US Consumer Prices Jump 7%, Most in 40 Years

WASHINGTON —

U.S. consumer prices jumped 7% in December compared to a year earlier, the highest inflation rate in 40 years, the government’s Labor Department reported Wednesday.

Higher prices coursed throughout the U.S. economy in 2021, with the biggest increases since 1982. The annualized jump in December was up from the 6.8% figure in November and was a half-percentage point gain over the course of a month.

Analysts say robust consumer demand collided with coronavirus-related supply shortages, pushing up prices over the year for big ticket items like cars and furniture, but more importantly for must-buy, everyday purchases like food and gasoline for motorists.

Despite the year-over-year inflation surge, President Joe Biden said the report “shows a meaningful reduction in headline inflation over last month, with gas prices and food prices falling.”

He said it “demonstrates that we are making progress in slowing the rate of price increases. At the same time, this report underscores that we still have more work to do, with price increases still too high and squeezing family budgets.”

The rapidly rising costs for consumers have caught the attention of the White House and policy makers at the country’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, even as they say they expect inflation to remain high throughout 2022.

In November, Biden called for the Federal Trade Commission to investigate “mounting evidence of anti-consumer behavior by oil and gas companies.” The Fed is signaling new efforts to rein in inflation by ending its direct financial support of the economy in March, sooner than originally planned, and to increase its benchmark interest rate that influences borrowing costs for businesses and consumers.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told a congressional committee Tuesday that getting prices down to more stable levels was key to ensure a lasting recovery from the pandemic.

“If inflation does become too persistent, if these high levels of inflation become too entrenched in the economy or people’s thinking, that will lead to much tighter monetary policy from us, and that could lead to a recession and that would be bad for workers,” Powell told lawmakers.

For consumers, inflation is often more of a daily fact of life than other aspects of the American economy that have recovered smartly since the coronavirus pandemic first swept into the U.S. in March 2020.

The U.S. economy added a record-setting 6.4 million jobs last year, the unemployment rate dropped from 6.3% in January to 3.9% in December and rank-and-file workers’ hourly paychecks rose by 5.8%. Government assistance checks sent to all but the wealthiest American households helped many families.

But prices consumers paid rose markedly.

Government statistics showed that gasoline prices paid by motorists at service stations were up 58% last year, while the price of used cars and trucks were up 31% and new vehicles by 11%.

Meat, poultry and fish prices were up 13%, furniture and bedding by nearly 12%. Fast-food and casual dining places raised their prices by nearly 8%.

Source: Voice of America

Iran, Venezuela and Sudan Lose UN Voting Rights With 5 More

Iran, Venezuela and Sudan are in arrears on paying dues to the United Nations’ operating budget and are among eight nations that will lose their voting rights in the 193-member General Assembly, the U.N. chief said in a letter circulated Wednesday.

Also losing voting rights are Antigua and Barbuda, Republic of Congo, Guinea, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in the letter to General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid.

The suspension takes effect immediately.

The U.N. Charter states that members whose arrears equal or exceed the amount of their contributions for the preceding two full years lose their voting rights. But it also gives the General Assembly the authority to decide “that the failure to pay is due to conditions beyond the control of the member,” and in that case, a country can continue to vote.

The General Assembly decided that three African countries on the list of nations in arrears — Comoros, Sao Tome and Principe, and Somalia — would be able to keep their voting rights.

According to the secretary-general’s letter, the minimum payments needed to restore voting rights are $18,412,438 for Iran, $39,850,761 for Venezuela and $299,044 for Sudan. The five other countries each need less than $75,000 to restore their voting rights.

Iran also lost its voting rights in January 2021. It regained those rights in June after making the minimum payment on its dues and lashed out at the United States for maintaining sanctions that have prevented it from accessing billions of dollars in foreign banks. At that time, U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq thanked banking and government authorities in various places, including South Korea, for enabling the payment to be made.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump reimposed sanctions on Iran after pulling the U.S. out of the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and six major powers in 2018.

Source: Voice of America

N. Bahr el Ghazal orders commissioners to mobilize assistance for Massiriya attack victims

The government of Northern Bahr el Ghazal State on Tuesday ordered all the commissioners of the five counties in the state to mobilize assistance for the victims of the recent Massiriya attacks in Yinh Pabol, Aweil East County.

On 2 January, armed Massiriya tribesmen from neighboring Sudan attacked and killed 4 people and wounded several others in the process displacing hundreds of villagers in Aweil East County’s Yihn Pabol area. The death toll later jumped to 24.

Kiir Chan Wol, the Northern Bahr el Ghazal State minister of local government and law enforcement agencies, on Tuesday told Radio Tamazuj about the assistance mobilization drive after the closure of the monthly performance review for the commissioners.

“I have had a meeting with all five county commissioners over the contributions to support the victims of the Yihn Pabol attacks,” Minister Chan said. “I ordered the commissioners to think big with their chiefs and citizens to find ways to gather the assistances to rescue the victims whose homes and property were set on fire by the Messiriya attackers.”

Aweil Center County Commissioner Peter Natale said he had already engaged the payam administrators and that they are going to sensitize the communities so that they can contribute expeditiously.

“We as the county commissioners have already talked with payam administrators to collect the funds and other items like sorghum, sesame, cows, and goats in kind so that they will be taken to the front-line-affected citizens,” Commissioner Natale said.

A paramount chief who preferred anonymity protested the idea of the common people making contributions and said they could only give groundnuts. He said it is the role of the government to intervene.

“The citizens have nothing to contribute at all except groundnuts which are produced in the highlands where the attacks took place,’’ he said. “We do not have sorghum, but we are ready as of now to collect the groundnuts.”

Source: Radio Tamazuj

Education Cannot Wait announces US$17.7 Million grant for new multi-year resilience programme in Sudan

Education Cannot Wait (ECW) on Tuesday announced US$17.7 million in catalytic seed funding to roll out a first-ever Multi-Year Resilience Programme in Sudan, a press statement said.

The catalytic grant will be delivered in partnership with Save the Children and UNICEF. The grant seeks to catalyze an additional US$60 million in funding for the multi-year programme while, at the same time, calling international attention to the pressing humanitarian crisis in Sudan.

According to ECW, the initial seed-funding investment will support access to quality life-sustaining education programmes for at least 100,000 displaced, conflict-affected and vulnerable children and adolescents in Sudan. To reach the most vulnerable and marginalized, 60% of beneficiaries are girls and 10% are children with disabilities.

The investment will be implemented by a Save the Children-led consortium (US$14.7 million grant) – which includes the Norwegian Refugee Council, International Aid Services and Global Aid Hand – and UNICEF (US$3 million grant).

“Conflict, COVID-19, climate change and a deepening economic crisis are derailing efforts to build peace, unity and sustainable development in Sudan,” said Yasmine Sherif, Director of Education Cannot Wait, the UN’s global fund for education in emergencies and protracted crises.

She added: “Without an education, girls and boys face increased risk of child marriage, early pregnancy, exploitation, abuse, recruitment into armed groups and child labour. Our investment in education is an investment in the future of Sudan. It’s an investment in ending poverty and hunger. It’s an investment in peace.”

Arshad Malik, the Save the Children Sudan Country Director, said for the past several years, education has been severely disrupted for millions of children in Sudan, with conflict-affected children, girls, and children living with a disability most impacted.

“Save the Children, along with its consortium partners, is delighted to partake in the Education Cannot Wait Multi-Year Resilience Programme to deliver lifesaving and life-sustaining education opportunities for the most vulnerable children in Sudan,” Malik said.

Mandeep O’Brien, UNICEF Sudan Representative said the children of Sudan need education support now more than ever.

“This Multi-Year Resilience Programme will provide inclusive, quality and protective learning environments to vulnerable girls and boys living in very difficult circumstances,” O’Brien said. “It safeguards their right to develop and thrive. With this investment, we have a chance to ensure that no child in Sudan is left behind, no matter their circumstances and where they come from because education can’t wait.”

According to ECW, before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, an estimated 4.3 million children were out of school in Sudan, with another 9.6 million experiencing prolonged absences during 2020. Schools are overcrowded and ill-equipped, teachers are underpaid and undertrained, and few children and adolescents are able to access remote learning opportunities.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

W. Bahr el Ghazal State uncovers 350 ghost teachers, to recruit qualified tutors

The ministry of education in Western Bahr el Ghazal State is set to recruit more than four hundred school teachers to improve the learning program in 2022 after recently uncovering ghost teachers.

This was disclosed by the state minister of education, Egidio Arkangelo Safu, after his ministry uncovered more than 300 ghost teachers during a recent screening process while paying salaries.

“One of the things that we noticed is that there is a lack of qualified teachers in the schools,” Minister Safu said. “After the recent local screening, we have identified over three hundred and fifty ghost names of teachers so we actually need to recruit over four hundred teachers in their places.”

He added: “It is a huge number and the fear is we may not get all the numbers but we hope to get them before the new academic year. The teachers are already on board and training and ready to start teaching in the schools.”

The minister said they are looking to recruit graduates and people who have completed secondary school.

“We want at least people who have completed senior 4 and have passed in English subject because our main area is English,” Safu said. “We will train them to be able to communicate properly with the children, build confidence in them and give them skills of presentation and also reading skills.”

Minister Safu said the increment in teachers’ salaries last year will improve their performance.

Source: Radio Tamazuj

SPLA-IO Kit Gwang, Juba delegation start talks in Khartoum

The breakaway faction of the SPLA-IO allied to General Simon Gatwech Dual, also known as the Kit Gwang faction, started negotiations with a delegation from the South Sudan government in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Tuesday.

The government delegation is led by President Salva Kiir’s security advisor Tut Gatluak Manime.

James Kalany Mamoun, the press secretary for the office of the interim head of the Kit Gwang faction, General Simon Gatwech told Radio Tamazuj that the negotiations started on Tuesday at the Sudanese Military Academy.

He said Gen. Gatwech’s team is led by Samuel Morris Oraj.

According to Kalany, Tuesday’s session was inaugural, and talks would officially start on Wednesday.

“The negotiations are chaired by Sudan, as the head of IGAD,” Kalany added.

In an interview with Radio Tamazuj in September last year, General Johnson Olony, one of the leaders of the Kit Gwang Declaration, said they had started negotiating with President Salva Kiir to expedite the implementation of the security arrangements.

He also said that they were open to joining forces with President Kiir’s SPLA if they were ready to ensure the full implementation of the peace agreement.

The SPLA-IO Kit Gwang group broke away from SPLA-IO led by First Vice President Riek Machar after accusing him of not representing their interests, lack of implementation of the security arrangements, poor governance, lack of transparency, and nepotism.

Since then, forces loyal to both camps have been fighting in areas of Upper Nile State.

Source: Radio Tamazuj