Categories
Selected Articles

Kenya’s president calls for UN support for responsible transition of Haiti security mission

Kenyan President Urges UN for Transition of Haiti Security Mission

Kenyan President William Ruto has called upon the UN Security Council to facilitate a “responsible transition” of the Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS) in Haiti, as its current mandate approaches expiration in October, reports 24brussels.

Ruto’s remarks were made during a bilateral meeting with Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley at the second Africa-Caribbean Community (Caricom) summit held at the African Union (AU) headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He highlighted the urgency of addressing the security crisis in Haiti where armed gangs control nearly 90% of Port-au-Prince and other regions.

In a separate meeting with Bahamas Prime Minister Philip Edward Davis, Ruto discussed how the escalating insecurity in Haiti impacts neighboring countries and the broader region. He emphasized the necessity for prompt “consideration and adoption of a resolution that anchors international efforts in Haiti,” as the mission’s mandate nears its end.

The MSS, established at Haiti’s request and authorized by the Security Council in 2023, is primarily led by Kenya and financed by the U.S. After its deployment in 2024, the mission aimed to bolster Haiti’s security forces against heavily armed gangs. The mission currently consists of approximately 1,000 troops, predominantly from Kenya, with over 500 officers added from countries including Jamaica, Belize, the Bahamas, Guatemala, and El Salvador in January 2025.

Despite these efforts, violence in Haiti shows no signs of abating. UN data reported over 4,000 murders in the first half of 2025, a 24% increase compared to the previous year. Gang-related conflicts have displaced an estimated 1.3 million individuals from their homes.

The MSS’s mission is shadowed by memories of past UN operations in Haiti, which faced criticism for sexual exploitation of vulnerable women and responsibility for the 2010 cholera outbreak. Reportedly, nearly 2,800 killings were recorded between late 2022 and mid-2023 alone.

In response, Haitian civil society organizations have pressed for stricter accountability measures and enhanced human rights protections to prevent a repeat of past mistakes.

As of mid-2025, Ruto acknowledged setbacks in the mission, revealing that less than half of the promised 2,500 troops had been deployed, only 30% of the essential equipment had arrived, and the number of displaced individuals had surged to 1.1 million within a year of the mission’s deployment.

Ruto’s statements reflect the complexities and urgent need for effective international support in Haiti as the MSS grapples with mounting violence and operational challenges.

Categories
Selected Articles

Belgium secures 12 goals in two World Cup qualifying matches, rising to second in Group J

Belgium Secures Dominant Wins in World Cup Qualifiers

Belgium convincingly defeated Liechtenstein and Kazakhstan in their recent World Cup qualifying matches, rising to second place in Group J. The Red Devils triumphed 6-0 against Liechtenstein in Vaduz, followed by an identical scoreline against Kazakhstan in Brussels., reports 24brussels.

Coach Rudi Garcia lauded his team’s efforts after the match at Anderlecht’s Lotto Park on Sunday, stating, “We did an excellent job during the international break and gave more than was required.”

He acknowledged Kazakhstan’s previous performance against Wales, remarking, “Kazakhstan played a solid game against Wales on Thursday [a 1-0 defeat] and they didn’t deserve to lose. We played at our best today. I think we did a perfect job, and even more than that. This international break has been excellent, but we’re keeping our feet on the ground.”

New captain Youri Tielemans netted two goals against Liechtenstein, while Kevin De Bruyne and Jérémy Doku each scored twice against Kazakhstan.

Garcia praised De Bruyne’s impact on the team: “We cherish Kevin. It’s wonderful to see him at work here. He is so good, in a class of his own. His talent is obvious. He was still very motivated and is a true leader.”

“This international break has been excellent, but we’re keeping our feet on the ground.”

As it stands, North Macedonia leads Group J, one point ahead of Belgium and having played one game more. The two teams will clash at the Planet Group Arena in Ghent on 10 October, followed by Belgium’s match against Wales in Cardiff on 13 October.

The top team in the group earns an automatic spot in the World Cup next summer in the US and Mexico, while the second-placed team will enter a playoff.

Garcia acknowledged the challenges ahead: “Next month, we will be facing two opponents of a completely different calibre. Both matches will be decisive for World Cup qualification. We are looking forward to it, but we are not there yet.”

The Belgian team celebrates with fans following their 6-0 victory over Kazakhstan in Brussels, 7 September 2025 © BELGA PHOTO VIRGINIE LEFOUR

Categories
Selected Articles

China Sends Navy Ship to America’s Backyard

China’s Defense Ministry said the hospital ship’s mission sought to strengthen cooperation between China and relevant countries.
Categories
Selected Articles

High rents and cost of living: Can a young person afford to live in Dublin?

Do you think it is harder for a young person to live in Dublin now compared to 20 years ago? And what do you think is the main challenge? Let us know by answering our poll at the end
Categories
Selected Articles

Social Security: Payments Worth up to $5,108 Due This Week

The Social Security Administration sends monthly payments to more than 74 million Americans.
Categories
Selected Articles

What the papers say: Monday’s front pages

A wide range of stories feature across Monday’s newspaper front pages
Categories
Selected Articles

UK MPs describe government’s meat and cheese import ban as ineffective amid rising food safety concerns

UK Faces Growing Food Safety Crisis Amid Illegal Meat Imports

The UK is grappling with a severe food safety crisis as the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee revealed in a report on Monday that “alarming amounts” of meat and dairy products continue to be illegally imported for personal use and commercial sale, reports 24brussels.

While the government has banned personal imports of meat and dairy from the EU, the committee described this measure as “toothless.” Illegally imported products continue to infiltrate the UK through airports, seaports, and the Eurotunnel, finding their way into the country via freight, parcels, personal luggage, and passenger vehicles.

Committee chair Alistair Carmichael warned, “It would not be an exaggeration to say that Britain is sleepwalking through its biggest food safety crisis since the horse meat scandal.” He highlighted the significant risk of an animal disease outbreak, pointing to a single case of foot-and-mouth disease in Germany this year, which likely stemmed from illegally imported meat and cost the country one billion euros.

Carmichael urged the government to take decisive action by establishing a national taskforce, enhancing food crime intelligence networks, imposing “real deterrents,” and equipping port health and local authorities with necessary resources and powers.

In a nine-month inquiry into animal and plant health, experts presented disturbing evidence regarding border controls, citing instances of meat arriving in unsanitary conditions, often transported in the back of vans, concealed in plastic bags, suitcases, and cardboard boxes.

At the Port of Dover alone, port health officials reported intercepting 70 tons of illegal meat imports from vehicles between January and the end of April, a sharp increase from 24 tons during the same period in 2024.

Emma Miles, director general for food, biosecurity, and trade at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, addressed the Public Accounts Committee last week, noting uncertainty surrounding the increase in seizures of illegal meat at Dover. “When you’re catching people it might just mean you are doing better surveillance and enforcement,” she explained.

Categories
Selected Articles

GoFundMe Responds to Decarlos Brown Jr. Fundraiser

Brown Jr. is suspected of killing Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a North Carolina train.
Categories
Selected Articles

Mugshots of Capitol Hill intern murder suspects revealed as manhunt continues for third suspect

Eric Tarpinian-Jachym worked for Representative Ron Estes when he was killed in June attack.
Categories
Selected Articles

Why Paul Graham advises against founding a startup in high school

Paul Graham Y Combinator
“The thing to do now is to learn new things and increase your skill at the things you already know. Startups are rarely the optimal way to do this,” Paul Graham wrote on X on Saturday.

  • Paul Graham is the cofounder of Y Combinator.
  • The startup incubator has funded several prominent companies such as Airbnb, Dropbox, and Reddit.
  • Graham said students are better off learning new things than founding startups in high school.

Paul Graham, the cofounder of startup incubator Y Combinator, said on Saturday that students should think twice before launching their startups in high school.

“The thing to do now is to learn new things and increase your skill at the things you already know,” Graham wrote in a post on X.

“Startups are rarely the optimal way to do this. The point of a startup is to make something people want, not to learn,” he added.

Representatives for Graham at Y Combinator did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

Graham said it probably isn’t the best idea for a high schooler to start their entrepreneurship journey right away, even though they could learn from the experience.

“You will learn things in a startup, of course. But the way to learn the fastest is to work on whatever you’re most curious about, and you don’t have that luxury in a startup. In a startup, you have to work on whatever users want most,” he wrote in a follow-up post on X.

Most prominent startup founders began their ventures after graduating from high school. Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg dropped out of Harvard during their junior and sophomore years, respectively.

Some, like SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky, earned their bachelor’s degrees before starting their first companies.

Graham has posted career advice on X. In August, Graham said in a series of X posts that the best way to secure one’s job in the age of AI is to focus on honing one’s passions.

“What AI (in its current form) is good at is not so much certain jobs, but a certain way of working. It’s good at scutwork. So that’s the thing to avoid,” Graham wrote.

In his post, Graham said low-level programming jobs “are already disappearing.”

Top programmers, meanwhile, are still “being paid exceptional amounts,” he added.

“So if I had to boil down my advice to one sentence, it would be: Find a kind of work that you’re so interested in that you’ll learn to do it better than AI can,” Graham wrote.

Read the original article on Business Insider