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Prince Harry says harms of social media have created an ‘epidemic’ for today’s youth

Prince Harry speaks during the Clinton Global Initiative, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

NEW YORK (AP) — Prince Harry said today’s youth is in the midst of an “epidemic” of anxiety, depression and social isolation due to negative experiences online, as he brought his campaign to help children and their parents navigate cyberspace to this week’s Clinton Global Initiative.

“These platforms are designed to create addiction,” Harry, 40, said in remarks Tuesday in New York City. “Young people are kept there by mindless, endless, numbing scrolling — being force-fed content that no child should ever be exposed to. This is not free will.”

Beyond supporting parents and youth throughout this advocacy, The Duke of Sussex stressed the need for corporate accountability. He asked why leaders of powerful social media companies are still held to the “lowest ethical standards” — and called on shareholders to demand tangible change.

“Parenting doesn’t end with the birth of a child. Neither does founding a company,” said Harry, who revealed that his smartphone lock screen is a photo of his children, five-year-old Prince Archie and three-year-old Princess Lilibet. “We have a duty and a responsibility to see our creations through.”

Prince Harry speaks during the Clinton Global Initiative, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024, in New York. PHOTO: AP

Harry’s remarks arrive as pressures continue to mount on tech giants like Meta, Snap and TikTok to make their online platforms safer, particularly for younger users. Many children on these platforms are exposed to content that is not age appropriate, such as violence, or misinformation. Others face unrealistic beauty standards, bullying and sexual harassment.

Companies have made some changes over the years — with Instagram, for example, announcing last week that it would be making teen accounts private by default in a handful of countries. But safety advocates have long-stressed that there’s more work to be done. Many also maintain that companies still put too much responsibility on parents when it comes to keeping children safe on social media.

Harry’s contribution to this year’s CGI annual meeting was part of the “What’s Working” theme, in a panel that included former President Bill Clinton, Clinton Foundation Vice Chair Chelsea Clinton and World Central Kitchen founder Jose Andres.

The Archewell Foundation, which Harry founded with his wife, Meghan Markle, to carry out their philanthropic work recently launched an initiative supporting parents whose children have suffered or died due to online harms. Harry highlighted the work of that initiative, called The Parents Network, in his speech Tuesday.

The foundation has also partnered with the World Health Organization and others to end violence against children, an issue he and Meghan outlined during a recent trip to Colombia. Harry on Tuesday pointed to the inaugural Global Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence Against Children, which is set to take place in Bogotá this November. He said that this meeting could result in the first global agreement for prioritizing child safety and protection online.

His CGI address was part of a string of appearances for Harry in New York at the growing number of humanitarian and philanthropic events that run alongside the United Nations General Assembly Week.

On Monday, he appeared at an event for The HALO Trust, where he discussed how the work of the landmine clearing charity was influential on his late mother, Princess Diana, as well as at the 2024 Concordia Annual Summit, where he spoke with winners of The Diana Award.

“The HALO Trust’s work in Angola meant a great deal to my mother,” he said. “Carrying on her legacy is a responsibility that I take seriously. And I think we all know how much she would want us to finish this particular job.”

Harry’s message on Tuesday was generally well-received at the conference.

Nia Faith, 22, co-founder of the Canadian nonprofit Revolutionnaire, which works to empower youth and uses social media to mobilize members, said she saw his presentation as a “call to action” on an issue that does not get enough attention.

“I was incredibly moved by Prince Harry’s speech,” she said. “At Revolutionnaire, we use digital advocacy and social media to empower youth to make a positive impact. We also recognized that social media is being used in a way that is harmful and detrimental to the mental health of young people.”

Faith hopes that Harry’s work will convince companies and governments to take action to protect children while encouraging the use of platforms to drive more positive action.
Ashley Lashley, 25, whose Ashley Lashley Foundation works to address environmental challenges in her native Barbados by motivating young people to take action in their communities, said she was impressed by his remarks, even though she also worries about the digital divide in her country.

“His message really hit home that parents, teachers, and students really need to unite to educate each other about the safe usage of digital technology,” she said. “I really believe that there needs to be a multi sectorial approach. That’s what we’re seeing here at CGI where different persons from different sectors — from governments, from private sectors, from philanthropy organisations — can really work together to ensure that there is peace and equity across all social media platforms.”

Video game actors’ union calls for strike against ‘League of Legends’

SAG-AFTRA member Zachary Luna participates in a kick-off picket line for the SAG-AFTRA video game strike at Warner Bros. Games headquarters on Thursday, Aug. 1, 2024, in Burbank, Calif. Hollywood's video game performers are currently on strike, throwing part of the entertainment industry into another work stoppage after talks for a new contract with major game studios broke down over artificial intelligence protections. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — “League of Legends” is caught in the middle of a dispute between Hollywood’s actors union and an audio company that provides voiceover services for the blockbuster online multiplayer game.

The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists called a strike against “League of Legends” on Tuesday, arguing that Formosa Interactive attempted to get around the ongoing video game strike by hiring non-union actors to work on an unrelated title.

Formosa tried to “cancel” the unnamed video game, which was covered by the strike, shortly after the start of the work stoppage, SAG-AFTRA said. The union said when Formosa learned it could not cancel the game, the company “secretly transferred the game to a shell company and sent out casting notices for ‘non-union’ talent only.” In response, the union’s interactive negotiating committee voted unanimously to file an unfair labor practice charge against the company with the National Labor Relations Board and to call a strike against “League of Legends” as part of that charge.

FILES- Demonstrators in a SAG-AFTRA video game actor strike picket line outside Warner Bros. Studios on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Burbank, California, USA. PHOTO: AP

“It’s bad enough that Formosa and other companies are refusing to agree to the fair AI terms that have been agreed to by the film, television, streaming, and music industries, as well as more than 90 other game developers,” said the union’s national executive director, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland. “To commit illegal unfair labor practices is beyond the pale and won’t be tolerated by SAG-AFTRA members.”

“League of Legends” is one of Formosa’s most well-known projects. The company provides voiceover services for the game, according to SAG-AFTRA.

SAG-AFTRA has accused Formosa of interfering with protections that allow performers to form or join a union and prevent those performers from being discriminated against — a move the union called “egregious violations of core tenets of labor law.”

Formosa rejected the union’s allegations and said the company has not “acted in any manner to undermine employee or union rights, nor our relationship with the union.”

“We believe the strike of ‘League of Legends,’ a game unrelated to the union’s claims, is not appropriate,” said Paul Lipson, senior vice president of Formosa Group. “We stand with developers, publishers, platform holders and talent to support global game development in a way that is safe and ethical for all.”

The strike comes as the video games industry struggles with both softer demand and a tougher supply-side environment, which means game publishers face growing risks as they increasingly rely on outside contractors, said Joost van Dreunen, author of “One Up: Creativity, Competition, and the Global Business of Video Games.”

This year’s record game industry layoffs, he added, lead to more companies outsourcing work to firms like Formosa, “which raises concerns about potential damage to reputations if these partners act unethically.”

“Even companies with strong reputations, like Riot Games—which is not at fault here—see their risks rise due to their partners’ actions,” he said. “It forces publishers to ensure all their partners meet ethical standards to protect their brands.”

“League of Legends” developer Riot Games said that the company “has nothing to do” with the union’s complaint.

“We want to be clear: Since becoming a union project five years ago, ‘League of Legends’ has only asked Formosa to engage with union performers in the U.S. and has never once suggested doing otherwise,” Riot said in an emailed statement. “In addition, we’ve never asked Formosa to cancel a game that we’ve registered.”

SAG-AFTRA’s allegations are related to a non-Riot game, the game publisher said.
The union said members must immediately stop providing covered services to “League of Legends.” Until Tuesday, the game was one of several titles that remained unstruck. Formosa is a union signatory.

“League of Legends is a game of champions. Instead of championing the union performers who bring their immense talent and experience to beloved characters, decision-makers at Formosa have chosen to try to evade and abandon them,” said Interactive Media Agreement Negotiating Committee Chair Sarah Elmaleh. “Such double-dealing is very disappointing from a longtime committed union signatory.”

SAG-AFTRA called a strike against major game companies in July after more than a year of negotiations around the union’s interactive media agreement broke down over concerns around the use of unregulated artificial intelligence. Formosa is a member of the bargaining group in those talks.

Anna Sorokin eliminated from ‘Dancing With the Stars’

This image released by Disney shows Anna Delvey, right, and her dancing partner Ezra Sosa on the celebrity dance competition series "Dancing with the Stars," in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. (Eric McCandless/Disney via AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Anna Sorokin, the convicted con artist who swindled banks, hotels and friends under the guise of being a “heiress” named Anna Delvey, has reached the end of her run on “Dancing With the Stars.”

As a controversial casting choice on the competition reality series, Sorokin had to don an ankle monitor on stage. Described as the “notorious ankle bracelet fashionista” in the announcement of her casting, Sorokin is under house arrest for an impending deportation case.

While she was released from prison in February 2021, immigration authorities picked her up shortly after she got out, claiming she overstayed her visa and must be returned to her native Germany. The “Inventing Anna” inspiration was in ICE custody for over a year before a judge cleared the way for her to switch to home confinement in October 2022 while she fights the deportation case.

After her performance to “Suddenly I See” by KT Tunstall on Tuesday with dance pro Ezra Sosa, Sorokin was cut from the series. Eliminations started in the series’ second week and are based on votes from viewers.

Asked by the hosts Tuesday night what she was going to take away from the competition, Delvey pointedly said: “Nothing.”

She doubled down on “Good Morning America” on Wednesday saying her favorite part of the experience was “getting eliminated.”

Sorokin and Sosa spoke with The Associated Press last week after her initial performance.

On dancing with her ankle monitor, which was bedazzled to match her costume, Sorokin said, “It’s actually not a big issue at all. It’s pretty light and I asked them to make it tight so it doesn’t dangle. So it’s not so bad.”

Changes to Sorokin’s house arrest conditions to accommodate filming the show in Los Angeles were unknown and it remains unclear how her lengthy deportation case will proceed.

This image released by Disney shows Anna Delvey, right, and her dancing partner Ezra Sosa on the celebrity dance competition series “Dancing with the Stars,” in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. PHOTO: AP

Also eliminated on Tuesday’s episode was Tori Spelling, an actor best known for “Beverly Hills, 90210.” After her elimination with partner Pasha Pashkov, Spelling described her time on the show as a “crazy transformational journey” and noted that she’s glad she faced her fears despite being cut.

“I just kept looking at my kids who were sitting in the audience and I was just like, ‘I love you. I love you.’ And I wanted them to know that whatever happens, ‘I love you and thank you for being proud of me,” Spelling said. “It goes fast and you’re in your head because it is scary. It’s really scary.”

US, EU, Arab states call for Lebanon ‘temporary ceasefire’

Debris and rubble from destroyed building lie at the scene of an Israeli strike in the southern Lebanese village of Burj el-Shmali on September 25, 2024. Lebanon's health minister said 51 people were killed and more than 220 injured on September 25, on the third day of major Israeli raids across the country. (Photo by Bilal KASHMAR / AFP)

UNITED NATIONS, United States (AFP) The United States, European Union and several Arab nations issued a joint call Wednesday for a 21-day “temporary ceasefire” in Lebanon after Israeli strikes on Hezbollah threatened to tip the Middle East into all-out war.

Hundreds have been killed and thousands have been displaced since Israel launched its strikes, with the Lebanese health ministry saying that another 72 people died on Wednesday.

“It is time to conclude a diplomatic settlement that enables civilians on both sides of the border to return to their homes in safety,” said the joint statement issued by the United States, Australia, Canada, European Union, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

Debris and rubble from destroyed building lie at the scene of an Israeli strike in the southern Lebanese village of Burj el-Shmali on September 25, 2024. Lebanon’s health minister said 51 people were killed and more than 220 injured on September 25, on the third day of major Israeli raids across the country. (Photo by Bilal KASHMAR / AFP)

“Diplomacy however cannot succeed amid an escalation of this conflict. Thus we call for an immediate 21 day ceasefire across the Lebanon-Israel border to provide space for diplomacy towards the conclusion of a diplomatic settlement.”

Wednesday saw a flurry of diplomatic activity on the issue at the United Nations, which is hosting its flagship world leaders’ week.

France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told an emergency UN Security Council meeting on Lebanon that Paris and Washington were proposing a three-week truce “to allow for negotiations and a more sustainable ceasefire.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had urged an immediate ceasefire in Lebanon and warned “hell is breaking loose.”

Israel said it welcomed diplomacy on Lebanon but did not commit to a ceasefire, vowing to pursue its goal of degrading Hezbollah.

Longest-serving death row prisoner seeks acquittal in Japan retrial

(FILES) This file picture taken on August 28, 2018 shows Japanese former professional boxer Iwao Hakamada, who was sentenced to death for the murder of four members of a family in 1966, speaking during an interview with AFP in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka prefecture. The world's longest-serving death row prisoner hears from a Japanese court on September 26, 2024 if he will again face execution or finally be acquitted, a decade after obtaining a retrial of his murder conviction. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP) / TO GO WITH Japan-crime-justice-murder-rights,ADVANCER by Tomohiro OSAKI

Japan (AFP) The world’s longest-serving death row prisoner hears from a Japanese court on Thursday if he will again face execution or finally be acquitted, a decade after obtaining a retrial of his murder conviction.

Iwao Hakamada, 88, was jailed under the death penalty for 46 years until he was freed in 2014 pending retrial.

The former boxer was first convicted in 1968 of killing his boss, the man’s wife and their two teenage children.

But over the years, questions arose over fabricated evidence and coerced confessions, sparking scrutiny of Japan’s justice system, which critics say holds suspects “hostage”.

Hundreds of people were queuing in the morning at the Shizuoka District Court to try and secure a seat for the verdict in the murder saga which has gripped the nation.

“For so long, we have fought a battle that has felt endless,” Hakamada’s sister Hideko, 91, told reporters in July. “But this time, I believe it will be settled.”

(FILES) This file picture taken on August 28, 2018 shows Japanese former professional boxer Iwao Hakamada, who was sentenced to death for the murder of four members of a family in 1966, speaking during an interview with AFP in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka prefecture. PHOTO: AFP

Prosecutors meanwhile have said they remain convinced of his guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

Japan is the only major industrialised democracy other than the United States to retain capital punishment, a policy that has broad public support.

Hakamada is the fifth death row inmate granted a retrial in Japan’s post-war history. All four previous cases resulted in exoneration.

Fighting ‘every day’ 

 

After decades of detention, mostly in solitary confinement, Hakamada’s health has deteriorated and he sometimes seems like he “lives in a world of fantasy”, according to his lead lawyer Hideyo Ogawa.

Speaking to AFP in 2018, Hakamada underlined his ongoing battle to obtain an acquittal, saying he felt he was “fighting a bout every day”.

“Once you think you can’t win, there is no path to victory,” he said.

Outside the court on Thursday, Hakamada supporters held flags and banners calling for a not-guilty verdict.

Atsushi Zukeran, wearing a T-shirt saying “Free Hakamada Now”, told AFP he was “absolutely certain he will be acquitted” given the qualms over the evidence.

But given how long the affair has dragged on, with Hakamada maintaining his innocence throughout, “part of me wouldn’t be able to celebrate the acquittal entirely,” Zukeran said.

“His case is a painful reminder of how Japan’s criminal justice system must change,” he added.

Although the Supreme Court upheld Hakamada’s death sentence in 1980, his supporters fought for decades to have the case reopened.

A turning point came in 2014 when a retrial was granted on the grounds that prosecutors could have planted evidence, and Hakamada was released from prison.

Legal back-and-forth, including a pushback by prosecutors, meant it took until last year for the retrial to begin.

Blood and miso 

 

Hakamada initially denied having robbed and murdered the victims, but confessed following what he later described as a brutal police interrogation that included beatings.

Central to the trial is a set of blood-stained clothes found in a tank of miso — fermented soybean paste — a year after the 1966 murders, used as evidence to incriminate Hakamada.

The defence accuses investigators of a set-up, as the red stains on the clothes were too bright, but prosecutors say their own experiments show the colour is credible.

In Japan, death row prisoners are notified of their hanging only a few hours in advance.

As of December, 107 prisoners were waiting for their death sentences to be carried out. It is always done by hanging.

Hakamada’s case is “just one of countless examples of Japan’s so-called ‘hostage justice’ system”, Teppei Kasai, Asia programme officer for Human Rights Watch, told AFP.

“Suspects are forced to confess through long and arbitrary periods of detention” and there is often “intimidation during interrogation”, he said.

Hakamada’s defence team has petitioned the Shizuoka prosecution office to let a not-guilty verdict stand if that is the outcome on Thursday.

“We told prosecutors that the onus is on them to put an end to this 58-year-old case,” Ogawa told reporters this month.

Man Utd held at home by Twente to start Europa League

FC Twente players react following the UEFA Europa league stage football match between Manchester United and FC Twente at Old Trafford stadium in Manchester, north west England, on September 25, 2024. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)

PARIS (AFP) Manchester United stuttered to a 1-1 draw at home to FC Twente in their opening Europa League game on Wednesday as Christian Eriksen scored but then made an error that led to the equaliser.

The Denmark international put United ahead with a powerful first-half strike on a soaking wet night at Old Trafford before Sam Lammers equalised for Twente on 68 minutes after Eriksen was caught in possession.

“We wanted more in the end, far from good enough. They looked like they wanted it more – that can’t be right,” Eriksen told TNT Sports.

“I think everyone is looking at themselves, everyone is a professional footballer, they know what to do, what can’t happen. We don’t lose but it feels like a loss.”

United manager Erik ten Hag selected a strong side to take on Twente, a club where the Dutchman came through the youth ranks and had three spells as a player before moving into coaching with the Eredivisie side.

Marcus Rashford returned to the line-up after coming off the bench in Saturday’s 0-0 draw at Crystal Palace, with Harry Maguire replacing Matthijs de Ligt in defence and Manuel Ugarte taking the place of Kobbie Mainoo.

FC Twente players react following the UEFA Europa league stage football match between Manchester United and FC Twente at Old Trafford stadium in Manchester, north west England, on September 25, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

United had an early let-off when Lammers dragged narrowly wide after slack play by Diogo Dalot, before Twente goalkeeper Lars Unnerstall pulled off a brilliant save to stop Mees Hilgers from turning into his own net.

He was well beaten though by Eriksen’s thunderbolt after the ball broke to the midfielder inside the Twente area.

Andre Onana turned Sem Steijn’s low free-kick around the post near the hour, but Twente drew level when former Rangers forward Lammers dispossessed Eriksen after Bart van Rooij’s marauding run into the United half, galloping clear to fire home.

Unnerstall tipped Joshua Zirkzee’s stinging effort over the crossbar and Bruno Fernandes went close, with Unnerstall producing a magnificent reflex save in stoppage time to keep out a Maguire header deflected by Gijs Besselink.

‘Didn’t finish it off’ 

 

United ultimately had to settle for an underwhelming point to start the new-look, 36-team league phase that mirrors the format of the revamped Champions League.

“It’s the first game, it’s very important you get a win,” said Ten Hag.

“We kept them alive, 1-0 up, controlling the game you have to be consistent and keep going. In the second half we dropped the level, gave the goal away.

“We didn’t finish it off, we had to go for the second goal and so they stay alive and we get punished with a mistake from ourselves.”

“We can’t give a goal away like this,” he added.

Porto, the 2003 and 2011 winners of the second-tier European competition, lost 3-2 away to Norwegian champions Bodo/Glimt, who played most of the second half with 10 men.

Ruben van Bommel, the son of former Netherlands international Mark, scored twice for AZ Alkmaar in a 3-2 victory over Swedish side Elfsborg, with ex-Tottenham forward Troy Parrott netting the winner from the spot.

Mauro Icardi’s last-gasp goal sealed a 3-1 win for Galatasaray over PAOK in Istanbul, while Nice were left to rue a missed penalty in their 1-1 draw against Real Sociedad.

Ander Barrenetxea gave La Real the lead before Pablo Rosario equalised on the stroke of half-time, but Evann Guessand saw his second-half spot-kick saved for the hosts.

Slavia Prague won 2-0 away to Bulgaria’s Ludogorets, while Danish champions Midtjylland drew 1-1 with Hoffenheim and Anderlecht overcame Hungarian side Ferencvaros 2-1.

Boulaye Dia scored twice in Lazio’s 3-0 win over Dynamo Kyiv in Hamburg as both teams had a player sent off.

The biggest-selling gaming consoles

ABOVE & BELOW: Nintendo’s ‘Animal Crossing’; and Playstation’s Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. PHOTO: NINTENDO & ROCKSTAR GAMES

PARIS (AFP) – Since video game consoles first emerged in the early 1970s, hundreds of millions have been sold to players eager to immerse themselves in their favourite franchises, from Assassin’s Creed to Zelda.

The five most popular consoles have sold around 700 million units between them.

Japanese tech and entertainment giant Sony sparked a global frenzy with the release of PlayStation 2 in 2000.

A midnight launch in the United States (US) stoked excitement and in some areas people stormed the shops to make sure they got their hands on a unit.

Its initial success was built on its back compatibility – players could still enjoy original PlayStation games – and its ability to play DVDs.

Ironically critics were unimpressed with the initial slate of games for the console.

But a string of hits from franchises including Grand Theft Auto, Grand Turismo, Final Fantasy, Tekken and Metal Gear Solid helped kick the console into stratospheric popularity.

Former Sony Interactive Entertainment CEO Jim Ryan said earlier this year sales had reached USD160 million – though the company’s official count has stayed at USD155 million.

ABOVE & BELOW: Nintendo’s ‘Animal Crossing’; and Playstation’s Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. PHOTO: NINTENDO & ROCKSTAR GAMES
PHOTO: NINTENDO & ROCKSTAR GAMES

The Nintendo DS revolutionised the world of gaming when it hit shelves in 2004 and 2005.

Its foldable two-screen design, complete with built-in mic and internet connection, improved on the already incredible 1990s success of the Game Boy.

Its success was built on a solid stable of hit adaptations – Mario, Zelda and Pokemon among them.

But it also became famous for breakout cultural phenomena like Animal Crossing and Nintendogs – a real-time pet simulation game where players groomed and virtually walked their dogs. The Japanese firm said it had sold more than 154 million units.

The Nintendo Switch, released in 2017, has a tablet format that allows users to play on a large screen at home or on public transport, helping to turn it into a sensation.

It burnished its success with stellar sales of the latest chapters of the Zelda franchise.

And Animal Crossing: New Horizons – a game about social interaction – became a global mega-hit after launching in 2020, when much of the world faced some kind of confinement as a result of the COVID pandemic.

The Switch, still the Japanese giant’s current premium product, had reached USD143.4 million sales by the end of June this year, the firm said.

The Game Boy and its 1998 Color spin-off were a cultural phenomenon in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The tiny handheld consoles helped launched some of the world’s most recognisable characters.

Pokemon’s Pikachu first appeared on the Gameboy in 1996, spawning a globe-conquering franchise of films, series, games and toys.

With hits like Tetris and Super Mario Land, it helped crown Nintendo as a market leader in the 1990s, and eventually recorded more than 118 million sales, according to the firm.

While the PlayStation 2 helped kill Sega’s Dreamcast at the turn of the millennia, the PlayStation 4 did battle with Microsoft’s Xbox series – and won.

Released in 2013, it sold 117 million units, according to the Japanese firm’s data from 2022, far outstripping its Microsoft rival.

Success was secured with well-received additions to popular franchises like Grand Theft Auto and The Last of Us.

Myanmar flood death toll climbs to 419

Rescuers evacuate flood victims in Tatkon Township, Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar. PHOTO: XINHUA

YANGON (AFP) – The death toll in Myanmar in the wake of flooding and landslides sparked by Typhoon Yagi has climbed to 419, the junta said.

Yagi swept across northern Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar this month, triggering floods and landslides that have killed hundreds of people across the region.

The floods have heaped more misery on a country where millions were already displaced by more than three years of conflict unleashed by the military’s 2021 coup.

As of Tuesday, 419 people had been confirmed dead, the junta’s information team said in a statement.

The previous death toll reported by the junta was 384 dead and 89 missing.

Tuesday’s update did not mention how many were still missing.

Poor communication, particularly with remote areas, has also meant information about casualties has been slow to come out.

The United Nations has warned that as many as 887,000 people have been affected in Myanmar in the aftermath of Typhoon Yagi.

Severe flooding hit the country in 2011 and 2015, with more than 100 deaths reported on both occasions, while in 2008 Cyclone Nargis left more than 138,000 people dead or missing.

Rescuers evacuate flood victims in Tatkon Township, Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar. PHOTO: XINHUA

‘My country’: Playing for keeps

Cameroon refugee Fossi Wandji in action. PHOTO: AFP

SEOUL (AFP) – Fleeing civil war in his home country Cameroon, Fossi Wandji found himself stuck in Incheon airport terminal for a year when his attempt at obtaining asylum from South Korea was rejected.

But the Asian nation is now counting on him to boost its chances at the Homeless World Cup tournament – something that could in turn bolster his bid at winning the right to stay on in South Korea.

Wandji, 27, is playing on a squad with seven other South Korean players in the tournament, which showcases national teams made up of young, unhoused people, refugees and those who have battled substance abuse.

The tournament, newly backed by global football body FIFA, is hosted by Asia for the first time this year since it began in 2003.

The event bills itself as helping participants change their lives for the better through football and has already sparked a feel-good documentary starring Bill Nighy, plus a 2023 Korean movie called Dream.

But Wandji’s experience is also reminiscent of another movie, Tom Hanks’ The Terminal, in which the protagonist was forced to live in an airport as he was denied entry to the United States but unable to return to his own country because of a military coup.

Cameroon refugee Fossi Wandji in action. PHOTO: AFP
ABOVE & BELOW: Spectators watch the men’s group stage four-a-side football match at the 2024 Homeless World Cup in Seoul, South Korea; and Cameroon refugee Fossi Wandji celebrates a victory with his South Korean supporters after a match between South Korea and Switzerland in Seoul. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP

“I left Cameroon because Cameroon had a war,” Wandji told AFP on the sidelines of the football field at Seoul’s Hanyang University.

While he was trying to flee, a contact who was helping him suggested South Korea could be a good place to seek refuge. So, in October 2022, Wandji boarded a plane to Seoul.

But South Korea’s Justice Ministry immediately rejected his claim on his arrival at the airport, blocking him from leaving the terminal while he sought a reversal of the decision.

While he waited, the Terminal 2 transit area became his temporary home. “I had some place where you can put a blanket,” he said, describing how he shared the space with around 10 other people, including some other asylum seekers.

Photos published by South Korean media Hankyoreh showed Wandji making a makeshift bed with a blanket, using boxes of noodles to separate himself from other asylum seekers sleeping nearby.

Despite signing international conventions on refugees, South Korea accepts only a tiny number of asylum seekers each year.

It has received more than 116,400 asylum applications over the past 30 years but approved 1,507 – a 1.29 per cent acceptance rate, according to Justice Ministry data.

A South Korean court has overturned the Justice Ministry’s rejection of Wandji’s claim, allowing him to leave the airport last year with a stay permit while his asylum application is reexamined.

In May, Wandji applied to join the South Korean Homeless World Cup team and made the squad two months later.

His contribution has been crucial, according to teammate Hong Seung-woo.

“Without his defence, we would have conceded so many goals,” Hong said.

Wandji has scored one goal in the team’s first five matches.

This year’s edition features 52 teams from 38 countries worldwide, according to local organisers and it is the first since FIFA signed an agreement to partner with the Homeless World Cup Foundation in organising it.

Under the agreement, FIFA are providing medals and trophies, and broadcasting the event which runs until September 28, on their FIFA+ streaming platform free of charge.

“I don’t know how to explain but I feel like this is my country,” Wandji said of South Korea.

Brick by brick

ABOVE & BELOW: A religious scholar from the region of Al-Haouz, Hassan Ait Ali Ouhamous inspects restoration works at the Great Mosque of Tinmel; and construction workers build a house in the Atlas mountain village of Tinmel, Morocco. PHOTO: AP

TINMEL (AP) – The hand-carved domes and brick-laid arches had almost all been put back together when an earthquake shook Morocco so violently that they caved in on themselves and crashed to the earth.

After nearly 900 years, the Great Mosque of Tinmel lay in pieces – its minaret toppled, its prayer hall full of rubble, its outer walls knocked over.

But even in ruins, it remained holy ground for the residents of Tinmel. Villagers carried the sheet-laden bodies of the 15 community members killed in the quake down the hillside and placed them in front of the decimated mosque.

Among the mourners was Mohamed Hartatouch, who helped carry the remains of his son Abdelkrim. A 33-year-old substitute teacher, he died under bricks and collapsed walls while the village waited a day and a half for rescue crews to arrive.

“It looked like a storm. I wasn’t able to feel anything,” the grieving father said, remembering the day after the quake.

One year later, the rubble near Hartatouch’s half-standing home has been swept aside and Tinmel residents are eager to rebuild their homes and the mosque. They said the sacred site is a point of pride and source of income in a region where infrastructure and jobs were lacking long before the earthquake hit.

“It’s our past,” a 32-year-old construction worker Redwan Aitsalah, said the week before the earthquake’s anniversary as he reconstructed his home overlooking the mosque.

The September 2023 quake left a path of destruction that will take Morocco years to recover from. It killed nearly 3,000 people, knocked down almost 60,000 homes and levelled at least 585 schools.

ABOVE & BELOW: A religious scholar from the region of Al-Haouz, Hassan Ait Ali Ouhamous inspects restoration works at the Great Mosque of Tinmel; and construction workers build a house in the Atlas mountain village of Tinmel, Morocco. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show the interior of the Great Mosque of Tinmel which suffered significant damage during a 2023 earthquake. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
Redwan Ait Salah with his son, Tarik, and wife, Khadija Diwan, outside a house they are building. PHOTO: AP

The damage will cost about USD12.3 billion to rebuild, according to government estimates.

Stretches of road were left unnavigable, including Tizi N’Test, the steep mountain pass that weaves from Marrakech to Tinmel and some of the hardest-hit villages near the earthquake’s epicentre.

Workers are now sifting through the rubble searching for the mosque’s puzzle pieces.

They are stacking useable bricks and sorting the fragments of remaining decorative elements arch by arch and dome by dome, preparing to rebuild the mosque using as much of the remains as possible.

Though incomparable to the human loss and suffering, the restoration effort is among Morocco’s priorities as it attempts to rebuild.

The country’s Ministry of Islamic Affairs and Ministry of Culture have recruited Moroccan architects, archaeologists and engineers to oversee the project. To assist, the Italian government has sent Moroccan-born architect Aldo Giorgio Pezzi, who had also consulted on Casablanca’s Hassan II Mosque, one of Africa’s largest.

“We will rebuild it based on the evidence and remains that we have so it returns to how it was,” Morocco’s Minister of Islamic Affairs Ahmed Toufiq told The Associated Press.

The Great Mosque was a marvel of North African architecture with lobed arches, hand-carved mouldings and the adobe-style bricks made of rammed earth used to construct most the area’s structures.

It was undergoing an 18-month-long restoration project when the quake struck, causing its ornate domes and pillars to cave in. Its clay-coloyred remnants lay in pieces beneath scaffolding erected by restoration workers from villages throughout the region, five of whom also died.

“The mosque withstood centuries,” site’s conservationist Nadia El Bourakkadi told local media.

The temblor levelled it months before repairs and renovations were to be completed.

Like in many of the area’s villages, residents of Tinmel today live in plastic tents brought in as temporary shelter post-earthquake. Some are there because it feels safer than their half-ruined homes, others because they have nowhere else to go.

Officials have issued more than 55,000 reconstruction permits for villagers to build new homes, including for most of the homes in Tinmel. The government has distributed financial aid in phases. Most households with destroyed homes have received an initial USD2,000 instalment of rebuilding aid, but not more.

Many have complained that isn’t enough to underwrite the initial costs of rebuilding. Less than 1,000 have completed rebuilding, according to the government’s own figures.

Despite the extent of their personal losses, Moroccans are also mourning the loss of revered cultural heritage.

Centuries-old mosques, shrines, fortresses and lodges are scattered throughout the mountains. Unlike Tinmel, many have long been neglected as Morocco focuses its development efforts elsewhere.

The country sees Tinmel as the cradle of one of its most storied civilisations. The mosque served as a source of inspiration for widely visited sacred sites in Marrakech and Seville.

Pilgrims once trekked through the High Atlas to pay their respects and visit.
Yet centuries ago it fell into disrepair as political power shifted to Morocco’s larger cities and coastline.

“It was abandoned by the state, but materials were never taken from it,” said archaeologist Mouhcine El Idrissi working with Morocco’s Ministry of Culture. “People here have long respected it as a witness to their glorious and spiritual past.”

Some of the historic sites of the High Atlas have long been a lure to tourists. But the earthquake shone a spotlight on the vast disparities plaguing the primarily agricultural region. Long marginalised, poverty and illiteracy rates are higher than the nationwide average, according to census data and an October 2023 government report on the five earthquake-hit provinces.

“The mountainous areas most affected were those already suffering from geographical isolation,” Civil Coalition for the Mountain, a group of Moroccan non governmental organisations, said in a statement on the earthquake’s anniversary. “The tragedy revealed structural differences, and a situation caused by development policies that have always kept the mountains outside the scope of their objectives.”

“There’s a Morocco that exists in Rabat and Marrakech, but we’re talking about another Morocco that’s in the mountains,” added group’s regional coordinator Najia Ait Mohannad. “Right now, the most urgent need is rebuilding houses.”

The government has promised “a well-thought-out, integrated and ambitious programme” for the reconstruction and general upgrading of the affected regions, both in terms of infrastructure reinforcement and improving public services. It has also pledged to rebuild “in harmony with the region’s heritage and respecting its unique architectural features” and “to respect the dignity and customs” of the population.

For the village’s residents, the landmark could stand as a symbol of reinvestment in one of Morocco’s poorest regions, as well as a tribute to a glorious past.

For now, it stands in disrepair, its enchanting ruins upheld by wooden scaffolding, while down the hill, villagers hang laundry and grow vegetables amid the remnants of their former homes and the plastic tents where they now live.