
-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Malawi's debt crisis deepens as aid cuts hurt
-
Danish brewer adds AI 'colleagues' to human team
-
S. Korea plans extra $4.9 bn help for chips amid US tariff anxiety
-
Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools
-
The miracle babies who survived Ravensbruck
-
Asian stocks mixed as stability returns, autos lifted by exemption hope
-
Chinese EV battery giant CATL posts 33% surge in Q1 profit
-
China's economy likely grew 5.1% in Q1 on export surge: AFP poll
-
S. Korea govt plans $4.9 bn more help for semiconductors as US tariff risk bites
-
Harvard sees $2.2 billion in funding frozen after defying Trump
-
LVMH sales dip as Trump tariffs dent luxury tastes
-
Luka Modric becomes co-owner of Championship club Swansea
-
Trump's tariff exemptions give markets relief, but uncertainty dominates
-
Harvard defies Trump demands for policy changes, risking funding
-
Meta chief Zuckerberg testifies at landmark US antitrust trial
-
Goldman Sachs profits rise on strong equity trading results
-
Hungarian lawmakers back constitutional curbs on LGBTQ people, dual nationals
-
Nvidia to build supercomputer chips entirely in US for first time
-
Argentine peso depreciates after exchange controls lifted
-
Kim Kardashian will testify at Paris jewellery theft trial: lawyer
-
China warns UK against 'politicising' steel furnaces rescue
-
Stocks rise on new tariff twist
-
China, Vietnam sign agreements after Xi warns protectionism 'leads nowhere'
-
Stocks rise on tech tariffs respite, gold hits new high
-
Trump says no one 'off the hook' on tariffs but markets rise
-
Katy Perry set to roar into space on all-female flight
-
Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners
-
Chinese exports soared in March ahead of Trump's 'Liberation Day'
-
China's exports beat forecast in March despite trade war woes
-
Solar park boom threatens Spain's centuries-old olive trees
-
Trump tariff rollercoaster complicates ECB rate call
-
Asian stocks rise on electronics tariffs exemption, gold hits new high
-
A coffin for Pol Pot's memory, 50 years after Phnom Penh's fall
-
German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life
-
Xi warns protectionism 'leads nowhere' as starts SE Asia tour
-
Trump warns no country 'off the hook' on tariffs
-
Trump downplays tariffs walk-back, says no country 'off the hook'
-
Trump advisor Navarro looks to cool spat with Musk
-
Moviegoers digging 'Minecraft Movie,' tops in N.America theaters
-
Paris Olympic torches, other memorabilia auctioned off
-
US says tech tariff exemptions may be short-lived
-
China calls on US to 'completely cancel' reciprocal tariffs
-
Bulgarian border city hails Schengen tourism boom
-
Indonesia palm oil firms eye new markets as US trade war casts shadow
-
Harvey Weinstein sex crimes retrial to begin Tuesday in NY
-
World Expo opens in Japan in rocky times
-
Ecuador's presidential hopefuls face toxic brew of crime, unemployment
-
'Slow travel' start-up launches cross-Channel crossings by sail
-
Toll hits 225, Dominican officials say all bodies returned to loved ones

'Ambitious' islanders spice up ICJ climate hearings
Young people from small island states -- the driving force behind the climate change hearings at the International Court of Justice -- have provided a breath of fresh air to proceedings and gut-wrenching testimony from the front-line.
Many were presenting their country's first-ever ICJ submission and did not mince their words in the Great Hall of Justice, normally the scene of weighty legal arguments from austere lawyers in robes and wigs.
"The outcome of these proceedings will reverberate across generations, determining the fate of nations like mine and the future of our planet," said Vanuatu's representative Ralph Regenvanu, opening the hearings.
"This may well be the most consequential case in the history of humanity. Let us not allow future generations to look back and wonder why the cause of their doom was condoned," added Regenvanu.
Several speakers wore vibrant national dress, also sporting traditional necklaces and headdresses, a marked contrast to the sober suits usually seen in the Peace Palace.
Showing powerful images of devastation to the judges, many portrayed the battle against the worst ravages of climate change as nothing short of an existential struggle for survival.
"Saint Lucians live with a ticking clock at the start of every single hurricane season, which... causes cataclysmic devastation," said the Caribbean island's representative, Jan Yves Remy.
"Our fisherfolk complain already of dwindling catches. Many of our pristine beaches, including the one my father grew up on... have been replaced by barren rocks," she added.
- 'Story of inspiration' -
Most vulnerable island nations took aim at wealthy large polluting countries for failing to provide sufficient funding to mitigate the effects of climate change.
"As seas rise faster than predicted, these states must stop. This court must not permit them to condemn our lands and our people to watery graves," thundered John Silk from the Marshall Islands in Micronesia.
The tiny Melanesian island nation of Vanuatu spearheaded the drive to bring the case to the ICJ, corralling a group of countries to push the United Nations to ask its top court for its opinion.
The initiative began in a classroom at the University of the South Pacific in 2019.
About 27 law students wrote to Pacific leaders asking them to take up the campaign -- and Vanuatu answered the call.
Five years later, one of those students, Vishal Prasad from Fiji, stood on the steps of the Peace Palace and told journalists that the initiative was the culmination of an idea that seemed "ambitious, crazy, weird and insurmountable".
Asked what he would tell his fellow students, the 28-year-old said: "We have done what we set out to do. We have taken the world's biggest problem to the world's highest court."
"It's a story of inspiration to everyone, especially to young people who may not find hope in what's happening around them," said Prasad.
"But if they look within and if they look in the community of young people, there is enough inspiration, enough hope to get us through this."
Ch.Lefebvre--CPN