Spain bans live cattle exports over lumpy skin disease outbreak

Spain bans live cattle exports over lumpy skin disease outbreak
Spain has imposed a temporary ban on exports of live cattle following an outbreak of the highly-contagious lumpy skin disease, Agriculture Minister Luis Planas told reporters on Tuesday. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 sec ago

Spain bans live cattle exports over lumpy skin disease outbreak

Spain bans live cattle exports over lumpy skin disease outbreak
  • Lumpy skin disease is a virus spread by insects
  • France imposed a similar ban on cattle exports and events such as bullfighting on Friday

MADRID: Spain has imposed a temporary ban on exports of live cattle following an outbreak of the highly-contagious lumpy skin disease, Agriculture Minister Luis Planas told reporters on Tuesday.
Lumpy skin disease is a virus spread by insects that affects cattle and buffalo, causing blisters and reducing milk production. It does not pose a risk to humans but often leads to trade restrictions and severe economic losses.
“We have temporarily suspended exports of live animals to prevent the spread of the disease; France has done the same,” Planas said.
France imposed a similar ban on cattle exports and events such as bullfighting on Friday.
The Spanish outbreak was detected on a farm with 123 dairy heifers near Girona in the northeast, after three animals showed symptoms on October 1.


Azerbaijan lifts curbs on cargo transit to Armenia in sign of growing peace

Updated 27 sec ago

Azerbaijan lifts curbs on cargo transit to Armenia in sign of growing peace

Azerbaijan lifts curbs on cargo transit to Armenia in sign of growing peace
“I think this is also a good indicator that peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia is no longer on paper, but in practice,” Aliyev said
Armenia and Azerbaijan were locked in bitter conflict from the late 1980s over Nagorno-Karabakh

BAKU: Azerbaijan has removed all restrictions on cargo transit to Armenia, President Ilham Aliyev said on Tuesday, in a sign of warming ties between the former foes following nearly four decades of conflict.
Aliyev told Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev at a meeting in Astana that a shipment of Kazakh grain via Azerbaijan to Armenia marked the first such consignment since transit was halted in the final years of the Soviet Union, when war initially broke out between the two neighbors.
“I think this is also a good indicator that peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia is no longer on paper, but in practice,” Aliyev was quoted by Azerbaijani state media as saying.
Hikmet Hajjiyev, Aliyev’s foreign policy aide, told Reuters that the cargo shipments would travel to Armenia via Georgia, calling the transit “an economic benefit of peace.”
A spokeswoman for Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan hailed Aliyev’s move as a “step of great importance for opening regional communications, strengthening mutual trust, and institutionalizing the peace established between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”
Armenia and Azerbaijan were locked in bitter conflict from the late 1980s over Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous region within Azerbaijan that had enjoyed de facto independence for three decades until Baku took back full control in 2023.
The neighbors reached a US-brokered peace agreement in August, but major hurdles remain to its formal signing, including a demand by Azerbaijan that Armenia change its constitution.
The peace deal has the potential to transform the South Caucasus, an oil- and gas-rich region and a key transit route connecting Asia and Europe that has gained salience since the war in Ukraine largely shut down trade routes via Russia for European markets.
A planned strategic transit corridor, to be developed exclusively by the United States, is also expected to boost energy exports and bilateral economic ties between Baku and Yerevan.

IRA bomb victims in UK should be compensated with Qaddafi asset money: Report

IRA bomb victims in UK should be compensated with Qaddafi asset money: Report
Updated 21 October 2025

IRA bomb victims in UK should be compensated with Qaddafi asset money: Report

IRA bomb victims in UK should be compensated with Qaddafi asset money: Report
  • Frozen funds, which earn UK Treasury around £5m a year, recommended to be set aside
  • IRA used Semtex supplied by ex-Libyan regime in bombings in 1980s, 1990s

LONDON: Victims of IRA bombings should receive compensation from tax on assets seized from the regime of the late Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, according to a report by former Charity Commission Chairman William Shawcross.

The report suggests that the funds on offer will not go far enough to compensate all victims adequately, but should still be set aside for the purpose by the Treasury.

The IRA used Semtex, a plastic explosive, supplied by Libya to conduct bombings in the 1980s and 1990s.

Qaddafi’s assets were frozen after the fall of his regime in 2011, with victims saying they have grown in value from £9 billion ($12 billion) to £17 billion, earning the Exchequer around £5 million annually in tax.

Shawcross wrote in his report: “Funding could be obtained from the tax accrued on the frozen Libyan assets but will probably be insufficient, depending on the solution chosen. Other sources of government funding will probably be required.”

He added that it is “not possible to identify the number of people affected” by IRA bombings backed by Qaddafi, and that the number may continue to rise.

The Treasury, he said, should make up any shortfall owed to them and strike a deal with the current Libyan authorities over unfreezing assets, but this “may not transpire.”

He added: “It is time to draw a line. The pain and suffering of the victims is real and harrowing; it has been compounded by the length of time this matter has been under discussion and that victims have waited for the redress they believe is due to them, partly because they have been encouraged in that belief.”

The report was completed in 2020 but was sat on by successive Conservative and Labour governments before being released on Monday after lobbying by the families of victims.

It had been withheld in part due to the sensitive and in some cases classified nature of information it contained.

Susanne Dodd, whose father Stephen Dodd died in the bombing of Harrods department store in London by the IRA in 1983, said: “I would like to see the tax from the Libyan assets ring-fenced and given to victims’ families. That should include all the tax brought in so far.

“We believe the Treasury raised £5 million last year and over almost 15 years that’s a lot of money.”


Austria deports Afghan, a first since 2021

Austria deports Afghan, a first since 2021
Updated 21 October 2025

Austria deports Afghan, a first since 2021

Austria deports Afghan, a first since 2021
  • The Alpine nation is one of 20 EU member states which have urged the European Commission to take action to enable both voluntary and forced returns of Afghans with no legal right to stay

VIENNA: Austria — one of the European Union members pushing for deportations of Afghans and Syrians — on Tuesday deported an Afghan man, the first such removal since 2021.
The Alpine nation is one of 20 EU member states which have urged the European Commission to take action to enable both voluntary and forced returns of Afghans with no legal right to stay.
In July, it also became the first EU country in recent years to deport a Syrian.
It has since sent two other Syrians back to their home country, where long-time strongman Bashar Assad was ousted in December.
A 31-year-old Afghan, who served four years in jail over a sexual offense and causing grievous bodily harm, was deported from Vienna via Istanbul to Kabul, Austria’s interior ministry said.
This was the first such deportation since summer 2021, it said, adding that more deportations of criminal convicts were being prepared.
Austria’s conservative-led government received Taliban government representatives in Vienna in September, drawing criticism from rights group and the opposition Greens.
The Taliban have been largely isolated on the global stage since they imposed a strict version of Islamic law after they returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021, following the withdrawal of US-led forces.
Lawyers for the Afghan, who came to Austria as an unaccompanied minor, failed to obtain a court order to stop his deportation on the grounds that he suffered “severe psychological impairment,” according to rights group Asylkoordination Austria.
“We are concerned... that there is no follow-up on what actually happens to the people” who are deported, spokesman Lukas Gahleitner-Gertz told AFP.
They could face “torture or inhumane treatment” in their home countries, he said.
The EU said on Monday it has “initiated exploratory contacts” with the Taliban government in Afghanistan, in the face of pressure from EU member states to increase deportations of failed asylum seekers.
Germany has deported more than 100 Afghans since last year.


Cable that broke in Lisbon rail crash was uncertified, report shows

Cable that broke in Lisbon rail crash was uncertified, report shows
Updated 21 October 2025

Cable that broke in Lisbon rail crash was uncertified, report shows

Cable that broke in Lisbon rail crash was uncertified, report shows
  • The yellow tram-like carriage hit a building after leaving the track on September 3
  • Gloria is one of three old funiculars operated by the municipal public transport company Carris

LISBON: The cable that snapped and caused a Lisbon funicular railcar to hurtle down a hill in September, killing 16 people, was not certified for use in passenger transport, according to a preliminary report that also pointed to maintenance flaws.
Portugal’s Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations (GPIAAF) said in the report late on Monday it was still impossible to say whether the use of an inadequate cable had caused the crash, as other factors were also at play.
GPIAAF’s final report is due by next September.
The yellow tram-like carriage, which carries people up and down a steep hillside in the Portuguese capital, hit a building after leaving the track on September 3.
Gloria, which opened in 1885, is one of three old funiculars operated by the municipal public transport company Carris, which suspended their use after the incident. The line carried around 3 million tourists and locals a year.
GPIAAF said the maintenance procedures, designed by Carris, have not been updated for many years and “the use of cables that did not comply with the specifications and usage restrictions was due to several accumulated failures in the process of acquiring, accepting, and using them by Carris.”
Carris’ internal control mechanisms “were not sufficient or adequate to prevent and detect such failures.”
Carris has outsourced maintenance of the elevator since 2007 and the GPIAAF also identified deficiencies in this area.
“There is evidence that maintenance tasks recorded as completed do not always correspond to the tasks actually performed,” it said.
Carris said in a statement “it is not possible at this stage to say whether the nonconformities in the use of the cable are relevant to the accident or not.”


French police may nab Louvre thieves but unlikely to recover their loot

French police may nab Louvre thieves but unlikely to recover their loot
Updated 21 October 2025

French police may nab Louvre thieves but unlikely to recover their loot

French police may nab Louvre thieves but unlikely to recover their loot
  • Manhunt underway for perpetrators of Louvre heist
  • Museum thefts on the rise in France and around Europe

PARIS: Crime gangs around Europe are increasingly robbing valuable jewels and gold from cash-needy museums like the Louvre, but while police often catch the thieves, they struggle to recover the priceless goods, law enforcement and art experts say.
Only a small pool of criminals would be capable of such a job as Sunday’s audacious robbery in Paris and may already be known to police, the specialists say. But the objects themselves could be quickly broken down into component parts and sold on.
“If I steal a Van Gogh, it’s a Van Gogh. I can’t dispose of it through any other channel than an illicit art market,” said Marc Balcells, a Barcelona-based expert in crimes against cultural heritage. “But when I am stealing ... jewelry, I can move it through an illicit market as precious stones.”
The brazen heist of crown jewels from the Louvre, the world’s most visited museum, has been decried by some as a national humiliation and sparked security checks across France’s multitude of cultural sites.
“If you target the Louvre, the most important museum in the world, and then get away with the French crown jewels, something was wrong with security,” said art investigator Arthur Brand.
Officials at the Louvre, home to artworks such as the Mona Lisa, had in fact already sounded the alarm about lack of investment.
And at least four French museums have been robbed in the last two months, according to media reports.
On Tuesday, prosecutors said they had charged a Chinese-born woman for the theft of six gold nuggets worth about €1.5 million ($1.75 million) from Paris’s Museum of Natural History last month. She was arrested in Barcelona trying to dispose of some melted gold, they said.
Christopher Marinello, founder of Art Recovery International, which tracks stolen art, said museum heists were on the rise across Europe and further afield.
He cited cases in the Netherlands, France, Egypt.
“If you have jewels or gold in your collections, you need to be worried,” Marinello said.
Whodunnit?
Paris prosecutors have entrusted the investigation to a specialized Paris police unit known as the BRB, which is used to dealing with high-profile robberies.
Former police officer Pascal Szkudlara, who served in the unit, said the BRB handled the 2016 Kim Kardashian probe, when Paris thieves stole her $4 million engagement ring, as well as a recent spate of kidnappings of wealthy crypto bosses.
He said the BRB has about 100 agents, with over a dozen specialized in museum thefts. Investigators will look at video footage, telephone records, and forensic evidence, while informants will also be activated.
“They can have teams working on it 24/7 and for a long period,” Szkudlara said, expressing “100 percent” confidence the thieves would be caught.
Police will be poring over security footage going back weeks, looking to identify suspicious people casing out the joint, Brand said.
Corinne Chartrelle, who previously worked at the French Police’s Central Office for the Fight against Trafficking in Cultural Property, said the jewels could feasibly end up in a global diamond center like Antwerp where there “are probably people who aren’t too concerned about the origin of the items.”
The diamonds could also be cut into smaller stones and the gold melted down, leaving buyers unaware of their provenance.
If the thieves feel the net closing, they could chuck or destroy the loot altogether.
Police are clearly in a race against time.
“Once they’ve been cut into smaller jewels, the deed is done. It’s over. We’ll never see these pieces again intact,” said Marinello. “It’s a very small percentage, recovering stolen artworks. When it comes to jewelry, that percentage is even less.”
Any theory about the objects being ordered up by a mysterious buyer was laughable, said Brand. “That’s unheard of,” he said. “You only see it in Hollywood movies.”
Cultural authorities across Europe will be looking at how to better secure museums at a time of tight public finances.
Brand said it was impossible to properly safeguard a museum, so the best thing was to slow down the time it takes to steal objects and escape, giving police longer to respond by making windows or display cases thicker, or adding more doors.
“They know they have only five, six minutes to get away with it because after six minutes, the police show up. So if they go into a museum ... and they find out that it takes more than six, seven, eight minutes, they will not do it,” he said.
Finland’s National Gallery Director General Kimmo Leva said financial realities meant tough decisions.
“A tightening everyday economy is, naturally, not the best basis for making the investments needed to mitigate potential threats,” Leva said.