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Humanity has opened gates of hell on climate, says Guterres

Wednesday’s summit was unusual due to Guterres’ decision to restrict the speaker list to countries he deemed to have clear and effective climate plans, and those prepared to send a high-level leader to speak….reports Asian Lite News

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has said “Humanity has opened the gates to hell.” He made the remarks at a high-level summit on the climate crisis, CNN reported.

“Horrendous heat is having horrendous effects. Distraught farmers watching crops carried away by floods. Sweltering temperatures spawning disease,” he said in a speech to open the Climate Ambition Summit, happening alongside the UN General Assembly in New York.

“Climate action is dwarfed by the scale of the challenge,” he added, warning that if nothing changes we are heading “towards a dangerous and unstable world.”

The one-day conference – which comes as the world grapples with devastating floods and fires – is intended to build global momentum toward slashing planet-heating pollution ahead of the UN’s COP28 climate summit in Dubai in December.

Wednesday’s summit was unusual due to Guterres’ decision to restrict the speaker list to countries he deemed to have clear and effective climate plans, and those prepared to send a high-level leader to speak.

As per CNN, of the nearly 200 countries present in New York for the General Assembly, only 34 nations and seven non-governmental bodies secured speaking slots at the UN chief’s summit.

The aim of the summit is to increase ambitions on climate action, Guterres said.

Selwin Hart, a special adviser to the UN Secretary-General on climate action and just transition said there has been “massive backsliding” on commitments, as per CNN.

“The countries that committed to net-zero by 2050, and to the 1.5-degree goal of the Paris Agreement, they’re expanding fossil fuel licensing at a time when science tells us this is totally incompatible with this 1.5-degree goal,” he told CNN in an interview on Tuesday.

Guterres in his speech, called on developed countries to reach net-zero emissions – removing from the atmosphere at least as much planet-warming pollution as they produce – by 2040, at least ten years earlier than most current commitments.

He also asked countries to commit to timelines to phase out fossil fuel emissions, as well as to significantly increase finance to help low- and middle-income countries quickly move to clean energy and invest in climate resilience measures to better cope with increasingly severe extreme weather events.

“We are decades behind. We must make up time lost to foot-dragging, arm-twisting and the naked greed of entrenched interests raking in billions from fossil fuels,” Guterres said as per CNN. (ANI)

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Yoga for humanity

Ministers of health and education from across the Region issued a Call to Action to scale up implementation of comprehensive health programmes in schools, including by facilitating physical activity…reports Asian Lite News

On the International Day of Yoga (IDY), the World Health Organisation (WHO) and its member states in the South-East Asia Region lead global efforts to celebrate the physical and mental health benefits of yoga and its contributions to life-long health and well-being.

Regular yoga practice can help people of all ages and incomes achieve adequate physical activity, making it a high-impact, cost-effective way to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) – one of the Region’s eight Flagship Priorities.

It has been shown to have immediate psychological effects, decreasing anxiety and stress, and increasing feelings of emotional and social well-being. Throughout the COVID-19 response, yoga has helped hundreds of millions of people from all countries and cultures stay healthy and well, highlighting that yoga is for all of humanity – the theme of this year’s IDY event.

Consistent with the Region-wide push to reorient health systems towards strong primary health care (PHC), policy makers should consider integrating yoga into community-based mental health and well-being initiatives, while also increasing efforts to leverage the power and potential of safe and effective traditional medicine.

The region continues to intensify action to increase physical activity and enhance mental health, in line with its Flagship Priorities, the WHO Global Action Plan on Physical Activity (GAPPA) 2018–2030, the WHO Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan 2013–2030, and the Sustainable Development Goals. Last year, WHO launched a Regional Roadmap on implementing the GAPPA, which will help Member States identify and implement policies to achieve a 15% relative reduction in the prevalence of insufficient physical activity by 2030.

Ministers of health and education from across the Region issued a Call to Action to scale up implementation of comprehensive health programmes in schools, including by facilitating physical activity. Amid the ongoing COVID-19 response and recovery, policy makers should explore integrating yoga into preventive and promotive health strategies, especially for mental health – a core priority in the months and years ahead.

These are exciting times for traditional medicine (TRM). In March, WHO and the Government of India signed an agreement to establish the WHO Global Centre for Traditional Medicine (GCTM) in Jamnagar, India.

The GCTM – which is supported by an investment of $250 million from the Government of India – has a strategic focus on evidence and learning, data and analytics, sustainability and equity, and innovation and technology, with the overall aim of optimizing the contribution of TRM to global health and sustainable development.

The mission of the GCTM is well aligned with the Region’s longstanding focus on strengthening TRM system performance monitoring, increasing safety monitoring for TRM products, enhancing research capacity on TRM, and integrating safe and effective TRM into health service delivery, especially at the PHC level.

Yoga is not only widely accessible, but also has widespread appeal, reflected in the 177 votes garnered at the UN General Assembly in 2014 to make the IDY an annual, globally recognized celebration, as well as the inclusion of yoga in physical activities at WHO Governing Body meetings in the Region and more recently globally, including at the World Health Assembly.

In the region’s onward quest to prevent and control NCDs, WHO will continue to highlight the physical and mental health benefits of yoga, alongside other forms of traditional knowledge, skills and practice to prevent, diagnose and treat physical and mental illness. On the International Day of Yoga, WHO reiterates its commitment to support all countries of the Region to leverage the power and potential of yoga, for a healthier, happier and stress-free future for all.

Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh is Regional Director for South-East Asia at the World Health Organisation

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‘Help during crisis is a matter of pride’

We want the people in India to know that they are not alone, and we will fight this together. We may be 10,000 miles away, but we continue to keep you close in our hearts and thoughts…Anupam Kher speaks with Siddhi Jain.

More than being a complete celebrity, people love to find ‘humanity’ in celebrities they admire. Human beings have been known to come together in the face of a crisis; there is help and support pouring in from all quarters, which is a matter of great pride and relief, says senior actor and author Anupam Kher.

Kher’s foundation, called the Anupam Kher Foundation, partnered up with Ashutosh Tewari (Global Cancer Foundation, USA) and Baba Kalyani (Bharat Forge, India), for a new project called “Project Heal India”. Through this initiative, the organisations will provide critical equipment and other life supporting devices to needy institutions and hospitals across India.

“We are honoured and humbled to team up with Global Cancer Foundation and Bharat Forge, India to provide lifesaving equipment and medical supplies to people in need. The fact that many people are coming forward to selflessly help others is heartening,” Anupam Kher told.
Kher added that, “The first consignment of care supplies like ventilators, non-invasive ventilation devices and oxygen concentrators has arrived. We hope more people will join forces to ensure that India comes out of this pandemic soon.”

According to Ashutosh Tewari, “We want the people in India to know that they are not alone, and we will fight this together. We may be 10,000 miles away, but we continue to keep you close in our hearts and thoughts. The supplies we are sending are a kind of symbolic gesture and a sign of solidarity. We know that the needs are both extremely urgent and very great. On behalf of everyone who has so generously contributed to this effort, we are grateful to be able to contribute to Project Heal India. Covid-19 has touched me personally and professionally in many ways, yet I remain hopeful that together we will win this fight.”

Adding, Baba Kalyani called this an exemplary gesture and said: “As an eminent American doctor of Indian origin, this generous effort to help the Indian medical system with so much support at this time of crisis is immensely valued. I am personally humbled and very pleased to contribute to this collective endeavour.”

Concluding, Anupam Kher said: “At the time of an ongoing world crisis, we human beings have always collectively come together to respond and provide help in any way possible. As India is reeling under a huge crisis, it is our moral responsibility to pick up the mantle and do our bit. Numerous people from around the globe reached out asking for ways to be of help but as Ashutosh Tewari was one of the first to come up with a concrete plan.”

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