Three U.N. peacekeepers from Senegal killed in central Mali

Bamako, Three peacekeepers from Senegal were killed and five seriously injured after their convoy hit an improvised explosive device in central Mali, the U.N. peacekeeping mission in the country and Senegal’s army have said.

Mali is struggling to stem an Islamist insurgency that took root after a 2012 coup and has since spread from the West African country’s arid north. Thousands have died and millions have been displaced across the Sahel region.

Some of the groups have links to al Qaeda and Daesh, Reuters reports.

Tuesday’s incident took place near the village of Songobia, 29 km (18 miles) southwest of the town of Bandiagara in Mali’s Mopti region, the U.N. peacekeeping mission MINUSMA said in a statement.

Senegal’s army also issued a statement saying the victims were part of a Senegalese contingent of the U.N. mission.

At least 168 peacekeepers have been killed in Mali since the start of the mission in 2013, making it the deadliest U.N. peacekeeping effort in the world.

“This is another tragic illustration of the complexity of our operational environment and the sacrifices made by the international community for peace in Mali,” said MINUSMA Head of Mission El-Ghassim Wane.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Supercar Rental Company Classic Parade Launches UK’s First Cryptocurrency Payment Service

Supercar Rental Company Classic Parade Launches UK’s First Cryptocurrency Payment Service

One of the UK’s leading supercar hire companies has just launched a cryptocurrency payment system to rent the world’s most impressive supercars.

LONDON, Feb. 21, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — One of the UK’s leading supercar hire companies has just launched a cryptocurrency payment system to rent the world’s most impressive supercars. Customers can now choose to pay to for selection of over 100 supercars from 28 luxury marques in Bitcoin or Ethereum cryptocurrency as well as in Pound Sterling. One of the cars available at their showrooms in London, Manchester and Edinburgh, is the £2.4m Bugatti Chiron, which costs £200,000 a day to rent, or 220.75 ETH, or 11.696 BTC.

Classic Parade founder and owner Andrew Brown said: “Our clientele are international and want to be able to pay to rent our supercars without the hassle and cost of exchange rates and transfer fees. “Many of our clientele have significant holdings in cryptocurrency and so it makes sense to offer this option for them. The transactions are immediate, and we can also take the deposits in crypto as well, and then it’s easy to return the deposit after the rental has expired as well.”

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Crypto payments are made to Classic Parade’s secure wallet and all necessary steps are taken to ensure the safety of the financial transfers. Once the funds have transferred and the rental agreements are signed the supercar is either collected or delivered to the customers address in the UK.

Andrew Brown added: “We have to go through the usual identity checks needed to hire a vehicle, but these are easy to process, and it becomes much easier with every repeat transaction. “This way we can also provide adequate “know your customer” checks.” One of Classic Parade’s most popular cars for summer rentals is the Lamborghini Huracan Spyder which costs £1,100 a day to rent, or 1.21 ETH or 0.064 BTC. Andrew Brown said: “We are expecting a great deal of interest from crypto investors in the next few months to rent out our incredible supercars. Many investors are relatively young and want to show their wealth and so the interest in supercars is very strong for this market.”

You can see the full range of supercars and their prices at https://www.classicparade.co.uk

Media contact details:

James Goble, Classic Parade
+44 (0) 333 355 3595
rent@classicparade.co.uk

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/49b34c75-e25e-4725-bd2c-0b83c37cfe83

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Fighting Malnutrition in Ghana: How health workers are leading the charge

Almost half of all deaths for children under 5 are attributable to malnutrition — this is why improving nutrition is imperative to achieving USAID’s global maternal and child survival goals. Climate change, conflict, and the lasting impacts of COVID-19 have all exacerbated rates of global malnutrition and contributed to the global food security and hunger crisis.

But with the right tools, policies, government inputs, and community support, malnutrition is largely preventable.

In Ghana, progress to reduce malnutrition has improved, but almost 7 percent of children under 5 are still affected by wasting — the deadliest form of malnutrition. **The Government of Ghana is committed to addressing nutrition challenges across the country. **USAID partners with the Ghana Health Service and the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development to improve facility-based and community nutrition services, with a focus on northern Ghana.

Ghana, like many countries, faces several challenges when it comes to prevention and treatment of malnutrition, including a lack of regular opportunities to maintain and improve technical skills for health care workers and a lack of operational resources for community health outreach. These challenges are even more dire in resource poor northern Ghana, where under-5 malnutrition and severe anemia are common, and child mortality is higher than the rest of the country.

USAID teamed up with the Ghana Health Service’s primary health care clinics to train over 700 health workers in 17 districts in northern Ghana on how to manage and prevent malnutrition. By equipping health providers with this knowledge, they are now able to integrate and layer nutrition services into the delivery of a comprehensive set of primary health care services focused on the holistic needs of the child.

At the Yikpabongo Health Center in northern Ghana, USAID trained health workers on the prevention of anemia, proper feeding practices for infants and children, and screening and treatment for malnutrition.

“For several months, we were not able to identify and manage cases of acute malnutrition in children,” said Wedam Caesar Avugu, a community health nurse at the Yikpabongo Health Center.

He and colleagues said they did not have access to resources, like fuel and motorbikes, to conduct outreach visits to more distant communities to identify acute malnutrition cases and provide critical services, such as growth monitoring and skilled breastfeeding counseling.

With USAID support for training and transportation resources, Ghanaian health workers screened nearly 300 children for malnutrition across four districts in just two months. These health workers can now conduct additional home visits to follow up with children who are being treated for malnutrition, and they can provide additional nutrition services to pregnant and lactating women to further prevent childhood malnutrition.

In the northern Ghana community of Tuvuu, caregivers have seen healthy gains in their children after receiving recommendations from the USAID-trained health workers to use local ingredients to prepare more nutritious meals.

A young boy’s aunt, Shitu Iddrisu, said, “I am seeing changes in Fadlan, he is gaining weight day by day…when the nurse visits us, he tells us to use bean leaves, kenaf leaves, baobab leaves, dawada, soybeans, and other locally available ingredients to prepare nutritious food for the child. I thank the nurse for visiting us from time to time to check on Fadlan and advise us on what to do to make my nephew grow well.”

Sadia Alhassan, a mother to another child in Tuvuu, who received support from USAID-trained health care workers for nutrition, said:

“I now know the local ingredients that I need to add to the child’s food and fruits to help her recover from malnutrition. I add turkey berries, bean seeds, bean leaves, and jute leaves to the meat and fish to prepare stews and soups for the child. I can see that she is growing well now.”

Resilient primary health care systems, anchored by a well-trained and well-equipped health workforce, can improve life expectancy, increase health equity, and provide communities with the opportunity to live longer, healthier lives.

USAID’s investments enabled the Ghanaian health system to reach over 185,000 children under two years with community based nutrition services and over 68,000 pregnant women with nutrition specific interventions in just one year across 17 districts in northern Ghana.

For over 60 years, USAID has been at the forefront of advancing nutrition for mothers, children, and families around the world. USAID’s work to support health workers to address malnutrition in Ghana is just one example of the Agency’s commitment to continuous learning and adaptation in response to ever-evolving nutrition needs.

By integrating malnutrition screening and treatment into comprehensive primary health care, a range of essential health services is effectively and efficiently delivered — ultimately saving countless lives and, importantly, meeting patients where they are.

Source: US Agency for International Development

Jill Biden to Visit Africa for First Time as First Lady

Jill Biden arrives in Namibia Wednesday for her first visit to Africa as U.S. first lady.

Biden will focus on women’s empowerment, children’s issues and food insecurity that has ravaged parts of the continent.

“Dr. Biden’s trip builds on last year’s U.S.- Africa Leaders summit and as another demonstration of President Biden’s commitment that the United States is all-in on Africa and all-in with Africa,” Judd Devermont, senior director for African Affairs at the National Security Council, told reporters Tuesday morning.

“The U.S. strategy toward sub-Saharan Africa, which we released last August, starts with the conviction that Africa is critical to advancing our shared global priorities,” Devermont added. “We believe that we are in the early years of a decisive decade which will determine the rules of the road on a host of vital issues from trade and economics, cybersecurity and technology.”

With this visit, Jill Biden also becomes the first U.S. first lady to visit Namibia since the southwest African nation gained independence in 1990.

In addition to focusing on women and children, the first lady will draw attention to the dire food insecurity that is again gnawing at East Africa as she visits Kenya.

“In Kenya, Dr. Biden will very specifically draw attention to the food security crisis impacting the Horn of Africa, which is noted as the worst drought that this region has experienced in decades,” said NSC spokesperson Becky Farmer. “Over 20 million people are increasingly experiencing acute food insecurity with many more at risk of increased hunger over the last year.”

President Biden highlighted the situation in December when he announced a large humanitarian aid package at a summit that brought African leaders to Washington. And he discussed it again Tuesday as he highlighted the effects of Russia’s war in Ukraine on global food supplies.

“Putin tried to starve the world, blocking the ports of the Black Sea to stop Ukraine from exporting its grain exacerbating a global food crisis that hit the developing nations of Africa especially hard. Instead, the United States and the G-7, and partners around the world answered the call with historic commitments to address the crisis and to bolster global food supplies. And this week my wife, Jill Biden, is traveling to Africa to help bring attention to this critical issue,” President Joe Biden said Tuesday.

The Biden administration has been seen as trying to woo Africa to support Ukraine over Russia, recently dispatching Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to Senegal, Zambia and South Africa.

Meanwhile, Russia’s foreign minister has visited multiple nations that have historic or ideological ties to Russia or the former Soviet Union, such as Mali, Sudan and Angola.

China sent its new foreign minister to Africa for his maiden voyage — a sign of that nation’s deep interest in the continent.

Warm receptions are the norm

Presidential-spouse visits often provide a contrast to the strategic, muscular approach of the presidency — partly because, as Biden herself points out, she has no executive authority and no mandate from American voters.

“I wasn’t elected — but I had a part to play,” she said in December, at a gathering of spouses of African leaders. “As spouses, we serve the people of our countries, too. Don’t we? We see their hearts and hopes. We witness the small miracles of compassion and generosity between neighbors. We know what can happen when communities come together — how much can change when we work towards a cause that’s bigger than ourselves.”

U.S. first ladies are generally well-received on the African continent, said Katherine Jellison, a professor of U.S. women’s history and gender history at Ohio University.

“There’s just going to be warmer feelings toward a nonpolitician who’s visiting than a politician, because there may be strings attached,” she said.

U.S. first lady Laura Bush was well received during her multiple visits to the continent, where she promoted the Bush administration’s HIV and malaria initiatives and attended the inauguration of the continent’s first female president, Liberia’s Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, in 2006.

And for first Black first lady, Michelle Obama, trips to the continent were fraught with deep significance. She also used her platform to push for girls’ education.

And then there was first lady Melania Trump, whose 2018 visit to Ghana, Malawi, Kenya and Egypt was overshadowed by one, highly examined fashion choice.

For a safari in Nairobi National Park, the former model donned headgear that, for many Africans, evoked the continent’s painful history.

“She wore a pith helmet and looked like she was out of some movie about colonial-era Africa and so that didn’t go over well,” Jellison said. “And instead, the visual images very much played up the idea of Western colonization of Africa — absolutely the opposite of Michelle Obama, the daughter of Africa returning.”

Jill Biden visited Africa five times as second lady, highlighting the plight of the powerless. In 2011, when visiting the continent’s largest refugee camp at Dadaab in Kenya, she made an earnest plea, one she is likely to repeat on this trip as the region again descends into crisis.

“Mothers are bringing their children from Somalia, walking sometimes 15, 20, 25 days and they lose their children along the way, the children die,” she said. “So what I’m asking is for Americans just to be, maybe reach out and help and because the situation here is dire.”

Source: Voice of America

Planned Elections Rare Chance to Move Central African Republic Forward, Officials Tell Security Council, Noting Increasing Attacks by Armed Groups

Bangui’s Foreign Minister Calls for Lifting of ‘Unfair Sanctions’, Warns Proxy War Being Waged against Government, People of Central African Republic

Upcoming local elections — the first planned in the Central African Republic since 1988 — present the “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” to advance the country’s peace and political process, senior officials told the Security Council today, as members highlighted the deteriorating security and socioeconomic situations and their heavy toll on civilians.

Valentine Rugwabiza, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for the Central African Republic and Head of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA), said that following a period of relative calm during the rainy season, armed groups have increased their activities and attacks in the country in recent months. New developments in the modus operandi of armed groups — such as the use of explosive devices and drones — are negatively impacting civilians, national security forces and humanitarian actors. She also voiced concern over the resurgence of tensions at the country’s borders, especially in resource-rich hotspots in the north-west, north-east and centre-south.

These new and evolving threats require MINUSCA to maintain flexibility and mobility, she said, drawing attention to the acute lack of infrastructure across the country, including roads and bridges. Other factors constraining the Mission’s ability to act effectively include the lack of sufficient military helicopters and sporadic restrictions on its movements. Against that backdrop, she welcomed the Government’s lifting of its ban on MINUSCA night flights and voiced concern over a newly imposed ban on unmanned flights. In addition, she sounded alarm over the country’s worsening humanitarian crisis, reporting that the number of people suffering from acute food insecurity will increase to 49 per cent in 2023 amid a deep economic contraction.

Also briefing the Council was Omar Hilale, the Chairperson of the Central African Republic configuration of the Peacebuilding Commission, who cited several positive developments. Among other things, he drew attention to the revitalization and national ownership of the peace process, including the implementation of commitments in line with the 2019 Political Agreement for Peace and Reconciliation and the Luanda Joint Road Map for Peace.

Noting that peacebuilding can only be effective if it is accompanied by efforts to hold perpetrators accountable for serious crimes and human rights violations, he highlighted the Government’s strategy of engagement with armed groups, citing in particular the official dissolution on 6 December 2022 of four armed groups who had been signatories of the Peace and Reconciliation Agreement. He described the move as a “further step towards stabilizing the political and security climate, expanding democratic space, and keeping [the country] on the path to sustainable peace”.

As Council members took the floor, several condemned the rise in attacks by armed groups against civilians, the Central African armed forces and MINUSCA in recent weeks. One such speaker, the representative of France, expressed support for the Central African authorities’ efforts — with the support of MINUSCA and regional countries — to implement the country’s political agreement and the Luanda Road Map. Dialogue between MINUSCA and the Government enabled lifting the ban on night flights, he noted, calling on the latter to also lift its ban on the use of drones for the security of peacekeepers.

The representative of China, calling for the full implementation of the Peace and Reconciliation Agreement, noted that preparations for local elections remain underfunded and urged the international community to provide support. Stressing the need to curb the threat posed by armed groups, he supported the Government’s efforts to implement a national defence policy and address security threats. He also called for the lifting of the Council’s sanctions, expressing support for MINUSCA’s efforts to strengthen coordination among groups and protect civilians.

Gabon’s representative, also speaking on behalf of Ghana and Mozambique, commended an 8 February tripartite summit — attended by officials from the Central African Republic, Angola and Chad — which was devoted to improving the former’s political and security situations and consolidating security at the borders. Amid the upsurge in violence by armed groups and insecurity in localities outside urban centres, the humanitarian crisis in the country continues to worsen, he warned. “There is no military solution to the crisis in [the Central African Republic], there are only political solutions,” he said, adding that economic restoration of basic services must be financially supported.

The representative of Albania welcomed the Government’s decision to lift the ban on MINUSCA’s night flights. However, she expressed concern about a ban on all unmanned aerial vehicle flights in the country, except those of the national defence and security forces. This restricts the Mission’s freedom of movement and undermines its effectiveness, she asserted. She also welcomed the renewal until 2028 of the country’s Special Criminal Court and called on the Government to create a more democratic space for women and children to engage in the planned local elections.

Also addressing the Council was Sylvie Valerie Baipo Temon, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Central African Republic, who stressed that armed groups are waging a proxy war against her country’s people and institutions by exploiting natural resources and destabilizing the country. In the grips of such tyranny, people are forced to live in unacceptable situations of precarity, she said, noting that abuses committed by armed groups obstruct people from accessing land. Noting that the Secretary-General’s latest report on the situation fails to focus on the most essential issues, she said the global community needs to face facts and work together for peace — not simply talk about it. MINUSCA’s primary goal is far from being reached, she said, calling for the lifting of “unfair sanctions” imposed on the Government which legitimize armed groups to the detriment of the legitimate authorities.

Source: UN Security Council

Chinese Naval Fleet Arrived In South African Port Of Richards Bay For Joint Maritime Exercise

JOHANNESBURG, The 42nd Chinese naval escort fleet, consisting of the guided-missile destroyer, Huainan, the missile frigate, Rizhao, and a supply vessel, arrived at the Port of Richards Bay, South Africa, to participate in a joint maritime exercise held by China, Russia and South Africa.

The South African naval force held a grand welcoming ceremony at the dock, to celebrate the occasion.

More than 60 people, including Acting Chinese Consul General in Durban, Sun Anlin, officials of South Africa’s military and representatives of overseas Chinese, welcomed the arrival of the fleet, as Frigate Rizhao successfully docked at the Port of Richards Bay at 5.00 p.m. local time, Sunday.

The drill, which is being held in the eastern waters and airspace from Durban to Richards Bay, is the second joint maritime exercise conducted by the naval forces of the three countries, since 2019.

The joint exercise will be held in two phases, including port and sea. While at the port, the three navies will also hold consultations on joint maritime exercise subjects, and carry out exchange activities, such as ball games.

The Chinese fleet set sail from Qingdao, east China’s Shandong Province, on Sept 21, 2022, for the 42nd escort mission, in the Gulf of Aden and the waters off Somalia. They have escorted a total of 29 Chinese and foreign ships in the mission.

Source: Nam News Network

Licensed Crypto-Fiat Infrastructure Provider Encryptus Soft Launches in TechHub Kenya

VILNIUS, LITHUANIA / ACCESSWIRE / February 19, 2023 / Encryptus, a licensed and compliant crypto-fiat trading platform, is thrilled to announce its soft entry into the African Continent, starting with Kenya.

Encryptus will mark their exploratory journey in the upcoming Africa Tech Summit in Nairobi, Kenya. As a trailblazer in the crypto industry, Encryptus is dedicated to providing crypto and non-crypto companies its infrastructures for Crypto < > Fiat; including Compliances, Coin Monitoring, Fiat and Crypto Liquidity via API to enable institutions to plug into their ecosystem. The fiat services would only be available via Bank wires to KYCed users only.

Encryptus is licensed as a VASP (Virtual Assets Service Provider) in Lithuania and Licensed as a “Proprietary Trading in Crypto Commodities” trading desk in Dubai, UAE.

Africa Pushing Through to the Global Scale

Africa has been a rapidly growing market for international companies and is attracting many global corporations to the continent, such as Amazon, Google, and Uber. In the crypto ecosystem, Cardano’s founding partners EMURGO and IOG have built a considerable presence in Africa along with CELO Foundation and LBank Exchange.

With the rise of digital assets and cryptocurrencies, regulations for digital assets are becoming increasingly important in Africa. In recent years, there has been a growing demand for cryptocurrencies and digital assets in Africa, leading to a need for regulations to ensure the security and stability of these investments.

The African startup scene has also seen significant rise, with a record $5.4 billion raised in 2022, according to a report by Briter Bridges. Startups in Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Egypt accounted for 75% of all funding in 2022. This highlights the growing potential of the African startup scene and the increasing number of investors who are taking an interest in this market.

Crypto adoption in Africa has also been expanding in recent years. According to Chainalysis, Africa has the fastest-growing crypto market in the world.

Encryptus is well integrated with Industry leaders for self custody, coin monitoring and KYC providers for compliant onboarding. The Institutions can make use to the infrastructure by simply plugging into the Encryptus APIs. Encryptus services are also available on their platform for HNWIs and Institutions who simply want to use their services.

Encryptus will mark their soft launch at one of the largest African Tech event; “Africa Summit in Nairobi”

Encryptus’s Founder & CEO, Shantnoo Saxsena will also be sharing the stage with some industry leaders from Polygon, CELO Foundation and Nestcoin. When asked for comments for why Encryptus chose Africa, Shantnoo replied ” I started my crypto journey with a Kenyan startup in 2016. The Kenyan ecosystem is getting exciting and we have the right infrastructure ranging from Compliance to Fiat and Crypto Liquidity to empower other potential partners to build on top of our ecosystem. Encryptus is in the exploratory stage, but we are committed to bring innovative Crypto < > Fiat on-ramps and off-ramps solutions to the Kenyan ecosystem. The fiat and cryptos must coexist and we will work with the regulators and the banks to build the infrastructure together”

Twitter: https://twitter.com/EncryptusGlobal
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/encryptus/
Website: https://encryptus.io/

Please free to contact Abhi@encryptus.io for any queries.

SOURCE: Encryptus

Central African Republic: Human rights violations against civilians by the Central African Armed Forces (FACA) are unacceptable, says UN expert

GENEVA (20 February 2023) — Despite the government’s efforts to redeploy defence and security forces over a large part of the national territory and continue the DDRR programme, the human rights situation in CAR was still gravely concerning, a UN expert said today.

Yao Agbetse, UN independent expert on the Central African Republic said that in the last quarter of 2022, the Human Rights Division of MINUSCA documented and verified 483 human rights and humanitarian law violations and abuses that affected 1,300 civilian victims.

Based on MINUSCA data, Internal Security Forces, FACA and allied bilateral forces were responsible for 58% of the violations resulting in 70% of the victims, while armed groups committed the rest of the violations.

“Government forces were responsible for arbitrary arrests and detentions, violations of the right to life, physical and mental integrity, and abuses at roadblocks,” Agbetse said in a statement at the end of a 10-day visit to the country.

The expert highlighted the attack on the Beloko customs post on the border with Cameroon by armed groups from the coalition of patriots on 21 January 2023 and FACA positions in Sikikédé in Vakaga on 14 February 2023 when several FACA elements were taken prisoner.

“I am calling for the treatment of captured soldiers in line with the Geneva Conventions,” Agbetse said referring to the incidents.

Russian bilateral forces including those engaged jointly with the Central African Armed Forces continue to inflict cruel, inhuman, humiliating and degrading treatment on the civilian population in the Central African Republic, Agbetse said.

“The obstruction of UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA) operations by these forces are unacceptable and must stop,” the expert said.

“Allegations of abductions, kidnappings and summary executions of civilians are made against these forces, including in the Mambéré-Kadéï Prefecture,” Agbetse said. “Those in positions of State authority, in particular prefects, sub-prefects, mayors, as well as members of the police, gendarmerie and FACA forces, are also subjected to acts of torture and ill-treatment by the Russian bilateral forces,” he said.

“The Government of CAR must verify the allegation of human rights abuses and violations, dispatch teams to the scene and conduct impartial investigations,” the UN expert said. “Access to justice for victims and their protection, including while the case is being processed, must guide the State’s action,” he said.

The expert said hate messages and speech were blighting political and social life and relations between the Central African authorities and its technical and financial partners. “I urge the Government to respond promptly to these threats to social cohesion and to the ongoing peace and reconciliation process,” he said. “This is imperative in order to establish a peaceful climate before the organisation of local elections.”

Pointing out that the local elections in CAR had been postponed twice, Agbetse also urged the government to engage in genuine dialogue with opposition parties and other stakeholders, technical and financial partners, state institutions and civil society organisations to restore the confidence of stakeholders in the electoral process leading up to July’s municipal elections. Agbetse called for inclusive, free, fair, transparent, credible and peaceful elections in CAR and urged all actors, including opposition parties to participate fully in the electoral process.

“They must consider local governance as a political response to the restoration of State authority throughout the national territory and the delivery of basic needs and access to justice for grassroots communities,” the expert said.

Source: UN Human Rights Council

HRH the Crown Prince and Prime Minister chairs the weekly Cabinet Meeting

Manama, Feb. 20 (BNA): His Royal Highness Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the Crown Prince and Prime Minister, today chaired the weekly Cabinet Meeting at Gudaibiya Palace.

The Cabinet highlighted the importance of the talks held between His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and the President of Hungary, HE Katalin Novák, for furthering Bahrain-Hungary relations.

The Cabinet emphasised the importance of The Isa Award for Services to Humanity in promoting global humanitarian efforts in memory of the late Emir, Shaikh Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa. In this regard, the Cabinet noted the high turnout of the Isa Award’s 5th edition.

The Cabinet also noted the importance of the Middle East Oil, Gas, and Geosciences Show (MEOS GEO), held in the Kingdom of Bahrain, and commented that the conference provides a platform for innovative solutions in the sector.

The Cabinet commended the Bahrain Mixed Martial Arts Federation for winning the world championship, which is further proof of the Kingdom’s wide-ranging achievements in sports.

The Cabinet extended its congratulations to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on the anniversary of its Founding Day and noted Saudi Arabia’s progress and development, led by the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, and supported by its Crown Prince and Prime Minister, His Royal Highness Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud.

The Cabinet congratulated the Leadership, government, and people of the State of Kuwait on its 62nd National Day and its 32nd Liberation Day. The Cabinet noted Kuwait’s progress and development, led by the Emir of Kuwait, His Highness Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, and supported by its Crown Prince, His Highness Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah.

The Cabinet discussed several memorandums during the meeting with the following outcomes:

The approval of the following memorandums:

1. A memorandum submitted by the Ministerial Committee for Legal and Legislative Affairs regarding several draft laws aimed at advancing the Kingdom’s tourism and real estate sectors.

2. A memorandum submitted by the Ministerial Committee for Legal and Legislative Affairs regarding an MoU between the Ministry of Health and the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in dentistry.

3. A memorandum submitted by the Ministerial Committee for Legal and Legislative Affairs regarding a draft decision to establish and form a cooperation committee between the Capital Municipal Council, municipal councils, and government authorities.

4. A memorandum submitted by the Ministerial Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs and Fiscal Balance regarding the continuation of initiatives implemented in 2021-2022 to enhance the Kingdom’s regional and global competitiveness in the aviation sector.

The Cabinet reviewed a memorandum submitted by the Ministerial Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs and Fiscal Balance regarding the preliminary financial outcomes for the fiscal year 2022. The memorandum outlined an increase in total public revenues, in comparison to the financial outcomes for the fiscal year 2021, which is in line with the Kingdom’s commitment to implement economic and development priorities and programmes. The data further revealed compliance in actual expenditures with the levels in the state budget for the fiscal year 2022, which contributed to reducing the total fiscal deficit by 85% compared to the deficit estimated in the budget to BHD 178 million for the fiscal year 2022.

The Cabinet then took note of ministerial reports regarding:

The visit of the Minister of State for the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia, and United Nations at the Foreign, Commonwealth &amp; Development Office to the Kingdom of Bahrain

Outcomes of the Kingdom’s participation in:

The Seventh Annual Arab Fiscal Forum

The 9th session of World Government Summit

The Al Quds conference

The Second edition of Arab Meeting for Young Leaders

Source: Bahrain News Agency