Defiant French far right insists ‘we will win’ despite Le Pen ban

Defiant French far right insists ‘we will win’ despite Le Pen ban
Jordan Bardella, president of the French far-right National Rally political party, arrives at the RN party headquarters, a day after French far-right leader Marine Le Pen was found guilty of embezzlement of EU funds and barred from running for office for five years, in Paris, Apr. 1, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 01 April 2025

Defiant French far right insists ‘we will win’ despite Le Pen ban

Defiant French far right insists ‘we will win’ despite Le Pen ban
  • Addressing her lawmakers on Tuesday, Le Pen accused “the system” of rolling out “the nuclear bomb” in a bid to end her presidential hopes
  • “If they use such a powerful weapon against us, it’s obviously because we’re about to win an election“

PARIS: French far-right leader Marine Le Pen insisted Tuesday that her movement could still win 2027 presidential elections after she was banned from standing for office as part of an embezzlement conviction.
She was given a prison term and fine on Monday after being convicted of a fake jobs scheme at the EU parliament, a verdict that sparked an international echo including from US President Donald Trump.
But the most serious part of the conviction was a five-year ban — effective immediately — on standing for office, which eliminates her from the race.
Addressing her lawmakers on Tuesday, Le Pen, who considered herself the favorite in the 2027 election where President Emmanuel Macron cannot stand again, accused “the system” of rolling out “the nuclear bomb” in a bid to end her presidential hopes.
“If they use such a powerful weapon against us, it’s obviously because we’re about to win an election,” said Le Pen, 56. “We won’t let this happen.”
Le Pen has said she will appeal the “political decision,” though a new trial is not expected to take place for at least a year.
Should that fail, there is also a “plan B,” a candidacy by her protege and RN party leader Jordan Bardella, a 29-year-old with a slick television and social media presence.
Le Pen’s conviction sparked angry reactions from far-right figures across Europe but also from the Kremlin, X owner Elon Musk and Trump, while Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed concern.
“She was banned from running for five years and she is the leading candidate. That sounds like this country,” said Trump, comparing her conviction to the “lawfare” he says was waged against him before becoming president.
But the French government and prosecutors hit out against attacks on the judiciary and in particular against Benedicte de Perthuis, 63, the judge specialized in financial crimes who issued the verdict.
Analysts said the court decision could deepen France’s political crisis. Her National Rally (RN), which is the largest single party in parliament, can complicate life for Prime Minister Francois Bayrou, who does not have a majority in the lower-house National Assembly.
“Guilty,” French daily Liberation said on its front page, calling the ruling a “political earthquake.”
“No one is untouchable: she made a mistake, she must pay for it,” Nathanael Fichou, a waiter, said in the southern port of Marseille.
Nicole Prolhac, 78, said she was “annoyed” because Le Pen represented millions of French voters.
“But can we let someone who has committed embezzlement lead the country?“
Bardella said the party would seek to organize “peaceful” rallies this weekend.
Speaking to Europe 1 radio, Bardella said that Le Pen had been judged with “brutality and violence” and that her only mistake was to “have the capacity to take the national camp to victory.”
“Everything will be done to prevent us from coming to power,” he said.
He added that the situation could boost the fortunes of the RN.
“I tell the French do not lose hope. I think that what is happening will make millions of people who do not vote for the RN, vote for the RN,” he said.
“We are wounded. But we are far from being dead.”
Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin denounced “unacceptable” threats made against the judges while France’s prosecutor general Remy Heitz said the verdict was “not a political decision but a legal one.”
Le Pen took over the former National Front (FN) from her father Jean-Marie Le Pen in 2011 and has since sought to clean up its image. Her father, who died in January, was often accused of making racist and anti-Semitic comments.
After three unsuccessful presidential campaigns in 2012, 2017 and 2022, polls had shown Le Pen to be on course to easily top the first round with a chance of winning the presidency in the second round run-off.
She was given a four-year prison term by the Paris court. Two years were suspended and the other two would be served outside jail with an electronic bracelet.
Le Pen was convicted for a scheme where the party was found to have eased the pressure on its own finances by using European Parliament monthly allowances to pay “fictitious” parliamentary assistants, who actually worked for the party.
Twenty-four people — including Le Pen — were convicted, all of them RN party officials or assistants.


Oman woos Indian investors to Khazaen economic zone

Oman woos Indian investors to Khazaen economic zone
Updated 11 sec ago

Oman woos Indian investors to Khazaen economic zone

Oman woos Indian investors to Khazaen economic zone
  • Khazaen Economic City is the largest economic zone connected directly to Muscat
  • Omani and Indian officials expect to finalize a CEPA soon, ambassador says

NEW DELHI: Oman’s Khazaen free economic zone is promoting investment opportunities in its industrial and logistics sectors in India this week as the two countries finalize their comprehensive economic partnership agreement.

Khazaen Economic City, the largest economic development zone connected directly to Oman’s capital, Muscat, was established in 2023 as part of the sultanate’s strategy to reduce dependence on oil and gas. It is an integrated hub that includes a dry port, residential areas and commercial components.

Khazaen Economic City’s commercial affairs manager, Mohamed Al-Siyabi, said the aim was to highlight incentives the economic city could offer the Indian business community and the ways in which it could help them be successful.

“For that we are exploring how we can join hands to attract different (industries) and how these can join Khazaen Economic City and start doing business in the designated areas,” he told Arab News during a promotional event at the Omani embassy in New Delhi on Wednesday.

The trade event, which promoted industrial and logistics activities with a focus on pharmaceuticals and food processing, took place amid advanced talks on a bilateral free trade pact.

Indian Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal announced in July that the agreement was “almost finalized.”

Negotiations on the deal, which is expected to be a comprehensive economic partnership agreement, formally started in November 2023 with the first round in New Delhi and the second in Muscat.

When the talks concluded in March 2024, Oman sought revisions on market-access terms and the final signature was postponed.

“It’s now at the stage where the legislative and administrative systems of both countries will have a look at it, so hopefully we will come out with very positive news somewhere in the near future,” said Issa Saleh Abdullah Saleh Al-Shibani, the Omani ambassador to New Delhi.

“We have really developed the ecosystem in Oman to streamline the investment environment ... I think this comes with much keenness and eagerness that we have seen from the Indian community to invest.”

About 700 Indian companies have already invested in the sultanate and more are attracted by the opportunities it offers. Some 100 investors from across India took part in the trade event hosted by the Omani embassy.

While Oman is one of Delhi’s smaller Gulf Cooperation Council trading partners — trailing behind the UAE and , with bilateral trade volume accounting for about $10 billion — it remains strategically important.

Oman’s location, modern seaport facilities and stable environment make it a crucial logistics and trade hub that can play a role in promoting Indian businesses across the whole GCC, Waiel Awwad, acting secretary general of the India-Arab Countries Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture, told Arab News.

“(Oman) can play a good role in promoting business ... This will open opportunities for our Indian friends and businessmen to invest in the Arab world.”

Rushlene Kaur, vice president of Labotek Technologies, who took part in the promotional event, said she was especially interested in its space for green energy solutions and joint ventures with companies in Oman, especially as under the sultanate’s 2040 vision, the whole country will slash its consumption of fossil fuels.

“We are very keen to work on renewable energy solutions and setting up such solar power plants and renewable energy power plants in Khazaen,” Kaur said.

“We are looking to setting up a joint venture with companies in Oman, and looking for local manufacturing ... There are government tenders which have been floated, so we are very enthusiastic to be part of this ecosystem.”


Indonesia partners with UAE to train 10 million coders

Indonesia partners with UAE to train 10 million coders
Updated 22 min 12 sec ago

Indonesia partners with UAE to train 10 million coders

Indonesia partners with UAE to train 10 million coders
  • Indonesia has third-highest number of software developers in Asia-Pacific
  • Digital, tech developments part of government’s Golden Indonesia 2045 Vision

JAKARTA: Indonesia is partnering with the UAE to train 10 million young people in programming in the next three years, its Ministry of Communication and Digital Affairs has announced, as Southeast Asia’s biggest economy seeks to equip its youth with stronger tech skills.

Indonesia has the world’s third-largest youth population, with over 64 million people aged between 16 and 30, comprising almost a quarter of the country’s population. It also has the third-highest number of software developers in the Asia-Pacific, after India and China.

The 10 Million Coders initiative was launched earlier this week on the sidelines of the Indonesia-UAE Government Experience Exchange Forum in Jakarta, as the two countries seek to strengthen their digital and tech cooperation.

“We are launching this collaboration to strengthen our digital talent capacity, especially with this digital literacy program, which will train 10 million coders among Indonesia’s younger generation,” Nezar Patria, deputy minister of communications and digital affairs, told reporters.

“This cooperation seeks to strengthen the nation’s digital talent not only as users, but hopefully to become developers in new and emerging tech, such as artificial intelligence.” 

The Indonesia-UAE coding training program seeks to “empower Indonesian youth with the essential digital and coding skills for the digital age, providing them with the skills to meet 21st-century needs … and helping them unlock new opportunities in the fields of innovation and entrepreneurship,” the Emirates News Agency reported.

The initiative’s launch this week follows an April meeting between Indonesia’s Minister of Communications and Digital Affairs Meutya Hafid, and Omar Sultan Al-Olama, the UAE’s minister of state for AI, in Dubai, where they discussed ways to increase cooperation in developing tech talent.

In recent years Indonesia has captured the interest of global tech giants like Microsoft, which announced a $1.7 billion investment in April last year that includes AI-related skill development for 840,000 Indonesians and support for the country’s growing developer community. 

Indonesia has been developing its digital technology and information sectors as part of the government’s Golden Indonesia 2045 Vision, which seeks to make the nation one of the world’s top five economies with a gross domestic product of up to $9 trillion.


Russian strike kills 5 in Ukraine’s Kostiantynivka, police say

Russian strike kills 5 in Ukraine’s Kostiantynivka, police say
Updated 38 min 35 sec ago

Russian strike kills 5 in Ukraine’s Kostiantynivka, police say

Russian strike kills 5 in Ukraine’s Kostiantynivka, police say
  • Police said in a statement on the Telegram app that the strike happened around 10 am

KYIV: A Russian guided bomb strike killed five people in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kostyantynivka, near the frontline, the National Police said on Thursday.
Police said in a statement on the Telegram app that the strike happened around 10 a.m. (0700 GMT), killing two women and three men and damaging four residential buildings. Russian forces have come within 8-10 kilometers (5-6 miles) of the city, according to open-source mapping project DeepState.


London mayor slams Gaza ‘genocide’

London mayor slams Gaza ‘genocide’
Updated 50 min 26 sec ago

London mayor slams Gaza ‘genocide’

London mayor slams Gaza ‘genocide’
  • Sadiq Khan becomes most senior politician from ruling Labour Party to contradict govt stance
  • PM reportedly set to make announcement on recognizing Palestinian statehood this weekend

LONDON: London Mayor Sadiq Khan on Wednesday condemned Israel’s war in Gaza as a genocide, becoming the most senior politician from the ruling Labour Party to contradict the UK government’s stance.

In a report earlier this week, the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory said there are reasonable grounds to suggest genocide is taking place in Gaza.

The UK government has not said it believes Israel is committing genocide, and faces pressure over continued cooperation with and arms exports to the country.

“I think what’s happening in Gaza is a genocide,” Khan said. “When I see the images of the children starving — 20,000 children have starved because of the policies of the Israeli government — when I see the health system in Gaza collapsed, when I see the lack of supplies reaching people in need, when I see the famine that is man-made, when I read the interim judgment of the ICJ (International Court of Justice), and then see a UN commission report this week, I think it’s inescapable to draw the conclusion in Gaza we’re seeing before our very eyes a genocide.”

Britain had previously indicated that the question of genocide was a matter for international courts, with a case against Israel currently being heard at the ICJ in The Hague.

The UK government said it would recognize Palestine if certain conditions to alleviate the suffering of civilians in Gaza, including a ceasefire, were not met by the time of the UN General Assembly in New York on Sept. 23.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer will reportedly wait for visiting US President Donald Trump to leave the UK before announcing a decision on recognizing Palestinian statehood.

Labour MP Rosena Allin-Khan told Sky News on Wednesday: “We say ‘never again’ when we look at Bosnia and Rwanda, but here we are again, and it’s been live streamed, and we’ve all seen it. We can’t be bystanders to a genocide.”


UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme

UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme
Updated 52 min 15 sec ago

UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme

UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme
  • “A man who arrived in the UK by small boat in August was removed on a commercial flight this morning,” the UK interior ministry said
  • The French government also confirmed the removal

LONDON: Britain on Thursday returned the first migrant to France under a new “one-in, one-out” deal, both governments confirmed, as London bids to curb highly contentious cross-Channel small boat arrivals.
“A man who arrived in the UK by small boat in August was removed on a commercial flight this morning,” the UK interior ministry said.
The French government also confirmed the removal, with a source there telling AFP an Indian national had been deported from Britain.
The UK ministry called the move “another major step in the government’s action to dismantle the criminal networks” organizing the perilous Channel journeys and “profiting from human misery.”
“Further flights are due to take place this week and next week,” it added, noting the first arrivals from France through the new legal route agreed in July were expected “in the coming days.”
Under the scheme, the UK can detain and return small boat migrants arriving across the Channel if they are deemed ineligible for asylum, including those who have passed through a “safe country” to reach UK shores.
In return, London will accept an equal number of migrants from France who can apply for a UK visa via an online platform under the pilot scheme, which came into force in August and is set to run until June 2026.
Embattled Prime Minister Keir Starmer agreed the scheme with French President Emmanuel Macron just over two months ago, as the UK leader tries to deter the politically toxic crossings.
Tens of thousands of migrants have arrived annually on the shores of southeast England in recent years, to growing domestic anger and helping to fuel the rise of Brexit figurehead Nigel Farage’s hard-right Reform UK Party.
It has led in the polls in Britain for much of this year.
The journeys across one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes have also repeatedly proved fatal for those trying to reach the UK.
At least 23 people have died so far this year in incidents linked to crossings in overcrowded dinghies, according to an AFP tally based on official French data.
Thursday’s removal comes days after the High Court in London temporarily blocked the planned deportation of an Eritrean migrant, to the ire of the UK government.
More than 90 migrants who recently arrived to the UK on small boats have been detained for deportation to France, according to charities.
France will make its first repatriations from Saturday, its interior ministry has previously said.