British lawmakers accuse Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ in slavery reparations debate

British lawmakers accuse Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ in slavery reparations debate
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a press conference during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Apia, Samoa on October 26, 2024. (File/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 sec ago
Follow

British lawmakers accuse Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ in slavery reparations debate

British lawmakers accuse Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ in slavery reparations debate
  • Ahead of the Commonwealth heads of government summit in Samoa, where Caribbean and African nations wished to discuss the topic, Starmer said the issue was not on the agenda

LONDON: Some British Labour lawmakers on Sunday accused Prime Minister Keir Starmer of having a “colonial mindset” and trying to silence nations pushing for discussions on reparations for transatlantic slavery at this month’s Commonwealth summit in Samoa.
Britain has so far rejected calls for reparations but some campaigners hoped Starmer’s new Labour government would be more open to it.
However, ahead of the Commonwealth heads of government summit in Samoa, where Caribbean and African nations wished to discuss the topic, Starmer said the issue was not on the agenda and that he would like to “look forward” rather than have “very long, endless discussions about reparations on the past.”
“(It) is very insulting (to) tell people of African descent to forget and move forward,” said Labour lawmaker Bell Ribeiro-Addy at a cross-party reparations conference in London.
At the end the Samoa summit, leaders of the 56-nation club headed by Britain’s King Charles agreed to include in their final communique that the time had come for a discussion on reparations.
“I’m very proud those nations refused to be silenced,” Ribeiro-Addy said.
Another Labour lawmaker, Clive Lewis, said it was surprising Starmer thought he could take a “colonial mindset” to the summit and “dictate what could and could not be discussed.”
At a news conference in Samoa on Saturday, Starmer said slavery was “abhorrent” and that the discussions agreed to in the communique would not be “about money.”
A Downing Street spokesperson had no further comment on the remarks by Labour lawmakers on Sunday.
Proponents of reparations say slavery’s legacy has caused persistent racial inequalities while opponents say countries shouldn’t be held responsible for historical wrongs.
The lawmakers said that reparations could include a formal apology, debt cancelation, the return of artefacts or changing the school curriculum, not just financial payments.
Diane Abbott, Britain’s first Black woman lawmaker, said Labour previously had plans to establish a national reparations commission but Starmer “seems to have forgotten that.”
“Reparations isn’t about the past, it is about the here and now,” she said.


Muslim and Arab American leaders in Michigan endorse Trump

Muslim and Arab American leaders in Michigan endorse Trump
Updated 14 sec ago
Follow

Muslim and Arab American leaders in Michigan endorse Trump

Muslim and Arab American leaders in Michigan endorse Trump

DUBAI: Prominent Muslim leaders were invited by former US President Donald Trump on Saturday during a campaign rally in Michigan to announce their support for the Republican candidate.

Trump was joined onstage by what his campaign described as “prominent leaders of Michigan’s Muslim community” to encourage Muslim and Arab American to endorse him in the Nov. 5 presidential election.

The former president also said that he was banking on “overwhelming support” from these voters in the state, according to CNN.

“They could turn the election one way or the other,” Trump said of the Arab and Muslim communities, who are critical of US support for Israel in its war on Gaza.

On stage, the Muslim leaders cited Trump’s commitment to ending conflicts.

“We, as Muslims, stand with President Trump because he promises peace, not war,” Imam Belal Alzuhairi told the crowd. 

Alzuhairi described Trump as the “peace” candidate.

“The bloodshed has to stop all over the world. And I think this man can make that happen.”

Trump said that Muslim and Arab voters in Michigan and across the country want a “stop to the endless wars and a return to peace in the Middle East.”

“That’s all they want,” he said.

The endorsement of Trump by Muslim and Arab communities would be a notable shift by Michigan’s Muslim community, who have traditionally aligned with the Democrats.

 


Typhoon death toll rises to 90 in Philippines with some areas still submerged

Typhoon death toll rises to 90 in Philippines with some areas still submerged
Updated 51 min 53 sec ago
Follow

Typhoon death toll rises to 90 in Philippines with some areas still submerged

Typhoon death toll rises to 90 in Philippines with some areas still submerged
  • More than half a million Filipinos displaced and nearly 28,000 houses damaged by Trami
  • Authorities are bracing for tropical storm Kong-rey, which may affect Luzon in coming days

MANILA: The death toll from tropical storm Trami has risen to at least 90 in the Philippines, officials said, with 36 people reported missing. Some of the worst-affected areas were still submerged on Sunday.

Trami, known locally as Kristine, caused widespread flooding and triggered landslides that forced more than half a million people from their homes and damaged nearly 28,000 houses. It caused power disruptions in more than 150 cities and municipalities, according to the Office of Civil Defense.

It was the 11th and deadliest tropical cyclone to hit the Philippines in 2024, affecting people across Luzon, the country’s most populous island, and in Visayas islands and parts of Mindanao, along the Philippines’ eastern coast.

Relief workers were struggling to reach some of the worst-hit areas in the province of Camarines Sur and particularly Naga City, located in Luzon’s Bicol region.

“The situation, particularly in the five towns of Camarines Sur, is still the same. There is still heavy flooding …  (and) very little change, the waters have receded by just less than a foot,” Claudio Yucot, regional director at the OCD in Bicol, told Arab News.

Floods were above head-level in some areas, he said, adding that the destruction left by Trami was “unprecedented,” citing local residents who said they have never experienced such strong rains.

“There was no wind, in fact the storm was far from us, we were outside of the cone of uncertainty. But the amount of rain dumped in our area was really unprecedented.”

Authorities were bracing for yet another tropical storm, Kong-rey, which was moving over the Philippine Sea on Sunday with similar wind speeds. While the storm, known locally as Leon, may not make landfall in the Philippines, weather authorities say it may still affect northern Luzon in the coming days.

OCD administrator Ariel Nepomuceno said in a radio interview that authorities were still unable to access some areas on Sunday, due to the floods caused by Trami.

“We need to use boats or rubber boats, we cannot reach them via ordinary vehicles. But we are reaching them albeit slowly because land vehicles still cannot pass through,” he said.

Trami also triggered deadly landslides in Talisay and Batangas, killing at least 20 people in the village of Sampaloc.

 “Due to the non-stop heavy rains, the mountain gave way and when the landslide happened, many people were killed. Twenty bodies have already been recovered and there is still one missing,” Hibirio Garcia, Sampaloc village head, told Arab News.

“The houses are gone, because most (of them) are huts, they are not made of cement, just made of wood.”

The Philippines is the country most at risk from natural disasters, according to the 2024 World Risk Report.

Millions of Filipinos are affected by storms and typhoons every year, which have grown more unpredictable and extreme due to the changing climate.

Last month, more than a dozen people were killed when Typhoon Yagi, known locally as Enteng, hit the country’s east.


King Charles to resume foreign tours after cancer diagnosis

King Charles to resume foreign tours after cancer diagnosis
Updated 27 October 2024
Follow

King Charles to resume foreign tours after cancer diagnosis

King Charles to resume foreign tours after cancer diagnosis
  • Doctors agreed King Charles could pause his treatment to allow him to travel to Australia and Samoa

LONDON: King Charles III’s cancer diagnosis will not prevent him flying abroad next year for foreign visits, a Buckingham Palace official said, as the monarch wrapped up a tour of Australia and Samoa.
“We’re now working on a pretty normal looking full overseas tour program for next year, which is a high for us to end on, to know that we can be thinking in those terms,” the official said late Saturday.
Charles was diagnosed with an undisclosed cancer earlier this year but doctors agreed he could pause his treatment to allow him to travel to Australia and Samoa.
The palace announced in April that he would make a limited return to public duties, as doctors were “very encouraged” by his progress.
The official added that the king had “thrived” on the tour’s program which had lifted “his spirits, his mood and his recovery.”
“In that sense, the tour, despite its demands, has been the perfect tonic,” he added.
The tour was Charles’ first to Australia, where he is also head of state, since he became king following the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022.
Charles and Queen Camilla left Samoa Saturday after the marathon 11-day tour that saw the king carry out more than 30 engagements.
The royal couple visited Sydney, Canberra and the Samoan capital Apia, where Charles attended a meeting of Commonwealth nations.
The 56-nation bloc — made up mostly of British ex-colonies — had hoped to focus on a future threatened by climate change, but instead bickered over a troubled past marked by slavery and colonization.


Migrant dies attempting to cross Channel to UK: French authorities

Migrant dies attempting to cross Channel to UK: French authorities
Updated 27 October 2024
Follow

Migrant dies attempting to cross Channel to UK: French authorities

Migrant dies attempting to cross Channel to UK: French authorities

LILLE: A migrant died Sunday in an attempt to cross the Channel to Britain, a death that comes on top of two deadly boat sinkings in the past 10 days, French officials said.
The man, an Indian citizen, had set off from the beach of Tardinghen in the Pas-de-Calais department in northern France.
“The vessel, which was in very poor condition, deflated immediately after leaving the beach” at around 5:30 am (0430 GMT) the local prefecture said in a statement.
Not all the passengers had life jackets, but most on board were able to swim back to shore.
One man “of Indian nationality, around 40 years old, was in cardio-respiratory arrest” and could not be revived by emergency services, the prefecture added.
Sunday’s death brings the total on the France-Britain route across the Channel to at least 56 in 2024, already more than any previous year with two months remaining.
Two men and a woman were killed on Wednesday when their boat was wrecked around two kilometers offshore near port city Calais.
The previous week, a four-month-old baby had died after a boat disintegrated.
And three migrants were hospitalized Friday after suffering injury or hypothermia in attempted crossings.
“We can’t bear any more of this migration policy. As far as we’re concerned, that’s what’s responsible” for the deaths, said Axel Gaudiant, coordinator of migrant aid association Utopia 46 in Calais.
Britain and France have worked together for years to prevent people departing northern France in small boats.
Over 29,000 migrants have made it across the Channel since the start of 2024, according to the British Home Office, the UK’s equivalent of an interior ministry.


Putin says Moscow will respond if West helps Ukraine to strike deep into Russia

Putin says Moscow will respond if West helps Ukraine to strike deep into Russia
Updated 27 October 2024
Follow

Putin says Moscow will respond if West helps Ukraine to strike deep into Russia

Putin says Moscow will respond if West helps Ukraine to strike deep into Russia
  • Putin says defense ministry exploring responses
  • Russia has changed nuclear doctrine
  • Putin says NATO would have to help strikes by Ukraine

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday that Russia’s defense ministry was working on different ways to respond if the United States and its NATO allies help Ukraine to strike deep into Russia with long-range Western missiles.
The 2-1/2-year-old Ukraine war has triggered the biggest confrontation between Russia and the West since the depths of the Cold War, and Russian officials say the war is now entering its most dangerous phase.
Russia has been signalling to the United States and its allies for weeks that if they give permission to Ukraine to strike deep into Russian territory with Western-supplied missiles, then Moscow will consider it a major escalation.
Putin said on Sept. 12 that Western approval for such a step would mean “the direct involvement of NATO countries, the United States and European countries in the war in Ukraine” because NATO military infrastructure and personnel would have to be involved in the targeting and firing of the missiles.
Putin said that it was too early to say exactly how Russia would react to such a move but that Moscow would have to respond accordingly and different options were being examined.
“(The Russian defense ministry) is thinking about how to respond to the possible long-range strikes on Russian territory, it will offer a range of responses,” Putin told Russian state TV’s top Kremlin reporter, Pavel Zarubin.
With Russia advancing at the fastest rate in eastern Ukraine since the first months of the invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been pleading with the West to allow Kyiv to fire deep into Russia with Western missiles.
Hitting Russia
The United States has not said publicly if it will allow Ukraine to strike Russia, but some US officials are deeply skeptical that doing so would make a significant difference in the war.
Ukrainian forces already strike deep into Russia on a regular basis with long-range drones.
Putin, who ordered thousands of troops into Ukraine in 2022 after eight years of fighting in eastern Ukraine, casts the war as a battle between Russia and the declining West, which he says ignored Russia’s interests after the 1991 Soviet collapse.
Ukraine and its Western allies say Putin unleashed an imperial-style war against its smaller neighbor and have repeatedly said that if Russia wins the war then autocratic countries across the world will be emboldened.
Just weeks before the US presidential election, Putin changed Russia’s
nuclear doctrine
in what the Kremlin said was an attempt to signal Russia’s concern over Western discussions about missile strikes from Ukraine.
Asked if the West had heard Russia’s warnings, Putin told Zarubin: “I hope they have heard. Because, of course, we will have to make some decisions for ourselves, too.”
Putin said that only NATO officers would be able to fire such weapons into Russia and that they would need to use Western satellite data for targeting the weapons so the question is really “whether they will allow themselves to strike deep into Russian territory or not. That is the question.”
US officials say the United States is not seeking to escalate the conflict.
How a new US president will approach the war is unclear: former US president Donald Trump has said he will end the Ukraine war while Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris says she will continue to support Ukraine.