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Cinderella 乡

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  4. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1933691/middle-east Morocco’s prime minister-designate announced Wednesday that a three-party coalition will form the country’s next government. King Mohammed VI appointed billionaire Aziz Akhanouch as prime minister earlier this month after his party placed first in a legislative election, netting 102 out of the 395 seats in the lower house of parliament. The coalition includes Akhanouch’s liberal National Rally of Independents Party, or RNI, the Authenticity and Modernity party (PAM) and the conservative Istiqlal (IP). Formed in 2008 by Fouad Ali El Hima, a personal friend of the king and one of his close advisers, PAM has never before been part of a Moroccan government. The Istiqlal Party is Morocco’s oldest party and has participated in several governments since the kingdom gained independence from France in 1956. The three parties together won 270 seats in the House of Representatives, giving the coalition government a comfortable majority to pass laws. “We will work together to form an effective and coherent majority before presenting the government lineup to King Mohammed VI,” Akhanouch said during a press conference. “We share many historical backgrounds and we intersect in a number of priorities.” A former agriculture minister, Akhanouch is one of Morocco’s richest men. He replaces Prime Minister Saad Eddine El Othmani, whose Islamist Justice and Development Party (PJD) suffered a stinging a defeat in the Sept. 8 election. The party, which has been in power since 2011, secured only 13 parliament seats, down from 125 in the 2016 election. The PJD’s leadership resigned en masse after this month’s elections and said the party would join the opposition ranks. In a statement, the moderate Islamist party alleged “many violations and imbalances witnessed” during the elections,” adding that “the results do not reflect the reality of the political map and the free will of the voters.”
  5. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1929326/lifestyle A recent study has revealed that a series of camel sculptures in Saudi Arabia that were first discovered in 2018 are likely to be the oldest surviving large-scale animal reliefs in the world. The researchers behind the new study, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, believe that the life-size carvings of the camels are between 7,000-8,000 years old. This means that the sculptures are older than ancient landmarks like Egypt’s Pyramids of Giza, which are 4,500 years old, and England’s Stonehenge, which is 5,000 years old. The figures, which include other animals such as a donkey, were found in the northern province of Al-Jouf. According to the researchers, “Neolithic arrowheads and radiocarbon dates attest occupation between 5200 and 5600 BCE. “This is consistent with measurements of the areal density of manganese and iron in the rock varnish. The site was likely in use over a longer period and reliefs were re-worked when erosion began to obscure detailed features. By 1000 BCE, erosion was advanced enough to cause first panels to fall, in a process that continues until today,” the text says, according to a report by the BBC. The research was done by the Saudi Ministry of Culture, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, French National Centre for Scientific Research and King Saud University.
  6. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1933816/middle-east Algeria said Wednesday it has closed its airspace to all Moroccan planes due to “provocations and hostile practices” by its neighbor, in the latest dispute between the countries at odds mainly over Western Sahara. The move comes after Algeria broke off diplomatic ties with Morocco on August 24, accusing it of “hostile actions” following months of heightened tensions between the two North African countries. Morocco called the severing of ties “completely unjustified” and said the decision was based on “false, even absurd pretexts.” Relations between the neighbors have been tense for decades due to Algeria’s support for the Polisario Front, which demands a self-determination referendum in Western Sahara, while Morocco, which controls around 80 percent of the desert territory, has offered only autonomy. The Algerian presidency said in a statement on Wednesday the decision had been made “to shut its airspace immediately to all civilian and military aircraft as well as to those registered in Morocco.” The decision was announced after a meeting of the High Security Council chaired by President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. The presidency said the meeting examined the situation on Algeria’s border with Morocco and took into account “the continuation of provocations and hostile practices by Morocco,” without providing details. The decision will not have a major immediate effect because Algeria closed off air links in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, reopening to seven countries in June — of which Morocco was not one. A source close to the state-owned carrier Air Algerie said no direct commercial flights between Algeria and Morocco had flown since. “Algerians traveling to Morocco transfer via Tunis,” the source said on condition of anonymity. The decision will more immediately effect Moroccan flights that have routes over Algerian territory. Algerian Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra told CNN International on Tuesday that cutting diplomatic ties was “sending the right message” to Morocco. “This is a civilized way of putting an end to a situation that could not last anymore without running the risk of costing more casualties and taking the two countries into a path that would not be desirable.” In July, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI deplored the tensions and invited Algeria’s President Abdelmadjid Tebboune “to make wisdom prevail” and “work in unison for the development of relations” between the neighboring countries. Earlier this month, more than 200 Moroccan and Algerian civil society figures appealed for a “return to reason” after Algiers’ decision to cut diplomatic ties. Intellectuals, academics and other civil society actors, most of them Moroccan, signed a petition rejecting the “current situation which could lead to an unnatural confrontation... contrary to the interests of the two peoples and the region.” Algeria is the key foreign backer of the Polisario Front, which has for decades fought Morocco for the independence of Western Sahara. Morocco sees the former Spanish colony as an integral part of its territory. The sparsely-po[CENSORED]ted desert territory boasts significant phosphate resources and a long Atlantic coastline with access to rich fishing waters. Algiers was also angered by Morocco’s normalization of ties with Israel last year as a quid pro quo for US recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara. Rabat had severed diplomatic relations with Algeria in 1976 for several years after Algiers recognized the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), proclaimed by the Polisario. The border between the two countries has been closed since 1994.
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  11. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1928506/lifestyle British musician Mark Ronson will perform at the UAE’s inaugural Semi Permanent Middle East festival in Abu Dhabi. The festival is set to take place from Oct. 14-16 at Manarat Al-Saadiyat in the country’s capital city. The Grammy and Oscar-winning music sensation will perform a DJ set at the event. Organized by the Department of Culture and Tourism — Abu Dhabi and global creative company Semi Permanent, the event will also feature an array of immersive and multi-sensory experiences, including the first international pop-up by famed New York restaurant The Flower Shop. Accompanying an international line-up, the event will also feature Arab talents including musician Dana Hourani, artist Jason Seife, Les Benjamins’ founder and creative director Bunyamin Aydin and photographer Hussain Al-Moosawi. The festival is curated around the theme “Bridges,” whereby international professionals in the creative world will showcase how to build new bridges between industry peers and a complex matrix of worldwide consumers through keynote talks, panels, workshops and experiences.
  12. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1928096/middle-east Lebanon’s new Prime Minister Najib Mikati, who took office last week promising to revive IMF talks to unlock aid, said on Monday there was no time to lose and no easy path to tackle one of history’s worst economic meltdowns. The new government, formed after more than a year of political stalemate, met for the first time on Monday, replacing a caretaker administration that had quit in the aftermath of last year’s Beirut port explosion that killed hundreds, injured thousands and left large swathes of the capital destroyed. “It is true that we don’t have a magic wand. The situation is very difficult,” Mikati, a billionaire-turned-politician told the cabinet, according to a statement published after the government’s first meeting. Lebanese hope the new administration will plot a path out of a crisis that has sunk the currency by some 90 percent since late 2019 and forced three quarters of the po[CENSORED]tion into poverty. Mikati pledged to help resolve shortages of fuel and medicine, supplies of which have dried up as the import-dependent nation’s hard currency reserves have run out. State electricity is available for a few hours a day, if at all, and most Lebanese homes and establishments increasingly rely on private generators. A generator at a dentist’s clinic in Tyre exploded on Monday leaving seven people injured, a reflection of the safety hazards of relying heavily on the alternative source of power. Western governments, including the United States and France, have welcomed the cabinet formation, while urging it to quickly implement reforms that international lenders have demanded before loans can flow. “We need the help of the IMF, the World Bank, regional and international funds,” President Michel Aoun, who approved the new government after months of bargaining, told the cabinet. “What is required are urgent, decisive steps to start reforms.” Mikati has previously said resuming IMF talks would be a priority. On Friday, he said divisive politics must be put to one side and that he could not go to IMF talks if he faces opposition at home. In a boost to the government, the finance ministry said Lebanon would receive a total of $1.135 billion in IMF Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), more than the $860 million’s worth that had been expected as part an IMF general allocation. In addition to the $860 million from 2021, the sum includes$275 million dating from 2009, the ministry said, adding the sum would be deposited with the central bank on Sept. 16. IMF talks broke down last summer, with politicians and banks disputing the scale of vast losses mapped out by a government financial recovery plan which the Fund endorsed. Aoun urged the government to include that financial recovery plan in its policy program, as well as reforms set out by a French roadmap last year. The previous government failed to implement structural reforms which donors have been urging for years, including measures to address state corruption and waste at the root of the crisis.
  13. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1927946/middle-east Egyptian Minister of Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Aty has said that the flooding of the Nile River this year has been higher than average, with the rainfall rates continuing to rise at the source of the river during September. At the meeting of the Permanent Committee for Regulating Nile River Revenue he said the relevant ministry agencies are continuing to follow up on rainfall rates at the source in order to determine the quantities of water reaching the High Dam lake. He said the process of gradual water disposal will continue in order to meet the water needs of all beneficiaries. The minister was reassured about the water situation in the various governorates, and about the progress in all irrigation and drainage departments to enable the water system to provide water needs for all uses. He ordered a high alert state for all ministry departments and directed them to continue preparing to take all necessary measures to meet water needs during the monsoon season. The spokesman for the Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation, Mohamed Ghanem, said that the committee in the ministry usually follows up on Nile flooding periodically, but at present it is meeting every few days to monitor the situation. Ghanem said it is the natural hydrology of the Nile that flood levels fluctuate annually. He explained that the bulk of the flood waters come from Ethiopia, heading downstream past Khartoum to Egypt, and therefore any increase of rainfall at the source causes water levels to rise in Egypt. Ghanem stressed the importance of the Rain and Flood Forecasting Center in the Ministry of Irrigation due to its ability to predict rainfall 72 hours before it occurs through satellite images. This allows the relevant parties in governorates that are particularly susceptible to flooding to prepare accordingly.
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  15. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1926851/middle-eas Tunisia’s powerful labor union, the UGTT, on Saturday called for elections to form a new parliament to debate changing the political system, an implicit rejection of any move by the president to do so directly via a referendum. President Kais Saied seized governing powers on July 25, citing an emergency clause in the constitution to dismiss the prime minister and suspend parliament, moves his political critics call a coup. It has thrust Tunisia into its biggest political crisis since the 2011 revolution that ousted an autocratic regime and introduced democracy. The UGTT’s Achaab newspaper said: “The secretary general (of the union) called for early legislative elections that would lead to a new parliament, after which the constitution would be discussed and the political system would bechanged.” This week one of Saied’s advisers, Walid Hajjem, told Reuters that the president was planning to suspend the 2014 constitution and offer a new version himself via a referendum. Despite indefinitely extending emergency measures, Saied has rejected accusations of a coup, but nearly seven weeks after his intervention, he has not appointed a new prime minister or formally declared how he plans to rule. The UGTT, which has more than a million members, is one of the most powerful political forces in Tunisia and was instrumental in bringing together rival political blocs after the 2011 revolution. Political parties, including some that voiced support for Saied’s July 25 intervention, have rejected the idea of his suspending the constitution and unilaterally offering a new one. Western democracies, which have been important donors for Tunisia’s battered public finances in recent years, have also pushed Saied to quickly name a prime minister and set out a path forward.
  16. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1927391/lifestyle Curated by British critic and writer Sacha Craddock, Saudi Arabia’s Misk Art Institute is set to showcase its thirs annual flagship exhibition from Oct. 3- Jan. 31. Titled “Here, Now,” the show’s theme is “culture” and both Saudi and international artists will be showcased. The exhibition will feature a mix of mediums, including paintings, textiles, sculptures, immersive installations, and digital works. It was curated by Craddock, as well as assistant curators Alia Ahmad Al-Saud and Nora Algosaibi. The participating artists include Ayman Yossri Daydban (Saudi Arabia/Palestine); Filwa Nazer (Saudi Arabia); Manal AlDowayan (Saudi Arabia); Piyarat Piyapongwiwat (Thailand); Salah ElMur (Sudan); Sami Ali AlHossein (Saudi Arabia); Sheila Hicks (USA); Vasudevan Akkitham (India); Young In Hong (South Korea) and Yousef Jaha (Saudi Arabia). The exhibition will be housed at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Arts Hall in Riyadh and is also accessible online via the Misk Art Institute’s website.
  17. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1922646/media Publicly available mail exchanger records show that some two dozen Afghan government bodies used Google’s servers to handle official emails, including the ministries of finance, industry, higher education, and mines WASHINGTON: Google has temporarily locked down an unspecified number of Afghan government email accounts, according to a person familiar with the matter, as fears grow over the digital paper trail left by former officials and their international partners. In the weeks since the Taliban’s swift takeover of Afghanistan from a US-backed government, reports have highlighted how biometric https://theintercept.com/2021/08/17/afghanistan-taliban-military-biometrics and Afghan payroll https://www.technologyreview.com/2021/08/30/1033941/afghanistan-biometri... databases might be exploited by the new rulers to hunt their enemies. In a statement on Friday, Alphabet Inc’s Google stopped short of confirming that Afghan government accounts were being locked down, saying that the company was monitoring the situation in Afghanistan and “taking temporary actions to secure relevant accounts.” One employee of the former government has told Reuters the Taliban are seeking to acquire former officials’ emails. Late last month the employee said that the Taliban had asked him to preserve the data held on the servers of the ministry he used to work for. “If I do so, then they will get access to the data and official communications of the previous ministry leadership,” the employee said. The employee said he did not comply and has since gone into hiding. Reuters is not identifying the man or his former ministry out of concern for his safety. Publicly available mail exchanger records show that some two dozen Afghan government bodies used Google’s servers to handle official emails, including the ministries of finance, industry, higher education, and mines. Afghanistan’s office of presidential protocol also used Google, according to the records, as did some local government bodies. Commandeering government databases and emails could provide information about employees of the former administration, ex-ministers, government contractors, tribal allies and foreign partners. “It would give a real wealth of information,” said Chad Anderson, a security researcher with Internet intelligence firm DomainTools who helped Reuters identify which ministries ran which email platform. “Just even having an employee list on a Google Sheet is a big problem,” he said, citing reports of reprisals against government workers. Mail exchanger records show that Microsoft Corp’s email services were also used by several Afghan government agencies, including the ministry of foreign affairs and the presidency. But it isn’t clear what steps, if any, the software firm is taking to prevent data from falling into the hands of the Taliban. Microsoft declined comment. Anderson said the Taliban’s attempt to control US-built digital infrastructure was worth keeping an eye on. Intelligence drawn from that infrastructure, he said, “may be far more valuable to a fledgling government than old helicopters.”
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  19. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1917286/world Sri Lanka’s new animal protection laws, which ban riders from drinking on the job and require domesticated elephants to have photo identity cards with a DNA stamp, will keep a “check on animal cruelty” on the island nation, experts and officials told Arab News. Under the upgraded measures, owners or anyone in the custody of domesticated elephants must ensure that the mahout or elephant rider has not “consumed any liquor or harmful drugs while employed,” according to the directive issued earlier this month. Violators could face up to three years in prison and have their elephants seized by the government. There are about 200 tamed elephants in Sri Lanka, highly revered and used in religious and cultural events throughout the year, while an estimated 7,500 roam in the wild across the island nation of 22 million people. However, complaints of ill-treatment and cruelty of the endangered species are rampant, which officials are looking to curb with the latest measures. “The new rules have been introduced to regularize the tamed elephant po[CENSORED]tion in the island,” Wimalaweera Dissanayake, state minister for wildlife protection, told Arab News. “They are being implemented to keep a check on animal cruelty and to stop elephants from being stolen from the wild and brought up in sheltered homes,” he added. Capturing wild elephants in Sri Lanka is a criminal offense punishable by death, but prosecutions are rare. The heavily poached pachyderms are prized across the country, where several affluent Sri Lankans, including Buddhist monks, keep them as pets. Out of the 200 tamed elephants in Sri Lanka, Dissanayake said that nearly 100 are at homes, temples or used for work, while others are at the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage and the Elephant Transit Camp. “All of these elephants are permanently stationed at these places, except for the animals at the transit camp where abandoned animals are bred and sent back to the wild,” Dissanayake said. He added that the new laws would ensure owners provide better care for their elephants, which must be registered with biometric identity cards and receive medical checkups every six months. “The ID cards include four photos, a DNA stamp and a microchip number with details of each elephant’s height, weight and unique characteristics,” Ashraff A. Samad, renowned photographer and journalist in the capital, Colombo, told Arab News. “To my knowledge, elephant births only occur at the Pinnawela orphanage. Any claims of elephant births at individual homes cannot be accepted, and it is clear the baby elephants were stolen from the wild,” he added. To avoid such crimes, the expert suggested that photos of registered elephants should be displayed on the Internet “so that their real owners can identify the stolen animals.”
  20. https://www.arabnews.com/node/1926746/lifestyle After weeks of being spotted on yachts and holding hands on intimate walks, Jennifer Lopez and old flame turned new again Ben Affleck made it official Friday night on the red carpet for the premiere of Affleck’s “The Last Duel” at the Venice International Film Festival. She was dripping in Cartier diamonds in a white mermaid body hugging gown with plunging neckline and high side slit by Lebanese designer Georges Hobeika. He was dapper in a black Dolce & Gabbana tuxedo. There were plenty of kisses and hugs for the cameras after a summer of love for the two, who rekindled their romance in May, 17 years after they broke up in 2004. They were spotted out and about in Venice before their formal coming out. At the premiere, the 49-year-old Affleck waved to the crowd as he helped Lopez, 52, out of a black car and onto the red carpet. For weeks the two haven’t been shy about PDA after coming back together not long after Lopez’s coming apart with Alex Rodriguez. Affleck’s divorce from Jennifer Garner was finalized in 2018. Throughout the summer, they were photographed on a yacht off Saint-Tropez, cuddling on a walk in the Hamptons and nuzzling over sushi in Malibu. Ridley Scott’s medieval drama “The Last Duel” also reunites Affleck and Matt Damon, with some Adam Driver thrown in.
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