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Friday 11 November 2022

Ghana To Receive Up To $50m; As Lands Minister Calls For Bridging Climate Financing Gap

 Ghana is set to receive up to Fifty Million United States Dollars (US$50,000,000.00) from the World Bank for reducing carbon dioxide emissions between 2019 and 2024. This was disclosed by the Climate Change Manager of the World Bank, Mr. Erwin De Nys, on Wednesday, 9th November 2022. The amount is in return of some ten million tons of carbon dioxide emissions expected to be reduced by 2024 within a six-million-hectare stretch of the West African Guinean Forest.



Mr. De Nys was speaking at an event on Ghana’s Forest Solutions to Climate Change, organised by the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources at the ongoing twenty-seventh session of the Conference of Parties (COP27) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.

He said Ghana has been an important and active member of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility since its establishment in 2008 and is one of the first countries to transition to emission reduction programmes and results-based payments.

Mr. De Nys said the country will soon receive US$4.8 million, representing over nine hundred and seventy thousand (970,000) tons of verified and validated emission reductions between June and December 2019. He said the payment will be used to reward stakeholders in emission reduction, and boost confidence in Ghana’s REDD+ process.

In addition to this payment, Mr. De Nys said Ghana will also benefit from the Enabling Access to Benefits while Lowering Emissions (EnABLE) Programme of the World Bank, to further reduce emissions and ensure social inclusion.

On his part, the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Hon. Samuel A. Jinapor, MP, called for strategic collaboration to bridge the climate financing gap. He said existing financing options are inadequate to deal with the enormity of the problem; and having missed the one hundred billion dollars ($100 billion) climate finance pledge made in Copenhagen, there is an urgent need for stakeholders to work together to bridge the gap between ambition and action.

Mr. Jinapor called on governments and all actors to deliver action beyond pledges and declarations. “We are at a stage in the climate struggle where mere talk, commitments, declarations and/or pledges are not enough. Consistent with the clarion call of COP27, this is the time the world must “walk the talk” and get on with action and implementation of the many years of unfulfilled climate action promises”, the Minister said.

He said Ghana was committed to forest and nature-based solutions to climate change, which is evidenced by the over 547,000 hectares of degraded forests cultivated between 2017 and 2021, and the over thirty million trees planted under the Green Ghana Project, as well as the verified and validated emission reduction under the Ghana REDD+ Strategy. He expressed his confidence in COP27, which has been termed action and implementation COP, to deliver real action towards limiting global warming to the one point five degrees Celsius (1.5ÂșC) target set out in the Paris Agreement.

The UNDP’s Principal Advisor on Climate and Forests, Tim Claris, who also spoke at the event, commended Ghana for her forest solutions to climate change and said the country deserves to be rewarded for actions being taken in the forestry sector.

Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana

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Man arrested on COVID ward in Scotland is American rape suspect who faked his own death, court rules

 Sheriff Norman McFadyen dismisses Nicholas Rossi's claims of mistaken identity as "scandalous" and "implausible and fanciful".



A court has ruled for the first time that a man arrested on a COVID ward in Scotland is an American rape suspect who faked his own death.


The court sheriff has decided that the man calling himself Arthur Knight is in fact Nicholas Rossi.

Sheriff Norman McFadyen said: “I am ultimately satisfied on the balance of probabilities, by the evidence of fingerprint, photographic and tattoo evidence, taken together, supported by the evidence of changes of name, that Mr Knight is indeed Nicholas Rossi, the person sought for extradition by the United States.”

He rejected the 35-year-old’s claims of mistaken identity as “scandalous” and “implausible and fanciful”.

Fugitive Rossi is wanted in connection with sex attacks on three different women in Utah, and is also alleged to have committed a number of other crimes across the US.

Authorities say he fled the US to avoid prosecution and attempted to trick investigators into believing he was dead, even attempting to hold a fake memorial mass to commemorate his passing.

But he was tracked via an Interpol arrest warrant to a hospital in Glasgow where he was undergoing treatment for COVID-19 in December 2021.

Since his arrest he has insisted he is a victim of mistaken identity – that his name is Arthur Knight, and that he is an Irish orphan who has never visited the US.

But today officials at Edinburgh Sheriff Court ruled this story was false and that he was indeed the man wanted by US authorities.

Three days of evidence were heard this week as lawyers tried to get to the truth of the man’s identity.

Advocate Depute Paul Harvey called 10 witnesses including hospital staff, police officers and fingerprint experts who were all adamant the man they had encountered in Glasgow was the man identified by the Americans as Rossi.

Two fingerprint experts from Police Scotland identified unique characteristics of prints from “Arthur Knight” which they said were “identical” matches for prints taken from Rossi.

A nurse, from Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, described “distinctive” tattoos on her patient’s biceps, which were the same as images released by Interpol as part of the manhunt.

During the course of his defence, the wanted man made a series of bizarre claims to explain away the biometric evidence put before the court.

He told the sheriff that he did not have any tattoos before his admission to hospital and that he “awoke” from a coma to find his body had been tattooed while he was unconscious.

In another strange twist, he alleged the fingerprints on the Interpol warrant only matched his own because they were taken by an NHS employee in Glasgow. He claimed a man known only as “Patrick” took the prints while he was sedated and then sent them to a corrupt official in Utah who in turn circulated them to Interpol.

Sheriff McFadyen said Rossi’s claim that he had regained consciousness from a coma to find that he had been tattooed “was equally… if not more implausible and fanciful” than his assertion that his fingerprints were taken from him by an NHS worker on behalf of US prosecutors while he was in intensive care.

On Rossi’s insistence that he was Arthur Knight and not the man wanted in the US, the sheriff added: “It seems to me highly suspicious that the change of names went through a number of permutations. That seems to me consistent with someone who was hiding from someone or something.”

Rossi’s series of bizarre stories, excuses and stalling tactics were branded “entirely fanciful” and “outlandish” by the prosecutor, who suggested there was no doubt the man in court was Rossi himself.

At one point in the proceedings Rossi appeared to cry and wheeze, describing his experience of Scottish prison as “challenging and dystopian”.

He mouthed “I love you” at his wife Miranda, who has stood by him and maintains that her husband Arthur is a victim of mistaken identity.

US extradition bid

This case, which has been plagued with delays, is one of the most bizarre to be heard in a Scottish court.

Today’s ruling by Sheriff Norman McFadyen brings to an end the relentless fight over the identity, removes any suggestion of the existence of alias “Arthur Knight” and paves the way for full extradition proceedings which are likely to get under way next year.

American officials want him extradited to stand trial.

By Connor Gillies, Scotland correspondent, at Edinburgh Sheriff Court

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Ukraine war: Russia says troops have begun leaving Kherson as Kyiv stays sceptical

 Moscow says it has started pulling its troops out of the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson.



Russia’s defence ministry said on Thursday that the “manoeuvre of units of the Russian group” had begun to the other side of the Dnipro River.

It comes after Ukrainian officials cautioned that Russia’s announcement of a withdrawal from Kherson could be part of a misinformation campaign.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said they had seen no signs that Russia was completely leaving the city.

“Which means that these statements may be disinformation.”

“A part of the Russian group is preserved in the city, and additional reserves are charged to the region. Ukraine is liberating territories based on intelligence data, not staged TV statements,” he said.

Russia’s military claimed Wednesday that it will withdraw from the only Ukrainian regional capital it captured. Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said he had ordered Russian troops to withdraw from the west bank of the Dnipro River in the face of Ukrainian attacks near the southern city.

The announcement marks one of Russia’s most significant retreats and a potential turning point in the war, now nearing the end of its ninth month.

In a nightly video address, Zelenskyy didn’t comment directly about Russia’s withdrawal announcement, saying only that: “Our emotions must be restrained — always during war. I will definitely not feed the enemy all the details of our operations […] when we have our result, everyone will see it.”

In recent months, Kyiv’s forces have zeroed in on Kherson, a city with a pre-war population of 280,000 people.

They’ve cut off supply lines in recent weeks as part of a larger counteroffensive in eastern and southern Ukraine that has pushed Russian troops out of wide swaths of territory.

In addition to the largely successful counteroffensive, Ukrainian resistance fighters behind the front line have worked inside Kherson, with sabotage and assassinations of Moscow-appointed officials.

Recapturing Kherson could allow Ukraine to win back lost territory in the Zaporizhzhia region and other southern areas, including Crimea, which Russia illegally seized in 2014.

A Russian retreat is almost certain to raise domestic pressure on the Kremlin to escalate the conflict.

Yaroslav Yanushevych, Kherson’s Ukrainian-appointed governor, called on residents “not to give in to euphoria” just yet. Another Ukrainian-appointed Kherson regional official, Serhii Khlan, told reporters that Russian forces had blown up five bridges to slow Kyiv’s forces.

Military analyst Oleg Zhdanov said that Russia’s announced retreat “could very well be an ambush and a Russian trap to force the Ukrainians to go on the offensive, force them to penetrate the Russian defenses, and in response to strike with a powerful blow from the flanks.”

By Euronews  with AP

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