Tag: europe

  • NATO starts nuclear weapon drills in Europe

    NATO starts nuclear weapon drills in Europe

    NATO has begun its annual military drills involving nuclear weapons, a spokesman for the Western defence alliance confirmed on Monday.

    Up to 60 aircraft would be involved in the `Steadfast Noon’ exercise, which lasts until Thursday next week.

    The craft involved include modern fighter jets, but also surveillance and tanker aircraft as well as long-range B-52 bombers.

    This year, the manoeuvres are taking place mainly in the airspace over Italy, Croatia and the Mediterranean.

    A total of 13 alliance members, including Germany, were taking part.

    NATO Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg, said last week that Russia’s war against Ukraine was a reminder of the important role of nuclear weapons for deterrence.

    “Although it is a routine training exercise, “Steadfast Noon’’ will help to ensure the credibility, effectiveness and security of nuclear deterrence,” he said.

    NATO did not release any details about the exercise and the scenario that it involved.

    According to military experts, the manoeuvres are used to practice how to safely transport U.S. nuclear weapons on European soil from underground storage sites to the aircraft and mount them under the fighter jets.

    The training flights then took place without the bombs.

    NATO’s nuclear-sharing agreement provided for U.S. nuclear weapons to be stationed in Europe and to be dropped from aircraft of partner states in the event of an emergency.

    Although it has not been officially confirmed, U.S. nuclear weapons were known to be stored in northern Italy, Turkey, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany.

  • FIFA awards 2030 World Cup to three continents, Africa, Europe, South America

    FIFA awards 2030 World Cup to three continents, Africa, Europe, South America

    World Cup 2030 will be held across two continents Africa and Europe, TheNewsGuru.com can authoritatively report.

    Morocco, Spain and Portugal have been named hosts of the 2030 soccer World Cup, while Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay will host the opening matches to mark the tournament’s centenary, world soccer body FIFA said in a surprise announcement on Wednesday.

    According to FIFA, Morocco, Portugal and Spain was the sole candidate to host the tournament. FIFA were due to announce the hosts next year.

    The inaugural World Cup in 1930 was held in Uruguay and won by the hosts after they defeated Argentina in the final in Montevideo.

    This is the first time that the World Cup will be hosted across two continents, while it also marks the first time that the competiton will spread across three continents, with the involvement of South American nations of Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay.

    “The FIFA Council unanimously agreed that the sole candidacy will be the combined bid of Morocco, Portugal, and Spain, which will host the event in 2030 and qualify automatically from the existing slot allocation subject to the completion of a successful bidding process conducted by FIFA and a decision by the FIFA Congress in 2024,” FIFA said in a statement.

    “Additionally, having taken into account the historical context of the first-ever FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Council further unanimously agreed to host a unique centenary celebration ceremony in the country’s capital, Montevideo… as well as three World Cup matches in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay respectively.”

    While Portugal and Morocco have never hosted the World Cup, Spain last hosted the tournament in 1982.

    Pedro Rocha, President of the Management Committee of the Royal Spanish Football Federation, said they were excited to bring it back to the country, who won the World Cup in 2010.

    “I am sure that together with Morocco and Portugal we will organise the best World Cup in history,” he said.

    Portugal, who hosted the European Championship in 2004, have finally succeeded in the World Cup bidding process after failing to secure hosting rights for the 2018 and 2022 editions along with Spain.

    Fernando Gomes, the president of the Portuguese Football Federation, said: “Each of our countries brings a vibrant footballing tradition, unrivalled organisational experience and a capacity for innovation that will undoubtedly leave its mark on the future of the competition.”

    Morocco’s King Mohammed VI welcomed FIFA’s decision. The African nation stunned the world in Qatar last year when they became the first team from the continent to reach the semi-finals.

    “His Majesty King Mohammed VI… has the great pleasure of announcing to the Moroccan people that the FIFA Council has unanimously selected the Morocco-Spain-Portugal bid as the sole candidate to organise the 2030 football World Cup,” Morocco’s Royal Office said in a statement.

    Morocco will be the second African country to host the World Cup after South Africa in 2010.

    The decision comes days after Morocco was also chosen to host the 2025 African Cup of Nations, following the withdrawal of rival bids, and a month after an earthquake in the country killed nearly 3,000 people.

    Soccer plays a big part in Moroccan life, with its biggest teams often winning African club competitions and drawing packed crowds to large city stadiums.

  • NDLEA arrests Europe-bound teenage student with Meth consignment

    NDLEA arrests Europe-bound teenage student with Meth consignment

    Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, (NDLEA) have arrested a 19-year-old student, Nnamani Daberechi for attempting to export 7.2 kilograms of methamphetamine concealed in crayfish.

    The Director, Media and Advocacy, NDLEA, Mr Femi Babafemi said this in a statement on Sunday in Abuja.

    Babafemi said that the suspect was arrested at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport Abuja on his way to Europe for undergraduate studies.

    He said that the suspect was intercepted on July 15 during an outward clearance of passengers on Turkish Airlines flight TK 0624.

    “While being interviewed by operatives, Daberechi claimed he was a student on his way to Cyprus for studies.

    ” But upon a thorough search of his luggage, he was found in possession of 7.2kg of whitish substance neatly concealed inside a sack of crayfish.

    “A field test of the substance however proved positive to Methamphetamine, ” he said.

    In the same vein, operatives of the Tincan Port Command of the agency on July 11 intercepted 116.5kg consignment of Colorado.

    Babafemi who described the drug as a strong strain of cannabis was concealed in bags hidden in a heap of used vehicles parts.

    This, he said was on the floor of a container marked FCIU 8459700, bearing three units of used vehicles imported from Toronto, Canada.

    “Based on intelligence, the agency had requested for a 100 percent examination of the container which arrived the TICT terminal of the port on June 14.

    “A joint examination with the Nigeria Customs, DSS and other stakeholders on Tuesday July 11, led to the discovery of 233 parcels of the illicit substance.

    “It was stashed inside travelling bags on the floor of the container, covered with used vehicles spare parts.

  • Spain becomes 1st country in Europe to allow menstrual leave

    Spain becomes 1st country in Europe to allow menstrual leave

    Spain’s sexual and reproductive health law, which includes the right for women to take time off work when they have their period, came into effect on Thursday.

    The Gender Equality Ministry’s bill, put forward by the left-wing government, was approved by parliament in February.

    Since then, amendments were passed as part of the new law.

    Barriers have been removed which make access to abortions and changing the gender of trans people easier.

    After the parliamentary vote in February, Equality Minister Irene Montero spoke of a “historic day for the advancement of feminist rights.”

    Menstrual leave is not a common regulation.

    There is no comparable provision in German law.

    In Taiwan, women can only stay at home for three days a year, and they then only get 50 per cent of their salary.

    In South Korea, employers have to give their female employees one day off a month if they make a request, but the law does not regulate who pays the employee’s salary.

    To take menstrual leave, female workers in Spain require a doctor’s note.

    The duration of the leave from work is in principle unlimited.

    According to the law, it depends on how severe the menstrual pain is and how long it lasts.

    The costs are covered by the state.

  • FIFA threatens not to broadcast women’s World Cup in Europe

    FIFA threatens not to broadcast women’s World Cup in Europe

    FIFA has threatened not to broadcast the 2023 women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand this summer, to five big European countries due to disagreements on media rights.

    “The offers from broadcasters, mainly in the ‘Big 5’ European countries, are still very disappointing and simply not acceptable,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said in a statement.

    Infantino didn’t name the countries, but according to dpa information, Germany is among them.

    Germany’s defeat to England at the women’s Euro 2022 final was the most watched programme on German television in 2022, with 17,952 million viewers.

    He said that “should the offers continue not to be fair (towards women and women’s football), we will be forced not to broadcast the FIFA Women’s World Cup into the ‘Big 5′ European countries.”

    FIFA said the viewing figures of the women’s World Cup are 50 to 60 per cent of the men’s tournament, yet the broadcasters’ offers in the major European countries for the women’s event are 20 to 100 per cent lower.

    Infantino added that the time difference between Europe and the two host countries shouldn’t be an excuse.

    “It doesn’t make any economic sense because the viewing figures are there.

    “Maybe, because it is in Australia and New Zealand, it’s not played on prime-time in Europe, but still, it is played at 9am or 10am, so it is quite a reasonable time,” he said.

    Infantino said that FIFA “did our part” by raising the prize money to $152 million, three times the amount paid in 2019 and 10 times more than in 2015.

  • Europe must not become U.S. follower in Taiwan Conflict – Macron

    Europe must not become U.S. follower in Taiwan Conflict – Macron

    French President Emmanuel Macron pointed to the risks Europe faces in the conflict over Taiwan in an interview published on Monday following a three-day state visit to China.

    “The worse thing would be to think that we Europeans must become followers on this topic and take our cue from the U.S. agenda and a Chinese overreaction,” he said.

    The interview was conducted earlier on Friday and published by the French newspaper Les Echos.

    “Europe should avoid falling into the trap of being caught in a foreign crisis.

    “Europe faced the threat of becoming a vassal between the United States and China, while it could instead be a third pole,” Macron said.

    The French president’s comments drew a heated reaction in Germany from across the political spectrum.

    Norbert Röttgen, a foreign policy spokesman for the opposition conservative CDU, told the mass-circulation Bild newspaper: “Macron appears to have taken leave of his senses.”

    He accused him of dividing and weakening Europe with naïve and dangerous rhetoric.

    Bijan Djir-Sarai, general secretary of the liberal FDP, a junior government partner, said the position taken up by Macron was not a sound strategy for Europe, as the US and Europe should work together.

    Speaking to the Tagesspiegel, Metin Hakverdi of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s centre-left SPD said: “It is a serious mistake to allow ourselves as the West do be divided in our dealings with Beijing of all things.”

    Dietmar Bartsch of the hard-left Die Linke opposition party backed Macron’s aim of European strategic autonomy, as long as it was linked to becoming a force for peace in the world.

  • Ukraine to resume electricity exports to Europe after 6 month halt

    Ukraine to resume electricity exports to Europe after 6 month halt

    Ukraine will resume exporting electricity to Europe after a six-month pause due to crippling Russian missile attacks on the country’s infrastructure, Energy Minister German Galushchenko, said on Friday.

    “The Ukrainian power grid had been functioning for almost two months without any restrictions on consumption and with a power reserve,” Galushchenko said in a statement, saying repairs had been a success.

    He said that exporting the surplus electricity would provide additional financial resources for the reconstruction of the destroyed and damaged energy infrastructure.

    An export of a maximum of 400 megawatts to the European energy grid had been agreed. Ukraine was connected to the grid shortly before the war began.

    However, the actual amount of electricity exported will depend on the needs of Ukrainian consumers, said Galushchenko, adding that their own electricity consumers “unquestionably” remained their priority.

    In the face of the all-out Russian invasion more than 13 months ago, Ukraine continued to export electricity to neighbouring ex-Soviet republic, Moldova, and the European Union from June until October.

    This was when targeted Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy supply began.

    In 2022, electricity generation in Ukraine fell by over 27 per cent due to the war.

    Europe’s largest nuclear power plant near Zaporizhzhya, which has been under Russian control since March, was shut down in September.

  • ICC: Europe’s lapdog in a theatre of the absurd – By Owei Lakemfa

    ICC: Europe’s lapdog in a theatre of the absurd – By Owei Lakemfa

    THE International Criminal Court, ICC, on March 17, 2023 added a comic dimension to the tragic war in Ukraine by issuing warrants of arrest for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Commissioner for Children’s Rights, Maria Lvova-Belova. The ICC, a body notorious for the persecution of people in the bad books of the European Union, EU, and its allies, is accusing Putin of “unlawful deportation of population…from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation”.

    It claims that: “There are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Putin bears individual criminal responsibility for the aforementioned crimes (and) for his failure to exercise control properly over civilian and military subordinates who committed the acts, or allowed for their commission…”. The ‘court’ is also accusing 39-year-old Ms Lvova-Belova of the same alleged crimes. The ICC also said “there are reasonable grounds to believe that each suspect bears responsibility for the war crime of unlawful deportation of population…from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation, in prejudice of Ukrainian children”.

    The ICC warrants do not disclose what it means by deportation of population. Does it refer to the Prisoners of War or the hordes of mercenaries Russia captured and moved to its territories? Or is it populations of Russian-speaking Ukrainians who were evacuated from war zones just like those moved or evacuated from Ukraine to neigbouring countries like Poland? Can Ukrainian President  Zelensky be accused of deportation of populations to other European countries?

    These are in the realms of speculation, but what is not speculative is that asking countries around the world to arrest the Russian President is a sick joke. Any country that tries it can be annihilated; it would be the same as arresting a sitting United States President. These countries are not superpowers for nothing. So, the ICC’s quixotic moves can only be in the service of its EU owners.

    I must, however, say that this is a new low for the ICC whose speciality is the arrest and persecution of African leaders who refuse to toe the path set for them by the West. The war in Ukraine is one that pitches Russia against the EU and the latter owns the ICC. Since its 2002 establishment, the EU has been responsible for 63 per cent of all ICC funds. In 2009, for instance, just five members of the EU: Spain, Germany, France, Italy and the United Kingdom, UK, paid 44 per cent of the ICC budget. In 2020, the main funders of the ICC were Germany, France, Japan, and the United Kingdom.

    So the ICC jumps when the EU asks it to do so; the only question it would ask is: ‘How high boss?’ Therefore, the ICC has neither independence nor self-esteem, and certainly does not command the respect even of its owners. Let me give an example. When the ICC in 2021 strayed into investigating Israel for its on-going genocide against the Palestinian people, its sustained murder of civilians, including children, and the continuous theft of Palestinian land, then UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson firmly told the ICC to back off as it was exceeding its bounds. Although the ICC probe also covered rockets fired by Hamas and other Palestinian groups into Israel,  the British Prime Minister in a letter declared that: “This investigation gives the impression of being a partial and prejudicial attack on a friend and ally of the UK.”

    Apart from the EU and some of its allies like Japan, plus the horde of African countries pressured by the EU to join the ICC, no self-respecting country has joined;  not China, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Iraq, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Russia, Sudan, Syria; not even the US  whose allies built the contraption. In fact, the US which has gone to war almost non-stop for two centuries and has most military bases in the world, would not allow even murderous  American mercenaries like those of Blackwater, to be tried outside its own courts.

    The same 2002 the ICC was born, the US Congress in warning it against investigating its war crimes across the globe, including places like Afghanistan and Iraq, passed the American Service-Members’ Protection Act. The Act banned financial assistance to any member country of the ICC which may want to hand over US personnel.  The law also authorised the US to use force to free any American that may be held by the ICC. The Americans went on to force dozens of countries to sign bilateral agreements not to handover over any American to the ICC. To counter the ICC’s joke, the Russia Investigative Committee countered with its own symbolic investigation of the ICC prosecutor and judges who issued the warrants of arrest. It said neither Putin nor Lova-Belova were criminally liable and that Heads of State in the world enjoy absolute immunity under a 1973 UN Convention.

    Almost all cases brought to the ICC concern Africans and their then-sitting Presidents like Omar al-Bashir of Sudan, Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and his then Vice President (now President) William Ruto, and Laurent Gbagbo of Cote d’ Ivoire. President Gbagbo’s case is illustrative of the way the ICC functions. There was an electoral dispute between Gbagbo and opposition leader Alhassan Quatara with each claiming to have won the elections. The latter’s rebel army with the backing of French and United Nations troops, marched on the Presidential Palace on April 11, 2011 and captured Gbagbo who became a Prisoner of War. But he was not treated as such neither was he accorded his right to be tried in his country. Rather, the foreign troops contrary to UN protocols on a President’s diplomatic immunity, bundled Gbagbo out of his country and deposited him in an ICC  jail for five years without trial while his rival was installed as the country’s President. He was subsequently subjected to a charade in the guise of judicial trial and after another three years, declared innocent.

    The ICC was simply used by the EU to remove an uncooperative African president, and after incarcerating him for eight years, set him free while his rival was in power in Cote d’ Ivoire doing the wishes of the Europeans, including subverting Africa’s move for a common West Africa currency. Even after he was declared innocent, the Europeans still prevented Gbagbo from returning home until their stooge was ready to cage him. The African Union, AU, realising that the ICC is primarily an instrument of neo-colonialism, on January 31, 2017 asked the 34 African countries who signed up to the ICC to make a collective withdrawal. Lives are being needlessly lost in Ukraine, what the world needs is a negotiated peace settlement not a clownish performance by an howling lapdog.

  • NDLEA intercepts Europe-bound Cocaine at Lagos airport

    NDLEA intercepts Europe-bound Cocaine at Lagos airport

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has foiled attempts to export large consignments of illicit drugs including cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and ephedrine to Dubai and Europe.

    The Director, Media and Advocacy, NDLEA, Mr Femi Babafemi said in a statement on Sunday in Abuja that the drugs were intercepted at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.

    Babafemi said that the drugs were discovered by NDLEA operatives despite various disingenuous modes of concealment by the desperate drug cartels.

    He added that all those behind the efforts to export the illicit drugs were arrested.

    Babafemi said top on the list of those so far arrested in connection with the seizures was a Nigerian based in Athens, Greece, Iwuozor Edward Chinedu.

    According to Babafemi, Chinedu was disembarked from an Ethiopian airline flight on Friday after NDLEA officers in the tarmac intercepted two bags during a secondary check at the foot of the aircraft.

    “When the bags were searched in the presence of Chinedu and other airport stakeholders, two big pellets wrapped with foil papers and some sprinkles of pepper were recovered from each of the two sides of one of the bags.

    “The pellets were used to construct false walls at the sides of the bag. The two parcels contained substances that tested positive to cocaine and heroin with a gross weight of 1.30kgs and 900 grams respectively.

    “Chinedu claimed he came to Nigeria three months ago to do a surgery, which he was not comfortable doing in Athens. He further claimed he was given the bag to deliver in Greece for a fee of two million naira,” Babafemi said.

    The NDLEA spokesman also said operatives at the export shed of Nigerian Aviation Handling Company of the airport on Jan. 30, arrested a pregnant woman, Mrs Gloria Onome.

    Babafemi said that the arrest came after 800grams of skunk were discovered concealed in two small radio sets she was sending to Dubai, United Arab Emirate.

    “On the same day, operatives also intercepted a consignment going to Congo Kinshasa containing 111 bottles of body cream that were used to conceal 24.50kgs of ephedrine, a chemical precursor and active ingredient to produce methamphetamine.

    “The cargo was later traced to a trader at Alaba trade fair complex, Ojo area of Lagos, Onyekachukwu Uduekwelu after the initial arrest of two freight agents.

    “Another housewife, Mrs. Victoria Okpara was arrested at her residence at 37 Obashola street, Ijesha area of Lagos on Jan. 27, following the seizure of 300 grams of skunk hidden in a bag of crayfish she was sending to Dubai, UAE through a freight agent,” he said.

  • Uzoho, Adeleye best ranked Nigerian goalkeepers in Europe

    Uzoho, Adeleye best ranked Nigerian goalkeepers in Europe

    Statistics website Tranfermarkt has rated Super Eagles goalkeeper, Francis Uzoho as Nigeria’s best shot-stopper in Europe this season.

    According to the online website, the Nigerian goalie has kept more clean sheets than any of his compatriots in Europe this season.

    The in-form Omonia Nicosia goalkeeper has kept eight clean sheets in 15 games, conceding 14 goals so far this term – the best return so far among the top Nigerian goalkeepers in Europe.

    Uzoho has already attracted interest in France as Ligue 1 side Reims FC have tabled a bid for him.

    Meanwhile, Hapoel Jerusalem goalkeeper Adebayo Adeleye is the second-rated Nigerian keeper in Europe after keeping six clean sheets in 15 games this season, conceding 16 goals, while Sebastien Osigwe is third in the ranking, having kept two clean sheets from three games so far this term for Lugano.

    Maduka Okoye is ranked fourth as he is yet to keep a clean sheet for Watford after two games this term.

    Okoye has fallen out of favour for both club and country. For the Eagles, he is behind Uzoho in the pecking order and in Watford, the 23-year-old has struggled for minutes finding the more experienced Austria international Daniel Bachmann more favoured by the Hornets backroom.

    Okoye, who is open to a move away from Vicarage Road, has also been linked with a return to the Dutch Eredivisie.

    “We’ll see what happens. My contract runs until 2027, so anything is possible. Maybe I will be rented out, or not, I don’t know yet,” Okoye told Voetbal Primeur.

    “The Eredivisie? Yes, that sounds like something to me. The clubs in the Netherlands know me well from Sparta and know what they can do with me. We’ll see. For now, I’m just focusing completely on Watford and the games we’re going to play.”

    Meanwhile, Eagles goalkeeper trainer, Ike Shorunmu, is pleased with the form of the goalies in Europe and has urged them not to take their foot off the burner.

    “The goalkeepers are doing well and I can only say that this form will make competition for places in the Eagles more competitive when they stay in form. The AFCON qualifiers are around the corner and I hope they maintain this form,” Shorunmu said.