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UN Urges Pakistan to Suspend Forcible Deportation of Afghan Nationals 


U.N. agencies are warning that Pakistan’s planned expulsion of more than a million “undocumented” foreign nationals risks triggering a human rights catastrophe.

They are appealing to Pakistani authorities to suspend these deportations as a November 1 deadline looms for the forcible return of 1.4 million Afghan nationals to Afghanistan where many will likely be at grave risk of human rights violations.

“We are very worried that those who are deported face a whole host of human rights violations including torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, severe discrimination, and lack of access to basic economic and social needs,” said Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson for the U.N. high commissioner for human rights.

She said women are of particular concern as the de facto Taliban rulers “have attempted to completely erase them from any public presence in society — from the workplace, from schools, from even public parks.”

The U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, reports Pakistan currently is hosting 3.7 million Afghan refugees, 700,000 of whom fled Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover in August 2021. It says about 1.7 million are deemed to be in Pakistan illegally, with little legal protection or means to get asylum.

Pakistan says Afghans who are registered as refugees do not have to worry about being deported. It says only those people, regardless of nationality, who are in the country illegally will be returned to their home countries.

The UNHCR and International Organization for Migration report nearly 60,000 Afghans have returned to Afghanistan since October 3 when Pakistan announced its November 1 deportation deadline. The agencies say 78 percent of those returning to Afghanistan cite fear of arrest as the reason for leaving Pakistan.

“We have appealed to Pakistan to continue its protection of all vulnerable Afghans who have sought safety in the country and could be at imminent risk if forced to return,” said Matthew Saltmarsh, UNHCR spokesperson.

“UNHCR appreciates the announcements by Pakistan to exclude registered refugees and other categories of vulnerable Afghans from this exercise,” he said but noted that Afghanistan was going through a severe humanitarian crisis with several human rights challenges, particularly for women and girls.

Besides women and girls, others at particular risk include civil society activists, journalists, human rights defenders, former government officials, and security force members.

“As winter approaches, any mass deportations are bound to deepen the dire humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, as it grapples with the devastating impact of a series of earthquakes that struck Herat Province this month,” said Shamdasani.

According to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA, the Herat disaster has directly affected more than 66,000 people, killed about 1,500, and injured nearly 2000.

Shamdasani said that U.N. human rights monitors in Afghanistan have raised their concerns with the de facto authorities of the international human rights obligations that continue to bind Afghanistan as a state and “their obligations to protect, promote and fulfil human rights.”

At the same time, she said Pakistan too must “continue providing protection to those in need and ensure that any future returns are safe, dignified, and voluntary and fully consistent with international law.

“As the November 1 deadline approaches,” she said, “we urge the Pakistan authorities to suspend forcible returns of Afghan nationals before it is too late to avoid a human rights catastrophe.”

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@SvobodaRadio: RT by @mikenov: В городе Волноваха в подконтрольной российским военным части Донецкой области Украины были убиты девять человек, среди ни…


В городе Волноваха в подконтрольной российским военным части Донецкой области Украины были убиты девять человек, среди них двое детей. Убийство мог совершить российский военнослужащийhttps://t.co/sVYOA8Q7Sb

— Радио Свобода (@SvobodaRadio) October 29, 2023

The post @SvobodaRadio: RT by @mikenov: В городе Волноваха в подконтрольной российским военным части Донецкой области Украины были убиты девять человек, среди ни… first appeared on The News And Times – thenewsandtimes.com.


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@sentdefender: RT by @mikenov: Ground Operations by the Israel Defense Force inside of the Northern Gaza Strip were Expanded even more last night with H…


Ground Operations by the Israel Defense Force inside of the Northern Gaza Strip were Expanded even more last night with Hundreds of additional Troops and several Dozen Armored Vehicles said to have cross the Border into the Strip; these Forces alongside the Israeli Air Force are… pic.twitter.com/3vQoNM9auR

— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) October 29, 2023

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@anders_aslund: RT by @mikenov: The war in Ukraine united Europe as never before. The new Israeli-Hamas war is dividing Europe. Arabs are demonstrating…


The war in Ukraine united Europe as never before.
The new Israeli-Hamas war is dividing Europe.
Arabs are demonstrating in mases for Palestine, while Jews are scared.
This is likely to have lasting, bad political consequences.
In Europe, Russia appears the big winner.

— Anders Åslund (@anders_aslund) October 29, 2023

The post @anders_aslund: RT by @mikenov: The war in Ukraine united Europe as never before.
The new Israeli-Hamas war is dividing Europe.
Arabs are demonstrating…
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The alarming rise of Hamas in America America is headed towards very serious and blinding headwinds. Opinion.


 

Selected Articles – The News And Times

The alarming rise of Hamas in America
America is headed towards very serious and blinding headwinds. Opinion.
 

Yishmael, a thorn in our sides from his birth
Weekly Torah Study: Lech Lecha
 

Justice Minister Yariv Levin: ‘I’m not dealing with the judicial reform now’
Justice Minister Yariv Levin spoke about his efforts to establish an emergency government.
 
Macron urges to open Gaza humanitarian corridor for French nationals – Hindustan Times
Macron urges to open Gaza humanitarian corridor for French nationals  Hindustan Times
 
Frankly Speaking: Does Israel have a right to defend itself? – Arab News
Frankly Speaking: Does Israel have a right to defend itself?  Arab News
 

Staff Sgt. Jonathan Savitsky, 21: Fended off Hamas to retake IDF post
Killed in fierce Kissufim battle on October 7; helped saved lives of some 50 soldiers and civilians The post Staff Sgt. Jonathan Savitsky, 21: Fended off Hamas to retake IDF post appeared first on The Times of Israel.
 

The first creation of Adam: “It is not good that man is alone”
In this article I will try to provide an answer to the “simple” question of why G-d made woman.
 

4,000 years of ‘The Logic of the Impossible’
An interview with Eduard Shyfrin – founder of the theory of the Kabbalah of Information.
 

Israel-Hamas war is just part of the global war on Islamist terror – opinion
Israel and the Jewish people are serving humanity on the front line of what could become a global reckoning for organizations of Islamist terror.
 

Can the Hamas Oct. 7 massacre be compared to the Holocaust? – opinion
Even though Hamas is unable to replicate the scale of the Holocaust, one cannot ignore the numerous voices that rightly point to experiential elements and ideologies that exhibit similarities.
 

US asking Israel ‘hard questions’ on Gaza military assault – White House
“We talk candidly, we talked directly, we share our views and an unvarnished way and we will continue to do that,” Jake Sullivan said.
 

 
Bibi’s War: How Incompetence, Opportunism, and Rejection Led to a Catastrophe for Israel and Palestine – Rolling Stone
Bibi’s War: How Incompetence, Opportunism, and Rejection Led to a Catastrophe for Israel and Palestine  Rolling Stone
 
Netanyahu Apologizes for Blaming Israeli Officials in Hamas Attack – The New York Times
Netanyahu Apologizes for Blaming Israeli Officials in Hamas Attack  The New York TimesNetanyahu apologises for blaming Israeli security chiefs for Hamas attack  Al Jazeera English’Crossed Red Line’: Netanyahu Apologises For Blaming Israeli Security Chiefs  Hindustan Times
 
Thousands Break Into Aid Warehouses In Gaza As Deaths Top 8000 And Israel Widens Ground Offensive – HuffPost
Thousands Break Into Aid Warehouses In Gaza As Deaths Top 8000 And Israel Widens Ground Offensive  HuffPost
 
Video: Drone footage shows extensive damage near Gaza refugee camp – CNN
Video: Drone footage shows extensive damage near Gaza refugee camp  CNN
 
Iranian Diplomat: Iran Free To Do Any Missile Activity As UN … – Iran Front Page – IFP News
Iranian Diplomat: Iran Free To Do Any Missile Activity As UN …  Iran Front Page – IFP News
 
Israel pounds Gaza as UN warns order ‘starting to break down’ – FRANCE 24 English
Israel pounds Gaza as UN warns order ‘starting to break down’  FRANCE 24 English
 
Israel-Hamas War News Live Updates: Civil order breaking down in Gaza, says UN as thousands loot aid from warehouses – The Indian Express
Israel-Hamas War News Live Updates: Civil order breaking down in Gaza, says UN as thousands loot aid from warehouses  The Indian Express
 
Israel’s Mobileye CEO Urges That Netanyahu Be Replaced … – U.S. News & World Report
Israel’s Mobileye CEO Urges That Netanyahu Be Replaced …  U.S. News & World Report
 

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Tweets from Michael Novakhov – USA Intelligence Failures


@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Intelligence Failures
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA
Intelligence Failures – Again 
https://t.co/jqiV5hRHmJ… pic.twitter.com/CtsdC57AOM— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023

 

Tweets from Michael Novakhov – TNT – The News And Times – TheNewsAndTimes.com

@UsernameDu59993: RT by @mikenov: For those wishing to connect the dots. #Epstein #Maxwell #CIA #Mossad #RoyCohn https://t.co/awXlSAZJS9
For those wishing to connect the dots.#Epstein#Maxwell#CIA#Mossad#RoyCohn https://t.co/qqfWhhRCsS pic.twitter.com/awXlSAZJS9— DullUsername (@UsernameDu59993) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA https://t.co/dUYQvxEp2m Can Russia Ever Learn To Live… https://t.co/hoIyI1wxj6
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USAhttps://t.co/dUYQvxEp2mCan Russia Ever Learn To Live… pic.twitter.com/hoIyI1wxj6— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Intelligence Failures
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USAIntelligence Failures – Again https://t.co/jqiV5hRHmJ… pic.twitter.com/CtsdC57AOM— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@Xudozhnikipoeti: RT by @mikenov: Анна Ярмолюк. «Первый снег и последние яблоки». Масляная пастель. https://t.co/6riZnhQn8F
Анна Ярмолюк. «Первый снег и последние яблоки». Масляная пастель. pic.twitter.com/6riZnhQn8F— Художники и Поэты (@Xudozhnikipoeti) October 29, 2023
 

@TOIAlerts: RT by @mikenov: Live update: IDF re-issues urgent call for civilians in Gaza to move south, says aid to expand https://t.co/RMCWOde414 . Cli…
Live update: IDF re-issues urgent call for civilians in Gaza to move south, says aid to expand https://t.co/RMCWOde414 . Click to read ⬇— TOI ALERTS (@TOIAlerts) October 29, 2023
 

@Xudozhnikipoeti: RT by @mikenov: Афиша с изображением Анны Павловой для Русского сезона в театре Шатле. Париж, 1909 г. В.А. Серов. https://t.co/7Mvhwiz…
Афиша с изображением Анны Павловой для Русского сезона в театре Шатле. Париж, 1909 г. В.А. Серов. pic.twitter.com/7MvhwizcXl— Художники и Поэты (@Xudozhnikipoeti) October 29, 2023
 
@IDF: RT by @mikenov: A statement from LTG Herzi Halevi. “The objectives of this war require a ground operation – the best soldiers are now operating i…
A statement from LTG Herzi Halevi.“The objectives of this war require a ground operation – the best soldiers are now operating in Gaza.” pic.twitter.com/KUGj6cG4Ke— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) October 28, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Robert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USARobert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin – GS… pic.twitter.com/HPAgorPZcj— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Robert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USARobert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin – GS… pic.twitter.com/sa6PFFq8cP— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Robert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USARobert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin – GS… pic.twitter.com/LliA3o0Ien— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA Robert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin
#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH https://t.co/aNqa3wvK2v #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USARobert Card is the “greeting card” from Putin – GS… pic.twitter.com/0FUxZy553I— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 
@AmbJohnBolton: RT by @mikenov: If you believe that you’re entitled to live free from terror, and you’ve been attacked like Israel, then you have a righ…
If you believe that you’re entitled to live free from terror, and you’ve been attacked like Israel, then you have a right to defend yourself up to and including eliminating the threat of terror itself. Biden needs to take his hand off Bibi’s belt and let Israel go forward with a… https://t.co/smqR9ll49U— John Bolton (@AmbJohnBolton) October 28, 2023…
 

@mikenov: https://t.co/dpWLI1fO4u
https://t.co/dpWLI1fO4u— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 29, 2023
 

@mikenov: Former Vice President Mike Pence is suspending his 2024 presidential campaign: ‘This is not my time’ https://t.co/vbMWecfPFR https://t.co/YzBY7LnYo3
Former Vice President Mike Pence is suspending his 2024 presidential campaign: ‘This is not my time’ https://t.co/vbMWecfPFR pic.twitter.com/YzBY7LnYo3— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 28, 2023
 

@MailOnline: RT by @mikenov: Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu vows to ‘completely eliminate evil’ Hamas from existence https://t.co/4IAhhYYYx8 https://t.co…
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu vows to ‘completely eliminate evil’ Hamas from existence https://t.co/4IAhhYYYx8 pic.twitter.com/QNSCSRMr8D— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) October 28, 2023
 

@KarinaKarapety8: RT by @mikenov: Ombudsman of #Armenia: We talked to about 400 forcibly displaced persons from #NagornoKarabakh. Data were received on…
Ombudsman of #Armenia: We talked to about 400 forcibly displaced persons from #NagornoKarabakh. Data were received on the death of civilians, torture, desecration of bodies, dismemberment, as well as other cases prohibited by intl law as a result of #Azerbaijan/i aggression. pic.twitter.com/ILxfC78sKk— Karina Karapetyan (@KarinaKarapety8) October 28,…
 

@SvobodaRadio: RT by @mikenov: Израиль отзывает дипломатов из Турции после митинга в центре Стамбула в поддержку сектора Газа. https://t.co/jMx6oheFMi
Израиль отзывает дипломатов из Турции после митинга в центре Стамбула в поддержку сектора Газа.https://t.co/jMx6oheFMi— Радио Свобода (@SvobodaRadio) October 28, 2023
 

@TOIAlerts: RT by @mikenov: Live update: Netanyahu: Goal of war is ‘to defeat the murderous enemy, ensure our existence in our land’ https://t.co/nAiOy1…
Live update: Netanyahu: Goal of war is ‘to defeat the murderous enemy, ensure our existence in our land’ https://t.co/nAiOy1EMso . Click to read ⬇— TOI ALERTS (@TOIAlerts) October 28, 2023
 

@nypmetro: RT by @mikenov: Israel-hating ex-DSA staffer in NYC was jailed for soliciting threesome sex from minor https://t.co/e8eFjgBm3p https://t.co/8…
Israel-hating ex-DSA staffer in NYC was jailed for soliciting threesome sex from minor https://t.co/e8eFjgBm3p pic.twitter.com/8N5DLosnZt— New York Post Metro (@nypmetro) October 28, 2023
 
@IDF: RT by @mikenov: In response to three rockets launches from Lebanon, the IDF is currently striking Hezbollah terrorist targets in Lebanon.
In response to three rockets launches from Lebanon, the IDF is currently striking Hezbollah terrorist targets in Lebanon.— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) October 28, 2023
 

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‘This is our second independence war,’ Netanyahu declares as Israeli troops battle inside Gaza


GettyImages-1749127086-scaled.jpg?_t=169

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Israelis Saturday night that “this is our second independence war,” as troops battled on the ground inside the Gaza Strip in what he and other members of his war cabinet described as the war’s “second phase.”

It was unclear how many tanks and soldiers had entered Gaza or when more would come, but the Israeli military reissued its warning to Gaza residents to evacuate the northern part of the coastal enclave, and reported that two soldiers had been wounded in the ground battle.

“The war inside Gaza will be long and difficult — and we are ready for it,” Netanyahu said in a televised address. “This is our second independence war. We will fight to protect our country. We will fight on land, in the sea and in the air. We will destroy the enemy above ground and underground.”

Meanwhile in New York, thousands of pro-Palestinian activists marched across the Brooklyn Bridge Saturday and rallied in front of the Brooklyn Museum, chanting “Free, free Palestine” and “Let Gaza live!”

The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry on Sunday reported a death toll of 7,700 from Israel’s retaliatory strikes since  the Oct. 7 terror attack in which Islamist militants killed more than 1,400 Israelis and kidnapped about 220. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which supports the 80% of Gaza residents classified as Palestinian refugees, described an increasingly desperate humanitarian crisis in which its storehouses had been ransacked of foodstuffs.

“The situation in Gaza is growing more desperate by the hour,” U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres said Sunday during a visit to Nepal. “I regret that instead of a critically needed humanitarian pause, supported by the international community, Israel has intensified its military operations.”

The Times of Israel reported Sunday that Israel had reopened the second of three water pipelines to Gaza, allowing about 28.5 million liters a day to flow into the enclave. That is more than half the flow of 49 million liters a day before the war.

An Israeli spokesman said the pipelines typically provide about 9 % of Gaza’s water. Humanitarian aid groups have said the water crisis stems largely from the shortage of fuel to run desalination plants; Israel has not allowed fuel into Gaza for fear it will be abused by Hamas. The New York Times reported Friday that Hamas has stockpiled food and fuel as well as weapons in its massive network of underground tunnels.

Israel also continued to battle threats on its northern border, striking targets in Lebanon the Israel Defense Forces said belonged to the Shiite militia Hezbollah, which has fired a small but steady number of missiles at Israel throughout the three-week war.  Foreign journalists were invited to tour the north on Monday.

Netanyahu, taking questions from reporters for the first time since the war began, acknowledged the gaps in military intelligence that allowed for the unprecedented assault by Hamas three weeks ago.

“After the war, everyone will need to give answers to hard questions, including me,” he said Saturday night. “There was a horrible failure, and it will be fully checked. I promise you, no stone will be left unturned.”

But by Sunday morning, Netanyahu appeared to be trying to escape culpability. “At no stage” was the prime minister  “warned of war intentions on the part of Hamas,” read a post on his X account, according to The New York Times.“On the contrary, the assessment of the entire security echelon, including the head of military intelligence and the head of Shin Bet, was that Hamas was deterred and was interested in an arrangement.” The post was later deleted.

The post ‘This is our second independence war,’ Netanyahu declares as Israeli troops battle inside Gaza appeared first on The Forward.

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When Idiot Savants Do Climate Economics


NEW HAVEN, CT - OCTOBER 08: Yale Professor William Nordhaus speaks during a press conference after winning the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences at Yale University on October 8, 2018 in New Haven, Connecticut.  Professor Nordhaus' research has been focused on the economics of climate change, economic growth and natural resources. (Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images)
William Nordhaus speaks during a press conference after winning the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., on Oct. 8, 2018.
Photo: Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images

William Nordhaus, who turned 82 this year, was the first economist in our time to attempt to quantify the cost of climate change. His climate-modeling wizardry, which won him the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2018, has made him one of the world’s most consequential thinkers. His ideas have been adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, global risk managers, the financial services industry, and universities worldwide that teach climate economics. Nordhaus’s work literally could affect the lives of billions of people. This is because his quantification of the immediate costs of climate action — as balanced against the long-term economic harms of not acting — is the basis of key proposals to mitigate carbon emissions. It’s not an exaggeration to suggest that the fate of nations and a sizable portion of humanity depends on whether his projections are correct.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has assumed Nordhaus is to be trusted. The integrated assessment models used at the IPCC are based on Nordhausian visions of adaptation to warming that only marginally reduces global gross domestic product. If future GDP is barely affected by rising temperatures, there’s less incentive for world governments to act now to reduce emissions.

Nordhaus’s models tell us that at a temperature rise somewhere between 2.7 and 3.5 degrees Celsius, the global economy reaches “optimal” adaptation. What’s optimal in this scenario is that fossil fuels can continue to be burned late into the 21st century, powering economic growth, jobs, and innovation. Humanity, asserts Nordhaus, can adapt to such warming with modest infrastructure investments, gradual social change, and, in wealthy developed countries, little sacrifice. All the while, the world economy expands with the spewing of more carbon.

His models, it turns out, are fatally flawed, and a growing number of Nordhaus’s colleagues are repudiating his work. Joseph Stiglitz, former World Bank chief economist and professor of economics at Columbia University, told me recently that Nordhaus’s projections are “wildly wrong.” Stiglitz singled out as especially bizarre the idea that optimization of the world economy would occur at 3.5 C warming, which physical scientists say would produce global chaos and a kind of climate genocide in the poorest and most vulnerable nations.

In a journal article published last year, Stiglitz and co-authors Nicholas Stern and Charlotte Taylor, of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics and Political Science, declared that Nordhausian integrated assessment models are “inadequate to capture deep uncertainty and extreme risk.” They fail to incorporate “potential loss of lives and livelihoods on immense scale and fundamental transformation and destruction of our natural environment.”

Climate change is one of the instances, Stiglitz and Stern told me in an email, in which “it is generally agreed there is extreme risk — we know there are some really extreme events that could occur — and we know we cannot pretend (i.e., act as if) we know the probabilities. Nordhaus’s work doesn’t appropriately take into account either extreme risk or deep uncertainty.”

In other words, the economist who has been embraced as a guiding light by the global institution tasked with shepherding humanity through the climate crisis, who has been awarded a Nobel for climate costing, who is widely feted as the doyen of his field, doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

Farmers are harvesting barley and wheat crops in the town of Tal Salour, located in the countryside of Jinderes, northwest Syria. The agricultural crops in Syria are being threatened by drought and climate fluctuations.On May 31, 2023. (Photo by Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Farmers harvest barley and wheat in northwest Syria on May 31, 2023, crops that are being threatened by drought and climate fluctuations.
Photo: Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Among most scientists, it’s lunacy to discuss optimization of anything anywhere when the globe hits even 2 C warming. Climate researchers Yangyang Xu and Veerabhadran Ramanathan, in a widely cited 2017 paper, defined 1.5 C warming as “dangerous” and 3 C or greater as “catastrophic,” while above 5 C was “beyond catastrophic,” with consequences that include “existential threats.” The late Will Steffen, a pioneering Earth systems thinker, warned alongside many of his colleagues that 2 C was a critical marker. At 2 C warming, we could “activate other tipping elements in a domino-like cascade that could take the Earth system to even higher temperatures.” Such “tipping cascades” could lead quickly to “conditions that would be inhospitable to current human societies,” a scenario known as hothouse Earth.

But the path to hothouse Earth will be long and tortured. When I interviewed him in 2021, Steffen, who died last January at age 75, was concerned about “near-term collapse” of the global food system. Drought and heat have already reduced global cereal production by as much as 10 percent in recent years, according to Steffen. “Food shocks are likely to get much worse,” he wrote in a 2019 piece co-authored with Aled Jones, director of the Global Sustainability Institute at Anglia Ruskin University. “The risk of multi-breadbasket failure is increasing, and rises much faster beyond 1.5 C of global heating. … Such shocks pose grave threats — rocketing food prices, civil unrest, major financial losses, starvation, and death.” 

In a 2022 report titled “Climate Endgame: Exploring Catastrophic Climate Change Scenarios,” 11 leading Earth systems and climate scientists, Steffen among them, concluded there is “ample evidence that climate change could become catastrophic … at even modest levels of warming.” According to the report:

Climate change could exacerbate vulnerabilities and cause multiple, indirect stresses (such as economic damage, loss of land, and water and food insecurity) that coalesce into system-wide synchronous failures. … It is plausible that a sudden shift in climate could trigger systems failures that unravel societies across the globe.

What these scientists are describing is global civilizational collapse, possibly in the lifetime of a young or even middle-aged reader of this article. 

According to the “Climate Endgame” report, the current trajectory of carbon emissions puts the world on track for a temperature rise between 2.1 C and 3.9 C by 2100. This is a horrific prospect. Earth systems analysts tell us that habitable and cultivable land in a 3 C to 4 C warming regime would be so reduced and ecosystem services so battered that the deaths of billions of people could occur in the next eight decades or less.

Terrible numbers get thrown around. But scientists mean what they say. Kevin Anderson, professor of energy and climate change at the University of Manchester in the U.K. and Uppsala University in Sweden, asserts that “something like 10 percent of the planet’s population — around half a billion people — will survive if global temperatures rise by 4 C.” He notes, with a modicum of hopefulness, that we “will not make all human beings extinct as a few people with the right sort of resources may put themselves in the right parts of the world and survive. But I think it’s extremely unlikely that we wouldn’t have mass death at 4 C.”

Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany and a leading researcher on climate tipping points and “safe boundaries” for humanity, projects that in a 4 C warmer world, “it’s difficult to see how we could accommodate a billion people or even half of that.” Global population today stands at 7.6 billion, with 80 million people added every year.

By contrast, when Nordhaus looked at the effects of 6 C warming, he did not forecast horror. Instead, we should expect “damages” of between 8.5 percent and 12.5 percent of world GDP over the course of the 21st century. Writing in the Economic Journal, Stern set Nordhaus straight in the harshest terms: “We could see deaths on a huge scale, migration of billions of people, and severe conflicts around the world,” he wrote. “It is profoundly implausible that numbers around 10 percent of GDP offer a sensible description of the kind of disruption and catastrophe that 6 C of warming could cause.”

In an email to The Intercept, Nordhaus characterized his colleagues’ critiques as “a distorted and inaccurate description of the work and my views. I have long supported carbon pricing and climate-focused [research and development], which are key to slowing climate change. The proposals in my writings have pointed to targets that are FAR more ambitious than current policies.” He declined to elaborate on any distortions or inaccuracies.

To understand the gap between climate scientists and climate economists, one must first understand that most economists — the folks we call mainstream or neoclassical economists — have little knowledge of or interest in how things really work on planet Earth. The problem of their ecological benightedness starts as a matter of training at university, where a typical undergraduate course in economics prepares students for a lifetime of abject ignorance about the complex underpinnings of the thing called the “market.”

Start with your typical textbook for the dismal science — say, the definitive one by Paul Samuelson, co-written with Nordhaus, titled “Economics.” The book is considered “the standard-bearer” of “modern economics principles.” You’ll find in its pages a circular flow diagram that shows “households” and “firms” exchanging money and goods. This is called the market. Households are the owners of land, labor, and capital, which they sell to firms for the manufacture of goods. Households then buy the goods, enriching firms, which allows the firms to buy more land, labor, and capital, enriching households. The quantity in the flow diagram, in ideal circumstances, is ever expanding: The profits of firms grow and so does the income of households.

A simple, imperturbable closed system that’s also ludicrous, fantastical, a fairy tale. In the circular flow diagram of standard economics, nothing enters from the outside to keep it flowing, and nothing exits as a result of the flow. There are no resource inputs from the environment: no oil, coal, or natural gas, no minerals and metals, no water, soil, or food. There are no outputs into the ecosphere: no garbage, no pollution, no greenhouse gasses. That’s because in the circular flow diagram, there is no ecosphere, no environment. The economy is seen as a self-renewing, perpetual-motion merry-go-round set in a vacuum.

The economy is seen as a self-renewing, perpetual-motion merry-go-round set in a vacuum.

“I taught that foolish little diagram to undergraduates at Louisiana State University for 30 years,” the late Herman Daly, one of the 20th century’s great dissenters from standard economics, told me in an interview before his death at age 84 last year. “I thought it was just great. I was well beyond a Ph.D. before it came crashing in on my head that this is a very bad paradigm.”

In the 1970s, working at the University of Maryland, Daly pioneered the field of ecological economics, which models the biophysical reality that delimits all economies. “The human economy,” wrote Daly, “is a fully contained wholly dependent growing subsystem of the non-growing ecosphere” — a commonsense observation that amounted to heresy in mainstream economics. Daly emphasized that the economy depends on nonrenewable resources that are always subject to depletion and a functioning biosphere whose limits need to be respected. His most important contribution to the literature of this renegade economics was his famous (in some circles, infamous) “steady state” model that accounts for biophysical limits to growth. Daly paid the price of heterodoxy. His fellow economists declared him an apostate.

E.F. Schumacher arrived at similar conclusions about mainstream economics in his 1973 book “Small Is Beautiful,” which became a bestseller. “It is inherent in the methodology of economics to ignore man’s dependence on the natural world,” Schumacher wrote, the emphasis his. Economics, said Schumacher, only touches the “surface of society.” It has no capacity to probe the depths of the systemic interactions between civilization and the planet. Faced with the “pressing problems of the times” — the negative environmental effects of growth — economics acts “as a most effective barrier against the understanding of these problems, owing to its addiction to purely quantitative analysis and its timorous refusal to look into the real nature of things.”

Purely quantitative analysis is the amphetamine of the mainstream economist. The steady dosing keeps his pencil sharp and his eyes blind. It has not gone unnoticed that graduate schools produce a kind of ingenious hollowness in economists who race to the finish on the schools’ assembly line. As early as 1991, a report from a commission on “graduate education in economics” warned that the university system in the United States was churning out “too many idiot savants,” economists “skilled in technique but innocent of real economic issues” — unable, that is, to look into the real nature of things.

A picture taken on October 6, 2023 shows a forest fire spreading for nine days due to the dry season and high temperatures in the Lawu mountain area in Karanganyar, Central Java. (Photo by DEVI RAHMAN / AFP) (Photo by DEVI RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Forest fires spread due to the dry season and high temperatures in Karanganyar, Central Java, Indonesia, Oct. 6, 2023.
Photo: Devi Rahman/AFP via Getty Images

By what mathemagical sorcery has Nordhaus, celebrated member of the Ivy League elite, arrived at projections that are so out of line with those of climate scientists?

The answer is in something called DICE, the mother of integrated assessment models for climate costing. It stands for dynamic integrated climate-economy. Nordhaus formulated DICE for the first time in 1992 and updated it most recently last year.

In DICE, the effect of a warmed climate is measured solely as a percentage loss (or gain) in GDP. Growth of GDP is assumed to be “exogenously determined,” in the language of economics theory, meaning it will persist at a set rate over time regardless of climate shocks. Earth systems scientists will tell you that to assume exogenously determined growth is the height of hubristic arrogance. By contrast, Nordhaus assures us in his DICE model that growth continues like a cruising Cadillac on the California coast with an occasional pothole. But the reality is rainstorms, mudslides, earthquakes, and other drivers on the road.

This blithe presumption of constant growth in a climate-damaged future is the first of Nordhaus’s errors, as Stern and Stiglitz point out. “Nordhaus’s model doesn’t fully take into account the fact that if we don’t do more to avert climate change, climate change will affect growth rates,” they told me in an email. “We will have to spend more and more repairing damage, leaving us less and less to spend on growth-enhancing investments.” And, they add, some outcomes arising from weak climate action could profoundly alter what is possible in terms of economic activity. Extreme heat, submergence, desertification, hurricanes, and so on: Such weather events and broad climatic shifts could render large areas of the world low productivity, unproductive, or uninhabitable.

The second of Nordhaus’s errors is the use of reductionist mathematical formulas. He employs something called a quadratic to calculate the relationship between rising temperatures and economic outcomes. Among the properties of a quadratic is that it permits no discontinuities; there are no points at which the relationship implied by the function breaks down. But smooth functions chart smooth progressions, and climate change will be anything but smooth. Such calculations do not account for extreme weather, vector-borne diseases, displacement and migration, international and local conflict, mass morbidity and mortality, biodiversity crash, state fragility, or food, fuel, and water shortages. There’s no measurement of amplifying feedbacks and tipping points such as Arctic sea ice loss, shutdown of vital ocean currents, collapse of the Amazon, and the like.

The third of Nordhaus’s errors is related to similarly simplistic formulas. Nordhaus calculates GDP of a particular location as fundamentally related to the temperature of that place. So, if in 2023 it’s a certain temperature in London, and the GDP in London is such-and-such, it’s reasonable to assume that when latitudes north of London rise in temperature in the future, GDP will rise to be the same as London’s today. Make of this what you will — it’s foolishness on a grand scale, and yet it’s central to the Nordhaus model.

The fourth fatal error Nordhaus makes is the most farcical. In a 1991 paper that became a touchstone for all his later work, he assumed that, because 87 percent of GDP occurs in what he called “carefully controlled environments” — otherwise known as “indoors” — it will not be affected by climate. Nordhaus’s list of the indoor activities free of any effects from climate disruption include manufacturing, mining, transportation, communication, finance, insurance, real estate, trade, private sector services, and government services. Nordhaus appears to be conflating weather with climate. The one can make trouble for outdoor dining plans on your yacht. The other sinks the yacht. 

Ignorance of systems has its way of plowing forward, juggernaut-like. Nordhaus has opined that agriculture is “the part of the economy that is sensitive to climate change,” but because it accounts for just 3 percent of national output, climate disruption of food production cannot produce a “very large effect on the U.S. economy.” It is unfortunate for his calculations that agriculture is the foundation on which the other 97 percent of GDP depends. Without food — strange that one needs to reiterate this — there is no economy, no society, no civilization. Yet Nordhaus treats agriculture as indifferently fungible.

This crude mess of a model is what won him the Nobel. “It shows how little quality control goes into selecting a winner in economics that he was even nominated for the prize,” Steve Keen, a research fellow at University College London and self-described renegade economist, told me. Keen has authored numerous books that question the orthodoxy of mainstream economics. He was an early critic of the integrated assessment models at the IPCC that owe their optimistic sheen to Nordhaus’s methodology. His caustic 2021 essay, “The Appallingly Bad Neoclassical Economics of Climate Change,” delved into the problems of Nordhausian models.

“When it comes to climate, the guy is an idiot: an idiot savant, but still fundamentally an idiot.”

“Any investigative journalist who overcame a fear of equations and simply read Nordhaus’s texts would have known that his work was nonsense,” Keen told me. “Assuming that 87 percent of the economy would be ‘negligibly affected by climate change’ because it takes place in ‘carefully controlled environments’?”

“When it comes to climate,” Keen said, “the guy is an idiot: an idiot savant, but still fundamentally an idiot.”

And it’s not just Nordhaus. Climate economists have followed dutifully in his footsteps and come up with cost models that appear to have no relationship with known laws of physics, the dynamics of climate, or the complexities of Earth systems.

A 2016 study by economists David Anthoff of University of California, Berkeley; Francisco Estrada of the Institute for Environmental Studies in Amsterdam; and Richard Tol of the University of Sussex offers one of the more egregious examples of Nordhausian nonsense. (Tol is one of Nordhaus’s protégés, and Nordhaus is listed as a reviewer of the paper.) The three academics boldly assert that shutdown of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, or AMOC — a pivotally important Earth system that loops warm equatorial water toward the Arctic and cold water back south — could have beneficial effects on the European economy.

Over the last several thousand years, the AMOC, also known as the thermohaline circulation, has functioned to keep Europe relatively warm in winter because of the warm water it draws northward from the equator. The slowing and eventual shutdown of this system could plunge Europe and broad parts of the Northern Hemisphere into extreme cold. Such a shutdown is a growing likelihood as glacial melt pours into the North Atlantic and alters the delicate balance of salt water and fresh water that drives the looping current. 

For Tol, Anthoff, and Estrada, however, collapse of one of the Earth systems that undergirds the climatic stability of the Holocene might be a good thing. “If the [AMOC] slows down a little, the global impact is a positive 0.2-0.3 percent of income,” they concluded. “This goes up to 1.3 percent for a more pronounced slowdown.” They argued that while climate heating cooks the rest of the world, European countries will benefit from a cooling effect of the current’s collapse.

This sunny assessment comes as a surprise to James Hansen, father of climate science, who has calculated that a massive temperature differential between the poles and the equator would occur with an AMOC shutdown, producing superstorms of immense fury across the Atlantic Ocean. According to Hansen, the last time Earth experienced those kinds of temperature differentials, during the interglacial Eemian era roughly 120,000 years ago, raging tempests deposited house-sized boulders on coastlines in Europe and the Caribbean. Waves from the storms were estimated to have surged inland to 40 meters above sea level.

Under these extreme conditions, what would happen to shipping lanes, coastal cities and ports, and trans-Atlantic traffic of all kinds? For the climate simpletons Tol, Anthoff, and Estrada, the question doesn’t come up. “It will be a helluva lot stormier on the North Atlantic, especially for Europeans,” Hansen told me in an email. His study team concluded that shutdown of AMOC “is in the cards this century, possibly by mid-century, with continued high emissions.”

It gets worse. Simon Dietz, at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and his fellow economists James Rising, Thomas Stoerk, and Gernot Wagner have offered some of the most ignorant visions of our climate future, using Nordhausian math models. They examined the consequences to GDP of hitting eight Earth system tipping points that climate scientists have identified as existential threats to industrial civilization. The tipping points are as familiar as a funeral litany to anybody schooled in climate literature: loss of Arctic summer ice; loss of the Amazon rainforest; loss of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets; release of ocean methane hydrates; release of carbon in permafrost; collapse of the AMOC; and collapse of the Indian monsoon.

Dietz and friends came to the astounding conclusion that if all eight were tipped, the economic cost by 2100 would amount to an additional 1.4 percent of lost GDP on top of the roughly 8 to 12 percent that Nordhaus projected.

Think of this projection in commonsense terms: A negligible effect on world affairs when the Arctic during summer is deep blue rather than white; when the jungle of the Amazon is no longer green but brown savannah or desert; when in Greenland and the West Antarctic, white ice is barren rock. A transformation of immense proportions on the Earth’s surface, in the atmosphere, and in terrestrial biotic communities. Ocean methane hydrates have an energy content that exceeds that of all other fossil fuel deposits. Permafrost holds an amount of carbon roughly twice the current carbon content of the atmosphere. With the weakening or collapse of the AMOC, Europe could be plunged into conditions akin to the Little Ice Age, with drastic reduction of the land area suitable for wheat and corn farming. Increased variability of the Indian monsoon would jeopardize the lives of over a billion people.

“The claim that these changes would have effectively zero impact upon the human economy is extraordinary,” wrote Keen. The reality is that if all eight Earth system tipping points were reached, humanity would be in terrible trouble.

SVALBARD AND JAN MAYEN - JULY 15: An aerial view of the partially melting glaciers as a polar bear, one of the species most affected by climate change, walks on glacier in Svalbard and Jan Mayen, on July 15, 2023. Under the responsibility of the Turkish Presidency and Turkish Ministry of Industry and Technology, with the coordination of TUBITAK MAM Polar Research Institute (KARE), 11 scientists carried out the 3rd National Arctic Scientific Research Expedition, within the scope of the Turkish Naval Forces Command, the Turkish General Directorate of Meteorology, Anadolu Agency, research institutes, universities and bilateral cooperation. While the Arctic region remains one of the most profoundly impacted by global climate change due to its geographical location, maritime activities, trade routes, overfishing, mining, oil and gas exploration, human-driven pollutants, and the proliferation of plastic in ocean waters, it persists in experiencing rapid warming and melting. Projections indicate that polar bears, categorized as 'vulnerable' on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)'s endangered species list and recognized as the world's largest land carnivores, will confront habitat loss and the threat of extinction should the ongoing Arctic melt persist. (Photo by Sebnem Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
An aerial view of a polar bear, one of the species most affected by climate change, walking on partially melting glaciers in Svalbard and Jan Mayen on July 15, 2023.
Photo: Sebnem Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

An uncharitable view of the work of climate economists in the Nordhaus school is that they offer a kind of sociopathy as policy prescription. Nordhaus estimates that as economic activity heads poleward with warming, the massive reduction in GDP in the tropics will be offset by optimal adaptation in the Global North. “Massive reduction in GDP,” of course, is not explicitly understood by Nordhaus as food system collapse across the equator, followed by social collapse, mass death, wars, and biblical exoduses that produce cascading nonlinear effects drawing the world into a nexus of unknowns.

Nothing to worry about, assures Nordhaus: The violent extinction of low-GDP nations will hardly affect the outlook for economic growth because things will improve in the cold Global North. This is an embrace of imagined silver linings in a climate genocide.

This is an embrace of imagined silver linings in a climate genocide.

Do governments, policymakers, and the public have any clue that the message from climate economist elites is unhinged? So far, we have followed along in the belief that all is well. One of the better indicators of this lemming-like fealty to a narrative of delusory optimism is in the financial sector.

Keen authored a report for investors this year in which he noted that pension funds have swallowed whole the Nordhausian projections of our sunny future as the climate system collapses. “Following the advice of investment consultants, pension funds have informed their members that global warming of 2-4.3 C will have only a minimal impact upon their portfolios,” Keen wrote. “This results in a huge disconnect between what scientists expect from global warming, and what pensioners/investors/financial systems are prepared for.” Keen does not expect things to end well for investors.

When I asked him what needed to be done to alter policy at the IPCC, Keen replied, “We need everyone to be as angry as I am.” Negligence by economists like Nordhaus, he said, “will end up killing billions of people.”

Andrew Glikson, who teaches at Australian National University in Canberra and advises the IPCC, has written about the coming era of mass human death, what he calls the Plutocene, the natural successor to the Anthropocene. Global governments, he charges, are “criminals” for ushering in the Plutocene in pursuit of short-term political and economic gain. I first reached out to him during the black summer of bushfires that raged across Australia in 2020. Glikson’s mood was foul then, and it has not gotten better since.

“The governing classes have given up on the survival of numerous species and future generations,” he told me, “and their inaction constitutes the ultimate crime against life on Earth.” Part of the reason for inaction is the false cheer that Nordhaus has spread with his math-genius, climate-idiot models.

The post When Idiot Savants Do Climate Economics appeared first on The Intercept.

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UN Warns of Growing Money Laundering, Shadow Banking Risk from Mekong Casinos


Transnational criminal gangs are using Southeast Asia’s booming and increasingly digital gambling industry as a shadow banking system to covertly move and launder ever more dirty money, United Nations officials have told VOA.

Drawing on new research and analysis, including the latest intelligence from local law enforcement, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime believes the region’s casinos and online gambling sites now handle tens, if not hundreds, of billions of dollars in returns a year from illegal gambling, drug trafficking, cyberscams and other organized crime, the UNODC officials say.

The same digital tools helping to make that growth possible, they added, are making the money trail harder for authorities to track and interdict.

Sharing some of their findings with VOA, the officials pointed to an underground banking system of “industrial scale,” consolidating mostly in the lower Mekong River countries — Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

What the findings show “is really a paradigm shift in how organized crime networks active in the Mekong have been using technology not just to expand their activities and revenue streams, but also to create a banking system to move these massive amounts of money around undetected,” Benedikt Hofmann, UNODC deputy representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, said.

The UNODC says the region’s gambling industry got a big boost when China started cracking down on illegal gambling and cross-border money transfers about six years ago. Many gambling operators looking for countries with a lighter touch landed in the Mekong region.

Then came COVID-19, with its strict travel controls, turbocharging the industry’s shift to online gambling and giving the underground banking business a lift as well.

“Casinos have long played a role in money laundering in Southeast Asia, but the surge of online gambling has accelerated this in ways that weren’t expected,” Hofmann said.

“High volumes of large, anonymous transactions, very limited regulation and compliance standards and the transboundary nature of services make the online gambling sector really attractive for people wanting to hide transactions,” he added.

Tools of the trade

Among the sector’s most pernicious features, the UNODC says, is the practice of “offsetting,” where clients deposit money into a gambling operator’s account in one jurisdiction and draw an equal amount out of a second account in another jurisdiction but with the same operator’s help. While meant for gambling, authorities across the region say the service is being used more and more to move and launder dirty money. 

Another major and growing concern is “white-labeling,” where all the sophisticated software and services needed to run an online gambling site can be bought from a provider and set up in a matter of weeks, much like a franchise. The UNODC says this helps criminals with little to no gaming or technical knowledge launch their own online casinos to mask their money moves.

Also fueling much of the problem is the rise of hard-to-trace cryptocurrencies, said Amanda Gore, a forensic accountant who heads the Centre for Global Advancement, which studies financial crime in Asia and elsewhere.

“If you put money into a casino and then you cash out in a different format, say for example you cash in with a bank card and then you cash out with … a cryptocurrency, how do you verify that it’s the same person? You could be paying someone as part of a drug deal, for example,” Gore told VOA.

Rules for cashing in and out of a casino or gambling site vary by country, she added, but “if you are able to use different payment methods, then it can pose pretty significant issues from a money laundering perspective.”

Authorities have no comprehensive estimates of how much dirty money is flowing through Southeast Asia’s underground banking system but the UNODC says several high-profile cases in recent years suggest it stretches easily into the tens of billions of dollars per year.

In January, for example, a Macau court convicted Alvin Chau of running an illegal gambling empire that handled over $105 billion in bets since 2013. Months earlier, a court in mainland China convicted 36 others connected to the operation; the charges included making at least $160 million in illegal cross-border payments through VIP rooms and online gambling sites run from casinos in Cambodia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

In July, Thailand arrested Kuo Che-min and last month extradited him to Taiwan, where he was wanted for allegedly running a major online gambling and underground banking network based out of a casino in Cambodia. Thai authorities said he may have laundered over half a billion dollars through the operation.

Police in Taiwan suspect Kuo of having worked with Lin Pin-Wen, an alleged member of one of the island’s main triads, Heavenly Way, which has been linked to a number of other drug trafficking cases. Lin was arrested in Taiwan in November on the same set of charges as Kuo.

Gore said high-profile cases like these were most likely “only the tip of the iceberg” and agreed with the UNODC that the problem was getting worse.

Through the backdoor

Beyond the Mekong, the Philippines has also emerged as a major node of the region’s underground banking system.

In 2016, Manila started licensing Philippine offshore gambling operators, or POGOs, to target overseas gamblers in hopes of generating local jobs and revenue. Reports of their suspected misuse filed with the government by local companies soon rose, and law enforcement authorities linked many of them to drug trafficking and money laundering, according to a 2022 report co-authored by Gore. Another report this year by the government’s own Anti-Money Laundering Council shows reports of misuse skyrocketing again between 2021 and 2022.

“It has gotten worse,” conceded Michelle Sabino, spokeswoman for the Philippine National Police Anti-Cybercrime Group, ascribing much of the blame to POGOs.

“This is the tool, this is the gateway for people, for syndicates to be able to money launder,” she told VOA. “They hide behind the legitimate POGO operations … but under that there are different companies who are doing the illegal activities.”

Increasingly aware of the system’s flaws, the Philippines started reining in POGO licensing at the start of the pandemic, which Gore said drove some operators to relocate to Cambodia, just as China’s crackdown a few years prior drove many to Southeast Asia. Gore and the UNODC say a second crackdown by the Philippines this year is now driving them mainly to Laos and Myanmar.

“That’s why comprehensive regional responses are so important — individual countries’ efforts just bring the issue back through the back door,” Hofmann said.

The UNODC is helping coordinate a response. It held a workshop on fighting underground banking through the gambling industry with law enforcement agencies from Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand last month and is planning more.

Gore said many of the countries in the region need to focus on creating or improving their laws on gambling, and seriously enforcing the ones they may already have.

Sabino said she would welcome more collaboration, as the fight still feels frustratingly fragmented.

“If they’re able to get all these countries united together in one pursuit for us to be able to apprehend cybercriminals then that will be fantastic,” she said. “That will be the day, because right now each and every country has to deal with their own problems with regards to cybersecurity and cybercriminals on their own.” 

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Marathoners in Beijing Go Maskless, Unfazed by Smog 


Runners undeterred by thick smog engulfing the Chinese capital ran the Beijing Marathon maskless on Sunday, many wearing shorts in one of the warmest Octobers on record.

Despite a greyish brown smog settling, some 30,000 marathoners set off at 7:30 a.m. (2330 GMT) from Tiananmen Square on the route through four districts of the Chinese capital over 42.195 km (26.2 miles).

Beijing was the second most-polluted major city in the world on Sunday, according to Swiss air-quality technology firm IQAir.

In the Haidian district on Beijing’s outskirts, the sky looked dreary, but hikers and visitors showed up at the Fragrant Hills Park where many go to enjoy autumn foliage, according to a Reuters witness.

China’s national forecaster advised the public to wear masks, warning on Sunday morning that air quality was reaching moderate or severe pollution.

Smog and fog will blanket parts of China for the next few days, reducing visibility and affecting travel in northeastern, northern, central and some eastern provinces, the National Meteorological Center said on Sunday.

Beijing’s observatory cautioned in the evening that visibility in most areas of the city will drop to less than 1 km (0.62 mile) overnight.

The smoggy weather is expected to gradually weaken and dissipate from Friday, but not before heavy fog forecast to cover parts of Jiangsu, Anhui and Sichuan provinces over the next three days could reduce visibility to less than 200 meters (650 feet), the forecaster said.

Steel production hubs in Tangshan, Handan and other cities in the northern province of Hebei launched emergency responses on Friday after heavy air pollution forecasts. The notices did not indicate when the controls would be lifted.

The smog adds unusually warm October weather, due to significantly weaker cold air currents from the north as the polar vortex that sends cold air southward was situated further north recently, experts said.

Beijing’s high on Sunday was 19 C (66 F), according to the national weather bureau.

Parts of China, including in the north and northeast, have been experiencing temperatures 2 to 4 degrees Celsius (4-7 Fahrenheit) higher than normal the past 10 days.

“At present, a total of 237 national meteorological stations have broken historically highest temperatures in late October, which is still a relatively rare situation,” meteorological bureau’s chief forecaster Fang Chong was quoted by state media as saying.

Weak cold air currents were forecast to last the rest of the month before beginning to cool in early November.

While the smog was expected to clear up in less than a week, the backdrop of hazy weather resembled that of Beijing’s annual race almost a decade ago. In 2014 then-Premier Li Keqiang, who died on Friday, declared “war” on pollution and many marathoners donned masks for protection.

 

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