Amsterdam warns of new calls for unrest after violence around Israeli match

Amsterdam warns of new calls for unrest after violence around Israeli match
Police officers are seen patrolling the streets in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024, as the city is facing tensions following violence last week. (AP)
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Updated 13 November 2024
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Amsterdam warns of new calls for unrest after violence around Israeli match

Amsterdam warns of new calls for unrest after violence around Israeli match
  • Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema pleaded with the Israeli ambassador for officials in Israel to make clear “that this is about a sporting event and should not be mixed with politics”

AMSTERDAM: A senior police officer warned Tuesday of calls for more rioting in Amsterdam, after dozens of people armed with sticks and firecrackers set a tram on fire Monday night and the city faces tensions following violence last week targeting fans of an Israeli soccer club.
Olivier Dutilh, of the Amsterdam police force, told a court hearing that “we have signals that there are calls for similar” unrest in the west of the city. Streets in the area were relatively calm as evening fell, and the security presence was low-profile.
The Amsterdam mayor, chief of police and top public prosecutor published a report Monday outlining what happened last week, including new details about actions by Maccabi Tel Aviv fans ahead of the Maccabi Tel Aviv-Ajax soccer match.
Local authorities had decided against banning the game, but beefed up security. Pro-Palestinian demonstrators were banned by local authorities from gathering outside the stadium.
The day before the game, authorities reported incidents and saw social media posts threatening Maccabi fans. Around midnight, Israeli fans ripped a Palestinian flag off a downtown building and several of them took off their belts and attacked a cab, the document said. Cab drivers sought to mobilize online in response, and centered on a casino where some 400 Israeli fans were gathered. Police mobilized to avoid a major confrontation.
The morning of the game, authorities were “specifically worried about the Maccabi fans and the reaction of cab drivers,” the document said. Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema pleaded with the Israeli ambassador for officials in Israel to make clear “that this is about a sporting event and should not be mixed with politics.”
In the afternoon, social media posts hardened and antisemitic terms were used. After the 5-0 win of Ajax over Maccabi, parts of a large group of Maccabi supporters “are running around with sticks destroying things,” the document said. There were also “rioters, moving in small groups, by foot, scooter or car, quickly attacking Maccabi fans before disappearing,” the City Hall timeline said.
The police commander said that those incidents had “an antisemitic character — there is talk about a Jew hunt and people are asked about their nationality.” Rumors then surfaced about missing people and hostage-taking, which proved unfounded.
Police said the fire Monday was quickly extinguished and riot officers cleared the square. Images online showed people damaging property and setting off firecrackers. A police vehicle was later burned out in a nearby street and police said they suspect arson.
Police said it wasn’t clear who started the unrest and whether it was related to what happened last week. Some rioters could be heard on video shared on social media using slurs against Jewish people.
Police said they detained three suspects and appealed for witnesses, including of the assault of a cyclist who was beaten up as he rode past the unrest.
Police noted the tense atmosphere in the city since five people were treated in the hospital and dozens detained Thursday following the soccer match. Youths on scooters and on foot went in search of Israeli fans, punching and kicking them and then fleeing to evade police, according to Amsterdam’s mayor.
Prime Minister Dick Schoof met Tuesday with members of Amsterdam’s Jewish community to discuss antisemitism in the wake of the violence. Reports of antisemitic speech, vandalism and violence have been on the rise in Europe since the start of the war in Gaza.
A total of eight people are in custody in the investigation into last week’s violence, between the ages of 16 and 37, from Amsterdam and nearby cities, according to police.
Police said they have identified over 170 witnesses and have taken forensics evidence from dozens. The prime minister said they were also examining videos posted to social media.
The mayor has banned all demonstrations in the city and declared several parts of Amsterdam risk zones where police can stop and check anyone. Dozens were detained on Sunday for taking part in a pro-Palestinian demonstration in central Amsterdam that had been outlawed.
A small demonstration was ended by police Tuesday outside Amsterdam City Hall during a debate about the unrest, Dutch broadcaster NOS reported.


Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat

Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat
Updated 3 sec ago
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Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat

Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat
  • Vladimir Putin: ‘There are still people who want to go back to the time of Napoleon, they forget how it ended’
  • Putin: ‘All the mistakes of our enemies and opponents began with this: in underestimating the character of the Russian people and representatives of Russian culture in general’
MOSCOW: Russia will seek a peace deal in Ukraine that safeguards its own long-term security and will not retreat from the gains it has made in the conflict, President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday in comments to relatives of soldiers killed there.
Putin also took an indirect swipe at French President Emmanuel Macron, saying Western leaders should not underestimate the Russian people and should keep in mind the fate of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose invasion of Russia in 1812 ended in disaster.
“We must choose for ourselves a peace option that will suit us and that will ensure peace for our country in the long term,” Putin told a group of Russian women who have lost loved ones during the three-year war in Ukraine.
Asked by the mother of one fallen soldier if Russia would retreat, Putin said he did not intend to do that. Russia currently controls just under a fifth of Ukraine — or about 113,000 square km.
At times during the meeting some women wiped away tears.
US President Donald Trump has upended Western policy on the Ukraine war, opening up bilateral talks with Moscow and pausing military aid to Kyiv after clashing with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the White House last week.
Reuters reported in November that Putin was open to discussing a Ukraine peace deal with Trump but ruled out any major territorial concessions and would insist that Kyiv abandon ambitions to join NATO.
In comments last summer setting out his terms for ending the war, Putin also said Ukraine must withdraw all its forces from the entire territory of four Ukrainian regions claimed and partly controlled by Russia.

Trump’s dramatic change of US policy on Ukraine has raised hopes for peace talks but has also alarmed Washington’s European allies who this week have reaffirmed their support for Kyiv.
France’s Macron angered Moscow on Wednesday when he said in an address to the nation that Russia was a threat to Europe.
Macron said Paris could discuss extending its nuclear umbrella to allies and that he would hold a meeting of army chiefs from European countries willing to send peacekeeping troops to Ukraine after any peace deal.
Russia mocked Macron, calling him “Micron.” Russian cartoons cast him as France’s Emperor Napoleon riding toward defeat in Russia in 1812.
“There are still people who want to go back to the time of Napoleon, they forget how it ended,” Putin said on Thursday, without mentioning Macron by name.
“All the mistakes of our enemies and opponents began with this: in underestimating the character of the Russian people and representatives of Russian culture in general,” Putin added.

Trudeau expects a trade war between Canada and the US for the ‘foreseeable future’

Trudeau expects a trade war between Canada and the US for the ‘foreseeable future’
Updated 06 March 2025
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Trudeau expects a trade war between Canada and the US for the ‘foreseeable future’

Trudeau expects a trade war between Canada and the US for the ‘foreseeable future’
  • Trudeau said the two sides discussed tariffs, and that they are “actively engaged in ongoing conversations”
  • He also reiterated that “we will not be backing down from our response tariffs”

TORONTO: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday he expects Canada and the US to be in a trade war for the foreseeable future after having what he called a colorful but constructive call with US President Donald Trump this week.
Trudeau said the two sides discussed tariffs, and that they are “actively engaged in ongoing conversations in trying to make sure these tariffs don’t overly harm” certain sectors and workers. He also reiterated that “we will not be backing down from our response tariffs until such a time as the unjustified American tariffs are Canadian goods are lifted.”
Trump launched a new trade war Tuesday by imposing tariffs against Washington’s three biggest trading partners, drawing immediate retaliation from Mexico, Canada and China and sending financial markets into a tailspin. Trump put 25 percent taxes, or tariffs, on Mexican and Canadian imports, though he limited the levy to 10 percent on Canadian energy.
A day after the new tariffs took effect, Trump said he would grant a one-month exemption for US automakers. The announcement came after Trump spoke Wednesday with leaders of Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, the parent company of Chrysler and Jeep. His press secretary said Trump told the chief executives to move auto production to the US to avoid tariffs.


Romania detains suspects in Russia-linked treason case, 101-year-old retired general’s house raided

Romania detains suspects in Russia-linked treason case, 101-year-old retired general’s house raided
Updated 06 March 2025
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Romania detains suspects in Russia-linked treason case, 101-year-old retired general’s house raided

Romania detains suspects in Russia-linked treason case, 101-year-old retired general’s house raided
  • Romania’s intelligence agency SRI said the two expelled Russian diplomats “collected information in areas of strategic interest”
  • Prosecutors said the group had a military-type structure, with judicial sources naming 101-year-old former army major general Radu Theodoru as a suspect

BUCHAREST: Romania detained six people on charges of trying to overthrow the state with Russia’s help, prosecutors said on Thursday, and a 101-year-old former army major general said his home had been raided as part of the investigation.
The suspects were detained on Wednesday, the same day Romania — a European Union and NATO member state — declared the Russian embassy’s military attache and his deputy personae non grata for what it said were acts contravening diplomatic rules.
Moscow has said it will respond to the move.


“The members of the criminal group repeatedly contacted agents of a foreign power, located both in Romania and the Russian Federation,” anti-organized crime prosecutors agency DIICOT said in a statement, which did not name the suspects.
Romania’s intelligence agency SRI said the two expelled Russian diplomats “collected information in areas of strategic interest and took measures to support the anti-constitutional moves of the group.”
Russia’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

MILITARY STRUCTURE
Prosecutors said the group had a military-type structure, with judicial sources naming 101-year-old former army major general Radu Theodoru as a suspect.
Theodoru, a Holocaust denier who has repeatedly praised Romania’s fascist World War Two leadership, said in a recorded interview with his daughter posted on his Facebook page that he believed the current government represented “an anti-Romanian state, a system organized to rob this country.”
“They wasted this country and now they defend themselves and find reasons to misinform the public,” he added. Theodoru did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Prosecutors said the group had taken steps to negotiate with external forces regarding the potential withdrawal of Romania, which shares a border with Ukraine, from the NATO military alliance.
They said the group aimed to install a new government and dissolve the current constitutional order, introducing a new flag, national anthem and changing the country’s name.
Political tensions have been running high in Romania since its top court voided the presidential election in December amid accusations of Russian interference — denied by Moscow — in favor of far-right frontrunner Calin Georgescu.
Georgescu is himself under investigation on six charges, all of which he denies.
The investigation announced on Thursday is unrelated to Georgescu, prosecution sources said. Judicial sources quoted by TV station Antena3 said one of the expelled Russian officials was loosely tied to a suspect in the Georgescu investigation.


Russia has no euphoria over Trump — just absolute realism, Zakharova says

Russia has no euphoria over Trump — just absolute realism, Zakharova says
Updated 06 March 2025
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Russia has no euphoria over Trump — just absolute realism, Zakharova says

Russia has no euphoria over Trump — just absolute realism, Zakharova says
  • Zakharova was answering a question from a journalist

MOSCOW: Russia does not feel any euphoria over Donald Trump’s rise to power in the US and instead has absolute realism, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday.
Zakharova was answering a question from a journalist who asked whether or not Russia had excessive euphoria over Trump’s return to power.


Poland and Baltic nations welcome Macron’s nuclear deterrent proposal

Poland and Baltic nations welcome Macron’s nuclear deterrent proposal
Updated 06 March 2025
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Poland and Baltic nations welcome Macron’s nuclear deterrent proposal

Poland and Baltic nations welcome Macron’s nuclear deterrent proposal
  • Poland’s PM Donald Tusk said “we must seriously consider this proposal”
  • Baltic nations also showed interest in Macron’s offering as they push for more defense spending by EU countries to avoid any future aggression by neighboring Russia

BRUSSELS: Poland and Baltic nations welcomed Thursday a proposal by French President Emmanuel Macron to launch talks about using France’s nuclear deterrent to protect the continent from Russian threats, a move Moscow quickly dismissed as “extremely confrontational.”
The comments came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky joined European Union leaders in Brussels for an emergency summit on defense and security.
On Wednesday, Macron said he has decided to open a “strategic debate” on using France’s nuclear deterrent to protect European allies amid concerns over potential US disengagement. The French president described Moscow a “threat to France and Europe,” in a televised address to the nation.
France is the only nuclear power in the European Union.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Thursday Macron’s speech was “extremely confrontational.”
“One can conclude that France thinks more about war, about continuing the war,” he said during a regular call with journalists.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov echoed Peskov, saying during a news conference in Moscow that Macron’s comments were a “threat” against Russia.
In Brussels, several eastern European nations welcomed Macron’s move.
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said “we must seriously consider this proposal.”
He noted that “as always, the details matter, but France’s willingness in this regard is very significant.”
Baltic nations also showed interest in Macron’s offering as they push for more defense spending by EU countries to avoid any future aggression by neighboring Russia.
Lithuania’s President Gitanas Nausėda praised a “very interesting idea.”
“We have high expectations because a nuclear umbrella would serve as really very serious deterrence toward Russia,” Nausėda said.
Latvian Prime Minister Evika Siliņa called the French proposal “an opportunity to discuss,” stressing that more time was needed to have talks with other European allies and at the domestic level.
The Federation of American Scientists, or FAS, says France maintains the world’s fourth largest nuclear arsenal, with an estimated 290 nuclear warheads.
The United Kingdom, which is no longer an EU member but is working on restoring closer ties with the 27-nation bloc, also has nuclear weapons.
“In terms of extending our nuclear deterrent or using it to protect other European nations –- we already do,” said Tom Wells, a spokesman for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. “The UK already commits its nuclear forces to NATO, helping to safeguard European Euro-Atlantic security.”
During the Cold War, the US nuclear umbrella was aimed at ensuring that allies, especially NATO members, would be protected by American nuclear forces in case of a threat. That’s one of the reasons why many nations in Europe and across the world haven’t pursued their own nuclear arsenals.
Last month, Germany’s election winner and likely future chancellor Friedrich Merz called for a discussion on “nuclear sharing” with France. Germany is among the European countries that host US nuclear weapons under NATO’s nuclear sharing policy,
Macron said Wednesday any decision to use France’s nuclear weapons would remain only in the hands of the French president.