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It is important that Finland and Sweden address [Türkiye’s requests] for terrorists' extradition so long as the PKK is considered a terror organisation by all EU members, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said.
PKK is considered a terrorist organisation by all members of the European Union (EU), including Sweden and Finland, and working together against the group and addressing [Türkiye’s] requests for extradition are fair and very important, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said.
"The main message [in the memorandum] is that they are going to work more closely together in fighting terrorism...The PKK is a terrorist organisation according to Finland, Sweden and all members of the European Union," Stoltenberg told reporters after attending a joint European Parliament-NATO session in Brussels on Wednesday to discuss results of the recent summit of the military alliance, which has recently taken place in the Spanish capital, Madrid.
"And to exchange intelligence, to work together, to also address requests for extradition, that is fair enough... It is important."
Türkiye's pending extradition requests
Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO in May, a decision spurred by Russia's offensive in Ukraine. But Türkiye, a longstanding member of the alliance, voiced objections to the membership bids, criticising the countries for tolerating and even supporting terrorist groups.
Türkiye, Sweden and Finland signed an agreement after trilateral talks that took place ahead of the NATO summit in Madrid last month. The agreement allows the two Nordic countries to become NATO members, but conditions them to take steps on Türkiye's terrorism concerns and lift an arms embargo on Ankara.
According to the memorandum, the Nordic countries will address Türkiye's pending deportation or extradition requests of terror suspects, and investigate and interdict financing as well as recruitment activities of the PKK and other terrorist groups.
Still, the Nordic countries’ accession needs to be approved by the parliaments of all 30 NATO members.
Türkiye has called on Sweden and Finland to fulfil their promises before the ratification of the memorandum in Turkish parliament and says Ankara will continue to monitor whether the two Nordic countries comply with the deal.
"If they do not fulfil promised obligations, the memorandum will not reach Turkish parliament for approval," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at the end of the NATO summit in Madrid.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Türkiye, the PKK — listed as a terrorist organisation by Türkiye, the US, EU and NATO — has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants.
PKK terrorists are also involved in "organised crime activities such as money laundering, racketeering, extortion, drug trafficking," says the report.
The PKK terror group continues its fundraising activities in Europe, the bloc’s law enforcement agency Europol has said.
According to Europol’s annual European Union Terrorism Situation and Trend Report 2022 released on Wednesday, PKK organisations in the EU are coordinated by the Belgium-based European Kurdish Democratic Societies Congress (KCDK-E).
The report noted that the PKK terror group continued its propaganda, protest, recruitment and fundraising activities throughout Europe despite Covid-19, and that money was collected from European countries through membership fees, sales of publications, special events and campaigns.
PKK terrorists were also involved in "organised crime activities such as money laundering, racketeering, extortion and drug trafficking," said the report.
The report said that left-wing extremists from the member states have traveled to northeastern Syria and northern Iraq and received military training from the YPG terror group, which is PKK's offshoot in Syria.
"Given the training and the battle experience acquired there, it is assessed that upon their return to the EU, such individuals have the potential to carry out violent attacks," the report said.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Türkiye, the PKK has been responsible for the deaths of more than 40,000 people, including women, children and infants./Agencies
As a result of Türkiye's efforts in Madrid, PKK offshoot PYD/YPG as well as FETO have been written off as terror groups in NATO's records for the first time, the Turkish president has said.
Speaking to reporters while returning from the NATO summit on Friday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the decisions taken at Madrid will bear fruit in time.
“Promises that were made are, of course, important but the main point is the implementation," he said on the landmark memorandum signed between Finland, Sweden and Türkiye.
With the signing of the memorandum, Türkiye lifted an objection to the Nordic countries' NATO bid. In return, Finland and Sweden will address Türkiye's terrorism concerns.
However, Erdogan said Türkiye will be cautious as "a country that has repeatedly been stabbed in the back in its fight against terrorism."
"We will closely monitor whether the promises made to our country are fulfilled in the coming days," he added.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Türkiye, the PKK has been responsible for the deaths of more than 40,000 people, including women, children and infants. The YPG is its Syrian offshoot.
FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016 in Türkiye, in which 251 people were killed and 2,734 injured.
On Türkiye-Greece ties
On relations with Greece, Erdogan said that NATO leaders whom he met in Madrid offered to intermediate to organise talks with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
“We said ‘sorry, but we don’t have time for such a meeting right now.’ Because it is obvious that they are militarising the islands,” said Erdogan.
In the backdrop of NATO's new security policy, Erdogan said Ankara is maintaining a "balanced policy" in relations with Russia and Ukraine, as it does not want any harm to its "diplomatic traffic".
NATO leaders on Wednesday approved the 2022 Strategic Concept on Wednesday, a blueprint for the alliance for the next decade.
It covers the alliance’s priorities and goals for the next 10 years, and sets its joint position on emerging challenges, including Russia, while also addressing China for the first time.
The 2022 Strategic Concept accuses China of pursuing “coercive policies” that threaten NATO's “interests, security and values.”
It cites the “deepening strategic partnership” between China and Russia as a threat, saying that “their mutually reinforcing attempts to undercut the rules-based international order run counter to our values and interests.”/ Agencies
Europe faced an energy crisis even before the Nord Stream 1 pipeline from Russia to Germany went offline for regular maintenance. While there were signals that at least some gas was likely to flow Thursday, it was still uncertain and government officials braced for the possibility that the key pipeline won’t restart as scheduled.
They say Russian President Vladimir Putin is using energy for political leverage in his confrontation with the European Union over Ukraine. Russia has already slashed Europe’s flows of natural gas used to power factories, generate electricity and heat homes in the winter, and Putin warns they could keep dwindling.
The deliveries through Nord Stream 1 were cut by 60 percent before repairs began. Even if the pipeline restarts at reduced levels, Europe will struggle to keep homes warm and industry humming this winter.
Here are key things to know about the energy crisis:
Did Russia cut off gas to Europe?
It has reduced supplies significantly. Even before the invasion of Ukraine, Russia was not selling gas on the short-term spot market. After the EU imposed drastic sanctions on Russia’s banks and companies and started sending weapons to Ukraine, Russian cut off gas to six member countries and reduced supplies to six more.
Flows into Germany, the EU’s biggest economy, through Nord Stream 1 were dialed back by two-thirds, with Russia blaming a part that was sent to Canada for maintenance and not returned due to sanctions.
European leaders rejected that claim, saying it was a political gambit in retaliation for sanctions. It has left the 27-member EU scrambling to fill gas storage ahead of winter, when demand rises and utility companies draw down their reserves to keep homes warm and power plants running.
The EU’s goal is to use less gas now to build storage for winter. Europe’s gas reserves are only 65 percent full, compared with a goal of 80 percent by Nov. 1.
Why is Russian natural gas so important?
Russia supplied some 40 percent of Europe’s natural gas before the war. That has dropped to around 15 percent, sending prices through the roof and straining energy-intensive industries.
Gas is used across a range of processes that most people never see — to forge steel to make cars, make glass bottles and pasteurize milk and cheese.
Companies warn that they often can’t switch overnight to other energy sources such as fuel oil or electricity to produce heat. In some cases, equipment that holds molten metal or glass is ruined if the heat is turned off.
High energy prices are already threatening to cause a recession in Europe through record inflation, with consumers having less to spend as costs rise for food, fuel and utilities. A complete cutoff could deal an even heavier blow to an already troubled economy.
What is the Nord Stream 1 pipeline?
It is the major European natural gas pipeline that runs under the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany and is Germany’s main source of Russian gas.
The head of Germany’s network regulator, Klaus Mueller, tweeted that Russian state-owned Gazprom had notified plans to deliver some 530 gigawatt hours’ worth of gas through Nord Stream 1 on Thursday — about 30 percent of the pipeline’s capacity, and down from roughly 800 gigawatt hours it had notified hours earlier. He noted that “further changes are possible.”
In the days leading up to the closure for maintenance, gas supplies ran at about 700 gigawatt hours per day.
Analysts at Rystad Energy said that if Nord Stream 1 does stay dormant, Europe would reach only about 65 percent of its storage capacity, creating a real risk that gas would run out during the heating season.
Three other pipelines bring Russian gas to Europe, but one through Poland and Belarus has been shut down. Another, through Ukraine and Slovakia, is still bringing reduced amounts of gas despite the fighting, as is one through Turkey into Bulgaria.
What’s Putin’s game?
Although Russia’s oil and gas exporters are selling less energy, spiking prices mean Putin’s earnings have actually increased, according to the International Energy Agency. Since the invasion, Russia’s revenue from exporting oil and gas to Europe has doubled over the average from recent years, to $95 billion, the Paris-based IEA said.
The increase in Russia’s energy revenue in just the last five months is three times what it typically makes by exporting gas to Europe over an entire winter.
So Putin has cash in hand and may calculate that painful utility bills and an energy recession could undermine public support for Ukraine in Europe and increase sentiment for a negotiated settlement in his favor.
“Based on what we have seen over the past year, it would be unwise to exclude the possibility that Russia could decide to forgo the revenue it gets from exporting gas to Europe in order to gain political leverage,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said.
Indeed, Putin said the amount of gas pumped through Nord Stream 1 will fall further from 60 million to 30 million cubic meters a day, or about one-fifth of its capacity, if the turbine that was sent to Canada for repairs isn’t quickly replaced. Canada has said it has sent back the part, but Germany has declined to say where it is.
“Our partners are trying to shift the blame for the mistakes they made to Russia and Gazprom, but it’s absolutely unfounded,” Putin told Russian reporters Tuesday during talks in Tehran with the leaders of Iran and Turkey.
What can Europe do?
The EU has turned to more-expensive liquefied natural gas, or LNG, which comes by ship from places like the US and Qatar. Germany is fast-tracking construction of LNG import terminals on its North Sea coast, but that will take years. The first of four floating reception terminals is to come online later this year.
But LNG alone can’t make up the gap. The world’s LNG export facilities are running at full capacity amid tight energy markets, and there’s no more gas to be had. An explosion at a US terminal in Freeport, Texas, that sent most of its gas to Europe took 2.5 percent of Europe’s supply offline overnight.
Conservation and other energy sources are key. For example, Germany is running coal plants longer, creating a gas auction system intended to encourage conservation, and resetting thermostats in public buildings.
The European Union on Wednesday proposed that member states voluntarily cut their gas use by 15 percent over the coming months. The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, is seeking the power to impose mandatory reductions across the bloc if there’s a risk of a severe gas shortage or an exceptionally high demand.
EU member states will discuss the measures at an emergency meeting of energy ministers next Tuesday.
Countries have been scrambling to secure alternative energy supplies, with leaders of Italy, France and the European Union sealing deals with their counterparts in Algeria, Azerbaijan and the United Arab Emirates this week.
Could people freeze this winter?
It’s unlikely homes, schools and hospitals will lose heat because governments are required to impose rationing first on businesses. The German government also could allow gas suppliers to immediately pass on increases to customers.
The choices could include torpedoing industry and/or socking consumers with even higher bills.
If Nord Stream 1 resumes at reduced levels, Europe would need to save 12 billion cubic meters of gas, the equivalent of 120 LNG tankers, to fill its storage levels by winter. The IEA recommends European countries step up campaigns people to conserve at home and plan to share gas in an emergency.
A total cutoff would mean even more need to conserve. And time is getting short.
“European leaders need to be preparing for this possibility now to avoid the potential damage that would result from a disjointed and destabilizing response,” Birol said. “This winter could become a historic test of European solidarity — one it cannot afford to fail — with implications far beyond the energy sector.”/AP
— A Moroccan court Tuesday sentenced 33 migrants to 11 months in jail for “illegal entry”, their lawyer said, after a deadly mass border-crossing attempt into the Spanish enclave of Melilla last month.
The court in Nador, near the North African kingdom’s border with Melilla, sentenced “all the (33) migrants to 11 months behind bars each”, Khalid Ameza told AFP, describing the ruling as “a very heavy sentence”.
At least 23 migrants died after around 2,000 people, many from Sudan, stormed the frontier on June 24 — the worst death toll in years of attempted migrant crossings into Spain’s Ceuta and Melilla enclaves, which represent the EU’s only land borders with Africa.
The 33 irregular migrants were prosecuted for “illegal entry onto Moroccan soil”, “violence against law enforcement officers”, participating in an “armed gathering” and “refusing to obey orders”, according to a court statement.
“We hope that the appeals court will rectify this severe sentence,” the AMDH human rights group’s Nador office said.
A separate trial, also in Nador, of a group of 29 irregular migrants including a minor opened last week but has been adjourned to July 27, the court said.
That group is accused of “participating in a criminal gang with a view to organizing and facilitating” irregular migration, among other charges.
Spanish rights group Caminando Fronteras says as many as 37 people lost their lives in the June 24 incident.
The United Nations, the African Union and independent rights groups have condemned the use of excessive force by Moroccan and Spanish security personnel.
Morocco’s state-backed CNDH rights group said last week that those who died likely “suffocated”.
The CNDH defended Moroccan forces’ actions, saying cases of violence were “isolated” and citing the danger posed by “the large number of migrants” carrying sticks and stones./acencies
A remote town in the Australian Outback celebrated on Sunday the 25th anniversary of a camel race with unlikely links to Abu Dhabi’s royal family.
Boulia in Queensland saw its population balloon from 300 to more than 3,000 as visitors came from around the country to attend the Boulia Camel Races.
The race got its start in 1997 after founder Paddy McHugh rounded up 1,000 feral camels, which were considered pests for feeding on grass used for grazing cattle.
McHugh ended up transporting 33 of the camels to Abu Dhabi, where far from being seen as pests, the dromedaries were considered prized race contenders. He then sold the camels to the royal family.
“We spent a bit of time there and saw what a massive industry camel racing was, so we tried to emulate something in Australia that could make our camels worth some money,” he was quoted as saying in a press release.
The Outback event is a family-oriented affair involving live music and novelty competition such as the camel tag and the lawn mower race.
It has evolved from humble beginnings to a “full-blown professional affair,” McHugh said, with drug testing, microchipping, and government-sanctioned gambling.
Gunna, a wild-caught camel belonging to local team Woodhouse Camels, won this year’s 1,500m cup.
“To win this Cup is amazing, every jockey will tell you it’s the main one they want to win,” Jockey Kyrraley Woodhouse said.
“The big 1,500m race is a fully mental race for both the camel and yourself. Some people sing to the jockeys, some people yell a bit, but I stay quiet and then every 50 or 100 meters I give a ‘raaah’ and that does the trick,” she added.
For race organizer Rebecka Britton, the cultural heritage of camels in the outback is an often-overlooked aspect of the annual get-together.
“Camels can be regarded as quite a pest or a feral animal, so I’m not really sure whether or not there’s much significance to the cultural side of things left,” she explained to Al Arabiya English.
“It’s definitely something that we try and market and promote as an organization because of the history and heritage involved in camels essentially settling these western parts of Australia.”
Although worlds apart in many respects, Australia and countries of the Arabian Gulf have a shared heritage of using camels to traverse long distances across barren climes.
First brought to the continent by the British in the 1800s, camels were used to explore the vast wilderness of the Outback.
They were sourced mainly from the Middle East, India, and Afghanistan, and the handlers that came along with them were referred to generically as “Afghans.”
These camel handlers played an essential role in exploring the region and transporting supplies between remote settlements.
A passenger train running through the depths of the Outback was even named ‘The Ghan’ in honor of those early travelers.
An increase in online scams is expected ahead of the FIFA World Cup, warns a Dubai-based cybersecurity expert, warning people to beware of fake and fraudulent websites and emails that can look official.
“It is fair to consider that there will always be an increase in online scams around significant large-scale events,” Emad Fahmy, Systems Engineering Manager for the Middle East at cybersecurity firm NETSCOUT, told Al Arabiya English in a recent interview. interview on Wednesday.
Fahmy said cybercriminals often use mega-events like the FIFA World Cup, which kicks off on November 21 in Qatar, “as a pretext to lure and catch unsuspecting fans or users.”
While maintaining connectivity during a major event like the World Cup can be challenging, the even bigger challenge is keeping user data secure.
“During events of this magnitude, malicious actors often take advantage of their [the event’s] escalate and intensify attacks on critical cloud infrastructure with new and sophisticated tactics, such as exploiting and identifying stolen credentials to amplify ransomware attacks,” he said.
“Attendees can often expect to encounter numerous fake and fraudulent official-looking websites and emails, enticing them to find cheap tickets, and simply streaming and watching these events live will expose them to multiple additional scams.”
Fahmy warned that the use of unauthorized service providers can result in the theft of credentials, passwords and credit card information. Other threats include falling victim to ransomware or malware that can infect a user’s phone or computer.
“These can cause the unwitting victim to spread the malware to family and friends, lose sensitive data, or even suffer significant financial consequences,” it added.
Attack Mitigation
A “rigorous and comprehensive approach” needs to be taken when dealing with mega-events, Fahmy said, urging the need to incorporate more than just basic security standards.
“The organizations that are involved in these events must take additional responsibility in developing and operating the security necessary to create a more secure software system,” Fahmy said.
“There is no better way to mitigate cyber attacks [during] events so prominent that I first understand them thoroughly.”
The cybersecurity expert urged users to approach digital communication or website links in connection with the World Cup with caution.
Users should avoid clicking on suspicious emails or website links and ensure that they are always using the latest versions of web browsers and never enter their login, password or credit card information on suspicious websites as there is a high probability that they could be scams, waiting to catch the next victim.
The 2022 FIFA World Cup will take place in Doha, Qatar, from November 21 to December 18.
The long-awaited event is the first World Cup to be hosted in a Middle Eastern country.
According to FIFA, 1.8 million match tickets were sold in the first two sales batches, but the Federation has not yet mentioned the total number of tickets that will be available./agencies
Two men were indicted Wednesday in the case of a hot, airless tractor-trailer rig found last month with 53 dead or dying migrants in San Antonio, officials said.
A federal grand jury in San Antonio indicted Homero Zamorano Jr., 46, and Christian Martinez, 28, both of Pasadena, Texas, on counts of transporting and conspiring to transport migrants illegally resulting in death; and transporting and conspiring to transport migrants illegally resulting in serious injury.
Both remain in federal custody without bond pending trial. Martinez's attorney, David Shearer of San Antonio, declined to comment on the indictments. A message to Zamorano's attorney was not immediately returned.
Conviction on the death counts could result in life sentences, but the Attorney General's Office could authorize prosecutors to seek death penalties. The serious bodily injury counts carry sentences of up to 20 years in prison.
It was the deadliest tragedy to claim the lives of migrants smuggled across the border from Mexico. The truck had been packed with 67 people, and the dead included 27 from Mexico, 14 from Honduras, seven from Guatemala and two from El Salvador, said Francisco Garduño, chief of Mexico's National Immigration Institute.
The incident happened on a remote San Antonio back road on June 27. Arriving police officers detained Zamorano after spotting him hiding in some nearby brush, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney's Office. A search of Zamorano's cellphone revealed calls with Martinez concerning the smuggling run.
Surveillance video of the 18-wheeler passing through a Border Patrol checkpoint showed the driver matched Zamorano's description, according to the indictment. One survivor of the journey, a 20-year-old from Guatemala, told The Associated Press that smugglers had covered the trailer's floor with what she believes was powdered chicken bouillon, apparently to throw off any dogs at the checkpoint.
The tragedy occurred at a time when huge numbers of migrants have been coming to the U.S., many of them taking perilous risks to cross swift rivers and canals and scorching desert landscapes. Migrants were stopped nearly 240,000 times in May, up by one-third from a year ago.
Of the 73 people in the truck, those who died included people from the Mexican states of Guanajuato, Veracruz, Oaxaca, Mexico, Zacatecas, Queretaro, Morelos and Mexico City. Migrants from Honduras and Guatemala also were among those who died in the deadliest known smuggling attempt in the United States.
In 2017, 10 people died after being trapped inside a truck parked at a San Antonio Walmart. In 2003, the bodies of 19 migrants were found in a sweltering truck southeast of the city./AP
The United States hopes to see a global price cap on Russian oil introduced by December, US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said on Wednesday.
“We are following on what the Europeans have done,” he told the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado.
“They introduced the idea of looking to do a price cap but they also said by December, they plan to put in place their insurance ban.
“Our goal is to make sure that as that insurance ban is going into place, we're in a position where there's a price cap that can be joined onto that that is a global one that helps to drive down global energy prices and also allows Russian energy to flow into the market place.”
Russia will not export oil to the world market if the price is capped below the cost of production, Interfax news agency quoted Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak as telling Russian television earlier./Reuters
LONDON (Reuters) -British officials repeatedly warned the government not to pursue its plan to send migrants to Rwanda and the country was initially excluded from the shortlist of partner countries because of human rights concerns, London's High Court was told on Tuesday.
Under an agreement struck in April, Britain will send tens of thousands of migrants who arrive on its shores illegally more than 4,000 miles (6,4000 km) to the East African country.
The first planned deportation flight last month was blocked by a last-minute injunction from the European Court of Human Rights.
The government has vowed to press ahead with the plan, but the policy is facing a judicial review at the High Court where its lawfulness is being challenged.
Lawyers acting for asylum seekers from countries including Syria, Sudan, and Iraq, as well as charities and Border Force staff, have been sent thousands of documents detailing internal government discussions about the policy.
In February last year, the British High Commissioner to Rwanda said in a memo that Rwanda should be not selected as a place to send migrants for a variety of reasons including that the East African country had been accused of "recruiting refugees to conduct armed operations in neighbouring countries", according to written evidence submitted to the court.
The memo also said that Rwanda "has a poor human rights record regardless of the conventions it has signed up to" and has been criticised by Britain for "extrajudicial killings, deaths in custody, enforced disappearances and torture".
Another internal government memo from April 12, a day before the deal with Rwanda was signed, said the agreement was "unenforceable, consisting in part of upfront payments, meaning fraud risk is very high".
'HUMAN RIGHTS'
Officials in the Foreign Office also cautioned that if Rwanda were to be selected, "we would need to be prepared to constrain UK positions on Rwanda’s human rights record, and to absorb resulting criticism from UK Parliament and NGOs".
Yolande Makolo, a spokeswoman for the Rwandan government, has criticised what she called misconceptions about the way migrants would be treated in the country. The Rwandan government is not party to the hearing.
"Rwanda is a safe and secure country with a track record of supporting asylum seekers," a British government spokesperson said. "We remain committed to delivering this policy to break the business model of criminal gangs and save lives."
The government argues the deportation policy will smash the business model of people-smuggling networks after a record 28,500 people crossed the English Channel in small boats last year.
However, a report by parliament's Home Affairs Committee on Monday said there was no clear evidence the Rwanda plan would deter migrants.
"The government’s Rwanda plan is a total mess," Yvette Cooper, the home affairs spokesperson for the opposition Labour Party, said.
"Today's revelations show that ministers knew the policy was unenforceable, would be at very high fraud risk and would undermine UK foreign policy and our ability to raise the issue of Rwanda’s human rights record."
Tuesday's hearing was being held to decide when a full judicial review should begin, with the court due to give its decision on Wednesday.