Brazilian president meets with Arab leaders during African Summit

Brazilian president meets with Arab leaders during African Summit
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In those talks, he dealt both with urgent matters such as the Gaza war, and long-term partnerships. (Supplied)
Brazilian president meets with Arab leaders during African Summit
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In those talks, he dealt both with urgent matters such as the Gaza war, and long-term partnerships. (Supplied)
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Updated 19 February 2024
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Brazilian president meets with Arab leaders during African Summit

Brazilian president meets with Arab leaders during African Summit
  • Lula holds talks with Palestinian PM, chairman of Presidential Council of Libya in Ethiopia
  • He dealt both with urgent matters such as Gaza war, and long-term partnerships

SAO PAULO: During the 37th African Union Summit in Ethiopia, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who took part as a guest, took the opportunity to advance his South-South cooperation agenda, including in bilateral meetings with Arab leaders.

In those talks, he dealt both with urgent matters such as the Gaza war, and long-term partnerships.

After visiting Egypt, where he met with President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and took part in an extraordinary session of the Council of the Arab League, Lula traveled to Addis Ababa, where he attended the summit and held private talks with several leaders, including Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh and Mohamed Al-Menfi, chairman of the Presidential Council of Libya.

On Saturday, Lula and Shtayyeh discussed Gaza and agreed that an immediate ceasefire must be declared in order to protect civilians.

Lula reaffirmed his government’s commitment to a two-state solution, and declared that humanitarian aid must reach the victims of the war.

Two days earlier, in Cairo, he had promised extra financial aid to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, after a number of developed nations decided to stop funding it.

Shtayyeh thanked Lula for Brazil’s support to the Palestinian people, telling reporters after the meeting: “We’ll continue to work together. I’ve heard messages of encouragement, and that Brazil stands solid for peace and justice with international law.”

Emir Mourad, secretary-general of the Palestinian Confederation of Latin America and the Caribbean, said the face-to-face meeting between Lula and Shtayyeh strengthened ties between Brazil and Palestine, and is part of the president’s strategy for Middle East peace.

“Lula reiterated the key points of the Brazilian stance during the event in Africa, where several nations have a great identification with the plight of the Palestinians,” Mourad told Arab News.

The fact that Lula fiercely criticized Israel’s military operation against the Palestinians during an interview after the summit on Sunday, comparing it to the Holocaust, is a sign that his administration is willing to increase pressure on Israel until it stops the attacks, Mourad said.

“When there’s no clear solution in sight, one must take further steps. It’s a principle of diplomacy. That’s what Lula is doing now,” he added.

Lula’s visit to Egypt and his meeting with Shtayyeh demonstrate that he has a roadmap and is engaging in strategic discussions as part of it, Mourad said.

Before returning home, Lula met with Al-Menfi, who told him about the growing stability in Libya and asked him to reopen the Brazilian Embassy in Tripoli.

Brazil had maintained an embassy in Libya since 1974. But in 2014, amid growing instability in the country after the eruption of the civil war in 2011, Brazil moved its representation in Libya to Tunis.

Aline Rizzo, a historian who specializes in the South-South agenda, told Arab News that Lula “has several challenges ahead in his battle for multilateralism, but his trip to Africa and his meetings with Arab leaders show that’s the path he’ll follow.”

Last year, Brazil exported $451 million in products to Libya, especially animal protein and iron ore.

Ali Saifi, CEO of Cdial Halal, a halal certification company in Brazil, told Arab News that now is the right moment to reopen the Brazilian Embassy in Tripoli.

“We should be present there now that the nation is being restructured. We have much to offer in terms of food and building technology. Libya is a strategic country for Brazil,” he added.

Rizzo said the expansion this year of the BRICS bloc of developing economies is a favorable element for Lula to establish new partnerships with Arab countries, including in new sectors such as green energy.

“Lula has been repeatedly talking about climate challenges and producing clean energy together with other nations. My guess is that countries like Libya may be partners of Brazil in those new ventures,” she added, recalling that he mentioned such possibilities several times during his trip to Africa.


Two dead as migrant boat capsizes off Greek island

Two dead as migrant boat capsizes off Greek island
Updated 17 sec ago
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Two dead as migrant boat capsizes off Greek island

Two dead as migrant boat capsizes off Greek island
Athens: A boat carrying undocumented migrants capsized during the night off the Greek island of Samos, leaving two people dead, while 22 were rescued, coast guard officials said Monday.
A coast guard spokesperson said the body of a man and a woman were taken from the Aegean Sea while 20 men and two women were taken to Samos and put in police custody.
The spokesperson said winds of up to 60 kilometers (37.5 miles) per hour were blowing when the boat capsized.
Samos, which is near the western Turkish coast, is frequently used as a staging post for migrants seeking to enter the European Union. But there are many accidents.
Two children and two women died when one boat sank off the island of Kos last Wednesday. Three people died off the coast of Samos in September.

China says lodges protest with Myanmar over consulate attack

China says lodges protest with Myanmar over consulate attack
Updated 45 min 3 sec ago
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China says lodges protest with Myanmar over consulate attack

China says lodges protest with Myanmar over consulate attack
  • “China expresses its deep shock at the attack and sternly condemns it,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said of the incident that occurred Friday

BEIJING: China said Monday it had lodged a protest with Myanmar authorities after Beijing’s consulate in the city of Mandalay was attacked with an explosive device.
“China expresses its deep shock at the attack and sternly condemns it,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said of the incident that occurred Friday.
“China has made stern representations to the Myanmar side,” Lin said.
China is a major ally and arms supplier to Myanmar’s junta, but it also maintains ties with ethnic groups fighting the military in Myanmar’s northern Shan state, according to analysts.
Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military deposed the government of Aung San Suu Kyi and seized power in 2021.
The blast occurred at the consulate office in central Mandalay, south of the sprawling Royal Palace, around 7:00 p.m. Friday (1230 GMT), local media said.
A statement from the junta on Saturday night blamed “terrorists” for the incident, which it said it was investigating in cooperation with consulate officials.
China said Monday there had been no casualties and that it had “urged Myanmar to thoroughly investigate the attack” and “go all out to catch and punish the perpetrators in accordance with the law.”
Beijing called on authorities to “comprehensively step up security for Chinese consular offices, institutions, projects and personnel in Myanmar, and prevent this kind of incident from ever happening again,” Lin said.
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NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict

NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict
Updated 21 October 2024
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NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict

NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict
  • South Korea summons Russian envoy to protest North Korea troop dispatch

BRUSSELS: If North Korea were to send troops to Ukraine to fight on Russia’s behalf it would significantly escalate the conflict, NATO Chief Mark Rutte said on social media platform X on Monday.
Rutte, who took office at NATO at the start of the month, said he had a discussion with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol about the alliance’s close partnership with Seoul, focusing on defense industrial cooperation and the interconnected security of the Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions.
South Korea’s foreign ministry summoned on Monday the Russian ambassador in Seoul in protest over what it has called the dispatch of North Korean troops to Russia for deployment in Ukraine and pledged a joint international response.
South Korea’s first vice foreign minister Kim Hong-kyun called in Georgy Zinoviev, the top Russian envoy to Seoul, and urged the immediate withdrawal of North Korean soldiers from Russia, the ministry said in a statement.
Kim said the participation of North Korean troops in the war in Ukraine violated UN resolutions and the UN charter and posed serious threats to the security of South Korea and beyond.
“We condemn North Korea’s illegal military cooperation, including its dispatch of troops to Russia, in the strongest terms,” the ministry quoted Kim as saying.
“We will respond jointly with the international community by mobilizing all available means against acts that threaten our core security interests.”
Phone calls to the Russian embassy went unanswered. The ministry said Zinoviev told Kim that he would relay the message to Moscow.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said last week that North Korea was preparing to send 10,000 soldiers to help Moscow’s war effort, and that some North Korean officers were already deployed on Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory.
The West has long accused North Korea of supplying weapons to Russia. Rutte and the Pentagon both said last week that they have found no evidence yet of a North Korean military presence on the ground in Ukraine.


US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen dead: Turkish TV

US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen dead: Turkish TV
Updated 21 October 2024
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US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen dead: Turkish TV

US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen dead: Turkish TV

ISTANBUL: Turkish public television reported Monday that US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who Ankara says masterminded a failed 2016 coup, has died.
Citing posts on X and social media by groups close to Gulen, they said the 83-year-old died in hospital overnight.
Gulen, who led a movement called Hizmet, was accused by Turkiye of leading a “terrorist” group and being the brains behind an abortive coup to topple strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s governmnt in 2016 — accusations he had consistently denied.
Gulen had lived in Pennsylvania since 1999. He was stripped of his Turkish nationality in 2017.


Polio is rising in Pakistan ahead of a new vaccination campaign

Polio is rising in Pakistan ahead of a new vaccination campaign
Updated 21 October 2024
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Polio is rising in Pakistan ahead of a new vaccination campaign

Polio is rising in Pakistan ahead of a new vaccination campaign
  • Since January, health officials have confirmed 39 new polio cases in Pakistan, compared to only six last year, despite conducting multiple campaigns
  • Pakistan regularly launches polio campaigns despite attacks on workers and police assigned to inoculation drives

ISLAMABAD: Polio cases are rising ahead of a new vaccination campaign in Pakistan, where violence targeting health workers and the police protecting them has hampered years of efforts toward making the country polio-free.
Since January, health officials have confirmed 39 new polio cases in Pakistan, compared to only six last year, said Anwarul Haq of the National Emergency Operation Center for Polio Eradication.
The new nationwide drive starts Oct. 28 with the aim to vaccinate at least 32 million children. “The whole purpose of these campaigns is to achieve the target of making Pakistan a polio-free state,” he said.
Pakistan regularly launches campaigns against polio despite attacks on the workers and police assigned to the inoculation drives. Militants falsely claim the vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.
Most of the new polio cases were reported in the southwestern Balochistan and southern Sindh province, following by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and eastern Punjab province.
The locations are worrying authorities since previous cases were from the restive northwest bordering Afghanistan, where the Taliban government in September suddenly stopped a door-to-door vaccination campaign.
Afghanistan and Pakistan are the two countries in which the spread of the potentially fatal, paralyzing disease has never been stopped. Authorities in Pakistan have said that the Taliban’s decision will have major repercussions beyond the Afghan border, as people from both sides frequently travel to each other’s country.
The World Health Organization has confirmed 18 polio cases in Afghanistan this year, all but two in the south of the country. That’s up from six cases in 2023. Afghanistan used a house-to-house vaccination strategy this June for the first time in five years, a tactic that helped to reach the majority of children targeted, according to WHO.
Health officials in Pakistan say they want the both sides to conduct anti-polio drives simultaneously.