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Canada Election: Trudeau Wins but Liberals Fall short of majority

By Jessica Murphy
BBC News, Montreal

Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party has narrowly won Canada’s election, but it failed to secure a majority.

This is Mr Trudeau’s third federal election win, but his critics say the poll was a waste of time.

The Liberals are projected to win 156 seats, short of the 170 seats needed for the majority Mr Trudeau was seeking with his early election call.

The Conservatives have held onto their main opposition status and are expected to win about 122 seats.

“There are still votes to be counted but what we’ve seen tonight is millions of Canadians have chosen a progressive plan,” Mr Trudeau told supporters in Montreal in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

“You elected a government that will fight for you and deliver for you,” he said.

A failed gamble for Trudeau

The election, which took place during a fourth pandemic wave in Canada, was the most expensive in the country’s history, costing some C$600m ($470m; £344m).

The projected results suggest a parliament strikingly similar to the one elected just two years ago in 2019.

The snap election call, sending Canadians to the polls for the second time in two years, was widely seen as a bid by Mr Trudeau to secure a majority government and he struggled to explain why a campaign was necessary. Conservative leader Erin O’Toole called it a waste of time and money.

“Canadians sent him back with another minority at a cost of $600m and deeper divisions in our great country”, he told reporters.

Mr Trudeau maintained that the election gave the incoming government clear mandate in moving forward.

But controversy over three instances of him wearing blackface and brownface – widely accepted as racist caricatures – resurfaced in the election campaign.

Separately he was also heckled by anti-vaccine protesters on the campaign trail, with some shouting they would refuse the Covid-19 jab.

Trudeau and his wife share a kissimage source, Reuters

While questions will inevitably be raised about Mr Trudeau’s political future, Liberal MP Pablo Rodriguez told journalists early in the evening that no matter the outcome, he had “100% confidence” in him as Liberal Party leader.

“And all the members of the party do as well,” he said.

The country’s left-wing New Democrats (NDP), which ran on a “tax the ultra-rich” message with leader Jagmeet Singh trying to tap into progressive voters frustrated with the Liberals, looks to have picked up a small number of seats.

Vote counts will continue to trickle in over the coming days as elections officials tally the roughly one million mail-in ballots cast this election, and current seat tallies are still to be finalised.

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole speaks from Oshawa, Ontario
Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole speaks from Oshawa, Ontario

For the Conservatives, the result is a disappointment for new party leader Erin O’Toole, who ran on a centrist message in a bid to expand the party’s base of support.

Like in 2019, the party is projected to have won the popular vote. But the first-past-the-post system – awarding victory to the candidate with most votes in any given constituency – means that has not translated to seats won.

Speaking to party faithful in Oshawa, Ontario, a defiant Mr O’Toole pitched his vision for a bigger Conservative tent, saying: “Our party needed the courage to change because Canada has changed.”

He urged supporters not to waiver from the commitment to grow the party’s base, acknowledging that “clearly there is more work for us to do” in setting the stage for a better showing in the next campaign.

Conservative strategist Jason Lietaer told journalists at party headquarters that there’s reason to keep Mr O’Toole on as leader despite his failure to secure them a victory.

“He’s gone from unknown to contender in just a few weeks,” Mr Lietaer said. “O’Toole was a huge underdog. To be within a few points is something we’re all proud of.”

Jagmeet Singh speaks alongside his pregnant wife
Jagmeet Singh speaks alongside his pregnant wife 

While minority governments are common in Canada, coalitions are extremely rare and Mr Trudeau will need to compromise with opposition parties to pass legislation.

The NDP are likely to be kingmakers in this new parliament, and could help the Liberals to survive key confidence votes and get their policies through.

Mr Singh, the NDP leader, speaking in Burnaby, British Columbia, noted he had secured concessions from Mr Trudeau in the last parliament.

He said he had a laundry list of priorities this time around, and vowed to push for action on climate change, affordable housing, and healthcare.

“You can be sure if we work together we can build a better society,” he said.

Graphic showing the balance of power in Canada's House of Commons at dissolution

The night saw setbacks for both the Green Party and the People’s Party of Canada (PPC).

New Green leader Annamie Paul was badly defeated in her efforts to secure a seat in Toronto, after she struggled with internal party divisions that threatened her leadership.

“I am disappointed – it is hard to lose, no one likes to lose,” Ms Paul said as she thanked supporters.

Still, the party is still projected to send at least two members of parliament to Ottawa.

The PPC failed to secure any seats despite a late surge as it’s populist leader tapped into a vein of anger among some Canadians over vaccine mandates and lockdown measures, but did increase its overall vote share.

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Independence 38: State Service of Prayer, Praise and Thanksgiving held in Charlestown, Nevis

BASSETERRE, ST. KITTS, September 20, 2021 (MMS-SKN) — In celebration of the 38th Anniversary of Independence of the Federation of St. Christopher and Nevis, Prime Minister Dr the Hon Timothy Harris led the Nation at the State Service of Prayer, Praise and Thanksgiving which was held at the Elquemedo T. Willett Park in Charlestown, Nevis, on Independence Day, Sunday September 19.

Held under the theme ‘Adapt, Diversify, Recreate: Independence 38’, the sermon was delivered by Rev Ron Daniel, Pastor of the Wesleyan Holiness Church in Newcastle, Nevis. Rev Daniel is also the Assistant District Superintendent of the Wesleyan Holiness Churches on the St. Kitts District, and President of the Nevis Evangelical Association.

Rev Ron Daniel (right) delivering the sermon. In the congregation included Prime Minister Dr the Hon Timothy Harris, and the Deputy Governor General for Nevis Her Honour Mrs Hyleeta Liburd, among others.

The service which was held under strict Covid-19 protocols was attended by the Deputy Governor General for Nevis Her Honour Mrs Hyleeta Liburd, and Mr Elmo Liburd, Deputy Prime Minister the Hon Shawn Richards, Premier of Nevis who is also the Federal Minister of Foreign Affairs the Hon Mark Brantley, Minister of Health et al who is also the Chair of the Independence Committee the Hon Akilah Byron-Nisbett, and other members of the Federal and Nevis Island Administration Cabinets.

Also in attendance included His Lordship, the Hon Justice Ermin Moise, Resident High Court Judge in Nevis; President of the Nevis Island Assembly, the Hon Farrel Smithen; Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly, Senator the Hon Dr Bernicia Nisbett; Commander of the St. Kitts and Nevis Defence Force, Lt Col Anthony Comrie; Commissioner of Police, Mr Hilroy Brandy; Chief Fire Officer, Mr Everette O’Garro; and other senior civil servants.

Others in attendance included former Premier of Nevis, Ambassador His Excellency Vance Amory; Ambassador His Excellency Michael Powell, Ambassador His Excellency Sydney Osborne, Ambassador His Excellency Kevin Williams; and former President of the Nevis Island Assembly and former acting Deputy Governor General for Nevis Mrs Marjorie Morton among others.

Order of service was prepared by the National Church Bodies and Subcommittee for the 38th Anniversary State Service. Welcoming the congregants was Rev Ericson Cumberbatch of the Wesleyan Holiness Church, Molineux in St. Kitts, who is also Chaplain of the Royal St. Christopher and Nevis Police Force.

Prime Minister Dr the Hon Timothy Harris reading scriptures from the Old Testament, Genesis 41: 37-57.
The Nevis Independence Choral, under the direction of Mr Wayne Moore.

 

Old Testament Lesson, coming from Genesis 41: 37-57, was read by Prime Minister, Dr the Hon Timothy Harris, while the New Testament Lesson, coming from Acts 10: 34-43, was read by Leader of the Opposition, the Rt Hon Dr Denzil Douglas.

“As I looked at the theme ‘Adapt, Diversify, Recreate for Independence 38’, I wondered as to which story would be the best fit to share on this theme,” said Rev Ron Daniel as he delivered the sermon. “I thought of our country at this time of pandemic, and the crushing resultant effect it has had on our economy and our people in so many ways.”

He pointed out that he settled for the story of Joseph who though not faced by a pandemic was faced with a crisis of epic proportions which would see him have to lead Egypt as its Prime Minister during a time of uncertainty, distress, anxiety and in a time of famine, and was forced to adapt, diversify and recreate new norms to guide Egypt through difficult times.

According to Rev Daniel, for St. Kitts and Nevis to diversify and recreate as a nation, people must humble themselves and realise that their plans, programmes, policies, principles and projections must all come from God if indeed they are going to be successful.

“You see you can get plans from God but don’t have the heart to implement and stick to them,” said the man of the cloth. “Sometimes it’s because of fear of what you see. Sometimes it’s the people around you who question if it is going to work and maybe Joseph had those too.”

Some of the clergymen at the service: Rev Ericson Cumberbatch (top left), Pastor of the Salvation Army in St. Kitts, Major Roxroy Campbell (top right), and Father Piotr Palowski (bottom picture).
Scenes from the State Service of Prayer, Praise and Thanksgiving at the Elquemedo T. Park in Charlestown, Nevis, on Independence Day, Sunday September 19.

He added: “We must realise that as we face this pandemic that Joseph also faced a famine. He was able to adapt, diversify and recreate as well but he was able to do so because, he was human enough to realise that some things are bigger than him, and he was humble enough to realise that he had to get his plans from God.”

The Nevis Independence Choral, under the direction of Mr Wayne Moore, with accompanists Mrs Veta Morton and Mr Darron Sutton, rendered its anthem ‘In the Spirit of Thanksgiving’, while the Eden Brown Church of God Dancers performed a liturgical dance to the glory and honour of God and in celebration of the 38th Anniversary of the country’s independence.

Father Piotr Palowski of the St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Nevis, delivered the final blessing and benediction where among others he prayed to God to “heal our land and save our people. Satisfy us with your goodness.” This was followed by the benediction recited by Nevis Independence Choral, and the singing of the National Anthem by all present.

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Phillip Davis Sworn in as Prime Minister of Bahamas

The chairman of the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP), Fred Mitchell, says he believes that the new government of Bahamas, led by Prime Minister Phillip “Brave” Davis, will be in place “certainly not beyond Saturday”.

Davis, 70, an attorney, was sworn into office during a private ceremony at the Office of the Governor-General on Friday.

Davis led the PLP to a convincing victory, winning 32 of the 39 seats in Thursday’s general election, reversing the 35-4 drubbing the party had suffered at the hands of the Free National Movement (FNM) in 2017.

Mitchell had told reporters earlier that Davis would have arrived in the capital from Cat Island, where he “won his seat resoundingly”.

Mitchell said that prior to the general election, he had been in touch with the Commissioner of Police and with Government House “about the arrangements for an orderly transition from the existing government to the new government.

“In our system, as you know…as soon as the election results are finalized by the public officials, in this case, the Parliamentary Commissioner. A letter is written to the Governor-General to advise him of the winner and the Governor-General then writes a letter to invite the Prime Minister-designate to form a government”.

Mitchell said he had expected that to have been done overnight, adding “it is my hope that as soon as possible the government will be put in place and certainly not beyond Saturday.

“There is to be no break and we understand in this climate there is to be no honeymoon. We understand that the first measure the government takes will tell the Bahamian public how serious we are about the business of governing and the business of national building,” Mitchell added.

Davis, who sold himself during the campaign as a formidable leader in stark contrast to an “out of his depth” then prime minister Dr. Hubert Minnis now faces some formidable challenges in office due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and its continuing health and economic impact.

The country is still rebuilding from the battering it took in 2019 by Hurricane Dorian, one of the strongest Caribbean hurricanes on record, which killed at least 74 people and left many others missing.

In addition, the Ministry of Finance said that the national debt stood at US$10.356 billion at the end-June 2021, forecasting a $951 million fiscal deficit for 2021-2022.

CMC

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Canada is Hosting the XXII World Congress on Safety and Health at Work

GENEVA (ILO News) – Toronto, Ontario, Canada is hosting the XXII World Congress on Safety and Health at Work under the theme of Prevention in the Connected Age: global solutions to achieve safe and healthy work for all.

The Institute for Work & Health (IWH) and the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS) will host the Congress, together with the International Social Security Association (ISSA) and the International Labour Organization (ILO).

Participants from around the globe will attend virtually from September 20 – 23, 2021. Amidst the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, high-level government officials, trade unions, workers and their representatives, communicators, representatives of social security organizations, filmmakers, journalists, speakers, thought leaders, occupational experts and decision-makers will explore critical occupational safety and health issues. The Congress program features over 200 speakers in six technical sessions and 21 symposia. The International Media Festival for Prevention will take place during the Congress, as well as hundreds of virtual poster presentations and an International Safety and Health Exhibition.

WHAT: XXII World Congress on Safety and Health at Work

WHEN: September 20 – 23, 2021

Speakers include:

  • Mr. Cameron Bailey – Artistic Director and Co-Head, Toronto International Film Festival
  • Dr. Joachim Breuer – President, ISSA
  • Dr. John Howard – Director of NIOSH, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Dr. Cameron Mustard – President, IWH
  • Dr. Elizabeth Nkumbula – Founder and Chairperson, ENVIS Consulting Limited, Zambia
  • Mr. Guy Ryder – Director General, ILO
  • Prof. Atsushi Seike – President, The Promotion and Mutual Aid Corporation for Private Schools of Japan
  • Ms. Anne Tennier – President & CEO, CCOHS
  • Ms. Maayan Ziv CEO & Founder, AccessNow

Organizers:

  • International Labour Organization
  • International Social Security Association
  • The Institute for Work & Health
  • Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety

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Tropical Storm Peter Projected to Swing Through Caribbean with Wind, Rain

Sept. 20 (UPI) — Tropical Storm Peter, the 16th named system of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, is projected to pass multiple islands in the Caribbean in the coming days.

Peter, which became a tropical storm early Sunday, is on track to move close to the Northern Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico through Tuesday, forecasters said.

In its 5 a.m. EDT Update, the National Hurricane Center said Peter was located 245 miles northeast of the Northern Leeward Islands and had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph. It was moving northwest at 14 mph.

Forecasters said a gradual decrease in forward speed is expected through Tuesday, with a turn to the northwest expected by Wednesday.

The storm is not expected to impact the United States mainland.

Compared to the record-setting 2020 hurricane season, Peter arrived a little late. Last year, the 16th storm, Paulette, developed on Sept. 7.

Tropical Storm Rose also formed on Sunday, becoming the 17th named storm of the season, and is projected to follow a similar movement as Peter.

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St Kitts and Nevis to Celebrated 38th Independence Anniversary Sunday

LONDON, Sept. 17, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The Federation of St Kitts and Nevis celebrated its 38th Independence Anniversary on September 19th. With the theme of “Adapt, Diversify, Recreate: Independence 38,” the day will commemorate the country’s independence from the United Kingdom almost four decades ago

During his second voyage in 1493, Christopher Columbus landed on St Kitts and named the island after his patron saint, Christopher. The British in 1623 and the French in 1624 were the first Europeans who settled on the islands, and on September 19th 1983, St Kitts and Nevis attained independence within the British Commonwealth.

Typically, the occasion encompasses streets filled with a carnival atmosphere with music, calypso shows, and parades of dancers in colourful costumes. However, due to COVID-19 protocols, some of this year’s independence events will not be held, while others will be scaled back to limit health risks for citizens. The celebratory activities that mark the national occasion are spread throughout September and run into October 2021.

After St Kitts and Nevis gained independence, the nation inaugurated the world’s best and longest-standing Citizenship by Investment (CBI) programme in 1984. The programme allows vetted foreigners to attain citizenship after they make a monetary contribution to the nation’s economy. The accumulated funds help the government build a more robust education, health and social foundation for citizens.

Until now, CBI has facilitated the creation of countless jobs in construction, health, hospitality, and tourism through projects like Port Zante, the largest vessel dock in the region, and an athletic track on the island of Nevis. “CBI has been there for us from the very beginning. It has not only aided in our fight against COVID-19 but has established our country as an independent economy that stands as one of the strongest in the region,” Les Khan, the CEO of St Kitts and Nevis’ CBI Unit, told CS Global Partners.

Today, CBI makes up to 35 percent of the government revenue. While citizenship hopefuls need not reside, visit, or know the English language or local culture, they must pass some of the strictest due diligence checks. Successful applicants gain lifetime rights to live, work and study in the country and access high-quality healthcare and education. They can also travel to nearly 160 destinations without a pre-departure visa, a perk that has become a necessity in an uncertain world.

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www.csglobalpartners.com

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CELAC Summit: EU Style Block for Caribbean, Latin America Proposed

MEXICO CITY, Sept 18 (Reuters) – Latin American and Caribbean nations should aspire to a bloc like the European Union, Mexico’s president and other leaders said at a summit on Saturday, in a bid to wrest influence away from the Washington-based Organization of American States (OAS).

For years, a few of the region’s leftist standard-bearers who attended the gathering of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) have viewed the OAS as too close to the United States, resenting in particular its exclusion of Cuba from its members states.

The host of Saturday’s summit, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, told more than a dozen presidents and prime ministers at the opening ceremony that such a revamped diplomatic body could better boost the region’s inequality-stricken economies as well as confront health and other crises.

“In these times, CELAC can become the principal instrument to consolidate relations between our Latin American and Caribbean nations,” he said in a cavernous ballroomat Mexico’s ornate national palace where leaders took turns speaking and some sparks flewbetween ideological adversaries.

“We should build in the American continent something similar to what was the economic community that was the beginning of the current European Union,” the leftist Lopez Obrador said. He emphasized the need to respect national sovereignty and adhere to non-interventionist and pro-development policies.

The leaders gathered at the invitation of Lopez Obrador with a stated aim of weakening the OAS. The summit’s kickoff focused attention on the region’s center-left leaders, including Peru’s new president, Pedro Castillo, Cuba’s Miguel Diaz-Canel and Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.

Brazil’s right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro pulled out from CELAC last year, criticizing it for elevating undemocratic countries. Argentina’s Alberto Fernandez canceled at the last minute due to a sudden cabinet shuffle in his country.

SPARKS FLY

Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador speaks before the traditional military parade to mark the bicentennial of Mexico’s Independence from Spain, and ahead of the summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), at the Zocalo square in Mexico City, Mexico September 16, 2021. REUTERS/Gustavo Graf

Some fissures emerged among leaders. Uruguay’s center-right President Luis Lacalle said his participation should not be interpreted as an embrace of some of the region’s more authoritarian regimes or a rejection of the OAS.

“We are worried and look gravely at what’s happening in Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela,” he said, ticking off what he described as repressive actions including jailing of political opponents.

Cuba’s Diaz-Canel fired back by attacking neo-liberal policies that he said have retarded social progress. He also criticized Lacalle’s leadership, noting the large response from a recent petition drive by his domestic political opposition.

The Uruguayan responded by criticizing Cuba’s communist government, noting it does not tolerate opposition or allow its people to elect their own leaders.

Bolivian President Luis Arce called for a global agreement to forgive debts for poor countries while Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez called for a regional body to combat climate change.

A new CELAC fund to respond to natural disasters was also announced.

Venezuela’s late President Hugo Chavez helped set up CELAC in 2011, and his embattled successor Maduro arrived in the Mexican capital late on Friday as a surprise addition. read more .

In remarks Friday night, Maduro suggested a new CELAC headquarters be established in the Mexican capital. Mexico’s Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard politely sidestepped that proposal on Saturday when asked by reporters, describing the idea as premature.

Reporting by David Alire Garcia and Noe Torres; Editing by Andrea Ricci and David Gregorio

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“Trapped”: Migrants Collecting Food Try to Evade Cowboy Cops at U.S.-Mexico Border

CIUDAD ACUÑA, Mexico, Sept 19 (Reuters) – A U.S. law enforcement officer on horseback wielded what appeared to be a lariat, whipping it close to the face of a man wading in the Rio Grande carrying a plastic bag of food.

It was just one desperate moment in a few hours of such scenes along the Rio Grande on Sunday.

Hundreds of Haitian migrants who have been camping under a bridge in the Texas town of Del Rio were trying to bring food and other supplies from Ciudad Acuña in the Mexican state of Coahuila, while U.S. officials have stepped up security at the border and started flying migrants out of the area, some to Haiti.

Migrants said their squalid encampment under a bridge on the U.S. side of the river was short of supplies. U.S. officials over the last few days had let migrants cross back and forth at a shallow point of the river. On Sunday, however, they told migrants they would not be able to return to the U.S. side if they ventured into Mexico.

“We’re trapped,” said Joncito Jean, 37, who had spent three days sleeping on a sheet on the ground with his wife and children, ages 3 and 4. He said he regretted the decision to come.

“There are no humane conditions… We have to break out to buy water.”

More than 12,000 migrants, identified by officials on both sides as mostly Haitian, have been gathering under the bridge in recent days, awaiting immigration processing. Instead, U.S. officials began removing several thousand people from the camp over the weekend, including some who were later seen arriving in Haiti.

Still, several people who spoke to Reuters, most of whom traveled with their children, said they would take their chances to try to stay in the United States.

Mackenley Pearre, 25, left impoverished Haiti in July with his cousin, wife and 2-year-old daughter due to the worsening violence and inability to find work as an electrician. In July, Haiti’s president was assassinated, and in August a major earthquake and powerful storm hit the country.

A migrant man asylum seeker walks through the Rio Grande river to cross the border between Ciudad Acuna, Mexico and Del Rio, Texas, U.S., after buying supplies at the Mexican side, in Ciudad Acuna, Mexico September 19, 2021. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril

“You have to do something to not die of hunger,” he said, eating a tamale given to him by a local resident on the Mexican side, one of several people who said they felt moved to help.

At a news conference in Del Rio Sunday, U.S. Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz said resources were available.

“We are providing food, water, portable toilets, towels, emergency medical technicians are available for first aid,” Ortiz said.

“Over the next 6 to 7 days our goal is to process the 12,662 migrants that we have underneath that bridge as quickly as we possibly can,” Ortiz said. “What we want to make sure is that we deter the migrants from coming into the region so we can manage the folks that are under the bridge at this point.”

At the border, migrants waded deeper to try to evade law enforcement. Mostly men, many barefoot and in boxers, attempted trickier crossings through waist-deep water. Some migrants crossed at another point where water reached their necks.

Reuters journalists saw mounted officers wearing cowboy hats and vests emblazoned with “POLICE U.S. BORDER PATROL” blocking the path of migrants scrambling up the U.S. embankment carrying plastic bags and cardboard boxes.

After one of the officers in the vests unfurled a cord resembling a lariat like a whip and steered his horse to block the migrants, one tumbled back into the water. He got up and tried again, but the officer swung the cord again near his face.

In another incident, the same officer grabbed the back of the shirt of a migrant trying to run up the bank with bags of food.

Both people appeared to eventually slip past while the officers tried to hold back migrants who were scattering in all directions. A group of some two dozen people were later seen seated on the U.S. side of the river’s edge behind yellow tape near several patrol cars.

Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon, Alberto Fajardo and Daniel Becerril in Ciudad Acuña; Alexandra Ulmer in Del Rio. Editing by Donna Bryson and Diane Craft

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World View: UN Chief Warns of New Cold War, US Haitian Round-Up, Mass Russian Uni Murder, More

Sept. 20, 2021

Alternate text
  • The head of the United Nations is warning of a potential new Cold War if the United States and China don’t repair their “completely dysfunctional” relationship.
  • The U.S. is flying Haitians camped in a Texas border town back to their homeland in a massive show of force.
  • In parts of Ethiopia’s Tigray region, people are dying from hunger.
  • And pressure is building on world leaders to increase their efforts to fight global warming, an issue coming to a boil this week at the United Nations.
  • Multiple fatalities result from shooting at university in Russia
  • Canada votes in a pandemic election that could cost Trudeau
  • China limits the amount of time kids can spend playing online games

VANESSA GERA

Warsaw, Poland

The Associated Press

Advancing the Power of Facts

The Rundown

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Warning of a potential new Cold War, the head of the United Nations implored China and the United States to repair their “completely dysfunctional” relationship before problems between the two large and deeply influential…Read More

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DEL RIO, Texas (AP) — The U.S. is flying Haitians camped in a Texas border town back to their homeland and blocking others from crossing the border from Mexico in a massive show of force that signals the beginning of what could be one of Amer…Read More

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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — In parts of Ethiopia’s Tigray region, people now eat only green leaves for days. At a health center last week, a mother and her newborn weighing just 1.7 pounds died from hunger. …Read More

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Pressure keeps building on increasingly anxious world leaders to ratchet up efforts to fight climate change. There’s more of it coming this week in one of the highest-profile forums of all — the United Nations. …Read More

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OK, it definitely wasn’t the Pandemmys, or the Zoomemmys, or whatever you want to call last year’s virtual Emmy ceremony — with everyone at home, and visitors in hazmat suits showing up to bestow awards. …Read More

OTHER TOP STORIES

MOOSE, Wyo. (AP) — Authorities said a body discovered in northern Wyoming was believed to be that of a 22-year-old woman who disappeared while on a cross-country trek wi…Read More

MOSCOW (AP) — A gunman opened fire in a university in the Russian city of Perm on Monday morning, leaving at least four people wounded, the university’s spokespeople sai…Read More

TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau gambled on an early election in a bid to win a majority of seats in Parliament, but now faces the threat of being knocked fr…Read More

Li Zhanguo’s two children, aged eight and four, don’t have their own smartphones, but like millions of other Chinese children, they are no strangers to online gaming. “…Read More

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WHO/ILO: Almost 2 M People Die from Work-Related Causes Yearly

The first WHO/ILO global estimates on disease and injury in the workplace outline the level of preventable premature deaths due to exposure to work-related health risks.

Press release | 17 September 2021

GENEVA (ILO News) – Work-related diseases and injuries were responsible for the deaths of 1.9 million people in 2016, according to the first joint estimates from the World Health Organization (WHO) and International Labour Organization (ILO).

According to the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury, 2000-2016: Global Monitoring Report , the majority of work-related deaths were due to respiratory and cardiovascular disease.

Non-communicable diseases accounted for 81 per cent of the deaths. The greatest causes of deaths were chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (450,000 deaths); stroke (400,000 deaths) and ischaemic heart disease (350,000 deaths). Occupational injuries caused 19 per cent of deaths (360,000 deaths).

The study considers 19 occupational risk factors, including exposure to long working hours and workplace exposure to air pollution, asthmagens, carcinogens, ergonomic risk factors, and noise. The key risk was exposure to long working hours – linked to approximately 750,000 deaths. Workplace exposure to air pollution (particulate matter, gases and fumes) was responsible for 450,000 deaths.

“It’s shocking to see so many people literally being killed by their jobs,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “Our report is a wake-up call to countries and businesses to improve and protect the health and safety of workers by honouring their commitments to provide universal coverage of occupational health and safety services.”

Work-related diseases and injuries strain health systems, reduce productivity and can have a catastrophic impact on household incomes, the report warns.

Globally, work-related deaths per population fell by 14 per cent between 2000 and 2016. This may reflect improvements in workplace health and safety, the report says. However, deaths from heart disease and stroke associated with exposure to long working hours rose by 41 and 19 per cent respectively. This reflects an increasing trend in this relatively new and psychosocial occupational risk factor.

This first WHO/ILO joint global monitoring report will enable policy makers to track work-related health loss at country, regional and global levels. This allows for more focused scoping, planning, costing, implementation and evaluation of appropriate interventions to improve workers’ population health and health equity. The report shows that more action is needed to ensure healthier, safer, more resilient and more socially just workplaces, with a central role played by workplace health promotion and occupational health services.

Each risk factor has a unique set of preventive actions, which are outlined in the monitoring report to guide governments, in consultation with employers and workers. For example, the prevention of exposure to long working hours requires agreement on healthy maximum limits on working time. To reduce workplace exposure to air pollution, dust control, ventilation, and personal protective equipment is recommended.

“These estimates provide important information on the work-related burden of disease, and this information can help to shape policies and practices to create healthier and safer workplaces,” said Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General. “Governments, employers and workers can all take actions to reduce exposure to risk factors at the workplace. Risk factors can also be reduced or eliminated through changes in work patterns and systems. As a last resort personal protective equipment can also help to protect workers whose jobs mean they cannot avoid exposure.”

“These almost 2 million premature deaths are preventable. Action needs to be taken based on the research available to target the evolving nature of work-related health threats,” said Dr. Maria Neira, Director of the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Health at WHO. “Ensuring health and safety among workers is a shared responsibility of the health and labour sector, as is leaving no workers behind in this regard. In the spirit of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, health and labour must work together, hand in hand, to ensure that this large disease burden is eliminated.”

“International labour standards and WHO/ILO tools and guidelines give a solid basis to implement strong, effective and sustainable occupational safety and health systems at different levels. Following them should help to significantly reduce these deaths and disabilities,” said Vera Paquete-Perdigao, Director of the Governance and Tripartism Department at ILO.

A disproportionately large number of work-related deaths occur in workers in South-East Asia and the Western Pacific, and males and people aged over 54 years.

The report notes that total work-related burden of disease is likely substantially larger, as health loss from several other occupational risk factors must still be quantified in the future. Moreover, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic will add another dimension to this burden to be captured in future estimates.

These estimates are published ahead of the XXII World Congress on Safety and Health , which meets virtually 20 – 23 September, 2021.

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