substantial profits both within and outside the country. The latest findings put the value of opium in Myanmar at US$ 0.5-1.1 billion, and at the same time heroin from Myanmar contributes significantly to the regional drug market which has more than 3 million heroin users consuming approximately US$10 billion worth of the drug per year.

Farmers and rural communities in Shan State and other poppy-growing areas have relatively little to gain from the transnational drug business based on their crops. However, increasing wholesale prices – for the first time since 2016 farm-gate opium prices have gone up – and a much less stable economic and security environment make opium more attractive. “Poverty is the key reason for farmers to consider poppy cultivation in Myanmar,” says Benedikt Hofmann, UNODC Country Manager for Myanmar, “As a new dynamic in the opium economy appears to be taking shape, promoting economically, socially and environmentally sustainable livelihood opportunities will be one of the few ways to address the illicit drug situation in Myanmar, both in the context of increased instability and as a long-term impediment to peace and sustainable development, in particular in Shan State.”

Data on the 2021-2022 cultivation season is expected to be available later this year.

Click here to learn about the UNODC Regional Programme for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

Click here to learn about UNODC regional work on drug control.

Cultivation changes between 2020 and-2021*
Cultivation changes between 2020 and-2021*
Opium poppy cultivation density in Myanmar (average over the period 2015-2021 in ha/km²)
Opium poppy cultivation density in Myanmar (average over the period 2015-2021 in ha/km²)

Religious Freedom: Stories of the Believers of a “Lesser God” in 2022

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religious freedom person under water holding brown wooden cross above water at daytime
Photo by Tim Marshall

Ever since the eyes of the world have turned to the conflict in Ukraine, it is difficult to speak of religious freedom.

First, the COVID, and then the war have hidden the minor but no less serious tragedies that are perpetuated in the rest of the globe, the suffering that continues to be perpetrated at the expense of the weakest.

For a moment, we realized what the state of the art on religious freedom was when last summer, NATO troops withdrew from Afghanistan, and suddenly we were plunged back into a dark time of segregation and discrimination. A time of persecution against those whose only fault is that they believe in their own God or because of their own being.

We realized that in certain parts of the world, being a woman or being a Christian, is still a guilt. This, for example, is the story of Zabi*, whose story was told to us by the NGO Open doors, the story of a young Afghan Christian woman who fled following the capture of the Taliban.

Zabi is a refugee who had to flee Afghanistan after the Taliban take-over. She’s single, still quite young and well-educated. She was active in the area of human rights and, therefore a target for the Taliban.

But being an activist and fighting for her ideals is not Zabi’s only fault. Zabi has many sins, including that of being born a woman and a Christian.

The Taliban already know who she is and what she does because already five years ago, they killed her father for his faith, only after having tortured him for several months. And unfortunately, the tragedies for Zabi do not end here.

Only two years ago, her brother also disappeared. Like Zabi, he was a believer. We don’t know if she has other siblings, but Zabi’s mother is still alive. She’s not Christian.

The story of Zabi is not the only one. There are many other stories, very similar, stories that are lost in the speed of modernity and in a world where priorities are those that make it to the front page. So, it is precisely these stories, those of which it is impossible to know the epilogue.

We know, for example, that many of these refugees, after the seizure of Kabul, fled to Pakistan in the hope of a better future. And that right here, they found themselves, if not in hell, certainly in purgatory. Even in Pakistan, in fact, there is no rest for persecuted Christians.

With the intergroup, we managed to bring to the attention of European institutions, the infamy of the anti-blasphemy laws that claim victims every day in this part of the world. Thanks to our actions, we have been able to save the couple Shafqat Emmanuel and Shagufta Kausar in prison for eight years, with the only fault of being Christians.

But that’s not enough. The Intergroup receives reports on a daily basis, not least that of Shahzad Masih, for whom the Intergroup has made several moves to try to get a resolution on the agenda of the Parliament’s plenary session.

The story of Shahzad Masih was brought to the attention of the Intergroup by the NGO European Centre for Justice and Law. Shahzad is a 22-year-old young Christian man who has been in Pakistani prisons for five years, allegedly accused of being a blasphemer.

In 2017, while at work – at the time of the events Shahzad was working in a hospital as a janitor – Shahzad got into an argument with one of his Muslim colleagues. Shortly after the dispute, the situation escalated, and Shahzad was arrested.

From that moment, it also became impossible to get a date for a hearing. A hearing that to this day continues to be postponed.

There are several reasons why it is difficult to bring this case to the attention of European institutions and to have a hearing in Pakistani courts.

First of all, even before the recent developments in Pakistan, the situation regarding the blasphemy laws was complex. The Pakistani administration itself is in fact, hostage to radicalized segments of the population that strenuously defend the anti-blasphemy laws and therefore fear that by freeing an alleged blasphemy offender, protests will arise.

At the European level, the intergroup does its best to carry on battles related to religion. However, it often encounters a relativist culture. A culture that permeates the European institution and that wants to relegate any discussion on religion to a merely private matter, not realizing that, by doing so, they are not even able to establish clear boundaries and limits for negotiations with third countries.

“[there is] A culture that permeates the European institution and that wants to relegate any discussion on religion to a merely private matter”

Carlo Fidanza -MEP

The hope, therefore, is that as soon as possible, the European institutions will awaken from this torpor and begin to make their full weight – political and economic – felt in these negotiations so that the lives of those who want to live in their own lands and who still look to this continent with hope, are protected. ■

*Real name protected for security reasons

Future of Europe: Conference plenary puts finishing touches to proposals

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Future of Europe: Conference plenary puts finishing touches to proposals | News | European Parliament

The Conference on the Future of Europe plenary met again in Strasbourg on 8-9 April to further develop proposals from the Conference’s working groups.

Chairs from the nine topical working groups presented the proposals to the Conference plenary where all members – representatives of citizens, European and national parliaments, EU institutions, social partners and civil society – debated them.

The proposals are based on recommendations made by citizens in EU and national panels, ideas gathered through the Conference’s digital platform, and exchanges held during Conference plenary and working group sessions.

Check out the discussion on the draft proposals in the previous Conference plenary session.

While there were calls for treaty changes in many areas during the plenary debates, some said the EU should push ahead with practical solutions that could be applied faster and with existing tools.

The war in Ukraine heavily influenced the finalisation of proposals.

Final discussions on proposals in nine areas

In a lively debate on the EU in the world, the question of whether EU competencies should be changed to better tackle crises such as the war in Ukraine came into the spotlight, with participants discussing the benefits and threats of abolishing the rule of unanimity in the Council. Supporting less developed countries and trade agreements were also discussed.

The right of countries to veto Council decisions was also one of main topics of discussions on European democracy. The debates also included calls for a more people-centred Europe that continues listening to citizens’ proposals: “We want a European charter for citizens’ participation. There should be a digital platform and a youth check for EU legislation,” said Manfred Weber (EPP, Germany).

On migration, debates tackled strengthening the EUs role on migration and a stronger system based on solidarity and shared responsibility, as well as improving integration. “Respect for human rights, solidarity, root causes of migration are present in the recommendations,” said Jordi Solé (Greens/EFA, Spain).

There were calls to protect the rule of law in the debate on values and rights, rule of law and security proposals. “European citizens call for a value-based EU, they ask for stricter legislation, for fiercer action on governments that fail the test,” said Katarina Barley (S&D, Germany). Zdzisław Krasnodębski (ECR, Poland) said: “I’m in favour of discussion on our values, but nobody should have a monopoly on what our values are.”

On health, many participants asked for new EU competencies, including minimum standards of health service across the EU. Alin Mituța (Romania, Renew Europe) said: “We would be able to save more lives if we could cooperate Europe-wide in the area of health, for example having a Europe-wide list of transplants and cardiovascular disease.” Promoting healthy lifestyles was on the table as well: “At schools, we should promote the culture of food,” said Susanna Ceccardi (ID, Italy).

The education, culture, youth and sport working group progressed on proposals about harmonising educational programmes, training, more funding, stopping the brain drain and strong social protection for young people. The balance between more English language in school and protecting minority languages was tackled and in sports, questions of gender equality, inclusiveness and the proper representation of local and traditional sports were raised.

On the topics of a stronger economy, social justice and jobs, the proposals were discussed in the context of supporting Ukrainians and tackling the social and economic consequences of the war inside the EU. The focus should be on a more sustainable and resilient economic model, concentrating on the green and digital transition. There were calls to strengthen the competitiveness of the EU economy, ensure good working conditions and tax justice.

Food security was among the main topics discussed on the climate change and the environment. More sustainable agriculture, climate action with faster implementation of the Green Deal going hand in hand with a fair and just transition and better informing consumers on greener mobility and food options were also discussed.

Digital solutions were discussed across working groups, not just the digital transformation group. Access to the internet as a fundamental right, digital skills, cybersecurity, trustworthiness of information without censorship, effective data protection and non-biased artificial intelligence were all discussed. “Access to digital infrastructure should be equal for everyone. People must be at the forefront of the deployment,” said Helmut Scholz (The Left, Germany).

Next steps

The final Conference Plenary sessionon  29-30 April will approve proposals to be presented to the Conference’s executive board. The final report will be delivered on 9 May in Strasbourg to the Presidents of the EU institutions who have committed to acting on the proposals.