African Biodiversity Loss Raises Risk to Human Security

Declines in Africa’s rich ecological biodiversity threaten millions of livelihoods, increased food insecurity, conflicts over land, and transmission of zoonotic diseases that can lead to more pandemics.

The African continent (20 percent of the planet’s land) is home to one-quarter of the world’s mammal species and one-fifth of the world’s bird species. At least one-sixth of the world’s plant species are endemic to Africa. The continent also boasts 369 wetlands of international importance.

More than 62 percent of Africa’s rural population rely on the continent’s diverse natural ecosystems for their food, water, energy, health, and secure livelihood needs. This biodiversity provides an arsenal of genetic capital beneficial not just to the people living in these ecosystems but to the world.

The continent also has around one-sixth of the world’s remaining forests, including those that comprise the Congo Basin, a 240-million-hectare rainforest straddling 8 African countries and supporting the livelihoods of 80 million people in the region. Often referred to as the world’s second green lung, the Congo Basin absorbs 4 percent of global carbon emissions every year, offsetting more than the entire African continent’s annual emissions.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), natural forests provide 21 percent of rural household income across 11 African countries and wild-harvested foods (including fisheries), contributing to the health of millions of Africans.

Two marine ecosystems along Africa’s west coast—the Benguela Current in the south-eastern Atlantic and the Canary Current in the north-eastern Atlantic—have enormous societal and economic importance for the adjacent countries as well as for the global food supply. They, along with the eastern parts of the Pacific Ocean, contain a continuous upwelling of nutrient-rich deep water which gives rise to extremely high biological productivity that provides 20 percent of the world’s fish harvest.

Second only to tropical rainforests when it comes to biodiversity, coral reefs provide valuable resources for coastal communities and 25 percent of all marine life. Over half a billion people globally depend on coral reef ecosystems for food, income from tourism and fisheries, and coastal protection. The coral reef systems that stretch from Egypt all the way down to South Africa provide millions of Africans a source of food and coastal protection.

Drivers and Accelerators of Biodiversity Loss

Africa’s rich biodiversity is under duress with ongoing losses of species and habitat. According to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), over 6,400 animals and 3,100 plants in Africa are at risk of extinction. Surveys of Africa’s bird populations show declines over the past 25 years, a pattern likely matched by fish and plant populations, though data is limited. Overall, populations of vertebrate species in Africa are estimated to have declined by 39 percent since 1970.

Africa hosts 9 of the world’s 36 biodiversity hotspots (defined as regions with more than 1,500 endemic plant species which have lost at least 70 percent of their primary native vegetation). On the island of Madagascar, for example, 82 percent of its plants and 90 percent of its animals are endemic and together create irreplaceable ecosystems. Scientists believe overexploitation alone threatens 62 percent of vertebrates on this ecologically unique island while unsustainable agriculture threatens 57 percent. Together, they endanger 90 percent of all Madagascar’s plant species. Of the 40,283 plant species known to be used by humans worldwide for medicine, food, and mitigation against climate change, 5 percent (1,916 in total) are found in Madagascar. Of these, 1,596 are endemic.

Destructive farming, mining, logging, fishing practices are the primary drivers behind the decline in ecosystems and biodiversity loss in Africa.

Some 20 percent of Africa’s land surface (6.6 million km2) is estimated to be degraded because of soil erosion, salinization, pollution, and loss of vegetation or soil fertility. The Congo Basin, for example, is losing an estimated 500,000 to 1.2 million hectares of tropical rainforest every year. This has resulted in roughly a 30-percent decline in tree cover across large stretches of the African tropics since 2001.

Among wildlife, an IUCN assessment of five taxonomic groups (mammals, birds, amphibians, corals, and cycads) found that all have deteriorated steadily between 1993 and 2016.

Africa’s blue economy—comprising ports, fisheries, tourism, and other coastal economic activity—is conservatively projected to grow from $296 billion in 2018 to $405 billion by 2030. However, repeated mass coral bleaching events in East Africa and the poleward migration of marine life from their habitats could result in a 30-percent contraction of this sector, leading to lost livelihoods for millions of African fishers.

Although it is not the primary driver, climate change is exacerbating human-driven biodiversity losses. At global warming levels (GWL) above 1.5°C:

Half of IPCC-assessed species are projected to lose over 30 percent of their population or area of suitable habitat.

More than 10 percent of plants, vertebrate, and invertebrate species across 90 percent of Africa face risk of local extinction.

There will be a greater than 12-percent decline in marine fisheries catch potential for multiple West African countries. Other estimates put the decrease in fish biomass in the intertropical belt around Africa at 30 percent by 2050.

Above 2°C GWL, the risk of sudden and severe biodiversity losses becomes widespread for much of Africa, including:

Potential destabilization of the African tropical forest carbon sink – Risk of local extinction of more than 50 percent of plants, vertebrate and insect species across one-fifth of Africa – Risk of total extinction of a third of freshwater fish and more than 90 percent warm-water coral reefs. Some of the most critically endangered reefs are in Madagascar, the Comoros, and Mascarene Islands.

Africa’s marine biodiversity loss is also accelerated by global warming. The ocean absorbs around 23 percent of the annual CO2 emissions to the atmosphere. Rising CO2 concentration leads to ocean acidification, endangering fisheries and aquaculture and weakening coral reefs, which affects coastal protection. According to the IPCC, this has resulted in a 20-percent reduction in phytoplankton biomass in the western Indian Ocean since the 1960s (potentially leading to reduced tuna catches). This is expected to have severe impacts on an estimated 30 estuarine and marine fish species (including anchovy, sardine, hake, and rock lobster).

East Africa’s coral reefs—from Kenya to South Africa—covering 11,919?km2 of reef, constitute 5 percent of the planet’s total coral reef area. Already, mass coral bleaching events in the western Indian Ocean in 1998, 2005, 2010 and 2016 have left coral cover just 30–40 percent of 1998 levels.

Coastal ecosystems, which include mangroves, seagrasses, and coral reefs, critically support nursery habitats for fish, sequester carbon, and provide shoreline protection. An acre of mangroves can store 5 to 10 times as much carbon as an acre of rainforest. Their loss will impact not just African coastal communities but the entire planet.

Security Threats from Biodiversity Loss

Food Insecurity, Increased Incidents of Conflict

The conversion of natural habitat to low yielding cultivated land is the dominant driver of biodiversity loss in Africa. In arid and semi-arid regions, biodiversity losses and ecosystem degradation affects the quality of the soil and vegetation impacting agricultural output. The loss of grass-dominated biomes further reduces rangeland, impacting animal husbandry. Growing land pressure is contributing to population displacements and the escalation of farmer-herder conflicts.

Under changing ocean conditions, some fishing exclusion zones and seasonal restrictions may no longer serve their purpose. As fish stocks shift from one zone to another, fishers may be tempted to venture into these marine protected areas, potentially harming the vulnerable resources enclosed within them. Illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing may also occur as stocks shift across national boundaries and into the fishing zones of other countries. There have already been a few instances of such conflicts between local and foreign fishermen in West Africa.

Public Health

Tropical forest edges are a major launching pad for novel human viruses. These edges arise as humans build roads or clear forests for timber production and agriculture. Humans and their livestock are more likely to contact wildlife when more than 25 percent of the original forest cover is lost. Hunting, transport, farming, and trade of wildlife for food, pets, and traditional medicine compound these routes of transmission and closely track deforestation. For example, bats are the probable reservoirs of Ebola, Nipah, SARS, and the virus behind COVID-19. The WHO found there has been a 63-percent increase in the number of zoonotic outbreaks in Africa (particularly in the DRC and Nigeria) in the decade from 2012-2022 compared to 2001-2011.

Ways Forward

While many species have already been lost, it is not too late to improve the future for many endangered plants and animals. Initiatives focused on biodiverse-friendly entrepreneurship, education, and sustainable agriculture schemes would help protect Africa’s biodiversity and its citizens. Alongside these citizen-focused initiatives, African governments and their international partners can also focus on biodiverse-friendly governance.

Uphold and enforce existing conventions and laws. Many African countries are already party to various regional and international agreements against trafficking in natural resources such as wildlife and timber. Bridging the gap between frameworks and actual implementation—by harnessing the power and knowledge of local communities, civil society, and law enforcement—would see results beneficial to biodiversity and the communities that directly rely on them.

Expand the use of carbon credits to facilitate the preservation of ecosystems. Gabon issued carbon credits to help protect its rainforest in October 2022—the largest ever and potentially worth more than $2 billion. The use of such carbon credits and other conservation-based revenue schemes can help protect natural preserves while generating income for local communities. With citizen oversight, these funds could be a source of investment in economic diversification and sustainable livelihoods.

**Scale up data collection to inform policy making. **Despite impressive recent developments to track trade in biodiversity products and biodiversity loss, there is still much that is unknown about areas at risk. Not least of these are the biodiversity-rich primary forests of the Congo Basin and coral reefs off the eastern coasts of Africa. More resources and attention toward data collection and strengthening the science-policy interface in governmental institutions is key to raising awareness and directing effective policy.

Additional Resources

C. Browne, Catherine Lena Kelly, and Carl Pilgram, “Illegal Logging in Africa and Its Security Implications,” Spotlight, Africa Center for Strategic Studies, August 12, 2022.

Africa Center for Strategic Studies, “Cycles of Escalating Threats Facing Africa from Global Warming,” Infographic, June 17, 2022.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), “Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability: Chapter 9 Africa,”United Nations, February 2022.

Jean-Marc Fromentin, Marla R. Emery, John Donaldson, Marie-Claire Danner, Agnès Halosserie, Daniel Kieling, Ganesan Balachander, Elizabeth S. Barron, Ram Prasad Chaudhary, Maria Gasalla, Marwa Halmy, Christina Hicks, Brenda Parlee, Mi Sun Park, Jake Rice, Tamara Ticktin, and Derek Tittensor, eds., “Summary for Policymakers of the Thematic Assessment Report on the Sustainable Use of Wild Species of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services,” IPBES, 2022.

Africa Center for Strategic Studies, “How Global Warming Threatens Human Security in Africa,” Infographic, October 29, 2021.

Leif Brottem, “The Growing Complexity of Farmer-Herder Conflict in West and Central Africa,” *Africa Security Brief, *No. 39, Africa Center for Strategic Studies, July 2021.

Emma Archer, Luthando E. Dziba, Kulemani Jo Mulongoy, Anicia Malebajoa Maoela, and Michele Walters, eds., “The IPBES regional assessment report on biodiversity and ecosystem services for Africa,” IPBES, 2018.

UNEP-WCMC, “The State of Biodiversity in Africa,” 2016.

Source: Africa Center for Strategic Studies

UNICEF Ethiopia Humanitarian Situation Report No. 11 – November 2022

Ongoing deterioration of livelihoods in the drought affected regions of Ethiopia continues to result in negative coping mechanisms of communities; incidents of gender-based violence (GBV) are affecting the lives of millions of women and adolescent girls.

In November 2022, UNICEF supported 60,000 people through child protection interventions including mental health and psychosocial support, family tracing and reunification and alternative care services for unaccompanied and separated children (UASC) and prevention and response to violence, including GBV.

In Borena zone, Oromia, UNICEF provided 10 Emergency Drug Kits (EDK) and expanded provision of essential health services to drought affected communities.

UNICEF provided financial support for shock responsive cash transfers through the government-led rural Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) for drought affected families, covering the needs of 64,315 households.

UNICEF-procured 1.4 million doses of routine vaccines reached Tigray, which will help vaccinate an estimated 50,000 children.

Situation in Numbers

29.7 million

people in need (2022 HNO)

15.7 million

children in need of humanitarian assistance (CSA)

4.51 million

Internally Displaced People (IDPs)

878,027

pending and registered refugees (UNHCR, 31 October 2022)

Funding Overview and Partnerships

UNICEF’s Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) 2022 currently requires US$532.3 million to meet the critical humanitarian needs of children, adolescents, women, and men in Ethiopia. This represents an increase of over US$281 million from 2021 primarily due to the situation in northern Ethiopia, increased needs due to climatic shocks including severe drought, failed harvests, public health emergencies, and deepening food insecurity across the country. To date, US$253.1 million has been received towards the appeal, representing, with the carry forward from 2021, only 48 per cent of the required needs to reach children and their families with critical lifesaving support.

Within the appeal, funding dedicated to the Northern Ethiopia Response Plan is budgeted at US$223.4 million and fully incorporated in the HAC. Furthermore, due to the severe drought that has impacted 24.1 million people across four regions, another US$202.9 million within the HAC has been dedicated to the drought response. UNICEF appeals for support to close the remaining gaps and to ensure that children and their caregivers receive lifesaving support.

UNICEF expresses its sincere gratitude to the many donors who have already provided critical support towards UNICEF’s HAC, including Australia, Canada, Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), China, Denmark, European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO), Finland, France, Germany, Japan, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, UK Aid, United Arab Emirates, USAID, Ethiopia Humanitarian Fund (EHF), Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) and private sector donor contributions through UNICEF National Committees

Situation Overview and Humanitarian Needs

The deteriorated livelihood situation in the drought affected regions has continued to cause people to resort to negative coping mechanisms, and gender-based violence (GBV) is affecting the lives of millions of women and adolescent girls. The data from West Guji zone Bureau of Women and Children Affairs office, collected from 10 drought and conflict affected woredas shows that 293 children were exposed to child marriage over the last three to four months. In addition, there are increased reports of children fleeing from their villages and crossing the border to Kenya, Djibouti and Somaliland, primarily from East Hararghe and Borena Zones of Oromia region, to avoid impact of the current climate shock.

As of 14 December 2022, 669 cholera cases have been reported including 24 deaths. Close to 743,000 people are at high-risk in the eight woredas. Of the total 669 cholera cases, 191 IDPs have been affected in five woredas of Bale zone (Harena Buluk, Berbere, Delo Mena, Gura Damole and Meda Welabu), one woreda of Guji zone (Girja) and two woredas of Liban zone (Quarsadula and Guradamole) with Case Fatality Rate (CFR) of 3.59 per cent. In Girja woreda over 100 cases have been recorded in less than two weeks. The reported cases mostly fall within the age range of 0 to 14 years (with 16 per cent children under five), of the total caseload, more than 65 per cent have not received any doses of Oral Cholera Vaccination (OCV). UNICEF continues to support the scale-up of health, WASH and Risk Communication and Community Engagement (RCCE) activities in priority areas.

The situation in Northern Ethiopia has shown improvement; the remaining 690 IDPs from Agatina IDP site in Afar have safely returned to Tigray through the multi-sector coordination facilitated by teams in Afar and Tigray. Similarly, in Amhara, over 250,000 IDPs in North Wollo, North Gondar, and South Gondar zones were returned to their place of origin. However, returnees are in urgent need of basic services due to damage or non-functionality of service delivering facilities. In Tigray, humanitarian convoys are gradually entering the region with food, health, education, nutrition, WASH and child protection supplies. Since the resumption of convoy movements in November, UNICEF has dispatched 28 trucks through the Semera (Afar) – Mekelle (Tigray) road with over 1,100 metric tons of multi sectoral supplies. In addition, on 8 December, UNICEF delivered 1.4 million doses of routine vaccines through UNHAS, which will help vaccinate an estimated 50,000 children. The distribution of aid to the most affected populations outside of Mekelle has been a work in progress, with supplies dispatched through UNICEF Rapid Response Mission (RRM) to Adigrat, Maichew and Abi Adi during the month of November, where nutrition, health, WASH and child protection supplies for vulnerable IDPs and host communities has been distributed.

While the relatively improved security situation in northern Ethiopia is gradually easing humanitarian movement, ongoing hostilities in western Oromia continue to displace hundreds of thousands of civilians impacting humanitarian operations. With the high probability of continued violence, the number of IDPs is expected to increase whilst response preparedness and capacity on the ground is very low to inadequate, compounded by access challenges. The escalation of hostilities in western Oromia has also impacted humanitarian operations in eastern Benishangul Gumuz Region. There is no road access along the main Assosa – Addis route via Oromia since 31 October, blocking both humanitarian and commercial supplies impacting approximately 200,000 IDPs and 76,000 refugees in the region.

Source: UN Children’s Fund

The Caribbean is leading the way in immigration investment due diligence: CS Global Partners

London, Dec. 23, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The global market for immigration investment is expected to grow exponentially, with big growth spurts already witnessed during the international travel restrictions imposed by countries across the world as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. As immigration and border control become increasingly important to countries and nations across the world, the role of immigration and investment due diligence grows.

As the longest-standing and most credible citizenship by investment programmes are found in the Caribbean, we take a look at what these nations can teach us about this growing industry.

What is immigration and investment due diligence?

In a nutshell, due diligence usually refers to the research that is done on a person or entity before engaging in a financial transaction. When it comes to immigration and investing, it means that certain background and other checks are performed on the applicants that are hoping to immigrate or invest in in a particular country or region.

Each territory that an applicant seeks to invest in will have its own requirements. This also applies to citizenship by investment (CBI) programmes, the first of which was launched globally in 1984 by the twin-island nation of St Kitts and Nevis in the Caribbean.

Why is investment immigration due diligence important?

Different countries award citizenship in different ways. Some countries award citizenship by virtue of birth in that country, descent from a parent who is a citizen, or by naturalisation, for example through marriage to a citizen or through an extended period of residence in that country. Citizenship by investment programmes allow successful applicants to obtain citizenship by virtue of a significant investment in a country.

Many families and entrepreneurs turn to citizenship by investment programmes as an alternative form of asset diversification. Global uncertainty is driving the desire among wealthy individuals to incorporate second citizenship as part of their portfolios. However, countries offering CBI programmes still require that applicants be strictly vetted before being granted citizenship. This is to maintain certain standards of the CBI programme and to ensure that applicants comply with certain national and international standards to support safety and security, as criminal background checks are also included in the vetting process.

For more on the requirements for Caribbean CBI programmes, see here.

How is the Caribbean leading the way?

As the acceptance of funds from CBI programmes provide a high level of risk for most banks operating in the Caribbean, as there is usually only one US bank providing corresponding banking services in each of the CBI countries, banks in the Caribbean tend to exercise extreme caution when vetting new customers. Local Caribbean banks therefore exercise their own vetting processes on each CBI applicant before allowing funds from the applicant to enter the local banking sector. As this forms such an important part of the success of each application, this vetting process is usually done before the applicant’s application is submitted to the recipient government’s CBI unit for processing. This dual process of vetting by the bank as well as vetting by the government agency in charge of CBI adds a necessary and additional level of security to CBI programmes in the Caribbean.

For example, the Dominica CBI due diligence process covers four steps: know-your-customer checks performed by local authorized agents; internal checks including anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing vetting by the Citizenship by Investment Unit; mandated international due diligence firms perform online and on-the-ground checks; and regional and international crime prevention bodies check that you are not on any wanted or sanctions lists.

Caribbean governments have also been hard at work to continue making improvements to their CBI programmes and to ensure the quality of their programmes and of the applicants accepted through its programmes. St Kitts and Nevis has recently welcomed a new government administration into power and which has already announced changes to strengthen their CBI programme. In a recent move, a new head of its CBI unit has been appointed.

Caribbean countries have very open and strong relationships with international parties and are always on the lookout at what international law enforcement is saying. For example, security concerns coming out of international law enforcement always trump due diligence service providers. If a due diligence agent gives an applicant a clear review but that same applicant gets a red flag from international law enforcement groups, the country will deny granting citizenship by investment to that applicant.

Another reason why applicants can be refused second citizenship is if an applicant has been refused a visa from a country that the Caribbean countries have visa-free access to.

“When looking at countries which are top-rated, such as those in the Caribbean, we see that they are doing more in upscaling their programmes so that they are not just meeting minimum standards. Their CBI Units are always trying to achieve best practices by asking their due diligence agents on a regular basis how they can improve their risk-based approach, and how they can evaluate applicants better and they are actively involved in the due diligence process from beginning to end,” said Karen Kelly, director of strategy and development at Exiger at a due diligence webinar hosted by Financial Times’ publication, Professional Wealth Management (PWM) this year. “We find that countries who are already engaging top due diligence intelligence companies have consistent standards across their CBI programmes.”

For more information on Caribbean CBI programmes, their offerings and benefits, visit www.csglobalpartners.com.

PR CS Global Partners
CS Global Partners
+44 (0) 207 318 4343
mildred.thabane@csglobalpartners.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8719525

Synchronoss tem mais de 30 milhões de assinantes de mensagens com base em RCS no Japão

Que utilizam a Plataforma de Mensagens Avançadas Synchronoss, NTT DOCOMO, KDDI e Serviço de Mensagens Avançadas Entre Operadoras SoftBank que viabilizam que os usuários e marcas se comuniquem, interajam e negociem

BRIDGEWATER, N.J., Dec. 22, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (“Synchronoss” ou a “Empresa”) (NASDAQ: SNCR), líder global e inovadora em nuvem, mensagens e produtos e plataformas digitais, anunciou hoje o lançamento de um novo marco no Japão para sua plataforma Synchronoss Advanced Messaging. Em colaboração com as operadoras móveis NTT DOCOMO, KDDI e SoftBank, o consórcio japonês agora tem mais de 32,5 milhões de assinantes do +Messaging, o serviço RCS entre operadoras alimentado pelo Synchronoss Advanced Messaging.

O marco atual representa um aumento de 62% de assinantes desde que a Synchronoss passou a observar o progresso da implantação do Consórcio Japonês do seu Rich Communications Service (RCS) em novembro de 2020.

Oferecendo um sistema de mensagens de texto com amplos recursos, o +Messaging permite que os usuários japoneses se comuniquem com amigos e familiares, além de fornecer a capacidade de interagir e se envolver com marcas e empresas com segurança.

O serviço +Messaging do consórcio tem por base o Synchronoss Advanced Messaging, uma completa plataforma e suíte de comércio móvel que permite que as operadoras ofereçam um ecossistema de mensagens avançado. O Synchronoss Advanced Messaging conecta marcas e provedores de conteúdo com assinantes, oferecendo novas maneiras de se comunicar e realizar transações comerciais.

“A sua adoção por mais de 30 milhões de assinantes do +Messaging no Japão confirma ainda mais o valor do RCS e como as operadoras móveis podem utilizá-lo para oferecer novos serviços geradores de receita”, disse Yosuke Morioka, Gerente Geral da Synchronoss no Japão. “Estamos prontos para trabalhar com a NTT DOCOMO, a KDDI e a SoftBank para explorar oportunidades de mercado adicionais para esta plataforma de tecnologia plena de recursos.”

Devemos destacar que o +Messaging está atualmente disponível para todas as marcas de telefones celulares das três operadoras e MVNO. Além disso, o serviço agora dá suporte à identificação pessoal pública (JPKI) com cartões My Number, permitindo que os usuários abram uma conta bancária ou usem um cartão de crédito com verificação fácil e segura da identidade via +Messaging, proporcionando experiências mais envolventes dentro do ecossistema móvel.

Sobre a Synchronoss

A Synchronoss Technologies(NASDAQ: SNCR) cria software que capacita empresas ao redor do mundo a se conectarem com seus assinantes de forma confiável e significativa. O conjunto de produtos da empresa ajuda a agilizar as redes, simplificar a integração e envolver os assinantes, permitindo novos fluxos de receita, redução dos custos e aumento da velocidade no mercado. Centenas de milhões de assinantes confiam nos produtos da Synchronoss que se mantêm em sincronia com as pessoas, serviços e conteúdo que elas gostam. Saiba mais em www.synchronoss.com.

Contato de Relações com a Mídia:
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contato de Relações com Investidores:
Matt Glover / Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8719420

Synchronoss annonce plus de 30 millions d’abonnés à des services de messagerie basés sur RCS au Japon

En s’appuyant sur la plateforme Synchronoss Advanced Messaging, NTT DOCOMO, KDDI et SoftBank fournissent un service de messagerie avancée inter-opérateurs permettant aux utilisateurs et aux marques de communiquer, d’interagir et de réaliser des transactions

BRIDGEWATER, New Jersey, 22 déc. 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (« Synchronoss » ou la « Société ») (NASDAQ : SNCR), un leader mondial et innovateur en matière de produits et plateformes numériques, de messagerie et de cloud, a annoncé aujourd’hui un nouveau jalon au Japon pour sa plateforme Synchronoss Advanced Messaging. En collaboration avec les opérateurs mobiles NTT DOCOMO, KDDI et SoftBank, le consortium japonais prend désormais en charge 32,5 millions d’abonnés à +Message, le service RCS inter-opérateurs s’appuyant sur Synchronoss Advanced Messaging.

Le jalon actuel représente une augmentation de 62 % du nombre d’abonnés depuis que Synchronoss a remarqué la progression du déploiement par le consortium japonais de sa technologie Rich Communications Service (RCS) en novembre 2020.

Offrant un système de messagerie texte riche en fonctionnalités, +Messaging permet aux utilisateurs japonais de communiquer avec leurs amis et leur famille, en plus de la possibilité d’interagir et de s’engager avec des marques et des entreprises en toute sécurité.

Le service +Messaging du consortium s’appuie sur Synchronoss Advanced Messaging, une plateforme et suite de commerce mobile de bout en bout qui permet aux opérateurs de proposer un écosystème de messagerie avancée. Synchronoss Advanced Messaging connecte les marques et les fournisseurs de contenu avec les abonnés, offrant de nouvelles façons de communiquer et de réaliser des transactions commerciales.

« L’adoption de plus de 30 millions d’abonnés à +Messaging au Japon valide davantage la valeur de la technologie RCS et la manière dont les opérateurs mobiles peuvent l’utiliser pour proposer de nouveaux services générateurs de revenus », a déclaré Yosuke Morioka, directeur général de Synchronoss au Japon. « Nous sommes impatients de travailler avec NTT DOCOMO, KDDI et SoftBank afin d’explorer des opportunités commerciales supplémentaires pour cette plateforme technologique riche en fonctionnalités. »

Point important, +Message est actuellement disponible pour toutes les marques de téléphones portables des trois opérateurs et du MVNO. De plus, le service prend désormais en charge l’authentification personnelle publique (JPKI) avec des cartes My Number, permettant aux utilisateurs d’ouvrir un compte bancaire ou d’utiliser une carte de crédit avec une vérification de l’identité facile et sécurisée via +Message, offrant des expériences plus engageantes au sein de l’écosystème mobile.

À propos de Synchronoss

Synchronoss Technologies (NASDAQ : SNCR) est un développeur de logiciels permettant aux entreprises du monde entier de se connecter à leurs abonnés de manière fiable et pertinente. Sa gamme de produits contribue à rationaliser les réseaux, simplifier l’intégration et interagir avec les abonnés afin de créer de nouvelles sources de revenus, de réduire les coûts et d’accélérer la mise sur le marché. Plusieurs centaines de millions d’abonnés font confiance à Synchronoss pour rester en phase avec les individus, les services et les contenus qu’ils aiment. Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur www.synchronoss.com.

Contact pour les relations avec les médias :
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contact pour les relations avec les investisseurs :
Matt Glover/Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8719420

Disease Outbreak News: Yellow fever – East, West, and Central Africa (22 December 2022)

This is an update on the yellow fever (YF) situation in the WHO African region published in the Event Information Site (EIS) announcement on 8 December 2021 and 26 August 2022 .

In 2022, 12 countries in the WHO African region have reported outbreaks of yellow fever (Cameroon, Central African Republic (CAR), Chad, Co^te d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Ghana, Kenya, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone and Uganda). Eight of these countries are experiencing a continuation of transmission from 2021 (Cameroon, CAR, Chad, Co^te d’Ivoire, DRC, Ghana, Nigeria, and Republic of the Congo) and four countries are newly reporting confirmed cases (Kenya, Niger, Sierra Leone and Uganda). One country, Gabon, reported cases in 2021, but no further cases were registered in 2022 indicating the end of the outbreak in Gabon.

From 1 January 2021 to 19 December 2022, a total of 203 confirmed and 252 probable cases with 40 deaths (CFR 9%) have been reported to WHO from 13 countries in the WHO African Region, with 49 additional plaque reduction neutralization test (PRNT) positive samples currently pending classification.

Since 5 August 2022 (data included in the previous EIS), a total of 22 additional confirmed cases have been reported from ten countries: Cameroon (1), CAR (3), Chad (6), Co^te d’Ivoire (1), DRC (2), Ghana (1), Niger (4), Nigeria (2), Sierra Leone (1) and Uganda (1)). However, only seven confirmed cases had symptoms onset after 5 August 2022 and those were reported from four countries (CAR (2), Cameroon (1) Nigeria (2) and Niger (2) including one death from Niger. The rest of the cases were retrospectively classified as confirmed (with symptom onset prior to 5 August 2022), based on confirmatory tests performed and details obtained from investigations.

Since 2021, 40 deaths (CFR 9%) have been reported in the total 455 confirmed and probable cases. Of those, 23 deaths have been reported among confirmed cases (CFR 11%) (Table 1). The high global CFR among confirmed cases in 2021 (17 deaths, 11%) continued into 2022 (6 deaths, 12%) with multiple countries reporting CFRs above 1%.

The M:F ratio amongst confirmed cases was similar in 2021 and 2022 (1.3 and 1.6 respectively). The most affected age group amongst confirmed cases in 2021 was 10 years and below; meanwhile, the most affected group in 2022 is 20 to 30 years. Overall, about 71% of confirmed cases are aged 30 years and below and children aged 10 years and below seem particularly affected.

The majority of confirmed cases in the two year period were reported in the last quarter of 2021, with most from Ghana (62 cases, 12 deaths), Cameroon (35 cases, 0 deaths), Chad (30 cases, 5 deaths), Nigeria (24 cases, 0 deaths), and CAR (23 cases, 3 deaths). The other countries that have reported confirmed cases in the two year period are Co^te d’Ivoire (8 cases, 0 deaths), DRC (6 cases, 1 death), Congo (4 cases, 0 deaths), Niger (4 cases, 1 death), Kenya (3 cases, 0 deaths), Uganda (2 cases, 0 deaths), Gabon (1 case, 0 death), and more recently Sierra Leone (1 case, 0 death). Countries including Burkina Faso, Senegal and Togo have reported probable cases that were subsequently discarded. One probable case from Benin is currently pending classification.

The M:F ratio amongst confirmed cases was similar in 2021 and 2022 (1.3 and 1.6 respectively). The most affected age group amongst confirmed cases in 2021 was 10 years and below; meanwhile, the most affected group in 2022 is 20 to 30 years. Overall, about 71% of confirmed cases are aged 30 years and below and children aged 10 years and below seem particularly affected. Approximately 48% of confirmed cases were in children and young adults <20 years which is greater than expected burden given that they were born after implementation of YF into routine immunization in many of the affected countries.

Several of the recent confirmations have been from urban areas and/or locations with little or no underlying immunity (e.g. near urban areas in Cameroon and Uganda; areas with no history of YF vaccination as in Isiolo, Kenya). Hard-to-reach and underserved populations have been disproportionately impacted.

Source: World Health Organization

WHO health highlights 2022

The year 2022 has presented us with many challenges that affect our health.

We have lived through another year of the COVID-19 pandemic and a global outbreak of mpox (formerly monkeypox). The people of Ethiopia and Ukraine have been confronted with the death and destruction brought about by war. Ebola struck in Uganda, multiple countries have faced cholera outbreaks, and drought and flooding have significantly increased malnutrition and disease in the greater Horn of Africa and the Sahel. Severe flooding in Pakistan has put an enormous strain on health services.

That’s not to mention the multiple other threats to health that people face year in, year out – threats in the environment, in the products they consume, the conditions in which they live and work, and in their lack of access to essential health services.

And yet, as 2022 draws to a close, we still have many reasons for hope.

The COVID-19 pandemic has declined significantly this year, the global monkeypox outbreak is waning, and there have been no cases of Ebola in Uganda since 27 November.

WHO is hopeful that each of these emergencies will be declared over at different points next year.

Despite the increase in cases of and deaths from malaria – another disease that continues to afflict some of the world’s most vulnerable populations – at the beginning of the pandemic, additional efforts in prevention, testing and treatment appear to be paying off, with no further increases in deaths in 2021 and cases increasing at a much slower rate than the year before.

WHO issued comprehensive global reports providing governments with guidance on how to transform mental health services, increase levels of physical activity, and prevent the oral diseases that affect almost half of the world’s population.

For more information on these, and other health highlights this year, read on.

COVID-19: progress on many fronts

One year ago, we were in the early stages of the Omicron wave, with rapidly increasing cases and deaths.

But since the peak at the end of January, the number of weekly reported COVID-19 deaths has dropped almost 90%.

The ACT-Accelerator (a global collaboration to accelerate development, production, and equitable access to COVID-19 tests, treatments, and vaccines) has now delivered nearly 2 billion vaccine doses and almost 200 million tests. The first oral antivirals started arriving in countries in the second half of 2022, while access to oxygen improved in nearly 100 countries.

However, there are still too many uncertainties and gaps for us to say the pandemic is over.

Gaps in surveillance, testing and sequencing mean we do not understand well enough how the virus is changing. Gaps in vaccination mean that millions of people remain at high-risk of severe disease and death. And gaps in our understanding of the post-COVID-19 condition mean we do not understand how best to treat people suffering with the long-term consequences of infection.

Preparing for a future pandemic

WHO has continued to emphasize the importance of learning from this pandemic so that we are better prepared for the next one. The establishment of the new Pandemic Fund in September is an important step in the right direction. The creation of an mRNA Technology Transfer Hub in South Africa, to give low- and lower-middle income countries the know-how to rapidly produce their own mRNA vaccines is another. A third is the commitment of countries to negotiate a legally-binding accord on pandemic preparedness and response. A zero draft will be discussed by Member States in February 2023.

Monkeypox

A new public health emergency

In July, WHO declared monkeypox, now known as mpox, a public health emergency of international concern. Primarily seen in central and west Africa in the past, more than 83 000 cases have been reported from 110 countries this year. Fortunately, the mortality rate has remained low, with 66 deaths.

As with COVID-19, the number of weekly reported cases of mpox has declined more than 90% since the peak. If the current trend continues, it is hoped that next year we will be able to declare an end to this emergency.

Ebola

A new outbreak in Uganda

In September, Uganda declared a new outbreak of Ebola disease, caused by the Sudan ebolavirus species, which had not been reported in the country for 10 years.

The response of the Ugandan government to detect cases, treat the ill and mobilize communities to help contain the outbreak are showing results and the countdown to the end of the outbreak in Uganda has now begun.

The greater Horn of Africa and the Sahel

Famine and conflict threaten the lives and health of millions

In the greater Horn of Africa and the Sahel, climate-related drought and flooding are supercharging a food crisis, and driving outbreaks of cholera, yellow fever, measles and vaccine-derived polio.

WHO and partners are on the ground, working to provide access to basic health services, treatment for severe malnutrition and support for countries to prevent, detect, and respond to outbreaks.

In addition to outbreaks, climate-driven crises and other emergencies, conflicts jeopardized the health and well-being of millions of people this year in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen.

Ukraine

Supporting the health system

For the people of Ukraine, 2022 has been a devastating year.

WHO’s work in the country since the start of the war has focused on delivering specialized medical supplies, coordinating the deployment of medical teams and working with health authorities to minimize disruptions to the delivery of critical health-care services, not only in Ukraine, but also in countries hosting refugees.

Particular emphasis has been placed on supporting the mental health response, as the psychological effects of months of war increase.

Childhood vaccination

Coverage rates have yet to recover

During the third year of the pandemic, efforts have continued to restore essential health services to pre-pandemic levels.

Routine immunization is one such area, where there has been the largest sustained decline in childhood vaccinations in 30 years. Measles is of particular concern, with an estimated 128 000 deaths from the disease and 22 countries experiencing large and disruptive outbreaks in 2021.

Increasing coverage rates to prevent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable childhood diseases will be a key priority in 2023.

Malaria vaccine

** Roll-out continues in Africa**

The roll-out of the world’s first malaria vaccine, RTS,S,in Ghana, Kenya and Malawicontinues through a pilot programme coordinated by WHO. More than 1.2 million children are protected by the life-saving malaria vaccine across the 3 countries. Broader deployment of the malaria vaccine is expected as soon as late 2023, and at least 27 countries have indicated interest in introducing the vaccine in areas of moderate to high malaria transmission.

Furthermore, new data released by WHO in December indicated that malaria cases and deaths had remained stable in 2021, contrary to a sharp increase in 2020.

Climate change: keeping health at the forefront of negotiations

WHO continued its efforts to highlight the impacts of climate change on health. The Organization had a significant presence at the COP27 discussions in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, in November, to promote the health argument for climate action and to advocate for resilient health systems, strengthening and reinforcing international cooperation and supporting the most vulnerable countries.

First-ever list of fungal “priority pathogens” released

A key output of WHO’s work to combat antimicrobial resistance this year was the release of the first-ever list of fungal “priority pathogens” – a catalogue of the 19 fungi that represent the greatest threat to public health. The WHO fungal priority pathogens list (FPPL) is the first global effort to systematically prioritize fungal pathogens, considering the unmet research and development needs and the perceived public health importance.

Global reports signpost the way forward in preventing and treating noncommunicable diseases and mental health

The World Mental Health Report provided the largest review of world mental health in 20 years. Drawing on the latest evidence available, showcasing examples of good practice, and voicing people’s lived experience, the report argues for a worldwide transformation in mental health services and lays out a roadmap for getting there.

The Report was followed by the publication of WHO guidelines on mental health at work, providing evidence-based recommendations to promote mental health, prevent mental health conditions, and enable people living with mental health conditions to participate and thrive in the workforce.

The Global status report on physical activity, the first such report issued by WHO, showed the extent to which governments are implementing recommendations to increase physical activity across all ages and abilities. Data from 194 countries showed us that overall progress is slow and uneven. Countries need to accelerate the development and implementation of policies to increase levels of physical activity, to reduce the burden from noncommunicable diseases such as heart disease and cancers, and mental health conditions.

Another first for WHO was the launch of the Global Oral Health Status Report, which highlighted that almost half of the world’s population suffer from oral diseases, with the number of oral diseases increasing by 1 billion over the last 30 years. The report serves as a wake-up call of the need to increase access to services for the prevention and treatment of oral diseases, particularly in low- and middle-income income countries where the burden is highest.

As the year came to an end, the world united to watch the FIFA World Cup. At this mega sporting event, our maturing partnership with FIFA enabled us to reach billions of people globally with campaigns to promote health.

2023: a milestone year

In 2023, we will celebrate WHO’s 75th birthday.

This milestone anniversary will provide an opportunity to reflect on the public health milestones of the last 7 and a half decades that have enabled people to live, longer healthier lives.

But it will also serve as a reminder of the continued commitment and energy that will be required to ensure that not only access to health services becomes a reality for everyone, regardless of where they live, but of the partnership that is required, locally, nationally and globally, to confront the many and complex challenges to our health that we face today.

Source: World Health Organization

UNOWAS Magazine N19 – December 2022

Women and Youth are key to Peacebuilding in West Africa and the Sahel

The consolidation of peace, security and development in West Africa and the Sahel is a breathless task that requires strong conviction and continued commitment from all partners. The challenges facing the people of the subregion are multiple, complex, and pernicious.

The solidarity of the international community and of regional actors and partners is crucial to safeguard the gains of peace and to strengthen development. But ownership of problems and solutions by all West African actors is not only necessary, it is also urgent. It must be a strategic priority for the Governments of the subregion in the implementation of their national plans and programmes through a desire to include all social categories, in particular women and young people.

Indeed, women and youth represent a leading part of the overall population of West African countries and the Sahel. No country or organization can ignore the contribution and importance of the role that women and young people can play in combating the multiple challenges that threaten peace and security in the subregion.

Since its establishment in 2002, UNOWAS has never stopped to sensitize the various State and non-State actors, especially those of civil society, to strengthen their efforts to promote the active participation of women and youth in decision-making processes that stem the negative effects of various challenges and contribute to the construction of prosperous societies. Continuing its commitment in this regard, UNOWAS, in coordination with its various regional, international and United Nations partners, has undertaken a series of activities to promote the role and involvement of women and youth in combating the adverse effects of climate change; promoting gender equality and empowering women in the security sector in West Africa; and the importance of gender in building peace and security in West Africa and the Sahel.

The story shared with us by the former Special Representative and Head of UNOWAS, Sai¨d Djinnit through his book “Carnet de Maputo ou ma lettre d’amour a` la femme Africaine” is a moving statement for African women, but also a call for the mobilization of all so that women, and young people as well, can occupy the place they deserve.

Source: UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel

Quantexa Positioned by Global Risk Analyst Firm Chartis as a Category Leader in 2023 RiskTech 100 Report for Trade-Based Money Laundering Solutions

Chartis also gave top ranking to Quantexa’s Entity Resolution solution – addressing key data management challenges that are costing financial institutions millions

LONDON, Dec. 22, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today Quantexa, a global leader in Decision Intelligence (DI) solutions for the public and private sectors, announced that their Decision Intelligence Platform has been recognized as a category leader in the Chartis RiskTech100 report for Trade-Based Anti-Money Laundering Solutions (TBAML). Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform has also been recognized by Chartis as a category leader in the recently released Chartis Financial Crime Risk Management Systems, Entity Management and Analytics Quadrant report.

RiskTech 100: Trade-Based Anti-Money Laundering Solutions
The 2023 RiskTech100 report ranks the world’s major players in risk and compliance technology. In the Trade-based money laundering (TBML) category Quantexa was named as a category leader for data support of their enterprise solution. The Quantexa Trade AML Solution was also ranked for depth of typology coverage, breadth of analytical techniques and workflow.

Today’s Anti-money laundering efforts face many growing and unresolved challenges. In a digital and globalized world, criminals are using a wide range of strategies to be successful – making context a critical factor in the ability to accurately detect trade-based money laundering. By unifying internal and external data sources and scaling to understand billions of transactions, Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform helps organizations create a holistic view of transactional, customer, and counterparty information. Quantexa’s approach to TBAML provides more accurate and efficient detection so organizations can reduce risk, assure compliance, and protect their reputation. Increased alert quality and automation, combined with reducing the volume of false positives helps organizations gain efficiencies and do more with the resources they already have.

Financial Crime Risk Management Systems: Entity Resolution
Quantexa’s dynamic Entity Resolution Solution capability that is a critical part of its industry leading Decision Intelligence Platform was recognized for coverage, scalability, data enrichment, depth and breadth of data sources supported.

Quantexa’s Entity Resolution Solution is an advanced data matching capability that connects disparate and ambiguous internal and external data at scale. Entity Resolution creates focused and complete views of people, organizations, places, and other data delivering game changing data quality and match rate accuracy. Quantexa also supports ‘dynamic entity resolution’, which gives unique flexibility across multiple use cases and informs granular and extensive security protocols.

Decision Intelligence Platform
Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform gives enterprises the ability to unify their data by connecting siloed sources and systems, providing the context needed to visualize the complex relationships that enable previously hidden risk to be discovered. Quantexa’s unique entity resolution technology can connect the most disparate and ambiguous internal and external data at scale to create single, complete views of people, organizations, places, and other data with 99% accuracy, handling poor quality data with exceptional performance. The result is a single view of data that becomes their most trusted and reusable resource across the organization.

Chartis Chief Researcher Sidhartha Dash said:

“Quantexa’s increasingly mature solutions and their strong implementations in large financial institutions leveraging network-based concepts, drove their rise in the RiskTech 100 as well as their leadership in TBAML and Entity Management quadrants.”

Quantexa Chief Product Officer Dan Higgins added:

“Quantexa is delighted to be included in the RiskTech 100 report, positioned very strongly amongst an esteemed list of enterprise solution providers. At Quantexa, we are keenly aware that criminals are hiding in plain sight and that traditional monitoring systems and manual controls just can’t handle today’s complexity, scale of activity and the underlying regulatory shifts, in particular the focus on counterparty risk, as well as customers. The usage of contextual monitoring to detect and manage the holistic financial crime and fraud risks within International Trade, including the identification of prerequisites such as underlying collusion, the presence of shell companies and professional money laundering gatekeeps and enablers has been a defining factor in Quantexa’s success in this space.”

ABOUT QUANTEXA

Quantexa is a global data and analytics software company pioneering Contextual Decision Intelligence that empowers organizations to make trusted operational decisions by making data meaningful. Using the latest advancements in big data and AI, Quantexa’s platform uncovers hidden risk and new opportunities by providing a contextual, connected view of internal and external data in a single place. It solves major challenges across data management, KYC, customer intelligence, financial crime, risk, fraud, and security, throughout the customer lifecycle.

The Quantexa Decision Intelligence Platform enhances operational performance with over 90% more accuracy and 60 times faster analytical model resolution than traditional approaches. Founded in 2016, Quantexa now has more than 500 employees and thousands of users working with billions of transactions and data points across the world. The company has offices in London, New York, Boston, Washington DC, Brussels, Toronto, Singapore, Melbourne, and Sydney. For more information, contact Quantexa here or follow us on LinkedIn.

ABOUT CHARTIS

Chartis is a research and advisory firm that provides technology and business advice to the global risk management industry. Chartis provides independent market intelligence regarding market dynamics, regulatory trends, technology trends, best practices, competitive landscapes, market sizes, expenditure priorities, and mergers and acquisitions. Chartis’ RiskTech Quadrant reports are written by experienced analysts with hands-on experience of selecting, developing, and implementing risk management systems for a variety of international companies in a range of industries, including banking, insurance, capital markets, energy, and the public sector.

Media Inquiries:

C: Laurel Case, VP, Fight or Flight

T: +1 315 663 6780

E: Quantexa@fightflight.co.uk

C: Adam Jaffe, SVP of Corporate Marketing
T: +1 609 502 6889
E: adamjaffe@quantexa.com
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RapidResponse@quantexa.com

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