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Prioritizing conservation over species ‘de-extinction’

Prioritizing conservation over species ‘de-extinction’

Prioritizing conservation over species ‘de-extinction’
Since 2022, 94 sand gazelles had been born under the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve's rewilding program. (SPA)
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Scientists have long dreamed of regenerating extinct animals — a dream that is now reality thanks to advances in molecular science and genetic techniques. However, the cost, value, and significance of such efforts have always been questionable.

The recent news about the “resurrection” of the dire wolf is captivating — but somewhat misleading. Scientists used ancient DNA from dire wolf fossils to modify a small segment of the gray wolf genome, recreating certain physical traits reminiscent of the extinct dire wolf.

But this does not mean the species has been revived. The dire wolf and gray wolf diverged more than 5 million years ago. A genetically modified gray wolf exhibiting some traits of the dire wolf has been developed — but it is not a resurrection.

Genetic engineering is a contentious issue because it is invasive and permanently alters an organism’s genetic profile. The process of genetically engineering mammals is slow, tedious, and expensive. The insertion, modification and deletion of genes are often heritable, producing new strains or breeds that do not occur naturally.

This raises questions about their biological, psychological and social characteristics, as well as their adaptability and disease resistance.

While cloning can help save endangered species from extinction, it may also lead to genetic homogeneity, weakening their long-term survival in the wild.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature predicts that by the end of this century nearly all critically endangered species worldwide — and 67 percent of endangered species — could be lost forever.

In ֱ, the rise of motor vehicles and the widespread ownership of firearms after the Second World War led to an explosion in hunting. This led to a significant decline in wild species — some now facing imminent extinction.

Examples include the Arabian ostrich, the onager and the Saudi gazelle. Sadly, some carnivorous species, such as the Arabian cheetah and lion, have long gone extinct in the Kingdom.

Several conservation organizations argue that resources would be better spent on saving endangered species by mitigating human impact on ecosystems.

Hany Tatwany 

In 1989, we launched a worldwide campaign to find the Saudi gazelle, dubbed “Operation Saudi Gazelle,” to locate living specimens of this unique animal, found exclusively in the Kingdom. The gazelle was extinct in the wild and known only from museum skin samples.

After failing to locate living gazelles in the wild, we redirected our efforts to protecting endangered species that still exist in the Kingdom.

Several conservation organizations argue that resources would be better spent on saving endangered species by mitigating human impact on ecosystems.

After all, pouring scientific and financial capital into reviving extinct species like the dire wolf — not to mention the woolly mammoth, thylacine or even the dodo — does nothing to help the millions of species alive today that urgently need our support.

Science can — and should — support conservation. But it must be grounded in ethics and responsibility. Misleading headlines do more harm than good.

What is lacking is not technology but support, funding and consistent care for the biodiversity that still survives.

We are losing species every day at an alarming rate, while simultaneously spending millions trying to bring back animals that no longer exist.

Instead, scientists should be fighting to protect the animals still clinging to existence. They are not extinct or mythical. They are just overlooked.

Hany Tatwany is a conservationist with more than 38 years of experience in biodiversity conservation.

 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Israel struck Gaza’s Nasser Hospital at least 4 times during deadly attack: BBC analysis

Israel struck Gaza’s Nasser Hospital at least 4 times during deadly attack: BBC analysis
Updated 8 min 9 sec ago

Israel struck Gaza’s Nasser Hospital at least 4 times during deadly attack: BBC analysis

Israel struck Gaza’s Nasser Hospital at least 4 times during deadly attack: BBC analysis
  • Strikes killed at least 20 people, including medics and 5 journalists
  • Initial reports in international press suggested facility was struck twice

LONDON: Israel struck Gaza’s Nasser Hospital at least four times during Monday’s attack that killed at least 20 people, including five journalists, analysis by BBC Verify has found.

The fact-checking service analyzed new video footage of the Israeli attack, which has drawn global condemnation.

Initial reports in the international press suggested that the facility was struck twice in a “double-tap” attack, with the second strike hitting nine minutes after the first, killing first responders and journalists who had arrived on the scene.

However, the BBC analysis found that the hospital was struck at least four times.

In what was believed to be the first strike, two staircases were hit almost simultaneously by separate munitions.

Journalist Hussam Al-Masri, who was operating a live video feed for Reuters, was killed in the first wave of strikes.

Separately, Israeli forces hit a staircase on the northern wing of the hospital at almost the same time.

The BBC discovered the additional attacks by analyzing dozens of videos recorded by a freelancer as well as eyewitness clips that were posted online.

One video shows an injured person being carried down the damaged northern staircase of the hospital after the first round of strikes.

Its nursing director was also seen holding destroyed, bloodied clothing that he said was worn by a nurse when she was working at the time of the attack.

The compiled footage of the first wave “appears to show interior damage consistent with a relatively small munition, including an entry hole that suggests a munition with a relatively flat trajectory,” said N R Jenzen-Jones, director of Armament Research Services, an arms and munitions intelligence company.

Israel’s second attack came nine minutes later after dozens of medics and journalists had gathered to inspect the damaged eastern staircase, one of the targets of the first wave.

Frame-by-frame analysis of video recordings show that two separate munitions fired by Israel struck the exposed staircase where the medics and journalists had gathered.

Military experts told the BBC that Israel had used Lahat missiles in the strikes, which can be fired from tanks, helicopters and drones. Israeli outlets reported that nearby tanks fired the projectiles at the hospital.

Amael Kotlarski, an analyst from Janes, the defense intelligence firm, said: “If these Lahats were fired from the ground, then at least two tanks would have been involved, as the interval between the two impacts is far too short. No tank loader could have reloaded that fast.”

Jenzen-Jones said the “impact of two projectiles at nearly the exact same moment suggests two tanks may have fired on the target simultaneously.” However, he added that the type of munition used was likely Israeli M339 tank shells.

The BBC discovered through satellite imagery that Israel Defense Forces units were about 2.5 km northeast of the hospital on the day of the attack — well within firing range. The IDF said it had no comment on BBC Verify’s new findings.

Israel has shifted its narrative about the attack amid mounting international anger over the killing of journalists and medics.

It initially admitted on Monday that the IDF had carried out an attack in the vicinity of the hospital but provided no justification.

Hours later, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel “deeply regrets the tragic mishap.”

A day later, the IDF claimed that its troops had discovered a Hamas-operated camera near the hospital, without providing evidence. The IDF has yet to acknowledge that it carried out more than one strike on the facility.

Since October 2023, Israel has killed at least 247 journalists in Gaza, according to the UN, making the war the deadliest ever conflict for reporters.


Karim Benzema confident Al-Ittihad will hit even greater heights as 2025-26 Roshn Saudi League season gets underway

Karim Benzema confident Al-Ittihad will hit even greater heights as 2025-26 Roshn Saudi League season gets underway
Updated 21 min 53 sec ago

Karim Benzema confident Al-Ittihad will hit even greater heights as 2025-26 Roshn Saudi League season gets underway

Karim Benzema confident Al-Ittihad will hit even greater heights as 2025-26 Roshn Saudi League season gets underway
  • Superstar striker backs his side to collect more trophies following an exceptional 2024-25 campaign
  • RSL and King’s Cup champions begin their title defense away to Al-Okhdood on Saturday

JEDDAH: Karim Benzema is calling on Al-Ittihad to “achieve even more” as the Roshn Saudi League champions begin their title defense when the 2025-26 season gets underway this week.

Al-Ittihad were the dominant domestic team last season, winning the RSL trophy by eight points to reclaim the title they last won in 2023, before claiming a historic double by defeating Al-Qadsiah in the Kings Cup final with a 3-1 victory.

Benzema scored twice in that final to conclude a phenomenal second season in Saudi football. The French forward scored 25 goals across both competitions, including 21 goals and a further nine assists in the RSL. In addition to the team trophies, Benzema picked up the ultimate individual accolade by being named the Saudi Pro League’s Player of the Season.

Reflecting on the success of last season, Benzema said: “I’m very happy finally to have won the league and the cup, which were very important. For me the most important thing is collective trophies. Then, to win an individual award, as I always say, it’s thanks to all my teammates at the club. So, thank you to them, and thank you to the fans as well.

“I said before that one way or another, I was going to win in ֱ. Thanks also to the people who put their trust in me. We won trophies all together. I’m someone who doesn’t give up until I achieve my goals. It was a lot of hard work, so I’m super happy and I hope it continues.”

The former Ballon d’Or winner also reserved special praise for Al-Ittihad’s supporters.

“We’re lucky to have the best supporters in Saudi,” he said. “Whether at home or away, they’re there. They sing, they push us forward. We always need what’s called the ‘12th man,’ the support of the fans. There’s a real connection with the supporters, and we thank them for the trophies by giving everything on the pitch. It’s really important for us to have fans like ours, and I hope we can continue this way.”

Benzema and his Al-Ittihad teammates take plenty of “confidence” from last season’s success into the new campaign. However, the club captain is aware that winning the double again will be a challenge ahead of their season-opener away to Al-Okhdood on Saturday.

The RSL is the most competitive it has ever been, with clubs across the Kingdom recruiting top talent to strengthen their squads, while Al-Ittihad will also have to balance domestic duties with a return to the AFC Champions League Elite.

Asked how Al-Ittihad can reach new heights, Benzema said: “You just have to look at what we did last year, take everything we did — all the moments that helped us win those trophies — and achieve even more this year. Because the opponents will be tougher. Teams have strengthened. Now, every team wants to beat Al-Ittihad. We need confidence and ambition.

“We can’t always predict the future. But what I can say is that we’ll fight until the end and we’ll do everything to win more trophies, which are the most important thing in football. And above all, to bring joy to everyone.”

Benzema, a five-times UEFA Champions League winner with Real Madrid, was one of the headline names to spearhead this new era for Saudi football when he swapped the Spanish capital for Jeddah in 2023.

In the two years since, the RSL has solidified its status as the leading league in Asia. The Saudi league made a notable impact on the global stage when Al-Hilal reached the FIFA Club World Cup quarterfinals this summer, which included a statement win over English Premier League giants Manchester City.

Benzema has seen the remarkable progress first-hand and expects a bright future for the sport in the Kingdom.

“The level of football in Saudi is rising every year,” he said. “There are very good Saudi players, and I think with hard work, and with the arrival of European players and European coaches, Saudi football can rise even higher.”


Ex-first minister of Scotland issues plea after relative killed in Gaza

Ex-first minister of Scotland issues plea after relative killed in Gaza
Updated 24 min 50 sec ago

Ex-first minister of Scotland issues plea after relative killed in Gaza

Ex-first minister of Scotland issues plea after relative killed in Gaza
  • Humza Yousaf appears in video with wife after family member shot trying to collect aid
  • ‘This is a genocide … and the world must not look away’

LONDON: Humza Yousaf, the former first minister of Scotland, has issued an impassioned message following the death of a relative in Gaza.

Yousaf, the veteran Scottish National Party politician, posted a video on Thursday in which he and his wife Nadia El-Nakla described what had happened to a member of her extended family, Ahmed, who was killed while trying to find supplies for his children.

“We want to give you an update from my cousin Sally, in Gaza,” El-Nakla said in the video message. “His wife asked him not to go, and not to leave them. But he said, ‘No, I have to go this time, I have to provide food that we need, I have to provide milk for my child. I have to go. I’ll only go this one time, and I’m not going to go again.’ And actually, this was the last time he went, because they killed him.”

The couple said Ahmed was killed in the vicinity of an aid distribution center run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which is backed by Israel and the US.

Yousaf said: “Sally goes on to say, what the world needs to know is that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is like a trick to kill the largest number of Palestinians every day.

“Every day, around 100 Palestinians are killed there, trying to get food. Our men, our women, our children.”

El-Nakla said: “This is Gaza. This is a genocide, and the world is backing these facilities. Famine has been declared, yet aid is blocked while the foundation profits from their hunger.

“Food, water and medicine must be allowed in through real aid agencies, and the world must not look away.” 

The GHF has come in for significant international criticism since it began operations in Gaza. It was initially given sole responsibility to distribute aid by Israel after the UN and other groups were denied access to the Palestinian enclave.

Thousands of Palestinians have been shot and killed at the GHF’s four distribution sites since May by contractors and Israeli soldiers, while its poor logistical operations have been blamed by aid agencies for contributing to famine in Gaza. 

Earlier this month, UN experts said innocent civilians were “paying the ultimate price of the international community’s legal, political and moral failure” over the GHF’s activities.

Yousaf, who resigned as Scotland’s first minister in May 2024, has been a vocal critic of Israel’s war in Gaza since its outbreak in October 2023.

Numerous members of El-Nakla’s family, including her parents, were caught up in the invasion, and the pair have consistently raised awareness of the humanitarian situation in the enclave throughout the war.


Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace
Updated 32 min 32 sec ago

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace

Conference League draw includes two-time finalist Fiorentina and reluctant Crystal Palace
  • Fiorentina’s slate of six opponents through mid-December was completed by Rapid Vienna, AEK Athens, Sigma Olomouc and Lausanne
  • UEFA aims to confirm the fixture schedule by Sunday

MONACO: Fiorentina’s quest to win the Conference League enters a fourth straight season with opponents including Mainz and Dynamo Kyiv from the draw ceremony on Friday.

The Italian club were top ranked in the 36-team draw after being twice a beaten finalist — against West Ham and Olympiakos in back-to-back years — and losing in the semifinals last season.

Fiorentina’s slate of six opponents through mid-December was completed by Rapid Vienna, AEK Athens, Sigma Olomouc and Lausanne. UEFA aims to confirm the fixture schedule by Sunday.

Crystal Palace make their European debut only reluctantly in the third-tier Conference League after a complex legal fight with UEFA.

The English FA Cup winner were demoted by UEFA from the Europa League for a breach of rules limiting investors having a significant stake in multiple clubs who qualify for the same competition. Lyon, majority owned by American businessman John Textor, stayed in the Europa League instead of Palace.

Palace get home games against Alkmaar, KuPS Kuopio of Finland and AEK Larnaca from Cyprus. Palace will go to Poland to play Dynamo Kyiv and also visit Strasbourg and Ireland’s Shelbourne.

Four clubs from Poland were in the draw, while Dynamo also has been playing games there — in Lublin — while Ukraine is unable to stage European games during the Russian military invasion.

Rapid Vienna will make two trips to Poland to play at Lech Poznan and Rakow Czestochowa.

Shakhtar Donetsk are having a rare season outside the Champions League, and will have trips to Ireland, Malta and Scotland to play Shamrock Rovers, Hamrun Spartans and Aberdeen.

Hamrun Spartans are the first club from Malta to qualify for the main phase of a European competition and also will host Switzerland’s Lausanne and Gibraltar’s Lincoln Red Imps.

Political football

UEFA kept Lincoln separate in the draw from Rayo Vallecano because of political tensions between Gibraltar and Spain. Drita of Kosovo were kept apart from Zrinjski Mostar of Bosnia-Herzegovina.

All the Polish teams, also including Legia Warsaw and Jagiellonia, were kept apart in the draw and cannot play each other until the knockout stage next year.

Format and prize money

Conference League teams play six different opponents and are ranked in a single-standings format.

The top eight teams go directly to the round of 16 in March. Teams placed ninth to 24th advance to the knockout playoffs in February. The bottom 12 teams are eliminated.

The Conference League has 285 million euros ($333 million) in UEFA prize money with each club getting a starting fee of 3.17 million euros ($3.7 million).


Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany
Updated 46 min 5 sec ago

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany

Europa League draw sets up rematch of 2 European Cup finals, Maccabi trips to Germany
  • Roma will have two trips to Glasgow to play fierce Glasgow rivals Celtic and Rangers
  • Villa’s slate of opponents includes a trip to Fenerbahce

MONACO: The Europa League draw on Friday set up two rematches of European Cup finals and two games in Germany for Israeli club Maccabi Tel-Aviv.

Feyenoord, the 1970 champion of Europe, will host Celtic in one of their league phase games and Nottingham Forest will have a home game against Swedish side Malmo, which were a semi-professional team in 1979 when they lost the European Cup title match to the English club.

Maccabi Tel-Aviv got away games in Germany against Stuttgart and Freiburg, and also will travel to play Aston Villa — in Birmingham, England — and PAOK in Greece.

Israeli clubs have been playing UEFA-organized games in neutral countries for security reasons during the conflict in Gaza, and Maccabi Tel-Aviv have hosted European games this season in Backa Topola, Serbia.

Maccabi Tel-Aviv’s home games are against Dinamo Zagreb, Lyon, Midtjylland and Bologna.

Roma — whose coach Gian Piero Gasperini won the Europa League with Atalanta two season ago — will have two trips to Glasgow to play fierce Glasgow rivals Celtic and Rangers among their eight opponents.

The Europa League uses the same 36-team league format as the Champions League. Teams play eight different opponents during the league phase and are ranked in a single-standings table.

Villa were one of 11 teams in Friday’s draw that played in the Champions League last season, though their coach Unai Emery is a four-time Europa League winner: three times with Sevilla and once with Villarreal.

Villa’s slate of opponents includes a trip to Fenerbahce, which parted ways with coach Jose Mourinho earlier Friday.

Forest are in the second-tier Europa League instead of Crystal Palace, the English FA Cup winner which was demoted by UEFA in a complex case relating to owners having stakes in multiple clubs. Palace will play in the Conference League instead.

Forest and their Portuguese coach Nuno Espirito Santo will play two opponents from Portugal, at home to Porto and away to Braga.

The top eight teams go directly to the round of 16 in March. Teams placed ninth to 24th advance to the knockout playoffs in February. The bottom 12 teams are eliminated.

The 36 Europa League teams will share a prize fund of 565 million euros ($659 million). Each club is guaranteed at least 4.3 million euros ($5 million).