Western Sahara denounces France’s plan to fund projects in disputed region

Soldiers of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SARD) parade during celebrations marking the 45th anniversary of the creation of the SARD Saturday, Feb.27 2021 near Tindouf, southern Algeria. (AP)
Soldiers of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SARD) parade during celebrations marking the 45th anniversary of the creation of the SARD Saturday, Feb.27 2021 near Tindouf, southern Algeria. (AP)
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Updated 08 April 2024
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Western Sahara denounces France’s plan to fund projects in disputed region

Western Sahara denounces France’s plan to fund projects in disputed region
  • “The Sahrawi government once again calls on all countries of the world and the public and private sectors to refrain from carrying out any activity of any kind in the Sahrawi national territory,” according to Western Sahara’s Information Ministry

CAIRO: France’s intention to use the French Development Agency (AFD) to fund projects in the disputed Sahrawi regions is a “provocative” step, Algerian state media reported on Sunday, citing a statement from Western Sahara’s Information Ministry.
Morocco considers Western Sahara its own but an Algeria-backed independence movement demands a sovereign state.
“This is a dangerous escalation of France’s hostile stance toward the Sahrawi people,” the ministry statement said, adding France’s plan “represents explicit support for Morocco’s illegal occupation of parts of Western Sahara.”
The statement came after France’s foreign trade minister, Franck Riester, visited Morocco last week.
“The renewal of French-Moroccan relations will involve new bridges between our private sectors,” Riester posted on X during his visit.
According to an article in France’s Le Monde newspaper, Riester indicated that the AFD, via its private sector financing arm Proparco, could help fund a project involving a high-voltage power line between Dakhla, Western Sahara’s capital, and the Moroccan port city of Casablanca.
“The Sahrawi government once again calls on all countries of the world and the public and private sectors to refrain from carrying out any activity of any kind in the Sahrawi national territory,” the statement from Western Sahara’s Information Ministry said.
Morocco took over most of Western Sahara in 1975 from colonial Spain. That started a guerrilla war with the Sahrawi people’s Polisario Front, which says the desert territory in the northwest of Africa belongs to it.
The United Nations brokered a ceasefire in 1991 and sent in a mission to help organize a referendum on the future of the territory, but the sides have been deadlocked since.

 


UK Conservative MP slammed after calling for arrests over ‘Allahu Akbar’ chants

UK Conservative MP slammed after calling for arrests over ‘Allahu Akbar’ chants
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UK Conservative MP slammed after calling for arrests over ‘Allahu Akbar’ chants

UK Conservative MP slammed after calling for arrests over ‘Allahu Akbar’ chants
  • Party leadership candidate Robert Jenrick made the remarks on Sky News
  • Deputy PM condemns MP for ‘stirring up’ nationwide rioting

LONDON: A Conservative Party leadership candidate in the UK has faced condemnation for suggesting police should arrest protesters chanting “Allahu Akbar” (God is great), The Guardian reported on Wednesday.
Robert Jenrick’s comments follow week-long nationwide riots by far-right groups, which have been met by counter-protesters, including many from the Muslim community.
The Conservative MP, a favorite in the party’s leadership race, made the remarks on Sky News in a discussion on the concept of “two-tier” policing.
Some commentators in the UK have claimed that police have reacted more harshly toward certain groups of protesters in light of pro-Palestine rallies that have taken place across Britain since last year.
“I have been very critical of police in the past, particularly around the attitude of some police forces to the protests we saw since Oct. 7,” Jenrick said.
“I thought it was quite wrong that somebody could shout Allahu Akbar on the streets of London and not be immediately arrested, project genocidal chants on to Big Ben and not be immediately arrested. That attitude is wrong and I’ll always call out the police for it.”
The leadership hopeful was widely criticized for his comments, including by Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, who accused Jenrick of “stirring up” rioting across the UK.
Mel Stride, a fellow Conservative who is also running in the leadership campaign, broke party ranks to accuse Jenrick of being “unwise and insensitive.”
He added: “Any threat in the use of these words can only ever be implied in the very rarest of circumstances. Context clearly matters hugely here.”
Conservative peer Sayeeda Warsi and Labour MP Naz Shah, who are both Muslim, also criticized Jenrick.
Warsi said on X: “Every day before we start parliamentary business in the Commons and Lords we say a prayer and praise God — we say our parliamentary version of Allahu Akbars at the heart of democracy — a process Robert Jenrick is a part of.”
Shah said: “This is complete ignorance and textbook Islamophobia from Robert Jenrick. It literally equates every Muslim in the world with extremism … it’s a basic Islamic saying that every Muslim in the world says in prayer.”
Jenrick later defended his comments in an interview on Times Radio. “I fundamentally disagree with Sayeeda Warsi … if a politician like myself, a political leader who aspires to be leader of the opposition of our country, cannot speak out about the undoubted problem we have as a country with Islamist extremism for fear of being falsely labeled as a racist by an individual such as Sayeeda Warsi, then that is a very troubling situation.”
He also posted a video on X showing masked Muslim protesters in Bolton chanting “Allahu Akbar,” accusing the group of being “intimidatory and threatening.”
Jenrick said in the caption: “Allahu Akbar is spoken peacefully and spiritually by millions of British Muslims in their daily lives. But the aggressive chanting below is intimidatory and threatening. And it’s an offence under section four and five of the Public Order Act.
“Extremists routinely abuse common expressions for their own shameful ends. All violence must end. All violence must be called out.”
The Muslim Council of Britain said in a statement: “We are shocked at Robert Jenrick’s claim on Sky News this morning that those who proclaim ‘God is great’ (or Allahu Akbar) in public should be arrested.
“As a prospective leader, Mr. Jenrick should be showing leadership, reassuring our communities when fear is palpable.
“Instead, by calling for a well-worn religious phrase to warrant arrest, which is the kind of divisive language we would come to expect peddled by sections of the media and politicians, he has emboldened the far-right thugs we see on our streets today.
“He should apologise, fully retract his comments and speak to ordinary Muslims to understand why his remarks are so outrageous. Rather than inflaming tensions, he should focus on ways to bring communities together.”


Muslim ice cream man gives ‘free cones for cops’ after UK riots

Mr Tee, King of Desserts, posted a TikTok video taken in Sunderland that amassed over 2.6 million views.
Mr Tee, King of Desserts, posted a TikTok video taken in Sunderland that amassed over 2.6 million views.
Updated 54 min 50 sec ago
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Muslim ice cream man gives ‘free cones for cops’ after UK riots

Mr Tee, King of Desserts, posted a TikTok video taken in Sunderland that amassed over 2.6 million views.
  • “We just thought we’d show them a little bit of love,” Mr.Tee, whose real name is Ashiq, said
  • Mr Tee said most of the praise for his video came from non-Muslims who value their community

LONDON: A British Muslim social media star who travels around the country in his ice cream van has thanked police officers trying to control racist and anti-immigration riots by handing out free cones.
Mr Tee, King of Desserts, posted a TikTok video taken in the English city of Sunderland that amassed over 2.6 million views, in which he offered a police van full of officers ice creams, with the theme tune to 1980s hit TV show ‘The A-Team’ blaring.
“We just thought we’d show them a little bit of love,” Mr.Tee, whose real name is Ashiq, told Reuters.
The two-minute clip — in which one policeman asked for a special birthday ice cream for a colleague — struck a chord with the British public, the vast majority of whom think the riots are unjustified, according to a recent YouGov poll.
“This is brill — remember under the uniforms there is a dad, husband, uncle brother, human,” said commenter sayithowitis1970.
Riots have erupted at anti-immigration protests in towns and cities across Britain in the last week, with attacks by far-right groups on hotels housing asylum seekers and on mosques.
Mr Tee said most of the praise for his video came from non-Muslims who value their community.
“It’s just a very small minority that are unfortunately (not) feeling in this way,” Mr.Tee said.
Based in the northern Welsh town of Wrexham, Mr.Tee said he would take a week off to let the tensions around the country die down.
“Some people are scared to leave the house, ladies especially, they don’t want to be seen walking about with their hijabs,” he said.
But Mr.Tee pointed to the reaction to his video as a reason for hope.
“It just showed the genuine true colors of Great Britain and the people that live here, and obviously the welcoming side of the people here.”


Family stunned as police officer who killed son appears in Olympics opening ceremony

Family stunned as police officer who killed son appears in Olympics opening ceremony
Updated 07 August 2024
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Family stunned as police officer who killed son appears in Olympics opening ceremony

Family stunned as police officer who killed son appears in Olympics opening ceremony
  • Souheil El-Khalfaoui, 19, was shot dead by Romain Devassine in August 2021
  • ‘How far can you take indecency?’ boy’s father says

LONDON: The family of a teenager killed by a policeman in France have shared their shock at seeing the officer included in the Paris Olympics opening ceremony.

Issam El-Khalfaoui said he and his family were “in a state of shock” when they saw Romain Devassine, who took part in the ceremony as a BMX rider, The Times reported on Wednesday.

Devassine was deemed by France’s General Inspectorate of the National Police to have shot dead Souheil El-Khalfaoui in August 2021 out of “absolute necessity” and no charges were brought.

The El-Khalfaoui family filed a complaint that the inquiry had been handled wrongly and that crucial CCTV evidence had been withheld, leading to the case to be reopened.

An investigation is ongoing, with two officers present during the shooting being questioned so far, but none of the officers have been suspended while under investigation or charged with any offense.

Devassine told the initial inquiry that he had been convinced that the 19-year-old El-Khalfaoui, who was reversing a vehicle at officers, would have “run over and killed” one of them. He said at the time that he was “devastated” by the incident.

The boy’s father said: “I told myself it can’t possibly be him, I took my phone and I saw it really is him. I couldn’t talk or breathe. I was in a state of shock.

“How can you put someone in the shop window when they have killed a kid of 19 whilst the investigation is going on? How far can you take indecency?”

A spokesperson for the Paris 2024 Olympics said Devassine had been hired via an agency and that the opening ceremony organizers had been given no information about his background.

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Sweden charges activist with hate crime over 2022 Qur'an burning

Far-right politician Rasmus Paludan holds up a copy of the Qur’an as he speaks in front of a mosque in Copenhagen. (File/AFP)
Far-right politician Rasmus Paludan holds up a copy of the Qur’an as he speaks in front of a mosque in Copenhagen. (File/AFP)
Updated 07 August 2024
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Sweden charges activist with hate crime over 2022 Qur'an burning

Far-right politician Rasmus Paludan holds up a copy of the Qur’an as he speaks in front of a mosque in Copenhagen. (File/AFP)
  • Prosecutors charged him with “agitation against an ethnic group” over a protest in Malmo in April 2022 where he desecrated and set fire to the Qur’an

STOCKHOLM: Swedish prosecutors on Wednesday charged a Swedish-Danish right-wing activist with inciting ethnic hatred by desecrating and burning a Qur'an in 2022.
Rasmus Paludan, who has been convicted for racist abuse in the past, provoked rioting in Sweden in 2022 when he went on a tour of the country and publicly burned copies of the Qur'an.
Prosecutors charged him with “agitation against an ethnic group” over a protest in the city of Malmo in April 2022 where he desecrated and set fire to the Muslim holy book, while making disparaging comments about Muslims, according to the charge sheet.
They also charged him with a second count of the same offense over another incident where he made derogatory remarks about Arabs and Africans.
Paludan later stoked international controversy when he set fire to a Qur'an outside Turkiye’s embassy in the Swedish capital in January 2023.
The incident strained relations between the country at a time when Turkiye was holding up Sweden’s NATO bid.
Relations between Sweden and several Middle Eastern countries were further strained by a slew of protests staged by Iraqi refugee Salwan Momika — which also included desecrations of the Qur'an — over the summer of 2023.
Iraqi protesters stormed the Swedish embassy in Baghdad twice in July of that year, starting fires within the compound on the second occasion.
In August last year, Sweden’s intelligence service Sapo raised its threat level to four on a scale of five after the Qur'an burnings had made it a “prioritized target.”
The Swedish government condemned the desecrations while noting the country’s constitutionally protected freedom of speech and assembly laws.
In October 2023, a Swedish court convicted a man of inciting ethnic hatred with a 2020 Qur'an burning, the first time the country’s court system had tried the charge for desecrating Islam’s holy book.
The man published the video on social media platforms Twitter, now known as X, and YouTube, and placed the burnt Qur'an with bacon outside the mosque in the city of Linkoping.
The video featured a song the court said was “strongly associated with the attack in Christchurch,” New Zealand, in 2019 in which an Australian white supremacist killed 51 people at two mosques.
Prosecutors have told Swedish media that under Swedish law the burning of a Qur'an can be seen as a critique of the book and the religion and thus be protected under free speech.
However, depending on the context and what statements are made at the time it can also be considered “agitation against an ethnic group.”

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Overwhelming majority of UK public want ICC arrest warrants pursued: Poll

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant attend a press conference in the Kirya military base
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant attend a press conference in the Kirya military base
Updated 07 August 2024
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Overwhelming majority of UK public want ICC arrest warrants pursued: Poll

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant attend a press conference in the Kirya military base
  • Court’s chief prosecutor issued warrants for Israeli PM, defense minister in May
  • Only 18% of Britons oppose ending arms sales to Israel

LONDON: The overwhelming majority of people in Britain believe that the UK should arrest the subjects of arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court, a new poll has found.

Commissioned by the Council for Arab-British Understanding and Medical Aid for Palestinians, the survey follows a request by Karim Khan, the ICC’s chief prosecutor, to issue arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

The poll, conducted on July 30-31, found that 84 percent of the UK public believe that Netanyahu and Gallant should be arrested if they enter British jurisdiction.

The new UK government has overturned previous legal opposition to Khan’s move, which CAABU in a press release described as a “welcome first step.”

The organization’s director, Chris Doyle, said: “At some point, perhaps within weeks or even days, the British government may have to enforce ICC arrest warrants relating to the atrocities over the last 10 months. This government has assured the electorate it will adhere to international law.

“This poll shows the electorate overwhelmingly wants to see that and that full accountability and justice matters to them, regardless of who is accused. The climate of impunity enjoyed by so many for so long must end.”

Fifty-eight percent of Britons support ending weapons sales to Israel, the poll found. Only 18 percent oppose the move.

Despite the previous British government’s unwillingness to support a ceasefire in Gaza, 74 percent of the public believe that the UK should back an end to the war, which has killed more than 39,000 Palestinians and injured 91,000.

Rohan Talbot, MAP’s director of advocacy and campaigns, said: “As Israel’s indiscriminate bombardment, including of homes, healthcare and so-called ‘safe zones,’ wages on, the British public has reaffirmed widespread support for action by the UK government to bring the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza to an end.

“This includes suspending arms sales to Israel which may be used in violations of international law. Ten months in, people in Gaza cannot wait any longer — the government must act now.”

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