War in Ukraine, climatic disasters, food insecurity … In a world besieged by crises, the leaders of the planet follow one another from Tuesday on the podium of the General Assembly of the United Nations tested by deep divisions. For nearly a week, some 150 heads of state and government from around the world will speak at this annual diplomatic high mass, which resumes in person following two years disrupted by the Covid-19. Traditionally, this first day gives pride of place to the speech of the American president who, as leader of the country hosting the United Nations headquarters, speaks in the first. But exceptionally – as on very rare occasions in the past – this will not be the case: Joe Biden, who was at the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on Monday, postponed his intervention to Wednesday. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres will be there with an opening speech for this 77th General Assembly which “will not water down things”, promised his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric. “We meet at a time of great peril for the world,” said Antonio Guterres on Monday, listing “conflicts and climatic disasters”, “mistrust and division”, “poverty, inequality and discrimination”. On the danger side, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will be at the heart of this high-level diplomatic week, with an intervention this Wednesday by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky – by video thanks to a special authorization voted last week by the States -members– and a Security Council on Thursday at the level of foreign ministers. But the countries of the South are increasingly annoyed that Westerners are focusing their attention on Ukraine. “We don’t just want to talk regarding ending the conflict in Ukraine. We want the conflicts to end in Tigray, we want the conflicts to end in Syria, we want the conflicts to end wherever they turn their noses. around the world,” Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley said Monday during a preliminary day focused on education and development goals. In an attempt to respond to the concerns of certain countries, Americans and Europeans were to organize a high-level meeting on Tuesday on food security, a consequence of this war from which the whole planet is suffering. And French President Emmanuel Macron, who was to be on the podium Tuesday in the middle of the day, was to insist on the need to prevent “fracturing” between countries of the North and the South, it is said at the Elysée. These tensions caused by the war in Ukraine echo the North-South resentment in the fight once morest climate change. Poor countries, on the front line of the devastating impacts of global warming for which they are not responsible, are fighting in particular to ensure that rich countries finally keep their promises of financial aid. Two months before the UN COP27 climate conference in Egypt, it would be surprising if this climate crisis was not prominently featured in the speech by Antonio Guterres who fought to reduce gas emissions greenhouse gases, in particular those of fossil fuel producers, one of its priorities. On Tuesday, Brazilian Presidents Jair Bolsonaro and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz were also to succeed each other on the podium. Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi is also in New York this week for his first General Assembly and the nuclear issue might once once more be at the center of discussions. Mr. Raïssi was to have a meeting on Tuesday with Emmanuel Macron who has encouraged him in recent months during telephone interviews to accept the conditions proposed by the Europeans to revive the 2015 nuclear agreement supposed to prevent Tehran from acquiring the atomic bomb in exchange for the lifting of sanctions suffocating its economy. This high-level week, however, has a few notable absentees, in particular Russian Presidents Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
release
The regional secretaries of the USFP are pleased with the quality of the debates that marked their meeting with the First Secretary
Coinciding with the return to political and social life, a crucial meeting bringing together the First Secretary of the Socialist Union of Popular Forces with the regional secretaries of the party, Saturday, September 17 in Casablanca This meeting is part of the laborious organizational dynamics at all levels of party authorities, initiated since the assizes of the last National Congress. It also stems from the deep and unanimous conviction of the importance of the action deployed by the regional secretariats with regard to anchoring the foundations of the new organizational edifice, namely listening, consultation and the spirit of participation. Moreover, this initiative reflects the constantly reiterated awareness of the central role of the territorial structures of the party in the enterprise of defending the rights of citizens aimed at establishing social and spatial justice on the basis of equity and equality. The meeting, which was sanctioned by a press release from the regional secretaries relating the content of the relevant debates in which all the participants took part, was in particular the opportunity to raise all the dysfunctions penalizing the action of the elected local authorities both at regional councils than to those of the prefectural and provincial councils and of the urban and rural communes. On this, the press release from the regional secretaries indicates that the action of the regional councils was evaluated, particularly since the extension of their powers and following the adoption of the 2011 constitution, being the referential and normative framework for the implementation of regionalization as a strategic option for the local management of public affairs, enshrining the consolidation of regional and participatory democracy and opening up prospects for real development in all its dimensions . In this respect, it was noted that contrary to what one might have expected, with the advent of the current government supported by the same majorities dominating the regions as those composing it, the assessment of the action of the regional councils has turned out to be disappointing and frustrating to say the least for the population. Indeed, as developed in the said press release, the management undertaken by these councils has not only obstructed development opportunities but has in no way contributed to facilitating the expected transition to decentralization and deconcentration, which is delaying and hindering the transformation democracy consisting in correcting the shortcomings of the supposed representative democracy by integrating a participatory scope capable of pursuing the construction of a “new democratic model” of development “associating efficiency with representativeness and participation with the success of the achievement “. On the other hand, there has been a clear decline in the action of these Councils concerning the services supposed to be presented by them to the population as well as in terms of measures that can encourage the attraction of investments help reduce unemployment. And the results of participation in the strengthening of health and educational infrastructure have been no less negative. As for the relationship between the structural components within the said elected councils, particularly the regional councils, the meeting did not fail to address the problem of the exclusion suffered by the elected representatives of the opposition. The statement by the regional secretaries of the USFP also pointed out that the governing majorities of almost all the regions have never invested their affiliation with the governing majority in the preservation of the interests of the citizens but have, on the contrary, accentuated bureaucratic forms, nepotism and the tendency of wait-and-see attitude destroying initiative and creativity. The First Secretary of the People’s Forces Party, together with the regional secretaries, took this opportunity to address at length the vital problem of water scarcity, following the alarming drop in rainfall in recent years, but also because of the successive policies followed in the fields of agriculture, irrigation, equipment and energy, marked by hazardous improvisation and frustrating wait-and-see attitude in the face of the decline in the volume of the water table and the filling rate of dams in addition to the consecration of the drought as a structural fact and not only as an exceptional fact. In this regard, it was concluded that the water challenge requires circumstantial and strategic interventions implying the revision of the green generation plan with a view to adapting export agriculture to the structural data of water scarcity and Quickly activate the implementation of scheduled projects relating to the desalination of seawater, the recycling of wastewater and the establishment of dissuasive and binding provisions once morest all those whose behavior causes loss of this vital matter. And to conclude by emphasizing the crucial need to consider the water crisis as a priority issue that requires special attention from all national, sectoral and spatial policies, just as the next finance law is in the pipeline. obligation to reserve resources commensurate with the water challenge At the end of the work of this meeting, the First Secretary expressed his pride and satisfaction with the action deployed by the regional secretariats and called for more “activism of proximity” so as to keep the Ittihadies and Ittihadis at the center of all national battles and at the height of present and future challenges, always driven by “the sense of open democratic patriotism”.
Ittihadi MP, Moulay El Mehdi Fatimi, challenges the head of government on the compliance and nature of the UNDP evaluation system
Deputy Moulay El Mehdi Fatimi, member of the Socialist Group in the House of Representatives, on behalf of the said parliamentary group, addressed an oral question to the Head of Government, questioning him on the subject of Morocco’s ranking in terms of the Human Development.
MP Ittihadi underlined in his question Morocco’s decline in the human development index from 122nd place in 2020 to 123rd in 2021, out of a total of 191 countries around the world. , indicating that our country has positioned itself, at the end of the investigation in question, behind Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, Libya, Jordan, Egypt, Algeria, Ukraine, Iran and Qatar, some of which are also experiencing particularly critical situations and circumstances.
The parliamentarian, member of the Socialist Group, went on to recall that since the 1990s of the past century, the UN institution, the UNDP, has continued to issue annual reports pointing out the human development index of the whole of the countries of the planet relying in terms of
classification and evaluation on three essential criteria and additional data relating mainly to the projected average age (life expectancy), education and the vital level of the population in relation, of course, to power of purchase.
Moulay El Mehdi Fatimi developed, on this, that the decline recorded in the said ranking might be explained by the inability of the State to raise the quality and the generalization of education and by the manifest drop in individual income. report of the Moroccan citizen, adding that the publication of this annual report nevertheless arouses a semblance of surprise and astonishment for our country because it finds itself oddly in a position well below a certain number of countries experiencing particular difficulties and innumerable problems and exerting efforts
of development by far less important than those granted by Morocco. For this purpose,
he observes, it is incumbent on us to pay greater attention to the statistical data put forward by this international institution.
To this end, by noting this important observation, the deputy ittihadi made a point of questioning, on behalf of the Socialist Group in the House of Representatives, the head of government regarding the degree of veracity and the nature of the statistical system adopted in the preparation of the said reports in view of the major efforts
deployed by Morocco in all directions, particularly in the fields of health and education, being preponderant sectors in terms of qualification, and ranking of the level of human development.
R.M
Here is the launch date for the new season of ‘Fortnite’
Epic Games has announced the release date for Fortnite’s fourth season and server downtime. The company had started releasing some information regarding the new season earlier this week, stressing that the new season will be called “Paradise”.
Information regarding the main theme behind this season is still unknown, but the teaser images and short videos for the season are all regarding everything chrome sucks. As always with new Fortnite seasons, there will be a long period of server downtime before players can access the new content.
☑️ Unlock Remaining Battle Pass Rewards
☑️ Collect and Complete Your Snap Styles
☑️ Solve The Puzzle to Unlock Indiana Jones
☑️ Let the good vibes roll ✨
— Fortnite (@FortniteGame) September 13, 2022
When will the fourth season of the third version of the game “Fortnite” be released?
The new season of the game will be released on Sunday, September 18, 2022. According to the company’s latest blog, the server downtime is expected to start around 10 am Beirut time.
It is currently unknown how long the servers will be down, but it is likely that the game will be launched within 5-7 hours. During server maintenance, players will be required to download and install the latest version of the game.