A princess, dates and milk welcome Ivanka Trump to Morocco

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Ivanka Trump, the daughter and senior adviser to President Donald Trump, is greeted by Princess Lalla Meryem of Morocco as she arrives in Rabat, Morocco on Wednesday. (AP)
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Ivanka Trump is greeted by Princess Lalla Meryem of Morocco and is offered dates and milk, as she arrives in Rabat, Morocco, Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2019. (AP)
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Ivanka Trump visits Morocco where she will promote a global economical program for women. (AP)
Updated 06 November 2019
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A princess, dates and milk welcome Ivanka Trump to Morocco

  • Morocco’s Princess Lalla Meryem met the daughter of President Donald Trump at the airport in the capital of Rabat
  • Ensuring that women can create wealth by inheriting or owning land or other property is a focus of Ivanka Trump’s initiative

RABAT: A princess, dates and milk welcomed Ivanka Trump to Morocco on Wednesday as she opened a three-day visit to promote the economic empowerment of women in developing countries.
Morocco’s Princess Lalla Meryem, Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita and other officials met the daughter of President Donald Trump at the airport in the capital of Rabat.
White-gloved servers offered traditional staples of dates and milk.

Ivanka Trump, a White House adviser, and the princess sat on a sofa and talked for several minutes before departing. She is visiting Morocco to promote the US government’s Women’s Global Development and Prosperity Initiative, which she spearheads.
Launched in February, the program aims to help 50 million women in developing nations advance economically over the next six years.
Ivanka Trump has promoted the initiative during trips this year to sub-Saharan Africa and South America.
She will be accompanied in Morocco by Sean Cairncross, CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corp., an independent US foreign aid agency that’s working with the Moroccan government to promote economic growth, reduce poverty and strengthen institutions.
The trip comes after Morocco updated land rights laws that critics say shortchanged women. Ensuring that women can create wealth by inheriting or owning land or other property is a focus of Ivanka Trump’s initiative.
She arrived in Rabat on a national holiday in Morocco and had no public appearances scheduled for Wednesday.
On Thursday, Ivanka Trump arranged to visit an olive grove on the outskirts of the capital that is a Millennium Challenge Corp. project.
She’ll also solicit feedback on women’s empowerment during a roundtable discussion in Rabat with female leaders.
Also planned are meetings with Morocco’s prime minister, foreign minister and royal family.


Sudanese paramilitary forces kill at least 28 people in an attack in Darfur, medical group says

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Sudanese paramilitary forces kill at least 28 people in an attack in Darfur, medical group says

  • At least 39 people, including 10 women, were wounded in the attack, the medical group said
  • Emergency Lawyers said RSF fighters torched many houses in the town, forcing people to flee to nearby villages

CAIRO: An attack by Sudanese paramilitary forces on a stronghold of a Darfur tribal leader left at least 28 people dead, a doctors group said Tuesday, the latest in a devastating war with no resolution in sight.
The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on Monday rampaged through the town of Misteriha in North Darfur province, according to the Sudan Doctors Network, which tracks the country’s ongoing war.
The town is a stronghold of Arab tribal leader Musa Hilal who also hails from the Rizeigat Arab tribe as the majority of the members of the paramilitary RSF.
At least 39 people, including 10 women, were wounded in the attack, the medical group said.
There was no immediate comment from the RSF and motives for the attack were not immediately known.


Sudan’s war erupted in 2023 after tensions between the Sudanese army and the rival RSF escalated into fighting that began in Khartoum, the country’s capital, and spread nationwide. The conflict has killed thousands and triggered mass displacement, disease outbreaks and severe food insecurity. Aid workers have been frequently targeted.
The medical group said RSF shelling hit the town’s health care center on Monday, after which the paramilitary fighters assaulted medical staff and detained at least one of them.
The RSF fighters had begun their offensive on the town over the weekend with drone strikes that hit Hilal’s guesthouse. On Monday, they launched a major ground offensive and took over the town.
Emergency Lawyers, an independent group documenting atrocities in Sudan, said RSF fighters torched many houses in the town, forcing people to flee to nearby villages.
The seizure of Misteriha would likely assert RSF control of Darfur. However, it risks escalating tribal tensions in an area long known for violence and war.
Monday’s attack came four months after the RSF overran el-Fasher, the provincial capital of North Darfur after 18 months of siege. The paramilitaries killed more than 6,000 people between Oct. 25 and Oct. 27 in the city. The attack was marked by atrocities that UN-backed experts said bore ” the hallmarks of genocide.”
The war has created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with over 14 million forced to flee their homes. It has fueled disease outbreaks and pushed parts of the country into famine that still spreads as fighting shows no sign of abating.
The latest report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification earlier this month warned that severe acute malnutrition, the most dangerous and deadly form of malnutrition, is expected to increase to 800,000 cases, up 4 percent from 2025.
Aid groups have long struggled to meet the growing needs of displaced people across the country and called for a ceasefire to secure aid delivery to remote areas in Darfur and Kordofan — another hotbed in the war.
“The main thing that needs to happen is, of course, a ceasefire,” said Zia Salik, interim UK director of Islamic Relief, an aid group working in Sudan. “Ultimately, that is what’s causing the pain and the difficulty for all of the civilians that are caught in the crosshairs.”