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Shiva Forum Europe Opens New Office to Empower Women & Youth Through Sanatana Dharma

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Representatives of Shiva Forum Europe with Aldermen of Oudenaarde, Natascha De Meulemeester.

Shiva Forum Europe Launches New Office to Promote Women and Youth Empowerment, Interreligious Dialogue, and the Values of Sanatana Dharma (Hinduism)

Press release // Oudenaarde, Belgium – Last february 14, 2025, Shiva Forum Europe, a prominent international organization dedicated to fostering understanding and dialogue among different cultures and religious communities, is proud to announce the opening of its new office in Oudenaarde, (East-Flanders) in collaboration with Sanatana Dharma Europe & Belgium.

This initiative aims to promote empowerment for women and youth, interreligious dialogue, and the core values of Sanatana Dharma, in alignment with the organization’s mission to build a more inclusive, peaceful, and just world. The new office will serve as a hub for organizing educational initiatives, community outreach, and dialogue programs that will work to uplift marginalized voices, especially women and youth, by providing them with opportunities for leadership, education, and social engagement. These programs will reflect the rich spiritual, philosophical, and cultural traditions of Sanatana Dharma while creating a platform for interfaith dialogue and understanding among diverse communities.

We are thrilled to open our office in Europe and expand our reach to promote empowerment and peace through dialogue and understanding,” said Swami Bhairavananda Saraswati, Executive Director of Shiva Forum Europe.

Through this office, we aim to create an inclusive space where women and youth can thrive, learn from one another, and work together to tackle some of the most pressing global issues. This will also be an opportunity to share the positive teachings of Sanatana Dharma, which emphasize respect for all beings, unity in diversity, and the importance of spiritual growth.”

The organization’s programs will include leadership training for women and youth, awareness campaigns on gender equality and education, and public forums on the role of religion in promoting peace and understanding. The office will also partner with other faith-based and secular organizations to encourage collective action toward sustainable and harmonious societies. Shiva Forum Europe’s mission is rooted in the deep teachings of Sanatana Dharma, which emphasizes compassion, nonviolence (ahimsa), and the interconnectedness of all life.

The organization hopes to foster a greater understanding of these principles through its programming and outreach efforts, creating a more harmonious and empathetic world. “We believe that interreligious dialogue and a focus on empowerment are essential to creating a future where people of all backgrounds, faiths, and cultures can live together in peace,” added Swamiji.

Sanatana Dharma offers invaluable wisdom that can guide us towards living in harmony with nature and with one another, and we are excited to share this message across Europe.” With a dedicated team of diverse professionals, Shiva Forum Europe states that is ready to contribute positively to the global conversation on social justice, inclusion, and spiritual growth.

The organization invites individuals and groups interested in supporting its mission to “connect, collaborate, and become part of this transformative journey”.

For further information on Shiva Forum Europe’s programs and upcoming events, please visit: www.shivaforum.eu Contact:

Email: info[a]shivaforum.eu

Phone: +32.493.41.88.34

About Shiva Forum Europe:

Shiva Forum Europe is an international non-profit organization dedicated to fostering interreligious dialogue, women and youth empowerment, and the promotion of the core values of Sanatana Dharma. Through education, outreach, and collaboration, the forum seeks to create a more inclusive, peaceful, and just world for all.

UN rights office warns of ‘dangerous tipping point’ as abuses surge in Sudan

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UN rights office warns of ‘dangerous tipping point’ as abuses surge in Sudan

In a new report, UN investigators detailed multiple attacks on civilians, healthcare facilities, markets, and schools, as well as ethnically motivated summary executions.

“The continued and deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as well as summary executions, sexual violence and other violations and abuses, underscore the utter failure by both parties to respect the rules and principles of international humanitarian and human rights law,” said Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Some of these acts may amount to war crimes. They must be investigated promptly and independently, with a view to bringing those responsible to justice,” he added.

Among its key recommendations, the report called for expanding the arms embargo and the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to cover the whole of Sudan – not just the region of Darfur, where atrocities raged unchecked 20 years ago.

Twenty-two months of brutal war

More than 22 months of brutal fighting between Government forces and their former allied militia, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has left more than 30 million people across Sudan in need of assistance and protection.

The fighting has precipitated the world’s worst displacement crisis, with over 12 million displaced from their homes, of whom 3.3 million have fled across the border.

Food security and healthcare are also in freefall, with less than a quarter of Sudan’s health facilities functioning in areas worst hit by fighting. Nearly 25 million people are suffering from “acute” levels of hunger.

Workers offload sacks of food aid from a barge in Sudan.

Sexual violence a weapon of war

The report highlighted the widespread use of sexual violence as a weapon of war, with 120 documented incidents affecting at least 203 victims. Cases are likely vastly underreported due to fear, stigma, and the collapse of medical and judicial institutions.

All sides involved in the fighting have been responsible for violations, according to report, including widespread sexual violence.

The persistent use of sexual violence as a weapon of war in Sudan is deeply shocking,” High Commissioner Türk said.

“Urgent steps must be taken by the parties to put an end to it, to hold those responsible to account and provide redress for survivors,” he stressed.

Crackdown on civic space

The report also detailed widespread disappearances and a generalised crackdown on civic space, including killings of journalists and attacks on human rights defenders.

At least 12 journalists were killed, two of them while in detention, and 31 were arbitrarily detained, including four women.

In all, throughout 2024, OHCHR documented more than 4,200 civilian killings in the context of hostilities though the real number is likely much higher.

Reamins of a health clinic that was attacked and looted, leaving thousands of women and girls without access to critical care.

Reamins of a health clinic that was attacked and looted, leaving thousands of women and girls without access to critical care.

A dangerous tipping point

Li Fung, the head of the OHCHR office in Sudan, described the dire situation in Sudan as a “dangerous tipping point”.

Speaking to journalists at the UN Office at Geneva (UNOG) via video link from Port Sudan, she underscored the need for the international community to renew the focus on human rights.

“[The international community] must take all necessary measures to protect civilians and prevent further violations and abuses. It remains urgent to ensure critical humanitarian assistance can reach those in need,” she said.

Together, we must stand with the people of Sudan.

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UN launches $6 billion Sudan appeal, as famine takes hold

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UN launches $6 billion Sudan appeal, as famine takes hold

“Civilians [are] paying the highest price, shelling, airstrikes [are] continuing unabated, killing and injuring civilians, damaging and destroying critical infrastructure, including hospitals,” said Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher.

“An epidemic of sexual violence rages,” he warned, adding that children are being killed and injured, amid reports of intensifying fighting in South Kordofan in recent weeks – “another state in which famine conditions have recently been confirmed”.

Speaking in Geneva, Mr. Fletcher explained that the UN 2025 humanitarian and refugee response plans for Sudan aim to assist nearly 26 million people inside the country and across the region who face a desperate situation.

After nearly two years of conflict, a staggering 12 million people in Sudan and across borders have been displaced.

The UN aid chief said that he welcomed a conversation just days ago with General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan – leader of the Sudanese Armed Forces – “about the importance of keeping Adre crossing open [from Chad]. But this is a fraction of what is needed and each movement only happens after complex engagement and bureaucratic processes,” he stressed.

Famine conditions

According to the UN World Food Programme (WFP), famine has been confirmed in more than 10 locations in Sudan; another 17 are on the brink of famine. 

The situation is a “collective failure that shames the global community”, WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain told the Geneva meeting via video link. 

“This is a full-scale hunger crisis and I’m going to call it a catastrophe”, Ms. McCain continued. “The civil war has killed thousands, uprooted millions and set the country ablaze, and yet it’s forgotten,” despite being “the epicentre of the world’s largest and most severe hunger crisis ever”.

Highlighting the fact that Sudan is also the world’s biggest displacement emergency, UN refugee agency chief (UNHCR), Filippo Grandi, condemned the continuing “military logic” of the rival armies that have waged war against each other since April 2023.

“The logic is, let’s achieve victory, let’s make advances, let’s progress militarily,” he said, referring to the Sudanese Armed Forces – led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan – and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, under Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

Suffering and neglect

“The logic continues to neglect the situation of ordinary Sudanese that are killed, displaced and suffer all sorts of hardship.”

Echoing Mr. Fletcher’s observation that it might be difficult to understand why the UN and its partners were issuing such a large appeal for funding at a time of deep cuts to overseas aid by UN Member States, the UN refugee agency chief explained that needs were immense, with one in three Sudanese uprooted by the violence.

“Social systems, health systems, education – kids haven’t gone to school, almost 13 million people are displaced,” he said.

The country is being destroyed; at its foundations, everything is collapsing,” Mr. Grandi insisted, in an appeal to the international community to “step up and help”, not just to ensure that emergency aid and life-saving protection can continue without disruption, but also to end the violence and restore peace to Sudan.”

Age-old conflict dangers

Across Sudan, women and girls continue to suffer through appalling patterns of conflict-related sexual violence,” and young men have been forcibly recruited to fight, Mr. Fletcher noted. “The collapse of the education system has compounded the risks faced by Sudanese girls: child marriage, gender-based violence.”

Although access “remains heavily constrained, particularly where the fighting is most acute”, the UN relief chief insisted that the appeal offered “a lifeline to millions” once the fighting stops, as he appealed for better access “by land, sea and air to those who need help”.

WFP chief Ms. McCain explained that millions of civilians had lost their livelihoods while humanitarians struggled to reach those in need because of access restrictions.

Agricultural production has also been decimated, driving up prices by 500 per cent in some areas, resulting in millions of displaced who have no access basic food staples.

Nearly 16 million reached in 2024

With $1.8 billion in support last year, humanitarian organizations reached more than 15.6 million people across Sudan. Assistance included food and livelihoods support for more than 13 million people as well as water, sanitation and hygiene support, health and nutrition, and shelter assistance.   

Humanitarian organizations working in neighbouring countries provided lifesaving assistance delivering food to over a million people, medical support to half a million and protection services to over 800,000.

For its part, WFP reached more than eight million people with lifesaving aid in 2024 but continues to face widespread access constraints caused by the fighting.

Famine conditions have been reported in at least five locations in Sudan including displacement camps in Darfur and in the western Nuba Mountains, according to a joint press release from the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, and UNHCR.

“Catastrophic hunger is expected to worsen by May when the lean season begins. With continued fighting and basic services having collapsed across most of the country, the crisis is set to get worse,” it noted.

Rape as weapon of war

Shaza Ahmed, Executive Director of Nada El Azhar – who is a gender based violence (GBV) coordinator in Sudan – said that “women and girls paid a hefty price, as GBV is used as a weapon of war”, compounding a lack of access to health services, education and employment.

In 2024, more than 50,000 of the most vulnerable women and girls received dignity kids and over 225,000 people received GBV-services such as mental health or psychological support.

Among the biggest challenges now are protection of female staff and access to communities as well as the overall funding crisis.

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Council sets fiscal expenditure path for Hungary and adopts recommendation to correct its excessive deficit situation

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Council sets fiscal expenditure path for Hungary and adopts recommendation to correct its excessive deficit situation

In the context of the implementation of the EU’s new economic governance rules, the Council endorsed Hungary’s medium-term fiscal-structural plan and set its net expenditure path.

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Speech Strasbourg, 07 May 2025 Honourable members, thank you for this important debate today.
Let me first and foremost thank the rapporteur, ITRE Chair [Borys] Budka and all shadows for thei…

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Introductory remarks by Commissioner Hoekstra at the European Parliament's Committee on the Environment, Climate and Food Safety (ENVI)

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Speech Strasbourg, 05 May 2025 Dear Chair,
Honourable Members,
It’s great to be here today with all of you, and thank you very much for organising this Structured Dialogue with the ENVI Commi…

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Statement by Executive Vice-President Raffaele Fitto on the appointment of María Ángela Holguín Cuéllar as the UN Secretary-General's Personal Envoy on Cyprus

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Statement Brussels, 03 May 2025 The European Commission welcomes the appointment of María Ángela Holguín Cuéllar as the UN Secretary-General’s Personal Envoy on Cyprus.
The Commission acknowle…

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EU welcomes final ruling of Arbitration Tribunal on EU-UK sandeel dispute

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Press release Brussels, 02 May 2025 The European Commission welcomes the final ruling by the Arbitration Tribunal, established under the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) to settle the E…

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Factsheet: EU support to Palestinians

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Factsheet Brussels, 16 Apr 2025 Factsheet: EU support to Palestinians Factsheet: EU support to Palestinians

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Commission proposes to frontload elements of the Pact on Migration and Asylum as well as a first EU list of safe countries of origin

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Opening statement by Commissioner Jørgensen in plenary debate on the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter

European Commission Press release Brussels, 16 Apr 2025 Today, the Commission is proposing to accelerate the implementation of certain aspects of the Pact on Migration and Asylum, adopted last year and due to enter into application in June 2026.

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