UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme

UK says deported first migrant to France under new scheme
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. (AFP/File)
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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.


Kyiv says Russia returned 1,000 bodies to Ukraine

Updated 9 sec ago

Kyiv says Russia returned 1,000 bodies to Ukraine

Kyiv says Russia returned 1,000 bodies to Ukraine
The bodies, according to the Russian side belong to Ukrainian servicemen

KYIV: Ukraine on Thursday received 1,000 bodies from Russia that Moscow said were of fallen Ukrainian soldiers, a Kyiv government agency announced.
“Repatriation measures took place today. 1,000 bodies, which according to the Russian side belong to Ukrainian servicemen, have been returned to Ukraine,” Ukraine’s Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War said on Telegram.

Malnutrition causes unrecognized type of diabetes: experts

Malnutrition causes unrecognized type of diabetes: experts
Updated 30 min 32 sec ago

Malnutrition causes unrecognized type of diabetes: experts

Malnutrition causes unrecognized type of diabetes: experts
  • Diabetes driven by malnutrition is not a new discovery — in the 1980s and 1990s, the World Health Organization classified a form of “malnutrition-related diabetes”

PARIS: Malnutrition can cause its own form of diabetes, health experts said Thursday, calling for “type 5 diabetes” to be recognized globally to help fight the disease in countries already struggling with poverty and starvation.
The most common form of diabetes, type 2, can be caused by obesity and occurs when adults become resistant to the hormone insulin. Type 1, mostly diagnosed in childhood, arises when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin.
But diabetes researchers have been tracking another form of the disease, which often appears in people aged under 30. It also affects insulin production but is less severe than type 1.
And rather than being linked to being overweight or obese like type 2, it affects people who are underweight because they do not eat enough.
A paper published in medical journal The Lancet Global Health shows that more than 25 million people suffer from this “type 5 diabetes,” mostly in developing countries.
“We call upon the international diabetes community to recognize this distinct form of the disease,” the authors wrote, reflecting a consensus reached by the International Diabetes Federation earlier this year.
The experts settled on calling this form of diabetes type 5, though types 3 and 4 have not been officially recognized.
Diabetes driven by malnutrition is not a new discovery — in the 1980s and 1990s, the World Health Organization classified a form of “malnutrition-related diabetes.”
But the UN agency abandoned this classification in 1999 due to a lack of agreement among experts about whether undernourishment alone was enough to cause diabetes.
Since then, numerous studies in countries including Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Uganda, Pakistan and Rwanda have indicated that this is possible.
The exact link between malnutrition and this strand of diabetes remains unknown. The efficacy of existing diabetes treatments that do not focus on weight loss on type 5 is also unclear.
The best way to fight the disease involves supporting programs already working to combat poverty and hunger, the authors of the paper said.
This includes giving people access to “low-cost, energy-dense staple foods high in protein and complex carbohydrates” such as lentils, legumes, oil-enriched cereals and fortified grains, they added.


‘Race against time’ to remove rubble after recent earthquake in Afghanistan’s east, says UN

‘Race against time’ to remove rubble after recent earthquake in Afghanistan’s east, says UN
Updated 18 September 2025

‘Race against time’ to remove rubble after recent earthquake in Afghanistan’s east, says UN

‘Race against time’ to remove rubble after recent earthquake in Afghanistan’s east, says UN
  • Satellite data shows that about 40,500 truckloads of debris still needs to be cleared from affected areas in several provinces, the United Nations Development Program said
  • The 6.0-magnitude quake on Aug. 31 was shallow, destroying or causing extensive damage to low-rise buildings in the mountainous region

The United Nations says aid workers are still in a “race against time” to remove rubble and rebuild after the devastating earthquake struck eastern Afghanistan last month, killing at least 2,200 people and cutting off remote areas.
The 6.0-magnitude quake on Aug. 31 was shallow, destroying or causing extensive damage to low-rise buildings in the mountainous region. It hit late at night, and homes — mostly made of mud, wood, or rocks — collapsed instantly, becoming death traps.
Satellite data shows that about 40,500 truckloads of debris still needs to be cleared from affected areas in several provinces, the United Nations Development Program said Wednesday. Entire communities have been upended and families are sleeping in the open, it added.
The quake’s epicenter was in remote and rugged Kunar province, challenging rescue and relief efforts by the Taliban government and humanitarian groups. Authorities deployed helicopters or airdropped army commandos to evacuate survivors. Aid workers walked for hours on foot to reach isolated communities.
“This is a race against time,” said Devanand Ramiah, from the UNDP’s Crisis Bureau. “Debris removal and reconstruction operations must start safely and swiftly.”
People’s main demands were the reconstruction of houses and water supplies, according to a spokesman for a Taliban government committee tasked with helping survivors, Zia ur Rahman Speenghar.
People were getting assistance in cash, food, tents, beds, and other necessities, Speenghar said Thursday. Three new roads were under construction in the Dewagal Valley, and roads would be built to areas where there previously were none.
“Various countries and organizations have offered assistance in the construction of houses but that takes time. After the second round of assistance, work will begin on the third round, which is considering what kind of houses can be built here,” the spokesman said.
Afghanistan is facing a “perfect storm” of crises, including natural disasters like the recent earthquake, said Roza Otunbayeva, who leads the UN mission to the country.
In a briefing to the UN Security Council on Wednesday, Otunbayeva said the development of Afghanistan’s full potential was required for it to address restrictions on personal freedoms, aid cuts, a struggling economy, climate-related stressors, and ” significant population returns ” from neighboring countries.


Syria’s foreign minister in Washington, a first in 25 years

Syria’s foreign minister in Washington, a first in 25 years
Updated 18 September 2025

Syria’s foreign minister in Washington, a first in 25 years

Syria’s foreign minister in Washington, a first in 25 years
  • Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shibani will meet US lawmakers to discuss the lifting of remaining US sanctions on his country

DAMASCUS: Syria’s foreign minister arrived in Washington on Thursday, the first official visit at that level in more than 25 years as the US makes a pro-Damascus policy push, lifting sanctions and mediating between the new Islamist rulers and Israel. Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan Al-Shibani will meet US lawmakers to discuss the lifting of remaining US sanctions on his country, Senator Lindsey Graham was quoted as saying by Axios. Two sources familiar with the trip confirmed the visit to Reuters.
It comes after some senior US diplomats focused on Syria were abruptly let go from their posts amid Washington’s pivot, as the US seeks to integrate its longtime Syrian Kurdish allies with the central administration of President Ahmed Al-Sharaa.
The United States has also been mediating between Israel and Syria. Sharaa, who is due to visit New York next week for the UN General Assembly, said negotiations to reach a security pact with Israel could yield results “in the coming days.”
The United States had placed crippling sanctions on Syria since 2011 after former President Bashar Assad, an ally of Iran and Russia, cracked down protests against him that triggered an almost 14-year civil war.
After he was toppled by Sharaa’s forces in a quick sweep in December, Washington and Damascus have been working to warm up ties, with US President Donald Trump announcing that he would move to lift the sanctions after meeting Sharaa in May.


South Korea prosecutors seek arrest of Unification Church leader

South Korea prosecutors seek arrest of Unification Church leader
Updated 18 September 2025

South Korea prosecutors seek arrest of Unification Church leader

South Korea prosecutors seek arrest of Unification Church leader
  • Han Hak-ja linked to bribery allegations against country’s former first lady and incitement to destroy evidence
  • The Unification Church has long been the subject of controversy and criticism

SEOUL: South Korean prosecutors on Thursday requested an arrest warrant for the leader of the Unification Church, Han Hak-ja, on allegations of bribery linked to the country’s former first lady and incitement to destroy evidence.
The move came a day after the 82-year-old was questioned over her alleged role in bribing former first lady Kim Keon Hee and a prominent lawmaker.
Founded in 1954 by her late husband Moon Sun-myung, the Unification Church has long been the subject of controversy and criticism, with its teachings centered on Moon’s role as the Second Coming, its mass weddings and a cult-like culture.
Followers are derisively referred to as “Moonies.”
But the church’s reach extends far beyond religion, spanning businesses from media and tourism to food distribution.
Han assumed leadership of the church after Moon’s death in 2012.
“We have requested an arrest warrant for Han earlier today,” said prosecutor Park Sang-jin.
“The charges against her include violation of political funds act, anti-graft law, incitement to destroy evidence and embezzlement,” he added.
“We considered the risk of Han tampering with evidence to be very high, which led us to seek the warrant.”
A court is expected to review the validity of the warrant request early next week.
Han is suspected of ordering the delivery of luxury gifts including a designer handbag and diamond necklace to Kim in 2022 to curry favor with her husband, Yoon Suk Yeol, who became president that year.
The former first lady has been arrested and indicted on charges of bribery and stock-market manipulation, while her husband – also in custody – is standing trial over his declaration of martial law in December.
The couple fell from grace after Yoon’s martial law declaration briefly suspended civilian rule, before it was overturned by opposition MPs in December.
Yoon was impeached and removed from office in April over the attempt.
Han also faces allegations of bribing a prominent MP with 100 million won ($72,000).
A Seoul court issued an arrest warrant on Tuesday for the lawmaker, Kweon Seong-dong, citing the risk he could tamper with evidence.
Han, who was wheeled out of the prosecutors’ office after more than nine hours of questioning, denied wrongdoing.
“Why would I have done that?” she said when asked about the allegations.
Prosecutor Park also said Han had denied committing any crimes during the Wednesday questioning.