CGTN launches ‘Media Challengers’ theme song

BEIJING, June 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — China Global Television Network (CGTN) launches the official song and music video for The Media Challengers – its global campaign to shine a spotlight on up-and-coming presenters, reporters and influencers – on Monday.

Titled “The Media Challengers,” the four-minute song features CGTN anchors Ji Xiaojun, Tian Wei, Wang Guan, Eva May, Kui Yingchun and Zhou Heyang.

CGTN anchors [L-R] Wang Guan, Kui Yingchun, Tian Wei, Ji Xiaojun, Zhou Heyang, Eva May. /CGTN)

Four vloggers and influencers who have accumulated huge fan-bases around the world also joined the CGTN crew to perform the song: Shaun Gibson from the UK, Anzelika Smirnova from Latvia, Ju Ju from southwest China’s Sichuan Province and Malik Naibi from Beijing.

Embodying young people’s pursuit of their dreams, the light-hearted and upbeat melody encourages content creators from all over the world to join CGTN’s diverse and international team.

Registration for the The Media Challengers talent campaign closes in late June, 2021, and the lineup of mentors and selected participants will then be released. Before the campaign concludes in September 2021, CGTN will present the selection process through online videos and reality shows held both remotely and in-person.

Shortlisted participants will enter CGTN’s global talent bank and receive professional training. The best-performing talents will receive offers to work as full- or part-time employees at CGTN’s Beijing headquarters or its international bureaus in Washington D.C., London and Nairobi, and will also be invited to take part in CGTN’s special programs between 2021 and 2022.

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-06-07/CGTN-launches-Media-Challengers-theme-song–10TDv9m5nlS/index.html

Video – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCPavz2iLX4
Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1528094/CGTN_anchors.jpg

CGTN: Peng Liyuan calls for global efforts in AIDS and TB prevention and treatment

BEIJING, June 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping, called on people from all walks of life in all countries to join hands and take action to strengthen the prevention and treatment of AIDS and tuberculosis (TB), in order to benefit all mankind and build a global community of health for all.

CGTN: Peng Liyuan calls for global efforts in AIDS and TB prevention and treatment

Peng, also World Health Organization (WHO) Goodwill Ambassador for Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS, made the remarks via video link on Monday at the opening ceremony of a special high-level event on the sidelines of the United Nations High-Level Meeting on AIDS.

The event aimed to provide a platform for WHO member states to reassert their commitment to ending TB deaths among people living with HIV and deliberate on how they will intensify the response to HIV-associated TB in the context of COVID-19.

Peng said the global fight against AIDS and TB has achieved remarkable results in recent years thanks to the concerted efforts made by the international community.

China has gradually established a cooperation mechanism between prevention and control institutions of AIDS and TB, she said. The country has kept the prevalence of AIDS at a low level, and in the past 20 years, the incidence of TB has dropped by more than 40 percent and the mortality rate by more than 70 percent.

These achievements have been made due to the attention paid by the Chinese government, the efforts of the medical personnel and the silent contributions of the volunteers, she said.

Peng also shared some touching stories and expressed her respect for people and volunteers worldwide who have contributed to the prevention and treatment of the diseases.

Major communicable diseases are among the common challenges facing mankind, and it is people’s common wish to end the threats of AIDS and TB, said Peng.

She added that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has brought more challenges to the containment of the diseases, calling for global efforts to protect lives and forge ahead.

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2021-06-07/Peng-Liyuan-calls-for-global-efforts-in-AIDS-TB-prevention-treatment-10UhJDOcrWE/index.html

Video – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3wyeOVnrGY

‫تغلق شركة مارلين إيكويتي بارتنرز صندوق التمويل الأوربي الثاني بقيمة 675 مليون يورو

لوس أنجلوس، لندن، 7 يونيو 2021 /PRNewswire/ —  يسر شركة مارلين إيكويتي بارتنرز (Marlin Equity Partners) – وهي شركة استثمارية عالمية رائدة – الإعلان عن الإغلاق النهائي لصندوق مارلين هيريتيج يوروب II محدود الشركاء (Marlin Heritage Europe II, L.P.)، ويُشار إليه فيما بعد باسم (“هيريتيج يوروب II” أو “الصندوق”) الذي تبلغ قيمته 675 مليون يورو من إجمالي الالتزامات الرأسمالية، أي أكثر من ضعف حجم الصندوق السابق التابع لها. لقد أُغلق الصندوق بنجاح متخطيًا المعدل المستهدف له بدعم قوي من الشركاء المحدودين الحاليين والاهتمام الكبير من المستثمرين العالميين الجُدد.

يعد هيريتيج يوروب II استمرارًا لاستراتيجية الاستثمار التي استخدمتها شركة مارلين لأكثر من 15عامًا وصندوقها السابق المعروف باسممارلين هيريتيج يوروب محدود الشركاء. ومن المقرر أن يطبق الصندوق نفس الفلسفة والنهج القائم على العمليات في الاستثمار الذي تستخدمه الصناديق السابقة لشركة مارلين، ويستهدف الاستثمارات في الشركات المتوسطة الموجودة بشكل عام في أوروبا حيثما كانت الشركة نشطة منذ عام 2006 وأنشأت مكتبًا رسميًا في لندن في عام 2012. وتماشياً مع المنظور التاريخي لشركة مارلين، سيسعى صندوق هيريتيج يوروب II إلى الاستثمار في شركات مستدامة وعالية الإمكانات  يمكنها الاستفادة من تاريخ الشركة العريق في تسريع النمو وتوسيع نطاق الأعمال، فضلاً عن مواردها التشغيلية الكبيرة، وسيستمر الصندوق في التركيز على المجالات التي طورت فيها شركة مارلين خبرة واسعة النطاق في المجال بما في ذلك البرمجيات والتكنولوجيا والرعاية الصحية والخدمات التجارية والمالية القائمة على التكنولوجيا.

وذكر ديفيد ماكجفرن ديفيد ماكجفرن – مؤسس شركة مارلين ورئيس مجلس إدارتها ورئيسها التنفيذي

– قائلاً ” إن قدرتنا على جمع أكثر من ضعف مبلغ رأس المال السابق بنجاح تؤكد على مكانتنا والاعتراف بنا كشركة رائدة في المنطقة وكذلك كشريك ذي قيمة مضافة”. وأضاف قائلاً “نحن ممتنون للدعم المقدم من قاعدة المستثمرين الحاليين والشركاء الجدد، ونتطلع الآن إلى مواصلة تنفيذ استراتيجيتنا الاستثمارية المرتكزة على العمليات لمساعدة الشركات على تحقيق قيمة طويلة المدى وتحقيق نتائج ناجحة لشركائنا “.

وأضاف بيتر سباسوف – المدير العام الأول لشركة مارلين – قائلاً: “إن نجاحنا في أوروبا هو نتاج خبراتنا العميقة المتخصصة وذلك من خلال المجالات التي نستهدفها، وتجربة الاستثمار الواضحة في المنطقة والبنية التحتية العالمية الراسخة والنهج التعاوني للعمل جنبًا إلى جنب مع فرق الإدارة للتأثير على المبادرات الهادفة إلى النمو وتعزيز القيمة. ونحن متحمسون لمواصلة الاستفادة من التحول الرقمي السريع الذي يحدث على نطاق واسع في الشركات والصناعات في الوقت الراهن، ونعتقد اعتقادًا راسخًا أننا في موقع فريد يمكننا من خلاله مساعدة الشركات على تسريع نماذج أعمالها في موجة الرقمنة الراهنة”.

أغلقت شركة مارلين 9 صناديق للأسهم الخاصة وأكملت أكثر من 180 عملية استحواذ منذ إنشائها في عام 2005، ولديها أكثر من 7.6 مليار دولار من رأس المال تحت الإدارة، ويأتي إغلاق هيريتيج يوروب II بعد فترة من النشاط الاستثماري القوي للشركة. ومنذ بداية عام 2020، ووسط أحداث الجائحة العالمية العالمية، استحوذت شركة مارلين على 26 شركة وأكملت 8 عمليات تخارج.

وعملت كل من سارة روبرتس وكاتي سانت بيترز وكارين أورسيك وبروس إيتلسون التابعين لشركة كيركلاند آند إليس التضامنية ذات المسؤولية المحدودة (Kirkland & Ellis LLP) كمستشارين قانونيين، كما عملت شركة كريديت سويس لتداول الأوراق المالية ذ.م.م (Credit Suisse Securities LLC) (الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية) كاستشاري الايداعات الخاص والحصرية وكوكيل إيداعات عند إنشاء هيريتيج يوروب II .

نبذة عن شركة مارلين إيكويتي بارتنرز 

مارلين إيكويتي بارتنرز هي شركة استثمار عالمية تدير رأس مال يزيد عن 7.6 مليار دولار. وتركز الشركة على تزويد الشركات الأم والمساهمين وأصحاب المصلحة الآخرين بحلول مناسبة تلبي احتياجات العمل والسيولة لديها. وتستثمر شركة مارلين في الأعمال التجارية من خلال مجالات متعددة حيث تعمل قاعدة رأس المال والعلاقات في هذه المجالات، وكذلك الشبكة الواسعة من الموارد التشغيلية على تعزيز آفاق الشركة بشكل كبير وترسيخ القيمة. ومنذ إنشاء الشركة، فقد نجحت – من خلال مجموعة من الصناديق والشركات ذات الصلة – في استكمال أكثر من 180 عملية استحواذ. ويقع المقر الرئيسي للشركة في لوس أنجلوس، كاليفورنيا ولها مكتب آخر في لندن. لمزيد من المعلومات، يُرجى زيارة الموقع الإلكتروني التالي:www.marlinequity.com.

Survivors of Burkina Faso Massacre in Urgent Need of Aid

The U.N. refugee agency says survivors of the Saturday massacre in a Burkina Faso village are in desperate need of humanitarian aid.

Unidentified gunmen attacked the village of Solhan in Burkina Faso’s northeast Sahel region on June 5. They reportedly stormed the village in the middle of the night, executing at least 138 civilians, seriously injuring nearly 40 other people and setting houses and a market ablaze.

The U.N. refugee agency says more than 3,300 people have fled for their lives to nearby villages. UNHCR spokesman Babar Balloch says the newly displaced, mostly children and women, have been arriving in desperate straits. He says they have few or no belongings and need everything.

“The new arrivals urgently need water and sanitation, shelter, essential aid items and medical care. Authorities have delivered almost 400 tons of food and thousands of relief items, while UNHCR partners are providing medical care and psychosocial support,” he said.

The attack, the deadliest since 2015, highlights the increasing insecurity and violence that has been gaining a foothold in Africa’s Sahel region over the past few years. The UNHCR calls Burkina Faso the fastest growing displacement and protection crisis in the world.

Since 2019, the agency says, violence in the country has forced more than 1.2 million people to flee their homes. Balloch says so far this year, violence has displaced some 150,000.

“84%, either women, who face a high risk of gender-based violence, or children, half of whom have reportedly been subjected to physical violence and abuse. In addition to the IDPs, Burkina Faso continues to generously host more than 22,000 refugees and asylum-seekers, mostly from Mali,” he said.

The UNHCR is appealing for more generous support from the international community. It says the available funds cannot keep pace with the growing humanitarian needs in the hugely insecure Sahelian region.

It notes only a quarter of the nearly $260 million required to assist Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger this year has been received.

Source: Voice of America

Tigray War Exposes Limits to Abiy’s Promises of Press Freedom

WASHINGTON – In September 2019, Simon Marks moved to Ethiopia, drawn by the rapid changes following its shift in leadership and declaration of peace with neighboring Eritrea after a war and decades of tensions. 

Since then, he has reported on the widespread optimism after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power and won the Nobel Peace Prize, and the human cost of the war in Tigray.

But on May 20, Ethiopia expelled Marks from the country. The freelancer, who reports for The New York Times and Voice of America, among others, is the latest casualty in what many journalists and rights groups say is a limited tolerance for critical reporting on the Tigray conflict.

Since November, the Ethiopian government has been fighting the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, or TPLF, a regional political party that led the country’s ruling coalition for nearly 30 years. The war has displaced tens of thousands of people and left millions in need of humanitarian aid, the United Nations says. 

Journalists and human rights groups have alleged serious abuses: mass killings, gang rapes, violence. Victims’ accounts predominately blame federal Ethiopian soldiers, the Amhara regional militias and Eritrean forces fighting in the region. The U.N. human rights chief has said that “serious violations of international law” may have been committed by Ethiopia, Eritrea and the TPLF.  

From the start of the Tigray conflict, Ethiopia’s government sought to limit information. Media access was restricted, and journalists covering the conflict were arrested. At least seven have been detained since November, and local media say they have been threatened, beaten or questioned over their reporting. The region was also hit with an internet and communications blackout.

At this “huge moment” in Ethiopia’s history, Marks said, “the country benefits from having as many professional journalists there as possible.”

“So, I felt sad that it had come to this and that everything I’ve been doing is so politicized,” he added. “And that the government in the end took a decision that I believe is just not in their interests in the long term.”

The deputy director general of the Ethiopian Broadcast Authority, Yonatan Tesfaye Regassa, did not reply to VOA’s request for comment.

Ethiopia’s prime minister’s office did not respond to VOA’s email requesting comment.

But at a June 3 briefing, Billene Seyoum, a spokesperson for the office, said that “claims of stifled media spaces are unfounded.”

Marks said he began to feel government pressure while reporting on protests in 2020 following the killing of Hachalu Hundessa, a popular singer from Ethiopia’s Oromo region. More than 100 people were killed in the protests, which led to mass arrests.

The journalist was later prevented from traveling to the Tigray region to cover the September regional elections that the central government had declared illegal. Ethiopia postponed national and regional elections because of the pandemic.

When the war started, Marks traveled to the regional capital, Mekelle, to speak with civilians being affected, including witnesses to the November Mai-Kadra massacre, which the U.N. said could be considered a war crime.

A Reuters investigation published Monday said the incident involved two attacks: one against Tigrayans, and the other against Amharas. It resulted in at least 767 dead.

Through interviews with witnesses, Marks was able to dispute the government’s claim that only Amharas were killed. Marks believes this reporting, along with his coverage of other violence and abuses, put him at odds with authorities.  

In March, his media accreditation was revoked, and the media regulator accused Marks of “fake news,” according to reports at the time.

“The government opinion seems to be that if a reporter writes sympathetic stories about the victims of violence in war, then he or she must be partisan to one side of the conflict,” Marks said.

“It’s normal to sympathize with mothers and babies with no food, or a mother who is unable to lactate because she has no nutrition. Or simply people who have had their family members slaughtered by soldiers,” he said. “The unfortunate aspect is that mine and other people’s reporting has become highly politicized by reporting on atrocities or human rights abuses.”

When he was finally expelled, he wasn’t given a specific reason, Marks said. He had just received a call to attend an immigration meeting that he “didn’t get a good feeling about.”

At that meeting, an immigration official told the journalist he needed to leave that day. “That was a done deal. There was no room for negotiation,” Marks said. He was flown to Brussels.

Ethiopia’s ambassador to the U.S. did not respond to VOA’s request for comment sent via messaging app.

Restrictions return 

Early in his leadership, Prime Minister Abiy was praised for improving conditions for the media, releasing several journalists and promising to amend a controversial anti-terror law that had been used to jail critics.

Up to that point, the country had a poor press freedom record, with high numbers detained and a repressive media environment.

But rights groups have pointed out that when Abiy faced protests or unrest, he fell back to the same past patterns of arrests and censorship.

In 2020, the government adopted a new version of the anti-terror legislation, despite criticism from human rights and free speech advocates.

Muthoki Mumo, the sub-Saharan Africa representative for the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, said earlier optimism has been tempered by a return to old ways.

“What we’ve seen,” Mumo said, “is a steady erosion of some of the (progress) made in early 2018.”

“The legislative commitments, the commitments to make legislative reforms were still there,” she said. “But then suddenly we started seeing a regression to old styles, old tools of dealing with the media, censoring the media essentially.”

The pressure from the government has driven some local journalists to publish stories without bylines or even to flee. One of those is freelance reporter Lucy Kassa.

In February, armed men, who refused to identify themselves, entered Lucy’s home, confiscated her computer and accused her of having links to the TPLF.

Lucy had just filed a story for the Los Angeles Times that included accounts from rape survivors who said their attackers were Eritrean soldiers.

At that time, the Ethiopian government was denying the presence of Eritrean soldiers.

Fearing for her safety, Lucy left the country, but even now she doesn’t feel safe.

“Even those of us who flee the country, we are still operating under fear because the supporters of the government have become as dangerous as the government itself,” she said. Lucy asked that her current location not be identified because she fears retaliation.

The journalist said she and others are being harassed online and threatened on social media by people accusing them of being TPLF sympathizers, anti-government, fake news and propaganda.

All local journalists work in an uncertain environment, but Tigrayan media come under extra scrutiny, Lucy said.

“Whether you like it or not, you will be defined by your ethnic background. For Tigrayans, for those who come from Tigrayan ethnic background, the pressure is much worse,” she said.

Lucy said the men who came into her home tried to link her ethnicity to her reporting, saying that because she is Tigrayan, she supports the TPLF.

Marks also said reporting deemed sympathetic to Tigrayans could lead to accusations of bias.

“All of a sudden it makes you a TPLF sympathizer, which couldn’t be further from the truth,” he said.

The freelancer added that local reporters risk tougher consequences, including imprisonment.

‘Grave message’

The erosion of media rights has “accelerated” over the past six months, with arrests of journalists or media workers who help foreign media “and intimidation coming from that regulator,” said Mumo, of CPJ.

“It does send one very grave and cohesive message of ‘be careful of what you’re reporting,’” Mumo said.

Marks’ expulsion has had an impact on foreign and local journalists, she said, adding that it sends a message: If this can happen to a foreign correspondent, “what could potentially happen to me?”

It also makes independent journalism harder.

It’s much more difficult to report on a country when you’re not there to see people’s faces, to interview them, to speak with sources in a safe manner, particularly in the context of internet shutdowns,” she told VOA.

Marks says the experiences of local journalists make his being expelled relative.

“Many others take much bigger risks than I take, especially the local reporters,” he told VOA. “Many have called me since I’ve been deported to say they are fearful that they can no longer really do their job.”

The impact, Marks said, will be a lack of information for those who need it.

“The spillover effects from something like this, which are going to hurt in the end, is the public’s right to know and hold their leaders accountable,” he said.

Source: Voice of America

Children Shot, Bombed and Knifed in Tigray War

Fifteen-year-old Beriha lost one eye in the war and was permanently blinded in the other.

And like many of the children hospitalized in Mekelle, the capital of Ethiopia’s Tigray region, she traveled for weeks to get here. Children in the ward had been shot, knifed or hit by shrapnel from heavy artillery. Some lost limbs from stepping on landmines.

“She and her cousin went out to play in the yard,” said her father, Gebray Zenebe. “Suddenly, they saw people running. They also ran, and they were both shot.”

Gebray and Beriha traveled from town to town searching for a functioning health care center. When they arrived at Ayder Referral Hospital in Mekelle, it took three days for Beriha to regain consciousness. She was shot in the right cheek, and the bullet exited through her left eye.

The only medical treatment she received before reaching the hospital was water to clean the wound.

The Tigray region has been at war since November 2020. Doctors Without Borders says less than 15% of health care centers are operating normally. Most have been looted, and many have been damaged.

“While some looting may have been opportunistic, health facilities in most areas appear to have been deliberately vandalized to render them nonfunctional,” the organization said in a statement in March.  

Open but empty

After the fighting stopped in Edaga Hamus, Nurse Tefetawit Tesfay emerged from where she was hiding just out of town. She went to her clinic on the main road from Mekelle to find a burned-out tank, bullet-riddled signs and dead soldiers on the streets. Like so many others, her clinic was empty.

“I came and the door was opened,” she said. “The glass (was) broken, and the equipment (was) stolen.”

Patients, including children and victims of rape, still come to her with war injuries, but there is very little she can do.

“Emergency medicine (was there),” she said, sifting through what was left in her cabinets. “It was stolen, and some in here. Infusions and dressing, suturing, all the equipment (was) stolen.”

Tefetawit said she refers patients to the few hospitals in the main cities, where medical workers say they are short of supplies in every department.

Mussie Tesfay Atsbaha, administrative chief and business development director of Ayder Referral Hospital, said that because of ongoing battles and road closures, only a small percentage of injured people make it to the city for treatment.

“If one person comes, they will tell us 20 or 30 couldn’t make it,” he said Monday in his office.

Likewise, parents say for every child survivor in the hospital, many more children did not make it.

Mourning

Michaele Kahsay, 16, was at the school where his father worked as a groundskeeper when it was hit by heavy artillery. Michaele lost the lower part of his left leg. His brother, 19, was killed in the attack.

“I didn’t feel pain at the time,” he said. “When I woke up in the hospital, I saw my leg was cut.”

Michaele looked listlessly at a photograph of his brother. Before the coronavirus, before the war, there was school. Michaele was good at mathematics and wanted to be a doctor, he said. Now, he also wants revenge.

Michaele, like many people in Tigray, said the region is under attack by federal forces, Eritrean soldiers and militias. The government said it is fighting the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, not the people of Tigray, as the group continues to stage attacks after losing control of most of the region.

The Ethiopian government also said “it takes very seriously” its responsibility to alleviate the suffering of people in Tigray.

But at the hospital, parents said the people are reeling — short of food and electricity and in constant fear of new battles. Farm fields have been abandoned, and roughly 2 million people have fled their homes.

“How can I farm in these conditions?” said Gebray, Beriha’s father. “Look, she is here. And my wife and other three children are missing. I don’t know if they are alive or dead.”

Source: Voice of America