Top Recent

Loading...
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews
Manchester United New Stadium Plan For Old Trafford Announced
~1.1 mins read
The famous English football club says the new 100,000-capacity venue will be built alongside the existing Old Trafford stadium. Manchester United plan to build a new two billion pound ($2.59 billion) 100,000-seat stadium that will be the biggest in Britain, next to the existing Old Trafford, the club announced. “Today marks the start of an incredibly exciting journey to the delivery of what will be the world’s greatest football stadium, at the centre of a regenerated Old Trafford,” United co-owner Jim Ratcliffe said in a statement on Tuesday. The British billionaire had been open about his desire for a new, state-of-the art ground since he became a minority owner in February last year, and the club have been studying whether to redevelop the existing stadium, which has been the club’s home since 1910, or build a new one. The club unveiled architectural designs for the new stadium at an event in London. The stadium will be part of a wider regeneration of the Old Trafford area, with British finance minister Rachel Reeves recently giving government backing for the plans. United say the project could create as many as 92,000 new jobs and will lead to the construction of 17,000 homes, and will be worth an additional 7.3 billion pound ($9.44 billion) per year to the British economy. Old Trafford has not had any major redevelopment since 2006 and criticism of the 74,140-seat stadium, England’s biggest club ground, has grown in recent years, with issues around its leaking roof and recent rodent sightings. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
Read this story on Aljazeera
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews
How Drones Killed Nearly 1,000 Civilians In Africa In Three Years
~4.2 mins read
Use of unmanned aircraft has surged in countries across Africa, often resulting in mass civilian deaths, new report finds. The use of drones by several African countries in their fight against armed groups is causing significant harm to civilians, according to a new report. More than 943 civilians have been killed in at least 50 incidents across six African countries from November 2021 to November 2024, according to the report by Drone Wars UK. The report, titled Death on Delivery, reveals that strikes regularly fail to distinguish between civilians and combatants in their operations. Experts told Al Jazeera that the death toll is likely only the tip of the iceberg because many countries run secretive drone campaigns. As drones rapidly become the weapon of choice for governments across the continent, what are the consequences for civilians in conflict zones? Is it time for the world to regulate the sale of drones? The report highlights how the number of African nations acquiring armed drones, specifically Medium Altitude, Long Endurance (MALE) drones, has increased dramatically in recent years. Since 2022, at least 10 African countries have obtained these weapons with governments justifying their purchases as a means to combat rebellions and security threats. However, the reality on the ground has often been different with many strikes leading to mass civilian casualties, raising concerns about human rights violations. Cora Morris, the report’s author, said drones have been marketed as an “efficient” and modern way to conduct warfare with minimal risk to military personnel. But in reality, that’s not always true as civilian casualties have mounted. Morris said drones “significantly lower the threshold for the use of force, making it much easier for armies to deploy munitions without risk to their own forces”. “The result of this has been a grave civilian toll,” she told Al Jazeera. The proliferation of drones has also been fuelled by geopolitical shifts as African governments seek greater military self-reliance and turn to new suppliers willing to sell without stringent conditions. Michael Spagat, head of the department of economics at Royal Holloway University of London, sees the trend as primarily driven by economics. “Buying drones has become a cheap way for states to acquire significant firepower. Drones have the additional advantage that attackers don’t have to worry about pilots getting killed,” Spagat told Al Jazeera. “You don’t have to invest in training people you might lose.” He also said this trend is likely just at its beginning. “Some countries may still be getting up to speed on the use of their drones, and at some point, we’ll start hearing about nonstate groups using potent drones,” he warned. “These are still fairly advanced technologies, but I doubt it will stay like this forever,” he added. While the report primarily examines the consequences of the use of drones in Africa, it also touches on the key suppliers fuelling this surge. Turkiye, China and Iran have emerged as the dominant exporters, the report found, and supply a range of drone systems to African nations. Morris said the role of actors like Turkiye and China, which have been willing to supply drones “relatively cheaply with little concern for how they are to be used”, means that these weapons have proliferated rapidly in the past few years, particularly to states fighting armed groups. The report identifies six key nations where the use of drones has had a particularly deadly impact: Sudan Drones have been used extensively in Sudan’s ongoing civil war with reports of strikes hitting civilian infrastructure, including markets and residential areas. Both warring sides – Sudan’s military and its Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group – have used drones. Somalia The country has long been a battleground for drone warfare, primarily driven by operations targeting al-Qaeda affiliate al-Shabab. However, civilian deaths have been alarmingly frequent, raising concerns over the precision and intelligence behind these strikes. The United States military’s Africa Command has conducted hundreds of air strikes in Somalia that it said targeted al-Shabab fighters but also ended up killing civilians in so-called collateral damage. Nigeria The Nigerian government has employed drones in its fight against Boko Haram and other armed groups. Yet there have been multiple instances of strikes on civilians, including in December 2023 when a drone attack hit a group of people observing a Muslim celebration in Tudun Biri in Kaduna State. Burkina Faso Conflict in Burkina Faso began to intensify around 2015 as armed group activity spilled over from neighbouring Mali. It is part of a wider regional crisis in the Sahel. Mali Both Mali and Burkina Faso have ramped up their use of drones against armed groups. But these strikes have repeatedly resulted in civilian casualties. Ethiopia The Ethiopian government has increasingly relied on drones in its fight against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Multiple strikes on refugee camps and marketplaces have led to widespread condemnation. Human rights organisations and the United Nations have decried the lack of accountability. The impact has been devastating with several strikes leading to significant losses of civilian lives. Among the most tragic incidents documented in the report are: Morris said there is “an obvious unwillingness to properly investigate claims of civilian casualties”, adding that “the mounting scale of civilian harm worldwide betrays a wholesale failure to take seriously the loss of civilian life. “This is altogether more brazen where the use of drones is concerned with a concerning normalisation of civilian death accompanying their proliferation,” she said. The report emphasises the urgent need for greater oversight and regulation of drone use amid a rapid expansion of drone warfare worldwide. In the past 10 years, the number of countries operating drones has gone up from four to 48, according to the report. It said three main international arms control agreements currently apply to the export of armed drones but they all have “significant weaknesses”. In its recommendations, the report’s author urged the international community to move rapidly towards establishing a new international control regime focused on the prevention of harm arising from the proliferation of armed uncrewed systems. Morris and Spagat agreed that drone warfare is only going to expand. “I do think that the use of drones is going to grow quite substantially and possibly proliferate to nonstate groups,” Spagat said. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
Read this story on Aljazeera

Loading...