ֱ

Turkiye in new bid to revive Somalia-Ethiopia talks

Turkiye in new bid to revive Somalia-Ethiopia talks
Demonstrators gather in a stadium during a demonstration in support of Somalia's government following the port deal signed between Ethiopia and the breakaway region of Somaliland at Eng Yariisow Stadium in Mogadishu on January 3, 2024. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 20 September 2024

Turkiye in new bid to revive Somalia-Ethiopia talks

Turkiye in new bid to revive Somalia-Ethiopia talks

ISTANBUL: Turkiye will hold separate talks with Horn of Africa rivals Somalia and Ethiopia to ease tensions before a new round of Ankara-hosted talks, the foreign minister said on Thursday.

Relations between Mogadishu and Addis Ababa have soured dramatically since Ethiopia struck a controversial maritime deal in January with the breakaway Somali region of Somaliland.

The memorandum of understanding gives Ethiopia — one of the world’s biggest landlocked countries — access to the sea, but Somalia has condemned it as an assault on its sovereignty.

Turkiye, which has been conducting shuttle diplomacy between Ethiopian and Somalian foreign ministers since the summer, mediated two rounds of talks in July and August.

The third round, which was supposed to take place on Tuesday, was canceled as Turkiye’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Ankara would rather meet them separately before another round of talks.

“Because there are some lessons we learned from the previous two rounds of talks,” Fidan told the Anadolu news agency. 

Fidan said he would directly talk to the two parties to “bring their positions closer” and help them reach a deal.

Under the Jan. 1 deal with Addis Ababa, Somaliland agreed to lease 20 km of its coast for 50 years to Ethiopia, which wants to set up a naval base and a commercial port.

Somaliland has said Ethiopia would give it formal recognition in return, although Addis Ababa has never confirmed this.

Somaliland, a former British protectorate of 4.5 million people, unilaterally declared independence in 1991, but the international community has never recognized the move. Addis Ababa had access to a port in Eritrea until the two countries went to war between 1998 and 2000. Since then, Ethiopia has sent most of its sea trade through Djibouti.

Fidan said he was hopeful about a deal between the two rivals.

“I believe we have brought the parties closer to a certain degree. Hopefully, we will continue this ... I am hopeful,” he said.


Belgium to recognise Palestine at UN General Assembly: foreign minister

Belgium's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, European Affairs and Development Cooperation Maxime Prevot take
Updated 8 sec ago

Belgium to recognise Palestine at UN General Assembly: foreign minister

Belgium's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, European Affairs and Development Cooperation Maxime Prevot take
  • “Palestine will be recognized by Belgium at the UN session! And firm sanctions are being imposed against the Israeli government,” Prevot wrote on X

BRUSSELS, Belgium: Belgium will recognize the State of Palestine at the United Nations General Assembly in September, foreign minister Maxime Prevot announced on Tuesday.
“Palestine will be recognized by Belgium at the UN session! And firm sanctions are being imposed against the Israeli government,” Prevot wrote on X.
In July, French President Emmanuel Macron said France would recognize a Palestinian state at the UN meeting, due to be held from September 9 to 23 in New York. More than a dozen other Western countries have since called on others to do the same.
 

 


New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won’t run for reelection in 2026

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won’t run for reelection in 2026
Updated 27 min 42 sec ago

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won’t run for reelection in 2026

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won’t run for reelection in 2026

WASHINGTON: Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York says he will not run for reelection next year, according to an interview published Monday night by The New York Times.
Nadler told the Times that watching then-President Joe Biden’s truncated reelection campaign last year “really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that.” He suggested a younger Democratic lawmaker in his seat “can maybe do better, can maybe help us more.”
Nadler, 78, is serving his 17th term in Congress. He was chairman of the House Judiciary Committee from 2019 to 2023, then served as ranking member on the panel after Republicans won House leadership. He stepped down from that role late last year.
Nadler’s decision to relinquish that spot came a day after fellow Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin announced his bid for the job and quickly amassed support from colleagues.
“I am also proud that, under my leadership, some of our caucus’s most talented rising stars have been given a platform to demonstrate their leadership and their abilities,” Nadler wrote then in a letter to Democrats that was obtained by The Associated Press.
Without naming names, Nadler suggested to the Times that some of his Democratic colleagues should also consider retirement.
“I’m not saying we should change over the entire party,” Nadler said in the interview posted Monday. “But I think a certain amount of change is very helpful, especially when we face the challenge of  Trump and his incipient fascism.”


President Donald Trump’s policies spark protests in multiple US cities on Labor Day

President Donald Trump’s policies spark protests in multiple US cities on Labor Day
Updated 42 min 56 sec ago

President Donald Trump’s policies spark protests in multiple US cities on Labor Day

President Donald Trump’s policies spark protests in multiple US cities on Labor Day
  • In New York, people gathered outside Trump Tower, which has become a magnet for protests and remains a prominent symbol of the president’s wealth, even though the president hasn’t lived in the Manhattan skyscraper for years

CHICAGO: Protesters took to the streets in multiple US cities on Labor Day to criticize President Donald Trump and demand a living wage for workers.
Demonstrations in Chicago and New York were organized by One Fair Wage to draw attention to the struggles laborers face in the US, where the federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour. Chants of “Trump must go now!” echoed outside the president’s former home in New York, while protesters gathered outside a different Trump Tower in Chicago, yelling “No National Guard” and “Lock him up!” Large crowds also gathered in Washington D.C. and San Francisco.
In New York, people gathered outside Trump Tower, which has become a magnet for protests and remains a prominent symbol of the president’s wealth, even though the president hasn’t lived in the Manhattan skyscraper for years. Demonstrators waved signs and banners calling for an end to what they said is a fascist regime.
In Washington, a large crowd gathered with signs saying “Stop the ICE invasion” and an umbrella painted with “Free D.C. No masked thugs.” Hundreds more gathered at protests along the West Coast to fight for the rights of immigrants and workers.
Multiple groups joined together at the protests in Chicago to listen to speeches and lend their voices to the chants.
“We’re here because we’re under attack. We’re here because our core values and our democracy is under attack. We are here because they are threatening to send the military into our streets,” Daniel Biss, the mayor of Evanston, Illinois, told the crowd in Chicago as he urged them to stand up for workers.
At one point, a woman got out of a vehicle with Iowa plates in Chicago to shout “Long live Donald Trump” over and over again, resulting in a brief confrontation as the protesters responded with shouts of their own until the woman left a few minutes later.
In the crowd, Ziri Marquez said she came out because she’s concerned about overlapping issues in the US and around the world, decrying anti-migrant attitudes in the US and the deaths of Palestinians in Gaza.
“I think especially, you know, when we’re dealing with low wages and we’re dealing with a stagnant economy, immigrants are largely used as a scapegoat,” said Marquez, 25.
Along the West Coast from San Diego up to Seattle, hundreds gathered at rallies to call for a stop to the “billionaire takeover.”
Groups supporting federal workers and unions marched in Los Angeles; San Francisco; and Portland, Oregon, in support of workers rights. Rally organizer May Day Strong said on its website that “billionaires are stealing from working families, destroying our democracy and building private armies to attack our towns and cities.”
They called on people to take collective action to stop the takeover.
Portland protester Lynda Oakley of Beaverton told Oregolive.com that her frustrations with health care, immigration and Social Security inspired her to join the march.
“I am done with what’s happening in our country,” she said.
King County Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda, who took part in a demonstration at Seattle’s Cascade Playground, told KOMO News that they wanted to send a message of workers above billionaires.
“Workers should be more powerful than the small billionaire class,” she said.

 


New Zealand to allow some wealthy foreign investors onto property market

New Zealand to allow some wealthy foreign investors onto property market
Updated 49 min 47 sec ago

New Zealand to allow some wealthy foreign investors onto property market

New Zealand to allow some wealthy foreign investors onto property market
  • The visas give residency to people investing a minimum NZ $5 million in New Zealand businesses over three years, or NZ $10 million over five years if the money is deposited in less risky investments

WELLINGTON, New Zealand: New Zealand will relax a ban on foreigners buying homes in the country to allow some wealthy overseas business investors a single high-value residential property purchase, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said Monday.
The move partially reverses a ban introduced in 2018 by a previous government to cool a runaway housing market fueled by property speculation. Holders of a residency “golden visa” reintroduced by Luxon’s government in April will now be able to buy one home worth at least 5 million New Zealand dollars ($3 million).
Luxon said the move balanced a desire to attract wealthy investors to the country with allaying house price fears. The change stops well short of a full reversal of the policy and would apply only to a small number of wealthy foreigners and a limited number of houses, he added.
The visas, which were intended to draw overseas investors to the country’s businesses, give residency to people investing a minimum NZ $5 million in New Zealand businesses over three years, or NZ $10 million over five years if the money is deposited in less risky investments.
Some visa holders had been ineligible to buy property because they didn’t live in New Zealand for at least six months of the year. That requirement will now be waived.
Luxon’s opponents decried the policy reversal Monday, saying it focused on attracting wealthy foreigners instead of solving domestic problems.
“Many Kiwis are already struggling to buy a home, and he has just made it worse,” opposition Labour housing spokesperson Kieran McAnulty said. “Homelessness is up, unemployment is up, and people cannot afford the basics at the supermarket.”
Push to attract wealthy foreign investors
The government hopes reversing the ban for some will boost economic growth by luring wealthy foreigners to the country during a period of recession.
“We’re a safe haven in a very volatile and uncertain world,” Luxon told reporters in Auckland on Monday, of his government’s pitch to investors abroad. Those investors would create jobs, he said.
Luxon denied the move would lift house prices which have fallen from a 2022 peak. He said applications so far for the residency visa that would allow a home purchase could result in up to NZ $1.8 billion in investment.
Officials have received just over 300 applications for the visas, representing about 1,000 people, government figures showed. Almost 40 percent of applicants were from the United States.
Luxon said the rule that houses must be worth a minimum amount meant that fewer than 1 percent of New Zealand’s houses -– about 10,000 homes -– would be eligible for foreign investors to buy. The majority of those home (about 80 percent) are in the largest city, Auckland, with around 10 percent in the popular skiing and tourism destination of Queenstown, on the South Island, where wealthy foreigners have snapped up bolt holes before.
The average cost of a home in July was NZ $767,250, according to figures from the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand. In Auckland, the average cost was NZ $975,000.
Housing crisis
The ban on allowing foreigners to buy property, which was introduced during a housing affordability crisis, prompted debate about the extent to which foreigners had contributed to ballooning prices and shut out domestic first-time buyers. Figures at the time showed about 3 percent of New Zealand homes were being sold to foreigners, although the number rose to 22 percent in Auckland.
Exceptions to the ban were made for Australians and Singaporeans under trade agreements.
Support for the ban was bolstered by anecdotal tales, never well-substantiated, of wealthy foreigners building doomsday-style bunkers in the scenic Queenstown region.
New Zealand, located in a remote part of the South Pacific, is a popular destination for migrants seeking distance from global tumult and applications to move there often increase during moments of turbulence, according to years of official data.
Luxon’s center-right party campaigned in the 2023 election on a pledge to reverse the ban. His negotiations as part of a coalition governing deal with other political parties, however, forced him to compromise on only a partial rollback.


North Korea’s Kim in China ahead of massive military parade

North Korea’s Kim in China ahead of massive military parade
Updated 27 min 28 sec ago

North Korea’s Kim in China ahead of massive military parade

North Korea’s Kim in China ahead of massive military parade
  • The North Korean leader's special train passed into China early Tuesday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported, citing the North's state-run radio service, KCBC

BEIJING: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was on his way to Beijing on Tuesday morning, having crossed the border into China aboard an armored train ahead of a massive military parade on Wednesday.
Kim will join Chinese President Xi Jinping and other world leaders including Russia’s Vladimir Putin for a huge spectacle in which China will showcase its military prowess, with troops marching in formation, flypasts and other high-tech fighting gear.
More than 25 leaders will also attend Wednesday’s parade centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square to mark 80 years since the end of World War II.
Millions of Chinese people were killed during a prolonged war with imperial Japan in the 1930s and 40s, which became part of a global conflict following Tokyo’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
China has touted the parade as a show of unity with other countries, and Kim’s attendance will be the first time he has been seen with Xi and Putin at the same event.
The North Korean leader’s special train passed into China early Tuesday, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported, citing the North’s state-run radio service, KCBC.
His appearance in China “formalizes the China-Russia-North Korea trilateral (relationship) to the public,” Soo Kim, a geopolitical risk consultant and former CIA analyst, told AFP.
Kim enjoyed a brief bout of high-profile international diplomacy from around 2018, meeting US President Donald Trump and then South Korean president Moon Jae-in multiple times.
But he withdrew from the global scene after the collapse of a summit with Trump in Hanoi, Vietnam, in 2019.
Kim stayed in North Korea throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, but met Putin in Russia’s far east in 2023.

Security around Beijing has tightened in recent days and weeks, with road closures, military personnel stationed on bridges and street corners, and miles upon miles of white barriers lining the capital’s wide boulevards.
Art installations with flowers, doves and an emblem showing the Great Wall of China with “1945-2025” have cropped up around the city, and on Tuesday morning Chinese flags flew in residential neighborhoods.
Officials have been tight-lipped over the list of hardware to be displayed at the parade, but military enthusiasts have already spotted significant new systems, including what is rumored to be a gigantic laser weapon.
Wednesday’s event caps a bumper week of diplomacy for President Xi, who on Sunday and Monday hosted a slew of Eurasian leaders for a summit in the northern port city of Tianjin aimed at putting China front and center of regional relations.
The club of 10 countries — named the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) — touts itself as a non-Western style of collaboration in the region and seeks to be an alternative to traditional alliances.
During the summit, Xi slammed “bullying behavior” from certain countries — a veiled reference to the United States — while Putin defended Russia’s Ukraine offensive, blaming the West for triggering the conflict.
Many of the guests from the Tianjin gathering, including Putin, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and several other leaders will join Xi and Kim for the parade in Beijing.