UN confirms 2021 among seven hottest years on record

GENEVA, The past seven years have been the hottest on record, the United Nations confirmed, adding that 2021 temperatures remained high despite the cooling effect of the La Nina weather

phenomenon.

“The warmest seven years have all been since 2015,” the UN’s World Meteorological Organization said in a statement.

And despite the fact that two consecutive La Nina events captured global attention for large portions of the year, 2021 still ranked among the seven warmest years on record, the WMO said.

“Back-to-back La Nina events mean that 2021 warming was relatively less pronounced compared to recent years. Even so, 2021 was still warmer than previous years influenced by La Nina,” WMO chief Petteri Taalas said in the

statement.

This, he said, shows that “the overall long-term warming as a result of greenhouse gas increases is now far larger than the year-to-year variability in global average temperatures caused by naturally occurring climate drivers.”

La Nina refers to the large-scale cooling of surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, with widespread impacts on weather around the world.

The phenomenon, which typically has the opposite impacts as the warming El Nino phenomenon, usually occurs every two to seven years, but has now hit twice since 2020.

WMO reached its conclusions by consolidating six leading international datasets, including the European Union’s Copernicus climate monitor (C3S) and the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which

announced similar findings last week.

The datasets showed that the average global temperature in 2021 was around 1.11 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial levels measured between 1850 and 1900.

Last year also marked the seventh consecutive year that global temperatures were more than 1C above pre-industrial levels, the datasets showed.

“The global average temperature in 2021 is already approaching the lowerlimit of temperature increase the Paris Agreement seeks to avert,” the WMO warned.

The 2015 Paris Agreement saw countries agree to cap global warming at “well below” 2C above pre-industrial levels, and 1.5C if possible.

The WMO stressed that the unbroken warm streak over the past seven years was part of a longer-term trend towards higher global temperatures.

“Since the 1980s, each decade has been warmer than the previous one,” it said.

“This is expected to continue.”

The datasets varied slightly in their assessment of where 2021 ranked among the seven warmest years, with C3S ranking it fifth, NOAA ranking it sixth, and others saying it was seventh.

“The small differences among these datasets indicates the margin of error for calculating the average global temperature,” the WMO said.

But while 2021 was among the coolest of the top-seven hottest years, it was still marked by a range of record temperatures and extreme weather events linked to global warming.

Taalas pointed to the “record-shattering temperature of nearly 50C in Canada, comparable to the values reported in the hot Saharan Desert of Algeria, exceptional rainfall, and deadly flooding in Asia and Europe as well as drought in parts of Africa and South America.”

“Climate change impacts and weather-related hazards had life-changing and devastating impacts on communities on every single continent.”

Source: Nam News Network

Reporter Kidnapped, Beaten in Northeast Syria

WASHINGTON — Tuesday started like any other day for Jindar Barakat. The reporter, who works part time at a currency exchange, was opening up the store in the northeastern Syrian city of Al-Hasakah.

But instead of customers, masked men in military uniform filled the store.

“They were probably five men, all masked up,” Barakat said. “Two of them captured me, while the rest started to search the store, seizing my cellphone and other personal belongings.”

The 33-year-old was confused, but as he was blindfolded and bundled into a nearby vehicle, he suspected he was being targeted for his reporting for Yekiti Media.

The news website is affiliated with the Kurdish Yekiti Party in Syria, one of several political parties that oppose the Democratic Union Party (PYD), the de facto ruling party in northeast Syria.

The PYD and its affiliated military force, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), control large parts of north and eastern Syria. The SDF has been a major U.S. partner in the fight against the Islamic State terror group.

Barakat’s reporting focuses on abuses carried out by the local authorities, including the arrests of activists, recruitment of children by local military forces, and corruption.

As he was driven away, Barakat tried to make sense of what was happening.

“I asked them to identify themselves, but they were very harsh with me. I knew they were affiliated with the PYD because of their uniforms and also because they didn’t stop on checkpoints,” Barakat told VOA.

“I was blindfolded and handcuffed, and they kept beating me and insulting me,” he said.

About an hour later, the vehicle stopped, and Barakat said he was taken to what felt like an empty room.

“They kept me blindfolded and tied my already cuffed hands to a rope and pulled it upward,” he said. “They beat me on my back, neck and the back of my hands.”

As he was being beaten, Barakat said his captors told him they didn’t like his media work and Facebook posts. But “they didn’t point to a particular article or post,” he said.

Neither the press office at the PYD-led Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) nor the local security service known as Asayish responded to VOA’s requests for comment.

After several hours, Barakat was dropped without his phone at the side of the road, about 15 kilometers from his home. The journalist walked to a nearby house to borrow a phone to call a cab.

Images he shared with VOA showed bruising to his hands, the back of his neck, and his stomach.

“Their objective was to intimidate me and deter me in my work as a journalist,” he said. But “I won’t be afraid of them.”

Risky beat

Since the beginning of Syria’s conflict in 2011, the PYD-run semiautonomous region has largely been seen as friendly to international journalists.

But it’s a different story for local reporters, who can be detained, harassed or attacked for coverage deemed too critical of local authorities.

Red lines for media often include major corruption cases, oil deals made by the local administration and military matters, particularly those related to terrorism.

Security forces in the northeastern city of Qamishli last month briefly detained eight reporters and personnel from international and regional news organizations who were covering a demonstration against the recruitment of children by local military forces.

History of harassment

Barakat was first harassed over his reporting in 2015. It was the first of at least three occasions where he has been detained or taken for questioning by different security agencies, local news reported.

Last month, a stun grenade was thrown at the balcony of his apartment. He believes those responsible are part of the local security apparatus.

The incident was widely reported in Kurdish and regional media. The regional AANES security forces did not comment publicly on the incident.

Tuesday’s beating was condemned by the General Union of Kurdish Writers and Journalists in Syria.

In a statement, the union demanded that “the perpetrators be brought to a fair trial by independents, and in the presence of independent human rights organizations.”

Radwan Badini, a professor of politics and journalism at Iraq’s Salahaddin University-Erbil, said the violence against journalists in northeast Syria is alarming.

“This is increasingly becoming a regular occurrence, which will necessarily threaten the margin of press freedom that journalists in northeast Syria enjoy,” he told VOA.

While the northeast generally has a better climate for media than the rest of Syria, the country as a whole has a poor media freedom record. It ranks 173 out of 180 countries, where one is freest, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“The risk of arrest, abduction or death makes journalism extremely dangerous and difficult,” according to RSF’s World Press Freedom Index.

Source: Voice of America

The President of the Presidential Council discusses with dignitaries and wise men from the eastern region the file of national reconciliation.

Tripoli The President of the Presidential Council, “Mohammed Al-Manfi” reviewed today, Wednesday, with a number of dignitaries and wise men of the eastern region, a number of current issues, foremost of which is the file of national reconciliation and the developments of the political situation in the country.

The meeting, which was held in the capital, Tripoli, in the presence

of a number of members of the Political Dialogue Committee from the eastern region, discussed the file of national reconciliation, in its political, economic and social aspects, and worked to enlist some experts to support this national project adopted by the Presidential Council.

The meeting also touched on efforts to hold elections as soon as possible, so that this event does not lose its momentum, in order to end the division between the parties to the political process, and to emphasize support for the work of the 5 + 5 Joint Military Committee.

According to what was published by the media office of the President of the Presidential Council, the meeting touched on ways to take care of the Agricultural Bank Corporation, protect it from division, and support it in coordination with the competent authorities.

Al-Manfi affirmed the role of the Presidential Council in the file of national reconciliation, to restore stability and social peace among Libyans, reiterating the Council’s support for the joint military committee, and its continued support for the political track to reach the elections.

Source: Libyan News Agency