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Adapting Indus Basin key to adapt PM KAKAR HAILS UAE-LED Pakistan to climate change: PM $30B FUND AS PROMISING TO MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE Monday, 4 December, 2023 i 19 Jamada al-awal, 1445

Rs 15.00 | Vol XIV No 155 I 08 Pages I Islamabad Edition

DUBAI

Staff RepoRt

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Stresses climate change is global challenge, and contribution has also to be global

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Says Pakistan considers climate change a ‘national security challenge’ and shared global issue ISLAMABAD

Staff RepoRt

ARETAKER Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar while lauding the United Arab Emirates’ announcement of a $30 billion fund to channel investments to mitigate climate change, on Sunday said that the climate fund initiative by the UAE is promising and will be translated into tangible projects, especially in the Global South. However, at the same time, the prime minister noted that the challenge was global, and the contribution has to be global as well. “It is not just the UAE who should cater to climate mitigation,” he opined during an interview with Aletihad, a leading Abu Dhabi based UAE newspaper. The caretaker prime minister also highlighted the importance of modern knowledge-based economies and the transformation towards low carbon, adding that Pakistan considered the climate change a “national security challenge” and a shared global issue. He said the climate change was a common challenge to all of them, whether it was a small nation or a large nation. Elaborating his viewpoint, the caretaker prime minister further said that one could not rely on the assumption that drought would only affect a particular country, or a hurricane would target a specific nation, or the melting of a glacier would only occur in certain regions.

“Yes, there will be more vulnerable countries, but that vulnerability does not protect others. Climate change is changing its face, shape, and form, affecting more or less the entire globe,” the media outlet quoted the prime minister as saying. Emphasising the need for solutions, he said that scientific and empirical evidence should guide governments. Vulnerable nations as well as emitters determined the terms of reference for dialogue. These terms outlined the role of all contributors, he observed. “Rather than being judgemental, the focus should be on resolving the challenge, and the key question is who would play that role!” the caretaker prime minister said. In the initial stages, the outcomes of the process were beyond the scope of human knowledge. Now, all were aware of the situation, he said, stressing that defining roles and determining who would actively contribute, held the key to resolving the climate issue. The caretaker prime minister also highlighted the importance of closely watching scientific developments in the climate domain. “The buzzwords of one decade would be obsolete in another. So we have to think that the change will be kaleidoscopic, and it will be quite speedy. So we have to be vigilant about what scientific developments are happening. And we have to keep an eye on that,” he maintained.

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From north to south, nowhere safe in Gaza as 700 killed in 24 hours TEL AVIV/GAZA STRIP agencieS

From north to south, nowhere safe in Gaza as 700 more Palestinians killed, majority of them children and women during the past 24 hours, which so far one of the highest daily death tolls since the war began as Israeli army targets the Jabalia refugee camp for a second day. Israel’s war on Gaza is escalating, leaving death and devastation across the besieged strip. At least 700 Palestinians have been killed in the past 24 hours – one of the highest daily death tolls since the war began on October 7. From the north to the south, Palestinians in Gaza say nowhere is safe. The Israeli military targeted the Jabalia refugee camp for a second day. Several homes were destroyed, killing dozens of people while more are buried under the rubble. Israel has also called on residents from certain neigbourhoods in Khan Younis in southern Gaza to evacuate. Roads leading to other parts of the city or further south have been destroyed or heavily damaged. More than 15,500 people have been confirmed killed in Gaza since the start of the conflict, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza. A Palestinian Civil Defence spokesperson told Al Jazeera that conditions across Gaza are “beyond dire”, warning that rescuers lack the resources to reach all victims of Israeli bombardment. “There are dozens of civilians being killed in every single air strike. Hundreds are also being wounded,” said Mahmoud Basal. The Israeli army has ordered more people to evacuate from southern Gaza, which was earlier declared ‘safe zone’. UNICEF spokesperson describes scenes inside Gaza hospital as ‘death zone’ Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in Israeli

air raids in the past 24 hours in Gaza as the Israeli army ordered more areas in and around the enclave’s secondlargest city of Khan Younis to evacuate. The Director General of the Government Media Office in Gaza told Al Jazeera on Sunday that more than 700 Palestinians have been killed since Israel resumed bombardment after a seven-day truce ended on Friday. More than 1.5 million people have been displaced, most of them from northern Gaza, since Israel launched a military offensive on October 7 in the wake of a deadly Hamas attack. Overnight and into Sunday, intense bombing was reported in Khan Younis, Rafah, and some northern parts targeted by Israel’s air and ground attacks. “Everywhere you turn to, there are children with third-degree burns, shrapnel wounds, brain injuries and broken bones,” James Elder, UNICEF’s global spokesperson, told Al Jazeera from Gaza. “Mothers crying over children who look like they are hours away from death. It seems like a death zone right now.” The main hospital in Khan Younis received at least three dead and dozens wounded on Sunday morning from an Israeli air raid that hit a residential building in the eastern part of the city, according to an Associated Press journalist at the hospital. Separately, the bodies of 31 people killed in Israeli bombardment across the central areas of the strip were taken to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Gaza’s central city of Deir el-Balah, said Omar alDarawi, an administrative employee at the hospital. In northern Gaza, rescue teams with little equipment scrambled on Sunday to dig through the rubble of buildings in the Jabaliya refugee camp and other neighbourhoods in Gaza City in search of potential survivors and dead bodies.

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Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar on Sunday said adapting Pakistan to climate change was vital to adapt the Indus Basin to the impacts of climate as majority of the population was linked with the river. “Pakistan’s climate challenge is primarily a water challenge which needs immediate actions to be addressed.” Addressing an event on “Living Indus Initiative” held here at the Pakistan Pavilion at the venue of United Na-

tions’ 28th Conference of Parties (COP 28), the prime minister said Pakistan was the 8th most vulnerable country in the world to the impacts of climate change. He said Living Indus was as an umbrella initiative aimed at restoring the ecological health of the Indus within the boundaries of Pakistan, which was most vulnerable to climate change. He maintained that the government of Pakistan was clear on its priorities with Living Indus.

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