PM issues instructions to prepare an integrated national plan to preserve environment.

Tripoli, Prime Minister of the Government of National Unity, Abdul Hamid al-Dabaiba, instructed the Ministers of Education, Higher Education, Scientific Research, Youth, Agriculture, Local Government and the Environment to take the necessary measures to preserve the environment.

The instructions, which came in a letter sent by the Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs and the Prime Minister to the concerned ministers, follow the participation of the Prime Minister in the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow and the recommendations he reached that obligate countries to take measures and limit the rise in global warming and the danger of global warming.

The instructions issued to the Minister of Education stipulate that the subject of the environment and its preservation should be included in the curricula, while the instructions to the Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research stipulate the activation of the environmental departments. The instructions also stipulated the ministries of youth, agriculture, local government, education, higher education, scientific research and the environment to prepare an integrated national plan to launch the planting trees campaign.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Ministry of Justice and UK Embassy discuss cooperation.

Tripoli, The meeting held between the Ministry of Justice and the Embassy of the United Kingdom in Tripoli was devoted to cooperation between the two countries in the field of developing and improving reform and rehabilitation institutions.

The meeting, which was held at the office of the Ministry of Justice in Tripoli and was chaired by the Undersecretary of the Judicial Police, reviewed the priorities for developing reform institutions, their management, work systems, and monitoring and control systems in accordance with international standards.

She also presented an overview during the meeting of the activities and programms that include her vision of bringing these institutions to international standards, according to Media Office of the Ministry of Justice on its official page.

The meeting concluded with an agreement to hold a meeting during the coming period via video conferencing, comprising specialists from both parties, entrusted with the task of formulating a set of joint programmes that can be implemented based on the strategy of the Ministry of Justice in managing this file.

The meeting was attended by the Head of the Cooperation Department in the Ministry, the Director of the Undersecretary’s Office, the Head of the Institutional Improvement Unit, the Head of the Women’s Empowerment Unit at the Judicial Police, and for the United Kingdom, the Director of the Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Network and the Head of Counter-Terrorism Programmes at the Embassy.

Source: Libyan News Agency

UN migration agency provides assistance for families affected by floods in Libya

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said that it provided assistance to over 150 families displaced by floods in eastern Libya.

“More than 150 families in eastern Libya have been displaced from their homes due to flash floods caused by the heavy rain over the weekend,” the UN migration agency said in a statement.

This emergency triggered the UN Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM) which includes coordinated emergency assistance from World Food Programme, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Libya, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Libya and IOM to support the affected households with assistance, the statement said.

“In line with RRM’s commitment to respond within 72 hours of an emergency, IOM jointly with RRM members distributed food, core relief items and drinking water in Albayar to 85 households and in Almaraj/Tacnis to 73 households,” it said.

Source: Nam News Network

King and queen of Netherlands tour the United Arab Emirates

Dubai, The king and queen of the Netherlands toured Dubai’s Expo 2020 and a strawberry farm deep inside the Emirati desert Wednesday, part of a two-day trip to the United Arab Emirates.

King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima received a rousing round of applause as their day ended at the massive Al Wasl Dome at Expo 2020, the world’s fair going on in Dubai until the end of March.

Children draped in the Netherlands flag and the parents listened as the king nodded toward the ongoing climate talks in Glasgow with a speech acknowledging his country and the oil-producing UAE both need new strategies for the future.

“The ideas, methods and growth strategies that helped us achieve greatness and prosperity in the past are no longer fit for the purpose,” the king said.

“They don’t offer solutions to the major challenges of our time.”

Earlier in the day, the king and Queen Maxima visited a strawberry farm in the deserts of Abu Dhabi near the city of Sweihan, built with Dutch help.

While there, they toured the facility, walking among the rows of strawberries growing inside the facility.

The king wore a pinstriped blue suit and red tie, while the queen sported a green-and-white jumpsuit, at the farm. Both also wore face masks as the UAE maintains a mask mandate amid the coronavirus pandemic, even as it has one of the world’s highest per-capita vaccination rates.

At Expo, the king wore a blue suit with a pale blue tie, with a pocket square sticking out of his suit jacket.

The queen wore a large sunhat and an off-white dress. They stopped by the Netherlands pavilion, where a young boy handed the royals a hand-drawn picture of the Netherlands tri-color flag.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

163 illegal Nigerian migrants deported from Libya

Libya’s anti-illegal migration department said that 163 illegal migrants have been deported to their native country of Nigeria.

“Based on instructions from the Ministry of Interior and the Attorney General’s office, 163 illegal Nigerian migrants, including women and children, managed to return to their country voluntarily in cooperation with the International Organization for Migration (IOM)”, the department said in a statement.

All the migrants have been tested for COVID-19 before departure, it added.

Libya has been suffering insecurity and chaos since 2011, making the North African country a preferred point of departure for illegal migrants who want to cross the Mediterranean Sea to European shores.

The Voluntary Humanitarian Return program, run by the IOM, arranges the return of illegal immigrants stranded in Libya to their homelands.

Since 2015, more than 53,000 illegal migrants have returned from Libya through the program, with support from the European Union and the Italian Migration Fund, according to the IOM.

Source: Nam News Network

How COVID-19 Stole ‘Children’s Joy,’ Sparking a Mental Health Emergency

No in-person school. Isolation from friends. Lost rites of passage like graduation ceremonies. The COVID-19 pandemic upended the lives of many children in the United States.

“A lot of children’s joy comes from being with friends or from play, and from social interaction. When you ask kids, ‘What’s making you happy?’ 90% of the time, it’s being around friends or doing things with friends,” says Elena Mikalsen, head of the Psychology Section at the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio in Texas. “That was kind of taken away during the pandemic. … For the longest time, all kids had was the academics and no joy.”

A recent report finds that the uncertainty and disruption caused by COVID-19 has negatively affected the emotional and mental health of about one-third of America’s youth. So much so that the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), along with other children’s health organizations, has declared a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health.

“Elevated symptoms of anxiety, depression or stress,” says Nirmita Panchal, a senior policy analyst at the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), a nonprofit organization focusing on national health issues. “There’s also been a number of changes in behavior that parents have reported with some children having a poor appetite and difficulty sleeping. For others, it may be fear or irritability and clinginess.”

Panchal co-authored the report, which found that 8% of children between the ages of 3 and 17 currently have anxiety. That number rises to 13% among adolescents ages 12 to 17.

“During the pandemic, children, just like everybody else, have experienced a number of changes and disruptions,” Panchal says. “That includes school closures, possibly financial difficulties at home, isolation, perhaps the loss of loved ones and then difficulty accessing health care. So, all of these factors may be contributing to increased mental health issues among children.”

Rates of children’s mental health concerns and suicide steadily increased between 2010 and 2020, according to the AAP, which says the pandemic has made the crisis worse with “dramatic increases” in the number of young people visiting hospital emergency rooms for mental health-related concerns, including possible suicide attempts.

Maryland psychologist Mary Karapetian Alvord says uncertainty, as well as losing out on school activities, provoked varying levels of grief in young people.

“Particularly high school students, who really lost out on all of the fun activities, the fun clubs, and also graduations and homecoming, football games and all the social as well as the outlets that they have,” says Alvord, who is also an adjunct associate professor of psychiatry at The George Washington University School of Medicine. “So, those are themes that have dominated this pandemic, I think, grief, loss on all those different levels, and then just constant uncertainty. And we then get a rise in anxiety.”

Alvord says the young people being seen at her practice have a sense that they’re not moving forward, which has led to anger, frustration, sadness and anxiety.

“It runs the gamut, but kids have lost time,” she says. “They have a sense that they have lost time, and not in terms of only maybe some academic skills, which a lot of the schools are concerned about, but in terms of maturity. How do you mature as a kid? It’s not by being home 24/7.”

And while children missed being in school with their friends, the idea of returning to in-person classes also triggered some anxiety.

“Some kids were scared to go back to school because they were afraid of contracting COVID. They were afraid of what school might look like and what that would entail, especially kids that already were more predispositioned to have anxiety or depression,” says psychologist Nekeshia Hammond, former president of the Florida Psychological Association. “It basically made that process a lot more stressful. And not just school but going back into social situations.”

The pandemic has shaken the sense of safety most children feel. More than 140,000 children in the United States lost a primary and/or secondary caregiver to COVID-19.

“The majority of kids just have this innocence, in a way, that the world is safe. ‘I’m going to be OK. People are here to protect me,’” Hammond says. “And that got stripped away for a lot of kids who don’t feel the world is safe.”

Children of color have been disproportionately impacted by the losses caused by the pandemic. And not solely because they were more likely to lose a loved one to the virus.

Mikalsen, who works primarily with minority youth and inner-city youth in Texas, found that many of the children she spoke to were forced to use their smartphones for their schooling because they didn’t have computers at home. Spotty internet connections made it difficult to stay in touch with their schoolwork and to get their assignments.

Some of Mikalsen’s young patients were home alone all day because their parents are essential, front-line workers.

“A lot of the kids that I was talking to during the pandemic, they were completely alone at home, left to be there by themselves and, ‘Hey, if you can get connected to school, that’d be great, but if you don’t, no big deal,’” Mikalsen says. “So many kids that I talked to, they just slept all day and had nobody to talk to. Things like that can really cause a lot of depression and anxiety.”

And then there was the societal upheaval caused by the police murder of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man in Minneapolis. Video of police officer Derek Chauvin pressing his knee into Floyd’s neck while Floyd struggled to breathe went viral, sparking nationwide protests against police brutality.

“All of that affects kids of color in a different way, on top of a global pandemic, on top of, ‘You can’t go to school, and you lost a loved one.’ It was basically more compounded,” Hammond says. “There were so many different stressors all at one time, which made it extremely difficult as far as coping, and as far as mental health.”

The AAP is calling for more federal funding for mental health screenings and treatment for all children from infancy through adolescence, with an emphasis on making certain kids from less privileged homes get the services they need.

“We don’t want to wait until it’s unmanageable. We want to have scaffolding and services in place to catch kids when they’re having that much trouble,” Alvord says. “We’re all tied to one another, and if your family is doing better, then those kids get sent to school and they’re doing better in school. Which helps the whole health of the classroom. Which helps the teachers do better to teach and do what they need to, instead of having to deal with the mental health crisis.”

Source: Voice of America