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Middle East Crisis: Global Leaders Press Iran and Israel to Avoid Escalation

For people in eastern Ukraine, where nightly barrages of drones from Russia outpace the military’s overwhelmed air defenses, the response by Western allies to Iran’s aerial assault against Israel this weekend produced uncomfortable comparisons.

The militaries of the United States, Britain, France and others stepped in to help Israel defend against the fusillade of more than 300 Iranian drones and missiles, nearly all of which were intercepted. A similar number of aerial weapons are fired at Ukraine on a weekly basis, its officials say, with many of the drones in those attacks designed by Iran and now produced by Russia.

Since the start of this year, Russia has fired 1,000 missiles, 2,800 drones and 7,000 guided aerial bombs at Ukraine, according to Ukraine’s permanent representative to the United Nations, Sergiy Kyslytsya. While Washington and other allies have provided Kyiv with some powerful air defense weapons, they have not directly confronted Russian forces, and Ukrainian officials have long argued that the supplied weapons are insufficient to counter the threat from Moscow.

In the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, where 1.3 million people live with nightly air raid alarms, many people expressed anger and disappointment over the weekend that Ukraine’s allies, wary of provoking Russia, don’t give it the same protection as they did Israel.

“When rockets fly in Israel, the whole world writes about it,” said Amil Nasirov, a 29-year-old singer. “Here, rockets are flying, and we don’t have American bombers that are saving the sky like over Israel.”

“It’s very stupid; it’s hypocrisy,” he added. “And it’s like some devaluation of Ukrainian lives.”

Ukraine has begged since the outset of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022 for more tools to close its sky to Russian missiles. But the first Patriot missile systems from the United States and Germany — the only proven defense against ballistic missiles — did not arrive until the spring of 2023.

Ukraine also pleaded for F-16 fighter jets, which the Biden administration, which must approve any transfers of the American-made planes, long resisted providing them out of concern that Moscow would see it as an escalation.

It eventually relented, but Ukrainian pilots are still training on the systems and they are not expected to fly in the skies above Ukraine until this summer.

Ukrainian officials noted the role that fighter jets played in defending Israel as a sign of their importance in air defense.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said the response to the Iranian attack was clear evidence that “the world has everything necessary to stop any missiles, Shahed drones, and other forms of terror,” referring to the Iranian-made attack drones that have been a large part of Russia’s arsenal.

“The whole world sees what real defense is. It sees that it is feasible. And the whole world saw that Israel was not alone in this defense — the threat in the sky was also being eliminated by its allies,” Mr. Zelensky said in his latest nightly address.

Britain’s foreign secretary, David Cameron, said on Monday that while his country has been one of the staunchest military supporters of Ukraine — training thousands of troops and providing tanks and other advanced weapons — Britain could not shoot down Russian drones over Ukraine because it could inflame a wider war in Europe.

“If you want to avoid an escalation in terms of a wider European war, I think the one thing you do need to avoid is NATO troops directly engaging Russian troops,” Mr. Cameron told Britain’s LBC radio station. “That would be a danger of escalation.”

The United States remains the chief supplier of the munitions for Ukraine’s best air defense systems. But the last time Congress approved military aid for Ukraine was in October. In the intervening months, Ukraine’s air defenses have been critically depleted, while Russia has greater success in using air power to advance on the front line, attack Ukraine’s energy grid and inflict more casualties against civilians.

At least 126 people were killed and 478 more were injured in Russian strikes in March, a 20 percent increase compared with the previous month, according to the United Nations.

Liubov Sholudko contributed reporting from Kharkiv, Ukraine.

Israeli ‘diplomatic offensive’ urges sanctions against Iran | News

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Push on partners to sanction Tehran comes as Israel mulls military retaliation for Iran’s weekend attack.

Israel has launched a “diplomatic offensive” against Iran, calling for sanctions against the Islamic republic.

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday that he has contacted 32 countries calling on them to impose sanctions against Tehran. The move comes as Israel mulls a military response to Iran’s attack on Israel.

Iran says its attacks on Saturday, using more than 300 drones, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles, were in retaliation for Israel’s strike on the Iranian consulate in Syria. That attack killed seven people including two commanders of the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

The Israeli military said it intercepted 99 percent of the aerial threats with the help of the United States and other allies, and that the attack caused only minor damage, including to a military base in the country’s south.

“Alongside the military response to the firing of the missiles and the UAVs, I am leading a diplomatic offensive against Iran,” Katz said on X.

“This morning, I sent letters to 32 countries and spoke with dozens of foreign ministers and leading figures around the world, calling for sanctions to be imposed on the Iranian missile project and that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps be declared a terrorist organisation”.

Katz did not specify which governments he had asked to impose the sanctions. The IRGC is already blacklisted as a terrorist organisation by the United States and is subject to EU sanctions.

“Iran must be stopped now – before it is too late,” Katz insisted.

Warning from Iran

Tension is high as Israel mulls its reaction to Saturday’s attack.

International pressure calling for restraint is rife from Tel Aviv’s partners amid fears that the war in Gaza threatens further escalation of conflict in the Middle East.

However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and military commanders have pledged retaliation, albeit in undefined form for the meantime.

Chief of staff Herzi Halevi said on Monday that “this launch of so many missiles, cruise missiles and drones into Israeli territory will be met with a response” but gave no details.

Against this backdrop, Iran warned on Tuesday that it will respond swiftly to any action against its interests.

“We categorically declare that the smallest action against Iranian interests will certainly be met with a severe, widespread and painful response against any perpetrator,” President Ebrahim Raisi told Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, according to the Iranian Students’ News Agency.

Qatar has sought to play the role of mediator amid the Israel-Hamas war over the past six months.

Iran’s deputy foreign minister Ali Bagheri Kani told state TV on Monday night that Tehran’s response to any Israeli retaliation would be “a matter of seconds”.

Iran will not wait for another 12 days to respond, he said, a reference to the delay between the April 1 strike on the Syrian diplomatic facility and Iran’s attacks on Israel.

The Ukraine connection

The attack by Iran had already sparked fresh discussion of sanctions in the West, updating a debate that has been provoked by Tehran’s supply of drones to Russia for its use in Ukraine.

Germany called on Tuesday for the European Union to impose fresh sanctions on Iranian drone technology.

“I campaigned in late autumn together with France and other partners within the European Union for this drone sanctions regime to be extended further… I hope that we can now finally take this step together,” Annalena Baerbock told a press conference in Berlin, ahead of a visit to Israel.

ভিডিও ফুটেজে দেখা গেল প্রার্থীকে তুলে নিয়ে যাচ্ছেন প্রতিমন্ত্রীর শ্যালকের ঘনিষ্ঠরা

নাম প্রকাশ না করার শর্তে সিংড়ার দুজন সাংবাদিক ও একজন আওয়ামী লীগ নেতা জানান, ভিডিও ফুটেজে সিংড়া উপজেলা স্বেচ্ছাসেবক লীগের সাধারণ সম্পাদক মোহন আলীকে (পাঞ্জাবি পরা) ঘটনার সময় জেলা নির্বাচন কার্যালয়ের নিচতলায় সিঁড়ির নিচে দাঁড়িয়ে থাকতে দেখা যায়। উপজেলার শেরকোল ইউনিয়ন যুবলীগের সাধারণ সম্পাদক মজনু তালুকদারকে অপহরণ কাজে ব্যবহৃত মাইক্রোবাসের পাশে দাঁড়িয়ে থাকতে দেখা গেছে। সেখানে কলাপাতা রঙের গেঞ্জি পরা দেখা যায় কলম ইউনিয়ন যুবলীগের সাধারণ সম্পাদক নাজমুল হোসেনকে (কাজল)। আকাশি রঙের গেঞ্জি পরে উপজেলা শ্রমিক লীগের সাধারণ সম্পাদক স্বপনের ভাগনে সরলকে ঘটনার সময় দেখা যায়। আর হলুদ রঙের পাঞ্জাবি পরেছিলেন স্থানীয় যুবলীগ কর্মী পিয়াস।

প্রতিদ্বন্দ্বী প্রার্থী লুৎফুল হাবীবের ব্যক্তিগত সহকারী জাহিদ হাসানকে সাদা গেঞ্জি ও জিনসের প্যান্ট পরে অপহরণে অংশ নিতে দেখা যায়। এ ছাড়া সেখানে উপস্থিত ছিলেন শেরকোল ইউনিয়ন যুবলীগের সভাপতি সেতু সরকার, সাধারণ সম্পাদক মজনু তালুকদার, সিংড়া মোটর শ্রমিক ইউনিয়নের সাবেক সাধারণ সম্পাদক আবদুস সাত্তার, উপজেলা স্বেচ্ছাসেবক লীগের সদস্য আনোয়ার হোসেন, পুলিশের হাতে গ্রেপ্তার হওয়া নাজমুল হক বাবু, শেরকোল ইউনিয়ন যুবলীগের সাবেক সভাপতি সানোয়ার হোসেন।

এ ছাড়া লুৎফুল হাবীবের গাড়িচালক সুজনকে (ইটালি গ্রামের নিতাইয়ের ছেলে) কালো গেঞ্জি পরে অপহরণের কাজে ব্যবহৃত কালো মাইক্রোবাসের চালকের আসনে বসতে দেখা যায়। পরে তিনিই মাইক্রোবাসটি চালিয়ে নিয়ে যান।

ওই ঘটনায় স্বেচ্ছাসেবক লীগের নেতা-কর্মীদের জড়িত থাকার বিষয়ে সংগঠনের জেলা কমিটির সভাপতি ইশতিয়াক আহমেদ বলেন, ‘এ ব্যাপারে আমি কিছুই জানি না। খোঁজ নিয়ে দেখব।’

World’s No. 2 Citrus Exporter Challenges EU on Restrictions

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(Bloomberg) — South Africa has taken a preliminary step toward filing a complaint with the World Trade Organization against the European Union over its treatment of citrus purchases from the country.

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The African nation has requested consultations with the EU at the WTO in a bid to resolve the dispute, the nation’s trade and agriculture departments said in a statement Monday.

“It is our view that the measures by the EU are not justified, proportionate or appropriate,” Ebrahim Patel, South Africa’s trade minister, said in the statement.

Two years ago, the EU imposed requirements including additional refrigeration of incoming fruit from South Africa, the world’s biggest exporter of the produce after Spain, to combat incidences of Citrus Black Spot, a fungal disease that leaves dark spots on fruit. South African producers also have to prove that they have conducted costly spraying of the trees in a bid to contain the disease and undergo inspections at orchards and packing houses.

South Africa shipped $644 million of citrus such as oranges, lemons, grapefruit and mandarins to the EU in 2023, according to the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa.

The EU’s move increased costs for South Africa, which maintains that Citrus Black Spot, while causing blemishes on the fruit skin, doesn’t affect the quality and cannot be transferred to other plants at this stage. It has also said that some shipments to Europe have been falsely classified as being tainted with the disease.

The Citrus Growers Association of Southern Africa last year said the measures would cost the industry over 500 million rand ($26 million) in lost exports as it couldn’t access enough specialized refrigerated containers in time to get the fruit to the European market.

“The industry cannot afford the almost 2 billion rand that is needed to comply with the EU’s trade restrictive regulations,” Thoko Didiza, South Africa’s agriculture minister, said.

“The EU regrets that South Africa has chosen to pursue WTO consultations regarding this matter,” Olof Gill, a spokesman for the European Commission, said in a response to queries. “The EU is confident that its legislation is in full compliance with its obligations under WTO.”

Overall South Africa exported about $2.5 billion of agricultural products to the EU last year and $13.2 billion in total across the world. A third of its citrus exports go to the EU.

The industry has the potential to expand to earn an additional 20 billion rand in exports a year and create 100,000 more jobs, said Justin Chadwick, the CEO of the Citrus Growers Association, in the statement. That won’t happen if the EU restrictions are maintained, he said.

(Updates with EU comment in third last paragraph)

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Anti-Israeli protesters disrupt traffic on Brooklyn Bridge in New York

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NEW DELHI: In a dramatic escalation of tensions in New York City, hundreds of anti-Israeli protesters wreaked havoc in downtown Manhattan on Monday, effectively shutting down traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge. The protesters, part of a larger national movement responding to the ongoing conflict in Gaza, converged on the bridge around 3:45pm, leading to immediate traffic disruptions and a swift response from the NYPD.
The chaotic scene saw protesters, some of whom burned American flags, storm the Manhattan-bound side of the bridge, as documented in social media posts and live footage. NYPD officers, equipped in riot gear, quickly moved in to contain the situation, resulting in the arrest of at least two dozen participants. According to a protester on the scene, the police adopted a zero-tolerance policy, blocking further access to the bridge and preventing the demonstrators from advancing toward City Hall, a New York Post report said.
The protest in New York is part of a series of nationwide demonstrations, including disruptions at major transportation hubs like Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. These protests have seen roads to arrivals and departures blocked, causing significant delays and forcing some passengers to walk past the protests with their luggage.
Back in New York, the protest escalated into the evening with reports of smoke billowing outside One Police Plaza around 7:30pm, as protesters lit flares and chanted pro-Palestinian slogans. This marks yet another significant protest in the city following previous demonstrations that have targeted Midtown holiday festivities and other iconic locations.
The NYPD, under the command of Deputy Chief Timothy Beaudette, who clashed with protesters on the bridge, continues to monitor the situation closely. These protests have strained city resources and have highlighted the growing domestic responses to international conflicts.
Meanwhile, pro-Palestinian demonstrators disrupted traffic on San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge, causing significant delays for commuters entering the city on Monday morning.
The California Highway Patrol shut down both directions of the famous bridge when officers worked to redirect vehicles hemmed in by the group of protesters. The demonstrators, numbering in the dozens, displayed a banner proclaiming “Stop the World for Gaza.”
This ongoing unrest underscores the deeply polarized opinions surrounding the Israeli actions in Gaza and the broader implications for communities across the US. As tensions continue to simmer, city officials and law enforcement are bracing for more disruptions, keeping a vigilant watch over these increasingly frequent and volatile demonstrations.
(With inputs from agencies)

Massive fire hits Copenhagen’s Old Stock Exchange in Danish capital

Copenhagen residents looked on in horror Tuesday as the Danish capital’s historic stock exchange building was engulfed in flames and its 180-foot spire in the shape of four entwined dragon tails collapsed. Everyone inside the building was able to leave.

Known as the Borsen, the 400-year-old building served as the stock exchange until the 1970s. Today it houses the headquarters of the Danish Chamber of Commerce. Dramatic video from the scene showed huge plumes of black smoke billowing from the building and people rushing to rescue some of the historic paintings housed there.

“Terrible pictures from the Stock Exchange this morning,” tweeted Danish Culture Minister Jakob Engel-Schmidt. “400 years of Danish cultural heritage in flames.”

The fire was first reported at 7:30 a.m. Copenhagen fire department head Jakob Vedsted Andersen told reporters that the blaze, which began in the building’s copper roof, had spread to several floors of the building.

“The extinguishing work is very difficult,” said Vedsted Andersen, adding that parts of the building were unreachable because it was too dangerous.

The incident was Denmark’s “Notre Dame moment,” Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen wrote on X, recalling the images of the burning Paris cathedral that was severely damaged five years ago.

The cause of the fire was not initially clear. The Dutch Renaissance-style building, completed in 1625, is currently covered in scaffolding for renovations.

Iran vows to hit Israel with weapon ‘never used before’ as world waits with bated breath over Middle East crisis

IRAN has vowed to unleash a weapon “never used before” against Israel should their enemy strike back in retaliation for Tehran’s failed missile and drone blitz.

Israel has now confirmed they will retaliate as the world waits with bated breath amid fears of an “uncontrollable war” breaking out across the Middle East.

As Iran braces for Iran's response, it has now cryptically vowed to use a weapon 'never used before'

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As Iran braces for Iran’s response, it has now cryptically vowed to use a weapon ‘never used before’Credit: Rex
The moment Iran began its 300-missile attack on Israel that threatened to drag the Middle East to the brink of war

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The moment Iran began its 300-missile attack on Israel that threatened to drag the Middle East to the brink of war
Israel and its allies shot down 99 per cent of the projectiles but Iran has promised to strike back with 10 times the amount of Israel retaliates

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Israel and its allies shot down 99 per cent of the projectiles but Iran has promised to strike back with 10 times the amount of Israel retaliatesCredit: Reuters

Last night, Iranian security chief Abolfazl Amouei stated that if Israel chooses to respond to Iran’s drone and missile strike then Tehran is “prepared to use a weapon that we have never used”.

Amouei also warned Israel to “act wisely” as it considered its next steps.

It is unclear what weapons he is referring to, but Colonel Hamish de-Bretton Gordon, a weapons and defence expert, said that they’re hinting at nuclear, biological and chemical warfare.

Yet, the retired army officer told The Sun: “It is unlikely that Iran has some new, wonderful weapon that nobody knows about that could really have an impact against Israel or the West.

“What I take from this is further bluster from Iran. They’re obviously desperately concerned that the Israelis are going to hit them back hard.”

On Saturday night, Iran attacked Israel with a wave of at least 330 ballistic and cruise missiles and drones – the first ever direct attack by Tehran on its enemy.

Iran had promised retaliation for a deadly strike on its consulate building in Damascus earlier this month, but its barrage failed to get through Israel’s defences.

Israel Iron Dome defence system and its allies warplanes – including the UK’s RAF Typhoons – shot down 99 per cent of the projectiles.

In response, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Ali Bagheri, raged last night: “If the enemy makes another mistake…they should know they will not have 12 days and Iran’s response speed will be less than a few seconds”.

Iran also yesterday vowed to launch ten times the amount of missiles in a fresh strike against Israel if it unleashes a retaliatory hit.

An attack ten times the size would see over 3,300 weapons hurled at Israel, including more than 1,400 missiles.

The recent threats mark another escalation in the blazing power battle between the two foes that is threatening to spark an all-ouT war across the region.

But Israel appears undeterred by Tehran’s warnings as it confirmed again last night it will strike back.

De-Bretton Gordon argued that Iran’s warnings are a clear sign of its fear as the nefarious state will do all it can “to persuade Israel to do nothing and draw a line under it”.

“It’s clear that the Iranian air defence system is nowhere near capable of what Israel and her allies put together.

“Iran could take a heck of a thumping and it might well be that Israel decide to take out their nuclear capability as well.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured on the phone to US President Joe Biden) has decided on his plans to strike back at IranCredit: Alamy

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured on the phone to US President Joe Biden) has decided on his plans to strike back at IranCredit: AlamyCredit: Alamy
A drone is launched at Israel from an undisclosed area in Iran

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A drone is launched at Israel from an undisclosed area in Iran

IRAN’S NUKE SITES

This is the fear of the UN’s nuclear watchdog chief who said yesterday he is “concerned” that Israel may target Iran’s nuclear sites.

Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) urged “extreme restraint” from Israel.

He revealed that Iran temporarily closed its nuclear facilities over “security considerations” in the wake of its missile and drone attack.

They reopened on Monday but inspectors were kept away “until we see that the situation is completely calm”.

Iran has long said its nuclear programme is peaceful but Western countries accuse Tehran of attempting to build nuclear bombs.

It comes as Israel Defence Forces (IDF) chief of staff, Lt Gen Herzi Halevi, said Israel will respond to Iran’s barrage – bolstering other Israel’s military’s comments they will launch a “significant response”.

“This launch of so many missiles, cruise missiles and drones into Israeli territory will be met with a response,” he said in the clearest confirmation that Israel was plotting a revenge strike.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu met with his war cabinet for a second time yesterday after already hinting that plans had been drawn up – without specifying their nature or scale.

Israel had said it reserves the right to strike Iran “at a manner and time” of its own choosing and told the UN that Iran “crossed every red line” in its attack.

But the question on everyone’s lips is how will Israel choose to respond.

The Sun also told of the five major ways Israel may choose to respond – from fighter jet blitz on Tehran’s nuclear facilities to a submarine strike or large-scale cyberattacks.

WORLD’S RESPONSE

As Iran braces for Israel’s “significant” response, world leaders have pushed for calm to avoid further escalation.

PM Rishi Sunak hads demanded Israel show restraint in response to Iran’s onslaught, calling out Tehran for its “reckless and dangerous escalation” that is the work of a “despotic regime”.

A joint statement by the G7 also urged for caution, fearing an “uncontrollable” war in the region.

UK foreign minister David Cameron said this morning that Iran’s attack was significant and Israel has “every right to respond”.

While he urged caution to “avoid escalation”, he said Israel would “make their own decisions”.

The IDF announced on Sunday night they had approved “both offensive and defensive actions” – but did not reveal further detail.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres told an emergency Security Council meeting on Sunday: “The Middle East is on the brink.

“The people of the region are confronting a real danger of a devastating full-scale conflict. Now is the time to defuse and de-escalate.”

PM Rishi Sunak blasted Iran’s attack as “reckless” and called for calm

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PM Rishi Sunak blasted Iran’s attack as “reckless” and called for calm
US president Joe Biden speaking with Netanyahu on Sunday over fears of a 'catastrophic escalation' in the Middle East

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US president Joe Biden speaking with Netanyahu on Sunday over fears of a ‘catastrophic escalation’ in the Middle East

Nuclear sites in Iran

IRAN, a formidable and dangerous world power, is home to a number of nuclear sites.

It is thought to have active nuclear sites, research reactors and uranium mines.

Arak plant – satellite pictures of this plant near the Iranian town of Arak surfaced over 20 years ago.

It contains a heavy-water reactor with plutonium that can be used for nuclear bombs.

Bushehr nuclear power station – this power plant is a combination of Russian and German engineering.

It’s nuclear reactor is operating at 100% power and the site is home to enriched uranium, used for nuclear bombs.

Gachin uranium mine – home to uranium ore concentrate, or yellowcake, which can be transformed into enriched uranium ready for nuke bomb assembling.

Isfahan conversion plant – yellowcake is converted here into three dangerous substances.

Hexafluoride gase used in the enrichment process, uranium oxide used to fuel reactors and metal used in the cores of nuclear bombs.

Natanz uranium enrichment plant – this is Iran’s largest enrichment base.

It’s made up of three underground buildings and is closely watched by the international community.

Parchin military site – south of Tehran, this site is focused on research and the production of ammo, rockets and explosives.

Concerns have been raised that it is also used as part of Iran’s nuclear weapon development.

Qom uranium enrichment plant – a heavily fortified and initially secret facility where Iran carries out uranium enrichment.

Iran has a spate of dangerous nuclear sites - including power plants, uranium mines and research reactors (pictured: Isfahan power plant)

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Iran has a spate of dangerous nuclear sites – including power plants, uranium mines and research reactors (pictured: Isfahan power plant)

Paris 2024 Olympic flame lit in Greece at ancient birthplace of the Games

The sacred flame for the Paris 2024 Olympics was lit Tuesday in ancient Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Games, setting off an epic three-month torch relay to the July 26 opening ceremony. 

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Cloudy skies prevented the traditional lighting, when an actress dressed as an ancient Greek priestess uses the sun to ignite a silver torch.

Instead, a backup flame was used that had been lit on the same spot Monday, during the final rehearsal.

The torch relay will culminate with the lighting of the Olympic flame in the French capital at the Games’ opening ceremony. Paris will host the summer Olympics for a third time after 1900 and 1924.

“In these difficult times we are living through, with wars and conflicts on the rise, people are fed up with all the hate, the aggression and negative news they are facing day in and day out,” International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach said in his speech.

“We are longing for something which brings us together, something that is unifying, something that gives us hope. The Olympic flame that we are lighting today is the symbol of this hope.”

The flame will be officially handed over to Paris Games organisers in Athens’s Panathenaic stadium, site of the first modern Games in 1896, on April 26 after an 11-day relay across Greece.

It will then depart the next day for France on board a three-masted ship, the “Belem”, and will arrive on May 8 in Marseille, with up to 150,000 people expected to attend the ceremony in the southern city’s Old Port.

Marseille, founded by the Greek settlers of Phocaea around 600 BCE, will host the Olympic sailing competitions.

The French torch relay will last 68 days and will end in Paris with the lighting of the Olympic flame during the opening ceremony on July 26.

Officials on Tuesday stressed that the Paris Games will set new milestones, following the legacy of the other two prior Olympics held in the French capital.

“The Olympic flame will shine over the first Olympic Games inspired by our Olympic Agenda reforms from start to finish,” Bach said. 

“These Olympic Games will be younger, more inclusive, more urban, more sustainable. These will be the very first Olympic Games with full gender parity, because the IOC allocated exactly 50 percent of the places to female and male athletes,” he said.

Paris Olympics chief organiser Tony Estanguet noted that women took part for the first time in the Paris 1900 Games.

For the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic imposed toned-down events for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and 2022 Beijing Winter Games, the flame-lighting ceremony was back with full regalia and scores of spectators.

Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, French sports minister Amélie Oudéa-Castéra and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo were present at the ceremony.

American mezzo soprano Joyce DiDonato delivered the Olympic anthem. 

A 17,000-kilometre journey

The torch harks back to the ancient Olympics when a sacred flame burned throughout the Games. The tradition was revived in 1936 for the Berlin Games. 

During the 11-day relay on Greek soil, some 600 torchbearers will carry the flame over a distance of 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles) through 41 municipalities.

Nana Mouskouri, the 89-year-old Greek singer with a worldwide following, has been invited to perform at the ceremony at the all-marble Panathenaic Stadium on April 26, when Paris 2024 organisers are due to receive the flame.

The following day, the flame will begin its journey to France on board the 19th-century three-masted barque Belem, which was launched just weeks after the Athens 1896 Games.

Ten thousand torchbearers will then carry the flame across 64 French territories.

It will travel through 400 towns and dozens of tourist attractions during its 12,000-kilometre (7,500-mile) journey through mainland France and overseas French territories in the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and Pacific before forming the centrepiece of the Paris Olympics opening ceremony.

The ceremony is planned to be held on the river Seine – the first time it has not been held in the Games’ main stadium.

However, French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday said it could be moved to the national stadium in the event of a security threat.

Macron said instead of teams sailing down the Seine on barges, the ceremony could be “limited to the Trocadero” building across the river from the Eiffel Tower or “even moved to the Stade de France”.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP and Reuters)

Uptime Institute Launches Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment for Digital Infrastructure

New Assessment enables organizations to identify, document, track, and report on sustainability metrics & programs across their IT estate

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Uptime Institute today announced the launch of the comprehensive Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment, an assessment and award service that empowers organizations to clearly assess, benchmark, and demonstrate the sustainability credentials of their digital infrastructure to all their stakeholders, whether their applications are deployed in their own enterprise-operated data centers, as well as colocation data centers, or hosted by other third-parties such as hyperscalers or managed service providers.


Organizations that undertake the Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment will be able to develop a clear view of their sustainability status and achievements to date across a wide range of independent and interdependent corporate functions and criteria, and then monitor and demonstrate progress over time, both internally and externally. The insights gained from the Assessment can be used to make continuous improvements in support of sustainability commitments while allowing participating organizations to be publicly recognized for their efforts in meeting globally accepted digital infrastructure sustainability best practices.

The Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment identifies and reviews the steps that have been taken, and progress made, across all aspects of data center sustainability in 14 key categories and over 50 subcategories. This assessment can be used for a single location, or across a distributed hybrid IT estate. Key areas include IT equipment, energy and water usage, carbon emissions and waste, including reuse and recycling of end-of-life equipment, and span disciplines such as IT Operations and Management, Facility Operations & Management, and cross-functional areas such as clean energy and IT and facilities equipment procurement and corporate greenhouse gas reporting. The assessment scope uniquely balances the global requirement for more efficient and sustainable digital infrastructure, while also recognizing that resiliency and availability must not be compromised.

The introduction of the Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment comes at a critical time for all organizations operating and outsourcing digital infrastructure. The increasing visibility of the data center sector, partly due to the significant growth in aggregate energy use and carbon emissions within the sector, has led to increased scrutiny of data centers’ individual and collective environmental footprint and sustainability strategies by regulators, legislators, customers and investors alike, and calls for much greater transparency. Organizations are increasingly expected to have meaningful oversight of the environmental footprint of their digital infrastructure, have clear roadmaps covering all areas of data center sustainability and have defined actionable programs for continuous improvement.

Recent and repeated research by Uptime Intelligence suggests that many IT and data center operators are still at an early stage in this rapidly evolving and increasingly complex journey. According to Uptime Intelligence’s latest report, “Sustainability strategies face greater pressure in 2024,” fewer than half of digital infrastructure operators are compiling and reporting water usage (41%), only a quarter (26%) track IT waste or recycling, and only 23% compile and report all three Scopes (1,2, and 3) of carbon emissions.

To ensure the Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment is comprehensive today and also anticipates future needs, Uptime Institute analyzed over 150 current and proposed standards, regulations and laws from around the world. Uptime’s global, multi-disciplinary development team worked with a sophisticated, representative consortium of over two dozen world-class enterprises and service providers which collectively have built and operate hundreds of data centers and have over 3 gigawatts of installed capacity in 38 countries.

Because it takes local and regional requirements, low carbon energy and green resource availability as well as climatic conditions into account, the Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment is applicable around the world, setting the baseline for globally accepted digital infrastructure sustainability best practices. The outputs from the Assessment have been designed to be consistent wherever possible, with internationally accepted standards and current and emerging regulatory reporting requirements.

“As with the unique and groundbreaking production of the Uptime Sustainability Executive Advisory report series in 2021 and the Accredited Sustainability Advisor education course first introduced in 2022, this assessment has been designed to help data center owner-operators and service provider communities build, deploy, benchmark and manage impactful and practical sustainability programs that deliver tangible results,” said Ali Moinuddin, Chief Corporate Development Officer, Uptime Institute. “The Sustainability Assessment will allow organizations to identify which sustainability initiatives can help reduce the environmental impact and operating expenses of their specific data center operating modality and deployment architecture without comprising the availability and resiliency of their mission-critical digital infrastructure.”

Since the first “Uptime Institute Green IT Symposium” in 2007, Uptime has worked tirelessly to address the profound environmental and economic impacts of this ever more important sector, which now enables and underpins the way the world works. The Uptime Institute Sustainability Assessment is grounded in Uptime’s unparalleled depth and breadth of applied institutional knowledge, which has evolved over two decades of helping tens of thousands of organizations around the world identify, manage, and reduce the environmental impact of their digital infrastructure.

Learn More: For further insight into Uptime’s Sustainability views and recommendations, register to attend the upcoming “Assessing Data Center Sustainability: Benchmarking and Best Practices” webinar on Wednesday, May 8th at 9:00 a.m. PDT here.

About Uptime Institute

Uptime Institute is the Global Digital Infrastructure Authority. With over 3,400 awards issued in over 114 countries around the globe, and over 1,000 currently active projects in 80+ countries, Uptime has helped tens of thousands of companies optimize critical IT assets while managing costs, resources, and efficiency.

For over 30 years, the company has established industry-leading benchmarks for data center performance, resilience, sustainability, and efficiency, which provide customers assurance that their digital infrastructure can perform across a wide array of operating conditions at a level consistent with their individual business needs. Uptime’s Tier Standard is the IT industry’s most trusted and adopted global standard for the design, construction, and operation of data centers. Offerings include the organization’s Tier Standard and Certifications, Management & Operations reviews, and awards, SCIRA-FSI financial sector risk assessment, and a broad range of additional risk management, as well as performance, availability, and sustainability offerings. Uptime Education accredited training courses have been successfully completed by over 10,000 data center professionals and have now been expanded by the acquisition of CNet Training, Ltd. which has also trained over 80,000 digital infrastructure professionals.

Uptime Institute is headquartered in New York, NY, with main offices in London, Sao Paulo, Dubai, Riyadh, Singapore, and Taipei, and full time Uptime professionals based in over 25 countries around the world. For more information, please visit uptimeinstitute.com.

Contacts

Brenda South

206-706-4647

bsouth@uptimeinstitute.com

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Eddie Hearn’s Power Play: Signing Deontay Wilder As Team Captain

Eddie Hearn revealed today what went into his signing Deontay Wilder as the captain of his Matchroom team for the June 1st 5v5 event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

The promoter Hearn was given the green light by His Excellency Turki Alalshikh to sign one fighter to name as his captain, and he chose the former WBC heavyweight champion Wilder (43-3-1, 32 KOs), even though he was coming off a loss.

Wilder will be in the captain’s seat for the Matchroom Boxing squad in a fight against the dangerous Zhilei Zhang in a 12-round fight. Hearn is confident that Wilder will regain his old form and emerge victorious by knocking out Zhang (26-2-1, 21 KOs).

The Art of the Deal

“I said, ‘Can I go and sign someone?’ And he said, ‘Yes, you can go and work with anyone you want for one night,’” said promoter Eddie Hearn to Charlie Parson’s YouTube channel about his conversation with His Excellency Turki Alalshikh about what went on behind him signing Deontay Wilder and making him captain of his Matchroom team for the 5v5 event on June 1st.

Hearn acknowledges that he will need to rebuild Wilder’s confidence, considering it’s likely at an all-time low after the timid, gunshy performance he turned in against Joseph Parker in his one-sided twelve-round unanimous decision loss last December.

I don’t know if Hearn can rebuild Wilder’s shattered self-confidence that quickly without a lot of coaching. Wilder looked afraid against Parker and unwilling to take any risks in that fight.

Perfect Timing? Or Perfect Strategy?

“I said, ‘Let’s give Deontay a little work.’ The best time,” said Hearn when asked about the timing not being good to sign Deontay with him coming off a loss to Joseph Parker last December. “I got to pump him up. I got to believe in him. I’ve got to tell him how great he is, and get some fire in his belly.”

If Hearn can boost Wilder’s morale and make him understand that he’s the captain, he’ll be more willing to take the ultimate risk and blitz Zhang as he would on the battlefield.

Reviving the ‘Bronze Bomber’

“You’re the captain. You are the boss of this ship. Let’s go and represent the team and smash this block to pieces, and he will stop Zhilei Zhang inside five rounds. That’s one of the reasons why I gave him the captain seat. I spoke to him and looked in his eyes, and he’s for real. He wants to do damage on June 1st, and he’s fighting for his career on June 1st,” said Hearn.

YouTube video