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Council of Europe says asylum policies may put lives in danger

Council of Europe says asylum policies may put lives in danger
The Council of Europe urged its 46 member states on Thursday not to outsource the processing of asylum seekers to third countries, saying these people risked being tortured or killed. (AFP/File)
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Council of Europe says asylum policies may put lives in danger

Council of Europe says asylum policies may put lives in danger
  • Several European nations have begun outsourcing the handling of asylum seekers to countries outside the EU
  • “Externalization policies might result in people being subjected to torture,” said O’Flaherty

STRASBOURG, France: The Council of Europe urged its 46 member states on Thursday not to outsource the processing of asylum seekers to third countries, saying these people risked being tortured or killed.
Several European nations have begun outsourcing the handling of asylum seekers to countries outside the European Union.
They include Italy, whose hard-right government opened migrant reception centers in Albania that have now morphed into repatriation outfits.
“Externalization policies might result in people being subjected to torture or other ill-treatment, collective expulsions and arbitrary detention or may put their lives in danger,” said the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, Michael O’Flaherty.
“Such policies might also hinder effective access to asylum and deprive individuals of legal remedies,” he said.
A new report by the council — Europe’s human rights watchdog — identifies three areas in which risks are “particularly acute.”
These are “external processing of asylum claims; external return procedures..; and the outsourcing of border control to other countries, some of which have a documented history of serious violations against people on the move.”
Last month, the EU Court of Justice ruled in favor of Italian judges who had ordered the repatriation to Italy of asylum seekers expelled to Albania by Giorgia Meloni’s government.
In 2022, the European Court of Human Rights, which is part of the Council of Europe, blocked the transfer of asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda.
Britain, which has since formally left the EU, has now set up an agreement with France that provides for asylum seekers to be sent back from the UK to France.
Four African countries — Eswatini, Rwanda, South Sudan and Uganda — have agreed to accept migrants expelled en masse from the United States by the administration of President Donald Trump.
El Salvador was the first Latin American country to accept migrants deported from the United States.


Russian missile hits demining mission near Ukraine’s Chernihiv, official says

Russian missile hits demining mission near Ukraine’s Chernihiv, official says
Updated 5 sec ago

Russian missile hits demining mission near Ukraine’s Chernihiv, official says

Russian missile hits demining mission near Ukraine’s Chernihiv, official says
One person was killed and two people were wounded in the attack

KYIV: A Russian ballistic missile struck a humanitarian demining mission near the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, a local official said on Thursday.
Chernihiv Mayor Dmytro Bryzhynskyi wrote on the Telegram messaging app that one person was killed and two people were wounded in the attack.

15 people hospitalized after double-decker bus crashes outside London’s Victoria Station

15 people hospitalized after double-decker bus crashes outside London’s Victoria Station
Updated 22 min 50 sec ago

15 people hospitalized after double-decker bus crashes outside London’s Victoria Station

15 people hospitalized after double-decker bus crashes outside London’s Victoria Station
  • Police said another two people were treated by medics at the scene of the crash near Victoria Station
  • The driver of the route 24 bus was among the injured in the morning rush-hour collision

LONDON: Fifteen people were hospitalized Thursday after a double-decker bus mounted the sidewalk and crashed outside one of London’s busiest railway stations.
Police said another two people were treated by medics at the scene of the crash near Victoria Station. None of the injures is believed to be life-threatening.
The driver of the route 24 bus was among the injured in the morning rush-hour collision.
Footage showed the bus stopped with a smashed windshield and emergency vehicles including police cars, ambulances and a fire engine in attendance.
Witness Emit Suker said the bus “was going really fast and came off the road.”
“There were about 15, 16 people inside the bus. People were screaming – it was terrible,” Suker said.
The Metropolitan Police force appealed for witnesses to send in phone or dashcam footage as it investigates. There have been no arrests.
Victoria is a major rail, subway and bus hub not far from Buckingham Palace, and is usually thronged with commuters and tourists. Two pedestrians have been killed by buses near the station since 2021.


Muslim deputy leader of UK’s Green Party suffers racist attack

Muslim deputy leader of UK’s Green Party suffers racist attack
Updated 51 min 14 sec ago

Muslim deputy leader of UK’s Green Party suffers racist attack

Muslim deputy leader of UK’s Green Party suffers racist attack
  • People shouted ‘get out of our country’ and ‘Paki bastards’ at Mothin Ali and his family
  • Sheffield-born Leeds councillor was elected deputy leader this week

LONDON: The new deputy leader of the UK’s Green Party and his family were the victims of a racist attack last week, he told The Guardian.

Mothin Ali, a Leeds councillor who was born in Sheffield and has lived in Yorkshire all his life, was elected joint deputy leader of the party this week.

During a trip to the coastal town of Cromer in Norfolk, he and his mother, wife and children were racially abused and attacked by a group on the beach.

“It was a lovely sunny day. I’d been building sandcastles and catching shrimps in rock pools with my six-year-old,” he told The Guardian.

“Suddenly there were these people throwing beer bottles at us and shouting: ‘Get out of our country’ and ‘Paki bastards.’ Then one of them decided to pull his trousers down.”

The attack reflects the rise of far-right attitudes in Britain and a growing trend to blame immigrants and refugees for social issues, Ali said.

He also highlighted how the Reform UK party has increasingly used anti-minority rhetoric in recent months.

“Reform UK offers simple ‘solutions’ to extremely complex problems — blame immigrants, blame black and brown people, blame Muslims,” he added. “The language is incredibly inflammatory. It’s language that is designed to stir up hate.”

Ali was elected as a councillor in Leeds in May, and has been outspoken over his views on the Gaza war.

On the day of his election, he spoke to supporters with a Palestinian flag in the background, describing his victory as a “win for the people of Gaza.”

He was criticized for using the phrase “Allahu Akbar” in his victory speech, but said the denunciation reflects wider Islamophobia in Britain.

Political observers have highlighted a growing trend in which those who voted for the ruling Labour Party are moving toward the Greens due to their dismay over government policy on Gaza.

“There is a genocide taking place,” Ali said. “We won’t know the extent of it for years, but what we see is horrible enough. The Labour Party has been pathetic, but also they’ve been complicit. The UK is not just a passive observer (of the war); we’re active participants.”


UK sanctions target Russians linked to deportation of Ukrainian children

UK sanctions target Russians linked to deportation of Ukrainian children
Updated 04 September 2025

UK sanctions target Russians linked to deportation of Ukrainian children

UK sanctions target Russians linked to deportation of Ukrainian children
  • “The Kremlin’s policy of forced deportations, indoctrination and militarization of Ukrainian children is despicable,” Lammy said
  • The Russian embassy in London said the sanctions were unlawful and based on “unfounded claims” from Ukraine about the forcible transfer of children

LONDON: Britain on Wednesday imposed sanctions on 11 more individuals and entities affiliated with the Russian state, targeting those involved in what it said were Moscow’s attempts to forcibly deport and indoctrinate Ukraine’s children.
Ukraine says that more than 19,500 children have been taken to Russia or Russian-occupied territory during the war without the consent of family or guardians, calling the abductions a war crime that meets the UN treaty definition of genocide. Moscow has said it was protecting vulnerable children from a war zone.
“The Kremlin’s policy of forced deportations, indoctrination and militarization of Ukrainian children is despicable,” foreign minister David Lammy said in a statement, setting out Britain’s latest round of sanctions against Russia for the war in Ukraine.
Organizations such as the Akhmat Kadyrov Foundation which runs re-education programs for Ukrainian children and teenagers, subjecting them to militaristic training, and its president, Aymani Nesievna Kadyrova, are among those targeted, the statement said. The sanctions include asset freezes, travel bans and other penalties.
The Russian embassy in London said the sanctions were unlawful and based on “unfounded claims” from Ukraine about the forcible transfer of children.
“We call upon the UK authorities to refrain from making baseless accusations in future and to avoid hindering the efforts aimed at protecting the rights and interests of minors,” it said in a post on social media.
In March, a report by the United Nations Human Rights Office said Russia had inflicted unimaginable suffering on millions of Ukrainian children and violated their rights since its full scale invasion of Ukraine began in 2022.
Kadyrova’s son Ramzan, head of Russia’s Muslim Chechnya republic who has sent large contingents of troops to boost Russian ranks in Ukraine, published a statement in Russian via his channel on Telegram messaging app in defense of his mother.
“She always helps victims of war and supports the poor and disadvantaged around the world,” said the translated comments, which also said that she was not involved in politics.
“These actions prove that the West is guided neither by morality nor by law, but acts out of hatred and Russophobia ... This is the lowest level of rotten Western politics,” he added.
In March 2023, the International Criminal Court issued warrants for the arrest of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his children’s rights commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova related to the abduction of Ukrainian children. Russia denounced the warrants as “outrageous and unacceptable.”


Death toll in Lisbon streetcar crash rises to 17 as investigators search for a cause

Death toll in Lisbon streetcar crash rises to 17 as investigators search for a cause
Updated 04 September 2025

Death toll in Lisbon streetcar crash rises to 17 as investigators search for a cause

Death toll in Lisbon streetcar crash rises to 17 as investigators search for a cause
  • The injured included Portuguese people as well as two Germans, two Spaniards and one person each from France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, Morocco, South Korea and Cape Verde
  • Officials have declined to speculate on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have prompted the descending streetcar to careen into a building

LISBON: The death toll in the crash of a Lisbon streetcar popular with tourists rose to 17 on Thursday after two people died from their injuries while receiving hospital care, an emergency services official said. The cause of the derailment remained unclear.
The dead were all adults, Margarida Castro Martins, head of Lisbon’s Civil Protection Agency, told reporters. She didn’t provide their names or nationalities, saying that their families would be informed first.
Another 21 people were injured in the crash on Wednesday, she said, adding that they were men and women between the ages of 24 and 65 as well as a 3-year-old child.
The injured included Portuguese people as well as two Germans, two Spaniards and one person each from France, Italy, Switzerland, Canada, Morocco, South Korea and Cape Verde, she said.
The range of nationalities reflected how big a draw the renowned 19th-century streetcar was for tourists who are packing the Portuguese capital during the summer season. Portugal observed a national day of mourning Thursday after the capital’s worst disaster in recent history.
Officials have declined to speculate on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have prompted the descending streetcar to careen into a building where the road bends, and investigations were underway.
British tourist heard a ‘horrendous crash’
Felicity Ferriter, a 70-year-old British tourist, had just arrived with her husband at a hotel near the crash site and was unpacking her suitcase when she heard “a horrendous crash.”
“We heard it, we heard the bang,” she told The Associated Press outside her hotel.
The couple had seen the streetcar when they arrived and intended to ride on it the next day.
“It was to be one of the highlights of our holiday,” she said. “It could have been us.”
She said that the emergency response was “amazing.” Police and ambulances quickly “flooded in,” she said.
The yellow-and-white streetcar, known as Elevador da Gloria, was lying on its side on the narrow road that it travels on, its sides and top crumpled.
Italian tourist won’t ride one again
The electric streetcar, technically called a funicular, is harnessed by steel cables, with the descending car helping with its weight to pull up the other one. The car can carry more than 40 people, seated and standing. It is also commonly used by Lisbon residents.
Francesca di Bello, a 23-year-old tourist from Italy on vacation in Lisbon with her family, had been on the Elevador da Gloria a few hours before the derailment.
They walked by the cordoned-off crash site on Thursday, shocked by the crumpled wreckage. Asked if she would ride a funicular again in Portugal or elsewhere, Di Bello was emphatic. “Definitely not,” she said.
Though authorities gave no details about those killed, the transport workers’ trade union SITRA said that the streetcar’s brakeman, AndrĂ© Marques, was among the dead.
One of Lisbon’s big tourist draws
The 19th-century streetcar is one of Lisbon’s big tourist attractions and is usually packed with foreigners at this time of year for its short and picturesque trip up and down one of the city’s steep hills.
Teams of pathologists at the National Forensics Institute, reinforced by colleagues from three other Portuguese cities, worked through the night on autopsies, which were expected to be concluded early Thursday, officials said. The injured were admitted to several hospitals in the Lisbon region.
Detectives from Portugal’s judicial police force, which investigates serious incidents, photographed the rails and the wreckage on the deserted road.
“It hit the building with brutal force and fell apart like a cardboard box,” witness Teresa d’Avó told Portuguese television channel SIC. She described the streetcar as out of control and seeming to have no brakes, and said she watched passersby run into the middle of the nearby Avenida da Liberdade, or Freedom Avenue, the city’s main thoroughfare.
The crash occurred at the start of the evening rush hour, around 6 p.m. local time. Emergency officials said all victims were pulled out of the wreckage in just over two hours.
Service halted as inspections ordered
The service, inaugurated in 1885, goes up and down a few hundred meters of a hill on a curved, traffic-free road in tandem with one going the opposite way. It goes between between Restauradores Square and the Bairro Alto neighborhood renowned for its nightlife.
Lisbon’s City Council halted operations of three other famous funicular streetcars in the city while immediate inspections were carried out.
The Elevador da Gloria is classified as a national monument.
Lisbon hosted around 8.5 million tourists last year, and long lines of people typically form for the brief rides on the popular streetcar.
Carris, the company that operates the streetcar, said that scheduled maintenance had been carried out. It offered its deepest condolences to the victims and their families in a social media post, and promised that all due diligence would be taken in finding the causes.
President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa offered his condolences to affected families, and Lisbon Mayor Carlos Moedas said the city was in mourning. “It’s a tragedy of the like we’ve never seen,” Moedas said.
“A tragic accident 
 caused the irreparable loss of human life, which left in mourning their families and dismayed the whole country,” the government said in a statement.
European Union flags at the European Parliament and European Commission in Brussels flew at half-staff. Multiple EU leaders expressed their condolences on social media.