Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands

Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands
Some islands in the southeast of the Aegean sea, including Rhodes, are seeing an increase in migrants arriving by boat from Turkey, Greek migration and asylum minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos said Tuesday. (AFP/File)
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Updated 05 November 2024
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Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands

Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands
  • At the end of October, several hundred migrants set up tents and cardboard houses outside the local government offices of the city of Rhodes, sparking anger among residents
  • Rhodes mayor Alexandros Koliadis told Rodiaki that the island lacks the personnel, police officers and coast guard needed to register the arrivals before transferring them to camps

ATHENS: Some islands in the southeast of the Aegean sea, including Rhodes, are seeing an increase in migrants arriving by boat from Turkiye, Greek migration and asylum minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos said Tuesday.
“The southeast of the Aegean and the island of Rhodes are experiencing migratory pressure right now,” he said on public television station ERT, though he said the increase does not appear to be linked to rising tensions in the Middle East.
At the end of October, several hundred migrants set up tents and cardboard houses outside the local government offices of the city of Rhodes, sparking anger among residents and local authorities.
According to local media Rodiaki, more than 700 migrants arrived during the last week of October.
Rhodes mayor Alexandros Koliadis told Rodiaki that the island lacks the personnel, police officers and coast guard needed to register the arrivals before transferring them to camps on the mainland or in other islands.
Previously, Aegean islands further north such as Lesbos and Samos had received the brunt of migrants crossing from Turkish shores.
Crete, which has likewise seen an increase in arrivals from Libya, also needs to build facilities to process migrants.
Greece has seen a 25 percent increase this year in the number of people fleeing war and poverty, with a 30 percent increase alone to Rhodes and the south-east Aegean, according to the Migration Ministry.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees says 48,158 arrivals have been recorded so far in 2024, of which around 42,000 arrived by boat and 6,000 by crossing the land frontier with Turkiye.
“The camps on the islands have an occupancy rate of 100 percent. But on the mainland they are only 55 percent full, which provides a margin in the event of an increase in arrivals on the islands,” Panagiotopoulos said.


France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial

Updated 22 sec ago
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France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial

France says Tunisian political dissidents did not receive fair trial
The comments by France came amid growing criticism of the government of President Kais Saied over its crackdown on dissent
The French Foreign Ministry said: “We regret the failure to respect fair trial conditions“

TUNIS: France on Wednesday criticized the lengthy sentences handed down by a Tunisian court against opposition leaders and businessmen on conspiracy charges on the weekend, saying the conditions for a fair trial were not met.
The comments by France, the first country to speak out on the trial, came amid growing criticism of the government of President Kais Saied over its crackdown on dissent.
Rights groups said the mass conviction of dissidents is a disturbing indication of the authorities’ willingness to go ahead with its crackdown on peaceful dissent.
Tunisia’s opposition has said the trial was fabricated and aimed at silencing critical voices and consolidating the authoritarian rule.
“We learned with concern of the harsh sentences...against several individuals accused of conspiring against state security, including French nationals,” the French Foreign Ministry said.
“We regret the failure to respect fair trial conditions,” it added. Journalists, diplomats, and civil society were barred from attending the trial.
The trial highlights Saied’s full control over the judiciary since he dissolved parliament in 2021 and began ruling by decree. He also dissolved the independent Supreme Judicial Council and sacked dozens of judges in 2022.
Forty people were prosecuted in the trial, which started in March. More than 20 have fled abroad since being charged.
Lawyers said the maximum sentence was 66 years for businessman Kamel Ltaif, while opposition politician Khyam Turki received a 48-year sentence.
The court also sentenced prominent opposition figures including Ghazi Chaouachi, Issam Chebbi, Jawahar Ben Mbrak and Ridha BelHajj to 18 years in prison. They have been in custody since being detained in 2023.
Saied said in 2023 that the politicians were “traitors and terrorists” and that judges who would acquit them were their accomplices.
The opposition leaders involved in the case rejected the charges and said they were preparing an initiative aimed at uniting the fragmented opposition to face the democratic setback in the cradle of the Arab Spring uprisings.

Lebanon parliament approves changes to banking secrecy law

Lebanon parliament approves changes to banking secrecy law
Updated 11 min 40 sec ago
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Lebanon parliament approves changes to banking secrecy law

Lebanon parliament approves changes to banking secrecy law
  • The international community has long demanded major fiscal reforms to unlock billions of dollars in aid to restart the Lebanese economy
  • The crash since 2019 has seen the local currency lose most of its value against the US dollar

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s parliament on Thursday approved amendments to banking secrecy legislation, a key reform demanded by the International Monetary Fund, as Lebanese officials hold meetings with global finance institutions in Washington.
A statement from speaker Nabih Berri’s office said parliament passed amendments to “the law related to banking secrecy” and to monetary legislation.
The international community has long demanded major fiscal reforms to unlock billions of dollars in aid to restart the Lebanese economy in the wake of a five-year economic collapse widely blamed on mismanagement and corruption.
The crash since 2019 has seen the local currency lose most of its value against the US dollar and has pushed much of the population into poverty, with ordinary people locked out of their savings.
The recent war between Israel and Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah group has worsened matters, with the cash-strapped country now also needing funds for reconstruction.
Lebanese rights group Legal Agenda said the amendments allow “banking supervisory and regulatory bodies... to request access to all banking information without linking the request to a specific objective.”
These bodies will now be able to access information including customer names and deposit details, and look into possible suspicious activity, the group said.
Lebanon has long had strict rules over bank account privacy that critics have said makes it susceptible to money laundering.
The cabinet had approved the amendment earlier this month, saying it would apply retroactively for 10 years from the date of request.
That means it would apply to the start of the economic crisis, when bankers were accused of assisting influential individuals to transfer large amounts of money overseas.
Parliament’s approval comes with Finance Minister Yassine Jaber, Economy Minister Amer Bizat and new central bank governor Karim Souaid in Washington for meetings with the World Bank and IMF.
Jaber said earlier this week that parliamentary approval of the banking secrecy amendment would give a “boost” to the delegation’s meetings.
In April 2022, Lebanon and the IMF reached conditional agreement on a $3-billion loan package, but painful reforms that the 46-month financing program would require have largely not happened.
In February, the IMF said it was open to a new loan agreement with Beirut following discussions with the newly appointed Jaber.
The new government has pledged to implement other required reforms, and approved draft legislation on restructuring the banking sector earlier this month.


UK ends sanctions on Syria defense, interior ministries

UK ends sanctions on Syria defense, interior ministries
Updated 24 April 2025
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UK ends sanctions on Syria defense, interior ministries

UK ends sanctions on Syria defense, interior ministries
  • Sanctions against various media groups and intelligence agencies were also lifted
  • New Syrian government is aiming to persuade Western capitals that sanctions should be lifted

LONDON: The UK government announced on Thursday it was lifting sanctions that were imposed on Syria’s interior and defense ministries during the rule of the now-deposed Bashar Assad.
“The following entries have been removed from the Consolidated List and are no longer subject to an asset freeze – Ministry of Interior, Ministry of Defense,” the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation said in a notice.
Sanctions against various media groups and intelligence agencies were also lifted, although Syria’s new rulers dissolved the Assad-era spy bodies in January.
Those targeted by the sanctions were “involved in repressing the civilian population in Syria” or had been “involved in supporting or benefitting from the Syrian regime,” said the notice.
The new Syrian government is aiming to persuade Western capitals that the militant origins of the rebels who toppled Assad in December, after 14 years in charge, are confined to the past, and that crippling international sanctions should be lifted.


Amnesty denounces Algeria over ‘alarming’ crackdown

Amnesty denounces Algeria over ‘alarming’ crackdown
Updated 24 April 2025
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Amnesty denounces Algeria over ‘alarming’ crackdown

Amnesty denounces Algeria over ‘alarming’ crackdown
  • Amnesty said the 23 were detained “solely for the peaceful exercise of their human rights”
  • Amnesty singled out accelerated judicial procedures, which it said did not give several detainees time for adequate defense

TUNIS: Amnesty International on Thursday denounced what it called a “crackdown on peaceful dissent” in Algeria in response to an online protest campaign.
“Algerian authorities have intensified their relentless clampdown on peaceful dissent through arbitrary arrests and unjust prosecutions leading to lengthy prison sentences,” the rights group said in a statement.
It said the authorities have arrested and sentenced at least 23 activists and journalists over their purported support for an online protest movement dubbed Manich Radi (which loosely translates as “I do not agree“).
The campaign, Amnesty said, was launched in December 2024 “to denounce restrictions on human rights and difficult socioeconomic conditions in the country.”
Amnesty said the 23 were detained “solely for the peaceful exercise of their human rights.”
Its regional director for the Middle East and North Africa Heba Morayef said: “The trajectory of suffocating online activism pursued by the Algerian authorities is alarming and must be reversed.
“Nothing can justify detaining and jailing people solely for having expressed dissatisfaction about political and socioeconomic conditions,” she added.
The crackdown coincided with the lead-up to the sixth anniversary in February of the pro-democracy Hirak movement.
Amnesty singled out accelerated judicial procedures, which it said did not give several detainees time for adequate defense.
Among several cases, it cited the March sentencing of activists Soheib Debbaghi and Mahdi Bazizi to 18-month jail terms for their ties to the “Manich Radi” movement.
Debbaghi was convicted of “publishing content harmful to national interest,” Amnesty said.
It urged the authorities in Algeria to “end their crackdown on peaceful dissent and stop punishing the legitimate exercise of the right to freedom of expression.”


Yemen’s leadership pushes for unity as political leaders meet to shape post-war transition

Yemen’s leadership pushes for unity as political leaders meet to shape post-war transition
Updated 24 April 2025
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Yemen’s leadership pushes for unity as political leaders meet to shape post-war transition

Yemen’s leadership pushes for unity as political leaders meet to shape post-war transition
  • The PLC is working to restore state authority in areas under government control while countering the influence of the Houthis
  • The president called for a renewed sense of unity among Yemen’s political forces, urging them to set aside divisions

DUBAI: Yemen’s internationally recognized leadership convened key political figures in Riyadh on Wednesday to rally support for a unified national strategy to shape the country’s postwar transition and rebuild state institutions after nearly a decade of conflict.

Chairman of the Presidential Leadership Council, President Rashad Mohammed Al-Alimi, met with leaders of the National Bloc of Political Parties — a coalition of major political groups — to discuss how best to coordinate efforts during the transitional period. The meeting was part of consultations with political forces throughout Yemen to prepare for what officials describe as a pivotal phase in the country’s recovery.

The PLC, formed in 2022 to unify anti-Houthi factions and guide the country toward peace, is working to restore state authority in areas under government control while countering the influence of the Houthis, who continue to dominate much of northern Yemen.

During the meeting, the president called for a renewed sense of unity among Yemen’s political forces, urging them to set aside divisions and work together to restore stability, deliver basic services and lay the foundation for long-term governance.

“This is a moment for collective leadership and national alignment,” he said, stressing the importance of shared responsibility in rebuilding the state.

The national bloc reaffirmed its commitment to the PLC’s vision, presenting a political roadmap focused on national cohesion, economic recovery and effective governance in liberated areas. The group also underlined the importance of alleviating humanitarian suffering and accelerating institutional reforms.