vendredi 26 octobre 2012

Migrant Boat from Morocco to Spain Sinks, 14 Dead and 4 Missing


The flimsy craft that went down in Mediterranean waters en route from Morocco to Spain was carrying 35 migrants, not the 71 mentioned by one of the survivors, the Moroccan Human Rights Association said Thursday.
mediterranean sea 
Spanish and Moroccan teams pulled 14 bodies out of the water and rescued 17 other people, Spain’s Maritime Rescue service said earlier.
One of the survivors said 71 people were aboard the boat when it left Morocco.
Ammari Hasan, the representative of the human rights association in the northeastern town of Uxda, told Efe that the figure of 35 passengers had been confirmed by several different sources.
If that number is correct, it would leave four of the sub-Saharan migrants aboard the craft unaccounted for.
The Moroccan government has made no mention of the accident, while the official MAP news agency has reported only that one African migrant was rescued at sea and brought to a hospital in Alhucemas in grave condition.
Authorities from both countries began searching for the boat on Wednesday after a tip from someone who feared for the safety of a family member aboard the craft, Spanish officials told Efe.
The boat was located by a Maritime Rescue surveillance plane, which lowered a raft to pick up some of those in the water and summoned vessels from both Spain and Morocco to aid in rescue and recovery efforts.
The Maritime Rescue plane remained in the area to search for additional survivors or victims.

mardi 23 octobre 2012

Locust Swarms Threaten North Africa


(Newsroom America) -- The Food and Agriculture Organization has alerted Algeria, Libya, Mauritania and Morocco to prepare for the likely arrival of Desert Locust swarms from the Sahel in West Africa in the coming weeks.
The four countries are being urged to stand by to mobilize their field teams to detect the arrival of the swarms and control them.
Swarms of adult locusts are currently forming in Chad and are about to form in Mali and Niger following good summer rains that provided favourable conditions for two generations of breeding and which triggered a 250-fold increase in locust populations in those countries.
"Prevailing winds and historical precedents make it likely the swarms, once formed, will fly to Algeria, Libya, southern Morocco and northwestern Mauritania," said Keith Cressman, FAO Senior Locust Forecasting Officer.
"Once there, they could damage pastures and subsistence rain-fed crops. They could also pose a threat to harvests in Chad, Mali and Niger."
After becoming airborne, swarms of tens of millions of locusts can fly up to 150 km a day with the wind. Female locusts can lay 300 eggs within their lifetime while a Desert Locust adult can consume roughly its own weight in fresh food per day -- about two grams every day. A very small swarm eats the same amount of food in one day as about 35,000 people.
FAO has been able to monitor the situation in Niger and Chad, but conflict in Mali has made it very difficult to track the situation there. Control operations, with spraying by ground teams, started in Chad in early October. Similar interventions are beginning now in Niger, though teams must be accompanied by military escorts to ensure their safety.
The hazardous security situation plus difficult access to some locust breeding grounds are constraining control efforts, Cressman said. This makes it unlikely that all locust infestations will be found and treated on the ground - especially in Mali.
FAO has brokered agreements with countries that have available appropriate pesticide stocks - Algeria, Morocco and Senegal - to donate them to Mali, Niger and Chad. This will avoid increasing stockpiles of hazardous chemicals in the region. The supplies are being airlifted with the support of the World Food Programme.
Last June, FAO appealed for $10 million to maintain and expand operations. So far, $4.1 million has been received, allowing field operations to continue throughout the summer in Mali, Niger and Chad, thanks to the support from the governments of France, United Kingdom and United States, as well as bilateral assistance to Niger.
A regional meeting organized last month by the FAO Commission for Controlling the Desert Locust in the Western Region (CLCPRO) and the World Bank confirmed that the full appeal is sufficient to cover the costs of the control campaign in the region until December. Efforts are currently underway to obtain the remaining funds.
Frontline countries in the Sahel such as Mauritania, Mali, Niger, and Chad have trained locust survey and control teams but they need external assistance, especially vehicles, equipment and pesticides, to respond effectively to a full-scale emergency.
Mali is particularly short of equipment after more than 30 pickup trucks were looted in the northern part of the country.

lundi 22 octobre 2012

Morocco's Governing Council Approves Budget


Morocco’s governing council has recently adopted during an extraordinary meeting the country’s 2013 finance bill, providing for a raft of fiscal measures.

Following the meeting, Morocco’s Communications Minister and government spokesman Mustapha El Khalfi revealed that the 2013 budget predicts growth next year of 4.5%, and for a reduction of the public deficit to 4.8% of gross domestic product.

According to El Khalfi, the government’s “ambitious” finance bill aims to tackle the constraints of the financial crisis, while at the same time enabling various strategic development projects to continue to support investment and to reduce social inequalities.

El Khalfi underscored that the budget contains a number of initiatives designed to improve the competitiveness of the national economy, to develop new industrial sectors, and to support and assist SMEs in Morocco.

However, the government aims to increase tax revenues in 2013 by 5.1% compared with 2012, an amount equivalent to MAD8.7bn (USD990m).

The 2013 finance bill is due to be presented to parliament shortly.

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dimanche 21 octobre 2012

Israel failed to reelect to Universal Postal Union



Israel's nominations for election to the Council of Administration (CA) and the Postal Operations Council of the Universal Postal Union (UPU) were not supported at the union's congress meeting in Doha last week. 
 
Israel has served on the Council of Administration for the past four years and has been a member of UPU since 1949. Israel’s delegation to the UPU congress came late, after meetings had already commenced because of logistical confusion over security arrangements with the Qataris.


The countries elected to the CA were: Argentina, Australia, Bangladesh, Barbados, Brazil, Republic of Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Canada, Republic of Congo, Costa Rica, Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, Ecuador, Egypt, France, Gabon, Greece, India, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Kuwait, Malawi, Mexico, Morocco, Norway, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Sudan, United Republic of Tanzania, Thailand, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United States of America and Viet Nam. According to the report, Israel's Postal Company feels that political considerations were responsible for the failure to win reelection to the Council of Administration, and that this is “part of the price Israel is paying for its diplomatic isolation.” 

The UPU, which was established in 1874, provides a framework for the international exchange of mail through a single global postal territory, formalized through multilateral agreements cited as ‘The Acts’. The UPU is a specialized body of the United Nations that promotes the organization of postal services across 192 member states. In particular, the UPU encourages the development of international collaboration to increase the efficiency of international mail transit. The CA - composed of 41 countries - meets annually at UPU headquarters in Berne, Switzerland, to ensure the continuity of the UPU's work between Congresses, supervise its activities and study regulatory, administrative, legislative and legal issues. Kenya’s Bishar A Hussein has been elected as the new director general to lead the Universal Postal Union over the next four years. Ambassador Hussein is a former Kenyan postmaster general, and has served his country as Ambassador to the UAE. Switzerland’s Pascal Thierry Clivaz has been elected as UPU deputy director general. Clivaz has been director of finance and strategic planning at UPU headquarters in Berne since 2005. He is a former executive of the Swiss Post and was a Swiss delegate at the UPU before joining the organization in 2005.

mercredi 10 octobre 2012

Five sub-Saharan migrants drown off Morocco


Five sub-Saharan migrants, including a child, are thought to have drowned when their boat capsized off Morocco’s north coast as it tried to reach the Spanish enclave of Melilla, a rights group said Wednesday.
Seventeen illegal migrants were on board the small boat that attempted to reach Melilla on Tuesday from the nearby town of Nador, on Morocco’s Mediterranean coast, the Moroccan Association of Human Rights (AMDH) said, citing one of the migrants.
The boat capsized around one kilometre before it reached its destination and five people died or remain unaccounted for, including a child under five years old and three women, said AMDH’s Hassan Ammari, citing the same source.
Illegal migrants from sub-Saharan Africa regularly attempt to cross from Morocco into the tiny north African enclave, held by Spain for centuries, but considered occupied by Rabat, in a bid to reach mainland Europe.
The Moroccan authorities have tightened immigration policy in recent months, sending hundreds of sub-Saharans out of the country since early September, and cooperating with Madrid to evict a group that swum to a tiny Spanish islet just off the coast last month.
North African and European leaders agreed in Malta last week to set up an immigration task force following the Arab Spring uprisings, which have seen a sharp rise in the number of people making risky boat crossings to seek a new life in Europe.
This year alone, hundreds of illegal migrants have disappeared at sea.

mercredi 3 octobre 2012

Morocco says incoming abortion ship is outside the law

(AP) RABAT, Morocco - Officials say a Dutch ship promoting safe abortions set to dock in Morocco on Thursday is operating outside the law.The ministers told The Associated Press Wednesday the boat has not followed proper procedures to land in Morocco, suggesting it might not be allowed to do that.

Interior Minister Mohend Laenser said they had not been informed of the ship’s arrival and "a boat we don’t know or why it is coming, I don’t know what we can do."

Education Minister Lahcen Daoudi said all boats coming to Morocco must obey the law and security forces will "apply law on everything to do with the boat."The Dutch "Women on Waves" ship was invited by a Moroccan women’s group to raise awareness and support efforts to legalize abortion in Morocco.

source: http://www.whec.com/

Morocco In mediterranean Initiative launched in Sicily

   Italy's customs agency has officially launched the "Iniziativa del Mediterraneo" (Mediterranean Initiative) in Taormina in Sicily whose objectives are cooperation and improvement of protecting markets and border control in the run-up to the creation of the European-Mediterranean free trade area. With italy in the lead, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Jordan and Lebanon have signed up. The customs agency is to take action in three areas; the fight against drug trafficking, integrated border control through coordination with all services and agencies of the other nations and finally, customs simplification and easing trade restrictions in order to support exports and Italian investments. The project will hold workshops, seminars, information exchange and training. The free trade area will cover an area of 600 million consumers. Italy today has 21% of the trade between the European Union and the countries in the Mediterranean. In 2009 Italian exports towards those countries were worth EUR 22 billion, with trade worth about EUR 45 billion. These numbers confirm Italy as the number one trading partner with the nations on the south shore of the Mediterranean. To encourage Italian investment in other countries, the Italian Society for Companies Overseas (Societa' italiana per le imprese all'Eetero, SIMEST) has launched 119 projects worth a total of EUR 3 billion. The E.U. is working on a project to support micro-businesses and small and medium-size businesses in the region. The main point of the Mediterranean Initiative, according to the assistant director of Italy's customs agency, Walter De Santis, "is the creation of integrated data banks of networks able to identify trustworthy operators. It's an ambitious program, but achievable," said De Santis, "that can be the basis of long term development in an area with great potential for economic growth." Along with De Santis in Taormina were Mehmet Guzel, Turkey's assistant trade inister, Natalina Cea, director of the International Cooperation Office, Fabio Ballini, project manager for Custom Med, Vincenzo Donato, general director of the development department of the Economic Development Ministry and representatives of the seven countries involved in the initiative. (AGI) .

the Morocco-born rapper back home for the first time in 15 years


Fans recently got a rare glimpse into French Montana's personal life when the Morocco-born rapper traveled back to his home for the first time in 15 years to reunite with his father and other family. Although the journey was difficult at some points, French tells MTV News he was happy to show a different side of himself.
"I was like the ambassador of Morocco," French joked, as he described his trip on the BET Hip-Hop Awards red carpet.
The Bad Boy MC, whose real name is Karim Kharbouch, moved from Morocco to the South Bronx in New York at the age of 13 with mother, father and brother, but his dad eventually returned to Morocco without the rest of their family. His recent trip back home, which was documented inFader's October cover story, marked his first time seeing his father in 15 years.
"It was real life... us being entertainers, we really got a real life and all of us got a struggle," French told MTV News, as he motioned to Machine Gun Kelly, standing next to him on the carpet. "More than likely, ya'll [are] gonna find something about [MGK] that makes him who he is, and same thing with me — we go through a lot. That's why we're here."
When asked about the difficulty of reuniting with his dad, French threw in a quick joke before getting to the real stuff. "I think he cares more about the money I gave him," he said laughing, and then adding, "I just feel like, for me, it was a relief off my back to see my father after 15 years. When I had a kid and I went through my drama and situation, I respected my father more because it kinda made me understand what he went through with me."
Away from the cameras, French and his younger brother reunited with their father and gifted him $10,000 cash. The "Pop That" rapper is currently prepping his debut album Excuse My French.


mardi 2 octobre 2012

International Convention on Training & Certification for Fishing Vessel Personnel Enters Into Force


The International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Fishing Vessel Personnel, 1995 (STCW-F 1995) enters into force on 29 September 2012.

The STCW-F Convention sets the certification and minimum training requirements for crews of seagoing fishing vessels of 24 metres in length and above. The Convention consists of 15 Articles and an annex containing technical regulations.

The STCW-F Convention has been ratified by 15 States: Canada, Denmark, Iceland, Kiribati, Latvia, Mauritania, Morocco, Namibia, Norway, Palau, the Russian Federation, Sierra Leone, Spain, the Syrian Arab Republic and Ukraine, and also by Faroes, Denmark.

The entry into force of the STCW-F Convention comes just days before a diplomatic conference, to be held in Cape Town, South Africa, from 9 to 11 October, which will consider adopting an Agreement on the implementation of IMO’s other instrument relating to fishing vessel safety, the 1993 Protocol relating to the 1977 Torremolinos International Convention for the Safety of Fishing Vessels.

The conference is expected to consider and adopt an agreement on the implementation of the provisions of the 1993 Protocol. The agreement would also amend the technical provisions of the 1993 Protocol, with the aim of bringing them into force as soon as possible thereafter.  

Instituto Cervantes Taller:Laboratory and visual performance practice


Workshop: Laboratory and visual performance practice with choreographer Juan Dominguez from Monday 15 to Friday 19 October from 15h to 20h at the Instituto Cervantes. REGISTRATIONS OPEN UNTIL OCTOBER 8.

  Send us your CV and a covering letter by email with Ref: Juan Dominguez to: adx5cas@cervantes.es or provide documentation in the Cervantes Institute, 31 rue d'Alger, before 8 October.

"Abortion Ship Will Visit Morocco Next Week


A Dutch "abortion boat" has set sail for Morocco, its first trip to a Muslim country, to provide abortions to women who are exposed to grave health risks if treated domestically, its organiser said on Monday. 


 "The ship is on its way. We can't yet disclose the place and time of arrival... We expect it to stay for up to a week." Rebecca Gomperts(in picture), the founder of the Dutch non-profit organisation Women on Waves, said. (AFP)