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Colombia declares rainfall disaster
by AFP Staff Writers
Bogota (AFP) Nov 1, 2022

Colombia's president decreed a national disaster Tuesday after record-breaking rainfalls killed more than 200 people in recent months.

Rain levels recorded in 2022 so far have been "the highest in the last 40 years," he told reporters in Bogota before departing for Venezuela for a meeting with his counterpart Nicolas Maduro.

Resultant flooding killed 266 people, Petro said, while crop losses aggravated rising food inflation.

He pointed to climate change and the cyclical La Nina weather system for the record rains.

A state of national disaster would allow the government to give $100 per month -- half the minimum wage -- to feed the children in households headed by women, and to subsidize fertilizers used by small-scale farmers, the president said.

He also ordered the creation of special "committees" to see to it that people in areas affected by floods or crop losses receive three meals a day.

In September, Colombia recorded annual inflation of 11.4 percent, the highest in 23 years, with food prices among those rising the fastest.


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Calls for Egypt protests trigger security clampdown ahead of COP27
Cairo (AFP) Nov 1, 2022
Rights defenders say Egyptian authorities are cracking down on activists over a mysterious call for protests on November 11 - when world leaders will convene at the COP27 climate summit. The measures, which have included random phone searches and summons for interrogation, began in October, according to prominent opposition lawyer Khaled Ali. "Almost every day, state security is arresting and interrogating people about the call to protest on November 11," the former presidential candidate wrote ... read more

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