Te whaka-kanohi mai o rātou
mā,
Ru-ruku-tia i runga i te ngākau
whakapono,
Ru-ruku-tia i runga i te ngākau
aroha,
Waitaha, Ngāti Mamoe, Ngai Tahu, nāu rā te
reo pohiri.
Tena tātou katoa.
To
this large gathering of respected leaders in many
fields
We gather on the platform created by
those who have gone before us
We have come
together to bind in belief and hope
We have
come together to bind in love and
understanding
On the pohiri of waitaha, Ngāti
Mamoe and Ngai Tahu, greetings to us all.
As
individuals we will falter.
CHINA TASK FORCE WRAPS: Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s China task force, which was charged with finding ways to focus the Defense Department more effectively on countering China, has wrapped up its work and provided recommendations that are mostly classified.
‘RALLY THE WORLD'S DEMOCRACIES’: President Joe Biden departs this morning on the first overseas trip of his term, which begins with a meeting of G-7 ministers in Cornwall, includes a NATO summit in Brussels, and ends with a face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva.
Two years ago, New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and France’s President Emmanuel Macron called together governments and tech companies to act to eliminate terrorist and violent extremist content online.
The first Christchurch Call to Action summit was held in Paris in May 2019, two months after a gunman murdered 51 people at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. The killer live-streamed his rampage for almost 17 minutes on Facebook, and the video was shared about 1.5 million times in 24 hours.
Sixteen nations answered the Call, along with major internet companies, including Facebook, Twitter and Google – whose YouTube platform had been directly implicated as likely contributing to the online radicalisation of the Christchurch shooter.
How Social Media Companies are Suppressing the Voice of Palestinians oyetimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from oyetimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.