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‘We are One Humanity with a Shared Responsibility,’ Secretary‑General Stresses
ISTANBUL, 23 May - The first-ever World Humanitarian Summit opened today in Istanbul with more than 65 Heads of State and Government, and numerous public- and private-sector stakeholders gathered for two days of high-level discussions on ways to rapidly advance global efforts to address the record numbers of people suffering from conflict, climate disasters and hunger.
“We are here to shape a different future,” United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said. “Today, we declare: We are one humanity with a shared responsibility. Let us resolve here and now not only to keep people alive, but to give people a chance at a life in dignity.”
Providing a snapshot of current crises, he said hundreds had been killed in a recent earthquake in Ecuador, thousands more had been forced to flee bombings in Syria, millions faced hunger in Southern Africa and million had been displaced by conflict a
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Al-Shabaab (militant group)
Somalia-based Islamist movement
For other uses of "Al-Shabaab", see Al-Shabab.
Not to be confused with Al-Shabaab (Mozambique).
Harakat al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen,[note 1] commonly known as al-Shabaab,[note 2] is a transnational Salafi Jihadist[36][37] military and political organization based in Somalia and active elsewhere in East Africa. It is actively involved in the ongoing Somali Civil War as an Islamist group, regularly invoking takfir to rationalize its terrorist attacks on Somali civilians and government forces.[11][12] Allied to the militantpan-Islamist organization al-Qaeda since , it has also forged ties with al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
Formed in the mids as a youth militia within the wider military wing of the Islamic Courts Union, al-Shabaab came to prominence during the – Ethiopian invasion and occupation of Somalia, during whic
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Abstract: Many terrorist groups have released statements advocating weaponizing COVID Those entities exercising some form of territorial control, such as the Taliban and al-Shabaab, also face wider questions over the capacity and inclination of their administrative systems to effectively respond to the crisis. In Somalia, al-Shabaab has proactively established an isolation center and is issuing health advice, the latest extensions of a long-running experiment in militant governance. Previous humanitarian disasters revealed the group’s largesse to be ad hoc and rather mercurial. While recent strategic setbacks could change how it navigates this latest utmaning, the pandemic may nevertheless expose intrinsic limitations in al-Shabaab’s approach to civic administration. The key issue is whether the authorities the group is fighting can do any better.
Internationally recognized governments are not the only stakeholders that have been deliberating over how to deal with the COVID pand