US President Joe Biden to miss COP28 climate summit in Dubai

US President Joe Biden to miss COP28 climate summit in Dubai
US President Joe Biden has put a high priority on climate domestically, channeling billions of dollars to the green economy including through incentives for electric cars. (AP)
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Updated 27 November 2023
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US President Joe Biden to miss COP28 climate summit in Dubai

US President Joe Biden to miss COP28 climate summit in Dubai
  • Some 70,000 people including national leaders and Pope Francis are expected at climate summit
  • Until Joe Biden, it was not customary for the US president to attend each COP summit

WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden will miss the latest UN climate summit in Dubai, after two years of attending the talks in hopes of highlighting US leadership, a US official said Sunday.

Some 70,000 people including national leaders and Pope Francis are expected at COP28 as it opens Thursday, in what could be the largest United Nations climate summit ever.

Schedules released by the White House for Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris showed neither heading to Dubai this week.

Biden’s engagements include a trip to Colorado to highlight US investment in wind energy, a meeting with the president of Angola and the lighting of the national Christmas tree.

A US official confirmed that Biden was not planning to attend COP28 this week or during a second window close to the end of the talks on December 12.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Biden administration was still discussing whether to send a top-level official to Dubai.

John Kerry, the US climate envoy and former secretary of state and senator, will be leading day-to-day negotiations for the United States.

The official did not give a reason for Biden’s decision. But Biden has been focused for more than a month on the war between Israel and Hamas and is also looking to highlight his domestic agenda with less than a year to the US presidential election.

Until Biden, it was not customary for the US president to attend each COP summit.

Biden in 2021 traveled to Glasgow to vow that the United States would again take a global leadership role on climate after his predecessor Donald Trump pulled out of the Paris climate accord.

Trump, who is seeking the White House again, is a climate skeptic who says that action is too costly to the United States.

Biden again made a brief trip last year to COP27 in Sharm Eel-Sheikh, Egypt.

Biden has put a high priority on climate domestically, with the so-called Inflation Reduction Act, his signature legislative achievement, channeling billions of dollars to the green economy including through incentives for electric cars.

Ahead of COP28, Kerry held extended talks with his Chinese counterpart, Xie Zhenhua, with the two negotiators promising that their countries, the world’s two largest greenhouse gas emitters, would work together for progress in Dubai.


Macron to meet new Iranian president amid Lebanon crisis

Iran President Masoud Pezeshkian (L) France's President Emmanuel Macron. (Agencies)
Iran President Masoud Pezeshkian (L) France's President Emmanuel Macron. (Agencies)
Updated 12 sec ago
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Macron to meet new Iranian president amid Lebanon crisis

Iran President Masoud Pezeshkian (L) France's President Emmanuel Macron. (Agencies)

UNITED NATIONS, United States: French President Emmanuel Macron will meet Tuesday with Iran’s new president, Masoud Pezeshkian, as Israel strikes Tehran’s ally Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Macron will meet Pezeshkian, a self-styled reformist in a cleric-run state which Israel sees as its arch-enemy, on the sidelines of the annual UN General Assembly, the Elysee announced.
 

 


Gunman suspected of trying to kill Trump charged with attempted assassination

Gunman suspected of trying to kill Trump charged with attempted assassination
Updated 4 min 58 sec ago
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Gunman suspected of trying to kill Trump charged with attempted assassination

Gunman suspected of trying to kill Trump charged with attempted assassination

MIAMI:  The gunman accused of planning to kill Donald Trump at his Florida golf course was indicted Tuesday on three additional counts, including attempted assassination of a major presidential candidate, the US Department of Justice announced.

The indictment for Ryan Routh was issued by a grand jury in Miami, according to the Department of Justice, and court documents indicated that the case was assigned at random to Judge Aileen Cannon — a Trump appointee who stopped criminal proceedings against the former president over his retention of top-secret documents at his private residence.


EU wants Tunisia to probe migrant rape claims

EU wants Tunisia to probe migrant rape claims
Updated 55 min 31 sec ago
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EU wants Tunisia to probe migrant rape claims

EU wants Tunisia to probe migrant rape claims
  • Under a 2023 agreement, Brussels has given 105 million euros ($116 million) to debt-ridden Tunis to help it curb irregular migration, in addition to 150 million euros in budgetary support
  • Already in May, the EU admitted to a “difficult situation” after a journalism consortium said Tunisia, Morocco and Mauritania — which have struck similar deals — were dumping migrants in the desert, using the bloc’s funds

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The European Union said Tuesday it expected Tunisia to investigate allegations that police have beaten and raped migrants, putting further scrutiny on an EU deal with the country to stem irregular migration.
The 27-nation bloc has struck controversial migration agreements with Tunisia and other African countries with questionable human rights records, providing funds to help them curb small-boat crossings to Europe.
In the latest of a series of investigations to spotlight alleged abuses in the region, British newspaper The Guardian last week reported that officers from Tunisia’s national guard had committed “widespread sexual violence” against vulnerable migrant women bound for Europe.
“Tunisia is a sovereign country, so when there’s any allegations of wrongdoing concerning their security forces, then of course, as partners of Tunisia, we would expect them to duly investigate these cases,” a European Commission spokeswoman told reporters.
EU funding for migration programs in Tunisia was channelled through international organizations, EU member states and NGOs working on the ground, the spokeswoman added, denying the bloc was directly supporting Tunisia’s national guard — singled out in the Guardian report.
Tunisia is one of the main launching points for boats carrying migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean to seek better lives in Europe.
Most head for Italy, in particular its island of Lampedusa.

Under a 2023 agreement, Brussels has given 105 million euros ($116 million) to debt-ridden Tunis to help it curb irregular migration, in addition to 150 million euros in budgetary support.
The deal, strongly supported by Italy’s hard-right government, aimed to bolster Tunisia’s capacity to prevent boats leaving its shore, with some money also going to UN agencies assisting migrants.
It has contributed to a marked drop in crossings.
Between January 1 and September 2024, 47,455 migrants arrived in Italy via boat, down 64 percent on 2023 when 133,070 people reached Italian shores over the same period, according to the interior ministry.
But rights groups such as Human Rights Watch have decried the agreement.
HRW last year said migrants in Tunisia faced violence and arbitrary detentions, adding it had documented abuses by the coast guard, including beatings and leaving people adrift.
The EU’s ombudsman has opened an investigation into how the commission intends to ensure that human rights are respected under the agreement. The ethics watchdog is expected to publish its findings in the coming weeks.
Already in May, the EU admitted to a “difficult situation” after a journalism consortium said Tunisia, Morocco and Mauritania — which have struck similar deals — were dumping migrants in the desert, using the bloc’s funds.
On Tuesday the commission said it was working to establish a “more structured dialogue with partner authorities” to set up a “comprehensive rights-based migration management system.”
“Migration management has to be done in compliance with human rights,” said commission spokeswoman Ana Pisonero.
“There’s international obligations on this and we expect our Tunisian partners, as the rest of our partners, to comply with these.”
 

 


Starmer’s call for release of Gaza ‘sausages’ goes viral

Starmer’s call for release of Gaza ‘sausages’ goes viral
Updated 25 September 2024
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Starmer’s call for release of Gaza ‘sausages’ goes viral

Starmer’s call for release of Gaza ‘sausages’ goes viral
  • “I call again for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the return of the sausages,” he said, before quickly correcting himself with “the hostages” as applause rang out around the conference hall

LONDON: A video of Uk Prime Minister Keir Starmer calling on Hamas to return “the sausages” as he urged a peaceful solution to the Gaza war with Israel went viral on Tuesday.
Starmer’s slip of the tongue came while he was speaking at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool, northwest England, as he meant to say “hostages.”
Having first called for “restraint and de-escalation at the border between Lebanon and Israel,” Starmer moved on to the Gaza conflict.
“I call again for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the return of the sausages,” he said, before quickly correcting himself with “the hostages” as applause rang out around the conference hall.
“And a recommitment to the two-state solution, a recognized Palestinian state alongside a safe and secure Israel,” he continued.
Almost as soon as the words had left Starmer’s mouth, the video went viral on X and by Tuesday evening it was the second most shared content.
British media were quick to jump on Starmer’s mistake, with the left-wing Guardian calling it a “gaffe” and the right-wing Daily Mail noting a “faux-pas.”
Starmer was referring to the nearly year-long war that broke out after the attack by Hamas militants on Israel on October 7 last year and the Israeli ground invasion of Gaza that followed.
Recent escalation has seen Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah move to the brink of all-out war.
 

 


Ukraine’s Zelensky tells UN Russia must be forced into peace

Ukraine’s Zelensky tells UN Russia must be forced into peace
Updated 24 September 2024
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Ukraine’s Zelensky tells UN Russia must be forced into peace

Ukraine’s Zelensky tells UN Russia must be forced into peace
  • Zelensky has sought the support of Western leaders for what he calls a “victory plan” to end the war
  • “This war can’t be calmed by talks. Action is needed,” Zelensky said, thanking nations who have provided Ukraine support

UNITED NATIONS: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday that the war between Russia and Ukraine cannot be calmed by talks alone, but that Russia must be forced into peace.
Zelensky has sought the support of Western leaders for what he calls a “victory plan” to end the war that began when Russia launched a full-scale invasion of his country in February 2022.
Zelensky said the war would end one day but not because “someone got tired of the war” or through a trade with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a reference to proposals that Ukraine cede some territory seized by Russia to settle the conflict.
“This war can’t be calmed by talks. Action is needed,” Zelensky said, thanking nations who have provided Ukraine support.
“Putin has broken so many international norms and rules that he won’t stop on his own, Russia can only be forced into peace, and that is exactly what’s needed, forcing Russia into peace, as the sole aggressor in this war, the sole violator of the UN Charter,” Zelensky said.
Ukraine faces an uncertain future. A victory by former President Donald Trump over Vice President Kamala Harris in the Nov. 5 US election could prompt a reset of Washington’s policy on Ukraine, which relies heavily on US military and financial support. Opinion polls show a tight race.
Zelensky has said that if his plan is backed by the West, it will have a broad impact on Moscow, including a psychological one that could help compel Putin to end the war diplomatically.
Russian UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia spoke up at the meeting to reject the council hosting Zelensky.
“Western countries could not refrain from poisoning the atmosphere once again, trying to fill the air time with the hackneyed Ukrainian issue,” Nebenzia said of the meeting.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the 15-member council that Russia’s war in Ukraine was a clear violation of the founding UN Charter.
“I strongly condemn all attacks on civilians and civilian facilities – wherever they occur and whoever is responsible. They all must stop immediately,” he said. “And I remain deeply concerned about the safety, humanitarian needs and basic human rights of people residing in occupied areas.”