AIX-EN-PROVENCE, FRANCE (AFP) – France forwards coach William Servat said on Tuesday he had “no doubt” that emblematic captain Antoine Dupont could return from injury in time for a potential Rugby World Cup quarter-final next month.
Scrum-half Dupont underwent surgery after suffering a fractured cheekbone in Thursday’s victory over Namibia, putting hosts Les Bleus on the verge of the knock-out stages which take place on the weekend of October 14-15.
France’s next game is against Italy on October 7 when a victory would guarantee top spot in Pool A and a last-eight tie, in all likelihood with World Cup holders South Africa.
“The operation went well, he’s resting. He will be back training on Sunday,” Servat told reporters.
“I have no doubt about his ability to play the quarter-final,” the former France hooker added.
Former World Rugby player of the year Dupont, 26, was helped off the pitch in last week’s win over Namibia and has been at home since undergoing surgery on Friday.
Missing poster boy Dupont for the knock-out stages of the tournament would be a big blow to France’s chances of lifting the Webb Ellis trophy for the first time.
The Toulouse half-back is yet to lose on home soil as captain of his country, a run dating back 14 Tests.
“Friday and Saturday are days off for us,” Servat said.
“He will have time to return in that period of time,” he added.
Doctor Bernard Dusfour, former president of the medical commission of the French National Rugby League (LNR), told AFP on Friday that after undergoing surgery, the minimum period of unavailability for an elite athlete was “four weeks”.
On Saturday, former France back-rower Olivier Magne warned about bringing Dupont back too soon.
“I think, quite naturally, that he will return in his own way,” Servat said.
“It’s out of the question that we (the coaching staff) decide whatever before speaking to him and having the green light from the medical department,” he added.
Earlier on Tuesday, Namibia captain Johan Deysel was banned for five matches for the challenge on Dupont.
After the game in Marseille Dupont remained upbeat, posting “The show must go on” on social media.
Maxime Lucu or Baptiste Couilloud are set to replace Dupont at scrum-half against Italy in Lyon with the likes of Anthony Jelonch and Charles Ollivon among the contenders to lead the side.
Apart from Dupont, Fabien Galthie’s France also have injury concerns about flanker and former skipper Ollivon, back-rower Paul Boudehent as well as starting hooker Julien Marchand, with all three rested for Tuesday’s training session.
SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – The blockbuster football video game franchise from Electronic Arts, no longer linked to FIFA, will allow mixed-gender line-ups in fantasy matches that have triggered sexist pushback even before the Friday release.
Early access to the game, now renamed FC 24, began last week with the novel feature of female soccer stars virtually taking to the pitch with male counterparts for fantasy squad matches in an “Ultimate Team” mode of online play.
A version of the game tailored for mobile devices powered by Apple or Android operating systems was released Tuesday.
Spotlights on female soccer stars such as Sam Kerr and Alexia Putellas reflect the reality of the sport today, something the franchise wants to capture, EA Sports FC vice president of brand David Jackson told AFP.
“It’s not a moral thing; it’s not a cause-related thing,” Jackson said of fielding women soccer stars.
“It’s a faithful replica representation of the real world of football.”
Fans of the franchise offended by the idea of women and men athletes battling in mixed matches have bashed the game in online posts.
“This is like putting go-karts in F1 and racing them together,” a critic groused in a chat forum on YouTube.
“Putellas is actually good though,” a reply countered. “Don’t be sexist.”
The launch of FC 24 marks the end of an alliance with world soccer governing body FIFA that spanned three decades.
Since kicking off the franchise in 1993 with FIFA International Soccer, the annually refreshed lineup has become a key part of EA’s business, boasting some 150 million players last year alone.
The franchise has shed the FIFA name for the first time as the California-based video game giant pursues a vision of becoming a “global football platform” incorporating broadcast games, live match play and more.
“There are a number of different ways we can grow and expand and we intend to do that in the future,” Jackson said.
“While we were called FIFA, we weren’t able to realise the potential due to limitations of the rights that we held.”
Along with freeing EA from contractual constraints that came with carrying the FIFA name, the rebranding also enables the franchise to avoid being marred by scandals at the governing body.
“If we’re going to carry the name of the organisation as the name of our product, we’ve got to make sure that name carries the requisite level of quality, integrity and weight over time,” Jackson said.
“Now that we own that name, it’s all on us.”
EA designed FC 24 to be familiar to fans while adding novelty to make it fresh, according to Jackson.
EA uses motion-capture technology on real athletes and in-stadium cameras to capture action that translates into the gameplay, ramping up the amount of content it gets from games in top leagues, he said.
“Yes, the FIFA license is gone, and the game won’t feature the World Cup, but other than that, the feature set is basically unchanged and arguably even improved,” Circana video game analyst Mat Piscatella said of FC 24.
“It’s been a huge part of the US gaming landscape over the past decade, and of course elsewhere in the world it’s even bigger.”
Piscatella expects FC 24 to be among the top 10 bestselling video games of this year in the United States.
The games have already been among the top 20 bestselling titles annually in the United States for more than a decade, he added.
Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter expects most players to see FC 24 as the game they have come to know, just with a different name.
As the franchise evolves, EA may explore incorporating advertising or real-time matches into its game engine, eventually allowing live-action viewers to play out matches their own way.
“You could be watching an English Premier League game,” Jackson envisioned.
“If you don’t like the score at halftime, then you jump out of that and into our game and kind of rewrite history.”
South Korea’s largest wireless carrier by subscription SK Telecom unveiled on Tuesday the company’s roadmap to leap forward as a global artificial intelligence (AI) firm within the next five years by expanding its business and technology based on its AI assistant service.
At a press conference held in Seoul, the telecom giant’s CEO Ryu Young-sang introduced the firm’s new “AI pyramid strategy,” which focuses on three major areas: AI infrastructure, AI transformation and AI service. It is the key to realising the firm’s goal as the “global AI firm” by creating new industrial innovations, he said.
“The AI gold rush has begun. SK Telecom is trying to run most aggressively into the AI revolution. Since telecom operators have no legacy, the AI revolution is a definite opportunity for us,” the CEO said. “We’ll create business models that a telecom operator can do to be competitive in the market.”
For this, the telecom company plans to triple its investment in AI-related business from 12 per cent from 2019 to 2023 to 33 percent over the next five years until 2028 to achieve sales of more than 25 trillion won (USD18.5 billion) in 2028, while it logged some 17 trillion won in sales last year.
“Disruptive innovation triggered by generative AI has already created new values in all areas of industry, our society and life. … SK Telecom will accelerate our execution ability and continue to expand investment in AI-related resources based on the strategy centered around self-reliance and cooperation,” Ryu said.
As the AI market is in full swing, data center supply shortages, excessive power use, and rapid increases in carbon emissions have emerged as new social problems. SK Telecom will introduce energy-saving solutions to solve the issues while making a foray into the global market. It is also planning to double the size of its domestic data centers by 2030, Ryu said.
Sapeon Korea, a global AI semiconductor company that spun out from the telecom giant last year, will launch the next-generation inference AI chip, X330, by the end of this year. It has the advantages of approximately twice the computational performance and 1.3 times the power efficiency compared to its competitors.
To secure competitiveness in the multi-LLM sector, it will strengthen cooperation with major Big Tech firms such as OpenAI.
SK Telecom looks to expand AI services to its existing telecommunications and IPTV services to reduce their costs by more than 20-30 percent in the mid to long term, as well as to non-telecom sectors, including Urban Air Mobility, health care, and media.
At Tuesday’s event, the CEO announced the official launch of A., which began its beta service in May last year. Based on A., the company will provide an AI phone service with call summary and calendar functions, AI sleep management tool, and AI music service that can create users’ playlists.
Additionally, SK Telecom plans to roll out a personal AI assistant roaming service that can provide about 1.2 billion telecom users in 45 countries, based on its global alliance formed in July. The Korean telecom firm joined hands with Germany’s Deutsche Telekom, the United Arab Emirates’s e& and Singapore’s Singtel to expand AI cooperation.
“Just as we subscribe to two to three over-the-top platforms these days, telecom users are expected to use two to three personal AI assistants within the next three years,” the SK Telecom chief said. “The personal AI assistant market will likely become a battleground for leading global firms in the near future.” – ANN/Korea Herald
SINGAPORE (THE STRAITS TIMES) – In the demanding realm of mixed martial arts (MMA), fighters often appear unbreakable and invincible, portraying themselves as relentless machines pushing their bodies to the brink for victory.
However, beyond the chiselled physiques and brute strength, they are just like the rest of us – individuals grappling with stress and mental health challenges.
One Championship superstar Angela Lee believes in breaking this facade.
She’s on a mission to remind her fellow fighters and athletes that it’s perfectly acceptable to acknowledge vulnerability and seek assistance.
Last Tuesday, the 27-year-old sent shockwaves when she revealed that she had tried to take her own life six years ago in a personal essay, while also confirming that her sister Victoria died by suicide last December.
In an emotional interview with the source a week later, Lee said: “As fighters, we have to portray this image that we’re the best in the world, where we’re so strong, where we’re on top of the world.
“What I would say to fighters out there is… we have to do this image for our profession. But make sure that you give yourself an outlet to show how you really feel to be who you really are, whether that outlet be through friends or family or coach, or through just journaling, getting those feelings out there. You can’t keep it all bottled up for so long.”
Inspired by late sister and her own mental health struggles, Lee has launched a non-profit charity called Fightstory, dedicated to inspiring hope and building a community for those struggling with mental health.
The current One atom-weight champion, who has not fought since October 2022, is in town this week ahead of the One Fight Night 14 event on Saturday at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, where she is expected to make an announcement on her future.
Encouraging others to speak up about their battles is just one way Lee, mother to two-year-old Ava, hopes to help.
She added: “There are many things that can be done to help support the mental health of athletic individuals especially in the fight world.
“That traditional mind-set of pushing hard and doing whatever it takes to win and to not show weakness is good and bad but finding that balance in between is something that I hope we can share and shed some light on.
“Because we do want to see the next world champion, see people succeed and winning. But at the same time, we don’t want them to do that (at the expense of) possibly hurting themselves in the process.”
One chief executive officer Chatri Sityodtong told the source that mental health is not solely a MMA-related issue, but applies to other sports as well.
The Singapore-based outfit will engage in various initiatives to support the cause, such as fundraising and having athletes visit schools to speak to children about mental health.
Chatri shared that he has been in constant contact with Lee and her family, who include Christian, 25, the reigning One Lightweight and Welterweight Champion and Adrian, 17, who is also set to follow in the footsteps of his siblings.
They were all coached by their father Ken Lee – their mum is South Korean – at their family’s United MMA Hawaii Gym in Waipahu, which was permanently closed after Victoria’s death.
Christian is likely to return to the octagon in early 2024, said Chatri.
When asked if he had any regrets about not being able to intervene before the tragedy, Chatri said: “No, I trust Ken Lee, and this is a family of expert martial artists.
“And like I said, I don’t think it’s an isolated incident. I think athletes of every sport around the world go through this at some level.”
Regardless of her decision on her MMA future, Lee, who holds a 11-3 win-loss record, will continue her fight to spread awareness on mental health.
As her thoughts turned to Victoria, Lee struggled to hold back tears as the interview came to a close.
“Victoria has always wanted to use her life to help others to do good. I know that one of the things she’s always wanted to do was to find something that she was good at, something that she loved, that would help others. And I know that’s what we’re doing with fight story.
His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien, Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam, underscored the imperative need for an overhaul in the pedagogical psychology within religious schools.
During an unannounced visit to the Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA) in Jalan Dewan Majlis on Wednesday, the monarch not only emphasised the urgency of strengthening teaching psychology among religious educators but also expressed reservations regarding the curriculum’s content.
His Majesty stressed the need for a comprehensive reevaluation, advocating for a shift from the subject of “Tarikh” to “Tarikh Islam,” making it a mandatory component of the curriculum.
His concerns also extended to the subject of “Tasawuf,” which he believed could pose challenges for children aged 10 to 13. The monarch suggested that restructuring “Tasawuf” into a subject focusing on values, more comprehensible to young learners, was paramount. His Majesty questioned why the name “Tasawuf” persisted in primary-level books, signaling a need for alignment.
Furthermore, His Majesty acknowledged grievances from parents who lamented their children’s unhappiness in religious schools due to overly strict teaching practices. He theorised that teachers may be neglecting the psychological aspects of education. “If such claims hold, it points to a deficiency in addressing the psychological well-being of students by their educators,” noted His Majesty.
The monarch’s visit also encompassed a tour of several departments within the Ministry, including the Department of Waqf, Zakat & BaitulMal Affairs.
BEIJING (ANN/CHINA DAILY) – The ongoing Hangzhou Asian Games, coupled with the upcoming eight-day Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day holiday period, are set to ignite China’s consumer market, with the tourism sector anticipated to reach its peak.
The 19th Asian Games are currently underway in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, from September 23 to October 8. As of September 20, data from online platforms like Meituan and Dianping revealed a remarkable 380 per cent surge in dine-in orders within the catering industry compared to the same period in 2019.
In host city Hangzhou, as well as co-host cities including Ningbo, Wenzhou, Huzhou, Shaoxing, and Jinhua, hotel rooms and Chinese-style bed-and-breakfast establishments (Minsu) are nearly fully booked.
Hangzhou has now secured a place among the top 10 preferred railway destinations for the National Day holiday.
By September 18, the booking number of air tickets to Hangzhou increased 20 per cent compared with the same period of 2019 at travel portal Qunar during the Asian Games, the hotel booking number jumped 4.4 times, and the scenic spot ticket sales grew 20 per cent.
The Asian Games is driving tourism consumption in the host city and co-host cities.
The search volume of Ningbo, Wenzhou, Huzhou, Shaoxing and Jinhua increased two times month-on-month in recent weeks, according to the Qunar.
During the Asian Games, the hotel booking volume and entrance tickets in these co-host cities soared over five times and over three times compared with the same period of 2019.
The Asian Games also bring sports fever to the country. As of September 20 the number of sports and fitness orders in Zhejiang province grew 150 per cent year-on-year, with the popularity of ball sports and fitness centres rising the fastest.
Catering is an essential element of mass tourism, and gourmet food is a rigid demand to well-off tourism, said Dai Bin, president of the China Tourism Academy, at a forum.
Gourmet food has become a new driving force for facilitating tourism consumption and promoting tourism to high-quality development.
This year, many young people turned their eyes to some small-crowd cities with characteristics for enjoying a leisurely holiday while having a good meal, as well as avoiding the surging tide during the eight-day holiday.
According to a list of popular small-crowd tourism destinations from Mafengwo, a travel service and social networking platform, more than half of cities stand out for their gourmet food.
Quanzhou of Fujian province, Taizhou of Zhejiang province, Leshan of Sichuan province, and Liuzhou of Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, with gourmet food such as ancient flavour food, seafood, and luosifen (river snail rice noodles) are ranked in the list.
THE WASHINGTON POST – I hate the expression “dump dinners.” Every time I hear it, I recoil because it sounds so unappetising to me. And, yet, I’m so drawn to the concept: Put all of the ingredients in a baking dish, on a sheet pan or in a Dutch oven, skillet or multi-cooker, and then step away while it cooks.
Even if the vessel changes from recipe to recipe, I prefer to call this one-pot cooking, if that’s okay with everyone.
I’ve never fully embraced the slow-cooker function on my multi-cooker, but I make frequent use of its pressure-cooker function for one-pot, weeknight suppers, especially when the weather starts to turn cool and I want something convenient, cosy and saucy without the wait.
I’m a big fan of the bright flavour of lemon as the days grow shorter, too, so this Lemon Chicken with Potatoes from “Instant Pot Miracle Mediterranean Diet” by Urvashi Pitre sounded just right for welcoming autumn.
Along with lemon juice, a whole lemon – peel and all – is thinly sliced and added to the multi-cooker with the chicken, broth and seasoning. The potatoes are added last to keep them on top and prevent them from overcooking.
The result is a luscious stew with a thin broth that has a slight pleasantly bitter note from the lemon pith. The cooked lemon calls to mind preserved lemons, but without the extra step, Pitre writes in her cookbook.
(If you want a richer sauce, she says to remove the chicken, potatoes and lemon and whisk in a bit of butter.)
In her cookbook, Pitre extols the virtue of eating a Mediterranean diet, and she writes about how her Instant Pot helps her continue to cook even while dealing with a degenerative disease that can limit her mobility.
The cookbook is a good one for the multi-cooker novice because she offers insights into Instant Pot terms – quick release vs natural release, for example – and descriptions of what all the buttons do. She also gives general tips for using a multi-cooker:
Factor the time it takes for a pot to come up to pressure into your cooking equation, keeping in mind that a fuller pot takes longer to reach pressure.
Don’t worry about browning proteins and vegetables. She says that pressure cooking delivers flavour without that step. (This is a hard one for me to give up because I like the look of browned meats, but I did as she instructed with this chicken dish and it was delicious.)
Consider using frozen vegetables. This slows the cooking so that you don’t end up with mush.
Each recipe offers active time and total time, the functions you will use, and the kind of release you will use for the dish.
I tried several of her recipes. Each worked just as she described. I chose to feature this one because I liked it best among the ones I made, and because it is was a good belly-warming recipe for any novice cook who wants to dip a spoon into one-pot cooking using a multi-cooker.
The recipe takes 15 to 20 minutes to prep; the rest of the time – about 25 minutes – is hands-off. That gives you enough time to clean up the kitchen, and maybe slice up a cucumber salad and make a quick dressing if you feel like it.
Or, you could just go pet the cat and call your sister for a quick catch-up like I did.
Instant Pot Lemon Chicken and Potatoes
Four servings
Active time: 20 minutes; Total time: 45 minutes
Lemon looms large in this fragrant chicken and potato dish, where the broth has a slight pleasantly bitter note from the pith. Along with lemon juice, a whole lemon is thinly sliced and added to the multi-cooker.
The dish takes only 20 minutes to prep; the rest of the time is hands-off. We tested this recipe in a 6-quart Instant Pot.
Storage: Refrigerate for up to 4 days.
INGREDIENTS
A quarter cup water or chicken broth
Two tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Three large cloves garlic, chopped
Two tablespoons fresh lemon juice
One teaspoon dried oregano
One teaspoon dried rosemary
One teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Half a teaspoon fine salt
One pound skinless, boneless chicken thighs, halved
One medium white or yellow onion (8 ounces), halved and thinly sliced
One large lemon, ends trimmed and thinly sliced
One pound unpeeled baby new potatoes
Chopped fresh parsley or basil, for garnish
DIRECTIONS
In the multi-cooker, combine the water or broth; olive oil; garlic; lemon juice; oregano; rosemary; pepper; and salt. Add the chicken, stir to coat it with the oil and herb mixture, and let rest while you slice and chop the other ingredients.
Add the onion and stir to combine. Arrange the lemon slices on top of the chicken, then scatter the potatoes over the lemon, making sure to leave the potatoes on top so they don’t overcook.
Secure the lid on the pot and close the pressure valve.
Select PRESSURE (HIGH) and set to six minutes. It takes about 10 minutes for the appliance to come to pressure before cooking begins.
Once cooking is complete, cover your hand with a towel or hot pad and release the pressure manually by moving the pressure-release handle to “Venting.” Never put your hands or face near the vent when it’s releasing steam. Let the pot sit undisturbed for five minutes.
Transfer the chicken and potatoes to a platter, sprinkle with the parsley or basil, and serve.
JAKARTA (ANN/THE JAKARTA POST) – Southeast Asian nations need to enhance their collaboration in order to establish a regional power grid and other critical infrastructure that can interconnect renewable energy sources.
This was said by Peerapat Vithayarichareon, who serves as the Principal Consultant for Energy Systems in the Asia Pacific region at DNV, noting that the initial step in this process must involve the improvement of transmission grids.
He highlighted that insufficient policy support and limited access to capital are currently hindering the expansion of clean energy throughout the region.
“Speaking from the technical perspective, there are concerns related to the potential impact of the cross-border power grid on the power systems within the countries,” he told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.
ASEAN member states need to invest in transmission grid upgrades to integrate electricity from intermittent electricity generators, such as solar and wind, which require power systems to be more flexible.
“Countries cannot just shift from coal-fired generation to renewable energy. We need to prepare the system to accommodate the increasing share of wind and solar power generation, for example. These are challenges for system operators,” Vithayarichareon said.
Southeast Asia must retire more than five gigawatts (GW) of coal-fired power plant capacity annually over the next two decades to phase out the fossil fuel in the region, according to a report from San Francisco-based non-profit organisation Global Energy Monitor (GEM).
Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines, the top coal-consuming countries in the region, operate a total of approximately 90 GW of coal power, despite cancelling 12.7 GW of proposed projects in 2022, the same report shows.
The herculean task of upgrading the regional electricity grid lies in the establishment of sufficiently appealing trade terms for member countries, according to the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
While ASEAN countries understood that only multilateral trade would leverage the economies of scale, the existing arrangements so far were bilateral, wrote the institute’s senior researchers Ryan Wong and Lee Poh Onn in an article published by Fulcrum in 2022.
“Southeast Asian countries are in general insular in their policy thinking. Therefore, it takes strong political will for them to look beyond national borders and immediate needs,” the article reads.
Different market structures of ASEAN countries, which influence how stakeholders negotiate prices, standards and regulations, remain one of the toughest challenges, according to DNV’s Vithayarichareon.
Indonesia is already involved in bilateral electricity trade. Sarawak Electricity Supply Corporation (SESCO), a subsidiary of Sarawak Energy Berhad, in Sarawak, Malaysia, for instance, supplies electricity to North Kalimantan.
SESCO operates a hydropower plant, making its electricity much cheaper than diesel-generated power from West Kalimantan. Meanwhile, an existing multilateral electricity agreement in the region involving the Laos-Thailand and Malaysia-Singapore (LTMS) transmission network covers the western side of Southeast Asia.
UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The UN’s most powerful body must support governments seeking to legally declare the intensifying crackdown by Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers on women and girls “gender apartheid,” the head of the UN agency promoting gender equality said Tuesday.
Sima Bahous, executive director of UN Women, told the Security Council that more than 50 increasingly dire Taliban edicts are being enforced with more severity including by male family members.
That is exacerbating mental health issues and suicidal thoughts especially among young women and is shrinking women’s decision-making even in their own homes.
“They tell us that they are prisoners living in darkness, confined to their homes without hope or future,” she said.
Under international law, apartheid is defined as a system of legalized racial segregation that originated in South Africa. But a growing consensus among international experts, officials and activists says apartheid can also apply to gender in cases like that of Afghanistan, where women and girls face systematic discrimination.
“We ask you to lend your full support to an intergovernmental process to explicitly codify gender apartheid in international law,” Bahous urged the 15-member council including its five permanent members: the US, Russia, China, Britain and France.
There is no existing international law to respond to “mass, state-sponsored gender oppression,” Bahous said. But she said the Taliban’s “systemic and planned assault on women’s rights … must be named, defined and proscribed in our global norms so that we can respond appropriately.”
The Taliban took power in August 2021 during the final weeks of the US and NATO forces’ pullout from Afghanistan after 20 years of war.
As they did during their previous rule of Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, the Taliban gradually reimposed their harsh interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, barring girls from school beyond the sixth grade and women from almost all jobs, public spaces, gyms and recently closing beauty salons.
The Security Council meeting on UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ latest report on Afghanistan took place on the final day of the annual meeting of world leaders at the 193-member UN General Assembly.
No country has recognised the Taliban, and the assembly’s credentials committee hasn’t either, primarily over its effort to relegate women to their homes and failure to form an inclusive government.
This has left UN recognition with the now-ousted previous government led by Ashraf Ghani. For the third year, its representative did not speak at the high-level gathering.
Bahous said that over the past year, UN Women collaborated with the UN political mission in Afghanistan known as UNAMA and the UN International Office for Migration to interview over 500 Afghan women.
Among their key findings, she said 46 per cent think the Taliban should not be recognised under any circumstances and 50 per cent think the Taliban should only be recognised after it restores women’s and girls’ rights to education, employment, and participation in government.
The women interviewed said the dramatic shrinking of their influence on decision-making, not just at the national or provincial level but also in their communities and homes, is driven by increased poverty, decreasing financial contribution and “the Taliban’s imposition of hyper-patriarchal gender norms,” Bahous said.
In a grim sign of women’s growing isolation, she said, only 22 per cent of the women interviewed reported meeting with women outside their immediate family at least once a week, and a majority reported worsened relations with other members of their family and community.
Bahous said the restrictions on women have led to an increase in child marriage and child labor, and an increase in mental health issues.
“As the percentage of women employed continues to drop, 90 per cent of young women respondents report bad or very bad mental health, and suicide and suicidal ideation is everywhere,” she said.
Roza Otunbayeva, the UN special envoy for Afghanistan and head of UNAMA, welcomed the recent visit of a group of Islamic scholars from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s member nations to Afghanistan to focus on girls’ education, women’s rights and the need for inclusive governance.
The scholars stressed that these requirements are “integral to Islamic governance around the world,” she said. “We urge that these visits continue. They are part of a vital conversation between the de facto authorities and the international community helpfully mediated by the Islamic world.”
Otunbayeva told reporters afterward that compared to the last visit of Islamic scholars, this time they left Afghanistan “quite satisfied.”
“We’ll see what will be resolved” at the upcoming International Conference on Women in Islam, she said. That converence, co-sponsored by the OIC and Saudi Arabia, will take place in Jeddah in November.
The UN envoy was asked whether any change in the Taliban’s hardline policies on women and government functioning is possible as long as its leader, Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, makes the final decisions.
“He’s the producer of decisions,” Otunbayeva replied. She said she heard from a Cabinet member that more than 90 per cent of its members support allowing girls to study, but as soon as such views get to the southern city of Kandahar, where Akhundzada is based, they are blocked.
“So, far he is unreachable,” Otunbayeva said. She said she tried to bring the entire ambassadorial corps to Kandahar for meetings with the provincial governor and others, but the meeting was canceled.
The UN envoy said the mission is in constant contact with Taliban officials in the capital, Kabul, “even as we continue to disagree profoundly and express these disagreements.”
Tecently, Otunbayeva said, provincial councils composed of religious clerics and tribal elders have been created in each of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces, aiming to provide accountability and listening to local grievances, but they also report to the Taliban leader.
It’s too early to judge their performance, but Otunbayeva noted that the councils for the predominantly Shiite provinces of Bamiyan and Daikundi have no Shiite members.
She appealed to donors to support the USD3.2 billion humanitarian appeal for the country, which has received just USD872 million, about 28 per cent of the needed funding.
Many programmes have been forced to close just as winter is approaching and people are most in need, Otunbayeva said. “This means that 15.2 million Afghans now facing acute food insecurity could be pushed towards famine in the coming months.”
BARCELONA, SPAIN (AP) – Spanish prosecutors have charged pop star Shakira with failing to pay EUR6.7 million (USD7.1 million) in tax on her 2018 income, authorities said Tuesday, in Spain’s latest fiscal allegations against the Colombian singer.
Shakira is alleged to have used an offshore company based in a tax haven to avoid paying the tax, Barcelona prosecutors said in a statement.
She has been notified of the charges in Miami, where she lives, according to the statement.
Shakira is already due to be tried in Barcelona on November 20 in a separate case that hinges on where she lived between 2012-14. In that case, prosecutors allege she failed to pay EUR14.5 million (USD15.4 million) in tax.
Prosecutors in Barcelona have alleged the Grammy winner spent more than half of the 2012-14 period in Spain and therefore should have paid taxes in the country, even though her official residence was in the Bahamas.
Spanish tax officials opened the latest case against Shakira last July. After reviewing the evidence gathered over the last two months, prosecutors have decided to bring charges. No date for a trial was set.
The public relations firm that previously has handled Shakira’s affairs, Llorente y Cuenca, made no immediate comment.
Last July, it said the artist had “always acted in concordance with the law and on the advice of her financial advisers.”
Shakira, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, has been linked to Spain since she started dating the now-retired soccer player Gerard Pique. The couple, who have two children, lived together in Barcelona until last year, when they ended their 11-year relationship.
Spain tax authorities have over the past decade or so cracked down on soccer stars like Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo for not paying their full due in taxes. Those players were found guilty of tax evasion but avoided prison time thanks to a provision that allows a judge to waive sentences under two years in length for first-time offenders.