As the war
between Hamas and Israeli forces enters a second day and dominates the
headlines, here are four other stories from around the world you may have
missed:
1. India’s Sikkim floods death toll rises to 77
At least 77
people have died in floods that hit India’s northeastern state of Sikkim, while
over 100 others are missing.
Violent
torrents struck Sikkim on Wednesday after a high-altitude glacial lake suddenly
burst.
Thousands of
people remain stranded in relief camps as bad weather delays airlift rescues.
Along with
destroying major infrastructure, the floods also damaged more than 1,200
houses, according to officials.
Police in
Jalpaiguri district, situated in the neighbouring West Bengal state, said 48
bodies were recovered on Sunday, including of eight Indian army personnel
stationed in Sikkim, a state on the remote frontiers of Nepal and China with a
sizeable military presence.
Thousands of
people remain stranded in relief camps as bad weather delays airlift rescues.
2. Two killed by avalanche on Shishapangma in Tibet
More than 50
climbers were climbing up the summit of Shishapangma in Tibet when an avalanche
crashed into them, killing an American mountaineer and her Nepali guide,
China’s state-run Xinhua News Agency reported on Sunday.
Two avalanches
hit the slopes of Shishapangma, the world’s 14th tallest peak, at elevations of
7,600 metres and 8,000 metres on Saturday, killing the American climber Anna
Gutu and her Nepali guide Mingmar Sherpa.
Another
American climber, Gina Marie Rzucidlo, and her Nepali guide, Tenjen Sherpa,
were missing, Xinhua said.
Climbers from
around the world were pushing up the summit in what is a popular month for
mountaineering in the Himalayas with eased monsoon rains making the conditions
more stable.
3. California governor vetoes caste discrimination bill
California was
just about to become the first US state to explicitly outlaw caste-based
discrimination – until Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill late on Saturday.
Last month,
California’s senate passed a bill that added caste as a form of protected
ancestry under state civil rights law, as well as education and housing codes.
Newsom called the bill “unnecessary” since the state already prohibits
discrimination based on various characteristics such as colour, ancestry and
national origin.
“Because
discrimination based on caste is already prohibited under these existing
categories, this bill is unnecessary,” he said in a statement.
The debate
around the bill has divided the Indian American community, with rights and
social justice groups backing it as the most significant victory in combatting
casteism in America. Proponents of the bill launched a hunger strike in early
September pushing for the law’s passage.
A United
Nations report in 2016 said at least 250 million people worldwide still face
caste discrimination in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Pacific regions, as
well as in various diaspora communities. Caste systems are found among
Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Jains, Muslims and Sikhs in South Asia.
Thenmozhi
Soundararajan, executive director of Equality Labs, the Oakland-based Dalit
rights group that has been leading the movement to end caste discrimination in
the US, said she still viewed the moment as a victory for caste-oppressed
people who have “organised and built amazing power and awareness on this
issue”.
4. COP28 chief calls for better adaptation to climate change
Sultan
al-Jaber, the president-designate of COP28 to be held in the United Arab
Emirates later this year, on Sunday said adaptation must be “front and centre”
of the climate agenda.
“We live in a
region of extreme heat, water scarcity and food insecurity. We are also
suffering harsh climate impacts, from droughts to the devastating floods of
Derna,” Jaber said, speaking at the MENA Climate Week in the Saudi Arabian
capital, Riyadh.
“To deliver for
our region we must put adaptation front and centre of the climate agenda.”
Jaber also
called on governments to abandon “fantasies” of hastily sideling existing
energy infrastructure in pursuit of climate goals.
“We cannot
unplug the energy system of today before we build the new system of tomorrow.
It is simply not practical or possible,” he said.
COP28 is
scheduled to take place in the UAE between November 30 and December 12.
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