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Worldnews
Thousands Gather For Centuries-old Holy Fire Ceremony In Jerusalem
~2.0 mins read
In Pictures Orthodox Christians celebrate Holy Fire tradition in Jerusalem, passing miraculous flame in the ancient basilica. Thousands of Christians gathered in the cavernous Church of the Holy Sepulchre for a centuries-old Holy Fire ceremony. Holding unlit candles, they packed into the sprawling 12th-century basilica built on the site where, according to tradition, Jesus was crucified and buried. In near-total darkness, the Greek patriarch entered the Holy Edicule and emerged with two lit candles. The flame was passed from one candle to the next, the light overcoming the darkness in the rotunda. The flame was later transferred to Orthodox communities in other countries on special flights. Eastern Orthodox Christians believe the light miraculously appears inside the Holy Edicule, built on the traditional site of Jesus’s tomb, while sceptics going back to the Middle Ages have dismissed it as a carnival trick for the masses. Either way, the ceremony, which goes back at least 1,200 years, is a sight to behold. It has also ignited safety concerns. In 1834, a frenzied stampede broke out in the darkened church, and the ruler of the Holy Land at the time barely escaped after his guards drew swords and hacked their way through the crowd, historian Simon Sebag Montefiore recounts in his history of Jerusalem. Some 400 pilgrims died in the melee, most from suffocation or trampling. Israeli authorities have sought to limit participants in recent years, citing safety concerns. That has drawn protests from church leaders, who have accused them of upsetting the delicate, unwritten arrangements around Jerusalem’s holy sites known as the status quo. On Saturday, there was a heavy military presence as thousands of worshippers passed through Israeli checkpoints to enter. Some worshippers lamented that the turnout lacked numbers this year because of Israel’s 18-month war on Gaza. “The number of police is higher than the number of pilgrims,” said Adeeb Joude, key holder for the Holy Sepulchre. Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City with major sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, in the 1967 Middle East War, and annexed it in a move not recognised internationally. The Palestinians want East Jerusalem to be the capital of their future state. The Old City has a long history of tensions between Israelis and Palestinians, among different religious groups that share its hilly confines and even within certain faiths. Perceived infringements on the status quo in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre have led to brawls between monks of different denominations. Israel says it is committed to ensuring freedom of worship for Jews, Christians and Muslims, and has long presented itself as an island of tolerance in the Middle East. In recent years, however, tensions have risen with the local Christian community, most of whom are Palestinian Christians, a population that has dwindled through decades of conflict as many have moved abroad. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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News_Naija
Starvation Of Prisoners Is Not Justice
~5.4 mins read
BEHIND the high walls of Nigeria’s prison system, thousands of forlorn souls endure a grim existence. Recent revelations about the Nigerian Correctional Service expose a system so plagued by neglect, mismanagement, and corruption that every custodial sentence could easily become a death sentence by starvation. In prisons across the country, from Ikoyi to Calabar, Kano to Maiduguri, inmates tell harrowing tales of being fed worse than animals. Reports speak of watery soups without meat or fish, beans filled with stones and weevils, dry garri passed off as sustenance, and rations so meagre they are measured in empty milk tins. Some prisoners claim that food is laced with chemicals called “scattering powder” to keep them weak and numb to prevent them from causing trouble. These are sordid testimonies of men and women slowly wasting away under the very watch of a system meant to rehabilitate them. The conditions described mimic those of death camps operated by opposing powers during World War II. This is not conjecture. An independent panel, convened by the Minister of Interior, confirmed that inmates are dying of hunger, citing rampant food racketeering, woefully insufficient rations, and a disturbing culture of corruption that places profit over life. A seasoned prison rights advocate on the panel, Ujo Agomoh, described the current state as “unprecedentedly dire,” warning that starvation is not only killing inmates but also stirring potential unrest within the walls of these overcrowded facilities. As of September 2024, at least 6,675 inmates, including high-profile Boko Haram terrorists and murderers, escaped in 13 separate jailbreaks that hit Nigerian custodial centres in the last five years, largely due to anger over poor treatment, overcrowding, and insecure facilities. Yet, despite overwhelming evidence and eyewitness accounts, the NCoS leadership denies the obvious. The Acting Comptroller-General, Sylvester Nwakuche, dismissed the hunger claims as exaggeration, citing a lack of statistics. The NCoS Public Relations Officer branded the reports as “misleading” and insisted inmates are well-fed under government guidelines. This is face-saving detachment from reality. Hunger, malnutrition, and untreated illnesses should not be part of a prison sentence. Justice demands accountability, but it also insists on the right to be free from torture, cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, the right to due process, and the right to legal representation as enshrined in the Nigerian Constitution. Denying inmates adequate food is a form of torture that cannot be justified by budget constraints or bureaucratic negligence. It is illegal. The rot in Nigeria’s prison system runs deep. Wardens reportedly grant privileges including access to “VIP” accommodation, mobile phones, TVs, private electricity, and illegal conjugal visits to wealthy prisoners in exchange for bribes. For the poor, corruption has weaponised starvation, with food contractors and complicit officers allegedly siphoning resources meant for the incarcerated. Facilities built for hundreds now house thousands. Funding is perpetually inadequate, and oversight mechanisms are either weak or corrupt themselves. Nigeria must confront this anomaly. Prisons are not supposed to be hellholes or gulags. They are institutions of correction, rehabilitation, and eventual reintegration. Democratic societies do not measure progress by how they treat their best citizens, but by how they treat their worst. Nigeria cannot afford to retain the colonial mentality of using the prison system to punish rather than reform. The Bola Tinubu administration must implement wholesale prison reforms. It must immediately launch an independent audit of prison feeding contracts, with transparent, public reporting.  The NCoS must implement the provisions of Section 14, Subsection 4 of its own Act, which guarantees proper feeding and welfare of inmates. The Minister of Interior, Bunmi Tunji-Ojo, must address the prison reforms with the same vigour with which he addressed passport issuance racketeering. NGOs, faith-based organisations, human rights defenders and the media should be granted regular access to provide supplementary support and to serve as watchdogs over a system long overdue for rehabilitation. The National Assembly must immediately initiate comprehensive prison reform legislation that addresses the core challenges of Nigeria’s correctional system. For a start, the ration allowance must be increased from the N1,125 approved in August 2024 to reflect the current economic realities and ensure inmates are fed adequately. Feeding should not be subject to corruption or cost-cutting. Nigerian prisons are overcrowded largely because of slow judicial processes, poor police investigation and coordination with the courts, and the inability of many prisoners to afford legal representation. Case files are routinely lost, leaving prisoners in limbo. As of April 2025, Nigeria’s prison population stood at 79,611 inmates held in 256 institutions, exceeding the official capacity of 50,153 by 136.7 per cent, per World Prison Brief. About 65.4 per cent, are pre-trial detainees or remand prisoners. The legislature must work with the judiciary to expedite trials, reduce unnecessary pre-trial detentions, and ensure timely justice. Fast-track courts, digital case management, and decongestion task forces led by magistrates and judges should be instituted and funded appropriately. Welfare and healthcare services within prisons must be improved. Inmates deserve access to proper medical care, mental health support, and recreational activities that aid rehabilitation. A society that refuses to reform its offenders only guarantees their return to crime. In September 2024, the NCoS reported that over 1,000 inmates are participating in various degree programmes, including 282 diploma and master’s degree students, along with six pursuing their PhD programmes. This is positive. There should be more opportunities for academic and vocational training, including farming, to enable prisoners to grow their own food. Prison officers need better training and welfare. To reform the prison system, improved training to cope with a high-stress, high-risk environment, including prisoner control measures, security awareness and response, professionalism, and ethics, with better pay, is required. The concept of incarceration itself must be revisited. Nigeria must adopt alternative correctional models, such as non-custodial sentences for minor offences. Community service, fines, and restitution can be more appropriate for certain crimes than confinement. A functional parole system would help reduce prison populations, reward good behaviour, and help in rehabilitation. Many Nigerian prisons are relics of the colonial era, characterised by crumbling mud walls and inadequate facilities. New and improved facilities need to be built to accommodate the country’s growing population, which is expected to reach 400 million by 2025. Nigeria should devolve the prison system and consider state-run and privately managed prison facilities, as seen in the United States and other parts of the world. Decentralising prison management can lift standards, enhance accountability, tailor correctional approaches to local needs, and improve security. Legal aid is another critical area of reform. Many inmates languish in prison, not necessarily because they are guilty, but because they cannot afford legal representation. All state governments should create Offices of the Public Defender to support indigent citizens. The Legal Aid Council of Nigeria must be better funded and partner with civil society organisations to ensure that no Nigerian is denied justice because they cannot afford a lawyer. Ultimately, Nigeria must decide if it wants a justice system that is brutally punitive or one that corrects, rehabilitates, and reintegrates. The current system fails the rehabilitation test and must be discontinued. The authorities, indeed, all of society, must not overlook the fact that prisoners are still fellow citizens – fathers, mothers, and children. Many are still awaiting trial, many guilty of only minor offences, and many still capable of reform. How they are treated defines society far more than their crimes define them. Starvation is not justice. Neglect is not discipline. The executive, legislature, the judiciary, and other stakeholders must work together to foster a humane, efficient, and just prison system. This is how Nigerian society should be defined.
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Worldnews
LIVE: Leicester City Vs Liverpool English Premier League
~0.2 mins read
Follow the build-up and live text commentary as Leicester host Liverpool, with the visitors closing in on the title. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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Healthwatch
Healthier Planet, Healthier People
~3.3 mins read
Five small steps toward better health for you and planet Earth.
A crystal globe with countries etched on, circled by stethoscope with red heart; Earth health and our health connect
Everything is connected. You've probably heard that before, but it bears repeating. Below are five ways to boost both your individual health and the health of our planet — a combination that environmentalists call co-benefits.

How your health and planetary health intersect

Back in 1970, Earth Day was founded as a day of awareness about environmental issues. Never has awareness of our environment seemed more important than now. The impacts of climate change on Earth — fires, storms, floods, droughts, heat waves, rising sea levels, species extinction, and more — directly or indirectly threaten our well-being, especially for those most vulnerable. For example, air pollution from fossil fuels and wildfires contributes to lung problems and hospitalizations. Geographic and seasonal boundaries for ticks and mosquitoes, which are carriers of infectious diseases, expand as regions warm.
The concept of planetary health acknowledges that the ecosystem and our health are inextricably intertwined. Actions and events have complex downstream effects: some are expected, others are surprising, and many are likely unrecognized. While individual efforts may seem small, collectively they can move the needle — even ever so slightly — in the right direction.

Five ways to improve personal and planetary health

Adopt plant-forward eating.
This means increasing plant-based foods in your diet while minimizing meat. Making these types of choices lowers the risks of heart disease, stroke, obesity, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and many cancers. Compared to meat-based meals, plant-based meals also have many beneficial effects for the planet. For example, for the same amount of protein, plant-based meals have a lower carbon footprint and use fewer natural resources like land and water.
Remember, not all plants are equal.
Plant foods also vary greatly, both in terms of their nutritional content and in their environmental impact. Learning to read labels can help you determine the nutritional value of foods. It's a bit harder to learn about the environmental impact of specific foods, since there are regional factors. But to get a general sense, Our World in Data has a collection of eye-opening interactive graphs about various environmental impacts of different foods.
Favor active transportation.
Choose an alternative to driving such as walking, biking, or using public transportation when possible. Current health recommendations encourage adults to get 150 minutes each week of moderate-intensity physical activity, and two sessions of muscle strengthening activity. Regular physical activity improves mental health, bone health, and weight management. It also reduces risks of heart disease, some cancers, and falls in older adults. Fewer miles driven in gas-powered vehicles means cleaner air, decreased carbon emissions contributing to climate change, and less air pollution (known to cause asthma exacerbations and many other diseases).
Start where you are and work up to your level of discomfort.
Changes that work for one person may not work for another. Maybe you will pledge to eat one vegan meal each week, or maybe you will pledge to limit beef to once a week. Maybe you will try out taking the bus to work, or maybe you will bike to work when it's not winter. Set goals for yourself that are achievable but are also a challenge.
Talk about it.
It might feel as though these actions are small, and it might feel daunting for any one individual trying to make a difference. Sharing your thoughts about what matters to you and about what you are doing might make you feel less isolated and help build community. Building community contributes to well-being and resilience.
Plus, if you share your pledges and aims with one person, and that person does the same, then your actions are amplified. Who knows, maybe one of those folks along the way might be the employee who decides what our children eat from school menus, or a city planner for pedestrian walkways and bike lanes!

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