New Zealand exempts abuse victims from a forced two-year wait before they can seek divorce

New Zealand exempts abuse victims from a forced two-year wait before they can seek divorce
Above, legislators in the old legislative chamber in Wellington during the re-opening of parliament on Dec. 6, 2023. All 123 members of parliament voted for the change, in a rare show of political unity. (AFP)
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Updated 16 October 2024
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New Zealand exempts abuse victims from a forced two-year wait before they can seek divorce

New Zealand exempts abuse victims from a forced two-year wait before they can seek divorce
  • The required cooling-off period before a couple in New Zealand can file for divorce is the longest among no-fault divorce laws in comparable countries

WELLINGTON: Victims of domestic violence in New Zealand will be allowed to cut ties to abusive spouses more quickly after lawmakers unanimously voted Wednesday to exempt them from a mandatory two-year separation period before divorce can be sought.
The required cooling-off period before a couple in New Zealand can file for divorce — during which they must also live apart — is the longest among no-fault divorce laws in comparable countries, including Australia, Britain, Canada and most states in the US.
Wednesday’s change means a victim of domestic violence can seek dissolution of their marriage or civil partnership as soon as a protection order against their spouse is granted. Lawmakers said in speeches at parliament in the capital, Wellington, that some survivors had told them the long reflection period made leaving an abusive relationship difficult and increased the chance they would return to a violent partner.
“Two years holds the tie. It binds the victim to their abuser,” said Deborah Russell, the lawmaker who sponsored the bill. “That should not be the case.”
All 123 members of parliament voted for the change, in a rare show of political unity.
Lawmakers cited New Zealand’s domestic violence figures, which are widely considered one of the country’s most entrenched and thorny social problems. Police figures for the year to June 2023 recorded more than 177,000 family harm investigations in the country of 5 million people, a 49 percent increase since 2017.
Some said more law changes were needed to ensure those leaving violent marriages were not rushed through property division or custody agreements while emotions were high. Others suggested more forms of evidence that abuse had taken place should be accepted. Currently a formal protection order must be granted before an expedited divorce is allowed.
New Zealand has permitted no-fault divorce, in which a couple need not state a reason for splitting, since 1980.
In neighboring Australia, a couple must separate for 12 months before divorcing but they can choose to remain under the same roof.
The UK introduced no-fault divorces in 2022, with a 20-week waiting period. Until then, couples had to cite a reason, including infidelity or abuse, to be granted a dissolution.
All 50 US states allow for no-fault divorce, with some requiring separation periods — most shorter than New Zealand’s. In recent years, conservative commentators and lawmakers in a handful of states have urged reversals of no-fault divorce laws.
Lawmakers credited three women, all survivors of abusive marriages, with prompting New Zealand’s shift.
Ashley Jones had approached her local MP, Chris Bishop, after leaving an abusive marriage in 2020 and later took a petition to parliament on the matter. It took more than 1,000 days after she left her husband for Jones to be granted a divorce, she said in 2023.
“We get a lot of grief in this place, probably sometimes fairly, about being fixated on things that don’t actually matter that much,” Bishop told parliament Wednesday. “But this matters, this legislation matters and this issue matters and today we’re doing something about it.”


Israeli booths, equipment barred from defense show in France

Israeli booths, equipment barred from defense show in France
Updated 47 min 8 sec ago
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Israeli booths, equipment barred from defense show in France

Israeli booths, equipment barred from defense show in France
  • The decision comes as tensions are rising between Israel and France
  • “The French government informed Euronaval of its decision to approve the participation of Israeli delegations at Euronaval 2024, without any stand,” said the organizers

PARIS: Israeli delegations taking part in the major Euronaval defense show in France next month will not be permitted to set up any stand or exhibit hardware following a decision by the French government, organizers said on Wednesday.
The decision comes as tensions are rising between Israel and France following comments by President Emmanuel Macron criticizing the civilian casualties in the Israeli campaigns against Shiite militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon and Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
The French leader last week insisted that stopping the export of weapons used by Israel in both operations was the only way to halt the two conflicts.
“The French government informed Euronaval of its decision to approve the participation of Israeli delegations at Euronaval 2024, without any stand or exhibition of equipment,” said the organizers of the show which is due to start on November 4 in Paris.
Euronaval, a biennial event that attracts naval defense exhibitors from around the world, said seven Israeli companies are affected by the decision.
“In accordance with the French government’s decision, Israeli companies and citizens who wish to attend will be welcomed at the show under the conditions listed above,” it added.
At the end of May, the presence of Israeli defense manufacturers at the Eurosatory land defense and security exhibition was banned by the government, before finally being authorized by the French courts.


Philippines prepares for debut at Saudi Arabia’s largest halal expo

Philippines prepares for debut at Saudi Arabia’s largest halal expo
Updated 16 October 2024
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Philippines prepares for debut at Saudi Arabia’s largest halal expo

Philippines prepares for debut at Saudi Arabia’s largest halal expo
  • Delegation representing not only food industry, but also wellness, travel, construction
  • Philippines’ central bank to promote Islamic banking opportunities in the country

MANILA: Philippine finance, tourism and food industry representatives are preparing for the country’s debut at the Middle East’s largest halal exhibition, which will take place in Saudi Arabia later this month.

The annual Saudi International Halal Expo will be held in Riyadh on Oct. 28-30, providing a platform to stakeholders from all over the world to see and showcase the latest innovations, research and development in the global halal market.

Led by the Department of Trade and Industry, the Philippine delegation and exhibitors will range from fruit, food and beverage, and supplement sectors to tourism, travel and finance. They will showcase their products and projects under “Halal-friendly Philippines” — a government umbrella brand promoting the country as a halal market hub in the Asia-Pacific region.

“This is the first time that we are participating,” Aleem Guiapal, DTI Halal Industry Development program manager, told Arab News. “It is about building relationships and to strengthen our presence in ASEAN and GCC countries.”

The predominantly Catholic Philippines — where Muslims constitute about 10 percent of the almost 120 million population — has been making efforts to tap into the global halal market, which is estimated to be worth more than $7 trillion.

By increasing its presence and doubling the number of its halal-certified products and services, the Philippine government plans to raise $4 billion in investments and generate about 120,000 jobs by 2028.

Guiapal said that the Filipino halal market’s strength is in agricultural products such as coconut oil, fruits, nutraceutical foods, baked goods, supplements and wellness items, but there will also be construction companies joining the country’s delegation at the Riyadh fair.

“Because if we want halal-friendly tourism or hotels, the contractors also ought to know how suitable their hotels would be,” he said.

Part of the Philippines’ strategy to revive its tourism sector after the COVID-19 pandemic has focused on expanding its halal tourism portfolio and developing halal-friendly properties.

The Southeast Asian country is also developing Islamic financial services and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the central bank, will also be part of its delegation.

The aim is to pitch in “opportunities for Islamic banks to open their Islamic banking operation in the Philippines,” BSP officer Winnie Claire Jamoner-Carbonel told Arab News.

“We want them to know that a lot has happened in the Philippines in Islamic banking and we want them to know that there is a market that no one serves ... so they could take a chunk of that market.”


Ukraine requests monitoring mission at Odesa ports amid Russian strikes

Ukraine requests monitoring mission at Odesa ports amid Russian strikes
Updated 16 October 2024
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Ukraine requests monitoring mission at Odesa ports amid Russian strikes

Ukraine requests monitoring mission at Odesa ports amid Russian strikes
  • Russian strikes on port infrastructure, grain storage facilities and civilian vessels threatened global food security
  • Insurance sources had already reported a jump in insurance costs and some canceled bookings after recent Russian attacks

KYIV: Ukraine has asked the International Maritime Organization to send a monitoring mission to ports in the southern Odesa region amid intensified Russian attacks, Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said on Wednesday.
In recent weeks, Russian troops have ramped up missile strikes on Ukraine’s southern port infrastructure and damaged a total of four foreign-flagged civilian vessels since Oct. 6.
“Amid increased Russian terror, Ukraine has officially appealed to the International Maritime Organization to immediately send an international monitoring mission to the ports,” Sybiha told a briefing in Odesa after meeting his counterparts from the Nordic-Baltic Eight group.
He stressed that Russian strikes on port infrastructure, grain storage facilities and civilian vessels threatened global food security.
Ukraine is a major global grain grower and before Russia’s invasion in 2022 the country exported about 6 million tons of grain alone per month via the Black Sea. About 85 percent of Ukrainian food exports now leaves Ukraine from its Black Sea ports.
Insurance sources had already reported a jump in insurance costs and some canceled bookings after recent Russian attacks.
Ukraine says that Russia had carried out almost 60 attacks on ports over the past three months, resulting in the damage and destruction of nearly 300 port infrastructure facilities and 22 civilian vessels.


NATO’s Rutte says he is aware of Ukraine’s ‘victory plan’, discussing next steps

NATO’s Rutte says he is aware of Ukraine’s ‘victory plan’, discussing next steps
Updated 16 October 2024
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NATO’s Rutte says he is aware of Ukraine’s ‘victory plan’, discussing next steps

NATO’s Rutte says he is aware of Ukraine’s ‘victory plan’, discussing next steps
  • Rutte said the victory plan also included other elements and that he was discussing the whole of the plan with members

PARIS: NATO chief Mark Rutte said he was aware of the details of Ukraine’s “victory plan” that was presented by the country’s president on Wednesday, and that he was in touch with the alliance’s member countries on the next steps.
While reiterating a position that the process of making Ukraine a future NATO member — a key demand of President Volodymyr Zelensky — was ‘irreversible’, Rutte said the victory plan also included other elements and that he was discussing the whole of the plan with members.


Polish president criticizes government’s no-asylum-for-irregular-migrants plan as a ‘grave mistake’

Polish president criticizes government’s no-asylum-for-irregular-migrants plan as a ‘grave mistake’
Updated 16 October 2024
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Polish president criticizes government’s no-asylum-for-irregular-migrants plan as a ‘grave mistake’

Polish president criticizes government’s no-asylum-for-irregular-migrants plan as a ‘grave mistake’
  • Duda argued in a speech in parliament that the plan would block access to safe haven for Belarusians and Russians opposed to their governments in Minsk and Moscow
  • Prime Minister Donald Tusk replied that it would not apply to dissidents

WARSAW: Polish President Andrzej Duda on Wednesday condemned the government’s plan for a temporary suspension of the right to asylum for irregular migrants, calling it a “fatal mistake” and signaling he will not approve it.
Duda argued in a speech in parliament that the plan would block access to safe haven for Belarusians and Russians opposed to their governments in Minsk and Moscow. Prime Minister Donald Tusk replied that it would not apply to dissidents.
Tusk’s government on Thursday adopted the controversial plan intended to strengthen protection of Poland’s and the European Union’s eastern border from massive pressure from many thousands of unauthorized migrants from Africa and the Middle East. The EU says the pressure is sponsored by Minsk and Moscow as part of their hybrid war on the European bloc.
“Poland cannot and will not be helpless in this situation,” Tusk said in parliament.
Poland’s plan aims to send a signal that the country is not a source of easy asylum or visas into the EU.
It says that in the case of a ‘threat of destabilization of the country by migration inflow,” a temporary suspension of accepting asylum applications can be introduced on a given territory. The general rules of granting asylum in the EU member country will be toughened to prevent the procedure from serving as a gateway into all of the EU.
In many cases, irregular migrants apply for asylum in Poland, but before their requests are processed, they travel across the EU’s no-visa travel zone to reach Germany or other countries in Western Europe.
The plan, which failed to win support from four left-wing ministers in Tusk’s coalition government, still needs approval from parliament and from Duda to become binding. Duda has made it clear he will not back it.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko “are trying to destabilize the situation on our border, in the EU, and your response to this is to deprive people whom Putin and Lukashenko imprison and persecute of a safe haven. It must be some fatal mistake,” Duda said in his emotional speech Wednesday.
Migration and Poland’s plan are to be discussed at the upcoming EU summit and on its fringes this week in Brussels.