‫‫أحجام تداول ATFX في الربع الثاني تحتل المرتبة السادسة عالميًا

دبي, 19 أغسطس 2022, /PRNewswire/ — بلغت قيمة أحجام التداول لدى ATFX خلال الربع الثاني 564.2 مليار دولار أمريكي، وذلك مقارنةً بـ 403.5 مليار خلال الربع الأول من عام 2022، أي بزيادة 39.8% عن الربع الأول من العام. قفز أيضًا عدد المتداولين النشطين إلى 51,745 مقارنة مع 43,774 في الربع الأول، وهو ما يمثل نموًا بنسبة 18.2% على أساس فصلي.

لا تزال المعادن تحتل المرتبة الأولى في فئة الأصول النشطة، حيث استحوذت على 46.82% من قيم التداول، تليها أزواج الفوركس عند 30.56% والمعادن بنسبة 13.8%، فيما غابت المؤشرات والأسهم والعملات المشفرة عن قائمة فئات الأصول الثلاثة الأكثر نشاطًا.

لا يزال أداء ATFX مثيرًا للإعجاب بين نظرائها، حيث احتلت المرتبة السادسة عالميًا بين وسطاء MT4/MT 5، وذلك بحسب إحصائيات Finance Magnates . وفي ظل صناعة يسيطر عليها عدد قليل من الوسطاء الذين رسخوا مكانتهم قبل عقود طويلة من انطلاق ATFX ، فإن احتلال هذه المرتبة المتقدمة لم يكن مهمة سهلة على الإطلاق.

وفقًا لتقرير Finance Magnates ، فإن قيم صفقات التداول التي نفذها العملاء، والبالغة 564.2 مليار دولار أمريكي، كانت سادس أكبر قيمة أفصح عنها المئات من وسطاء عقود الفروقات والفوركس عبر منصات MT4/MT 5 في كافة أنحاء العالم. يُصنِف هذا التقرير شركات الوساطة بناءً على متوسط حجم التداول الشهري، والذي بلغ في حالة ATFX نحو 188 مليار دولار (564 مليار دولار/3).

تواصل ATFX تفوقها رغم التحديات التي تواجهها في بيئة السوق الحالية، وأيضًا في ظل غياب المحفزات الرئيسية التي عززت أحجام التداول في عامي 2020 و 2021، مثل جائحة كوفيد-19 و سياسات التيسير النقدي التي اتبعتها كبرى البنوك المركزية وعلى رأسها الاحتياطي الفيدرالي في الولايات المتحدة.

تستمر الشركة في اجتذاب المزيد من العملاء، وهو ما تجلى في ارتفاع عدد المتداولين النشطين بنسبة 18.2%، مما ساهم في زيادة عدد وقيمة صفقات التداول على منصة الشركة.

عززت ATFX موقعها كأحد اللاعبين الرئيسيين في أسواق تداول الفوركس وعقود الفروقات للأفراد والمؤسسات على مدار الأعوام الأخيرة، ولا تزال حتى الآن قادرة على النمو بمعدلات غير مسبوقة. ويستند النمو المذهل الذي حققته شركة الوساطة الرائدة على تبني مفاهيم الابتكار والاستثمار المكثف في جميع جوانب العمل. 

ATFX
ATFX هي شركة وساطة دولية في أسواق تداول عقود الفروقات عبر الإنترنت، والتي تتمتع بحضور عالمي من خلال تزويد العملاء بأحدث الخدمات المالية بأكثر من 15 لغة. توفر ATFX التداول على أكثر من 300 أصل مالي، بما في ذلك عقود الفروقات، المعادن الثمينة، سلع الطاقة، المؤشرات والأسهم والتي يجري تداولها في شكل عقود الفروقات. الشركة مرخصة من هيئة السلوك المالي (FCA) في المملكة المتحدة، وهيئة الأوراق المالية والبورصات في قبرص (CySEC)، وهيئة الخدمات المالية في موريشيوس (FSC). وتعمل أيضًا كشركة مسجلة لدى هيئة الخدمات المالية (FSA) في سانت فنسنت وجزر غرينادين.

IGAD and UNDP to Collaborate on Cross-border Development in the Horn of Africa

(Djibouti, Djibouti): The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) and the United Nation Development Programme (UNDP) have entered a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) today to deepen collaboration in various areas of mutual interest including cross-border development in the Horn of Africa.

The MoU will build on ongoing collaboration between the two institutions, beginning with the implementation of a joint programme on borderlands development covering the IGAD member states in the region.

“IGAD appreciates the strategic partnership with UNDP in promoting the socioeconomic transformation of borderlands in the IGAD region,” stated Workneh Gebeyehu (PhD), Executive Secretary of IGAD. “The shared cultures, languages and traditions of border communities in the IGAD region can serve as building blocks for strengthening cohesion and promoting development in the borderlands.”

The MoU was agreed at the conclusion of a two-day workshop, taking place on 17-18 August 2022 in Djibouti. The workshop also validated a three years joint IGAD/UNDP programme document on borderlands development.

In his remarks, Zeynu Ummer, Team Lead and Senior Technical Adviser at the UNDP Africa Borderlands Centre, said “UNDP and IGAD have a long-standing presence and engagement in the Horn of Africa. The new programme on borderlands development takes into account lessons learned from ongoing joint initiatives and concretises the UNDP-IGAD partnership to ensure the Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals are attained in the region.”

Included in the agreed areas of cooperation is the exploration of joint programmatic initiatives at regional and country levels through the regular exchange of information, analysis and reporting. The two organisations will leverage their respective comparative advantage and value add in resilience building, socioeconomic development, prevention of violent extremism, conflict prevention, youth and gender, climate change, blue economy, water and other strategic areas.

Alessandra Casazza, Manager of the UNDP Resilience Hub for Africa, shared “The MoU formalises and strengthens ongoing and future joint initiatives led by UNDP and IGAD. The Drought Resilience Building in the Horn of Africa Programme, for instance, is a concrete example of what this partnership can deliver for communities in the border regions.”

The workshop also engaged technical experts working on cross-border programming at IGAD and several UNDP offices including the Africa Borderlands Centre, the Regional Programme for Africa, the Resilience Hub for Africa, and UNDP Country Offices in Djibouti, Kenya, Ethiopia, South Sudan, and Uganda.

The workshop interdisciplinary dialogue on partnerships and resource mobilisation around the newly adopted programme document through the development of a detailed Joint Partners’ Engagement Strategy and a roadmap for strategic priorities for the Horn of Africa.

Source: Intergovernmental Authority on Development

WFP scales up support for millions who ‘cannot wait’ for food aid amid Horn of Africa drought

As the threat of famine looms in the Horn of Africa, the World Food Programme (WFP) announced on Friday that it is scaling up operations to support millions going hungry who “cannot wait” for assistance.

The region is in the grip of a historic drought, brought on by four consecutive failed rains.  The crisis has left some 22 million people across Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia struggling to find enough to eat, with numbers expected to rise. 

Livestock are dying, and there are critical shortages of water and food. More than a million people have fled their homes and are now living in crowded camps, where humanitarians are scrambling to meet the overwhelming needs.

No end in sight

WFP chief David Beasley on Thursday wrapped up a visit to Somalia, where the risk of famine is high.  

More than seven million people there, nearly half the population, are acutely food insecure, and 213,000 are already facing famine-like conditions.

Mr. Beasley travelled to the southern city of Baardheere where he met families, including malnourished children and their mothers, who have been forced to leave home and travel long distances to seek humanitarian aid, amid ongoing conflict.

“People here have been waiting years for rain – but they cannot wait any longer for life-saving food assistance. The world needs to act now to protect the most vulnerable communities from the threat of widespread famine in the Horn of Africa,” he said. 

“There is still no end in sight to this drought crisis, so we must get the resources needed to save lives and stop people plunging into catastrophic levels of hunger and starvation”.

Food and cash assistance

WFP said the drought is expected to continue in the coming months as a fifth poor rainy season is forecast later this year.

The agency is doing everything possible to support the most vulnerable people, but urgently requires around $418 million over the next six months to meet the increasing needs.

Meanwhile, WFP is focused on using available funds to increase assistance in the worst-hit areas.  The aim is to target some 8.5 million people across the region, up from 6.3 million at the start of the year.

Staff are providing food and cash assistance to families, in addition to distributing fortified foods to women and children as malnutrition rates spiral. Cash grants and insurance schemes are also helping households to buy food to keep their livestock alive, or to compensate them when they die.

Support for Somalia

Relatedly, $10 million has been allocated from the UN’s Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to ramp up the drought response in Somalia.

UN Humanitarian Coordinator Martin Griffiths warned on Friday that time is running out for people in the country.

“If we don’t step up in force now, it’ll run out and the malnourished children are likely to die first,” he said. 

“This new funding will help humanitarian agencies get supplies and staff in place as soon as humanly possible to help avert a further catastrophe in Somalia. But it is no solution. We need all hands on deck and all resources mobilized to prevent famine”.

CERF has so far contributed a total of $41 million to the drought response in Somalia this year.

The funding has been used to support food and nutrition interventions, and to deliver healthcare, water and sanitation, protection, shelter, and education to people in need.

Source: United Nations

Ukraine – Russia’s war on Ukraine (DG ECHO, Ukraine government, media) (ECHO Daily Flash of 19 August 2022)

Since 24 February, the UN and humanitarian partners have provided vital humanitarian aid to more than 11.8 million people with various forms of assistance.

On 18 August in Lviv, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has been meeting Ukraine and Türkiye leaders to discuss finding a political solution to the war. They have also been talking about efforts to increase Ukrainian grain exports ahead of winter, and the risk of a catastrophe at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged the UN to ensure the security of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant which is currently under Russian control. Earlier, Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed a proposal by the UN Secretary-General to demilitarise the area around the plant.

A total of 25 grain-laden ships have so far left the Ukrainian ports. The ship carrying the first cargo of food aid bound for Africa, transited Istanbul’s Bosporus Strait on Wednesday evening.

A total of 17 people were killed and dozens wounded in a series of massive Russian missile strikes on Ukraine’s Kharkiv region on Wednesday night and Thursday morning.

Source: European Commission’s Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations

MMC East and Southern Africa Snapshot – August 2022: Interactions between local communities and transiting migrants in Hargeisa

The Eastern corridor from the Horn of Africa to the Arabian Peninsula has traditionally been one of the busiest maritime routes with 394,622 migrant arrivals since 2018.1 The journey undertaken by predominantly Ethiopian migrants2 can involve several stops at key transit locations to rest, look for smugglers, or work.3 In these locations, migrants’ interactions with local communities are linked to their need for information, for assistance and services, and for income-generating opportunities as well as on potential shared cultural and ethnic affiliations. Recognizing that local communities in transit locations are key stakeholders in the migration process, MMC and IOM have partnered under the 2022 Regional Migrant Response Plan for the Horn of Africa and Yemen to design and implement a mixed-methods study to generate an evidence-base on the dynamics between local communities and transiting migrants along the Eastern Route.

The study has targeted three key transit locations along the Eastern Route: Hargeisa in the Somaliland region, and Obock and Tadjourah in Djibouti. This snapshot presents the main findings on interactions between migrants and local communities in Hargeisa, based on 201 surveys conducted with local community members in July 2022.4 Hargeisa is the capital of the Somaliland region and is a place of transit mainly for Ethiopian migrants. After crossing into the region at the border towns of Borama and Waajale, many Ethiopians stop in Hargeisa before continuing on to Bossasso and Ceelayo where they embark on the sea crossing.5

Key findings

• Most local community respondents interact with migrants on a daily basis (60%), while 24% interact weekly.

• The provision of free assistance is the most common form of interaction (52%) between local community respondents and migrants, followed by commercial/economic interactions (45%) and social interactions (22%).

• Food (89/97) and water (55) are the most common forms of free assistance provided by local communities, followed by cash (40).

• Migrants are commonly clients of local businesses, as described by 61 of 85 who had commercial/economic interactions with migrants. Others hire migrants (27), most often in domestic work.

Source: Mixed Migration Centre

With dwindling numbers, stakeholders expand integrated TB and COVID-19 testing in communities

Kaduna, 19 August 2022 – When health workers took the Tuberculosis (TB) testing outreach to Rigasa community, Kaduna State, Rabi Umaru, a 37-year-old housewife, did not need much convincing to get tested.

She had been coughing for two weeks but had not visited any health facility because of lack of funds.

“I usually hear on the radio that if you cough for two weeks, you should go to the health facility to test for TB. I eventually tested for TB and COVID-19 during the community outreach, and after testing negative for COVID-19, I used the opportunity to receive the COVID-19 vaccination. Leaving here, I will lend my voice to mobilize other women in the neighbourhood to come out and benefit from the free TB and COVID-19 testing as well as receive their COVID-19 vaccine,” she said.

Tuberculosis and COVID-19 share similarities despite being caused by different biological agents. Worldwide, TB is one of the highest causes of death from a single infectious disease, and in the past two years, nearly all countries, including Nigeria, have felt the impact of COVID-19, resulting in a global health crisis with over 595 million people infected and above 6.45 million deaths as of 14 August, 2022.

High disease burden

For now, Nigeria has the highest burden of TB in Africa and ranked sixth globally. Worried about the low turnout of testing against the two deadly diseases, the Kaduna State Government collaborated with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners to initiate, plan and conduct a two weeks integrated mass TB and COVID-19 screening campaign across the 23 Local Government Areas in the state. The outreach was also leveraged to expand the COVID-19 vaccination coverage.

Two high-risk communities from each LGAs were selected based on reviews data on the burden of TB and COVID-19 infection, population density and the testing rates in the state.

Intervention

Emphasizing the importance of the campaign, the Kaduna State Commissioner of Health, Dr Amina Baloni, said the outreach is apt to tackle the rising cases of COVID-19 and TB and improve the low population coverage of COVID-19 vaccination in the state.

Dr Baloni emphasised that the integration of the tests was to leverage resources to shore up testing when we noticed people were no longer volunteering for testing.

“We are working towards the national COVID-19 vaccination target to ensure that the disease is no longer of public health concern by the end of this year and using the opportunity to improve the detection of missing/undiagnosed TB cases to about 85% by the end of the year, she said.

To achieve herd immunity against COVID-19, Nigeria planned to get 40% of its population vaccinated by the end of 2021 and 70% vaccinated as at the end of 2022.

However, with only about 27 million persons vaccinated due to the low COVID-19 vaccination performance coverage level in many states, Nigeria is far from meeting the set target.

Encouraging numbers

To mitigate this challenge, states have been adopting the integrated health service delivery to expand COVID-19 vaccination in the country.

For instance, during the campaign in Kaduna Sate, over 20,000 people were screened for TB and COVID-19. Of which 115 tested positive for TB while 161 tested positive for COVID-19

Also, over 2 million people received the COVID-19 vaccination, pushing the state to 55% coverage of its eligible population as August 11, 2022. Kaduna state had only 9% fully vaccinated at end March 2022.

Appreciating the WHO and other stakeholders for bringing the health services to their doorstep, a community leader and ward head of Warri Street, Kaduna North LGA, Mallam Isa Nuhu, said the visit would shore up testing for TB and COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination in his community.

“My people were initially afraid of these two diseases. Bringing sensitization and testing to our doorstep has encouraged many residents to avail themselves of the services. It also fostered vaccination uptake in the community because some people resisted taking the vaccine during the initial vaccination drive in February due to rumours about its safety. However, the perception has changed after seeing those who have received the vaccines are still healthy,” he said.

Also, the ward head of Makera, Rigasa in Igabi LGA, Mallam Isiyaku Abdulwahab, applauded the initiative saying it gave members of his community the opportunity to access health care services.

Mallam Abdulwahab said “we know COVID-19 and TB are two deadly diseases, and we are grateful they chose to bring the outreach to our community. Bringing the TB, COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination to our doorstep is a sign that the government is committed to stopping the transmission of these deadly diseases”.

He urges the government to continue such interventions in other communities around the state.

Effective Harmonization

Buttressing the significance and success of the campaign, the WHO Kaduna State Coordinator, Dr Audu Sunday, said WHO supported the intervention with funding through USAID and GAVI.

He said although WHO’s role is to provide technical support, it has also provided catalytic funding to close up identified gaps and expand coverage of testing’s and COVID-19 vaccination.

“To ensure COVID-19 data quality assurance, the WHO also provides supportive supervision in the field and ensures all persons vaccinated are uploaded to the Electronic Management of Immunization Data (EMID) platform and the data validated.

For TB, we harmonize and triangulate data reported from the facility registers (presumptive TB and treatment registers) with laboratory register records and the drug inventory records used to crosscheck data quality’” he said.

Technical Contacts: Dr Fadare Omoniyi Amos; Email: omoniyia@who.int Dr Audu Sunday; Email: audusu@who.int

Source: World Health Organization