Tunisians rally for release of women detained over criticism of Saied

Tunisian journalists carry placards and shout slogans during a demonstration in Tunis on May 27, 2024. (AFP)
Tunisian journalists carry placards and shout slogans during a demonstration in Tunis on May 27, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 14 August 2024
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Tunisians rally for release of women detained over criticism of Saied

Tunisian journalists carry placards and shout slogans during a demonstration in Tunis on May 27, 2024. (AFP)
  • Supporters of the Free Destourian Party also gathered near the Tunisian women’s ministry earlier in the day, calling for the release of the party’s leader, Abir Moussi, who has been jailed since October

TUNIS: Hundreds of Tunisians demonstrated Tuesday in the capital Tunis marking National Women’s Day and demanding the release of women detained for criticizing President Kais Saied, an AFP reporter saw.
Since a sweeping power grab in 2021 by Saied, a number of his critics, including women, have been arrested.
“Unfortunately, today is a day of anger for the women jailed because of their political views (and) their activism in society,” said Karima Brini, leader of the Women and Citizenship Association.
“We are angry and we demand freedom for the detained women.”
Chaima Issa, an opposition figure and member of the National Salvation Front coalition who was also imprisoned under Saied, deplored the arrests and conditions behind bars.
“I can only be in solidarity with them, because I experienced what they are currently experiencing,” she said, joining the rally that drew together factions from across the political spectrum.
Supporters of the Free Destourian Party also gathered near the Tunisian women’s ministry earlier in the day, calling for the release of the party’s leader, Abir Moussi, who has been jailed since October.
A staunch critic of Saied, Moussi was sentenced to two years in prison last week, two days after she submitted her candidacy for the presidential elections scheduled for October 6.
She was sentenced under Decree 54, a law enacted by Saied in 2022 to combat “false news.”
In July, lawyer Sonia Dahmani was sentenced to one year in prison over comments she had made about Tunisia in response to a TV pundit’s claim that sub-Saharan migrants were seeking to settle in the country.
She was also sentenced under Decree 54 after a court said her comments came in response to remarks by Saied.
In May, Saadia Mosbah, head of the Mnemty anti-racism association, was arrested and detained, hours after Saied lashed out at organizations helping migrants and called them “traitors and mercenaries.”
Mosbah has defended sub-Saharan African migrant rights after Saied said last year “hordes of illegal migrants” posed a demographic threat to Tunisia.
Rights groups have recently denounced an “authoritarian drift” and a “rollback” on freedoms in Tunisia, the birthplace of the Arab Spring uprisings.
Seeking a second term, Saied is set to face only two presidential challengers this fall after 14 hopefuls were rejected by the electoral authority and others were arrested.
 

 


Norway issues wanted notice for man connected to exploding pagers in Lebanon

Updated 46 sec ago
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Norway issues wanted notice for man connected to exploding pagers in Lebanon

Norway issues wanted notice for man connected to exploding pagers in Lebanon
The notice is part of a multi-country investigation trying to piece together how thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies were rigged to explode and their trail to Lebanon
Hezbollah and the Lebanese government have blamed Israel for the coordinated two-day attacks

COPENHAGEN: Norway issued an international wanted notice on Thursday for a man linked to a Bulgaria-based company that may have been involved in the dissemination of exploding electronic devices to the militant Hezbollah group that killed dozens and wounded thousands in Lebanon last week.
The notice is part of a multi-country investigation trying to piece together how thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies were rigged to explode and their trail to Lebanon.
Hezbollah and the Lebanese government have blamed Israel for the coordinated two-day attacks, which killed at least 39 people and wounded more than 3,000, including civilians. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.
“We have on behalf of the Oslo police sent out an international wanted notice today,” Åste Dahle Sundet, a spokeswoman for Norway’s National Criminal Investigation Service told The Associated Press.
The agency declined to name the man or provide his nationality. All that is known is that he was listed as working for a Norwegian company.
Norwegian news agency NTB wrote on Thursday that the 39-year-old man had traveled to the United States last week but vanished after arriving there. The man was subsequently reported missing on Wednesday, one of Norway’s major tabloids VG wrote, citing police.
The CEO of the man’s employer, Norway-based DN Group, told the AP in an email that the company had “tried to contact our employee without success since we first heard the serious allegations about his alleged private activity, which we did not know about and has nothing to do with us as a company.”
“We haven’t heard from him since (last) Wednesday, and we don’t know where he is. This worries us,” DN Group CEO Amund Djuve said.
Djuve also did not give the man’s name.
The man holds a Norwegian passport and has lived in Norway for 12 years but was born in another country, NTB reported. The news agency described him as one of the founders of the Bulgarian company that was allegedly connected to supplying the pagers to Hezbollah.
The Bulgarian company is not the only firm implicated in the pagers’ journey to Lebanon.
Last week, Taiwanese firm Gold Apollo, whose name appeared on the pagers, said it had authorized Budapest, Hungary-based BAC Consulting to use its brand for the devices that exploded, but insisted the Hungarian company was responsible for their manufacturing and design.
Hungary’s Special Service for National Security told the AP last week that the CEO of BAC Consulting had been interviewed “several times” as part of an investigation, but that they believed the company had not taken part in rigging the devices to explode.
“The results of the investigation so far have made it clear that the so-called pagers have never been on Hungarian territory, and that no Hungarian company or Hungarian expert was involved in their manufacture or modification!” the agency said in an email.
Norway’s domestic security agency, known by its acronym PST, earlier told the AP that it was checking whether a Norwegian national had any connection with the company that sold the pagers that exploded in Lebanon.
PST stressed that it was not a formal investigation and that there was currently no concrete suspicion against the man.

Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution

Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution
Updated 2 min 33 sec ago
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Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution

Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution
  • Rashad Al-Alimi calls for global designation of Houthis as terrorist organization to deter militia’s attacks on international shipping lanes
  • ‘Outcome of this decisive battle … will determine our freedom and dignity, as well as the future of all Yemeni men and women,’ he adds

AL-MUKALLA: The chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, pledged to defeat the Houthi militia and end their rule, as the country marked the 62nd anniversary of its Sept. 26 Revolution.

In a televised speech on the eve of the commemoration of the 1962 uprising, he accused the Houthis of attempting to restore the Zaidi Imamate that ruled Yemen before the revolution, and promised to defeat them and foil Iran’s plans for the country.

“At the forefront of our national tasks and priorities is the completion of the country’s liberation from terrorism, slavery, tyranny, ignorance and injustice brought about by the new imamates,” Al-Alimi said.

“We must defeat the Iranian project, and the outcome of this decisive battle, in which we have no choice but to win, will determine our freedom and dignity, as well as the future of all Yemeni men and women.”

The Yemeni leader thanked Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman for the support they have provided to the Yemeni people, the transitional council and state bodies, and for facilitating peace talks in the hope of ending the war in the country.

The revolution, which began on Sept. 26, 1962, resulted in the overthrow of the Zaidi Imamate rulers who had controlled northern Yemen for centuries, paving the way for the establishment of the Yemen Arab Republic. Many Yemenis believe the Houthis share similar radical ideologies as the Zaidi Imamate and wish to revive its era, during which rule over the country was limited to Hashemites.

The Houthis have attempted to suppress celebrations of the anniversary of the revolution in areas under their control. They have abducted at least 250 people over the past few days for commemorating the event online or encouraging others to do so. They also deployed forces and armored vehicles in Sanaa, Hodeidah, Taiz, Ibb, Dhamar and other areas to to crack down on any revolutionary rallies.

The Houthis say those who celebrate the revolution are being used by the US and other opponents to put pressure on the militia to halt its attacks on international shipping.

The leader of the group, Abdul Malik Al-Houthi, on Thursday vowed that attacks on vessels in waters off the coast of Yemen will continue until Israel ends its war in the Gaza Strip. He also said his forces would defend Hezbollah against Israeli attacks in Lebanon.

“We will continue to support Gaza and Palestine in general, as well as Lebanon and Hezbollah, without hesitation,” he said during a televised speech.

The Houthis say their attacks on ships using missiles, unmanned aerial vehicles and drone boats, which began in November, target Israeli, American and British ships in an attempt to put pressure on authorities in Israel to halt their military operations in Gaza.

However, critics say the militia is using outrage in Yemen over the deaths of thousands of civilians in Gaza to gain public support, recruit new fighters and divert attention from its failures to address crumbling services and pay public-sector salaries.

Speaking in the US on Wednesday during an event organized by the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations, Al-Alimi called for the Houthis to be globally designated as a terrorist organization in an attempt to deter them from undermining the security of international shipping lanes. He warned that the group would continue to attack ships even if the war in Gaza ended.

“After using the Red Sea as a weapon, Iran and its affiliate militias will continue to blackmail international trade, waterways and the environment in the future,” he said.


‘Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel’: Palestinian president

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
Updated 17 min 25 sec ago
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‘Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel’: Palestinian president

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
  • ‘Israel must stop the war in Lebanon and Palestine,’ Mahmoud Abbas tells UN General Assembly
  • ‘The entire world is responsible for what’s happening to our people in Gaza and the West Bank’

LONDON: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday urged the international community to stop sending weapons to Israel in order to end the war in Gaza and the occupation of the West Bank.

“Stop this crime. Stop it now. Stop killing children and women. Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel,” he told the UN General Assembly.

“This madness can’t continue. The entire world is responsible for what’s happening to our people in Gaza and the West Bank.”

Abbas’s comments come after the Health Ministry in Gaza on Thursday said at least 41,534 people have been killed in the war, now in its 12th month.

He said the Israeli government took advantage of the Hamas attack last October to launch an all-out genocide against Gaza. 

“It committed and continues to commit war crimes, as acknowledged by the international community,” Abbas added. 

He said Israel is now launching “a new aggression on the Lebanese people,” who are being “subjected to a war of genocide.”

He added: “Israel must stop the war in Lebanon and in Palestine. We condemn this aggression, and we demand that it stops immediately.

“Israel has reoccupied the Gaza Strip in its entirety … Seventy-five percent of everything in Gaza has been fully destroyed.” 

More than 600 people have been killed since Monday in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, which follow nearly a year of cross-border fire with Hezbollah in parallel with the Gaza war.

Abbas called on the international community to impose sanctions on Israel, and said the country does not deserve to be a UN member. 

“The international community must immediately impose sanctions on Israel. The massacres, the crimes, the genocide that Israel has been perpetrating against our people since its inception in 1948 to this very day won’t go unpunished,” he said.

“Israel, which refuses to implement UN resolutions, doesn’t deserve to be a member in this international organization.”

Abbas called for a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, an end to attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the delivery of humanitarian aid throughout Gaza, and a full Israeli withdrawal from the territory. 

“We refuse the establishment of buffer zones or taking any part from Gaza,” he said. “We won’t allow a single centimeter of Gaza to be taken.

“The State of Palestine must shoulder its responsibilities in the Gaza Strip and impose its full mandate on it and jurisdiction on it, including the border checkpoints, especially the Rafah international border.”

He said the Palestinian Authority should have control over all Palestinian territories, and it would hold elections once the war is over. Hamas has governed Gaza since 2007.

Abbas concluded by saying: “Palestine will be free. It will be free, despite anyone who objects to that. Our people will live on the land of their fathers and grandfathers, as they’ve done for more than 6,000 years. They’ll continue their legitimate struggle for independence. The occupation will end.”


Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’

Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’
Updated 24 min 47 sec ago
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Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’

Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’
  • Rapid Support Forces, Sudanese Armed Forces have been in conflict since April 2023
  • More than 6.1m have been displaced and at least 15,000 killed, according to UN figures

NEW YORK CITY: Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, Sudan’s army chief and chairman of the Transitional Sovereignty Council, on Thursday described the rebel Rapid Support Forces as a “terrorist group” for committing crimes against the country’s people, including “ethnic cleansing, forced displacement and genocide.

Since the ongoing conflict broke out between the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces in April 2023, the paramilitary group has taken over the capital Khartoum and most of western Sudan.

The hostilities have killed at least 15,000 people and displaced more than 6.1 million, according to UN figures.

Addressing the UN General Assembly, Al-Burhan stressed his government’s commitment to protecting civilians and aid workers, as well as facilitating humanitarian assistance.

“We fully uphold international humanitarian law and measures geared towards the protection of civilians,” he said. “The protection of civilians is our responsibility.”

He said women and children “are being hit the hardest by violations committed in areas controlled by the militias. Some women and children have even been sold in marketplaces.”

Al-Burhan added that the council has been seeking a peaceful solution to the conflict. “So as to alleviate the suffering of our fellow Sudanese and to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance, we’ve opened our borders and airports,” he said. We’ve lifted all impediments to this aid being delivered.”

The Jeddah Declaration of Commitment to Protect the Civilians of Sudan — signed by the US, Saudi Arabia, and representatives of Sudan’s two warring parties in May 2023 — aimed to achieve a ceasefire and facilitate humanitarian aid distribution.


Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’

Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’
Updated 57 min 46 sec ago
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Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’

Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’
  • A statement carried by Algeria’s official APS news agency charged that Morocco had “engaged in various actions that threaten Algeria’s stability“
  • Algiers broke diplomatic ties with Rabat in August 2021, citing “hostile acts” by its neighbor

ALGIERS: Algeria said Thursday it was imposing visa requirements on Moroccans, accusing its passport holders of criminal activity, including “Zionist espionage,” in a new downturn in fraught relations with its neighbor.
A statement carried by Algeria’s official APS news agency charged that Morocco had “engaged in various actions that threaten Algeria’s stability.”
It accused Morocco of having “deployed Zionist espionage agents holding Moroccan passports to freely enter the national territory.”
It also said Morocco had been conducting “multiple networks of organized crime, drug and human trafficking, not to mention smuggling and illegal immigration” within its borders.
Earlier this month, authorities in the Algerian city of Tlemcen said they had arrested seven people, including four Moroccans, accused of belonging to a spy ring.
Algiers broke diplomatic ties with Rabat in August 2021, citing “hostile acts” by its neighbor, months after the kingdom normalized relations with Israel.
In 2020, then US president Donald Trump recognized Morocco’s annexation of the disputed Western Sahara in return for Rabat normalizing relations with Israel.
The border between Algeria and Morocco has been closed for 30 years.
But travelers from Morocco did not need a visa to enter Algerian territory — despite the lack of direct flights — and neither do Algerians to enter Morocco.
There was no immediate response from Rabat to Thursday’s move by Algiers.
Algeria said it was “committed to preserving ties” with the “brotherly” Moroccan people, and blamed the Rabat authorities for recent diplomatic rifts.
“The Moroccan regime alone bears responsibility for the current deterioration of bilateral relations due to its hostile and aggressive actions against Algeria,” it said.
The two countries remain at odds over the Western Sahara and alleged Moroccan support for the Berber separatist movement MAK in Algeria.
The Polisario Front, which is backed by Algiers, has campaigned for the independence of Western Sahara since its colonial ruler Spain pulled out in 1975 but the territory is largely controlled by Morocco.
The United Nations, which has had a peacekeeping mission in Western Sahara since 1991, regards it as a “non-self-governing territory.”
After French President Emmanuel Macron said in July that “the only solution” was a Moroccan plan to grant the territory autonomy within the kingdom without the option of independence, Algeria recalled its ambassador.
Algiers also accuses Rabat of backing the MAK movement, which seeks independence for the Berber Kabylie region east of the capital.
Morocco described the 2021 decision to break off diplomatic relations as “completely unjustified.”