Borsa güne yüzde 0,85 artışla başladı

Borsa İstanbul’da BIST 100 endeksi, güne yüzde 0,85 artışla 4.928,63 puandan başladı.

Borsa İstanbul’da BIST 100 endeksi, güne yüzde 0,85 artışla 4.928,63 puandan başladı.

Açılışta BIST 100 endeksi, önceki kapanışa göre 41,72 puan ve yüzde 0,85 değer kazanarak 4.928,63 puana çıktı.

Bankacılık endeksi yüzde 1,20 ve holding endeksi yüzde 0,87 artış kaydetti. Sektör endeksleri arasında en fazla kazandıran yüzde 1,26 ile iletişim, en çok kaybettiren yüzde 0,43 ile menkul kıymet yatırım ortaklığı oldu.

Dün düşüş eğiliminde hareket eden BIST 100 endeksi, yüzde 1,30 değer kaybederek günü 4.886,91 puandan kapattı.

Analistler, küresel pay piyasalarında, ABD Merkez Bankası’nın (Fed) para politikasına ilişkin belirsizliklerin fiyatlamaları zorlaştırdığını ifade ederek, bugün yoğun makroekonomik veri takviminin yatırımcıların odağında olduğunu söyledi.

4.800 puan destek konumunda

Borç limitinin 2025’e kadar askıya alınmasını ve federal harcamaların 2 yıl boyunca sınırlanmasını öngören tasarı dün ABD Temsilciler Meclisi’nde onaylanırken, tasarının pazartesiye kadar Senato’dan geçmesi gerekiyor. Tasarının bugün Demokratların kontrolündeki Senatodan geçebileceği belirtiliyor.

Analistler, bugün dünya genelinde imalat sanayi Satınalma Yöneticileri Endeksi (PMI) ve ABD’de ADP özel sektör istihdam verileri başta olmak üzere yoğun veri gündeminin takip edileceğini belirterek, teknik açıdan BIST 100 endeksinde 5.000 ve 5.200 seviyelerinin direnç, 4.800 puanın destek konumunda olduğunu kaydetti.

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Prizmabet para yatırma ve çekme işlemleri konusunda da üyelerine kolaylık sağlamaktadır. Prizmabet’te banka havalesi, kredi kartı, papara, cepbank, QR kod, bitcoin gibi farklı yöntemlerle para yatırabilir ve çekebilirsiniz. Para yatırma ve çekme işlemleri 7/24 yapılabilmekte ve kısa sürede hesaplara yansımaktadır. Prizmabet para yatırma ve çekme işlemlerinde herhangi bir komisyon veya kesinti de yapmamaktadır.

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Yapı Kredi’ye 580 milyon dolarlık sosyal sendikasyon

Yapı Kredi, yılın ilk yarısında 21 ülkeden 35 bankanın katılımıyla 580 milyon dolar sosyal sendikasyon kredisi sağladı. Yapı Kredi CEO’su Gökhan Erün, “Sosyal sendikasyon olarak sağladığımız bu kaynak, deprem felaketinden etkilenen illerdeki müşterilerimizin dış ticaret finansmanına yönlendirilecek” açıklaması yaptı.

Bankadan yapılan açıklamaya göre, Yapı Kredi’nin imzaladığı ilk sosyal sendikasyon kredisi olan 580 milyon dolarlık işlem, depremden etkilenen illerdeki müşterilerin dış ticaret işlemlerinde kullanılacak.

Açıklamada görüşlerine yer verilen Yapı Kredi Üst Yöneticisi (CEO) Gökhan Erün, sağladıkları sendikasyon kredisiyle ülke ekonomisine ve Yapı Kredi’ye duyulan güveni bir kez daha teyit ettiklerini belirterek, “Hepimizi derinden etkileyen depremin yaralarını sarmak için Yapı Kredi olarak ilk günden itibaren var gücümüzle çalışıyoruz. Bu zorlu dönemde imza attığımız ilk sosyal temalı sendikasyon kredimizle ülkemiz ekonomisine 580 milyon dolar destek sağlayacağız. Sosyal sendikasyon olarak sağladığımız bu kaynak, deprem felaketinden etkilenen illerdeki müşterilerimizin dış ticaret finansmanına yönlendirilecek. Böylece gücümüzü aldığımız ülkemiz ekonomisine değer katmayı sürdüreceğiz.” ifadelerini kullandı.

Kredinin vadesi 367 gün

Yapı Kredi’nin, 201,5 milyon dolar ve 353,4 milyon avro olmak üzere iki ayrı döviz cinsinden sağladığı kredinin vadesi 367 gün, toplam maliyeti ise sırasıyla SOFR + yüzde 4,25 ve Euribor + yüzde 4,00 oldu.

Sendikasyon kredisinin ortak koordinatörlüğünü Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank ve Emirates NBD; sürdürülebilirlik koordinatörlüğünü Standard Chartered Bank ve Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation; aracılığını ise Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank üstlendi.

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Prizmabet’in en önemli özelliklerinden biri de Prizmabet TV kanalıdır. Bu kanal sayesinde bahis sitesinde bulunan müsabakaları üyeler bir ücrete katlanmadan istedikleri zaman takip edebiliyor. Böylece hem heyecanlı hem de kazançlı bir bahis deneyimi yaşayabiliyorsunuz. Prizmabet TV kanalında futbol, basketbol, tenis, voleybol gibi popüler spor dallarının yanı sıra daha az bilinen sporlara da yer verilmektedir. Prizmabet TV kanalını kullanmak için sadece siteye üye olmanız ve yatırım yapmanız yeterlidir.

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Sonuç olarak, Prizmabet ülkemizin en iyi bahis sitelerinden biri olarak gösterilebilir. Prizmabet’te hem eğlenceli hem de kazançlı bir bahis deneyimi yaşayabilirsiniz. Prizmabet’e üye olmak için güncel giriş adresini web sitemizden bulabilirsiniz. Prizmabet’e girmek için tıklayınız! Prizmabet’e katıldığınıza pişman olmayacaksınız!

Plastic pollution is a ‘time bomb’ warns France’s President Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron warns that global plastic pollution is a ‘time bomb’ as delegates begin five days of talks in Paris aimed at reaching an international treaty to end plastic waste.

Representatives of 175 nations with divergent ambitions met at UNESCO headquarters in Paris on Monday for the second of five sessions with the aim of signing a historic agreement covering the entire plastics life cycle.

The French president urged nations to put an end to today’s “globalised and unsustainable” production model.

“Plastic pollution is a time-bomb and at the same time already a scourge today,” said Emmanuel Macron in a video message in which he called for an end to a system where richer countries export plastic waste to poorer ones.

He added that the first priorities of the negotiations should be to reduce the production of plastics based on fossil fuel and to ban “as soon as possible” the most polluting products like single-use plastics.

Also taking part in the negotiations are NGOs, representatives of plastic companies and lobbyists, much to the annoyance of environmentalists.

In February 2022, nations agreed in principle on the need for a legally binding UN treaty to end plastic pollution around the world, setting an ambitious 2024 deadline.

Host country France organised a ministerial summit on Saturday with 60 countries to kick-start the talks.

“If we don’t act now, by 2050 there will be more plastic than fish in the oceans”, said French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna.

The stakes are high, given that annual plastics production has more than doubled in 20 years to 460 million tonnes, and is on track to triple within four decades.

Two-thirds of this output is discarded after being used once or a few times, and winds up as waste. More than a fifth is dumped or burned illegally, and less than 10 per cent is recycled.

Policy actions to be debated during the talks include a global ban on single-use plastic items, “polluter pays” schemes, and a tax on new plastic production.

Environmental groups are encouraged that global plastics pollution is finally being tackled but are concerned the treaty may not include targets to reduce overall plastic production.

‘It makes you sad’: Tourists and fishermen leave Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay covered in trash

Ha Long Bay is one of Vietnam’s most beautiful nature site. But the UNESCO world heritage site threatened by deluge of plastic waste.

Squinting in the bright light of a hot summer morning, Vu Thi Thinh perches on the edge of her small wooden boat and plucks a polystyrene block from the calm waters of Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay.

It’s not yet 9am, but a mound of styrofoam buoys, plastic bottles and beer cans sit behind her.

They are the most visible sign of the human impacts that have degraded the UNESCO World Heritage Site, famed for its brilliant turquoise waters dotted with towering rainforest-topped limestone islands.

“I feel very tired because I collect trash on the bay all day without much rest,” said Thinh, 50, who has been working for close to a decade as a trash picker.

“I have to make five to seven trips on the boat every day to collect it all.”

Waste threatens spectacular Ha Long Bay

Since the beginning of March, 10,000 cubic metres of rubbish – enough to fill four Olympic swimming pools – have been collected from the water, according to the Ha Long Bay management board.

The trash problem has been particularly acute over the past two months, as a scheme to replace styrofoam buoys at fish farms with more sustainable alternatives backfired and fishermen chucked their redundant polystyrene into the sea.

Authorities ordered 20 barges, eight boats and a team of dozens of people to launch a clean-up, state media said.

Do Tien Thanh, a conservationist at the Ha Long Bay Management Department, said the buoys were a short-term issue but admitted: “Ha Long Bay… is under pressure”.

More than seven million visitors came to visit the spectacular limestone karsts of Ha Long Bay, on Vietnam’s northeastern coast, in 2022.

Authorities hope that number will jump to eight and a half million this year.

But the site’s popularity, and the subsequent rapid growth of Ha Long City – which is now home to a cable car, amusement park, luxury hotels and thousands of new homes – have severely damaged its ecosystem.

Conservationists estimate there were originally around 234 types of coral in the bay. Now the number is around half.

There have been signs of recovery in the past decade, with coral coverage slowly increasing again and dolphins — pushed out of the bay a decade ago — coming back in small numbers, as a ban on fishing in the core parts of the heritage site expanded their food source.

But the waste, both plastic and human, is still a huge concern.

Ha Long Bay is known for its stunning natural beauty.

“There are so many big residential areas near Ha Long Bay,” said conservationist Thanh.

“The domestic waste from these areas, if not dealt with properly, greatly impacts the ecological system, which includes the coral reefs.

“Ha Long City can now handle just over 40 percent of its wastewater.”

Single-use plastic is now banned on tourist boats, and the Ha Long Bay management board says general plastic use on board is down 90 percent from its peak.

But trash generated onshore still lines parts of the beach, with a team of rubbish collectors not able to block the eyesore from tourists.

‘Plastic pollution crisis’ in Ha Long Bay

Pham Van Tu, a local resident and freelance tour guide, said he had received a lot of complaints from visitors.

“They read in the media that Ha Long Bay is beautiful, but when they saw a lot of floating trash, they didn’t want to swim or go canoeing and they hesitated to tell their friends and family to visit,” he said.

Rapid economic growth, urbanisation and changing lifestyles in communist Vietnam have led to a “plastic pollution crisis”, according to the World Bank.

A report in 2022 estimated 3.1 million tonnes of plastic waste are generated every year, with at least 10 per cent leaking into the waterways, making Vietnam one of the top five plastic polluters of the world’s oceans.

The volume of leakage could more than double by 2030, the World Bank warns.

Larissa Helfer, 21, who travelled to Vietnam from her home in Germany, said Ha Long Bay was beautiful but the trash problem would be one of her strongest memories of the trip.

“Normally you (might say) ‘Look at the view! Look at the fishing villages!” she told AFP.

But here “you have to talk about the trash, (you say) ‘oh god… look at the plastic bottles and things in the sea.’ And it makes you sad.”

Thinh, the trash collector, grew up in Ha Long and remembers a very different bay.

“It didn’t look so terrible,” she said.

“Of course, a lot of work makes me tired and irritated,” she admitted. “But we must do our work.”

Europe is home to the world’s heaviest drinkers. Which country drinks the most alcohol?

Among the 10 countries that drink the most in the world, nine are in the EU. But there are big differences between nations.

If you feel that Europeans drink a lot, your hunch is correct: people across the continent consume more alcohol than in any other part of the world.

Each year in Europe, every person aged 15 and over consumes, on average, 9.5 litres of pure alcohol, which is equivalent to around 190 litres of beer, 80 litres of wine or 24 litres of spirits.

That’s according to the 2021 European health report by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Total alcohol consumption per capita decreased by 2.5 litres (21 per cent) between 2000 and 2019 in the WHO European Region, which covers a vast geographical area of 53 countries including Russia and former Soviet states like Moldova.

But people continue to drink, especially in Western Europe. Out of the 10 countries that drink the most in the world (and adjusting for tourist consumption), nine are located in the European Union (EU).

In 2019, 8.4 per cent of the EU adult population (15 years or older) consumed alcohol every day, 28.8 per cent drank weekly, and 22.8 per cent monthly, while 26.2 per said they never consumed alcoholic drinks or hadn’t consumed any in the last 12 months.

Between EU countries, there are large differences in estimated alcohol consumption, but one trend remains prevalent: men drink more than women: 13.0 per cent of men vs. 4.1 per cent of women drink alcohol every day; 36.4 per cent of men vs. 21.7 per cent of women drink every week.

The largest gender drinking gaps are in Portugal (33.4 per cent of men drink daily vs. 9.7 per cent of women) and Spain (20.2 per cent vs. 6.1 per cent).

Which country drinks the most in Europe?

In 2019, the top 10 European countries with the highest alcohol consumption per capita were Czechia (14.3 litres), Latvia (13.2), Moldova (12.9), Germany (12.8), Lithuania (12.8), Ireland (12.7), Spain (12.7), Bulgaria (12.5), Luxembourg (12.4), and Romania (12.3).

The top 10 countries that consume the least alcohol across the WHO European Region are Tajikistan (0.9 litres), Azerbaijan (1.0), Turkey (1.8), Uzbekistan (2.6), Turkmenistan (3.1), Israel (4.4), Armenia (4.7), Kazakhstan (5.0), Albania (6.8), and North Macedonia (6.4).

It’s worth noting that most countries in this list, except for North Macedonia, Armenia and Israel, have Muslim-majority populations, for whom the consumption of alcohol is prohibited and condemned.

By contrast, within the EU, not a single country has an annual per capita consumption of fewer than five litres of pure alcohol, in fact, only five countries are below an annual per capita consumption of 10 litres: Italy (8.0), Malta (8.3 litres), Croatia (8.7), Sweden (9.0) and the Netherlands (9.7).

Europeans drink a lot, but how often?

Data shows that as people get older, their daily intake of alcohol also increases.

People aged between 15 and 24 are the smallest group in the daily drinker statistics (representing only 1 per cent), while those 75 or older are more likely to have a drink every day (16 per cent).

However, the senior group also has the biggest share of people who do not consume alcohol at all or have not consumed it in the past 12 months (40.3 per cent).

In the EU, drinking every day is most frequent in Portugal, with a fifth (20.7 per cent) of the population consuming alcohol daily, followed by Spain (13.0 per cent) and Italy (12.1 per cent). The lowest share of daily drinkers is around 1 per cent in Latvia and Lithuania.

The EU country with the biggest share of its population drinking alcohol on a weekly basis is the Netherlands (47.3 per cent), Luxembourg (43.1 per cent), and Belgium (40.8 per cent).

Croatia has the highest share of the population (38.3 per cent) saying it never consumed alcohol or has not consumed any in the last 12 months.

Across all European countries, there are clearly many more women than men staying away from alcohol.

Women are the most sober in Italy, where 46.7 per cent say they never consume alcohol or have not consumed any in the last 12 months (compared to 21.5 per cent of men). In Cyprus, that figure stands at 44.2 per cent of women vs. 12.8 per cent of men, and in Bulgaria at 42.0 per cent of women vs. 16.2 per cent of men.

Heavy drinking episodes, compared

Some EU countries have more heavy drinking episodes than others.

Heavy drinking is defined as ingesting the equivalent of more than 60 g of pure ethanol (approximately six standard alcoholic drinks) on a single occasion.

Almost one in five Europeans (19 per cent) reported having heavy drinking episodes at least once a month in 2019.

The biggest shares of adults taking part in heavy drinking episodes at least once a month were found in Denmark (38 per cent), Romania (35 per cent), Luxembourg (34 per cent), Germany (30 per cent) and Belgium (28 per cent).

Interestingly, some countries where a significant share of the population drinks alcohol every day, such as Spain and Italy, rank very low on the heavy drinking scale, with 6 per cent and 4 per cent, respectively.

Eurostat says regular risky single-occasion alcohol consumption is disproportionately more prevalent among men. Likewise, the percentage is higher among those with an upper secondary and college/university education and the highest incomes.

How much do people drink in the UK?

Because the United Kingdom left the EU in 2020, the island nation is no longer included in Eurostat data.

However, British people have a reputation for being heavy drinkers. So, how do their drinking habits compare with the EU?

According to Drinkaware, an independent charity which produces yearly reports about alcohol consumption in the UK, 57 per cent of British men, and 47 per cent of women, consumed alcohol at least weekly in 2020.

The average, 52 per cent, is over 23 percentage points higher than the average share of Europeans (28.8 per cent) who reported drinking once a week in 2019.

Fourteen per cent report never drinking (vs. 26.2 per cent in the EU).

How many drinks are safe?

There is no safe level of drinking, according to the WHO. And not drinking alcohol is the only way to avoid its damaging effects.

However, governments have issued guidance on low-risk consumption.

Canadians, for example, were recently told by the National Centre on Substance Use and Addiction to limit themselves to just two drinks a week. That’s a dramatic cut from the previous recommendation that allowed 10 drinks a week for women and 15 drinks a week for men.

Europe is more permissive than Canada, and the guidelines are relatively similar from one EU country to the next.

Belgium, for example, says the limit is 21 standard glasses per week for a man and 14 for a woman, whether these are half-pints of beer or small glasses of wine.

Ireland, however, advises a maximum of 17 standard weekly drinks for men and 11 for women.

Bulgaria and the Netherlands say the daily recommended limit is either one glass of wine, one beer or 50 ml of spirits.

Germany says the maximum tolerated daily dose for men is 24 g of alcohol, which is equivalent to either 500 ml of beer (one pint), 250 ml of wine (a large glass of wine), or 60 ml of liquor. Women are advised to drink half as much.

Estonia recommends at least three alcohol-free days per week, and not saving up on daily alcohol intake to then only binge later on.

Luxembourg and Cyprus advise favouring wine and beer over spirits. Norway says alcohol should not exceed 5 per cent of your total caloric intake.

The UK’s NHS recommends drinking no more than 14 units of alcohol a week, spread across three days or more. That’s equivalent to around six medium-sized (175-ml) glasses of wine, or six pints of beer with 4 per cent alcohol content.

Because women have less body water than men of similar body weight, they absorb and metabolise alcohol differently. This means that, in general, women have higher concentrations of alcohol in the blood after drinking equivalent amounts of alcohol.

The deadly toll of alcohol

The WHO links alcohol to 30 per cent of deaths from unintentional injuries, such as drowning and road traffic accidents, and to 39 per cent of deaths from intentional injuries, such as suicide and homicide.

Drinking is also associated with unsafe psychological and social consequences, including initiating young adults into other substances and unprotected sex, which ultimately play a role in the transmission of diseases, such as HIV and viral hepatitis.

The WHO estimates that alcohol causes almost 1 million deaths annually across the WHO European Region, and 3 million deaths worldwide.

Ukraine War: Russia launches more missiles over Kyiv as Moscow moves troops to Bakhmut

Euronews correspondent Sasha Vakulina reports with all the latest updates from the war in Ukraine

Russia launched its largest attack on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv over the weekend and then again on Monday morning.

On the 28th of May Russian forces conducted the biggest Shahed drone strike against Ukraine since the start of the full-scale invasion with 59 Shahed drones. 

Ukrainian air defences managed to shoot down more than 40 “air targets,” including drones and missiles, that were moving toward Kyiv.

The UK defence ministry said: 

In recent weeks, elements of the 31st Brigade of Russia’s Airborne Forces have likely moved from the Svatove-Kreminna area to reinforce Bakhmut’s flanks.

The transfer of these other Russian units to Bakhmut may further slow Russian efforts in other areas.

Watch Sasha Vakulina’s report in the video player below.

If we’re not careful, AI recruitment could institutionalise discrimination

Relying too heavily on automation and AI is akin to commercial airlines simply using autopilot: there’s too much on the line to dismiss the importance of human intervention, Oz Rashid writes.

Since recruiting methods are increasingly relying on artificial intelligence (AI), the principles used to identify qualified individuals have come into question. 

While these machines seem like a worthy replacement to subjective hiring managers, they can perpetuate historic company and algorithmic bias, discriminate against an applicant’s gender or age, and erode the laws in our democracies. 

Therefore, the world’s workforce shouldn’t be selected through AI alone. 

Trained professionals must be knowledgeable about AI recruiting methods and implement sufficient safeguards to keep programs ethical and the world safe.

Cases showing AI bias already exist

While AI has the potential to improve many aspects of the workplace, it also has the capability to undermine acceptable hiring practices and exacerbate wealth inequality. 

A 2022 Cambridge University study revealed how voice and phrenology analyses are unreliable, biased methods for identifying ideal applicant traits. 

Phrenology, a pseudoscience that claims skull patterns are linked to particular human characteristics, has been heavily contested, and voice analyses can be regarded as another underdeveloped practice not worthy of determining who deserves a job.

Since AI hiring tools can unintentionally discriminate against others, they can also be applied consciously as a way to manipulate a candidate pool. 

A case from 2018 showed that while Amazon’s recruitment tool was designed to solicit applicants of all genders, the hiring data used to train the tool was male-dominant.

People stand in the lobby for Amazon offices in New York, February 2019

The software can easily be hardwired to reject applicants with disabilities, a specific racial background, or based on physical profiles alone.

For instance, a case from 2018 showed that while Amazon’s recruitment tool was designed to solicit applicants of all genders, the hiring data used to train the tool was male-dominant. 

This caused the machine to interpret women as incompatible candidates and reject their applications. 

Although this stemmed from biased data alone, this detailed analysis could screen applicants on information they didn’t even know they were sharing. 

In 2019, the company HireVue released software that ranked job applicants’ employability based on their facial movements, word choice, and how they spoke.

Algorithms can have biases, too

Prior to AI recruitment tools, Applicant Tracking Systems (ATSs) have been popular applications used since the 90s. 

ATSs are helpful for sourcing, filtering, and analysing candidates throughout the entire recruiting and hiring process, but they can exacerbate workplace bias, and many have become outdated. 

Therefore, replacing old ATSs with modernised tools is smart as long as experienced professionals are still involved. 

All humans have an unconscious bias to prefer things familiar to them, which can directly skew the hiring data a machine learns from.

people walk across a rainbow crosswalk painted in support of the LGBT community in Philadelphia, June 2017

Too often, hiring managers and other business leaders think that AI will replace the jobs of talented HR teams because it’s less biased and more efficient.

In reality, even the most carefully programmed AI will have algorithmic biases and can make disconcerting decisions. 

All humans have an unconscious bias to prefer things familiar to them, which can directly skew the hiring data a machine learns from. 

Managing AI use in recruiting is crucial for protecting the rights of every citizen and ensuring that society has access to opportunities that keep them and their families alive. 

This kind of regulation can only be done through proper safeguards and monitoring.

We shouldn’t rely on autopilot too much

From the moment candidates are sourced, machine learning and predictive algorithms choose which individuals should see a job advertisement and which should be accepted. 

A study from Northeastern University in Boston and USC reported that Facebook advertised 85% of cashier jobs to women and showcased a taxi company’s vacancies to audiences that were 75% black. 

This situation most likely resulted from an AI’s independent evaluation of what applicants each company preferred. 

Relying too heavily on automation and AI is akin to commercial airlines simply using autopilot: there’s too much on the line to dismiss the importance of human intervention.

A hiring sign is displayed at a restaurant in Prospect Heights, IL, April 2023

While that behaviour isn’t inherently malicious, it’s in violation of US Equal Employment Opportunity laws.

Unfortunately, 79% of organisations used a combination of automation and AI for hiring in 2022, and the majority are completely unaware that their system is producing biased outcomes. 

Relying too heavily on automation and AI is akin to commercial airlines simply using autopilot: there’s too much on the line to dismiss the importance of human intervention.

Future-proofing efforts are everyone’s responsibility

In the past, organisations may have been shielded from being held accountable for their biases. 

However, new legislation like New York’s Local Law 144 guarantees transparency and accountability in AI hiring. 

The European Union’s upcoming AI Act is somewhat more opaque as to what type of remedies will be in place to prevent AI’s hiring bias, but the intention to create protections is there.

Meanwhile, organisations should already be educating themselves on which protocols protect them and their applicants.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz delivers his speech during a debate about Europe at the European Parliament in Brussels, 9 May 2023

Meanwhile, organisations should already be educating themselves on which protocols protect them and their applicants.

Minimising the risk of exacerbating discrimination in the recruitment and hiring process can be achieved through the implementation of safeguards such as auditing systems designed to detect bias and conducting thorough reviews of the data sets used by AI learning. 

Vendors should also be able to provide transparency within their algorithms, including how they were trained, what data was used, and what assumptions were made. 

This information should be accompanied by clear explanations of their efforts to mitigate bias and verified compliance to conduct ongoing testing that will catch future biases.

AI can still improve existing hiring practices if incorporated safely

Permitting AI to fully control an entire company’s hiring processes should never be acceptable. 

This allowance disengages employers from the people they need, and even worse, it could perpetuate discriminatory hiring decisions.

To counter this, we must learn how to incorporate AI safely and effectively into our existing hiring practices. This will benefit the long-term health of our organisations, the workforce that supports them, and global economies.

AI is a marvellous tool with a unique value proposition, but there is a balance that we need to strike to produce transformational results and keep humankind in control of its future.

_Oz Rashid is the CEO and founder of MSH, a global tech and talent solutions company.
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Meet the British women modernising classical theatre

In partnership with Media City, Qatar

SCENES shines a spotlight on youth worldwide, breaking down barriers and creating change. The character-driven short films will inspire and amaze as these young change-makers tell their remarkable stories.

British classical theatre is celebrated worldwide for its rich history, enthralling stories and enduring influence. Yet, despite its vibrant heritage, the genre has traditionally been a challenging field for black actors to enter. One London-based theatre company aims to change that by encouraging women of colour to embrace classical texts.

Mawa Theatre Company is the UK’s first all-black, all-female theatre group. The company examines the works of renowned English playwright William Shakespeare and makes him accessible to a new audience.

Maisey wants to see more representation of black and black mixed-race women in classical theatre

“Traditionally, classical theatre is a white male-dominated industry,” says Maisey Bawden, Mawa Theatre’s Artistic Director. “We want to see more representation of black and black mixed-race women in classical theatre,” she explains.

‘Shakespeare is not going away.

Despite being dead for over 400 years, Shakespeare’s work remains very much alive. His plays are featured in cinema, television, school curriculums and, of course, theatre productions.

“Shakespeare is always going to be commissioned in theatres. So as long as that’s happening, it is important for us to lean into that as Black women because Shakespeare is not going away,” says Maisey.

Gabrielle Brooks (left), says that they try to change people’s unfavourable views towards Shakespeare and classical theatre

Gabrielle Brooks, Creative Director of Mawa Theatre, says that some people in her peer group view Shakespeare negatively. The theatre aspires to alter those hardened perceptions and highlight the finest aspects of his work.

“One of the biggest challenges is how people feel that Shakespeare is not for them because of how it’s been presented to them through traditional education,” she says.

Danielle says schools have students read Shakespeare but don’t encourage them to perform it

According to Danielle, Mawa’s executive director, school curriculums often ask pupils to read Shakespeare but rarely encourage them to explore the work as a performance. “Academically, we need to start looking at how Shakespeare is, at its core, a show,” she says.

‘Shakespeare was a revolutionary’

Mawa Theatre encourages black actors to push boundaries and experiment with Shakespeare’s famous texts. “Shakespeare was a revolutionary, so we’d like to think that he would encourage us to move with the times as well,” she explains.

Mawa recently held a drama competition called ‘The Monologue Slam’ at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre. The esteemed writer wrote and directed plays there dating back to the 1500s. The famous theatre has been reconstructed several times but has kept its unique round shape.

Participating in Mawa’s Monologue Slam can jumpstart an actor’s career

“Doing a monologue is a great way to explore the company’s vision in an environment that is all Shakespeare,” explains Danielle. A competition like The Monologue Slam can be a fantastic way for an actor to launch their career, as a wide variety of talent agencies attend.

‘People who look like us’

Although Mawa is a new company, it has already won an Industry Minds award for its mental health approach. They have also been nominated for a Black Tech Achievement (BTA) Award for innovative use of technology.

Despite these accolades, the women behind the theatre company consider their ability to give black women autonomy their most significant achievement. “Inserting ourselves into a space that is normally not for people who look like us, we’re doing that every single day we put something on,” Gabrielle explains.

The theatre company’s founders believe their greatest accomplishment is empowering black women with autonomy

Limited opportunities

Danielle says she faced many challenges as a black actor and was inspired to join the company. “The opportunities for us can feel limited sometimes,” says Danielle. “I want other actors to feel that they have the space I never got to have,” she adds.

According to actor Tracey Dominique, the obstacles that Danielle encountered in her early acting career still exist. She says black women are frequently limited to roles that perpetuate negative stereotypes or are used solely as props.

By incorporating the work of William Shakespeare, the group is giving new life to timeless classics

“It’s a challenge just getting past that initial preconception of, ‘well, we can’t have two black girls in the play’,” explains Tracey. “How do we get out of that angry black woman trope and be seen for the range of what we can actually do?” she asks rhetorically.

Mawa Theatre Company is a progressive organisation providing black women a solid place to grow and flourish. By incorporating the work of William Shakespeare, the group is giving new life to timeless classics. As the company grows, there is little doubt that the theatre landscape will change and that black and black-mixed-race women will find the recognition and opportunities offered to everyone.

NATO condemns clashes in Kosovo, 25 KFOR troops injured, 3 critical

Serbia also slammed NATO-led peacekeepers stationed in neighbouring Kosovo for their alleged failure to stop “brutal actions” by Kosovo police against ethnic Serbs.

The NATO-led KFOR peacekeeping force on Monday said that 25 of its troops, including 11 from Italy, were injured in the clashes with ethnic Serbs in northern Kosovo who were trying to take over the offices of one of the municipalities where ethnic Albanian mayors took up their posts last week.

Three are in critical condition but none of the injuries are life-threatening. 

“NATO strongly condemns the unprovoked attacks against KFOR troops in northern Kosovo, which have led to a number of them being injured. Such attacks are totally unacceptable. Violence must stop immediately” a statement by NATO said. 

A spokesperson for the US-led alliance called on all sides to refrain from inflaming tensions and instead seek dialogue.

The Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, also expressed her “strongest condemnation of the attack on the KFOR mission”.

“What is happening is unacceptable and irresponsible. We will not tolerate further attacks on KFOR. It is essential to avoid further unilateral actions by the Kosovan authorities and that all parties involved immediately take a step back, contributing to the easing of tensions,” Meloni said on Twitter.

Zvecan, Leposavic, Zubin Potok and Mitrovica, four municipalities in the north, held early elections last month.

The votes were largely boycotted by ethnic Serbs, who form the majority in those areas. Only ethnic Albanian or other smaller minority representatives were elected to the mayoral posts and assemblies.

KFOR had tried to disperse demonstrators in front of Zvecan town hall, 45 kilometres north of the capital, Pristina, to protest the inauguration of the new mayor of the Albanian ethnicity. 

In the afternoon, KFOR soldiers called on Serbs to clear the way for two vehicles from the Kosovar special police forces.

The soldiers then used tear gas and stun grenades to protect the Kosovar officers in the vehicles and disperse protesters, according to witnesses and local media. 

The assembled Serbs responded by throwing rocks and other hard objects. One vehicle was burned, but there is no confirmation of any injured person yet.

Kosovo and Serbia have been foes for decades, with Belgrade refusing to recognize Kosovo’s sovereignty.

The conflict in Kosovo erupted in 1998 when separatist ethnic Albanians rebelled against Serbia’s rule, and Serbia responded with a brutal crackdown. About 13,000 people, mostly ethnic Albanians, died. 

NATO’s military intervention in 1999 eventually forced Serbia to pull out of the territory. Washington and most EU countries have recognised Kosovo as an independent state, but Serbia, Russia and China haven’t.

The United States and the European Union have stepped up efforts to help solve the Kosovo-Serbia dispute, fearing further instability in Europe as Russia’s war rages in Ukraine. 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov considered the situation in Kosovo as “worrisome,” blaming the US and NATO for claiming dominance in that part of the world.

“A big ‘explosion’ is brewing in the centre of Europe, in the very place where, in 1999, NATO carried out aggression against Yugoslavia,” he said from Nairobi, Kenya.

The EU has made it clear to both Serbia and Kosovo that they must normalise relations if they’re to make any progress toward joining the bloc.

Last Friday ethnic Serbs in northern Kosovo tried to block the newly elected ethnic Albanian officials from entering municipal buildings. Kosovo police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd and let the new officials into the offices.

More than a dozen Serbs and five Kosovar police officers were injured. Serbian troops on the border with Kosovo were put on high alert the same day. 

The US and the EU condemned Kosovo’s government for using police to forcibly enter the municipal buildings.

At a rally Friday evening in Belgrade with his supporters, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said, “Serbia won’t sit idle the moment Serbs in northern Kosovo are attacked.”

However, any attempt by Serbia to send its troops over the border would mean a clash with NATO-led troops stationed there.

Metsola reinforces support for Ukraine as GLOBSEC 2023 gets underway

“Last year we were talking about five days for Putin to take over Kyiv. We’re now over 400 days after that” said the head of the European Parliament at the 18th edition of the conference in Bratislava which will be focused on global security.

European Parliament President Roberta Metsola said Europe must maintain its protective measures for Ukraine, speaking on the first day of the GLOBSEC’s 2023 Bratislava Forum.

Metsola’s comments came as the Ukrainian capital Kyiv was bombarded for another day by Russian missiles.

The 18th edition focuses on security like never before, fueled by Russia’s war in Ukraine.

At the forum, president Metsola had strong words for the participants.

“Last year we were talking about five days for Putin to take over Kyiv. We’re now over 400 days after that. Kyiv is bombed more than it has been in these past two days. The bombs are increasing.”

“We have a responsibility to make sure that those populists who want us to talk about something else don’t manage. And that’s up to us to do it”.

The event is also expected to highlight the Central Eastern European region’s influence on global stability.

But the conference will also shed light on the knock-on effects Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is having on our world.

Soaring inflation, the rising cost of living, unprecedented energy disruptions, and economic and food crises are just some of the developing factors.