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Unspoilt corner of Portugal fears arrival of high end tourism

Unspoilt corner of Portugal fears arrival of high end tourism
A view of the “Sublime” hotel in Comporta, Portugal. (AFP)
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Unspoilt corner of Portugal fears arrival of high end tourism

Unspoilt corner of Portugal fears arrival of high end tourism
  • Rapid development in the coastal region of Comporta has alarmed locals and environmentalists, who fear a repeat of the unchecked growth seen in Portugal’s southernmost Algarve province, long a package holiday destination

COMPORTA: Above the pine forests and dunes that stretch along the nearly deserted beaches of southwestern Portugal, cranes rise from building sites soon to be luxury hotels — a sign of the region’s contentious transformation into a playground for the wealthy.
Rapid development in the coastal region of Comporta has alarmed locals and environmentalists, who fear a repeat of the unchecked growth seen in Portugal’s southernmost Algarve province, long a package holiday destination.
Dubbed “the new Portuguese Riviera,” Comporta has drawn high-profile visitors including Oscar-winning actor Nicole Kidman and Princess Caroline of Monaco.
Real estate consultancy Knight Frank lists the region, located about an hour’s drive south of Lisbon, among the five most sought-after luxury residential markets worldwide.
“Comporta appeals to a wealthy clientele seeking nature, privacy and wellness,” the company wrote in a recent report.
French designer Christian Louboutin was among the first international figures to discover Comporta’s charm, opening a hotel in Melides, a small village of whitewashed houses with blue doors.
Princess Eugenie, whose uncle is Britain’s head of state King Charles III, splits her time between London and Comporta, drawn by the region’s relaxed lifestyle.
“I can go to the supermarket in sportswear, my hair in disarray, and nobody cares,” she told the podcast Table and Manners in 2023.

- ‘Overrun by tourism’ -

Environmentalists warn that development projects threaten the region’s unique mix of dunes, pine forests, gnarled cork trees and an endless patchwork of rice fields.
Campaign group Dunas Livres (Free Dunes) says eight “mega-projects” are under development, each covering hundreds of hectares, which will increase water consumption in a region already threatened by drought.
“These hotel complexes, with golf courses, swimming pools and a very large number of tourist beds, obviously consume a lot of water,” Catarina Rosa, a biologist with the group, told AFP.
“Comporta, a true natural treasure, is being overrun by tourism,” she added.
The transformation traces back to the collapse of the Espirito Santo bank during the 2011 debt crisis.
The Espirito Santo family were once the sole owners of the 12,000-hectare Herdade da Comporta estate but sold large parcels to developers following the collapse of their banking empire.
Since then, investors including French developer Claude Berda’s Vanguard Properties and US-based Discovery Land Company have launched private residences, hotel complexes and golf courses.
Discovery Land is behind the CostaTerra Golf and Ocean Club, planned to feature nearly 300 luxury villas.

- ‘Frenzy’ -

Local residents have mixed feelings about the changes.
Some have sold small properties for staggering sums, while others worry that skyrocketing real estate prices are disrupting their way of life or forcing them out.
A small house worth 20,000 euros ($23,000) two decades ago is now valued at one million euros, said Jacinto Ventura, a farmer and president of a local association in Melides.
“This real estate bubble, with no clear end in sight, has driven prices into a frenzy. And this frenzy has forced a large portion of the population to move away,” he told AFP.
Residents also complain about restricted access to public beaches and rising costs in local shops since the arrival of wealthy visitors.
While some are leaving the area, others are trying to hold on.
Belinda Sobral, 42, a former engineer who reopened her grandparents’ tavern in the nearby town of Grandola, said the problem is not tourism itself, but the pace of development.
“It has been too fast, without planning or respect for the locals,” the mother of two said.
“I want to preserve the identity of this place. Without memory, Comporta will become another Ibiza — a resort like so many others,” she added.


63 people killed in Uganda road accident: police

63 people killed in Uganda road accident: police
Updated 3 sec ago

63 people killed in Uganda road accident: police

63 people killed in Uganda road accident: police
  • Two buses collided on a major motorway in Uganda early on Wednesday, killing 63 people and injuring several others, police said

NAIROBI: Two buses collided on a major motorway in Uganda early on Wednesday, killing 63 people and injuring several others, police said.
The incident occurred on the Kampala-Gulu highway just after midnight, when two buses “met head-on during the overtaking maneuvers” police said in a statement posted on X.
One of the drivers swerved in an attempt to avoid collision, but instead caused “a chain reaction” which led to at least four other vehicles “losing control and overturning several times,” the statement said.
“As a result, 63 people lost lives, all occupants from involved vehicles and several others sustained injuries,” police said.
Those hurt had been taken to Kiryandongo Hospital and other nearby medical facilities, the statement said, but did not give any further details on the number injured or the extent of their wounds.


Bangladesh court detains army officers for landmark trial

Bangladesh court detains army officers for landmark trial
Updated 58 min 6 sec ago

Bangladesh court detains army officers for landmark trial

Bangladesh court detains army officers for landmark trial
  • It is first time that formal charges have been brought for enforced disappearances in Bangladesh
  • The men are accused of running a secret detention center during the tenure of the now-ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina

DHAKA: A Bangladeshi court remanded in custody on Wednesday 15 high-ranking army officers on charges of enforced disappearances and atrocities committed during the 2024 uprising that toppled the government.
It is first time that formal charges have been brought for enforced disappearances in Bangladesh, and the first time so many senior military officials have faced a civilian trial.
The men, including five generals, are accused of running a secret detention center during the tenure of the now-ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina.
All have served in Bangladeshi military intelligence or the feared paramilitary Rapid Action Battalion (RAB).
The army has said it will assist the judicial process, but the situation has been tense since the court issued arrest warrants earlier this month.
“They declared their allegiance to the law of the land and their respect for the judicial process,” chief prosecutor Tajul Islam told reporters.
“That was reflected in the cooperation they have extended.”
UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk, in a statement on October 15, said that the court process was an important step toward accountability.
“It is a significant moment for victims and their families,” Turk said.
The officers were brought by a prison van to the court, guarded by a heavy deployment of police.
Bangladesh is prosecuting former senior figures connected to Hasina – now a fugitive in exile in India – and her now-banned Awami League party.
Up to 1,400 people were killed in the clashes between July and August 2024 as the security forces tried to quash anti-government protests, according to the United Nations.
During Hasina’s rule, RAB forces carried out scores of killings, and the organization was sanctioned by the United States in 2021.
Hasina, 78, fled last year to New Delhi, where she has defied court orders to return to attend her ongoing crimes against humanity trial for ordering the deadly crackdown.
Her trial in absentia is in its final stages, with Hasina’s state-appointed defense giving closing arguments. The prosecution have demanded the death penalty for Hasina.
Hasina’s Awami League says that she “categorically” denies the charges.


Thailand’s former PM Paetongtarn quits as party leader

Thailand’s former PM Paetongtarn quits as party leader
Updated 22 October 2025

Thailand’s former PM Paetongtarn quits as party leader

Thailand’s former PM Paetongtarn quits as party leader
  • Paetongtarn Shinawatra served less than a year as prime minister before being sacked by a court in August over an ethics breach
  • The Shinawatra clan has for two decades been the key foe of Thailand’s pro-military, pro-royalty elite

BANGKOK: Thailand’s recently removed prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra resigned Wednesday as leader of the party founded by her father, ex-premier Thaksin, signaling the potential end of the family’s decades-long political dynasty.
Paetongtarn, 39, served less than a year as prime minister before being sacked by a court in August over an ethics breach related to her handling of a border dispute with Cambodia.
The Shinawatra clan has for two decades been the key foe of Thailand’s pro-military, pro-royalty elite who view their populist brand of politics as a threat to the traditional social order.
But the Shinawatra dynasty has faced a series of legal and political setbacks, including the jailing of 76-year-old Thaksin this year for corruption during his time in office.
The Pheu Thai party announced Paetongtarn’s resignation in a statement on Wednesday, quoting her as saying the move would allow the party to “undergo a complete overhaul.”
“My resignation will allow the party to upgrade so eventually we can win the election,” she said in the statement.
Paetongtarn added that she would remain a party member and “continue to work hard for our Thailand.”
Thaksin, who founded the first iteration of Pheu Thai in the late 1990s, was ousted in a 2006 coup and then went into exile for more than a decade.
Paetongtarn was the third Shinawatra to become prime minister, following her father and aunt Yingluck Shinawatra. She is also the last family member still active in politics.
Analysts say her departure as party leader could mark the end of the family’s dominance in Thai politics, though some believe the Shinawatras still hold sway over Pheu Thai.
“It doesn’t matter who leads Pheu Thai, it will always be run by the family in the backroom,” Yuttaporn Issarachai, a politics expert at Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University, said.
He added that her resignation was mainly to safeguard against legal challenges to the party, after she was removed from office by the court.


Western Balkans leaders meet in London for talks on migration and security

Western Balkans leaders meet in London for talks on migration and security
Updated 22 October 2025

Western Balkans leaders meet in London for talks on migration and security

Western Balkans leaders meet in London for talks on migration and security
  • Delegations from Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia are attending a summit held as part of the Berlin Process, launched in 2014 to keep the southeastern European countries working toward EU membership

LONDON: Leaders of six Western Balkan nations are due to meet British and European officials in London on Wednesday for talks on migration, security and economic growth in a volatile region where Russia seeks to wield influence.
Delegations from Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia are attending a summit held as part of the Berlin Process, launched in 2014 to keep the southeastern European countries working toward European Union membership.
The only Western Balkan nation to join the EU is Croatia, which became a member in 2013. Progress for the others has stalled, with countries at various stages of the journey, and in recent years tensions have flared between Serbia and Kosovo, a former Serbian province whose independence is not recognized by Belgrade.
The EU’s openness to accept new members has grown since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. There are concerns the war in Ukraine and Russia’s deepening confrontation with the West could spill over into a region still scarred by its own conflicts.
The UK is hosting the annual summit despite leaving the EU in 2020. It is also being attended by representatives of several European countries and the EU.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s center-left government is hoping to make progress on tackling the drug trade, bolstering Western Balkan nations’ defenses against interference from Moscow and — a particular British priority — curbing unauthorized migration.
Gangs have smuggled hundreds of thousands of people to the EU via the Western Balkans in recent years, and Britain says a quarter of migrants reaching the UK in small boats across the English Channel have traveled through the region.
Britain is hoping to build on a joint task force with Albania that has helped — through a returns agreement and local projects in areas the migrants come from — reduce the number of Albanian migrants trying to reach the UK, from 12,000 in 2022 to some 600 in 2024.
Britain also has sent law enforcement officers to the region to work with the EU border agency, Frontex, and it is seeking countries willing to host “return hubs” where rejected asylum-seekers could be held until they can be deported.
The leaders of Albania and Montenegro both expressed reluctance to have return hubs on their soil.
“When it comes to the hubs, or whatever they are called, I’ve said it, and I repeat — never in Albania,” Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said Tuesday at the Chatham House think tank.
Montenegro’s Prime Minister Milojko Spajic said his country is “not part of the migrant routes through the Balkans” because its railway infrastructure isn’t developed enough.
He said might be willing to accept a migrant returns hub if Britain agreed to “invest 10 billion euros into building railways.”


Youth anger in Ivory Coast as the 83-year-old president seeks a fourth term

Youth anger in Ivory Coast as the 83-year-old president seeks a fourth term
Updated 22 October 2025

Youth anger in Ivory Coast as the 83-year-old president seeks a fourth term

Youth anger in Ivory Coast as the 83-year-old president seeks a fourth term
  • Ignoring calls to step down and brushing aside concerns over his age, Ouattara has said he seeks a fourth term due to the country’s “unprecedented security, economic and monetary” challenges
  • Critics say the government has exploited legal provisions to weaken the opposition, and they allege unfairness in the final list of candidates

ABIDJAN: Placide Konan has been using his slam poetry shows to speak out against Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara’s bid for a fourth term in Saturday’s election.
The 33-year-old in the capital, Abidjan, told The Associated Press he is frustrated by hardship in the country. Despite being one of West Africa’s economic powerhouses and the world’s largest cocoa producer, it has growing inequality and a poverty rate of 37.5 percent. More than three-quarters of the population is under 35.
“People can no longer make ends meet, Konan said. “You have to be very lucky, or a bit of a magician, to be able to live comfortably,” he said of the vibrant port capital, which still basks in its role as host of the 2024 Africa Cup of Nations.
Analysts say the 83-year-old Ouattara is likely to win and extend his rule that began in 2011. Key opposition leaders have been disqualified, including former Credit Suisse chief executive Tidjane Thiam. A local court ruled that Thiam had French nationality, which Ivorian law does not allow for presidential candidates. He rejected the decision as foul play and gave up his French nationality in March.
Instead, Ouattara will face a weakened challenge from four candidates including Jean-Louis Billon, a former commerce minister, and Simone Gbagbo, a former first lady.
The election is the latest in a pattern of African long-term presidents on a collision course with mostly young citizens.
Concerns about possible violence
About 8.7 million people are registered to vote in the election amid fears of the violence that has been common around past ones.
The ban on key opposition leaders has prompted protests that authorities have tried to block. Hundreds of protesters have been arrested, with some sentenced to prison. The government has restricted public gatherings and deployed more than 40,000 security personnel. At least three people have been killed.
Critics say the government has exploited legal provisions to weaken the opposition, and they allege unfairness in the final list of candidates. The president has denied targeting the opposition.
The recent events “undermine stability at a time when (Ivory Coast), like other countries in West Africa, faces big challenges,” said Paul Melly, a consulting fellow with the Africa program at Chatham House.
Ouattara came to power following a political crisis in 2010 and 2011 after Laurent Gbagbo refused to concede defeat. About 3,000 people were killed in the unrest.
Ouattara’s pitch
Ignoring calls to step down and brushing aside concerns over his age, Ouattara has said he seeks a fourth term due to the country’s “unprecedented security, economic and monetary” challenges.
In a pitch to young people, Ouattara told a rally last week: “I have always been committed to offering the best to our youth so that you can start businesses, work, learn and be independent.”
He won a disputed third term in 2020 after he claimed that a 2016 constitutional change reset his years in office to zero. Nearly 100 people died after Ouattara’s victory, according to rights groups.
“Ouattara has almost exclusive control over the state apparatus,” said Séverin Yao Kouamé, a research professor at the country’s University of Bouaké. “He has been able to build power relationships with all those who opposed him, from which he emerged victorious.”
Trouble in the north
Ouattara’s supporters point to a relatively strong economy, a flurry of infrastructure development across the country and investments in the public sector on the back of increasing government earnings and foreign investment.
The country saw 6 percent economic growth in 2024, according to the World Bank.
“If you left Côte d’Ivoire to live abroad for a few years and came back today, you would not recognize your neighborhood,” said Assita Karamoko, a hairdresser in Abidjan who supports Ouattara, referring to the country by its French name.
A commuter train line in Abidjan is being expanded. In rural areas, more roads have been paved. What was once considered an Abidjan-centric economy is expanding.
“But it is still very hard to translate all of these into enough more jobs for young people. In terms of youth employment and business opportunity, there is still a long way to go,” Melly with Chatham House said.
Security is another challenge. Bordered to the north by conflict-hit Mali and Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast is under pressure to stop a push by armed groups into coastal West Africa. The two junta-led countries have severed ties with the regional bloc, leading to a breakdown in security cooperation.
Analysts regard the Ivorian military as one of the region’s most sophisticated, but as neighbors lose more ground to armed groups, Ivory Coast will have more to deal with.
“The security conditions are fragile and exposed in the north of the country,” Melly said. “That is not the fault of the Ivorian government, (but) that is the reality of the regional situation.”