The U.N. and W.H.O. issue dire warnings for Gaza
İçerik Tablosu
U.N. officials warned yesterday that pressure was mounting near Gaza’s border with Egypt, where tens of thousands of Palestinians have tried to flee Israel’s military campaign.
“I expect public order to completely break down soon and an even worse situation could unfold, including epidemic diseases and increased pressure for mass displacement into Egypt,” António Guterres, the U.N. secretary general, said, adding that there was “no effective protection of civilians in Gaza.”
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At an emergency session of the W.H.O.’s executive board, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the organization’s director general, said that “Gaza’s health system is on its knees and collapsing.” Only 14 of the enclave’s 36 hospitals were even partly able to treat the sick and injured, he said.
Yesterday the Israeli military said that it had struck more than 250 “targets” in Gaza over the previous 24 hours. The intensified fighting followed a U.N. vote last week demanding a permanent cease-fire in Gaza, which failed because the U.S. vetoed it.
Saudi negotiators have flatly opposed including in a deal any language that even mentions fossil fuels, and have objected to a provision, endorsed by at least 118 countries, aimed at tripling global renewable energy capacity by 2030. Saudi diplomats have been particularly skillful at blocking discussions and slowing the talks, according to a dozen people who have been inside closed-door negotiations.
If nations do agree in Dubai to phase out fossil fuels, or even to phase them down, it would be a historic moment. Past U.N. climate deals have shied away from mentioning the words “fossil fuels.” But any one of the 198 participating nations could thwart a deal.
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Hong Kong’s disappearing neon
Nights in Hong Kong these days feel as if the city is still in the pall of a plague, or a deep political malaise. Many of the tourists and resident foreigners are gone. More than 110,000 permanent residents departed last year, and the city’s population of those worth more than $30 million shrank by 23 percent.
Its brash flash is literally fading as well. The government has been cracking down on Hong Kong’s neon signs for environmental and safety reasons. Tens of thousands have been removed in the past decade, by one estimate. Hong Kong today can feel like a city of shadows and metaphor, where a subject as innocuous as neon takes on shades of meaning.
“Neon is a kind of city emblem, an embodiment of Hong Kong stories,” said Cardin Chan, who runs Tetra Neon Exchange, a group dedicated to conserving condemned signs. “But it’s not only neon that’s undergoing a transformation. It’s the whole city, right?”