UK says Rwanda asylum seekers’ deportation flights to begin on July 23

UK says Rwanda asylum seekers’ deportation flights to begin on July 23
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak recently said the deportation flights would not leave before an election on July 4 but he has promised if he wins they would begin soon after. (Reuters)
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Updated 03 June 2024
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UK says Rwanda asylum seekers’ deportation flights to begin on July 23

UK says Rwanda asylum seekers’ deportation flights to begin on July 23
  • Policy of sending asylum seekers who arrived in Britain to the East African nation is one of Rishi Sunak’s flagship policies

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LONDON: The British government says it intends to begin deporting asylum seekers on July 23, court documents showed on Monday, although the controversial scheme is dependent on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative parties winning the upcoming election.
The policy of sending asylum seekers who arrived in Britain to the East African nation is one of Sunak’s flagship policies but legal and parliamentary obstacles have meant it has never got off the ground.
Sunak recently said the deportation flights would not leave before an election on July 4 but he has promised if he wins they would begin soon after, although he is trailing the opposition Labour Party by about 20 points in opinion polls and it has promised to scrap the plan.
In documents submitted to the London High Court as part of a charity’s challenged to the policy, government lawyers said the intention was “to effect removals with a flight to Rwanda on 23 July 2024 (and not before).”


DRCongo voices ‘regret’ after French diplomats assaulted

Congolese policemen walk in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. (REUTERS file photo)
Congolese policemen walk in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. (REUTERS file photo)
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DRCongo voices ‘regret’ after French diplomats assaulted

Congolese policemen walk in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. (REUTERS file photo)
  • “Members of the police and the prosecutor’s office” were among the assailants, “some of whom have already been arrested,” the ministry said

KINSHASA: DRCongo authorities on Monday expressed regret over an assault on three French diplomats in the capital Kinshasa, government and diplomatic sources told AFP.
Police officers were among a group that raided a site used by the French embassy in a bid to “oust a French diplomat,” the justice ministry said in a statement.
An embassy cultural cooperation diplomat was struck while being held for nearly three hours, while two other diplomats were “shoved around but with no wounds,” a diplomatic source added.
“Members of the police and the prosecutor’s office” were among the assailants, “some of whom have already been arrested,” the ministry said.
A DR Congo court last year ruled in favor of France in a dispute over the ownership of the site where the incident took place, occupied by the embassy since 1972, the diplomatic source said.
France’s ambassador Bruno Aubert met with President Felix Tshisekedi on Monday. Foreign Minister Therese Wagner Kayikwamba had already expressed “deep regret” Saturday over “an incident that violated international conventions.”
“We discussed this situation and the measures that will be taken, some already, by the Congolese authorities to ensure such an incident does not happen again,” Aubert said in comments released by Kayikwamba’s office.
 

 


NATO denounces ‘irresponsible’ acts by Russia as Poland searches for drone

NATO denounces ‘irresponsible’ acts by Russia as Poland searches for drone
Updated 30 min 24 sec ago
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NATO denounces ‘irresponsible’ acts by Russia as Poland searches for drone

NATO denounces ‘irresponsible’ acts by Russia as Poland searches for drone

BRUSSELS: NATO strongly condemned what it called Russia’s ongoing attacks against Ukrainian civilians and civilian infrastructure after Poland said a drone likely entered its airspace during a Russian attack on Ukraine early on Monday.
“Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russian drone fragments and missiles have been found on allied territory on several occasions,” NATO spokesperson Farah Dakhlallah said. “While we have no information indicating an intentional attack by Russia against allies, these acts are irresponsible and potentially dangerous.”


Trump hits Harris on US Afghan withdrawal ‘calamity’

Trump hits Harris on US Afghan withdrawal ‘calamity’
Updated 27 August 2024
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Trump hits Harris on US Afghan withdrawal ‘calamity’

Trump hits Harris on US Afghan withdrawal ‘calamity’

WASHINGTON: Donald Trump on Monday tied Vice President Kamala Harris to the chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan as he paid tribute to 13 troops killed in a suicide attack on the third anniversary of their deaths.

It was Trump who, as president in 2020, struck a deal with the Taliban for the United States to withdraw from the country.

But it was President Joe Biden who, after delaying it by a few months, finally implemented the retreat in 2021, one of the administration’s lowest points.

Trump regularly slams Biden over it, but has pivoted to blaming Harris for White House policy decisions since she replaced the 81-year-old Democrat as his rival for the White House.

In Detroit to address the National Guard Association of the United States, the Republican ex-president, 78, argued that the “humiliation” of the withdrawal destroyed US credibility and was “caused by Kamala Harris (and) Joe Biden.”

“Now, the voters are going to fire Kamala and Joe on November 5, we hope, and when I take office... I will get the resignations of every single senior official who touched the Afghanistan calamity to be on my desk at noon on inauguration day,” he said.

Taliban forces seized the Afghan capital Kabul on August 15, 2021, after the US-backed government collapsed days ahead of the planned withdrawal date and its leaders fled into exile.

A suicide bomb attack killed 13 US troops and 170 Afghans on August 26 at the crowded perimeter of Kabul’s international airport, where an unprecedented military airlift operation got more than 120,000 people out of the country in a matter of days.

Before US troops were able to secure the whole airport, the world witnessed tragic scenes of panicked Afghan civilians mobbing airliners and even falling to their deaths as they attempted to cling onto departing planes.

Ahead of Trump’s speech, his campaign pointed to previous Harris statements that she was the last person in the room before Biden made the call to withdraw from Afghanistan.

“By her own admission, Kamala Harris was a key player in the disastrous withdrawal,” it said in statement.

“She bragged about being the last person in the room for the fateful decision, was ‘front and center’ for the security briefings, and even laughed as a reporter asked her about the American citizens still trapped in Afghanistan.”

The White House released a classified review of the withdrawal in April last year, acknowledging intelligence failures but blaming Trump for creating the conditions leading to the rout.

In a declassified summary, the administration said the February 2020 deal between Trump and the Taliban had placed the incoming Biden government in an impossible position by agreeing a date for withdrawal, but providing no plan for executing it.

Harris released a statement offering prayers for “13 devoted patriots” and the loved ones they left behind. “My heart breaks for their pain and their loss,” she said.

Earlier Monday, Trump took part in a wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia for the slain service members.

The former president has been hammered repeatedly over inflammatory public comments and alleged private remarks about veterans.

Earlier this month he said the country’s top civilian award was “much better” than the elite military honor, because the service members who receive their medal are “in very bad shape” or “dead.”


Denmark to close its embassies in Mali, Burkina Faso

Denmark to close its embassies in Mali, Burkina Faso
Updated 27 August 2024
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Denmark to close its embassies in Mali, Burkina Faso

Denmark to close its embassies in Mali, Burkina Faso

COPENHAGEN: Denmark will close its embassies in Mali and Burkina Faso after a series of military coups over the past few years, the Danish Foreign Ministry said on Monday, as it formally launched a new strategy for its cooperation with the African continent.

Ruled by a military junta since 2020, Mali has been battling ethnic Tuareg rebels in its north alongside Russia’s Wagner mercenary group after it cut military cooperation ties with Western powers including EU countries.

Since then, relations between Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso and Western powers have deteriorated as the three turn to Russia for support.

Frustrations over authorities’ failure to restore security have contributed to coups in Mali and Burkina Faso, which the ministry said had created very limited room for maneuver in the Sahel region.

At the same time, the Danish ministry said it would open embassies in Rwanda, Senegal and Tunisia, and increase its diplomatic workforce in its embassies to Egypt, Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria and Ghana.

Separately, at least 100 villagers and soldiers were killed in central Burkina Faso during a weekend attack on a village by Al-Qaeda-linked terrorists, according to videos of the violence analyzed by a regional specialist, who’s described the assault as one of the deadliest this year in the conflict-battered West African nation.

Villagers in the Barsalogho commune which is 80 kilometers from the capital city were helping security forces dig trenches to protect security outposts and villages on Saturday when fighters with the Al-Qaeda-linked JNIM group invaded the area and opened fire on them, said Wassim Nasr, a Sahel specialist and senior research fellow at the Soufan Center security think tank.

Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack on Sunday, saying in a statement that it gained “total control over a militia position” in Barsalogho in Kaya, a strategic town security forces have used to fight off terrorists that have over the years tried to close in on the capital, Ouagadougou.


Hundreds of migrants swim into Ceuta enclave from Morocco

Hundreds of migrants swim into Ceuta enclave from Morocco
Updated 26 August 2024
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Hundreds of migrants swim into Ceuta enclave from Morocco

Hundreds of migrants swim into Ceuta enclave from Morocco
  • Spain’s prime minister to visit West Africa to stem refugee surge

MADRID: Hundreds of migrants took advantage of a thick mist to swim to the Spanish enclave of Ceuta from neighboring Morocco on Sunday and early on Monday, local police said.

Spain’s two enclaves on Morocco’s Mediterranean coast, Ceuta and Melilla, share the only land borders of the EU with Africa. The enclaves sporadically experience waves of attempted crossings by migrants trying to reach Europe.

Many of the migrants were intercepted near or on El Tarajal beach next to the Ceuta-Morocco border, a spokesperson for the Guardia Civil police said.

“There was pressure and we handled it with Morocco,” he said. The spokesperson added that the mist had lifted by Monday morning.

Police have intercepted an average of around 700 migrants trying to enter Ceuta each day since Thursday, with up to 1,500 people making the attempt on Sunday night, according to Cristina Perez, the Spanish government’s representative in Ceuta.

Moroccan nationals detained during the crossings are immediately sent back to Morocco unless they are underage or seeking asylum, Perez said.

People of other nationalities are taken to special centers where they are given shelter and released after a few days.

Another unknown number of people have managed to sneak illegally into the enclave without being detained by the police, a spokesperson for Perez’s office said.

Two years ago, at least 23 people died in a stampede when about 2,000 migrants tried to storm into Melilla, pushing down the border fence. 

Meanwhile, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez will start his second visit this year to West Africa on Tuesday, aiming to curb migration to the Canary Islands and to counter the Russian presence in the Sahel region.

The West African migration route has seen a 154 percent surge this year, with 21,620 people crossing to the Canary Islands in the first seven months, according to data from the European Union border agency Frontex.

The wave has stretched resources on the Spanish archipelago, with local authorities saying they may have to house migrants in military camps or even in tents ahead of an expected rise in arrivals due to calmer conditions in the Atlantic Ocean.

Spanish authorities fear that as many as 150,000 more migrants from Africa may be set to make the perilous crossing in the coming months.

According to Frontex data, nearly half of the new arrivals are Malians, forced out of their country by a conflict and economic crisis in which the Russian mercenary group Wagner is involved.

Sanchez is focusing on strengthening relations with Mauritania, Senegal, and Gambia, the main departure points for migrant boats. The first two share land borders with Mali.