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Posts Tagged ‘border’

Spain on rare Gibraltar visit

Gibraltar

Spain’s foreign minister is to meet UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband in an historic visit to Gibraltar.

Miguel Angel Moratinos will travel to the British-held peninsula on Tuesday for talks with Mr Miliband and chief minister of Gibraltar, Peter Caruana.

It will be the first time a Spanish minister has been to the disputed territory for more than 300 years.

The UK insists it will not hand over Gibraltar against residents’ wishes despite Spanish sovereignty claims.

Border closed

The talks, officially called a "trilateral forum of dialogue", were confirmed despite a new row over Gibraltar’s territorial waters.

The Gibraltar government opposed a reported move by Spain to use a European Commission environmental directive to officially denote the surrounding seas as Spanish.

The Self-determination for Gibraltar group has called on Gibraltarians to fly union jacks during the Spanish minister’s visit.

Spain ceded Gibraltar to Britain in 1704 but has long said it should return to Spanish sovereignty.

The border between Spain and Gibraltar was closed by Spanish dictator General Franco in 1969 and did not fully reopen until 1985.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Kenya boosts Somali border force

Somali militant, file image

Kenya has promised to reinforce its border with Somalia after several abductions near the frontier.

Officials have been discussing how to stop incursions since the weekend, when militants snatched three foreign aid workers from the town of Mandera.

A defence spokesman promised to try to stop the militants, but said it was often difficult to identify them.

Meanwhile, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki blamed Somali insurgents for an influx of illegal weapons into his country.

Defence spokesman Bogita Ongeri said his forces were working with other nations to try to keep Somali militias such as the radical al-Shabab group at bay.

"My government will not spare any efforts to mop up illicit arms"

Mwai Kibaki
Kenyan President

"The challenge that we have at border points is that these people come from the same clan, and you find that sometimes to identify who is al-Shabab and who is not is a problem," he said.

"Our borders are porous and it is not a place where you can totally keep al-Shabab at bay. But we are trying our best."

‘Banditry attacks’

The BBC’s Ruth Nesoba, in Nairobi, says a series of incidents on the Somali border has raised questions about the ability of Kenyan security agents to keep the country safe.

Kenya map

On Saturday alleged members of al-Shabab crossed into Kenya, kidnapped three aid workers in Mandera and returned to Somalia – apparently without any resistance.

Our correspondent says the incident came just days after militants were reportedly sighted trying to recruit young men outside a local school on the Kenyan side of the border.

During a speech to the armed forces, President Kibaki linked the insurgency in Somalia to the rise of insecurity and crime in his country.

"The continued fighting in neighbouring Somalia has contributed immensely to the infiltration of these illicit arms into our country," he said.

"My government will not spare any efforts to mop up illicit arms that are used by criminals to carry out banditry attacks."

Earlier this year militants from Somalia abducted two Italians nuns from the same border area.

The two were released a few weeks later after ransom money was paid.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bosnian, Montenegrin police begin joint patrols

Bosnian and Montenegrin border police are carrying out joint frontier patrols in an attempt to clamp down on cross-border crime. Under an earlier signed protocol, members of the Bosnian Border Police are already carrying out mixed patrols with Croatian and Serbian police officers, Radio Free Europe reports.

Palestinian killed on Gaza border

Israeli tank on Gaza border (15.07.09)

One Palestinian was killed and two were injured in incidents on the Israel-Gaza border on Sunday, Israeli officials and Palestinian medics have said.

The man died in hospital in Israel after he was shot while approaching the border fence. The Israeli military said he did not heed warning shots.

Separately, two Palestinians were hurt by Israeli tank fire, Gaza medics said.

Israel’s military said troops returned fire after a border patrol was targeted with a rocket-propelled grenade.

But a pro-Hamas website said militants had been retaliating against Israeli fire.

A spokeswoman for Soroka Hospital in Israel said the man had died from severe chest injuries about two hours after he was brought in for treatment.

The Israeli military said he had aroused suspicion by approaching the fence in a heavy coat, despite high summer temperatures.

But it said he was later found to be unarmed.

Both incidents took place in the vicinity of Nahal Oz, the main transfer point for fuel into Gaza.

Periodic incidents have taken place on the border since Israel’s large-scale military operation in Gaza in January.

Israel said the operation was aimed at ending Palestinian rocket fire into Israel, which has since been greatly reduced.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Customs seize 28.4 kilos of ecstasy

Customs officers on the Gradina border crossing with Bulgaria yesterday confiscated 28.4 kilograms of the drug ecstasy. The narcotics were packed in 11 packages, labeled “Mitsubishi and Rolex”, said the customs officials, who worked with Serbian police (MUP) officers on the case.

Somalis kidnap Kenya aid workers

Map

Three foreign aid workers have been kidnapped in Kenya and taken across the border into Somalia, officials said.

About 10 Somali gunmen crossed the border to abduct the workers from the border town of Mandera.

The nationality of the workers was not immediately known. Kidnappings are not uncommon in the region and most people are released unharmed.

Two French hostages were seized earlier this week in Mogadishu and have been handed to a Somali Islamist group.

‘Guard shot’

In the latest incident, the three aid workers were taken from their office in Mandera, in north-eastern Kenya.

Aid workers and journalists are particular targets for kidnappers and are often released after ransoms are paid.

One official told Associated Press that a security guard had been shot in the head during the abduction and was being treated in hospital for "life-threatening injuries".

The two French hostages have reportedly been handed to the al-Shabab militant group, which has carried out public executions.

A source in the Somali presidency said: "If they are in the hands of al-Shabab it is very, very serious".

The two security advisers, who were training government troops, were seized from a Mogadishu hotel on Tuesday.

Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991.

Moderate Islamist Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was sworn in as president in January after UN-brokered peace talks.

He promised to introduce Sharia law but hardliners accuse him of being a Western stooge.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

No comment

By Gabriel Gatehouse
BBC News, Suleimaniya

Portraits of Iranian leaders at the border crossing between Iraq and Iran

More than a month after the disputed presidential election in Iran, much of the country is still closed to the outside.

Following the street demonstrations in Tehran, the Iranian authorities have expelled and barred some foreign journalists and restricted others to reporting only from the capital.

Little news about the aftermath of the election and the subsequent street demonstrations is coming out of the smaller provincial towns, simply because there is no one there to report it.

But it is still possible to speak to the people who travel from those towns and villages to other places where journalists can work more freely.

One such place is Iraqi Kurdistan, near the Iranian border.

The main street in the town of Suleimaniya is a teeming mass of shops and stalls, selling almost anything you might want to buy, from nuts to vegetables to second-hand mobile phones.

Many of the wares, cosmetics and cheap clothes, come from Iran, but one product that most definitely did not was the whisky.

Tight lipped

A small shop on the high street was piled with bottles from floor to ceiling: Scotch, Irish, American bourbon.

Our translator pointed to three men, crammed into the little store, busy filling their bags. "Iranians," he said.

The market in Suleimaniya

The Iranian authorities have blamed "foreign powers" for stoking the unrest that followed last month’s elections. Since then, many people in Iran have been nervous about talking openly to foreigners, especially journalists.

I thought that here, in autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan, on the steps of a liquor store, we might find tongues a little looser. I was wrong.

The three men were ethnic Azeris, one of Iran’s largest minority communities. They live mostly in the north-west of the country.

In 2006, clashes between Iranian Azeri demonstrators and police left five dead, according to reports at the time.

But despite this history of tension with the central authorities in Tehran, these three had nothing to say.

Had there been any demonstrations in their home town following the elections They were not interested in politics. How was the economy, how was business They were satisfied with their lives.

What did they think of Mir Hossein Mousavi, supposedly a liberal, a reformer (I eyed their plastic bags stuffed with booze.)

Might he have made life at home a little more relaxed They were, again, satisfied with their lives. Or was it fear

Spot the police

The following morning we drove up through the hills of Kurdistan towards the border with Iran. The little town of Bashmagh is the main frontier post in this area.

A steady stream of vehicles and pedestrians were crossing over mainly in one direction – from Iran into Iraq.

Map

These people were lorry drivers and traders, or simply families going to visit relatives on the other side of the border.

Watching over them were two brooding portraits – those of Ayatollahs Khomeini and Khamenei, the father of the Iranian revolution and his successor, the current supreme leader.

As if aware of their gaze, most of the people crossing here were even more reluctant to speak than the Iranians in Suleimaniya.

Some said they were convinced the Iranian secret police had agents watching and listening to them, even on the Iraqi side of the border.

I looked around. I saw a plethora of men in different uniforms, border guards, customs officers, policemen.

Three money-changers sat behind fold-up tables counting wads of brightly coloured bank notes. Old men wearing turbans and baggy pantaloons stood around doing nothing much, apart from smoking.

"This government is not the elected government of the people"

Hadi
Kurdish trader

In the eyes of a wary traveller, any one of them could be an Iranian agent. The nervousness was easy to understand. And yet there were those who were willing to talk.

Hadi is an Iranian Kurd in his mid-twenties. He lives in Mariwan, a small town not far from the border, and makes his living trading in cosmetics, crossing back and forth between Iran and Iraq.

He voted for Mr Mousavi, he said, in the hope that the economy would improve. But he believes his vote was stolen.

"This government is not the elected government of the people," he said. "It is a fake and a coup d’etat. Nothing can change this system except force."

Watching the protests in Tehran over the past month, Hadi and his friends had wanted to demonstrate too. But, he said, in Mariwan it was simply too dangerous.

"There were more police than civilians in the streets, we couldn’t do anything in these small towns, because if you talk freely it could cost you your life. Everybody wanted to take part in the demonstrations. But we couldn’t."

"This government it so repressive," he went on, "we are afraid even when we are in our own homes."

Friend of the poor

It is unusual to hear someone speak so openly and critically of the Iranian authorities.

Sayyad

Reading between the lines though, many seemed unhappy with the events of the past month. But not everyone.

A short while after we spoke to Hadi, a vast yellow truck rolled across the border. Out of the cab jumped Sayyad, the driver.

He was transporting a consignment of rice from Pakistan, destined for Iraqi consumers.

Sayyad, who is from another town in western Iran, voted for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, he said, because the president was on the side of poor people.

To prove the point, he told us how he had recently bought his own lorry, at a good price and in instalments.

So he was pleased his man had won the election. He was also relieved that the authorities had restored law and order.

Of all the people we spoke to at Bashmagh, whatever part of Iran they came from and whoever they had voted for in the election, they all appeared to agree on two things.

Firstly, the Iranian economy is in bad shape. Many complained of high unemployment and of having difficulty making ends meet.

The other was that – excepting Tehran – there had been no recent demonstrations on the streets of their hometowns. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Sudan rivals agree to avert war

File photo from May 2008 showing Abyei village in South Sudan after clashes

Rival parties from north and south Sudan have agreed new plans to prevent conflict ahead of next week’s ruling on their disputed border.

The two sides ended 22 years of conflict in 2005 but tension remains high, especially in the oil-rich region of Abyei, claimed by both sides.

A court in The Hague is due to rule on the border next Thursday and both sides have promised to abide by its ruling.

The agreement in Khartoum was overseen by US envoy Scott Gration.

Last year, clashes in Abyei forced some 50,000 people to flee their homes and reportedly left 100 dead.

Could clashes herald return to war

Uneasy peace in Sudan ghost town

Map

Tensions are rising ahead of national elections put back until April 2010 and a referendum on whether the south should secede, due in 2011.

Senior negotiator Malik Aggar, from the south’s former rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), told the BBC there was bound to be disappointment from one side or another with the decision from the Permanent Court for Arbitration.

"We expected some violence may be there but both parties are prepared to quell any violence," he said.

He said that the presence of UN peacekeepers would be increased, while both sides would send officials to explain the ruling and try to avert bloodshed.

However, he also said there were up to 14 unresolved issues between the two sides.

Ghazi Salahaldin from President Omar al-Bashir’s National Congress Party also said the two sides were working together to prevent renewed conflict.

The long civil war – separate from the Darfur conflict – between the mainly Muslim north and the Christian and animist south ended in 2005, after claiming 1.5 million lives.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Hamas Accuses Israel Of Dumping Aphrodisiac Gum On Gaza

“We have discovered two types of stimulants that were introduced into the Gaza Strip from Israeli border crossings,” Hamas police spokesman Islam Shahwan said.

“The first type is presented in the form of chewing gum and the second in the form…

Guinea on alert for ‘attack plot’

Captain Moussa Dadis Camara (left) talking to General Mamadou Bah Toto Camara

The military government of Guinea says it has put the army on high alert at all border posts after uncovering plans for an attack on the country.

The West African state said armed men were gathering on the borders with Guinea-Bissau and Senegal to the north and Liberia to the south.

An announcement on state-run national radio said drugs cartels were believed to be behind the plans.

Guinea is a key transit point for drugs en route from the Americas to Europe.

When the junta led by Captain Moussa Camara seized power some seven months ago, it made the fight against drugs one of its key priorities.

Several leading suspects have been arrested and are awaiting trial, but the regime must have made powerful enemies in the process, correspondents say.

Map showing Guinea

The BBC’s Alhassan Sillah in the capital, Conakry, says the announcement of the national alert caught most people off guard and many have reacted with trepidation.

The statement, carried on state radio said "well informed sources" had indicated that the attackers were on the payroll of drug cartels.

"The ministry of defence was informed by the security services and other credible sources of the preparation of an armed attack on Guinea from its borders with Guinea-Bissau and the region of Casamance [in Senegal]," it said.

"These sources have also indicated that there are armed men regrouping on the border with Guinea Bissau to the north and the town of Foya to the south on the border with Liberia."

Election pressure

The statement comes as the military government faces increasing pressure from both local political and civil society groups and the international community for it to hold elections.

Captain Camara has said he will stand down after free and fair elections, which he says will take place by the end of 2010.

The African Union suspended Guinea after the coup, which followed the death of long-standing President Lansana Conte. Many Guineans welcomed the coup, seeing it as bringing an end to years of misrule.

Guinea has more than a third of the world’s bauxite reserves, and also has large reserves of gold, diamonds, iron and nickel.

COCAINE TRAFFICKING ROUTES INTO EUROPE VIA WEST AFRICA

  • 1. Most of the world’s supply of cocaine comes from South America. Venezuela is one of the main departure points for illicit drug consignments leaving the region. Drugs are flown or shipped to West Africa in shipping containers, small boats, or private and commercial aircraft

  • 2. West Africa has become a major hub for smuggling South American cocaine into Europe as British and American anti-drug efforts have curtailed the use of traditional smuggling routes

  • 3. In West Africa the drugs are stockpiled and prepared for transport into Europe by South American, European and local drugs gangs
  • 4. The drugs are smuggled to Europe by shipping container, overland, airfreight or on commercial passenger flights using "mules" via West and East Africa.
  • The countries shown are identified in the INCB report. Routes shown are general indications of illicit drug routes. They are not intended to show exact routes.

Source: INCB, Interpol
Map showing smuggling routes from South America to Europe via West and East Africa

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.