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UN’s top court says failing to protect planet from climate change could violate international law

Update UN’s top court says failing to protect planet from climate change could violate international law
Judges at the UN’s highest court are set to issue a decision Wednesday that could set a legal benchmark for action on the climate crisis. (AFP)
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Updated 25 min 34 sec ago

UN’s top court says failing to protect planet from climate change could violate international law

UN’s top court says failing to protect planet from climate change could violate international law
  • “Failure of a state to take appropriate action to protect the climate system ... may constitute an internationally wrongful act,” court President Yuji Iwasawa said
  • The non-binding opinion was hailed as a turning point in international climate law

THE HAGUE: The United Nations’ top court in a landmark advisory opinion Wednesday said countries could be in violation of international law if they fail to take measures to protect the planet from climate change, and nations harmed by its effects could be entitled to reparations.

Advocates immediately cheered the International Court of Justice opinion on nations’ obligations to tackle climate change and the consequences they may face if they don’t.

“Failure of a state to take appropriate action to protect the climate system ... may constitute an internationally wrongful act,” court President Yuji Iwasawa said during the hearing. He called the climate crisis “an existential problem of planetary proportions that imperils all forms of life and the very health of our planet.”

The non-binding opinion was hailed as a turning point in international climate law.

Notably, the court said a “clean, healthy and sustainable environment” is a human right. That paves the way for other legal actions, including states returning to the ICJ to hold each other to account as well as domestic lawsuits, along with legal instruments like investment agreements.

The case was led by the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu and backed by more than 130 countries.

All UN member states including major greenhouse gas emitters like the United States and China are parties to the court.

Climate activists had gathered outside the crowded court with a banner that read: “Courts have spoken. The law is clear. States must ACT NOW.” They watched the ruling on a giant screen, clapping and cheering at times during the two-hour hearing. When it was over, others emerged from the courtroom laughing and hugging.

“Today, the tables have turned. The world’s highest court provided us with a powerful new tool to protect people from the devastating impacts of the climate crisis — and to deliver justice for the harm their emissions have already caused,” former UN human rights chief Mary Robinson said in a statement.

“The ICJ’s decision brings us closer to a world where governments can no longer turn a blind eye to their legal responsibilities. It affirms a simple truth of climate justice: Those who did the least to fuel this crisis deserve protection, reparations, and a future,” said Vishal Prasad, director of Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change.

After years of lobbying by vulnerable island nations who fear they could disappear under rising sea waters, the UN General Assembly asked the ICJ in 2023 for an advisory opinion, an important basis for international obligations.

A panel of 15 judges was tasked with answering two questions: What are countries obliged to do under international law to protect the climate and environment from human-caused greenhouse gas emissions? Second, what are the legal consequences for governments when their acts, or lack of action, have significantly harmed the climate and environment?

“The stakes could not be higher. The survival of my people and so many others is on the line,” Arnold Kiel Loughman, attorney general of the island nation of Vanuatu, told the court during a week of hearings in December.

In the decade up to 2023, sea levels rose by a global average of around 4.3 centimeters (1.7 inches), with parts of the Pacific rising higher still. The world has also warmed 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 Fahrenheit) since preindustrial times because of the burning of fossil fuels.

Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu’s minister for climate change, called the ruling a “very important course correction in this critically important time. For the first time in history, the ICJ has spoken directly about the biggest threat facing humanity.”

Activists could bring lawsuits against their own countries for failing to comply with the decision, which ran to over 130 pages.

The senior attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law, Erika Lennon, said the ruling also can be used as leverage at the next UN climate conference later this year in the Brazilian city of Belém.

“States must take this ICJ ruling and use it to advance ambitious outcomes at COP30 and beyond. People and the planet deserve it,” she said.

The United States and Russia, both of whom are major petroleum-producing states, are staunchly opposed to the court mandating emissions reductions.

But those who cling to fossil fuels could go broke doing it, the UN secretary-general told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview this week.

Simply having the court issue an opinion is the latest in a series of legal victories for the small island nations. Earlier this month, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights found that countries have a legal duty not only to avoid environmental harm but also to protect and restore ecosystems. Last year, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that countries must better protect their people from the consequences of climate change.

In 2019, the Netherlands’ Supreme court handed down the first major legal win for climate activists when judges ruled that protection from the potentially devastating effects of climate change was a human right and that the government has a duty to protect its citizens.

The presiding judge on Wednesday acknowledged that international law had “an important but ultimately limited role in resolving this problem,” and said a lasting solution will need the contribution of all fields of human knowledge “to secure a future for ourselves and those who are yet to come.”


Indonesia stands to lose in ‘historic’ Trump trade deal, experts say

Indonesia stands to lose in ‘historic’ Trump trade deal, experts say
Updated 51 min 41 sec ago

Indonesia stands to lose in ‘historic’ Trump trade deal, experts say

Indonesia stands to lose in ‘historic’ Trump trade deal, experts say
  • Jakarta to cut tariffs, scrap non-tariff barriers on US goods under new trade agreement
  • US is Indonesia’s second-largest export market, with 2024 exports valued at over $26bn

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s new tariff deal granting the US duty-free access to its market is likely to undermine Southeast Asia’s largest economy, experts say, as the White House announced the agreement’s detailed terms on Wednesday.

Jakarta has agreed to drop its tariff on nearly all American imports to zero and scrap all non-tariff barriers facing American firms, while US tariffs on Indonesian imports would be set at 19 percent, according to a joint statement released by the White House.  

The framework on the US-Indonesia Agreement on Reciprocal Trade was issued following negotiations that took place earlier this month, after President Donald Trump threatened to levy a 32 percent duty on Indonesian exports. 

“The golden age is here … The United States and Indonesia have reached a historic trade deal,” the White House said.

The agreement will also exempt US food and agricultural products from Indonesia’s import licensing regimes, remove barriers for digital trade and remove export restrictions on critical minerals.

Jakarta’s new deal with Washington, which is expected to be finalized in the coming weeks, is putting Indonesia at a disadvantage, experts say. 

“This deal is not benefiting us. We used to face zero tariffs and now it’s 19 percent. Even though this is lower than 32 percent, Indonesia shouldn’t have accepted the deal because we stand to lose here,” Yose Rizal Damuri, executive director at the Jakarta-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Arab News. 

The US is Indonesia’s second-largest market after China, with exports valued at over $26 billion in 2024, according to Indonesia’s statistics agency.  

Indonesia has consistently posted trade surpluses with the US in the past decade. Last year, that figure stood at about $16.8 billion. 

The White House’s statement also mentioned “forthcoming commercial deals between US and Indonesian companies,” including aircraft procurement valued at $3.2 billion, purchase of agriculture products such as soybeans, wheat and cotton valued at $4.5 billion, as well as a $15 billion purchase of energy products. 

Indonesia is among other Southeast Asian nations, including Vietnam and the Philippines, which have negotiated for a better tariff deal with the Trump administration.

Vietnam, which agreed to zero tariffs on American exports and 20 percent on its own goods, had a “better” deal compared to Indonesia, said Bhima Yudhistira, executive director at Jakarta-based think tank Centre of Economic and Law Studies.  

“Vietnam’s tariff reduction from 46 per cent to 20 per cent is more significant than Indonesia’s tariff reduction from 32 per cent to 19 per cent. Vietnam’s negotiations were more effective than Indonesia’s. Ideally, Indonesia could achieve even greater reduction,” Yudhistira told Arab News. 

The tariff deal also posed a “high risk” to Indonesia’s trade balance.  

“The government should push for market access to Europe as a form of market diversification … as well as the intra-ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) market,” Yudhistira said. 

“It’s better not to depend on exports to the US because the result of these tariff negotiations is still unfavorable to Indonesia.” 


Growing calls for UK govt to help students in Gaza admitted to British universities

Growing calls for UK govt to help students in Gaza admitted to British universities
Updated 23 July 2025

Growing calls for UK govt to help students in Gaza admitted to British universities

Growing calls for UK govt to help students in Gaza admitted to British universities
  • 40 Palestinian students offered scholarships but cannot travel without biometric data
  • Gaza’s only UK-licensed biometrics center closed in October 2023

LONDON: Government ministers in the UK are facing renewed pressure to help 40 students in Gaza who were offered full scholarships to study at British universities, The Guardian reported.

The students, however, are unable to take their university places set to begin in September because of government bureaucracy.

The UK Home Office on Tuesday reportedly held a high-level meeting on the issue after MPs and campaigners demanded urgent action to help the students.

They demanded that the government take immediate steps to secure the students’ safe passage to Britain, following warnings that some Palestinians students had been killed while waiting for British university spots.

Others are also in constant danger amid Israel’s military campaign in the enclave.

A key hindrance affecting the students is a Home Office requirement to use biometric data for visa applications, campaigners have said.

The only UK-authorized biometrics center in Gaza closed in October 2023 and the students cannot travel to similar centers in neighboring countries.

Campaigners and MPs are calling on the government to issue a biometrics deferral and help the students navigate a safe route to a third country to complete their visa applications and travel onward to Britain.

Ireland, France, Belgium, Germany and Italy have already helped evacuate students with university positions in their countries, said Dr. Nora Parr, a Birmingham University researcher campaigning for the students.

“The students who studied, took TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) tests, wrote admissions essays and did virtual campus interviews under the most horrendous conditions imaginable — many from tent homes and makeshift Wi-Fi hubs — now must wait for a government decision,” she added.

“To not act is to decide to leave them without these hard-earned educational opportunities.”

Any response is also likely to be shaped by a government immigration white paper released earlier this year that signaled an intention to reduce international student numbers at British universities, Parr said.

“This, combined with the government’s tough stance on immigration, and absence of direct support for Palestine, has left these students in the most dire limbo.”

Among the campaigning group is the University and College Union, which represents 125,000 education workers.

Its general secretary, Jo Grady, urged the home secretary in a letter to “expedite the process” of evacuating the Palestinian students and ensuring “all these young Palestinians make it to our seminar rooms and lecture halls for the start of the academic year.”

The Palestinians students have secured spots at universities including Oxford, Cambridge, St Andrews, Edinburgh and University College London.

They are enrolled in subjects including dental public health, data science and genomic medicine.

One student, Soha, a 31-year-old, is hoping to complete a doctorate in nursing and health research at the University of Ulster.

“As a midwife living and working in Gaza, I have witnessed the unimaginable: mothers giving birth under fire, newborns taking their first breath in shelters, and health professionals struggling to provide care with little more than courage and commitment.”

She told The Guardian: “We need them (the British government) to be faster making the decisions that we are waiting for.

“Give us the biometric waiver that we want and facilitate our safe passage. We are running out of time. I carry with me the hopes of countless women and colleagues back in Gaza. When I return, I plan to lead maternal health research in Palestine.”

A government spokesperson told The Guardian: “We are aware of the students and are considering the request for support.”


UK PM facing mounting pressure to recognize Palestinian state

UK PM facing mounting pressure to recognize Palestinian state
Updated 23 July 2025

UK PM facing mounting pressure to recognize Palestinian state

UK PM facing mounting pressure to recognize Palestinian state
  • Several ministers have reportedly raised the issue at Cabinet meetings in recent months
  • Health secretary makes rare declaration in House of Commons calling for Palestinian recognition

LONDON: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing mounting pressure from his ministers to recognize a Palestinian state amid global condemnation of Israel’s conduct in Gaza.

A number of senior ministers in Starmer’s Cabinet have reportedly pushed the prime minister to take a leading international role in recognition at meetings in recent months, The Guardian reported.

The UK has long pledged to recognize a Palestinian state as part of a formal peace process between Palestinians and Israel, but only in tandem with other Western countries. The government, however, has reportedly suffered from a growing sense of desperation after the Israeli military killed scores of starving Palestinians queuing at food aid sites in Gaza.

One minister said: “We say that recognizing Palestinian statehood is a really important symbol that you can only do once. But if not now, then when?”

Almost 60 MPs from the ruling Labour Party earlier this month demanded that the UK immediately recognize Palestine as a state.

This came after Israel’s defense minister revealed plans to force all Gaza residents into a camp in the now-destroyed city of Rafah in the south of the strip.

French President Emmanuel Macron told the British Parliament on a visit this month that the two-state solution was “the only way” to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict and bring regional peace.

Diplomats have said that Macron is facing resistance from allies in Britain and Canada over his position, however.

Later this month, a planned conference co-chaired by ֱ and France will take place in New York City, aimed at rallying international support for the two-state solution.

The UK will “play its part” in a solution, David Lammy, the UK foreign secretary, has said.

“We said we wanted that to be part of a process. But we have had no process. What we have had is mayhem and conflict. There has been no process to attach that recognition to,” he told the BBC on Tuesday.

“Why do we say that? It’s because we don’t just want to recognize symbolically, we want to recognize as a way of getting to the two states that sadly many are trying to thwart at this point in time,” he added.

“But there is a live debate and discussion, and let me restate again my belief in two states, and two states in which Palestinians have their dignity and freedom, and Israel has its security for its people. We will do all we can to achieve that in time.”

Health Secretary Wes Streeting made a declaration in the House of Commons on Tuesday, calling for Palestinian recognition “while there’s still a state of Palestine left to recognize.”

It followed an Israeli attack on the staff residence of the World Health Organization in Gaza.

“I deplore Israel’s attacks on healthcare workers as well as other innocent civilians trying to access healthcare or vital aid,” he said.

“These actions go well beyond legitimate self-defense and undermine the prospects for peace.” 

Streeting is believed to be among the ministers who have pushed for recognition of Palestine. Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Northern Ireland State Secretary Hilary Benn have also reportedly raised the issue.


Pacific nation ponders taking asylum seekers from US

Pacific nation ponders taking asylum seekers from US
Updated 23 July 2025

Pacific nation ponders taking asylum seekers from US

Pacific nation ponders taking asylum seekers from US
  • Whipps’ office told AFP on Wednesday the proposal was still under consideration by the nation’s powerful Council of Chiefs
  • “A meeting was held last week. So far no decision has come out of that meeting,” a spokesman said

SYDNEY: The United States is looking to send asylum seekers to the sparsely populated volcanic isles of Palau, the small South Pacific nation said Wednesday.

Scattered about 800 kilometers (500 miles) east of the Philippines, tropical Palau has long been one of the United States’ closest allies in the Pacific.

Palau President Surangel Whipps Jr last week received a request from Washington to accept “third-country nationals seeking asylum in the United States,” his office said in a statement.

Whipps’ office told AFP on Wednesday the proposal was still under consideration by the nation’s powerful Council of Chiefs, an advisory body of traditional leaders.

“A meeting was held last week. So far no decision has come out of that meeting,” a spokesman said.

US President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to expel millions of undocumented migrants, saying the country had been “inundated” by unwanted arrivals.

He signed an executive order in January — titled “Protecting the American People Against Invasion” — that suspended admissions for countless refugees seeking haven in the United States.

Key details of the proposed deal between Palau and the United States were not immediately clear, such as how many asylum seekers it would cover, or what Palau may get in return.

“Based on the most recent draft agreement, Palau would have full discretion to decide whether or not to accept any individuals, and all actions would be consistent with our constitution and laws,” the Palau president’s office said in a statement.

US Ambassador Joel Ehrendreich was present at a meeting of senior officials to discuss the request, according to photos published last week by the Palau president’s office.

The United States has reportedly considered dispatching asylum seekers to the likes of El Salvador, Libya and Rwanda.

With some 20,000 people spread across hundreds of volcanic isles and coral atolls, Palau is by population one of the smallest countries in the world.

The Pacific microstate could find it difficult to deny Washington’s request.

Palau gained independence in 1994 but allows the US military to use its territory under a longstanding “Compact of Free Association” agreement.

In return, the United States gives Palau hundreds of millions of dollars in budgetary support and assumes responsibility for its national defense.

The United States Embassy in Palau did not respond to an AFP request for comment.

Since coming to power in 2021, Whipps has overseen the expansion of US military interests in Palau.

This has included the ongoing construction of a long-range US radar outpost, a crucial early warning system as China ramps up military manuevers in the Taiwan Strait.

Palau is one of the few remaining countries to recognize Taiwan’s claim to statehood.


German toddler dies after water slide fall in Croatia

German toddler dies after water slide fall in Croatia
Updated 23 July 2025

German toddler dies after water slide fall in Croatia

German toddler dies after water slide fall in Croatia
  • The circumstances of the accident were being investigated
  • The little girl slipped from her father’s arms on the slide at the aquapark in Lopar

ZAGREB: A German toddler died after falling from a water slide on Croatia’s northern island of Rab, police and media said Wednesday.

After the accident, on Tuesday afternoon, the child was flown from Rab to the northern Adriatic city of Rijeka for treatment, but doctors could not save her, said a police statement.

The circumstances of the accident were being investigated, the statement added.

A police spokeswoman told AFP that the child was a toddler.

Local media reported that the little girl slipped from her father’s arms on the slide at the aquapark in Lopar, and fell on the concrete surface.

Germans are the main tourists among more than 20 million who visit Croatia annually, heading mostly to its pristine Adriatic coast.