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Italy defense minister says it would be ‘absurd’ not to continue Ukraine aid

Italy defense minister says it would be ‘absurd’ not to continue Ukraine aid
Italy’s Minister of Defense Guido Crosetto and European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas arrive for a press conference during a Group of Five (GoF) meeting at the German Defense Ministry in Berlin on Nov. 14, 2025. (AFP)
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Italy defense minister says it would be ‘absurd’ not to continue Ukraine aid

Italy defense minister says it would be ‘absurd’ not to continue Ukraine aid
  • Crosetto said he had signed off on sending a 12th package of support for Kyiv
  • Salvini said this month that Italy could not continue sending money and weapons “for another 50 years“

ROME: It would be “absurd” for Italy not to continue or even increase its military and civilian aid to Ukraine, Italy’s Defense Minister Guido Crosetto said on Friday at a meeting with European counterparts in Berlin.
Crosetto said he had signed off on sending a 12th package of support for Kyiv, adding Italy would help Ukraine’s energy supplies during the winter months by sending electrical generators.
“It would seem absurd to me not to continue to do so and indeed not to increase, with all the possibilities we have, our aid to a nation that is doing nothing but defending itself from an absurd and incomprehensible attack,” he said.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has been a strong supporter of Ukraine, but some members of her right-wing coalition less so.
Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini said this month that Italy could not continue sending money and weapons “for another 50 years.”


19 migrants deported by US to Ghana have been moved to an unknown location, lawyer says

19 migrants deported by US to Ghana have been moved to an unknown location, lawyer says
Updated 6 sec ago

19 migrants deported by US to Ghana have been moved to an unknown location, lawyer says

19 migrants deported by US to Ghana have been moved to an unknown location, lawyer says
  • “We don’t know the location of any of them,” Dionne-Lanier said
  • Dozens of deportees have been sent to Africa from the US since July

ACCRA: Nineteen West African nationals deported by the US to Ghana have been moved to an unknown location, a lawyer for one of the deportees said.
Ana Dionne-Lanier, who represents one of the nationals, told The Associated Press on Thursday the group arrived in Ghana on Nov. 5 and were put in a hotel. They are protected from deportation to their home countries due to the risk of torture, persecution or inhumane treatment, she said.
“We don’t know the location of any of them,” Dionne-Lanier said, adding that neither she nor her client’s family has been able to reach him.
She said part of the group was sent by bus to an unknown border location between last weekend and Monday, while a second group, which included her client, was moved “under heavy armed guard” from the hotel around Wednesday.
The Ghanaian government didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Dozens of deportees have been sent to Africa from the US since July after the Trump administration struck largely secretive agreements with at least five African nations — including Eswatini, Rwanda and South Sudan — to take migrants under a new third-country deportation program.
The Trump administration’s deportation program has faced widespread criticism from human rights experts, who cite international protections for asylum-seekers and question whether immigrants will be appropriately screened before being deported.
The administration has been seeking ways to deter immigrants from entering the US illegally and remove those who already have done so, especially those accused of crimes and including those who cannot easily be deported to their home countries.
Faced with court decisions that migrants can’t be sent back to their home countries, the Trump administration has increasingly been trying to send them to third countries under agreements with those governments.
Last month, the Ghanaian rights group Democracy Hub filed a lawsuit against Ghana’s government, alleging that its agreement with Washington is unconstitutional because it wasn’t approved by the Ghanaian parliament and that it may violate conventions that forbid sending people to countries where they could face persecution.
In September, the US Department of Justice argued in a federal court that it had no power to control how another country treats deportees. It said that Ghana had pledged to the US it wouldn’t send the deportees back to their home countries.