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.

 


Two more crew members from Lynch’s yacht under investigation, source says

Two more crew members from Lynch’s yacht under investigation, source says
Updated 10 sec ago
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Two more crew members from Lynch’s yacht under investigation, source says

Two more crew members from Lynch’s yacht under investigation, source says
  • Ship engineer Tim Parker Eaton and sailor Matthew Griffith are being investigated over the same crimes
  • The Bayesian is lying on its right side, at a depth of around 50 meters
PALERMO: Italian prosecutors are investigating two more crew members from British tech tycoon Mike Lynch’s yacht, along with its captain, in connection with the vessel’s sinking over a week ago, a judicial source said on Wednesday.
Lynch and six other people were killed when the British-flagged Bayesian, a 56-meter-long (184-foot) yacht, capsized and went down on Aug. 19 within minutes of being hit by a pre-dawn storm while anchored off northern Sicily.
On Monday, the boat’s 51-year-old captain James Cutfield, a New Zealander, was put under investigation for manslaughter and shipwreck. Cutfield declined to respond to prosecutors during questioning on Tuesday.
Ship engineer Tim Parker Eaton and sailor Matthew Griffith are being investigated over the same crimes, the source said, adding that Parker Eaton is suspected of having failed to protect the yacht’s engine room and operating systems.
Griffith was on watch duty on the night of the incident, the source said.
Being investigated does not imply guilt and does not mean formal charges will follow.
The sinking has puzzled naval marine experts, who said a vessel like the Bayesian, built by Italian high-end yacht manufacturer Perini, should have withstood the storm and, in any case, should not have sunk as quickly as it did.
Prosecutors in the town of Termini Imerese, near Palermo, have said their investigation would take time, and would require the wreck to be salvaged from the sea. The Bayesian is lying on its right side, at a depth of around 50 meters (164 feet).

Poland says students arrested in Nigeria have been released

Poland says students arrested in Nigeria have been released
Updated 21 min 39 sec ago
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Poland says students arrested in Nigeria have been released

Poland says students arrested in Nigeria have been released

WARSAW: A group of Polish students who were arrested in Nigeria have been released, the foreign ministry in Warsaw said on Wednesday.
Nigeria said earlier this month that it had arrested seven Polish nationals for raising Russian flags during anti-government protests in the northern state of Kano.
Following their arrest, a Polish foreign ministry spokesperson rejected the accusation that they were waving the flags and said they were merely in the vicinity of the protest.
“The Polish students have been released and are in Kano,” the Polish foreign ministry said in a post on social media platform X. “Thank you to everyone involved in the release of the Polish citizens!“
Hundreds of thousands of Nigerians had been protesting since Aug. 1 against President Bola Tinubu’s painful economic reforms that have seen a partial end to fuel and electricity subsidies, currency devaluation and inflation touching three-decade highs.
Some protesters waved Russian flags during protests in northern states, underscoring concerns about increased Russian activity in western Africa.


Kremlin, dismissing Zelensky’s talk of a peace plan, says Russia will keep fighting in Ukraine

Kremlin, dismissing Zelensky’s talk of a peace plan, says Russia will keep fighting in Ukraine
Updated 15 min 43 sec ago
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Kremlin, dismissing Zelensky’s talk of a peace plan, says Russia will keep fighting in Ukraine

Kremlin, dismissing Zelensky’s talk of a peace plan, says Russia will keep fighting in Ukraine
  • Ukrainian president says he would present his plan to US President Joe Biden and his two potential successors

MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Wednesday dismissed talk by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky about a plan he has to end the war and said Russia would continue what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.

Zelensky said on Tuesday he would present his plan — full details of which he did not publicly disclose — to US President Joe Biden and his two potential successors.

Zelensky, addressing a news conference, said Kyiv’s three-week-old incursion into Russia’s Kursk region was part of his plan, but that it also comprised other steps on the economic and diplomatic fronts.

The idea, said Zelensky — who is pressing Washington to allow his forces to use long-range US-supplied arms to strike deep inside Russia — was to force Moscow to end the war.

“This is not the first time that we have heard such statements from representatives of the Kyiv regime. We are aware of the nature of this Kyiv regime,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked about Zelensky’s plan.

“We are continuing our special military operation and will achieve all of our goals.”

Russia is currently engaged in repelling the Ukrainian incursion that began on Aug. 6, and is pressing ahead with its own offensive in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine.

Peskov also said that Russia supported India’s view on the need for a peaceful settlement, but said it was “more than obvious” that there was no basis for talks right now.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Tuesday that he had told Russian President Vladimir Putin in a phone call that he backed an early, peaceful resolution to the Ukraine conflict, days after Modi held talks with Zelensky in Kyiv.


Bangladesh lifts ban on main Islamist party

Bangladesh lifts ban on main Islamist party
Updated 45 min 9 sec ago
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Bangladesh lifts ban on main Islamist party

Bangladesh lifts ban on main Islamist party
  • Jamaat-e-Islami ban was imposed in the final days of the rule of now ousted autocrat Sheikh Hasina
  • Jamaat was also barred from participating in elections in 2014, 2018 and again in January this year

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s new authorities on Wednesday lifted a ban on the country’s largest Islamist party, Jamaat-e-Islami, imposed in the final days of the rule of now ousted autocrat Sheikh Hasina.
“The government... has canceled the previous order of August 1, 2024 that banned Bangladesh’s Jamaat e Islami,” the order read. “It will come into effect immediately.”
Jamaat-e-Islami, which has millions of supporters, was banned from contesting polls in 2013 after high court judges ruled its charter violated the secular constitution of the Muslim-majority nation of 170 million people.
Jamaat was also barred from participating in elections in 2014, 2018 and again in January this year, when 76-year-old Hasina won her fifth term in widely discredited polls without a credible opposition.
Hasina’s government then banned the party outright under an anti-terrorism act on August 1, just four days before she was ousted from power after weeks of student-led protests, fleeing to India by helicopter.
The government order said it had lifted the ban, including on the party’s student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir, because there was “no specific evidence of involvement with terrorism and violence.”
Jamaat is one of the country’s main political parties, along with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
It is unclear what strength Hasina’s once all-powerful party, the Awami League, still holds.


Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church
Updated 28 August 2024
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Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

MOSCOW: Russian investigators said Wednesday they had held three people for allegedly plotting a terrorist attack on a church in Ingushetia, a small Muslim-majority republic in the Caucasus region.
The three Russian nationals were preparing to attack a church in the city of Sunzha, the regional branch of the investigative committee in Ingushetia said on Telegram.
Investigators have opened a criminal case against the three for “participation in the activities of a terrorist organization” and “preparation to commit a terrorist act by prior conspiracy.”
“During the investigation and related searches, it was established that the defendants... were planning to commit sabotage and terrorist acts in the region,” they said.
Those arrested are members of the Islamic State (IS) group, according to a source familiar with the case quoted by the Ria Novosti news agency.
Russia regularly announces that it has foiled plans for attacks by presumed Islamist cells. IS has repeatedly pledged to target Russia over its support of Syrian leader Bashar Assad.
In March, 145 people were killed in an attack on a Moscow concert hall — the most deadly terror attack in Russia for two decades.
A Central Asian branch of IS claimed responsibility for the attack and four suspected gunmen, now in pre-trial detention, are citizens of Tajikistan.
Last week, inmates killed at least three Russian prison guards in a prison siege, according to officials, with the assailants having apparent connections to IS.
Russian special forces stormed the facility in Russia’s southern Volgograd region and shot dead all four attackers after an hours-long stand-off.
It was the second such case of IS-affiliated prisoners taking staff hostage since June.