All posts by Luis Moreno

Moreno Luis - is a business and economics reporter based in Barcelona. Prior to joining the BNE24 he was economics editor of the BBC Spaine and worked as an economics and political reporter for Murcia Tuday.

WHO Urges Global Vigilance Against Covid Variants Amid Evolving Threat

The director general of the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr. Tedros Adhanom, has encouraged all countries to “strengthen the supervision of Covid-19” and “continue to implement the recommendations to save lives” in the presence of the new variants of Omicron EG.5 and BA.2.86.

This was expressed in a press conference held this Friday in which he stressed that the covid “continues to be a global health threat”.

Although the WHO currently has less data on the incidence in the different countries because they have stopped collecting it, so “there has been an increase in hospitalizations, ICU admissions and deaths in some countries.”

In this sense, it has called on all countries to continue reporting on their covid situation so that “they can advise them on the risk of new variants.”

For her part, the WHO technical lead for covid, Dr. Maria Van Kerhove, explained that “the virus continues to evolve because there are a number of variants in circulation, all of them from Ómicron.”

“Surveillance is really important”

“Surveillance is really important so that we can follow trends,” he declared, assuring that “they only have hospitalization data from 19 countries”.

“Surveillance is important not only to track variants, but also to let individuals know if they are infected or not,” added Dr. Kerhove.

Thus, he explained that the new variant BA.2.86, commonly known as ‘Pirola’, “has more than 30 mutations in the spike protein, although only nine or ten cases of this variant have been detected so far”.

For this reason, it has been classified as “under monitoring” while waiting for more cases to be found and its biology to be further explored.

In this sense, the expert has affirmed that “the virus presents a threat because it is evolving and changing and it is not possible to predict with certainty what those changes will mean”.

“Large numbers of people are being reinfected, there has been an increase in hospitalizations in the last month, in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere, where we are in summer.

This is not to be expected if we think of a respiratory pathogen such as influenza, which usually peaks in the winter months in temperate regions of the planet.. And this worries us because the world has opened up,” said the doctor.

Finally, the expert concluded by warning that “governments must remain vigilant in the face of covid because the threat has not disappeared.”

Dutch Defense Minister Expects F-16 Fighters to be Delivered to Ukraine Within a Year

The Dutch Defense Minister, Kajsa Ollongren, has calculated this Friday that the military training of the first Ukrainian pilots in Denmark to fly F-16s will take at least “about six or eight months”, so she expects the delivery of the fighters promised to Ukraine will be made “within the next year”.

The acting minister, who returned to her country last Wednesday after a visit to Kiev where she discussed the delivery of the F-16s with the government of Volodimir Zelenski, explained that “the Ukrainians have surprised positively so far”, they are “super motivated” and are “technically good”.

And these circumstances, he adds, allow “to be so optimistic and to think that they will be successful in those six or eight months of training”, despite the fact that it normally takes more time to train pilots.

In this way, this means that the first batch of Ukrainian pilots, who have already started their training in Denmark, will be ready in February next year at the earliest.

As she explained when she was a guest on the Dutch television program Op1, the first fighters promised by the Netherlands are expected to arrive in Ukraine “over the next year”, since, in addition to pilot training, it is necessary to establish the necessary infrastructure for the F-16s in Ukraine, have spare parts and adequate weapons for these fighters, and be prepared for the maintenance of combat aircraft. Otherwise, he has noted, there is “no point” in simply supplying F-16s to Ukraine.

“As Many As Possible”

Ollongren is still unclear on how many F16s the Netherlands will supply to Ukraine, but has assured that the Dutch government wants to “supply as many as possible” of the 42 fighters it has.

“We still have to put that puzzle together,” said the minister, who explained that Defense has 24 of them in use and needs several for training.

The Danish government has confirmed for the moment the donation of 19 F-16 fighters to Ukraine.

Both Denmark and the Netherlands are training the Ukrainian pilots together before the delivery of these fighters.

Thus, last Sunday, Zelensky landed by surprise in the Netherlands to take what he called “the most important agreement” reached during the war: the supply of F-16 fighters “to strengthen Ukraine’s air defenses.”

He also warned that kyiv “is not going to give up” and that it will deploy these planes “to keep Russian terrorists away from cities and towns” in Ukraine.

Fighter Jets Intercept Aircraft Violating Airspace Restrictions over Lake Tahoe

Two F-16 fighters and a helicopter responded Friday to a plane that violated airspace restrictions currently in place over the Lake Tahoe area, located between Nevada and California.. US President Joe Biden is currently on vacation here.

The incident occurred around 7:50 a.m. local time (2:50 p.m. GMT) when a civilian aircraft entered this restricted air zone, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) said in a statement.

Tragic Shooting Incident Leaves Multiple Dead and Injured at Historic Biker Bar in California

At least three people have died and another six have been wounded by the shots of an attacker, who was killed, in a shooting that took place on Wednesday night in a historic biker bar in the town of Trabuco Canyon, in California, according to the police.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office confirmed in a message on social networks, “four deaths at the scene, including the attacker, six taken to hospitals, five with gunshot wounds” and that law enforcement officers participated in the shooting, of the which “none were injured”. According to the Los Angeles Times, two of the injured are in critical condition.

Sergeant Frank González, spokesman for the sheriff’s office, informed the Los Angeles newspaper that at 7:04 p.m. a man armed with a gun inside the bar, who was shot.

The local television network KCAL reported that the attacker was a retired Ventura County Police officer, who was having a dispute with his wife at the scene.

It festered to the point that he ended up shooting several of the people present. The police officers who came to the scene killed the attacker.

Cook’s Corner is a biker hangout since the 1970s, located at the junction of El Toro, Santiago Canyon and Live Oak Canyon roads, near O’Neill Regional Park, and featuring live music performances.

In a message online, Orange County Supervisor (where Trabuco Canyon is located), Katrina Foley, lamented this “senseless” mass shooting, this time in our backyard.

In the United States, mass shootings are usually considered to be those that leave at least four people dead or injured, not counting the attacker.

So far in 2023, more than 640 have been registered across the country, according to the organization Gun Violence Archive, which maintains a database on gun violence.

BRICS Group Expands with New Member Additions: Argentina, Saudi Arabia, and More

The BRICS group of emerging economies, made up of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, has agreed to join Argentina, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Ethiopia, the United Arab Emirates and Iran, South African President Cyril announced today. Ramaphosa.

“As the five BRICS members, we have reached an agreement on the guiding principles, standards, criteria and procedures of the BRICS expansion process, Ramaphosa said on the last day of the XV Summit of Heads of State and Government of the group in Johannesburg, which began this Tuesday.

“We have decided to invite these countries to become full members of the BRICS from January 1, 2024,” the South African president stressed.

Ramaphosa pointed out that there is “a consensus on the first phase of this expansion process”, in a joint press conference with the presidents of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, China, Xi Jinping; Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who represents Vladimir Putin.

Some forty countries had expressed their desire to join that club, according to the South African government, which this year holds the bloc’s rotating presidency and had received “formal expressions of interest” from 23 countries, including Argentina, Bolivia, Cuba, Honduras and Venezuela.

China had especially supported the expansion of the BRICS, which are seeking more weight in international institutions, hitherto dominated by the United States and Europe, every time that Beijing wants to expand its influence in competition with the United States.

In the case of Argentina, Lula stressed this Tuesday that “it is very important that it be in the BRICS”. Brazil is the main trading partner of neighboring Argentina.

Brazil, Russia, India and China created the BRIC group in 2006, which South Africa joined in 2010 by adding the letter S to the acronym.

The block represents more than 42% of the world population and 30% of the planet’s territory, as well as 23% of the gross domestic product and 18% of world trade.

Yevgeni Prigozhin: The Enigmatic Journey of Putin’s Chef and Wagner Group Leader

Yevgueni Prigozhin, known worldwide as the leader of the Wagner mercenary group, died this Wednesday at the age of 62 after the private plane in which he was traveling with ten other people crashed in the Russian region of Tver.

The leader of the mercenaries participated in the war in Ukraine together with the Russian Army and just two months ago he led a failed military rebellion against the Kremlin, but who was Yevgueni Prigozhin really?

Born on June 1, 1961 in what is now St. Petersburg, his ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin began when Prigozhin, then a hot dog vendor at street stalls, distributed various food caterers to the Russian Army.

Prigozhin was nicknamed “Putin’s chef” due to his proximity to the president and his restaurant business, which he set up after he was pardoned from prison in 1990, where he spent almost ten years for various crimes.

The beginning of the relationship between Putin and Prigozhin took place in April 2000, shortly after the beginning of the term of the Russian president.

The first phase of the relationship between the two was purely commercial, but three years later, Putin would be celebrating his birthday on Prigozhin’s ship.

From the kitchen to leading a group of mercenaries

The future of ‘Putin’s chef’ changed its course with the start of the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Prigozhin recruited 35,000 prisoners who were released to fight alongside the Russian troops.

However, over time and also, within the framework of the war, he had harsh confrontations with the Russian Defense Ministry, which he accused of depriving his men of ammunition during campaigns as intense as the one waged in the city of Bakhmut.

For a long time Prighozin denied having created Wagner, but in September 2022 he acknowledged having founded this private military company in 2014, which is prohibited by law in Russia, but he assured that it had been born as a group of patriots.

This decision gave the organization a face and made it a star on social media, constantly announcing the group’s operations against Ukrainian forces.

The Wagners became a military ace for the Kremlin in its invasion of Ukraine, as they managed to advance into areas where the Russian army. Yevgeni Prigozhin’s men managed to take the city of Bakhmut after long fighting.

The ‘Putin chef’ recruited mercenaries from both Africa, Belarus and the cities of Donetsk and Lugansk, making the group number between 2,000 and 4,000 soldiers in January 2023, according to The Times.

The main confrontation between the Wagner leader and the Russian government took place on June 24, 2023, after he rose up against the Putin regime by taking the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don and marching on Moscow in response to alleged attacks.

Russians against their positions. Prigozhin assured that his troops would blockade the city until they had in their power the chief of the Russian General Staff, Valeri Gerasimov, and the Defense Minister, Sergei Shoigu, with whom he had been fighting harshly for months.

Vladimir Putin described this performance as a “betrayal” by the leader of the Wagner Group, although he agreed to meet with him after the failed rebellion.

Thanks to the mediation of the Belarusian president, Alexandr Lukashenko, Prighozin gave up that same day and ordered his men to stop the operation.

On June 27, Lukashenko confirmed that Prigozhin was in exile in Belarus. After almost two months without hearing from the Wagner boss, he reappeared in a video shared via Telegram in which he suggested meeting in Africa to make Russia

“even bigger on all continents”, but he finally died on the 23rd. August after the plane he was traveling in crashed.

Beyond the Russian borders

In parallel, the Wagner boss has operated with his mercenaries in different war scenarios such as the Syrian war and various armed conflicts on the African continent, such as Mali, where he instructed local forces to protect the Government, an action that was subject of strong controversy.

The actions of the Wagner Group led to serious international sanctions. The first came to him in December 2021 from the European Union (EU) for serious human rights violations in several African countries, including Mali, the Central African Republic and Libya, where he has also been deployed.

In the case of Libya, the Military Prosecutor General’s Office linked Wagner to the murder of 26 students at the Tripoli Military College, the bombing of the illegal immigration headquarters in Tajoura, which caused the death of 63 emigrants, and the bombing of the city of Al Zawiya, committed during the war in that country between 2019 and 2020.

The Wagner Group would have recently begun to get involved with the new Government of Niger, which requested collaboration from the mercenaries after the coup d’état that occurred in the country on July 26.

Niger’s new military junta pleaded for help as the deadline for the release of ousted president Mohamed Bazoum loomed. The latest images shared by Yevgueni Prigozhin suggested that he could be on the African continent with the aim of recruiting new soldiers.

Donald Trump Dismisses Criminal Indictments and Gears Up for 2024 Election Battle

Former US President Donald Trump on Wednesday called his four criminal indictments “bullshit” and said US citizens “get it” as he keeps rising in the polls.

“bullshit. It’s all bullshit, it’s horrible,” he said clearly agitated during an interview posted on Twitter with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson .

Trump defended that citizens are “smart” since, in general, if someone is charged, they go down in the polls.

The former president is the favorite to win the Republican nomination for the 2024 presidential elections, where he hopes to face again the current president, Joe Biden, against whom he lost in the 2020 elections.

Some elections that Trump continues to maintain were fraudulent, despite the fact that the result has been endorsed by the Justice and the main media in the country.

Precisely his insistence on not accepting the 2020 electoral outcome has made him receive two of his four criminal charges:

one in Washington DC. for allegedly trying to reverse the results at the national level and another in Georgia for trying to do the same in that state.

During the interview with Carlson, which was published at the same time as the first GOP debate began in Milwaukee, Trump again defended his belief that then-Vice President Mike Pence could have stopped confirmation of Biden’s election victory by refusing to to accept the result. Most experts agree that, to do so, the Republican would have gone against the Constitution.

Trump stood firm on his position and accused the prosecutor in charge of his case in Georgia, Fani Willis, of denying him his right to doubt the election results.

The former president also spoke of the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021 and assured that there was “much love” in the crowd gathered in front of the US Legislative headquarters.

That day, five people died and dozens of officers were injured when a mob of Trump supporters tried to stop the confirmation of Biden’s election victory.

The role played by the ex-president that day is part of the Washington DC criminal indictment

Asked if he thinks the United States is headed for civil war, Trump said: “I don’t know.. There’s a level of passion I’ve never seen and a level of hate I’ve never seen. It’s a dangerous combination.”

BRICS Countries Seek Equal Footing in Global Arena: Shaping the New Bipolar Order

The BRICS no longer want to show themselves to the world as five developing countries, but want to be on an equal footing with the United States and the European Union.

And it is that Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa ask that they be taken seriously in the new bipolar order, also marked by the Russian invasion of Ukraine: the states, meeting these days in Johannesburg, consider that their economic potential is more enough not to be on a second step.

“The changes that have taken place in the BRICS economies over the past decade have gone a long way in transforming the shape of the global economy,” said South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is holding the presidency.

In another era, these five countries were on a kind of waiting list against the great powers, but the scenario has changed, especially for China.

Beijing not only sets the pace for this group, but has also become a world engine, especially at a technological level.

“Together, the BRICS countries represent a quarter of the world economy, constitute a fifth of world trade and are home to more than forty percent of the world’s population,” said the

South African president, who also indicated that the collaboration between governments goes beyond “strengthening relations between governments”.

Likewise, the Brazilian leader, Lula da Silva, has come to ask at the summit “the use of a reference currency” to promote commercial relations.

The BRICS, however, coincide in having a different vision of the war in Ukraine, especially since they have Russia in it: they look from the equidistance to the anger of the Western bloc, to which they present themselves as a “counterweight”.

The conflict has remained in the background, but South Africa and China have found space to issue a joint statement.

“The parties agreed that dialogue and negotiation are the only feasible way out to resolve the Ukrainian crisis and they will insist on promoting peace and talks to play a constructive role in the political solution of the issue,” they explained, again representing the position of the Asian giant, which continues to be viewed with suspicion by Washington and Brussels.

In this sense, Xi Jinping and Ramaphosa have agreed to “continue to strengthen cooperation in international affairs and multilateral institutions, and jointly safeguard the international system with the United Nations as the core”, relying on International Law, safeguarding the rights and interests of developing countries” and respecting national sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The tone is almost always the same for these countries, in a meeting also marked by the absence of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has delegated his Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov.

Brazil, for its part, believes that the time has come for greater economic integration in the group, precisely to compete with Western players.

Thus, Lula da Silva has urged “the adoption of a reference unit of account for trade between the BRICS countries that will not replace our national currencies”.

And he gave as an example of this “progress” the New Development Bank (NBD), which was established seven years ago, with “positive” results in the eyes of the five states.

“The New Development Bank already represents a milestone in effective collaboration between emerging economies and is expected to be the world leader in financing projects that address the most pressing challenges of our time,” Lula concluded.

Suez Canal Traffic Suspended Briefly After Collision Between Tankers

A “slight collision” between a tanker and an oil tanker in the Suez Canal caused the suspension of traffic for several hours on the important maritime route, which has not yet recovered its regular traffic, which, according to the managing authority of the route, “It will resume in a few hours.”

The incident, the seventh so far this year, took place last morning when “a slight collision occurred between the liquefied gas tanker BW Lesmes and the oil tanker that was following it Burri”, from the Cayman Islands, the president confirmed. of the Suez Canal Authority, Lieutenant General Osama Rabie, in a statement.

Rabie explained that the crash occurred “at kilometer 144 of the seaway due to the sudden stop of the BW Lesmes due to a technical failure in the steering and machinery, while the intensity of the current pushed the Burri towards the stopped ship”.

He also pointed out that several tugboats “managed to deal with the emergency situation” to remove the two vessels out of the sea lane.

Rabie sent a reassuring message noting that “regular traffic will resume in a few hours” and that the “light” crash has not caused “serious damage or pollution incidents” in the channel, although he said that “the crew of the Burri tanker reported a sudden malfunction in the steering”.

“Regular navigation in the canal will resume in both directions within a few hours, as the ships of the northern convoy are due to resume their passage as soon as the Burri tanker is towed out of the way,” he stressed.

The Singapore-flagged BW Lesmes is 295 meters long, 46 meters wide and has a capacity of 121,000 tons, while the Burri is about 250 meters long, 44 meters wide and has a tonnage of 67,000 tons, stressed the note.

Pro-government media said this morning that “a failure” caused the BW Lesmes to run aground in the seaway at dawn, and the state chain Cairo24 broadcast images of the “ship after successfully refloating it”, without disclosing details.

The Suez Canal, an important source of foreign currency earnings for Egypt, has been the scene of repeated incidents this year, although not all events of this nature have interrupted transit through the canal.

The last serious one took place in the first week of August due to the collision of a tugboat and an oil tanker that was crossing the seaway, which caused the temporary suspension of traffic in the channel.

That incident, which caused the death of a tugboat crew member, was at least the sixth of its kind so far this year, and it happened two months after the oil tanker “Seavigour” paralyzed traffic in the canal after suffering a failure mechanic for which it had to be refloated.

The most serious incident took place in March 2021 when the container ship “Ever Given” blocked the sea passage with its 400 meters in length and 18,000 containers on board.

This caused a huge traffic jam along this route, through which around 10% of the world’s merchandise passes and which brings in some 8,000 million dollars a year to Egypt.

Rising Food Prices: Impact of Climate Crisis on Agricultural Produce

To buy olive oil or not to buy? That may be the question in the coming months, when the liter reaches 10 euros, an unprecedented barrier on the supermarket shelves, where the virgin olive oil is already seen at 9.90.

But it is not only oil, but also mushrooms or meat, plus some seasonal vegetables (beans or chard) are among the foods that become more expensive due to the impact of the climate crisis (drought and heat waves) on crops, according to warn in agricultural cooperatives.

“The crops that are suffering the most now are those that are being developed or beginning to be harvested, the vineyard and, above all, the olive grove,” they explain in the Union of Small Farmers (UPA).

“But also extensive livestock farming could have to transfer the lack of pasture and the losses from the purchase of feed to the price,” they warn.

Other products, however, despite their poor harvest, will not see high prices because they are set by the global market. This is the case of cereal, which in Spain has had the worst harvest in three decades, or almonds, which is on its way to losing 30% of its expected production.

Oil, at 10 euros?

The price of oil is the most striking of the rise in food. It has reached record levels, an average of 9.4 euros per liter, the highest since there are records.

The so-called ‘liquid gold’ has become more expensive by 5% between June and July and accumulates a rise of 38.8% in the last year, according to the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

The cause behind this rise in prices is the accumulation of a bad past harvest and the dismal prospects for the autumn.

The producers attribute it to the “climate crisis”, the lack of rain and the high temperatures that seriously affected the flowering season in almost the entire Spanish olive-growing area. The sector expects to obtain 660,000 tons, half of an average campaign.

With two consecutive production campaigns below 50%, the sector believes it necessary for the Ministry of Agriculture and the Autonomous Communities to establish support measures for farmers and cooperatives.

At the consumer level, the sector has calculated that national consumption has fallen this year in Spain by more than 50% in the first semester, due to the sustained rise in prices. This behavior is what worries them the most.

According to Javier Fatás, from COAG, “We are in very significant drops in consumption, of a product for daily use and it is no longer just for the economy of farmers, but for the future of a star product of the Mediterranean diet and the healthy food”.

Fatás believes that recovering lost consumption habits is not easy, and at the same time asks to investigate any hint of speculation at the expense of the climate crisis.

“Because we see specific prices above 7 euros per liter of oil and offers in other places at four euros per liter.”

The “bad harvest” of the almond

COAG has also recently shown its concern about the “bad harvest” that is being recorded in almonds after the start of the harvest in the main production areas, with decreases of between 30% and 50% compared to the figures initially forecast.

The yields that are being obtained in kilograms per tree are “low or very low”, something that adds to problems with the size of the almonds.

“This is due to the negative impact of the different adverse weather episodes and, especially, the long period of drought suffered by the main producing areas”.

However, they do not predict a rise in almond prices, because it is the global market that sets the prices of nuts, and right now they are falling.

The same is happening with the damaged beet or cotton crops in the Guadalquivir area, which their producers find that they cannot reflect the drop in production in global prices.

No mushroom due to lack of straw

The drought has also caused an increase of almost 300% in the price of straw used for compost in mushroom production, which threatens the cultivation of this product, reports EFEagro.

In Spain some 130 million tons are produced per year, half in La Rioja and the other in Castilla La Mancha, which is dedicated to 75% fresh cultivation and 25% preserves, while in the La Rioja community it is al reverse.

Other products that are more expensive this summer due to the drought are green beans, chard or borage.

“With excessive heat, it does not produce well”, they explain in COAG, where, however, they assure that other widely consumed vegetables, such as cucumber or zucchini, are at reasonable prices.

Cereal, the worst harvest in 30 years

“A disaster”, this is how COAG describes the 2023 summer cereal harvest, about to end the campaign, with the last combine harvesters plowing through the wettest Spain.

In estimated figures, the agri-food cooperatives say that ten million tons of cereal will be collected in Spain, the worst figure in thirty years and 42.36% less than the previous year’s campaign. The annual average is 18.2 million tons.

However, according to COAG, these reduced harvests will not lead to the rise in prices, marked by the world campaign. What is to be expected is that prices remain the same, or are at risk of future fluctuations that may occur due to Ukraine and speculation.

Control speculation

Farmers, however, ask that in these critical situations for the primary sector, vigilance on price speculation (PDF) in the food chain be increased.

The most recent report, for example, from July, highlights that plums raised their price at destination by 558% compared to origin (0.42 to 6.58 euros). Or table olives rose 532% (0.91 to 6.32) and bananas, 411% (0.44 to 5.11).

The Union of Small Farmers and Ranchers (UPA) of Malaga, for its part, has quantified 85% less mango production and 60% less avocado production due to lack of irrigation.

“We are tired of denouncing the derisory prices that we charge for these products that have gone from being stars to starry.

It is true that, at the beginning of August, they paid well for mangos, around two euros, but as September approaches we already have the average between 1.40 and 1.50 euros. And next month the price will continue to drop.

On the other hand, on the shelf you find mangoes at prices that are almost four times what they pay us farmers,” they criticize.