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Cave rescue: ‘Four more boys rescued’ by divers

Emerging reports say that cave divers in northern Thailand have rescued four more boys from a vast flooded cave system on the second day of a complex operation

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Emerging reports say that cave divers in northern Thailand have rescued four more boys from a vast flooded cave system on the second day of a complex operation.

The Thai Navy Seals leading the rescue operation have confirmed that eight boys in total have been extracted.

Four boys and their football coach remain inside the caves.

The group was trapped in the cave on 23 June after heavy rains caused flooding, and found alive last week by divers.

Read Also: What we know of the rescue efforts of 4 ‘cave boys’ of Thailand

Four boys were brought out safely on Sunday, but the mission was paused overnight for air tanks to be replaced.

Before the confirmation that four more boys had been rescued on Monday, air ambulances were seen departing from the cave system and ambulances arriving at the hospital in the nearby town of Chiang Rai.

Rescuers decided to go ahead with the operation to free the group because of fears that waters would rise again.

The group of boys and their coach were found after nine days.

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Musings From Abroad

WHO, Africa CDC begin response plan to check mpox outbreak

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A response strategy for the mpox outbreak throughout the continent was unveiled on Friday by the World Health Organisation and the Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

The collaborative endeavour seeks to support African nations in their attempts to stop the virus’ spread and save lives by fortifying and expediting their response to it.

Starting this month and lasting until February of the next year, it is expected to cost almost $600 million.

Three weeks after the WHO deemed the new strain of mpox spreading to be a public health emergency of global concern, the plan was announced.

Dr. Jean Kaseya, director-general of the Africa CDC, stated that fifteen additional countries will gain preparedness while the other fourteen countries will receive five5% of the funding.

Through partners, the remaining 45% will be used for operational and technical assistance. The organisation did not say who would provide the funds.

“We have classified countries based on their degree of risk, where there is intense spread as is happening in eastern DRC and other places where there is transmission happening,” said WHO regional director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti.

“And then right down to countries where we are working very much on building the preparedness and readiness to address in case cases appear, as has happened in Guinea.”

According to Kaseya, the strategy emphasises community involvement, lab testing, and surveillance—emphasizing that immunisations alone will not stop the outbreak from spreading.

The Africa CDC reported that there had been 5,549 confirmed cases of mpox across the continent since the beginning of 2024, along with 643 deaths related to the illness.

This indicates a considerable increase in infections as well as deaths over the preceding year.

Nineteen per cent of the cases are in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Children under the age of fifteen account for the majority of mpox infections in Burundi, the second most affected country, and Congo.

Mpox is a virus that can be transmitted from person to person through personal contact, as well as from place to person by objects and surfaces touched by a person infected with mpox.

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Musings From Abroad

Financial difficulties may affect Kenyan-led police mission in Haiti

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To replace the current Kenya-led mission in Haiti, the United States of America and Ecuador have published a draft resolution requesting that the UN start preparing for a U.N. peacekeeping operation.

Since June, around 400 Kenyan police have been deployed as part of the U.N.-backed mission.

The United States diplomats stated that the Kenya-led mission, which is dependent on donations from the public, is experiencing financial difficulties and could consider using a U.N. peacekeeping force. Thus far, most of the funding has come from the United States and Canada. In contrast, money for peacekeeping efforts comes from a separate U.N. budget.

It won’t change anything if the proposed Security Council resolution lists the “achievements” of the multinational mission supported by the United Nations.

The state of emergency in Haiti was extended last week to include the whole country.

2017 saw the end of the last UN mission in Haiti. It was said to have caused a cholera outbreak by disposing of contaminated sewage into a river. Nine Haitian children were exploited by at least 134 UN personnel in a sex ring between 2004 and 2007, according to an internal UN investigation.

A 2004 revolt brought the nation dangerously close to collapse, prompting the United Nations to send in reinforcements. Following successful elections and a devastating 2010 earthquake that claimed up to 300,000 lives and ended in October 2017, it contributed to the stabilisation of the impoverished nation.

However, there was a cloud cast over U.N. forces when troops from Nepal were widely accused of bringing cholera, which has killed over 10,000 people in Haiti since 2010, and other troops were linked to sexual assault, including rape and the targeting of undernourished children.

The United Nations has operated several small operations in Haiti since 2017. A Haitian-led political process aimed at advancing elections, the rule of law, and human rights is the goal of the most recent political mission, BINUH.

Given the controversies surrounding the previous peacekeeping deployment, many Haitians have resisted the idea of another one. In addition, some Haitians view U.N. forces as an invading army.

In 2022, Haiti requested an international force to fight gangs, and U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres pleaded for months for a nation to take the lead in organising the force before Kenya stepped up and offered 1,000 police.

Police from the Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin, Chad, and Jamaica are anticipated to join them, expanding the global force to 2,500 members.

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