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Peru’s mass COVID grave has left many families devastated.

Their family was unaware of what happened to Karina Ahuanari’s mother Teresa, who died from COVID on April 24, 2020 at a hospital in Peru’s port city Iquitos. The country was under lockdown at the time and people couldn’t leave their homes. Despite COVID restrictions Ahuanari’s brother-in-law and sister-in law went to the hospital to search for the matriarch of the family.

The scene at Loreto Regional Hospital was chaotic. Other relatives were looking for information about their loved ones, and harried workers tried to attend to the dying and the sick. Ahuanari says that Teresa was initially listed as having been cremated. Officials announced that cremations had been stopped. A few days later, Teresa’s name was listed on a list for the buried. However, Ahuanari could not find the actual location of the body. “We didn’t know where to look to find the answer to the question, “Where is my mom?” She says. “That was the entire month of May. We discovered through social media and the press that the bodies had been “dumped” in a mass cemetery near Iquitos in June.

Teresa is believed to have been one of the more than 400 COVID victims that were buried there. The Ahuanaris, along with other families, have been trying for over a year to get their loved one’s bodies exhumed, identified, and reburied in what they consider a proper resting place. This is complicated for many reasons. A mass grave in the jungle. The mass grave is located in a clearing just off a dirt track. It looks like a timber road. It is difficult to drive on, even with a pickup truck or car, because it is so rutted. Ahuanari and her siblings walk the last quarter mile like they’re walking through the forest. They then turn right into the clearing.

 

Ahuanari said that the entire area was open when she first visited the mass grave site last January. “There wasn’t a single cross. There were only a few small blue flags that marked the location of the bodies. There are now dozens of crosses and small shrines scattered across the red soil, with photos of the dead. Local journalists discovered the mass grave in June 2020. Many people came to the spot in search of relatives who had disappeared during the pandemic. They found only what the local newspaper described as a “slab” of earth sealed with a steamroller. The local government placed a gate in front of the grave and declared it the “COVID-19 Cemetary.” The health department published a map of the site that showed where each body was believed to be buried. It included graves with three-to-one holes and bodies. It also indicated which level the body was located — on top, middle, or bottom. Ahuanari claims that, due to the initial secrecy surrounding the burial plot, her siblings and she don’t believe that officials know where the bodies are. Or if their mother is in the second-level grave as they claim.

Community members added crosses to the places where they were told that people were buried in the mass cemetery in Iquitos. Although the mass grave was later renamed to the COVID-19 Cemetery, many family members still wish to exhume the bodies to be moved to individual graves at the San Juan Bautiste Cemetery.

A staggering number of bodies. In Peru, COVID caused so many deaths that the health system couldn’t keep pace. Iquitos was in a difficult spot when the country was placed under strict lockdown on March 15, 2020. The only way to reach the city is by air or barge on Amazon. After the COVID measures were implemented, all flights that normally carried medical supplies to Iquitos were cancelled and river cargo was banned. The local hospital, which had only seven ICU beds, was quickly overwhelmed. Doctors say that patients could have been saved, but they died from lack of oxygen. In the initial waves of the pandemic, things were so bad in Peru that the country has the highest COVID death rates per capita in the entire world.

Elvis Ricardo Sandoval Zamora was the director of environmental health at the provincial health department. He was responsible for a team that was created to collect corpses during the initial wave of the pandemic. He says, “We’d go on calls to pick-up the dead in the streets, in the streets, and from people’s houses.” “And these cadavers where taken to the regional hospital’s morgue.” The morgue could hold five bodies. Sandoval claims that COVID was killing people in Iquitos at the time. Funeral homes were overwhelmed. The town’s only crematorium had been destroyed. Sandoval claims that it was almost impossible to buy coffins. The hospital morgue was crowded with bodies. He says, “We had to rent an air-conditioned shipping container that could hold more than 50 cadavers.” However, it quickly filled up to its capacity. Families had difficulty claiming the bodies of their loved ones due to the pandemic. The nationwide lockdown meant that people could only leave their homes to go to the grocery store. Funerals and wakes were banned. Sandoval said that the problem of how to deal with the accumulating bodies at a morgue was a major problem that needed to be solved.

The regional governor directed the local health department in April to begin burying bodies in an unmarked area south of the city. Sandoval claims that the intention was not to conceal it as some have claimed. His team was on the ground 24/7 dealing with the crisis. Everyone was overwhelmed. He says that health officials were trying to manage the massive backlog of cadavers. Sandoval’s office now manages the COVID-19 cemetery, which is still used today as a place for unclaimed COVID patients. He is sympathetic to families who wish to move their loved ones into formal cemeteries. He says that exhuming and re-identifying the bodies would be costly. It’s not clear how to legally authorize exhumations. He says, “The law states that you can’t exhume bodies after one year.” The majority of the 400+ people buried at COVID cemetery were there more than a decade ago. Many others, including the Ahuanaris, claim that they have been trying for months for exhumation arrangements. However, they keep running into bureaucratic roadblocks at every turn. Some people are so fed up that they have dug up their loved one’s remains themselves, according to rumors. Ahuanari claims that the risk of strangers digging up body bags at night and trampling on her mom is another reason she wants the remains moved into a proper cemetery. A number of families have filed suit to seek a waiver from the law that prohibits the exhumation of bodies after one year. Ahuanari and her siblings are involved in that effort, but for now they are still waiting in limbo.

Peru has a Sunday for proper burial. Families often visit cemeteries to view the graves of the recently dead. It is often festive. At the cemetery gates, vendors sell flowers, soft drinks and empanadas. Children race along the walkways between rows of crosses. Adults gather around the graves of their loved ones to share drinks, tend to the flowers, and chat. Ahuanari and her family were present at the Cementerio San Juan de Bautista on a Sunday. If Teresa can be exhumed, then this is where they would like her to be reburied. It is a small, city-run cemetery. It bustles with people on this morning. To shade the tombstones from the heat, people have put colorful umbrellas on top. Alex Pizango, Ahuanari’s brother, says that this is what they want for Teresa and their entire family. “We haven’t seen our mom since her death. He says that we didn’t have the opportunity to bury her. “That’s why we are asking for exhumation of her corpse so that we can find out where she is buried. He says that this will allow us to go to her grave on Sundays as a family unit forever. “And also to make sure that it’s my mother’s body in that grave.”

 

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Ukraine war: Kyiv secures a bridgehead across the key Dnipro River, reports

But military experts warn that advancing from positions across the Dnipro could be very difficult.

Ukrainian troops have set up positions on the east bank of the Dnipro River in southern Kherson region, reports say.The region is partially Russian-held and crossing the river could be significant in future offensives.The US-based Institute for the Study of War says Russian military bloggers have posted “enough geolocated footage and text reports to confirm” the advance.BBC Ukraine says its military sources have reported a “certain movement across [the] Dnipro” near Kherson city.

Ukraine’s military has not confirmed the movement, while Russia has denied the reports.But if the reports that Ukraine has secured a bridgehead on the east bank are correct, it could be significant in helping Kyiv drive Russian troops back.A Ukrainian advance in the area could, in the future, even cut the land corridor to Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula, annexed by Russia in 2014.However, military experts say any Ukrainian troop movements in the bridgehead area – which is crisscrossed by floodplains, irrigation canals and other water obstacles – would be a tough task.And Ukrainian advances would be further complicated by Russia’s significant advantage in the air.

Ukraine’s military has for some time publicly spoken about preparations for a major counter-offensive, without specifying where and when it could be launched.Until now, all of the Kherson region on the east bank of the Dnipro has been under Russian control, with the wide river serving as a natural barrier.The regional capital – sitting on the west bank – was liberated by Ukrainian forces last November.Celebrations as Ukraine takes back key city KhersonPutin visits occupied Kherson region in UkraineIn Sunday’s report, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said “geolocated footage published on 23 April indicates that Ukrainian forces are operating in areas north-west of Oleshky on the east” bank of Dnipro.

The ISW added there was not enough information to analyse the scale of the reported Ukrainian advance – or the further intentions of the Ukrainian military.On Monday, Russia’s WarGonzo military blogger reported that Ukrainian troops were “trying to gain a foothold on Bolshoi Potemkin [Velykyi Potyomkin – Ukrainian] island”, which is located between the new and old channels of the Dnipro.

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India’s population will surpass China this week, according to UN

Last week, a different UN body said the milestone would be passed later in 2023.

India is expected to overtake China as the world’s most populous nation by the end this week. A different UN body predicted last week that India would surpass China by the middle this year. The Asian nations have accounted more than a quarter of the global population since over 70 years. The UN’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs said in a press release that “China will soon relinquish its long-held position as the world’s largest country”.

The UN Population Fund said last week that India would have 2.9 million more people than China by the middle of 2023. China’s birthrate has dropped recently, and its population shrank last year for first time since 1961. India’s population will continue to grow for several decades, it said. However, fertility rates in India are also dropping – from 5.7 babies per woman in 1950, to 2.2 today. In November, the world population reached 8 billion. Experts say that the growth rate is slower than it used to be, and is now at its lowest level since 1950.

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Scientists are concerned about recent rapid ocean warming.

There’s growing concern that the oceans are heating up quickly – and scientists are unsure of the implications.

It has never warmed up this much, so quickly. Scientists don’t fully understand why. But they worry that, combined with other weather events, the world’s temperature could reach a worrying new level by the end of next year. Scientists do not fully understand why it has happened. But they are concerned that combined with other weather conditions, the temperature of the planet could reach a new alarming level by the end next year. They are less efficient in absorbing planet-warming gases.

In the last 15 years, Earth’s heat has increased by 50 percent, with the majority of that extra heat going into the oceans. This has real world implications – not only was the temperature of the oceans a record in April, but in some areas the difference over the long term is enormous. Image source: Getty ImagesIn march, sea surface temperatures along the east coast of North America reached 13.8C above the 1981-2011 average. Karina Von Schuckmann, lead author of the study and oceanographer with the research group Mercator Ocean International, said: “It is not yet clear why such a rapid and huge change is occurring.”

“We have doubled heat in the climate system over the last 15 years. I don’t think this is climate variability, but it could be. We do see the change. “An interesting factor that could influence the level of heat entering the oceans is a reduction in shipping pollution. In 2020, the International Maritime Organisation implemented a regulation to lower the sulphur in fuel burned by ships. This has had an immediate impact on reducing the amount aerosol particles released in the atmosphere. Aerosols that pollute the air also reflect heat back into the space, so removing them could have caused more heat to reach the oceans.

The average surface temperature of the oceans has risen by 0.9C since pre-industrial times, with 0.6C of that increase occurring in the last 40. This is less than the rise in air temperatures on land which have increased by 1.5C. Oceans absorb heat much deeper than land and require more energy to heat. This has real-world implications. It is especially damaging to coral reefs. Extreme weather will increase as heat from the upper ocean surface increases hurricanes and cyclones. This means they become more intense and longer-lasting.Sea-level rise: warmer waters take up more space – known as thermal expansion – and can greatly accelerate the melting of glaciers from Greenland and Antarctica that flow into the oceans.

This increases global sea levels and increases the risk of coastal flooding. Warmer water has a lower ability to absorb CO2. The oceans will absorb less CO2 if they continue to warm. This will lead to more CO2 accumulating in the atmosphere, further warming the air. “The Australian Bureau model strongly suggests a strong El Nino.” Hugh McDowell, from Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology, said that the trend has been in that direction and that all climate models have been trending towards a stronger event. Mr McDowell warned that predictions are less reliable at this time of the year.

Other researchers are more optimistic. Experts believe that a fully-formed event will follow. “If we have a new El Nino on top of that, it will probably cause an additional global warming of 0.2-0.25C,” Dr Josef Ludescher from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Research said. “The impact of El Nino is reduced a few months following the peak. This is why 2024 is likely to be the warmest year on record. “Image source, Anadolu Agency.” And we may, we’ll be close to 1.5C and perhaps we’ll temporarily go over. El Nino is likely to disrupt weather patterns in Australia and around the world. It will also weaken the monsoon. There are also more fundamental concerns that as heat is absorbed by the oceans, they may be less able store excess energy.

One scientist described being “extremely stressed and worried”. Karina von Schuckmann says that some research has shown the world warming in jumps. Little changes over years are followed by sudden leaps upwards. After El Nino subsides, temperatures may drop again. She told BBC News that “we still have a window of opportunity to act and we should take advantage of this to reduce the effects.” Graphics by Erwan RIVALL.

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Wagner in Sudan: what have Russian mercenaries done?

The Wagner group denies involvement in the current conflict, but there’s evidence it has previously been active in Sudan.

Russian Wagner mercenary forces are accused of having commercial and military ties with Sudan. However, the group denies involvement in the current conflict. Yevgeny Praighozin, who has close ties to President Vladimir Putin, has stated that “not one Wagner PMC [private company] fighter has ever been present in Sudan”. We have found no evidence of Russian mercenaries currently inside the country. There is evidence of Wagner’s previous activities in Sudan. Mr Prighozin’s operations in the nation have been targeted by US and EU sanctions. Gold-mining DealsIn 2017, Sudan’s former President Omar al-Bashir, during a trip to Moscow, signed a number of deals.

These included an agreement to establish a Russian naval base at Port Sudan along the Red Sea as well as “concessions on gold mining” between Russian company M Invest, and the Sudanese Ministry of Minerals. The According to a CNN investigation, gold was transported overland into Central African Republic where Wagner operates – exports that were not recorded in Sudanese trade data.

The BBC has not independently confirmed these images. In 2021, a Wagner linked Telegram channel published photos of an unnamed top Wagner leader awarding Sudanese soldier memorabilia during a ceremony that took place two years earlier. TelegramAnd, in July 2022 this channel distributed a clip allegedly showing Wagner’s mercenaries performing par The same source linked the Instagram profile of a Russian mercenary who called himself a “freelancer”. He shared stories of his exploits on Sudan in posts dating from August and Oct 2021. How influential is Wagner? The US Treasury claims that the Wagner Group has been involved in “paramilitary activities, support for maintaining authoritarian regimes and exploitation natural resources”. The relationship between the Royal United Services Institute and the UK-based Royal United Services Institute has grown since then.

“In 2018, they had around 100 men actively training Sudanese forces,” says Dr Joana De Deus Pereira from the UK. Sudanese media reported that the number grew to 500 and that they were mainly based in the south-west, near Um Dafuq and close to Sudan’s borders with the Central African Republic. According to Dr Samuel Ramani who wrote a book on Russia’s activities throughout Africa, the Wagner Group created its own media campaigns in order to keep President Bashir in power. Image source: AFP. This caused friction with the president’s security forces and Wagner switched its support to General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who overthrew him.

Dr Ramani says that while the Foreign Ministry in Moscow opposed the coup, Prigozhin, and the Wagner Group, welcomed al-Burhan’s takeover. According to Dr Ramani it was between 2021 and 2022 when the Wagner Group increased their connections with the Rapid Support Forces, which is currently fighting Sudan’s regular army led by Gen Burhan. Mr Pri “Wagner had links with both General al-Burhan and Mr Hemedti in different degrees and ways,” she says. Wagner’s presence in AfricaWagner fighters are widely reported to be in the Central African Republic for several years, guarding diamond mines in the country, as well in Libya and Mali. 

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Sudan fighting: Foreign nationals and diplomats evacuated

Several countries are helping their citizens leave the capital, Khartoum, following a week of fighting.

Several other countries have also started organising evacuations, starting on Sunday. France, Germany Italy and Spain have also started organising evacuations. A vicious power struggle has caused violence throughout the country. The UK government was able to airlift British diplomatic staff and their families out in a “complex” and “rapid” operation. Foreign Minister James Cleverly stated that options to evacuate remaining British nationals were “severely restricted”.

The German army reported that the first of three flights had left Sudan bound for Jordan with 101 people aboard. Italy and Spain evacuated citizens – the Spanish mission included citizens of Argentina, Colombia, Ireland Portugal, Poland Mexico, Venezuela, and Sudan. Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his government had evacuated diplomatic staff. More than 150 people were evacuated to the Saudi Arabian port Jeddah by sea, including citizens from Egypt, Pakistan, and Gulf countries. Many foreign students from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East have also been trapped in Khartoum. They have made desperate calls for assistance.

The US announced on Sunday that a disaster response team will be sent to the region to “coordinate humanitarian response to those in need, both within and outside Sudan.” “Samantha Power, from the US Agency for International Development(USAID), said that the team would initially work out of Kenya and give priority to getting “life-saving humanitarian assistance to those in need.” The World Health Organization reports that the fighting has injured thousands and killed more than 400.

The death toll may be higher than 400, because people are unable to access healthcare due to the closure of most hospitals in the city. The fighting has also affected the western region of Darfur where the RSF was first formed. The UN has warned that 20,000 people, mostly women and children, have fled Sudan in search of safety in Chad across the border.

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