COP30 urged to link climate justice with reparations for historical crimes

In a letter to Brazil’s COP30 climate conference, dozens of environmental and human rights organizations and activists have urged the UN to place justice and reparations at the forefront of discussions.

The signatories, which include Brazil’s Instituto Luiz Gama and the Caribbean Pan African Network (CPAN), pleaded with the meeting’s organisers on Friday to “centre the voices of Africans, people of African descent, and Indigenous Peoples” from November 10 to November 21.

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The activists’ letter calls for justice for the nations and people of the world that have historically contributed the least to climate change but are frequently among the hardest hit by it.

They urged Brazil to “highlight” how climate justice is related to reparations “for the histories and legacies of colonialism and enslavement,” noting that Brazil has “one of the largest populations of indigenous peoples in the world” and that it is the host country of the meeting along with other organisers.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights’ recent advisory opinions on climate justice “highlighted the vulnerabilities of Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities,” according to the letter.

Due to their greater historical responsibility for emissions, the ICJ argued that industrialized countries are legally obligated to lead the fight against climate change.

In a 2015 agreement reached at COP talks in Paris, rich nations pledged to assist developing nations in resolving the growing climate crisis, but commitments lag significantly behind what developing nations claim is needed to cover damage and loss brought on by increasingly extreme weather.

At the COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan last year, participants in talks agreed to set a target of $300 billion in loss and damage funding to assist developing nations in adjusting to climate change.

In the middle of a severe drought, on October 4, 2024, boatloads of cargo cross the Negro River at Manaus, Amazonas state, Brazil.

That figure increased from the previous $100 billion pledge from wealthy nations, but it was still $200 billion less than the $ 134 billion COP meeting’s demand of 134 developing nations.

As more and more nations around the world continue to experience increasingly severe weather events, this is the latest example of reparations.

Pakistan, one of the developing nations grappling with climate change, is facing additional flooding this year after devastating floods that cost $ 14. 8 billion in damage and $ 15.2 billion in economic losses in 2022. According to the Climate Rate Index report, they pushed about 9 million people into poverty.

Recent price increases for Brazilian coffee and Ghanaian cocoa have also been linked to climate change, according to recent research from European organizations and the European Central Bank.

The Global Afro-Descendant Climate Collaboration for Climate Justice, Resilient 40, the Emancipation Support Committee of Trinidad and Tobago, and the HBCU Green Fund in the United States are also included in the letter’s address to COP organizers.

The letter, which will be sent to Brazil’s government and the UN the following week, has also been supported by Colombia’s environment minister.

The demand for reparations for colonial exploitation and slavery has grown in popularity around the world, but critics claim that modern governments and institutions should not compensate for historical wrongs or make other reparations.

North Korea’s Kim calls for sharpening of ‘nuclear shield and sword’

Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, has instructed senior officials to strengthen his country’s “nuclear shield and sword,” claiming only a “nuclear counteraction” could safeguard its security.

Kim stated in a meeting with nuclear scientists and technicians on Friday that the production of nuclear materials and weapons was an “essential top priority” along with Hong Sung-mu, a senior official believed to be the leader of North Korea’s nuclear program.

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The DPRK’s “invariable stand,” Kim was quoted as saying by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) as saying, “The powerful deterrent, namely, the logic of peacekeeping and security by force with nuclear forces as its backbone.” The official name of North Korea is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).

Kim also mentioned “main tasks” that the nation’s nuclear weapons research institute had to complete in relation to “a new significant nuclear strategy,” according to South Korea’s official Yonhap news agency.

The leader of North Korea did not provide any information about that new strategy.

“Comrade Kim Jong Un said we must constantly modernize and uphold the nuclear shield and sword to effectively safeguard national security, interests, and the right to development,” KCNA continued.

Kim Jong Un, leader of North Korea, is seen with scientists and engineers at a consultation meeting on nuclear materials and nuclear weapons production, according to a photo taken on September 26, 2025, which was made public by the country’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on that day.

Just days after South Korea declared Pyongyang was suspected to have up to 2, 000 kg (2 tonnes) of highly-enriched uranium, Kim met with his nuclear scientists and military leaders.

Chung Dong-young, the unification minister of South Korea, stated on Thursday that the enriched uranium content of 10 to 12 kg (22 to 26 lbs) needed to build a nuclear weapon.

According to Yonhap, “uranium centrifuges are running at this very hour at four locations (in North Korea) and are probably accumulating nuclear materials,” according to Chung.

The minister added that while it is now impossible to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program through sanctions, talks could resume between Pyongyang and Washington, which would “breakthrough” denuclearization efforts.

The minister said, “It will be desirable for]talks to take place as soon as possible.”

Kim claimed recently that if Washington stopped demanding that his nation refrain from releasing nuclear weapons, there would be no excuse for skipping talks with the US.

Despite having met Trump three times during his first administration, Kim told KCNA, “Personally, I still have fond memories of US President Trump.”

There is no reason for us not to sit down with the United States, Kim was quoted as saying. “If the United States abandons its absurd obsession with denuclearising us and accepts reality, and wants genuine peaceful coexistence, then we can stop.”

After a nation is forced to give up its nuclear weapons and disarms, Kim claimed, the world is already aware of what the US does.

Did restrictions on women workers hamper Afghanistan’s earthquake response?

More than 2, 200 people were killed and 3, 600 were hurt in an earthquake of magnitude 6,0 that occurred in eastern Afghanistan on August 31.

Relief and rescue efforts continue even after three weeks of the tragedy, with nearly half a million people affected by the earthquake in the provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar.

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Women are notably absent from these efforts as the local government and aid organizations attempt to assist victims in a nation that is heavily reliant on international humanitarian aid.

Women were prohibited from working in Afghan NGOs until 2022 by the Taliban government. Additionally, it forbade Afghan women from working for international NGOs and the UN a year later.

Despite the fact that fewer women were employed as aid workers in Afghanistan than they were before the Taliban’s rise to power, many NGOs were able to bargain terms that allowed some of their female employees to continue working if their “mahrams” (male guardians) were present.

Some claim that the Taliban’s ban has made it more difficult for humanitarian organizations to reach Afghan women who require assistance during natural disasters like the recent earthquake. More than half of the earthquake’s victims and injuries were women and girls, according to the UN.

The Taliban insists it is doing everything in its power to ensure that all victims, regardless of gender, receive assistance, and several women who were in the earthquake-affected areas have claimed that male rescue workers did assist them.

Women are left out? mixed tales

In the wake of the catastrophe, the World Health Organization (WHO) urged the Taliban to impose restrictions on female aid workers in Afghanistan.

The growing lack of female staff in these places is a very big issue right now, according to Mukta Sharma, a WHO representative in Kabul’s capital city. She claimed that the majority of the medical staff in the earthquake-affected region were men, with the rest 10% being women, who primarily served as midwives and nurses and were therefore untrained to deal with serious injuries.

The difficulties faced by rescuing women were confirmed by a few female volunteer healthcare workers who were able to travel to the sites damaged by the earthquake.

After returning from Kunar on Friday, Fatema, a volunteer who only had her first name, told Al Jazeera that “many women still go missing due to the neglect,” because of the strict social code in Afghanistan.

According to Susan Ferguson, the UN Women’s special representative in Afghanistan, “we have seen with the Afghan women returnees from Iran and Pakistan, as we have seen with the women who have been there,” she told Al Jazeera in an email interview. The two nations have recently expelled thousands of Afghan refugees and migrants.

Nearly six out of ten of the victims of the 2023 Herat earthquake were women, according to Ferguson, and nearly two-thirds of those injured were also women. Nearly 1,400 people were killed, thousands of injured, and several villages were flattened by the three consecutive earthquakes, all of which were greater than magnitude 6, that occurred in Herat province in October 2023.

However, many of the women Al Jazeera spoke to claimed that male aid workers actually saved them after the recent earthquake.

Gulalai, a Kunar resident of the Nurgal district of Kunar, suffered severe injuries and lost all six of his children. Her safety was provided by her brother-in-law. She said, “I was screamin’ in pain and begging to be rescued.”

A rescue helicopter was able to follow them as they signaled their arrival. They had to transport us to the helicopter’s landing site because it couldn’t land at the location where we were. The rescue team arrived. Gulalai, who only gave her first name, said, “They cleaned my wounds, patched my injuries, and evacuated me.

Taliban officials added that they were committed to ensuring that, if necessary, male health workers treat women as effectively as possible.

The Afghan military and volunteers “evacuated and cared for everyone,” according to Najibullah Haqqani, the ministry’s provincial director for Kunar.

“On the second day, UNICEF opened a medical facility in Nurgal, which had both female doctors and a male director. The clinic treated everyone, both male and female, as many injured people as the clinic could handle there. Any doctor willing to treat any patient will be there in any emergency situation, with no gender-based discrimination. He said that saving lives is top of the list.

Unsanitary circumstances

Women and girls who survived the earthquake continue to struggle as they battle injuries and challenging conditions in relief camps, according to female volunteers and global nonprofit leaders.

More than 7,700 families left their homes in Nurgal district open spaces on September 16 as per a UN-led assessment.

Both men and women have issues because there are no gendered restrooms. Social barriers, however, make it particularly difficult for women to share bathrooms with men.

According to Ruhila Mateen, a spokeswoman for Aseel, an Afghan organization that provides emergency aid, “they frequently wait until late at night or early in the morning to use the restrooms in the camps.” The organization is coordinating the construction of more restrooms for women in the area.

In the camps, Mateen continued, “Women survivors have also reported experiencing fever, diarrhoea, bellyaches, kidney, and stomach pain due to unhygienic conditions.”

Female medical staff is lacked.

The availability of female employees has also had an impact on the availability of medical and emergency services.

Since the Taliban’s rule over Afghanistan, many female medical professionals have left the country, despite the fact that they are still permitted to work there. Some of the people who stayed back claim that restrictions on their movements have made it harder for them to work. In many areas of Afghanistan, women are prohibited from traveling alone, making it illegal for them to move around in public.

Many of the women who are still enrolled in medical school are also prohibited by the Taliban’s higher education ban. There haven’t been any new female medical graduates in Afghanistan since the ban.

Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable in the wake of disasters like the recent earthquake, according to Pashtana Durrani, the founder of the NGO Learn Afghanistan, which disapproves the Taliban’s ban on women’s education.

She told Al Jazeera, “Women who are pregnant are not at all able to seek medical care.” Women are unable to interact with male doctors on matters relating to maternal and reproductive health because of the country’s traditionally conservative society.

After the earthquake, Durrani’s team of five female medical professionals sent medical supplies, including ultrasound equipment, to three Nangarhar districts. More than 11, 600 pregnant women who were affected by the earthquake are still urgently needed, according to the UNFPA in a report released earlier this month.

In the South Asian region, Afghanistan has one of the highest rates of maternal mortality. According to the World Bank, the nation had 521 maternal deaths per 100, 000 live births in 2023, which is many times the regional average of 120.

some candor

Female humanitarians, according to Ferguson of UN Women, are essential in overcoming gender barriers during times of crisis, such as after earthquakes. Too many women and girls will miss out on life-saving assistance, she said, “without them.” Women must provide assistance to women and girls, according to the statement.

According to Mateen of the Aseel NGO, women’s life-saving assistance needed to be provided by the appropriate professionals and facilities.

She said it is not very useful to send medicines without having doctors deliver them or using hygiene kits for women without having access to the restroom.

However, Durrani of Learn Afghanistan claimed that aid workers who worked with women were becoming more popular.

Although these are conservative communities, she said, “They have been very open to receiving help and support.” Many of the locals have reached out to us, offered to support us, and provided many helpful things. Therefore, I believe that everything is important.

Turkiye, group of athletes call on FIFA, UEFA to ban Israel’s football team

As UEFA’s governing body is under increasing pressure to act against Israel’s ongoing conflict in Gaza ahead of the World Cup in 2026, Turkiye has become the first player to publicly request that the country be barred from all football competitions.

Ibrahim Haciosmanoglu, president of the Turkish Football Federation, wrote a letter to world leaders on Friday, pleading that “it is now time for FIFA and UEFA to act.” He also mentioned the world’s and Europe’s football governing bodies.

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According to Turkiye’s state-run Anadolu news agency, “the sporting world and football institutions have remained silent for far too long,” Haciosmanoglu said.

We feel compelled to express our deep concern about the State of Israel’s unlawful (and, more importantly, completely inhumane and unacceptable) situation in Gaza and its surrounding areas, he added.

The men’s football team of Israel is currently attempting to qualify for the upcoming World Cup, which is co-hosted by Mexico, the United States, and Canada, and UEFA is preparing to vote on whether to suspend them.

If a vote is called, the 20-member UEFA ruling committee is expected to find a majority to force Israel to be removed from games.

Russia’s national team was banned by both UEFA and FIFA in 2022 following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, which is now causing a stir.

48 well-known professional athletes also requested by UEFA on Friday that Israel be removed from all football competitions because of its assault on Palestinians in Gaza.

48 of the 48 signatories to a statement published under the name Athletes 4 Peace called for Israel’s suspension, included France’s Paul Pogba and England’s Moeen Ali.

We as professional athletes with diverse backgrounds, beliefs, and faiths must uphold the values of justice, fairness, and humanity, the statement read.

The athletes’ signatories of Athletes for Peace call on UEFA to immediately ban Israel from all international competitions until it stops killing civilians and causes widespread starvation, according to the athletes.

The Palestinian Pele, or Suleiman al-Obeid, was killed last month when Israeli forces attacked civilians in southern Gaza, according to the statement.

After being kicked out of the Asian Football Confederation two decades ago in a vote initiated by Kuwait and supported by other Arab nations, Israel has been a full member of UEFA since 1994.

It was eliminated in the group stage without winning a game, which was the 1970 men’s World Cup competition in Mexico.

The US Department of State stated on Thursday that it would “absolutely work to completely stop any attempt to ban Israel’s national football team” from the World Cup in the coming year.

Israel can’t compete in FIFA-run World Cup qualifiers, despite UEFA’s ability to prevent it from playing games related to European competitions.

Gianni Infantino, the FIFA head, is known for his friendly relations with President Donald Trump, who is in town to meet with him in March. As a result, he is unlikely to support an Israeli suspension.