British PM urges Germany to approve $6bn fighter jet sale to Saudi Arabia

British PM urges Germany to approve $6bn fighter jet sale to Saudi Arabia
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz during a bilateral meeting at the Munich Security Conference (MSC), Munich, Germany, Feb. 18, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 27 September 2023
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British PM urges Germany to approve $6bn fighter jet sale to Saudi Arabia

British PM urges Germany to approve $6bn fighter jet sale to Saudi Arabia
  • Sale of Eurofighter Typhoons important for financial health of UK’s defense industry
  • Report: Around 20,000 jobs in Britain depend on Typhoon program

LONDON: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has privately urged German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to release a flagship delivery of Eurofighter Typhoon jets to Saudi Arabia, the Daily Telegraph reported on Wednesday.
Sunak is lobbying Germany to approve the sale of the 48 jets, which is thought to be worth over £5 billion ($6.1 billion) and has been identified as a strategically vital interest for the UK.
Britain is believed to have threatened to use a legal clause to try and cut Berlin out of the order altogether after disagreements within Germany’s ruling coalition.
The Typhoon was developed from the mid-1980s by a consortium of defense companies — including Britain’s BAE Systems and counterparts in Germany, Italy and Spain — under the patronage of NATO. As a result, Germany has a veto over any future sales.
Around 5,000 jobs at BAE factories and an additional 15,000 around the UK still depend on the Typhoon program, which contributes about £1.4 billion a year to the British economy, according to a report published by the company last year.
Saudi Arabia has already acquired 72 of the aircraft, and signed a memorandum of understanding with the UK to acquire a further 48 five years ago. The deal later stalled, but the prospects of a sale have been revived in recent months.
In July, however, Scholz caused alarm in London by announcing that Germany would not approve the delivery anytime soon. Britain has put Germany under intense diplomatic pressure to relent as a result, officials said.
The sale is important for the financial health of Britain’s defense industry and thousands of jobs at BAE factories in the north of England.
The UK also hopes that Saudi Arabia will invest in the Tempest program, a British-Italian-Japanese project to develop a next-generation fighter jet.


Pope heads to Papua New Guinea after final Mass in Indonesia before an overflow crowd of 100,000

Pope heads to Papua New Guinea after final Mass in Indonesia before an overflow crowd of 100,000
Updated 1 min 15 sec ago
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Pope heads to Papua New Guinea after final Mass in Indonesia before an overflow crowd of 100,000

Pope heads to Papua New Guinea after final Mass in Indonesia before an overflow crowd of 100,000
  • In the highlight of the visit, Francis and the grand imam of Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque, Southeast Asia’s largest, signed a joint declaration pledging to work to end religiously inspired violence and protect the environment
  • In Papua New Guinea, Francis’ agenda is aligned with more of his social justice priorities. The poor, strategically important South Pacific nation is home to more than 10 million people, most of whom are subsistence farmers

JAKARTA, Indonesia: Pope Francis wrapped up his visit to Indonesia on Friday after celebrating Mass before an overflow crowd of 100,000, a final celebration before heading to Papua New Guinea for the second leg of his 11-day journey through Southeast Asia and Oceania.
The 87-year-old pope had no official events Friday beyond a farewell ceremony and the six-hour flight to Port Moresby, giving him something of a break after a packed three-day program in Jakarta.
The visit culminated with a jubilant Mass on Thursday afternoon before a crowd that filled two sports stadiums and overflowed into a parking lot.
“Don’t tire of dreaming and of building a civilization of peace,” Francis urged them in an ad-libbed homily. “Be builders of hope. Be builders of peace.”
The Vatican had originally expected the Mass would draw some 60,000 people, and Indonesian authorities had predicted 80,000. But the Vatican spokesman quoted local organizers as saying more than 100,000 had attended.
“I feel very lucky compared to other people who can’t come here or even had the intention to come here,” said Vienna Frances Florensius Basol, who came with her husband and a group of 40 people from Sabah, Malaysia, but couldn’t get into the stadium.
“Even though we are outside with other Indonesians, seeing the screen, I think I am lucky enough,” she said from a parking lot where a giant TV screen was erected for anyone who didn’t have tickets for the service.
While in Indonesia, Francis sought to encourage the country’s 8.9 million Catholics, who make up just 3 percent of the population of 275 million, while also seeking to boost interfaith ties with the country boasting the world’s largest Muslim population.

A woman wears a shirt with a photo of Pope Francis at a market ahead of his visit to Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, on Sept. 6, 2024. (AP)

In the highlight of the visit, Francis and the grand imam of Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque, Southeast Asia’s largest, signed a joint declaration pledging to work to end religiously inspired violence and protect the environment.
In Papua New Guinea, Francis’ agenda is aligned with more of his social justice priorities. The poor, strategically important South Pacific nation is home to more than 10 million people, most of whom are subsistence farmers.
John Lavu, the choir conductor at St. Charles Luwanga parish in the capital, Port Moresby, said the visit would help him grow stronger in his Catholic faith.
“I have lived this faith all my life, but the coming of the Holy Father, the head of the church, to Papua New Guinea and to be a witness of his coming to us is going to be very important for me in my life as a Catholic,” he said on the eve of Francis’ arrival.
Francis will be traveling to remote Vanimo to check in on some Catholic missionaries from his native Argentina who are trying to spread the Catholic faith to a largely tribal people who also practice pagan and Indigenous traditions.
The country, the South Pacific’s most populous after Australia, has more than 800 Indigenous languages and has been riven by tribal conflicts over land for centuries, with conflicts becoming more and more lethal in recent decades.
History’s first Latin American pope will likely refer to the need to find harmony among tribal groups while visiting, the Vatican said. Another possible theme is the country’s fragile ecosystem, its rich natural resources at risk of exploitation and the threat posed by climate change.
The Papua New Guinean government has blamed extraordinary rainfall for a massive landslide in May that buried a village in Enga province. The government said more than 2,000 people were killed, while the United Nations estimated the death toll at 670.
Francis becomes only the second pope to visit Papua New Guinea, after St. John Paul II touched down in 1984 during one of his lengthy, globetrotting voyages. Then, John Paul paid tribute to the Catholic missionaries who had already been trying for a century to bring the faith to the country.
Papua New Guinea, a Commonwealth nation that was a colony of nearby Australia until independence in 1975, is the second leg of Francis’ four-nation trip. In the longest and farthest voyage of his papacy, Francis will also visit East Timor and Singapore before returning to the Vatican on Sept. 13.
 


Super Typhoon Yagi slams southern China, shutting schools and canceling flights

Super Typhoon Yagi slams southern China, shutting schools and canceling flights
Updated 59 min 50 sec ago
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Super Typhoon Yagi slams southern China, shutting schools and canceling flights

Super Typhoon Yagi slams southern China, shutting schools and canceling flights
  • Winds and rain were accompanied by powerful thunder and lightning across the region overnight and on Friday morning
  • Packing maximum sustained winds of 245 kph, Yagi is the world’s second-most powerful tropical cyclone in 2024 so far
  • Vietnam’s four airports in the country’s north, including Hanoi’s Noi Bai International, would be closed on Saturday due to the storm

HONG KONG: Powerful gales and heavy rain from Super Typhoon Yagi drenched southern China on Friday, with schools shut for a second day and flights canceled as one of the strongest storms to hit Asia this year headed for landfall along Hainan’s tropical coast.
Packing maximum sustained winds of 245 km per hour (152 mph) near its eye, Yagi registers as the world’s second-most powerful tropical cyclone in 2024 so far, after the Category 5 Atlantic hurricane Beryl.
More than doubling in strength since devastating northern Philippines earlier this week, Yagi is expected to make landfall along China’s coast from Wenchang on the island of Hainan, to Leizhou, in Guangdong province from Friday afternoon.
Winds and rain were accompanied by powerful thunder and lightning across the region overnight and on Friday morning.
Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority said four airports in the country’s north, including Hanoi’s Noi Bai International, would be closed on Saturday due to the storm.

Transport links across southern China were mostly shuttered on Friday with many flights canceled in Hainan, Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau. The world’s longest sea crossing, the main bridge linking Hong Kong with Macau and Zhuhai in Guangdong, was also closed.
In the financial hub of Hong Kong, the stock exchange was shuttered while schools remained closed on Friday.
The typhoon 8 signal, the third highest, would be lowered by 12.40pm, Hong Kong’s observatory said, with winds over the city expected to weaken gradually as Yagi moves away, allowing businesses to begin to reopening.
Intense rainbands associated with Yagi will still bring heavy squally showers to the territory, it said, warning residents to stay away from the shoreline.
China’s government sent task forces to Guangdong and Hainan to guide flood and typhoon prevention, official news agency Xinhua said.
In Hainan’s capital Haikou, streets were deserted as people stayed indoors, photographs on social media showed
Super Typhoon Yagi’s projected landfall in Hainan is rare, as most typhoons landing on the duty-free island are classified as weak. From 1949 to 2023, 106 typhoons landed in Hainan but only nine were classified as super typhoons.
Typhoons are becoming stronger, fueled by warmer oceans, amid climate change, scientists say. Last week, Typhoon Shanshan slammed into southwestern Japan, the strongest storm to hit the country in decades.
Yagi, which strengthened into a super typhoon on Wednesday night, is the Japanese word for goat and for the constellation of Capricornus, a mythical creature that is half goat, half fish. (Reporting by Farah Master and the Beijing newsroom; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)


Republican VP candidate JD Vance says school shootings are a ‘fact of life,’ calls for better security

Republican VP candidate JD Vance says school shootings are a ‘fact of life,’ calls for better security
Updated 06 September 2024
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Republican VP candidate JD Vance says school shootings are a ‘fact of life,’ calls for better security

Republican VP candidate JD Vance says school shootings are a ‘fact of life,’ calls for better security
  • Says further restricting access to guns, as many Democrats advocate, won’t stop a psycho who wants to make headlines from going after soft targets such as schools

PHOENIX: School shootings are a “fact of life,” so the US needs to harden security to prevent more carnage like the shooting this week that left four dead in Georgia, Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance said Thursday.
“If these psychos are going to go after our kids we’ve got to be prepared for it,” Vance said at a rally in Phoenix. “We don’t have to like the reality that we live in, but it is the reality we live in. We’ve got to deal with it.”
The Ohio senator was asked by a journalist what can be done to stop school shootings. He said further restricting access to guns, as many Democrats advocate, won’t end them, noting they happen in states with both lax and strict gun laws. He touted efforts in Congress to give schools more money for security.
“I don’t like that this is a fact of life,” Vance said. “But if you are a psycho and you want to make headlines, you realize that our schools are soft targets. And we have got to bolster security at our schools. We’ve got to bolster security so if a psycho wants to walk through the front door and kill a bunch of children they’re not able.”
Vance said he doesn’t like the idea of his own kids going to a school with hardened security, “but that’s increasingly the reality that we live in.”
He called the shooting in Georgia an “awful tragedy,” and said the families in Winder, Georgia, need prayers and sympathy.
Earlier this year, Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, toured the bloodstained Florida classroom building where the 2018 Parkland high school massacre happened. She then announced a program to assist states that have laws allowing police to temporarily seize guns from people judges have found to be dangerous.
Harris, who leads the new White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, has supported both stronger gun controls, such as banning sales of AR-15 and similar rifles, and better school security, like making sure classroom doors don’t lock from the outside as they did in Parkland.


UK to supply Ukraine with hundreds of new missiles

UK to supply Ukraine with hundreds of new missiles
Updated 06 September 2024
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UK to supply Ukraine with hundreds of new missiles

UK to supply Ukraine with hundreds of new missiles

LONDON: The UK will send Ukraine 650 new specialist missile systems to boost its air defenses, London said Friday, weeks after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky criticized the pace of weapons deliveries.

The first batch of the “Lightweight Multirole Missile (LMM)” systems — made by French defense group Thales — were set to be dispatched by the end of the year, the government said, as it bids to “speed up deliveries of aid.”

The £162-million ($213-million) package will be formally announced by Defense Secretary John Healey at a meeting Friday of Ukraine’s Western allies in Germany.

“This new commitment will give an important boost to Ukraine’s air defenses and demonstrates our new government’s commitment to stepping up support for Ukraine,” he said in a statement.

“In recent days we have seen the tragic cost of Russia’s indiscriminate strikes on Poltava and Lviv.

“These new UK-made missiles will support Ukraine to defend its people, infrastructure, and territory.”

Healy took up the post in early July, after Labour replaced the Conservatives in power in the UK after 14 years in opposition.

The new missiles order comes days after he told Ukrainian counterpart Rustem Umerov that Britain would “ramp-up support over the coming months” during talks in London.

He confirmed that £300 million worth of artillery ammunition will also start to arrive in Ukraine within months, according to the UK Ministry of Defense.

It said the latest missiles package was part of efforts to “step up UK and European defense production.”

Thales, which builds the systems in its Belfast factory in Northern Ireland, describes the LMM on its website as “a lightweight, precision strike multi-role missile.”

It is “designed to be fired from a variety of tactical platforms on land, sea and air against a wide range of conventional and asymmetric threats,” according to the arms-maker.

The UK has already provided hundreds of LMMs to Ukraine for air defense, the ministry noted, adding they had been used to destroy Russian drones and other aerial threats.

Britain has been one of Kyiv’s biggest backers in its fight against Russia’s full-scale invasion, supplying long-range Storm Shadow cruise missiles and a squadron of 14 Challenger 2 tanks deployed early last year.

In a post on X last month, Zelensky praised the supply of lethal UK aid, noting it had saved thousands of lives, but added that “unfortunately, the situation has slowed down recently.”

London promptly insisted its support remained “absolutely resolute.”


On rare Haiti trip, Blinken pledges aid and calls for more support

On rare Haiti trip, Blinken pledges aid and calls for more support
Updated 06 September 2024
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On rare Haiti trip, Blinken pledges aid and calls for more support

On rare Haiti trip, Blinken pledges aid and calls for more support

PORT-AU-PRINCE: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on a rare visit to violence-ravaged Haiti on Thursday heard guarded optimism as he promised $45 million in aid, urged greater international support for a new security mission and sought concrete action toward elections.

Blinken was the highest-ranking US official in nearly a decade to visit the country, which has been plagued by instability and whose capital had virtually been taken over by criminal gangs.

On Thursday, Blinken promised $45 million in humanitarian aid, but voiced concern about the long-term future of a Kenya-led police force that has been tasked with stabilizing Port-au-Prince and beyond.

He said he would convene talks at the United Nations later this month to raise support for the force, which arrived two months ago and is known as the Multinational Security Support Mission.

“At this critical moment, we do need more funding, we do need more personnel, to sustain and carry out the objectives of this mission,” he said.

Meeting Blinken, interim Prime Minister Garry Conille acknowledged that Haiti faced an “extremely complex” situation but voiced hope.

“If our partners bear with us, commit to us, we will achieve the goals. Progress we’ve achieved so far is actually quite remarkable,” he said.

The top US diplomat, too, saw reason for optimism.

“What I am seeing is tremendous resilience and the emergence — the reemergence — of hope,” Blinken said.

Speaking in French, Blinken addressed Haitians at a news conference: “We are with you.”

The senior US official zipped in an armored motorcade through crowded, pothole-ridden streets strewn with garbage for meetings in the safety of the US ambassador’s residence, after arriving at an airport where limited commercial flights only recently resumed.

Haiti has not held elections since 2016, widening a political vacuum that has worsened existing security and health crises.

In hopes of moving toward a more legitimate government, the United States and Caribbean nations recently worked to establish a transitional council representing key stakeholders, with Conille as interim prime minister.

“The critical next step that we talked about is setting up an electoral council. We hope to see that stood up soon,” Blinken told the coordinator of the transitional council.

Blinken acknowledged that greater security would be the “foundation” for all progress, including on elections.

The coordinator of the transitional council, Edgard Leblanc Fils, said he hoped to move toward the electoral council next week with a goal of elections in November 2025 and a transfer of power in February 2026.

“Progress has been made on security but there remains much to do,” Leblanc Fils said.

Gangs in recent years have taken over about 80 percent of the capital Port-au-Prince as any semblance of government evaporated.

US President Joe Biden’s administration has committed $360 million to the multinational mission meant to stabilize the country, including logistical support and equipment, but has also made clear it will not send US troops.

The mission is expected to include about 2,500 police officers, including from Bangladesh, Benin and Jamaica.

But its establishment was repeatedly set back both by a court in Kenya questioning the legality of the mission and by struggles to complete financing for the force, which is estimated to cost about $600 million per year.

To secure funding, the Biden administration has voiced willingness to make the mission a UN peacekeeping operation, after deliberately not putting the force under the UN flag due to grim past memories in Haiti.

The United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti, which deployed from 2004 to 2017, was tarnished by accusations of sexual abuse by peacekeepers and the force’s accidental introduction of cholera, which killed some 10,000 people.

As Blinken visited, Port-au-Prince was also facing a new energy challenge, with a key power plant going dark after being stormed by demonstrators angered by recurring blackouts.

Blinken also pressed Haitian leaders to take action against corruption, a serious concern in the country.

The last secretary of state to visit Haiti, John Kerry, met then-president Michel Martelly in 2015.

Last month, US authorities slapped sanctions on Martelly, who mostly lives in Miami, for allegedly trafficking drugs destined for the United States.

Blinken said that the action against Martelly showed that “we will use every tool that we have to hold accountable those who facilitate violence, drug trafficking, instability.”

The US secretary of state did not stay overnight in Haiti, landing in Santo Domingo on Thursday for meetings with leaders of the Dominican Republic.