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Experts issue warning over increasing threat to millions of vulnerable people: 'A fight for global justice'
Experts issue warning over increasing threat to millions of vulnerable people: 'A fight for global justice'

Yahoo

time15-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Experts issue warning over increasing threat to millions of vulnerable people: 'A fight for global justice'

Climate-related poverty is a silent but devastating consequence of rising global temperatures. According to a report by the Daily Observer, some of the poorest communities, often the least responsible for carbon pollution, are facing harsher living conditions, economic instability, and even displacement. Climate-related poverty happens when major environmental changes make it harder for people to meet their basic needs. Rising sea levels and disasters like hurricanes, floods, and wildfires can significantly impact resources, disrupt livelihoods, and result in economic hardships. And when flash floods wash away entire villages or droughts cripple food production, it's the poorest communities — the ones that don't have enough to recover on their own — that struggle the hardest. An example of climate-induced hardship is 2013's Typhoon Haiyan, which displaced millions of Filipinos and destroyed homes and livelihoods. In another part of the world, long droughts and desertification in Africa's Sahel wiped out farms, leading to food insecurity and malnutrition. The growing crisis strains healthcare, infrastructure, and government resources — problems already visible in areas battling severe drought and water shortages. Even regions once safe from extreme weather are now seeing displacement risks as the climate changes. While investing in solutions requires significant resources, ignoring the problem costs far more. Rising hunger, mass migration, and global conflicts are already warning signs. Tackling climate-induced poverty today is not only smart but also necessary. Fighting it is also "a fight for global justice," as the Daily Observer noted. At-risk nations can invest in drought-tolerant crops and solar-powered irrigation to safeguard food supplies. They can also build flood defenses, permeable pavement, and early warning systems to help protect their communities from future disasters. Switching to renewable energy can reduce dependence on dirty energy sources, which account for the bulk of the human-caused pollution warming our climate, as NASA notes. Meanwhile, programs aimed at bolstering local resilience are essential to make climate change solutions more accessible for all. By investing in sustainable strategies now, we can protect vulnerable communities and help foster a safer future for everyone. Do you think America has a plastic waste problem? Definitely Only in some areas Not really I'm not sure Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.

In a bastion of Catholicism, Filipinos mourn Pope Francis and wonder who comes next
In a bastion of Catholicism, Filipinos mourn Pope Francis and wonder who comes next

Yahoo

time05-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

In a bastion of Catholicism, Filipinos mourn Pope Francis and wonder who comes next

At Quiapo church in central Manila, the pews are filled with worshippers. Latecomers gather near the entrance, clutching fans to ease the stifling heat. A prayer is read out in memory of Pope Francis, known affectionately as Lolo Kiko, or Grandpa Francis, whose image stands framed on the altar. It's one of many tributes and services held across the Philippines over recent days, as one of the world's biggest Catholic populations marks the pope's death. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr declared a period of national mourning, lasting until the pope's burial on Saturday. Buildings – from universities to a shopping mall – have held light displays in the papal colours of yellow and white, and in violet, which is often symbolic of penance. At a major thoroughfare in Manila, a billboard declares: 'Pope Francis, thank you very much! We love you.' Quiapo, like many other churches across the country, rang out its bells to mark his death on Easter Monday. 'Pope Francis is the pope we grew up knowing,' says Mario Amor, 35, a member of Quiapo's congregation. 'For me, he is a very kind pope.' Related: Pope Francis – a life in pictures On the bustling boulevard outside the church, stalls are stacked with rosary beads, T-shirts emblazoned with Jesus' image, and figurines of Catholic saints. Veronica Reponte, who has had a stall outside the church for two decades, vividly remembers when the pope visited the Philippines in 2015. She took her son, then aged eight, along with her to watch the procession at Manila's Rizal park. 'I didn't have a raincoat and my umbrella couldn't withstand the rain,' she recalls. Miserable weather didn't stop the public from turning out. A record crowd of up to 7 million watched his procession. There had been a frenzy of excitement in the run-up to his arrival. Sales of anything pope-related on Reponte's stall soared – calendars, posters and even handkerchiefs decorated with Francis's face. 'I'd wished I'd be able to see him again,' she says. In the Philippines, where 80% of the population is Catholic, popes are always revered. Francis, however, was especially well loved. Many fondly remember his 2015 visit, which came just over a year after the country had experienced the devastating Typhoon Haiyan that killed more than 6,000 people. Francis was reportedly advised to postpone his trip to Tacloban, the area worst affected, because of the risk of a tropical storm, but he was determined to go ahead. In a yellow poncho, battered by wind and rain, he stood before thousands of typhoon survivors, telling them: 'I am here to be with you.' Men and women wept as he spoke. Francis was a pastor who 'understood what suffering meant for Filipinos', and who visited 'at such an important period in our history', says Jayeel Cornelio, a sociologist who specialises in the role of Catholicism in contemporary Philippines. He also opened up the church to groups who had been otherwise excluded, including the LGBTQ+ community. 'A lot of Filipinos [have described] … on social media how this was a man, in spite of representing a conservative institution, who gave hope, about how faith might be evolving,' Cornelio says. Catholicism, brought to the Philippines by Spanish colonisers in the 16th century, is deeply interwoven with the country's culture and has shaped its laws. Abortion is banned, and adultery and 'concubinage' carry jail sentences of at least six months. It is also the only place in the world, other than the Vatican, that does not have a divorce law – though there are efforts to change this – and public opinion has become far more sympathetic to divorce over recent years, reflecting the changing role or understanding of Catholicism in the country. The church was once so politically influential that it was at the forefront of movements to oust two presidents, including the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr. Its power has waned, however. The presidency of former leader Rodrigo Duterte, who presided over a deadly 'war on drugs' that activists believe killed as many as 30,000 people, was a particularly difficult time. Priests were conflicted: some risked retaliation by criticising the killings, others did not. Related: 'I'm a Muslim and he was my inspiration' – world pays tribute to Pope Francis Duterte remained highly popular throughout his presidency, despite international condemnation. Francis worked 'under the radar' to offer support to those who spoke out, says Cornelio. Leila de Lima, a former senator and human rights activist who was a fierce critic of Duterte, wrote in a statement this week: 'During one of the darkest times in my life, I received a rosary from Pope Francis. It came quietly, without fanfare, but its meaning was profound. In that moment, I felt seen. I felt remembered.' Other rights groups also paid tribute. The Filipino LGBTQ+ group Bahaghari noted his 'progressive yet controversial stance'. The group was, it says, hopeful that Francis's papacy 'becomes the spark' for a more inclusive church. Now Filipinos are bracing for the next pope, wondering whether he will continue Francis's inclusive legacy or revert back to a more conservative approach. The next pope will be selected by the College of Cardinals, many of whom were appointed by Francis and reflect a more diverse church. Luis Antonio Tagle, 67, from the Philippines, is among those in the running. He has a similarly progressive outlook, having suggested that the Catholic church's stance on gay and divorced couples is too harsh. He has, however, opposed abortion rights in the Philippines. If chosen, Tagle would be the first pontiff from Asia, the region with the fastest-growing Catholic population. 'The Italians might still want to be in power, but the signs of the times have changed,' Cornelio says. If he were appointed, the country would be overjoyed, he says. 'The Philippines is all about national pride, from Miss Universe to boxing.' But back at Quiapo church, Mario Amor thinks there are forces greater than the conclave at play in the selection of the new pope. 'I'm OK whoever will replace him,' he says. 'The lord will appoint whoever is deserving.'

Opinion Climate change in the Asia-Pacific: Empty classrooms, stalled dreams, a generation falling behind
Opinion Climate change in the Asia-Pacific: Empty classrooms, stalled dreams, a generation falling behind

Indian Express

time29-04-2025

  • General
  • Indian Express

Opinion Climate change in the Asia-Pacific: Empty classrooms, stalled dreams, a generation falling behind

On the banks of Tonle Sap, Southeast Asia's largest freshwater lake, children in school uniforms wait patiently for a boat that may never come. Their parents have taken the family's only means of transport — the rowboat — to fish for their livelihoods. Only when they return, often late in the day, can the children hope to go to school. Lately, though, that plan has begun to fall apart. Climate change is transforming Cambodia's floating villages. Over the past decade, erratic rainfall, prolonged droughts, and rising temperatures have dwindled fish populations. This spells both an economic and educational crisis for a country where 12 per cent of the GDP depends on fish exports. For many children, the climate crisis begins not in the headlines but in the silence of an empty classroom. With fishing now taking longer and yielding less, children are often left stranded, missing up to 10–12 school days each month. It comes as no surprise that many eventually drop out. This is the human face of climate change — beyond the parched lands or rising seas, there are empty classrooms, stalled dreams, and a generation falling behind. Across the Asia-Pacific, home to more than half the world's youth, climate change is disrupting education at scale, especially for children in poverty, remote areas, or crisis-affected zones — those already least likely to access quality education. From floods in Bangladesh to typhoons in Vietnam, and heatwaves in India to landslides in the Philippines, extreme weather is upending education. UNICEF's Children's Climate Risk Index estimates that over 1 billion children are at 'extremely high risk' from the impacts of climate change — education among them. Yet responses often fall short. Too many focus on short-term recovery rather than addressing deeper issues: Poverty, inequality, and fragile infrastructure. But around the world, communities are pioneering simple, scalable solutions. In the Philippines, after Typhoon Haiyan devastated Tacloban in 2013, local authorities rebuilt schools with elevated foundations and typhoon-resistant roofs. These climate-resilient structures allowed students to return to classrooms faster — and in some cases, provided shelter during future storms. In Cambodia, too, low-tech solutions such as providing dedicated school boats have reduced dropout rates and helped children transition to secondary education, proving that even modest investments can make a difference when rooted in local needs. But adaptation isn't enough. Education must also become a tool to fight climate change. In Vietnam, youth climate clubs supported by local and international partners are teaching nearly 20,000 students about renewable energy, climate science, and green entrepreneurship. These are not abstract lessons — they are practical tools to help youth lead sustainable initiatives in their own communities. Across Indonesia, a national green schools programme has been rolled out, integrating environmental education with hands-on activities such as composting, urban gardening, and waste management. Early data shows students not only retain this knowledge but also influence household behaviour, making schools catalysts for broader change. Between January 2022 and June 2024, climate-related disasters closed schools in 81 countries, affecting over 400 million students. In 2024 alone, extreme weather disrupted the education of at least 242 million children. But education is not only a casualty — it's a crucial part of the solution. Educated communities are more resilient, better prepared to adapt, and more likely to advocate for sustainable policies. Schools, therefore, must be reimagined as hubs of learning and resilience. That means integrating climate action into every curriculum and transforming school infrastructure — elevated buildings, green roofs, rainwater harvesting, and renewable energy systems. Young people need more than awareness. They need agency. When children and youth understand how climate change affects their communities — and are empowered to act — they begin to see themselves not as victims, but as leaders. Asia-Pacific, with its vast youth population and acute climate risk, has a chance to lead. But it will require collective effort: Regional policy coordination, investments in climate-smart education, and platforms that elevate the voices of rural youth, indigenous groups, and girls — too often excluded from the conversation. The cost of inaction is staggering. Without meaningful intervention, climate change could keep an additional 12.5 million girls out of school each year. But we also know what works. A schoolboat. A typhoon-proof classroom. A youth-led campaign for solar energy. This month, as we celebrate Earth Day, let's affirm the right of every child not just to survive climate change — but to learn, adapt, and lead through it. Because education and climate action are not two separate challenges. They are one and the same.

'Shared loss': Filipino Catholics bid Pope Francis farewell
'Shared loss': Filipino Catholics bid Pope Francis farewell

France 24

time26-04-2025

  • General
  • France 24

'Shared loss': Filipino Catholics bid Pope Francis farewell

Young people crowded into the front rows of the Sacred Heart Parish Shrine, where a trio of large fans kept parishioners cool as four days of national mourning in Asia's Catholic bastion neared an end. Giving people a place to share their pain and loss was an "act of gratitude," parish priest Father Randy Flores told AFP. "Pope Francis is special for Filipinos because he came here and we saw his impact on the faithful, especially his message of peace and caring for the vulnerable and the poor," Flores said. "Filipinos really love him." Known to many Filipinos as "Lolo Kiko", or "grandfather Francis", the pope visited in 2015, when he ministered to the survivors of Super Typhoon Haiyan, the deadliest storm in the country's history. Within hours of the announcement of his death this week, bells were rung and requiem masses were held at churches across the country of more than 90 million Catholics. On Saturday, as Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re delivered his homily in Rome, Joylene Sto. Domingo, 38, recounted how she had strained to catch a glimpse of the pontiff as he passed by on the streets of the capital. You could feel his kindness even from afar, the church youth advisor said. "As the faithful, our faith was reenergised and doubled" by his visit, she said. "He really cared for our youth," she added. "That's why he is our pope." Nedji Lee, a grade 9 student and parish volunteer, told AFP his own fondest memory of Pope Francis had come courtesy of a TikTok video. "He was asked if he could grant only one miracle (what would it be), and he answered that he wanted to heal all the sick children," the 16-year-old remembered. "It made me want to be a better person, a better Catholic." The funeral in Rome was still ongoing when the Manila service concluded. Some stayed and watched silently as the pageantry unfolded on the screens. The young people gathered around a framed photo of the pontiff to snap a group picture, then rushed off for promised snacks. Sister Imaniar Rusani, an Indonesian nun assigned to the Philippines, told AFP she had come to the service because it felt right to be with fellow believers for the funeral. "It's good to be with the people," she said, adding she was unbothered by the service being conducted mostly in Filipino, a language she does not speak.

How To Watch Pope Francis' Funeral: Live Stream, TV Channel
How To Watch Pope Francis' Funeral: Live Stream, TV Channel

Newsweek

time26-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Newsweek

How To Watch Pope Francis' Funeral: Live Stream, TV Channel

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. The world is getting ready to say a final farewell to Pope Francis. The funeral for Pope Francis will take place on Saturday, April 26, starting at 10 a.m. local time in Rome, 4 a.m. ET, and 1 a.m. PT. Pope Francis waves to thousands of followers as he arrives at the Manila Cathedral on January 16, 2015 in Manila, Philippines. Pope Francis will visit venues across Leyte and Manila during his visit to the... Pope Francis waves to thousands of followers as he arrives at the Manila Cathedral on January 16, 2015 in Manila, Philippines. Pope Francis will visit venues across Leyte and Manila during his visit to the Philippines from January 15 - 19. The visit is expected to attract crowds in the millions as Filipino Catholics flock to catch a glimpse of the leader of the Catholic Church in the Philippines for the first time since 1995. The Pope will begin the tour in Manila, then travelling to Tacloban to visit areas devastated by Typhoon Haiyan before returning to Manila to hold a mass at Rizal Park. The Philippines is the only Catholic majority nation in Asia with around 90 percent of the population professing the faith. More Photo by LisaHow to Watch Pope Francis' Funeral: Date: Saturday, April 26, 2025 Time: 4:00 AM ET Channel: NBC, ABC, CBS (Various outlets) Stream: FuboTV (watch for free) The service will be held in the iconic St. Peter's Square, just five days after the Vatican announced Pope Francis' passing at 88 years old, on April 21, the day after Easter. In the days leading up to the funeral, thousands of visitors have paid their respects as the Pope lies in rest at St. Peter's Basilica, dressed in traditional red robes, a bishop's miter, and a rosary in hand. Leaders from across the world will be attending the service, as well as religious figures spanning the globe. President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump will be in attendance, former President Joe Biden and former First Lady Jill Biden are expected to attend, along with cardinals, archbishops, patriarchs, bishops, and priests from around the globe. Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, the dean of the College of Cardinals, will lead the funeral Mass. Pope Francis, in classic Francis fashion, modernized the funeral rituals before his passing, cutting down the number of coffins and allowing popes to be laid to rest somewhere other than St. Peter's Basilica. The funeral will include a traditional Eucharistic celebration, honoring the Last Supper. As the Mass concludes, two important Latin rites will take place: the "Ultima commendatio" ("final recommendation") and the "Valedictio" ("farewell"). These solemn moments mark the official start of the "Novemdiales," nine days of mourning. Finally, per his wishes, Pope Francis will be laid to rest not in St. Peter's Basilica, but in the Papal Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, another sacred site with history and meaning. Live stream Pope Francis' Funeral with FuboTV: Start your subscription now! If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

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