New solutions urgently needed to tackle smoking worldwide: experts to convene in Poland at the Global Forum on Nicotine

GFN23

Tobacco harm reduction can hasten an end to smoking-related death and disease. Copyright-free photo by Mathew MacQuarrie on Unsplash.

WARSAW, Poland, June 19, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — International public health specialists, scientists, doctors, regulators, consumers and manufacturers are convening this week in the Polish capital to discuss new ways of tackling global smoking-related death and disease. Over four days, 70 speakers and hundreds of delegates at the tenth annual Global Forum on Nicotine (21 – 24 June) will focus on tobacco harm reduction, which encourages adults who cannot quit smoking to switch to safer nicotine products.

Despite decades of tobacco control efforts, a billion people still smoke worldwide, with eight million smoking-related deaths each year. Four in five smokers live in low- and middle-income countries, least able to cope with the resulting burden of disease, and smoking is a major cause of health inequalities in higher income countries. The thousands of toxins released when tobacco burns cause smoking-related diseases, not nicotine, which is a comparatively low-risk substance.

Vapes (e-cigarettes), pasteurised snus, nicotine pouches and heated tobacco products enable people to use nicotine without burning tobacco, significantly reducing health risks compared to continued smoking. Global estimates suggest 112 million people use these products, despite inconsistent regulation and outright prohibition in some countries. Smoking prevalence is falling faster where these products are available and appropriately regulated, such as in the UK, Sweden, Japan and New Zealand.

GFN23 will tackle the opportunities and challenges of tobacco harm reduction, including the development of regulatory systems that enable adult smokers to access safer products, while reducing youth uptake. Open to all, free live-streamed sessions from the event, translated from English to Spanish and Russian, will cover the last decade of science around safer nicotine products and their efficacy in smoking cessation, the environmental impact of safer products in comparison to combustible cigarettes and the detrimental impact of moral stances and ideology on science and regulation.

While it supports harm reduction for HIV/AIDS prevention and substance use, the World Health Organization opposes harm reduction for tobacco. Ibero-American experts at GFN23 will discuss the upcoming WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control COP10 in Panama this November, where decisions on the future of safer nicotine products may have grave implications for global public health.

Ahead of GFN23, Gerry Stimson, Emeritus Professor at Imperial College London and the event’s co-founder, called for international tobacco control leaders to adopt rational and pragmatic approaches that prioritise saving lives: “Ideology must be set aside and people must be supported to quit by all available means.”

The Global Forum on Nicotine (GFN) is the only international conference to focus on the role of safer nicotine products that help people switch from smoking, in an approach called tobacco harm reduction. Find out more and register to watch online sessions free at https://gfn.events/

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/feaca847-b6e8-4140-9da8-e5658737df26

Ruth Goldsmith, GFN23 Communications Lead
ruth@gfn.events
https://gfn.events/

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 1000825970

SAABSOFT introduces new property listing from Bitrix24 CRM

SAABSOFT is leading digital transformation for Real Estate sector

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, June 19, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitrix24 partners with Dubai-based SAABSOFT company to drive the digital transformation in the MENA region. It has been announced on 1st April, 2022 that the companies have entered into a strategic partnership to layer new technology into business strategy and operations of SMEs in the UAE and MENA region.

As a result of the agreement, SAABSOFT has implemented Bitrix24 CRM successfully for more than 300+ real estate companies in UAE. Due to high demand in the real estate sector, UAE’s market has witnessed an increase in real estate start-up companies which leads to high competition in the market.

On 1st April 2023, SAABSOFT has launched the latest integrated solution with Bitrix24 for the real estate sector to publish and manage property listings from Bitrix24 to all the popular real estate portals as a part of digital transformation efforts.

Mr. Ashraf Alsaab – CEO and Founder of SAABSOFT said, “The future is bionic, and it’s already here. It’s a new paradigm, powered by technology and harnessed by people. To thrive, you must focus on outcomes that will make a difference. Each company needs to achieve the best automation process that can save time, cost and the best performance.”

Saabsoft company – The Bitrix24 Dubai, Bitrix24 UAE and MENA region partner – is a leading software company that exists remarkably in the field since 2018, based in Dubai, UAE and founded by IT experts with over 20 years of experience in technology. Saabsoft offers services in key areas of: Digital Transformation, Software Development, Software Solutions, Business Automation, Digital Marketing and Research & Data Analysis.

Media Contact:
Baher Shokry
Business Development Manager
b.shokry@saabsoft.com
+971 50 4871465

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 1000825835

Palestine condemns Israel’s Jenin attack as ‘dangerous escalation’

Palestine has condemned Israel’s use of a military helicopter during a raid in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin, which killed five Palestinians and injured 91 others.

An Israeli military helicopter fired missiles at a residential building during the raid early on Monday, marking the first use of military aircraft by Israel in the occupied West Bank since 2002, witnesses said.

In a statement, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry termed Israel’s use of a military helicopter during the raid as a “dangerous escalation” that came as “an attempt by Israel’s ruling coalition to export its internal crisis and problems to the Palestinian scene.”

The ministry called for a firm stance from the United States and the international arena “that rises to the level of what our people are facing from settler colonialism and crimes of persecution, oppression and abuse.”

The United Nations rights chief, Volker Turk, said he was “extremely worried by the deteriorating situation” in Palestine.

“Unlawful killings of Palestinians by the Israeli security forces have increased, including apparent extrajudicial executions,” he added.

‘Open war’

The Palestinian Authority said it will convene an emergency meeting to discuss the repercussions of the Israeli raid in Jenin.

“A fierce and open war is being waged against the Palestinian people politically, security and economically by the occupation forces,” Hussein Al-Sheikh, Secretary of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)’s Executive Committee, said in a statement.

“We are in the midst of a comprehensive battle on all fronts that requires the unity of our people in the face of this aggression,” he added.

Tensions have been running high across the occupied West Bank in recent months amid repeated Israeli raids into Palestinian towns.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War. The territory is home to around 2.9 million Palestinians, as well as over 500,000 illegal Jewish settlers.

Nearly 165 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since the start of this year, according to Palestinian figures. At least 21 Israelis have also been killed in separate attacks during the same period.

Source: TRTworld.com

Israel made these Palestinians homeless – not once but twice, even thrice

On the afternoon of May 13, days after Israel began bombarding the besieged Gaza, Ezdin Abu Hamada, 16, and his family, were glued to the TV screen in the living room of their two-storey house. Someone from Israel called his father with an ultimatum: ‘Get out of the building. It can be bombed.’

Tel Aviv says its missiles and artillery only targets Palestinian gunmen hiding in the densely populated areas. But what it often doesn’t talk about is the collateral damage the Israeli strikes have on the lives and homes of ordinary civilians.

Half an hour after the call to Hamada’s father, Israeli rockets and shells rained down on an apartment building located not far from Hamada’s house.

“We ran from our house and watched what happened from a few miles away. I saw all the destruction,” Hamada says.

“The building that was struck was squashed like a biscuit.”

The shockwaves and impact of the Israeli ammunition destroyed Hamada’s home as well. Walls came down, window glass shattered to pieces, rooms collapsed onto each other.

“Nothing was left standing there,” he says.

Afterwards, Hamada waded through the debris of his house, searching for anything that could be salvaged. My school books, my tablets, even clothes – everything was ruined. And I have exams coming up.”

In the recent Israeli assault on Gaza that began in early May, hundreds of Palestinians homes were partly damaged or completely destroyed, forcing more than a thousand people to live in temporary accommodations, with relatives or tents, says Salama Marouf, the director of Gaza’s government media office.

Hamada’s family of eight including his five siblings have moved into his grandfather’s home in the Sabra neighborhood in the heart of Gaza.

“We all live in one room. There’s no other to spare,” he says.

All over again

Losing a home like this is painful. Losing it twice can be traumatizing and that’s what Hamada is going through.

In 2014, when he was ten-years-old, Israel had carried out a brutal series of airstrikes in Gaza, killing 74 people.

That flare-up destroyed the Hamada family home. The attacks began in the night and went on for the whole day, he recalled in between sobs.

“At that time, I had no idea what was going on. I just heard heavy and constant bombing everywhere,” said Hamada. “I heard my family say the region had been bombed by tanks, artillery and jets, and that many people bled to death inside their homes because medical personnel couldn’t enter.”

With dead bodies strewn on the roads, Hamada says his family hopped on to a truck and moved to their grandfather’s home.

They lived like that for 5 years until his father bought a house in Deir al Balah neighborhood, from where they were displaced last month.

“We thought our new house was in a relatively safer neighbourhood.

I don’t know how long we will have to endure this,” says Hamada.

‘A second Nakba’

Intisar Muhanna, 95, went through what she says is a second Nakba– the forced expulsion of Palestinians in 1948 from the lands, which now make up Israel.

On midnight of May 12, the same day Hamada and his family looked at their home being bombed, Israeli warplanes targeted the 5-storey building where Muhanna had lived for 60 years.

“My husband built this floor by floor over the years. We lived there with her kids,” she says.

All that hard work, all those memories turned into a pile of debris within seconds.

When Muhanna says this was the second Nakba for her, she isn’t speaking figuratively. She literally lived through the horrid experience of the Nakba, known to the Palestinians as the ‘Catastrophe’.

She was 20-years-old when Israeli forces attacked Palestinian villages in 1948, driving out tens of thousands of Palestinians from their ancestral homes.

Muhanna had to leave al Masmyya, a village located some 41 km from Gaza, where she was born.

“They destroyed the town, they tore down the two mosques and schools and one tiny clinic. They built an Israeli settlement on top of them, changing the area’s historical characteristics,” Muhanna says.

In al Masmyya, she lived in a house that was surrounded by various types of trees.

“I was happy with the modest life we lived. We worked on the field and took care of animals and birds.”

Living in a tent

Samir Taha, 73, lives in a three-story building, along with 20 others, in Beit Lahia, a north eastern part of Gaza. They were all displaced after the building was destroyed in the recent conflict.

Taha’s son received a call from the Israeli army officer, telling him to vacate the building within 15 minutes. They ran out barefoot. They weren’t able to take anything along.

“Three missiles struck the home I lived in for 40 years, knocking it to the ground in an instant. I got married in this house and brought up my kids and my nephews in that place,” Taha said.

This was not the first time an Israeli assault targeted the building he lived in, forcing him and his family to run for their lives. They were displaced in 2012, 2014 and now in May 2023 during Israeli military raids.

“My family and I only had a few years to enjoy our new home which was rebuilt in 2017 after being destroyed in the 2014 offensive,” he added.

After the recent assault, Taha pitched a tent near the debris of his home. He intends to remain there with his family until the building is rebuilt – a repeat of a life under the open sky as they lived for several years after the 2014 Israeli aggression.

“It is my land, and my family and I will continue to rebuild the house every time they destroy it. Their wars will not frighten us or cause us to abandon the land.”

Source: TRTworld.com

Israel has become a legal nightmare for Palestinians

Since 2016, Mohammad el-Halabi, a Palestinian from Gaza, has languished in an Israeli prison for a crime he did not commit. He was convicted by an Israel court in June 2022, on false charges of terrorism.

In the absence of any substantive evidence El-Halabi, an operations manager at the Christian relief NGO, World Vision International, was accused by Israel of supporting Hamas, which controls the besieged Palestinian territory.

I have been a lawyer in Israel for almost 25 years, representing many defendants, Israelis and Arabs alike, in Israel’s court system. I have seen firsthand how, for Palestinians, a fair trial is at best a highly remote or distant possibility. As Halabi’s defence attorney, I also saw how such a fair trial for Palestinians is flat-out impossible.

El-Halabi’s trial is a microcosm of the impossible task Palestinians face in proving their innocence. El-Halabi was sentenced to 12 years in prison last year.

As his trial has progressed, I have come to realise that he has been convicted on false statements and so-called “evidence”.

For example, the Israeli prosecutors routinely hid information, that they were using to frame el-Halabi. In a fair trial, I’d be able to see all evidence without any complications, in line with the right of the defence to review what the prosecution submits in a court against the accused.

At the beginning of his arrest, Israel had even denied el-Halabi legal representation and he was not allowed to see any lawyer for two months.

When my team and I began probing the prosecution for evidence against my client, the court twisted rules to make sure that actual evidence against el-Halabi – that might have exonerated him – was not admitted for trial.

If this isn’t enough, take a look at how the trial (read: mistrial) has proceeded so far.

Where’s the evidence?

The prosecution did not offer a single piece of objective evidence to support or substantiate the claims against el-Halabi throughout the trial.

He was charged with diverting funds to Hamas while working with World Vision. Israeli investigators confiscated all the records and documents related to various projects of the organisation. They also took custody of the NGO’s bank accounts and related records concerning its general and specific activity in Gaza.

During his testimony, the lead investigator admitted that they didn’t examine or vet any of the documents they confiscated, claiming that there were too many documents to go over!

He also admitted knowing nothing about how exactly the organisation’s funds were diverted.

The evidence that we, the defence team, meticulously collected, was not entertained by Natan Zlochower, the lead judge in the case (out of a panel consisting of 3 judges), who time and again said it must be “untrue” since it contradicts charges against el-Halabi.

Can’t copy the documents

At the start of the trial, the prosecution separated the evidence into three sections: one visible part, which included nothing against el-Halabi, and two hidden parts.

The second part is so secret that neither the defence nor the court can see or know what it contains.

Moreover, the defence was also denied a copy of the third part. I was only allowed to examine a copy (not original) of this evidence in the presence of two investigators, preventing me from copying anything for the record.

The prosecution even refused to let defence specialists review the documents, even after a preliminary assessment revealed that the supposed evidence was a forgery.

Even when I was allowed to take notes on the evidence, I was asked to write it down on the prosecutor’s laptop. Even my arguments to the court had to be typed on that laptop, in front of state investigators. And the laptop was brought in only at times that were convenient for the investigators!

The court even came up with a new “rule” that barred me from taking notes and questioning the validity of confidential evidence.

Where are the witnesses?

The prosecution failed to bring any witness who can testify against el-Halabi.

At one point during the trial, the prosecution claimed it was convinced that el-Halabi would prevent witnesses, workers and contractors in Gaza from testifying before the court.

Knowing he was innocent, el-Halabi himself tried to call the witnesses. But then the prosecution suddenly objected to his doing that. It succeeded in blocking the witnesses from ever coming before the judge in part because they were not given permits to cross the border into Israel and were threatened with arrests.

The main witness, who was threatened with arrest but showed up nevertheless, testified in court and completely refuted all the claims of the prosecution.

Hindrance in collection of evidence

As a defence attorney, I requested permission to enter Gaza in order to interview the witnesses and go over World Vision’s documents.

Israeli authorities didn’t let me, saying interviews of potential witnesses for the purpose of preparation for the court hearings will only be allowed in a room provided by Israel at the border crossing.

The witnesses must also be photographed and recorded on video and audio by Israeli authorities as a condition for my meeting with them.

Falling back on criminals

Of all the difficulties and peculiarities in the case, the most jarring was the court’s choice to rely completely, without any investigation, on the testimony of a convicted criminal.

This still applied when the prosecution’s own evidence completely contradicted his testimony.

For example, el-Halabi was convicted in 2010 of recording GPS coordinates at the Erez crossing point between Gaza and Israel, despite the fact that Israel’s official entrance and departure report shows that he did not travel through the border between 2005 and 2012.

Similarly, el-Halabi has been accused of shipping hundreds of tons of iron through trucks via the Kerem Shalom border, despite the fact that World Vision never imported iron into Gaza and never moved anything on trucks through the Kerem Shalom crossing. This was verified by Israel’s own records.

El-Halabi was convicted of transferring tens of millions of US dollars to Hamas, an amount that exceeded World Vision’s entire budget in Gaza.

The court concluded that the hearsay testimony of a convicted criminal superseded any proven facts. It did so being fully aware that el-Halabi is not guilty of any crime and that the charges levelled against him are completely baseless.

The entire goal of el-Halabi’s prosecution was to put pressure on foreign organisations in Gaza to cease their activities thereby claiming that their humanitarian aid was being diverted to fund militancy. In that, Israel has succeeded. World Vision suspended its operations in Gaza in response to el-Halabi’s detention.

Throughout his trial, the prosecution put pressure on el-Halabi to cooperate, ultimately making it easier for Israel to outlaw humanitarian help to poor Palestinians. In return, Israel promised el-Halabi he would be released from prison and be reunited with his family.

Heroically, el-Halabi refused. He opposed any cut to the desperately needed humanitarian help and instead sacrificed himself and has been enduring separation from his family.

The judges who presided over his detention and the attempts for mediation told him he had little hope of defeating the system and would be convicted, in any trial that took place in Israel’s judicial system. It didn’t matter that he was innocent. Still, he maintained before those judges that the truth is important. And that his humanitarian work in Gaza was a lifeline for Palestinians, from which he’d never waver.

Today el-Halabi or simply “Mohammad”, as I call him, remains in prison for this reason. The United Nations has acknowledged him as a humanitarian hero.

There was a chance for Israel to demonstrate that there is a proper legal system within the state, during el-Halabi’s trial. That never happened.

I hope the appeal of the trial verdict will yield a just outcome – something that Israel has denied to my client so far.

Source: TRTworld.com

Five Palestinians killed in Israeli military raid on Jenin

At least five Palestinians including a fifteen year old boy – have been killed during an Israeli raid in the city of Jenin in the occupied West Bank. Dozens more were injured, and several remain in critical condition. Seven Israeli soldiers were also wounded when the vehicle they were travelling in was targeted. More than 160 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since the beginning of this year, most of them during similar military raids. Shoaib Hasan has the latest.

Source: TRTworld.com

Fiercest fighting in years erupts in West Bank city of Jenin, at least 5 Palestinians killed

The Israeli military raided the West Bank city of Jenin on Monday, striking the refugee camp with helicopter gunships. This has triggered the most ferocious fighting in the occupied territory in years, killing five Palestinians, including a 15-year-old boy, and wounding over 91 others, health officials said, including 12 in critical condition. Seven Israeli soldiers were also wounded, the army said.

Source: France24.com

Jordan welcomes resumption of UAE-Qatar diplomatic ties

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates on Monday welcomed the resumption of diplomatic representation between the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, in adherence to the Al-Ula agreement. According to Sinan Majali, the ministry’s official spokesperson, the agreement is crucial for enhancing collaboration among Arab nations and promoting united Arab endeavors that benefit the region as a whole. In January 2021, the Al-Ula agreement was announced, effectively putting an end to the Gulf crisis. Since then, the agreement’s signatories have engaged in a series of meetings to implement the deal and establish normalized bilateral relations.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Jordan, Tunisia talk ties

The Jordanian-Tunisian Parliamentary Committee met with Chargé d’Affaires of the Tunisian Embassy in Jordan Mohammed Ali Binhabib on Monday to discuss prospects of strengthening relations, particularly in the parliamentary domain. MP Zainab Bedoul, the Committee Head, said Jordan and Tunisia see eye to eye on the Palestinian cause, the central issue in the Middle East, noting the historical, deep-rooted ties between Jordan and the North African Arab country and the need to boost ties in numerous fields. She said the Lower House has successfully implemented key reform legislation to foster political development and promote the active involvement of youth and women. MPs Abeer Jabour and Aisha Hasanat stressed the need to capitalize on the expertise of both parliaments, calling for holding joint exhibitions to showcase local products and encourage tourist and economic and educational exchange between the two countries. During the meeting, Binhabib was briefed on legislation passed by the lower House to advance political, economic, and administrative life in the Kingdom. He pointed to the distinguished and solid Tunisian-Jordanian relations, pointing to an agreement signed by the two countries’ ministries of higher education for student exchange. Binhabib also commended a decision to abolish tourist visas between the two countries to support tourism.

Source: Jordan News Agency