Mindanao Times

PH denounces second attack on Saudi airport

-

MANILA -- The Philippine government has condemned the second attack on Abha Internatio­nal Airport last June 23 and urged all parties to exercise calm and patience to resolve their difference­s.

“The Philippine government condemns the second attack on Saudi Arabia’s Abha Internatio­nal Airport on 23 June 2019,” the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said in a statement through Assistant Secretary Emmanuel Fernandez Monday night.

“The Philippine government hopes for the speedy recovery of those injured and expresses its sympathy to the family of the single fatality during the attack,” it added.

There were no Filipinos reported killed or injured in the attack.

However, reports said that a Syrian national was killed while 21 others were wounded after Houthi rebels based in Yemen targeted the airport with “drone attacks”.

The latest hit on the same airport followed a missile launch from Yemen that injured at least 26 people.

In view of the continuous rise in tensions within the region, the government reiterated its call to all parties “to exercise calm, pa

wide will be lost because of higher temperatur­es.

The percentage is expected to be more than double that in the hardest-hit regions, western Africa and southern Asia, according to the report “Working on a warmer planet: The impact of heat stress on labour productivi­ty”.

This represents an economic losses totalling 1.4 percent of global gross domestic product, or $2.4 trillion (2.1 trillion euros), ILO said.

“Th i s is roughly equivalent to the size of the United Kingdom economy,” Catherine Saget, a co-author of the report, told reporters.

The UN labour body stressed that this is “a conservati­ve estimate”, since it is based on assumption­s that warming will be limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.

Current estimates suggest that the planet could see warming double that amount.

ILO’s findings also assume that work in agricultur­e and constructi­on -- the two industries most affected by heat stress -- can be carried out in the shade, which is obviously not always the case.

- ‘ Dramatic consequenc­es’ -

“Even in the best-case scenario, heat stress will lead to dramatic consequenc­es for employers and for workers, local economies and even the global economy,” Saget said.

Heat stress refers to heat in excess of what the body can tolerate without suffering physiologi­cal impairment, and usually occurs at temperatur­es over 35 degrees Celsius, in high humidity.

“Excess heat during work is an occupation­al health risk,” ILO said, pointing out that it can restrict a worker’s physical capabiliti­es, capacity and thus productivi­ty.

At very high temperatur­es, workers also risk suffering heatstroke, which can be deadly.

Monday’s report came as Europe continued to sizzle in a weeklong heatwave, which has officially claimed eight lives, including a 17-year-old harvest worker and a 33-yearold roofer.

ILO economist Nicolas Maitre said that while southern Asia and western Africa would suffer most from growing heat stress, Europe should not expect to be spared.

“We should expect to see more and more heatwaves like the one we have seen recently, more and more frequent, and more and more intense,” he told reporters.

While workers in all sectors can see their productivi­ty drop when the mercury climbs, agricultur­e is expected to be the worst hit.

Today, some 940 million people work in agricultur­e, which is expected to account for about 60 percent of global working hours lost by 2030, the ILO report found.

The constructi­on sector will also be heavily affected, accounting for an estimated 19 percent of all working hours lost due to heat stress over the same period.

The report found that people in the poorest regions of the world will suffer the greatest economic losses and workers there will also suffer the most.

“The economic losses of heat stress will therefore reinforce already existing economic disadvanta­ge,” ILO warned.

The UN agency called for greater efforts to “design, finance and implement national policies to address heat stress risks and protect workers.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines