Allies slam Trump’s ‘reciprocal’ tariffs but try to avoid trade war

Allies slam Trump’s ‘reciprocal’ tariffs but try to avoid trade war
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. (Reuters)
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Updated 03 April 2025

Allies slam Trump’s ‘reciprocal’ tariffs but try to avoid trade war

Allies slam Trump’s ‘reciprocal’ tariffs but try to avoid trade war
  • Italian PM says US tariffs are “wrong,” but vows to find ways to avoid trade war
  • Australia says US tariffs ‘not act of a friend’, Japan trade minister says they were ‘extremely regrettable’
  • British officials have said they will not immediately retaliate, Mexico's president said she would wait to take action

ROME/MEXICO CITY/SYDNEY/TOKYO: The sweeping new tariffs announced Wednesday by US President Donald Trump were met initially with measured reactions from key trading partners, highlighting the lack of appetite for a full-fledged trade war.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, seen as close to Trump, described the new 20 percent tariffs against the European Union as “wrong,” saying they benefit neither side, but suggested finding a way to avoid a trade war.

“We will do everything we can to work toward an agreement with the United States, with the goal of avoiding a trade war that would inevitably weaken the West in favor of other global players,” she said in a statement on Facebook.

“In any case, as always, we will act in the interest of Italy and its economy, also engaging with other European partners,” she added.

In Sydney, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Trump’s decision to impose a 10 percent tariff on Australia was “not the act of a friend,” but ruled out reciprocal tariffs against the United States.

Trump singled out Australian beef, which saw a surge in exports to the United States last year, reaching A$4 billion amid a slump in US beef production.

“They won’t take any of our beef. They don’t want it because they don’t want it to affect their farmers and you know, I don’t blame them but we’re doing the same thing right now,” Trump said in an event in the White House Rose Garden announcing tariffs on a wide range of US trading partners.

Australia banned US fresh beef products in 2003 due to the detection of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, otherwise known as mad cow disease, in US cattle. BSE poses a risk to human health and has never been detected in cattle in Australia.

Albanese said Trump had not banned Australia beef, but had imposed a 10 percent duty on all Australian goods entering the United States, equivalent to the US baseline tariff on all imports, despite US goods entering Australia tariff free.

“The (Trump) administration’s tariffs have no basis in logic and they go against the basis of our two nations’ partnership. This is not the act of a friend,” Albanese told reporters.

Australia would not impose reciprocal tariffs as this would increase prices for Australian households, he added.

“We will not join a race to the bottom that leads to higher prices and slower growth,” Albanese said.

In Tokyo, Japan’s trade minister said he told his US counterpart that sweeping new tariffs including a 24-percent levy on Japanese imports were “extremely regrettable.”

Japanese firms are the biggest investors into the United States but Tokyo has failed in its attempts to secure exemption from Trump’s tariffs.

“I have conveyed that the unilateral tariff measures taken by the United States are extremely regrettable, and I have again strongly urged (Washington) not to apply them to Japan,” Yoji Muto, trade and industry minister, told reporters.

He said he made the comments in a conversation with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick before Trump’s announcement of new across-the-board tariffs.

“I also explained in detail how the US tariffs would adversely affect the US economy by undermining the capacity of Japanese companies to invest in the United States,” said Muto.

“We had a frank discussion on how to pursue cooperation in the interest of both Japan and the United States that does not rely on tariffs,” Muto said.
Government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi also said that the measures may contravene World Trade Organization (WTO) rules and the two countries’ trade treaty.

“We have serious concerns as to consistency with the WTO agreement and Japan-US trade agreement,” chief cabinet secretary Hayashi told reporters.

‘Nobody wants a trade war’

The fact that the tariffs fell most heavily on parts of the world sleeping through the night appeared to at least temporarily delay some of the potential outrage.

Trump presented the import taxes, which he calls “reciprocal tariffs” and range from 10 percent to 49 percent, in the simplest terms: the US would do to its trading partners what he said they had been doing to the US for decades.
“Taxpayers have been ripped off for more than 50 years,” he said. “But it is not going to happen anymore.”
The president promised that “Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country.” He framed it not just as an economic issue, but a question of national security that threatens “our very way of life.”

Shortly after Trump’s announcement, the British government said the United States remains the UK’s “closest ally.”
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the UK hoped to strike a trade deal to “mitigate the impact” of the 10 percent tariffs on British goods announced by Trump.
“Nobody wants a trade war and our intention remains to secure a deal,” said Reynolds. “But nothing is off the table and the government will do everything necessary to defend the UK’s national interest.”
British officials have said they will not immediately retaliate, an approach backed by the Confederation of British Industry, a major business group.

Little to gain
Spared for the moment from the latest round of tariffs were Mexico and Canada, so far as goods that already qualified under their free trade agreement with the United States. Yet, the previously announced 25 percent tariffs on auto imports were scheduled to take effect at midnight.
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said Wednesday she would wait to take action on Thursday when it was clear how Trump’s announcement would affect Mexico.
“It’s not a question of if you impose tariffs on me, I’m going to impose tariffs on you,” she said in a news briefing Wednesday morning. “Our interest is in strengthening the Mexican economy.”

Canada had imposed retaliatory tariffs in response to the 25 percent tariffs that Trump tied to the trafficking of fentanyl. The European Union, in response to the steel and aluminum tariffs, imposed taxes on 26 billion euros’ worth ($28 billion) of US goods, including bourbon, prompting Trump to threaten a 200 percent tariff on European alcohol.
As Trump read down the list of countries that would be targeted Wednesday, he repeatedly said he didn’t blame them for the tariffs and non-tariff barriers they imposed to protect their own nations’ businesses. “But we’re doing the same thing right now,” he said.
“In the face of unrelenting economic warfare, the United States can no longer continue with a policy of unilateral economic surrender,” Trump said.
Speaking from a business forum in India, Chilean President Gabriel Boric warned that such measures, in addition to causing uncertainty, challenge the “mutually agreed rules” and the “principles that govern international trade.”
Ultimately, Trump announced Chile would face the baseline reciprocal tariff of 10 percent. The US is Chile’s second most important trading partner after China.

Analysts say there’s little to be gained from an all-out trade war, neither in the United States or in other countries.
“Once again, Trump has put Europe at a crossroads,” said Matteo Villa, senior analyst at Italy’s Institute for International Political Studies.
“If Trump really imposes high tariffs, Europe will have to respond, but the paradox is that the EU would be better off doing nothing,” he added.
Villa also noted that retaliation would certainly be a further “blow” to the United States, but it would hurt Europe even more, as the EU bloc depends more on exports to the US than vice versa.
“On the other hand, Trump seems to understand only the language of force, and this indicates the need for a strong and immediate response,” Villa said. “Probably the hope, in Brussels, is that the response will be strong enough to induce Trump to negotiate and, soon, to backtrack.”

(With Reuters)


Trump asks Supreme Court to uphold restrictions he wants to impose on birthright citizenship

Trump asks Supreme Court to uphold restrictions he wants to impose on birthright citizenship
Updated 27 September 2025

Trump asks Supreme Court to uphold restrictions he wants to impose on birthright citizenship

Trump asks Supreme Court to uphold restrictions he wants to impose on birthright citizenship
  • The Justice Department’s petition has been shared with lawyers for parties challenging the order, but is not yet docketed at the Supreme Court
  • Any decision on whether to take up the case probably is months away and arguments probably would not take place until the late winter or early spring

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump ‘s administration is asking the Supreme Court to uphold his birthright citizenship order declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.
The appeal, shared with The Associated Press on Saturday, sets in motion a process at the high court that could lead to a definitive ruling from the justices by early summer on whether the citizenship restrictions are constitutional.
Lower-court judges have so far blocked them from taking effect anywhere. The Republican administration is not asking the court to let the restrictions take effect before it rules.
The Justice Department’s petition has been shared with lawyers for parties challenging the order, but is not yet docketed at the Supreme Court.
Any decision on whether to take up the case probably is months away and arguments probably would not take place until the late winter or early spring.
“The lower court’s decisions invalidated a policy of prime importance to the president and his administration in a manner that undermines our border security,” Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote. “Those decisions confer, without lawful justification, the privilege of American citizenship on hundreds of thousands of unqualified people.”
Cody Wofsy, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who represents children who would be affected by Trump’s restrictions, said the administration’s plan is plainly unconstitutional.
“This executive order is illegal, full stop, and no amount of maneuvering from the administration is going to change that. We will continue to ensure that no baby’s citizenship is ever stripped away by this cruel and senseless order,” Wofsy said in an email.
Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his second term in the White House that would upend more than 125 years of understanding that the Constitution’s 14th Amendment confers citizenship on everyone born on American soil, with narrow exceptions for the children of foreign diplomats and those born to a foreign occupying force.
In a series of decisions, lower courts have struck down the executive order as unconstitutional, or likely so, even after a Supreme Court ruling in late June that limited judges’ use of nationwide injunctions.
While the Supreme Court curbed the use of nationwide injunctions, it did not rule out other court orders that could have nationwide effects, including in class-action lawsuits and those brought by states. The justices did not decide at that time whether the underlying citizenship order is constitutional.
But every lower court that has looked at the issue has concluded that Trump’s order violates or likely violates the 14th Amendment, which was intended to ensure that Black people, including former slaves, had citizenship.
The administration is appealing two cases.
The US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco ruled in July that a group of states that sued over the order needed a nationwide injunction to prevent the problems that would be caused by birthright citizenship being in effect in some states and not others.
Also in July, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked the citizenship order in a class-action lawsuit including all children who would be affected.
Birthright citizenship automatically makes anyone born in the United States an American citizen, including children born to mothers who are in the country illegally, under long-standing rules. The right was enshrined soon after the Civil War in the first sentence of the 14th Amendment.
The administration has asserted that children of noncitizens are not “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States and therefore not entitled to citizenship.


Controversy in Pakistan over unauthorized member of Islamabad’s UNGA delegation

Controversy in Pakistan over unauthorized member of Islamabad’s UNGA delegation
Updated 27 September 2025

Controversy in Pakistan over unauthorized member of Islamabad’s UNGA delegation

Controversy in Pakistan over unauthorized member of Islamabad’s UNGA delegation
  • Coverage of Dr. Shama Junejo at UN meeting went viral, sparking public uproar
  • Foreign ministry says Junejo’s position behind defense minister did not have official approval

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government has come under public scrutiny over the presence of a researcher in Islamabad’s delegation at this week’s UN General Assembly in New York, as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied approving her attendance.  

Dr. Shama Junejo, a Pakistani researcher based in London, was seen sitting behind Defense Minister Khawaja Asif during a Security Council debate this week in videos and photos that have since gone viral on social media, with critics highlighting Junejo’s track record of supporting Israel.  

Given Pakistan’s staunch support of Palestine, Junejo’s presence near Asif at the UN caused an uproar among Pakistanis, prompting the minister to reaffirm his support for Palestine in a post on X on Friday. 

He said he did not know the woman sitting behind him in the footage, but that her presence would have been authorized at the discretion of the foreign ministry. 

“To clarify, the individual in question was not listed in the official letter of credence for the Pakistan delegation to the 80th UNGA Session, signed by the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister,” Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on X on Saturday.

“Her seating behind the Defense Minister did not have the approval of the Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister.”  

Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has steadfastly supported an independent Palestinian state with pre-1967 borders. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also reiterated Islamabad’s stance during his address at the UNGA on Friday.

But in less than a day, the foreign ministry’s statement had garnered more than 1.3 million views and thousands of reactions on X, as users questioned the official clarification and highlighted Junejo’s previous claims of being affiliated with the government and flying on the official government jet. 

In a now-deleted post on X, Junejo wrote on Sept. 21 that she has been working as an adviser to Sharif since May 2025. The researcher has also been photographed in the past with the premier, his elder brother and three-time former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz and Defense Minister Asif. 

In August 2022, she wrote online that meeting Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu “would have been an honor” and that she would have used a photo with him as her profile picture. She has also previously praised Israeli technology, including drip irrigation, suggesting it could benefit regions like Sindh and southern Punjab.

But the researcher said she joined others in leaving the UNGA during Netanyahu’s speech on Friday. 

“We walked out from UNGA when the war criminal Netanyahu entered,” Junejo wrote on X.

Asad Qaiser, a former speaker of the lower house of Pakistan parliament, said the defense minister and the foreign ministry were lying, and demanded answers regarding who allowed Junejo to travel in a Pakistani plane from London to New York, sit in an official Pakistani government seat behind Asif at the UNSC, and enabled her to attend UN sessions.

“These questions are extremely important … Most importantly she has been meeting Israeli diplomats and is known for her support (of) Israel,” he said. 

“This is an extremely grave situation that the PM himself must explain.”

-ENDS-


Danish defense ministry reports renewed drone sightings at military facilities

Danish defense ministry reports renewed drone sightings at military facilities
Updated 27 September 2025

Danish defense ministry reports renewed drone sightings at military facilities

Danish defense ministry reports renewed drone sightings at military facilities
  • The Danish defense ministry said drone activity was noticed at Skrydstrup Air Base and the Jutland Dragoon Regiment
  • One or more drones were also seen near or above the military Karup Air Base, which is Denmark’s biggest military base

BERLIN: The Danish defense ministry said Saturday that “drones have been observed at several of Danish defense facilities” overnight Friday into Saturday.
The renewed drone sightings come after there were several drone sightings in the Nordic country earlier this week, with some of them temporarily shutting down Danish airports.
The Danish defense ministry said in a statement that drone activity was noticed at Skrydstrup Air Base and the Jutland Dragoon Regiment.
Several local media reported that one or more drones were also seen near or above the military Karup Air Base, which is Denmark’s biggest military base.
The Defense ministry refused to confirm the sighting at Karup and said later that “for reasons of operational security and the ongoing investigation, the Defense Command Denmark does not wish to elaborate further on drone sightings.”
Danish public broadcaster DR reported that in Karup, there were drones in the air both inside and outside the fence of the air base at around 8 p.m., quoting Simon Skelkjær, the duty manager at the Central and West Jutland Police.
DR said that for a period of time the airspace was closed to civil air traffic, but that did not have much practical significance as there is currently no civil aviation in Karup.
The repeated unexplained drone activity, including over four Danish airports overnight Wednesday into Thursday and a similar incident at Copenhagen Airport, has raised concerns about security in northern Europe amid suspected growing Russian aggression.
The Copenhagen drones grounded flights in the Danish capital for hours on Monday night,
The goal of the flyovers is to sow fear and division, Danish Minister of Justice Peter Hummelgaard said Thursday, adding that the country will seek additional ways to neutralize drones, including proposing legislation to allow infrastructure owners to shoot them down.
For the upcoming European Union summit next week, the Danish defense ministry confirmed on X that the country’s government had accepted an offer from Sweden to “lend Denmark a military anti-drone capability,” without giving further details.
In neighboring Germany, several drones were reported in the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein, which borders Denmark, from Thursday into Friday night.
The state’s interior minister, Sabine Sütterlin-Waack, said that “the state police are currently significantly stepping up their drone defense measures, also in coordination with other northern German states,” German news agency dpa reported. She did not provide any further details, citing the ongoing investigations.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that in regard to frequent attacks on infrastructure and data networks, “we are not at war, but we are no longer living in peace either.” He did not allude to a certain country as the actor behind those attacks.
“Drone flights, espionage, the Tiergarten murder, massive threats to individual public figures, not only in Germany but also in many other European countries. Acts of sabotage on a daily basis. Attempts to paralyze data centers. Cyberattacks,” he added during a speech at the Schwarz Ecosystem Summit in Berlin on Friday, dpa reported.
What became known as the “Tiergarten murder” in Germany refers to the case of Vadim Krasikov, who was convicted of the Aug. 23, 2019, killing of Zelimkhan “Tornike” Khangoshvili, a 40-year-old Georgian citizen who had fought Russian troops in Chechnya and later claimed asylum in Germany. Krasikov was returned to Russia as part of a massive prisoner swap between the US and Russia in 2024.
Later on Saturday, Adm. Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, the chair of NATO’s Military Committee, said at a NATO meeting in Riga, Latvia, that “multiple allies, including Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland and Romania have experienced airspace violation by Russia. These acts are escalatory, reckless and endanger lives.”
“Russia bears full responsibility for these actions,” Dragone said. “Today, I express full and unequivocal solidarity with all allies whose airspace has been breached. The alliance’s response has been robust and will only continue to strengthen,” he said.
“The immediate priority today is clearly air defense,” the President of Latvia, Edgars Rinkēvičs, said. “Russia continues a pattern of provocations, most recently recklessly violating the airspace of Poland and Estonia. And here I really want to thank and welcome NATO’s immediate response commencing Eastern Sentry,” he said in reference to the operation to protect NATO’s eastern flank.
“This serves as a tangible example of NATO’s decisive response.”


Hague Group members call on world to deny Israel ‘tools of genocide’

Hague Group members call on world to deny Israel ‘tools of genocide’
Updated 27 September 2025

Hague Group members call on world to deny Israel ‘tools of genocide’

Hague Group members call on world to deny Israel ‘tools of genocide’
  • Organization aims to isolate Israel politically, economically, culturally in bid to end Gaza war
  • ‘We must turn indignation into action,’ Brazil FM says on sidelines of UN General Assembly

LONDON: A group of countries has called on the international community to deny Israel “the tools of genocide.”

The Hague Group, an alliance of states dedicated to putting pressure on Israel, met in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

They discussed ways to alleviate suffering in Gaza, and to prevent Israel from committing further violence in the enclave and the occupied West Bank.

Members called for a block on exports to the country, a ban on participation in international cultural events, and support for an aid flotilla currently approaching Gaza in the Mediterranean.

The group is co-chaired by Colombia and South Africa, whose government brought a case accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza to the International Court of Justice in December 2023.

Last week, South Africa’s ICJ case was joined by Brazil, which said Israel has no right to claim that its actions in Gaza constitute self-defense as an occupying power.

Brazil’s Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira told the group: “We must turn indignation into action, law into justice, and justice into peace.”

His government has also called for an international mission to be sent to Gaza, similar to the one established by the UN in 1962 to oversee the end of apartheid in South Africa.

“International law requires a state not only to refrain from genocide but also to prevent it. Failure to do so may give rise to state responsibility including complicity with genocide,” Vieira said.

“The time has come for states to fulfill their obligations under the Genocide Convention by adopting effective measures to ensure that they don’t, directly or indirectly, collaborate with its perpetrators.”

Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan said it is essential that international corporations complicit in the occupation are identified. Chile, another member of the group, recently withdrew its ambassador to Israel.

Zane Dangor, director general of South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation, said preventing genocide is a duty, despite the difficulty in proving it legally, in the aftermath of a UN report earlier this month that found reasonable grounds to conclude that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

Riyad Mansour, Palestinian envoy to the UN, told The Guardian: “The Hague Group represented an inflection point in the struggle to secure accountability and to prevent Israel receiving arms and services. Much more needs to be done, and fast.”


Protesters gather again in Madagascar

Protesters gather again in Madagascar
Updated 27 September 2025

Protesters gather again in Madagascar

Protesters gather again in Madagascar
  • Demonstrators including university students gathered again in Antananarivo Saturday
  • An unidentified hospital source said five people were killed in Thursday’s violence

ANTANANARIVO: Hundreds of mostly young protesters faced off against security forces in Madagascar’s capital Saturday days after an anti-government demonstration erupted into clashes and looting.
Police used rubber bullets and teargas to disperse crowds at Thursday’s protest, which was called to condemn persistent water and power cuts in the impoverished nation but descended into violence as stores were looted and buildings and cars set alight.
Demonstrators including university students gathered again in Antananarivo Saturday, holding placards with slogans that included, “We are poor, angry and unhappy” and “Madagascar is ours.”
Mostly dressed in black and with their faces covered, some wore the colored straw hats that have become a symbol of defiance.
A wall of security forces prevented protesters from marching toward the city center and there were reports that police used tear gas to disperse them.
An unidentified hospital source said five people were killed in Thursday’s violence, but no official has released a confirmed toll.
In a video address late Friday, President Andry Rajoelina said that in response to the protest he had sacked his energy minister “for not doing his job.” He also condemned the violence as “acts of destabilization.”
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) grouping said Saturday it was concerned about “an unconfirmed number of fatalities, injuries, and extensive damage to both public and private property.”
The 16-nation SADC, of which Rajoelina is the current chairperson, commended in its statement “the government’s steadfast commitment to restoring peace and stability.”
The African Union called for restraint, calm and dialogue.