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Lavrov tells Blinken West seeking to provoke Ukraine conflict

US withdraws nearly all remaining soldiers from Ukraine — Pentagon

By - Feb 12,2022 - Last updated at Feb 12,2022

Servicemen attend joint exercises of the armed forces of Russia and Belarus as part of a military excercise at the Gozhsky firing range in the Grodno region, Belarus, on Saturday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW/WASHINGTON — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Saturday accused the United States of seeking to provoke a conflict in Ukraine, during a call with his US counterpart Antony Blinken, the Russian foreign ministry said.

Lavrov said "the propaganda campaign unleashed by the United States and its allies concerning 'Russian aggression' against Ukraine pursues provocative goals," the Russian foreign ministry said.

That had the effect of "encouraging the authorities in Kyiv to sabotage the Minsk agreements and harm attempts to resolve the 'Donbass problem' by force," it added, referring to eastern Ukraine.

Lavrov and Blinken spoke by phone as US President Joe Biden and France's Emmanuel Macron prepared to sound out Russian leader Vladimir Putin later Saturday after Washington warned that an all-out invasion could begin "any day".

Weeks of tensions have seen Russia surround its western neighbour with more than 100,000 troops. Moscow is demanding binding security guarantees from the West that includes a pledge to roll NATO forces out of eastern Europe and to never expand into Ukraine.

Washington has flatly rejected the demands while offering to discuss a new European disarmament agreement with Moscow.

On Saturday Lavrov reiterated that the West had ignored “key” Moscow demands, the foreign ministry said.

“It was emphasised that these issues will be at the centre of our assessment of the documents received from the US and NATO,” the ministry added.

Meanwhile, the Pentagon announced on Saturday that the United States is withdrawing nearly all of its remaining soldiers from Ukraine as tensions soar over a possible Russian invasion of the eastern European country.

Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin “has ordered the temporary repositioning of the 160 members of the Florida national guard,” who were in the country “advising and mentoring Ukrainian forces”, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said in a statement.

The troops, who Kirby said were being withdrawn “with the safety and security of our personnel foremost in mind”, will be repositioned “elsewhere in Europe”.

Since 2015, reservists from the US national guard have been advising and training Ukraine’s army alongside soldiers from other NATO countries, notably Canada and Germany.

“This repositioning does not signify a change in our determination to support Ukraine’s Armed Forces, but will provide flexibility in assuring allies and deterring aggression,” Kirby said.

Earlier on Saturday, the United States ordered all non-emergency Kyiv embassy staff to leave the country because of the threat of a Russian invasion.

Weeks of tensions, during which Russia has surrounded its western neighbour with more than 100,000 troops, intensified when the Kremlin launched its biggest naval drills in years across the Black Sea.

Washington on Friday issued its most dire warning yet that Russia had assembled enough forces to launch a serious assault.

“Our view that military action could occur any day now, and could occur before the end of the Olympics, is only growing in terms of its robustness,” US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan warned.

‘My heart and body shake’: Afghan women defy Taliban

Feb 12,2022 - Last updated at Feb 12,2022

A group of women in Kabul protest the loss of freedom since the Taliban took back power in Afghanistan in August (AFP photo)

By Rouba Al Husseini
Agence France-Presse

KABUL — One after the other, quickly, carefully, keeping their heads down, a group of Afghan women step into a small Kabul apartment block — risking their lives as a nascent resistance against the Taliban.

They come together to plan their next stand against the hardline Islamist regime, which took back power in Afghanistan in August and stripped them of their dreams.

At first, there were no more than 15 activists in this group, mostly women in their 20s who already knew each other.

Now there is a network of dozens of women — once students, teachers or NGO workers, as well as housewives — that have worked in secret to organise protests over the past six months.

“I asked myself why not join them instead of staying at home, depressed, thinking of all that we lost,” a 20-year-old protester, who asked not to be named, tells AFP.

They know such a challenge to the new authorities may cost them everything: Four of their comrades have already been seized.

But those that remain are determined to battle on.

When the Taliban first ruled Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001, they became notorious for human rights abuses, with women mostly confined to their homes.

Now back in government and despite promising softer rule, they are cracking down on women’s freedoms once again.

There is enforced segregation in most workplaces, leading many employers to fire female staff and women are barred from key public sector jobs.

Many girls’ secondary schools have closed, and university curriculums are being revised to reflect their hardline interpretation of Islam.

Haunted by memories of the last Taliban regime, some Afghan women are too frightened to venture out or are pressured by their families to remain at home.

For mother-of four Shala, who asked AFP to only use her first name, a return to such female confinement is her biggest fear.

A former government employee, her job has already been taken from her, so now she helps organise the resistance and sometimes sneaks out at night to paint graffiti slogans such as “Long Live Equality” across the walls of the nation’s capital.

“I just want to be an example for young women, to show them that I will not give up the fight,” she explains.

The Taliban could harm her family, but Shala says her husband supports what she is doing and her children are learning from her defiance — at home they practise chants demanding education.

‘Fear can’t control me’ 

AFP journalists attended two of the group’s gatherings in January.

Despite the risk of being arrested and taken by the Taliban, or shunned by their families and society more than 40 women came to one event.

At another meeting, a few women were fervently preparing for their next protest.

One activist designed a banner demanding justice, a cellphone in one hand and her pen in the other.

“These are our only weapons,” she says.

A 24-year-old, who asked not to be named, helped brainstorm ideas for attracting the world’s attention.

“It’s dangerous but we have no other way. We have to accept that our path is fraught with challenges,” she insists.

Like others, she stood up to her conservative family, including an uncle who threw away her books to keep her from learning.

“I don’t want to let fear control me and prevent me from speaking and telling the truth,” she insists.

Allowing people to join their ranks is a meticulous process.

Hoda Khamosh, a published poet and former NGO worker who organised workshops to help empower women, is tasked with ensuring newcomers can be trusted.

One test she sets is to ask them to prepare banners or slogans at short notice — she can sense passion for the cause from women who deliver quickly.

Other tests yield even clearer results.

Hoda recounts the time they gave a potential activist a fake date and time for a demonstration.

The Taliban turned up ahead of the supposed protest, and all contact was cut with the woman suspected of tipping off officials.

A core group of the activists use a dedicated phone number to coordinate on the day of a protest. That number is later disconnected to ensure it is not being tracked.

“We usually carry an extra scarf or an extra dress. When the demonstration is over, we change our clothes so we cannot be recognised,” Hoda explains.

She has changed her phone number several times and her husband had received threats.

“We could still be harmed, it’s exhausting. But all we can do is persevere,” she adds.

The activist was one of a few women flown to Norway to meet face to face with the Taliban’s leadership last month, alongside other civil society members, when the first talks on European soil were held between the West and Afghanistan’s new government.

Crackdown on dissent 

In the 20 years since the Taliban last held power, a generation of women — largely in major cities — became business owners, studied PHDs, and held government positions.

The battle to defend those gains requires defiance.

On protest days, women turn up in twos or threes, waiting outside shops as if they are ordinary shoppers, then at the last minute rush together: Some 20 people chanting as they unfurl their banners.

Swiftly, and inevitably, the Taliban’s armed fighters surround them — sometimes holding them back, other times screaming and pointing guns to scare the women away.

One activist recalls slapping a fighter in the face, while another led protest chants despite a masked gunman pointing his weapon at her.

But it is becoming increasingly dangerous to protest as authorities crack down on dissent.

A few days after the planning meeting attended by AFP, Taliban fighters used pepper spray on the resistance demonstrators for the first time, angry as the group had painted a white burqa red to reject wearing the all-covering dress.

Activists said two of the women who took part in the protests — Tamana Zaryabi Paryani and Parwana Ibrahimkhel — were later rounded up in a series of night raids on January 19.

Shortly before she was taken, footage of Paryani was shared on social media showing her in distress, warning of Taliban fighters at her door.

In the video, Tamana calls out: “Kindly help! Taliban have come to our home in Parwan 2. My sisters are at home.”

It shows her telling the men behind the door: “If you want to talk, we’ll talk tomorrow. I cannot meet you in the night with these girls. I don’t want to [open the door]... Please! help, help!”

Several women interviewed by AFP before the raids, who spoke of “non-stop threats”, have since gone into hiding.

Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid denied any women were being held, but said authorities had the right “to arrest and detain dissidents or those who break the law”, after the government banned unsanctioned protests soon after coming to power.

Three weeks on and they have still not been found, with the United Nations and Human Rights Watch among those calling on the Taliban to investigate the disappearances.

The UN has also demanded information about two more female activists allegedly detained last week, named by rights advocates as Zahra Mohammadi and Mursal Ayar.

Starting from scratch 

The women are learning to adapt quickly.

When they began the movement last September, demonstrations would end as soon as one of the participants was pushed or threatened by the Taliban.

Hoda says they have now developed a system where two activists take care of the victim, allowing the others — and the protest — to continue.

As the Taliban prevents media coverage of protests, many of the female activists use high quality phones to take photos and videos to post on social media.

The content, often featuring them defiantly showing their faces, can then reach an international audience.

“These women... had to create something from scratch,” says Heather Barr of Human Rights Watch.

“There are a lot of very experienced women activists who have been working in Afghanistan for many years... but almost all of them left after August 15.”

“[The Taliban] don’t tolerate dissent. They have beaten other protesters, they have beaten journalists who cover the protests, very brutally. They’ve gone and looked for protesters and protest organisers afterwards,” she adds.

Barr believes it is “almost certain” those involved with this new resistance will experience harm.

A separate, smaller woman’s group is now trying to focus on protest that avoids direct confrontation with the Taliban.

“When I am out on the streets my heart and body shake,” said Wahida Amiri.

The 33-year-old used to work as a librarian. Sharp and articulate, she is used to fighting for justice having previously campaigned against corruption in the previous government.

Now that is no longer possible, she sometimes meets a small circle of friends in the safety of their homes, where they film of themselves holding candlelit vigils and raising banners demanding the right to education and work.

They write articles and attend debates on audio apps Clubhouse or Twitter, hoping social media will show the world their story.

“I have never worked as hard as I have in the past five months,” she says.

Hoda’s biggest dream was to be Afghanistan’s president, and it’s difficult for her to accept that her political work is now limited.

“If we do not fight for our future today, Afghan history will repeat itself,” the 26-year-old told AFP from her home.

“If we do not get our rights we will end up stuck at home, between four walls. This is something we cannot tolerate,” she said.

Kabul’s resistance is not alone. There have been small, scattered protests by women in other Afghan cities, including Bamiyan, Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif.

“[The Taliban] have erased us from society and politics,” Amiri says.

“We may not succeed. All we want is to keep the voice of justice raised high, and instead of five women, we want thousands to join us.”

Police fire tear gas, fine Paris protest convoy

By - Feb 12,2022 - Last updated at Feb 12,2022

French anti-riot policemen walk a street of Paris among bystanders on Saturday as convoys of protesters so called ‘Convoi de la Liberte’ arrived in the French capital (AFP photo)

PARIS — Paris police fired teargas and issued hundreds of fines on Saturday to break up a convoy of vehicles that attempted to block traffic in a protest over COVID restrictions and rising living costs.

Inspired by the truckers that shut down the Canadian capital Ottawa, thousands of demonstrators from across France made their way to Paris in a self-proclaimed “freedom convoy” of cars, trucks and vans.

The police, which had banned the protest, moved quickly to try to clear the cars at entry points to the city, handing out 283 fines for participation in an unauthorised protest.

But over 100 vehicles managed to converge on the famous Champs-Elysees avenue, where police used teargas to disperse protesters in scenes reminiscent of the “yellow vest” anti-government riots of 2018-2019.

The demonstrators oppose the COVID vaccine pass required to access many public venues but some also took aim at rising energy and food prices, issues which ignited the “yellow vest” protests that shook France in late 2018 and early 2019.

Aurelie M., a 42-year-old administrative assistant in a Parisian company, complained that the health pass meant she could no longer take a long-distance TGV train even if she tested negative for COVID in a home test.

“There’s so much inconsistency and unfairness,” she told AFP, noting that commuters could still cram onto a crowded Paris metro without proof of vaccination.

Sixty-five-year-old factory worker Jean-Paul Lavigne said he travelled across the country from the south-western town of Albi to protest fuel, food and electricity price hikes as well as the pressure on people to get vaccinated.

The demonstrations come two months ahead of presidential elections, in which President Emmanuel Macron is expected to seek reelection.

On Friday, the centrist French leader, who is a figure of hate for the far left, said he understood the “fatigue” linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.

‘Fatigue leads to anger’ 

“This fatigue also leads to anger. I understand it and I respect it. But I call for the utmost calm,” he told the Ouest-France newspaper.

Nearly 7,200 officers equipped with armoured vehicles and water cannon were deployed to keep the peace in Paris.

Police showed off their arsenal on Twitter, publishing photographs of loader tractors for the removal of barricades.

The convoys set out from Nice in the south, Lille and Vimy in the north, Strasbourg in the east and Chateaubourg in the west.

‘It’s a betrayal’ 

They are demanding the withdrawal of the government’s vaccine pass and more help with their energy bills.

“People need to see us, and to listen to the people who just want to live a normal and free life,” said Lisa, a 62-year-old retired health worker travelling in the Chateaubourg convoy, who did not want to give her surname.

Paris police banned the gathering saying it posed a threat to public order and said protesters who tried to block roads would face fines or arrest.

The order prohibiting the assembly of convoys was upheld on Friday by the courts, which rejected two appeals.

“It’s a betrayal. The basis of the order is not respectful of the law, of the freedom to demonstrate,” anti-vaccine and “yellow vest” activist Sophie Tissier told AFP.

The prime minister defended the clampdown.

“The right to demonstrate and to have an opinion are a constitutionally guaranteed right in our republic and in our democracy. The right to block others or to prevent coming and going is not,” he said.

From Paris, some of the protesters plan to travel on to Brussels for a “European convergence” of protesters planned there for Monday.

Phil, a 58-year-old on his way by truck from Brittany, said his refusal to get vaccinated had created “upheaval” in his family and work relations.

“When you join a demonstration you feel less alone,” he told AFP.

Indonesia to buy French warplanes as Paris boosts Asia alliances

By - Feb 10,2022 - Last updated at Feb 10,2022

This file photo taken on June 5 shows crew members standing next to a Rafale jet fighter on the deck of the French aircraft carrier Charles-de-Gaulle, off the coast of Toulon (AFP photo)


JAKARTA — Indonesia on Thursday ordered 42 Rafale fighter jets from France, as Paris and Jakarta seek to strengthen military ties in the face of growing tensions in the Asia-Pacific.

The agreement was announced as Indonesian Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto met his French counterpart Florence Parly in Jakarta.

"It's official, Indonesia orders 42 Rafale," said Parly on Twitter.

Subianto confirmed a deal had been struck for the purchase of the jets, with a contract signed on Thursday relating to the first six.

It is the latest sign of warming ties between Jakarta and Paris, as France rethinks its alliances in the region following the collapse in September of a multibillion-dollar Australian submarine deal.

Paris was left furious by the debacle, saying it had been given no warning that Canberra was negotiating a new defence pact with the United States and Britain.

Australia is now obtaining nuclear-powered submarines as part of the new defence alliance, named AUKUS, which brings together Canberra, Washington and London to counter a rising China.

In November, France and Indonesia strengthened a strategic partnership agreement during a two-day visit by French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian to the vast Southeast Asian archipelago.

Indonesia's first order for French warplanes comes as Jakarta replaces an ageing fleet -- consisting mainly of American F-16s and Russian Sukhois -- as concerns grow about rising US China tensions in Asia.

'Technical excellence' 

In Jakarta, Parly told reporters that Indonesia had chosen a warplane known for its "technical excellence", which had demonstrated its "operational capabilities on numerous occasions".

Eric Trappier, CEO of manufacturer Dassault Aviation, said the contract "marks the start of a long-term partnership that will see Dassault Aviation rapidly step up its presence in the country.

"It also demonstrates the strong bond between Indonesia and France and reinforces the position of the world's largest archipelago as a key power on the international stage."

Indonesia is reportedly in negotiations to buy about 30 American F-15s, and is participating in a South Korean programme to develop a warplane.

Since the Australian submarine deal collapsed, France has been bolstering ties with long-time partners including Japan and India, as well as turning to Southeast Asian nations such as Indonesia.

Indonesia is one of several Asian countries that expressed concerns about the AUKUS pact, with Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi warning it could trigger a nuclear arms race in the region.

The Dassault Aviation Rafale aircraft, which entered service in 2004, has proved popular in the international market despite competition from American and other European manufacturers.

The United Arab Emirates signed the biggest ever order for the jets in December, with a deal to buy 80 for 14 billion euros.

Other foreign clients include Qatar, India, Egypt, Greece and Croatia.

French Muslims uneasy as Islam takes centre stage in election

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

PARIS  — The role of Islam in French society has emerged as a key battleground in the presidential election campaign, leaving many French Muslims uneasy over the bursts of rhetoric against the nation's largest religious minority.

Far-right candidates Marine Le Pen of the National Rally (RN) and especially the former pundit Eric Zemmour have railed against Islam in frequent diatribes invoking security and terrorism risks.

Their messages are sometimes echoed by officials on the conservative right and allies of centrist President Emmanuel Macron, with their warnings on radical Islamism.

Such a fierce campaign debate about Islam would be less conceivable in neighbours like Britain and Germany, which also both have large Muslim minorities.

France, however, still lives in the shadow of the trauma of Algeria's War of Independence and, more recently, the massacres of 2015.

Zemmour, who is contending with Le Pen and the traditional rightwing candidate Valerie Pecresse to reach a second round run-off against Macron, caused a fresh outcry on Monday by describing the town of Roubaix in northern France as “Afghanistan two hours from Paris”.

He told France Inter Radio: “French people who are Muslims must live in the French way and not consider that sharia law is superior to the laws of the republic.”

His comments added to a febrile atmosphere that meant that a journalist had to be given police protection after a televised report about the rise of Islam in Roubaix.

The official division of church and state in France in 1905 left secularism as one of the cornerstones of the modern republic’s identity.

Macron’s government in 2021 also brought in a new law to defend France against what the president has described as “Islamist separatism”.

 

‘Deep scars’ 

 

The end of colonial rule prompted large migration flows into France in the 1950s and 1960s, but the economic crisis that hit in the 1970s saw many of the newcomers stuck without work in housing developments soon abandoned by the middle class.

While Britain and Germany also grappled with large postwar migrant arrivals, no other European colonial power fought a war whose ferocity, duration and consequences can compare with the Algerian War of Independence.

“The migration issue is particularly present in France because it awakens the difficult memory of the Algerian war,” political scientist Pascal Perrineau told AFP.

This “left deep scars in the collective consciousness”, he said.

But while the debate on Islam has been ever present in France, which in 2011 banned full veil face coverings for women, many Muslims who make up almost 9 per cent of the country’s mainland population are shocked by current levels of rhetoric.

“Sometimes I tell myself that no one can understand quite how violent this is,” said Fatma Bouvet de la Maisonneuve, a psychiatrist of Tunisian origin and author of the book “An Arab Woman in France”.

Acknowledging that people can be tempted to turn in upon themselves, she said: “Frankly, sometimes we just want to meet among Arabs to tell each other how bad things are,” she said.

 

‘Chasing public opinion’ 

 

Marine Le Pen’s father Jean-Marie Le Pen, who made it to the second round in the 2002 presidential vote, has shocked much of France with repeated broadsides against Islam and immigrants.

French Muslims fear that such rhetoric has now been normalised and increasingly supported by widespread news reports and saturation of social media.

“I feel bad, very bad,” said Khadija, 38, a social worker in the Loiret region in central France, who asked that her second name be withheld.

“I have the impression that today’s France spits on my grandparents, who fought to liberate it, on my parents who came to build its roads, and on me, who has respected all the rules of democracy and integration.

“A few days ago, my five-year-old daughter told me that she did not like being Arab,” she said, complaining of “living under permanent suspicion, no longer knowing what’s behind the baker’s smile or what people really think”.

For Kamel, who works for a charity association, the attacks on the night of November 13, 2015 changed everything. Islamist gunmen massacred 130 people in and around Paris at locations including restaurants and the Bataclan music venue.

“I parted ways with many of my friends who were beginning to link Muslims with terrorism,” he said.

For the prominent sociologist Ahmed Boubaker, “a dam has broken” and now “there is a total lack of inhibition” on the part of political figures accusing Muslims of failing to integrate.

“However, I am not convinced that French society is as racist as we say it is,” he said.

“It is the politicians who are chasing after the pseudo-racism of public opinion, without realising that in fact they are manufacturing it.”

In Canada’s sedate capital, some are fed up with noisy vaccine protests

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

Empty jerry cans line the street in front of parked trucks as demonstrators continue to protest the Covid-19 vaccine mandates implemented by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday in Ottawa, Canada (AFP photo)

OTTAWA — Canada’s capital is sometimes ribbed as being so quiet it’s dull. But not these days, as truckers and others frustrated over Covid-19 restrictions clog the city center, revving engines in a non-stop blast of anger.

Ottawa residents say they do not recognise their own city. And while some understand the protesters’ gripes, they think that after nearly two weeks of chaos and gridlock, enough is enough.

The so-called Freedom Convoy began in January in western Canada — launched in anger at requirements that truckers either be vaccinated or test and isolate when crossing the US-Canadian border.

But the movement has morphed into a broader protest against Covid-related restrictions and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government, and put a spotlight on pandemic curbs around the world.

Hundreds of big-rig trucks are now paralysing the streets of downtown Ottawa, with the mayor calling the situation out of control and declaring a state of emergency.

“People told me, ‘You will see, Ottawa is a dormitory town compared to Montreal or Toronto,’” said Cedric Boyer, a 48-year-old Frenchman who has lived in the capital for two years, smiling at how Ottawa has been turned upside down by the protests and drawn attention from around the world.

Copycat protests have popped up as far away as New Zealand. Calls have gone out on social media for similar rallies in Europe and the United States.

In Ottawa, some people are using those media platforms to make a plea: “Make Ottawa boring again”, playing on the Make America Great Again mantra of former US president Donald Trump, who has expressed support for the truckers.

“In a democracy, everyone has the right to have a different opinion and the right to express it,” Boyer said. “But where that starts poses a bit of a problem. It is when the freedom of some infringes on that of others.”

Boyer said he felt badly in particular for people who cannot work because of the protests. In the downtown area, many stores and restaurants that had just been allowed to reopen after Covid-related closures are shut down again because of the truckers.

Lisa Van Buren, 55, said there is a lot of frustration among Canadians these days.

“I think there is a real anger, we shouldn’t underestimate that anger,” she told AFP.

 

‘Vocal minority’ 

 

In a letter to Trudeau, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson complained about “an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods”.

“People are living in fear and are terrified — they’ve now been subjected to the non-stop honking of large trucks for nine days which is tantamount to psychological warfare,” he added.

Since a court ordered that incessant honking to stop, the truckers have turned instead to revving the engines of their big-rigs.

Local people are also suing the protest organisers for the chaos caused by the demonstration, and are seeking Can$10 million ($7.9 million) in damages.

“They may say that they have the support of many people, but I feel that’s the vocal minority that’s taking a lot of our patience away,” said Patrick Lai, a 30-year-old doctor out on a walk, carrying a pair of ice skates.

“I get where they’re coming from, but as someone who works in healthcare, I just feel like when they say, ‘I’ve done the research,’ it’s not the kind of research that I’m talking about,” Lai said of the protest’s complaints about Covid restrictions.

“I don’t tell you how to drive your truck. Don’t tell me as a healthcare worker how to do my job.”

He said he was concerned about a blockage that started on Monday of the Ambassador Bridge linking Ontario province and the US state of Michigan, which is a key trade route.

“I may have supported them at the beginning, but it’s gone on enough,” said Cheryl Murphy, a 74-year-old retiree who lives in downtown Ottawa.

“If Trudeau had come to talk to them at the very beginning, maybe a lot of this stuff would not have happened,” said Murphy.

UK's Johnson under fire over 'Trumpian' attack on rival

Prime minister refuses to apologise or to retract his accusation

By - Feb 08,2022 - Last updated at Feb 08,2022

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson reacts during his meeting with Lithuania's prime minister inside 10 Downing Street in central London on Tuesday (AFP photo)

LONDON — Britain's embattled Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced renewed pressure on Tuesday to apologise to opposition leader Keir Starmer for what critics have called a misleading "Trumpian" attack on him last week.

Johnson — already facing calls to step down after months of scandals — accused Starmer of failing in 2013 as head of the country's prosecution service to take action against notorious celebrity paedophile Jimmy Savile.

Labour leader Starmer, who led the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) from 2008 to 2013, was not personally involved in the case but has previously apologised on behalf of the CPS for its failures.

Critics, including numerous Conservative MPs, have decried Johnson's claim — made during a fractious parliamentary session — noting it has been propagated by far-right conspiracy theorists.

Johnson later clarified the remark, saying he accepted Starmer played no direct role in the decision but noting his apology and apparent acceptance of responsibility.

The prime minister has refused to apologise or to retract his accusation.

However, it has come under fresh scrutiny after several dozen anti-lockdown demonstrators mobbed Starmer outside parliament on Monday, with one protestor heard claiming he was "protecting paedophiles".

A video posted online showed the Labour leader being jostled before police, who arrested two people, intervened and escorted him to a car.

Within hours, Tory and other lawmakers were repeating calls for Johnson to say sorry.

"PM — apologise please," Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood wrote on Twitter.

"Let's stop this drift towards a Trumpian style of politics from becoming the norm. We are better than this."

'Inflame opinions' 

Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said Tuesday that Johnson's attack was "utterly shameful" and "straight out of [the] Trumpian playbook".

"Words have consequences — we saw that on [the] streets of Westminster yesterday evening. He's poisoning our politics & must apologise or go."

Johnson himself took to Twitter to criticise Starmer's treatment Monday as "absolutely disgraceful".

“All forms of harassment of our elected representatives are completely unacceptable,” he said, adding: “I thank the police for responding swiftly.”

His spokesman told reporters the British leader would not be apologising to Starmer, and insisted he “always seeks to engage with people in the right way”.

However, House of Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle, a non-partisan administrator of parliamentary business, warned MPs their “words have consequences” and reiterated that Johnson’s original claim was “inappropriate” and could “inflame opinions”.

Dogged by ‘Partygate’

But the incidents appear to have heightened unease within the restive Conservative Party at Johnson’s conduct — just as he attempts a major reset after months of tumult.

Ellwood is one of 13 Tory MPs to have publicly submitted a no-confidence letter in Johnson to a committee of backbench lawmakers with the power to call a leadership contest.

More are thought to have sent letters in without declaring them, sparked mostly by damaging allegations of parties in Downing Street during the pandemic in a scandal dubbed “partygate”.

The committee requires at least 15 per cent, or 54, of the 360 Conservative MPs to write such letters to trigger a party leadership challenge.

Johnson has sought to move beyond the scandal by changing his top team, with several senior aides departing and a new chief of staff and director of communications hired.

As part of a minor reshuffle on Tuesday, Johnson named Jacob Rees-Mogg, a fervent supporter of Brexit, as Minister for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency.

When Johnson’s longtime chief policy adviser Munira Mirza unexpectedly quit last Thursday, she specifically cited the Jimmy Saville claim in her resignation letter made public.

Meanwhile, Johnson is awaiting the outcome of a Metropolitan Police Service investigation into the numerous Downing Street gatherings and whether lockdown rules were breached.

The under-fire British leader could face the humiliation of being fined by police — an outcome likely to prompt a flurry of further no-confidence letters.

He is also heading into UK local elections in May with Labour enjoying a double-digit lead over his ruling Tories, on the back of “partygate” and a squeeze on living standards caused by surging inflation.

13 million face hunger as Horn of Africa drought worsens — UN

By - Feb 08,2022 - Last updated at Feb 08,2022

NAIROBI — An estimated 13 million people in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia are facing severe hunger as the Horn of Africa experiences its worst drought in decades, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

Three consecutive rainy seasons have failed as the region has recorded its driest conditions since 1981, the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) said.

The drought has destroyed crops and inflicted "abnormally" high livestock deaths, forcing rural families who rely on herding and farming to abandon their homes.

Water and grazing land is in short supply and forecasts of below-average rainfall in the coming months only threaten more misery, said Michael Dunford, WFP's regional director in East Africa.

"Harvests are ruined, livestock are dying, and hunger is growing as recurrent droughts affect the Horn of Africa," he said in a statement.

"The situation requires immediate humanitarian action" to avoid a repeat of a crisis like that of Somalia in 2011, when 250,000 died of hunger during a prolonged drought.

Speaking to journalists in Geneva, WFP spokesman Tomson Phiri described the scene he witnessed during a recent trip to northeastern Kenya.

“While it’s common to see dead livestock by the roadside... this time, they have not been hit by passing vehicles: They have died from thirst and starvation and died in large numbers,” he said.

“The drought is widespread, severe and likely to grow worse.”

Food aid is being distributed across an arid swathe of Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia where malnutrition rates are high and some 13 million people are at risk of severe hunger in the first quarter of this year.

‘Catastrophe’ 

The UN children’s agency meanwhile assesses that as many as 20 million people in those three countries, plus Eritrea, will need water and food assistance over the next six months.

Mohamed Fall, UNICEF’s regional director for eastern and southern Africa, said the situation was particularly dire for children and families.

Nearly 5.5 million children in the four countries are threatened by acute malnutrition, while 1.4 million risked falling into severe acute malnutrition, which can lead to death.

“UNICEF fears this number will increase by 50 per cent if rains don’t come in the next three months,” Fall told reporters in Geneva via video-link.

“The needs are massive and urgent, and they are quickly outpacing the available funds to respond,” he said.

“We need to act now to prevent a catastrophe.”

According to WFP, some 5.7 million already need food assistance in southern and southeastern Ethiopia, including half-a-million malnourished children and mothers.

In Somalia, the number of people classified as seriously hungry is expected to rise from 3.5 million to 4.6 million by May unless urgent interventions are taken.

Another 2.8 million people need assistance in south-eastern and northern Kenya, where a drought emergency was declared in September.

WFP said $327 million was required to respond to immediate needs over the next six months and support pastoral communities to become more resilient against recurring climate shocks.

UNICEF meanwhile is appealing for $123 million to cover life-saving needs in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and Kenya through to the end of June.

In 2011, failed rains led to the driest year since 1951 in arid regions of Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Uganda.

Experts say extreme weather events are happening with increased frequency and intensity due to climate change — with Africa, which contributes the least to global warming, bearing the brunt.

Trudeau vows to end spreading trucker protest

By - Feb 08,2022 - Last updated at Feb 08,2022

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has vowed to bring an end to a trucker protest still paralysing the Canadian capital on Tuesday — in a movement against Covid restrictions fast becoming a rallying cry for far-right and anti-vaccine groups.

Emerging from a week of Covid-19 isolation to address an emergency debate in the House of Commons late Monday, a visibly frustrated Trudeau declared: “It has to stop.”

Trudeau’s foreign minister, Melanie Joly, doubled down Tuesday morning, warning that while the truckers — whose demonstration is in its second week — have a “right to express themselves”, authorities would not tolerate a continued “occupation” of the capital.

“This situation will be dealt with,” she told reporters.

Struggling to tame the boisterous trucker movement that has prompted a state of emergency in Ottawa, Trudeau conceded on Monday that the “pandemic has sucked for all Canadians”.

“But Canadians know the way to get through it is continuing to listen to science, continuing to lean on each other,” he added, pledging unspecified federal support for local authorities.

Federal police have already deployed on the streets of the capital, as demonstrators waving Canadian flags and anti-Trudeau slogans dug in.

Under a light snowfall, the truckers warmed themselves by open pit fires and played street hockey.

A court on Monday ordered their incessant loud honking to stop — so they have turned instead to revving the engines of their big rigs.

The “Freedom Convoy” began in January in western Canada — launched by truckers angry with requirements to either be vaccinated, or to test and isolate, when crossing the US-Canadian border.

Protester Martin Desforges, 46, told AFP he was determined to stay “until the end”, which organisers said would come only when all pandemic restrictions are lifted.

“I’m against wearing a mask, all distancing measures and restaurant closures,” he told AFP.

“Getting vaccinated should be a decision between a person and their doctor,” echoed fellow protester John Hawley-Wight, “not the government”.

More than 80 per cent of Canadians five years or older are fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

Vaccine mandates for travellers are set by the federal government, but most other Covid measures are the responsibility of provincial authorities.

Only one province, Saskatchewan, has so far announced an imminent lifting of all pandemic restrictions. But others have started easing what are among the most stringent measures in the world, as hospitalisations start to trend downward.

 

‘Living in fear’ 

 

From the original opposition to vaccine requirements for truckers, the movement has morphed into a broader protest against Covid-19 health restrictions and Trudeau’s Liberal government, and put a spotlight on pandemic curbs around the world.

Inspired by the Canada protests, a convoy of trucks and campervans blocked streets near New Zealand’s parliament in Wellington Tuesday to protest against Covid restrictions and vaccinations at home.

Calls have multiplied on social media for similar rallies in Europe and the United States.

According to a Leger poll, 44 per cent of vaccinated Canadians “sympathise with the concerns and frustrations” voiced by the truckers.

Back in Ottawa, main opposition Conservative interim leader Candice Bergen sided with the demonstrators, calling them “passionate, patriotic and peaceful”.

They’ve also received support from former US president Donald Trump and several Republican lawmakers, as well as billionaire Elon Musk.

Ottawa’s police chief said the protesters had received funding from US sources. After GoFundMe ended a trucker fundraising campaign, citing violence, another popped up on GiveSendGo that had raised more than $5 million as of Monday night.

The mayor of Ottawa, Jim Watson, has urged tougher policing to “end this siege” that has infuriated local residents with incessant honking and diesel fumes.

“The occupation has turned into an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods,” he said in a letter to Trudeau on Monday. “People are living in fear and are terrified.”

Protests in solidarity with the truckers were held in almost every major Canadian city over the weekend.

Key border crossings in Ontario and Alberta for Canada-US trade were also partially blocked by truckers and farmers, which Transport Minister Omar Alghabra warned on Tuesday could “have serious implications on our economy, on our supply chain”.

Prior to his address to parliament, Trudeau was facing accusations of underestimating the protest movement — dismissing it as a “fringe minority” and “a few people shouting and waving swastikas”, and refusing to meet with the group.

For Felix Mathieu, a politics professor at the University of Winnipeg, Trudeau had been sitting on the sidelines in hope the movement would “run out of steam” — but two weeks in, there was no sign of that happening yet.

 

Macron hopes for 'start towards de-escalation' in Putin talks on Ukraine

By - Feb 07,2022 - Last updated at Feb 07,2022

French President Emmanuel Macron meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Monday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday he hoped to make a start towards a de-escalation of tensions over Ukraine, as he met Russian leader Vladimir Putin for talks in Moscow.

Macron flew into Moscow at the start of a week of intense Western diplomacy aimed at easing fears of a Russian invasion of its pro-Western neighbour.

Sitting across a long table from Putin at the Kremlin, Macron said he was in Moscow to address the "critical situation" in Europe.

"This discussion can make a start in the direction in which we need to go, which is towards a de-escalation," Macron said, calling for "an answer that is useful for both Russia and for all the rest of Europe".

Welcoming Macron as "dear Emmanuel", Putin said Russia and France have "shared concerns regarding security in Europe" and hailed "how much effort the current French leadership is making" to resolve these concerns.

With tens of thousands of Russian troops camped near the Ukrainian border, Macron was the first top Western leader to meet Putin since the crisis began in December.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was due to meet on Monday with US President Joe Biden in Washington, as Western leaders look to maintain a united front in their biggest showdown with Russia since the end of the Cold War.

Russia denies invasion plans 

US officials say Moscow has assembled 110,000 troops near the border with Ukraine and is on track to amass a large enough force — some 150,000 soldiers — for a full-scale invasion by mid-February.

Russia insists it has no plans to attack and has instead put forward its own demands for security guarantees that it says would ease tensions.

Macron, who will go on to Kyiv on Tuesday for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, told reporters on his plane from Paris that he was "reasonably" optimistic going into the talks.

He did not expect a solution to the crisis in the "short term", he said, but he was ready to take Russia's security concerns seriously.

Moscow has accused the West, in particular Washington and NATO, of ignoring what it says are legitimate concerns for its security.

It is demanding a permanent ban on Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, joining the US-led alliance and that the bloc roll back its military presence in eastern Europe.

Macron, whose country currently heads the European Union has tried to position himself as the key EU figure in negotiations with Russia.

He is expected to try to push forward a stalled peace plan for the festering conflict with Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, and could make offers to Russia for consultations on arms control and NATO expansion.

Biden has reacted to the Russian troop build-up by offering 3,000 American forces to bolster NATO’s eastern flank, with a batch of the troops arriving in Poland on Sunday.

 

‘Most dangerous moment’ 

 

Britain said on Monday that 350 more British troops would be sent to the Polish border and Germany announced that another 350 of its soldiers would go to Lithuania.

“We are living, to my understanding, the most dangerous moment for security in Europe after the end of the Cold War,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told a joint news conference in Washington with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Questioned about US warnings of an imminent Russian invasion, Blinken denied Washington’s stance was alarmist, saying: “This is not alarmism. This is simply the facts.”

While Scholz is in Washington, his foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, was in Kyiv along with her Czech, Slovak and Austrian counterparts for a two-day visit.

Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told a joint press conference with Baerbock that Ukraine and its Western allies would never be divided.

“No one, no matter how hard anyone tries in Russia, will be able to drive a wedge between Ukraine and its partners,” he said.

Scholz himself will be in Moscow and Kyiv next week for talks with Putin and Zelensky.

Visits to Moscow by the British foreign and defence secretaries are also expected at the end of this week.

 

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