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CrisisWatch: May Alerts and April Trends 2021


April 2021
Tensions continued to mount among Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt ahead of Addis Ababa’s planned second unilateral filling of Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam in coming months. In apparent warning to Addis Ababa and preparation for possible escalation of inter-state tensions, Sudan and Egypt 31 March-5 April held second joint military exercise since Nov 2020. New round of talks among Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan on filling and operation of Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on Blue Nile river broke down 6 April. Cairo same day denounced Ethiopia’s “lack of political will to negotiate in good faith”, while Khartoum vowed to “consider all possible options to protect its security”, denouncing Addis Ababa’s rejection of its proposal for quadripartite mediation by AU, EU, UN and U.S. to break deadlock in AU-led negotiations. Ethiopia’s water minister Seleshi Bekele 7 April said Addis Ababa would proceed with second filling of dam during forthcoming rainy seas ....

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Two Climate Migrants Recount Radically Different Experiences Seeking Sanctuary in the US


News
News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Two Climate Migrants Recount Radically Different Experiences Seeking Sanctuary in the US
Jose Luis Zelaya came to the United States as a child after Hurricane Mitch devastated his home country of Honduras.
Photo from Jose Luis Zelaya
The United States has done more to fuel climate migration than any other country on Earth, but it does not always welcome climate migrants equally.
Apr 15, 2021
Climate change is fueling longer dry spells, bigger floods, and more violent storms across the globe, but the effect is most pronounced in the tropics, where even a small rise in temperature can turn a heat wave from miserable to deadly or lend a hurricane the destructive power needed to level a small town. In the decades to come, more chaotic weather in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean will spur millions of people to move ....

United States , Puerto Rico , New York , Gulf Of Mexico , Mexico General , Jose Luis Zelaya , Sharellee Rosario Rond , William Pag , Byjeremy Deaton , Central America , Luis Zelaya , Hurricane Mitch , Rio Grande , Deferred Action , Childhood Arrivals , Nexus Media , Hurricane Maria , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ப்வெர்டோ ரிக்கோ , புதியது யார்க் , வளைகுடா ஆஃப் மெக்ஸிகோ , மெக்ஸிகோ ஜநரல் , ஜோசே லூயிஸ் ஸ்ய்லைய , மைய அமெரிக்கா , லூயிஸ் ஸ்ய்லைய , சூறாவளி மிட்ச் ,

A Tale of Two Climate Migrants


This story originally appeared in Nexus Media News
and is republished here as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the climate story.
Climate change is fueling longer dry spells, bigger floods, and more violent storms across the globe, but the effect is most pronounced in the tropics, where even a small rise in temperature can turn a heat  wave from miserable to deadly or lend a hurricane the destructive power needed to level a small town. In the decades to come, more chaotic weather in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean will spur millions of people to move to the mainland United States. This new migration has already begun, as drought devastates farmers in Guatemala and Honduras and more dangerous hurricanes imperil communities around the Gulf of Mexico. ....

United States , Puerto Rico , Gulf Of Mexico , Mexico General , Jose Luis Zelaya , Sharellee Rosario Rond , Willam Pag , Nexus Media News , Covering Climate Now , Central America , Luis Zelaya , Hurricane Mitch , Rio Grande , Deferred Action , Childhood Arrivals , Hurricane Maria , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ப்வெர்டோ ரிக்கோ , வளைகுடா ஆஃப் மெக்ஸிகோ , மெக்ஸிகோ ஜநரல் , ஜோசே லூயிஸ் ஸ்ய்லைய , நெக்ஸஸ் மீடியா செய்தி , உள்ளடக்கியது காலநிலை இப்போது , மைய அமெரிக்கா , லூயிஸ் ஸ்ய்லைய , சூறாவளி மிட்ச் ,

Meet the Candidates: Honduras


Meet the Candidates: Honduras
Criminal investigations and fears of fraud loom over this year’s presidential election.
Little is certain in the race to become Honduras’ next president. Current President Juan Orlando Hernández, re-elected in 2017 in what critics say is a fraudulent second term, is not running again. However, criminal investigations into Hernández and others in his circle loom over the race, with some suggesting the government would do whatever it takes to ensure the ruling National Party stays in power. Recent piecemeal electoral reforms also offer little in the way of ensuring a clean election in November. Still, experts believe the opposition stands a chance if it unites. Below, ....

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