News
Cuba Expects To Resume US Deportation Flights This Month
BETHESDA, Maryland – A Cuban official indicated this month that the country would resume accepting deportation flights from the United States, reflecting US fears about the largest levels of Cuban migration in six decades.
Cuba’s deputy foreign minister, Carlos Fernandez de Cossio, said flights are expected before the United States lifts coronavirus pandemic-related asylum limitations on May 11, widely expected to boost the number of persons seeking admission into the United States at the U.S.-Mexico border.
The diplomat talked to The Associated Press at the Cuban ambassador’s residence outside Washington following what he called a “productive meeting” with US Department of Homeland Security officials to discuss migration.
“We have a lot of common understanding, both parties, the United States and Cuba, about the nature of the problem,” he said.
According to Fernandez de Cossio, there has yet to be an agreement on flying frequency, which we and Cuban capacity will determine. However, he believes there is no reason they cannot return to pre-pandemic levels around twice a month. The final flight was scheduled for December 2020.
A request for comment from the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned on Friday.
Cubans were detained approximately 43,000 times at the US-Mexico border in December Deportation, making them one of the most numerous nations entering the US. In January, President Joe Biden’s administration announced that Cubans might travel to the United States if they filed online and had a financial sponsor, but that if they crossed the border illegally, they would be returned to Mexico.
“We’re going to see if we can get one in the coming weeks Deportation, and then we’re going to make that regular so that people can be easily removed, not to Mexico, but directly to Cuba,” Fernandez de Cossio said late Thursday.
He said that after a fall earlier this year, the number of Cubans fleeing on boats, particularly high-powered vessels associated with smugglers, had increased and that more Cubans were leaving the country to fly to Nicaragua as tourists, which is typically the first step for Cubans to travel by land to the US-Mexico border.
Fernandez de Cassio stated that the January amendments that allowed people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to apply for humanitarian parole to come to the United States were beneficial in reducing the number of Cubans attempting to cross the US-Mexico border. However, he stressed that it was a short-term solution.
“It would be irresponsible or naive for us to believe that this will be sustainable in the long run because there will always be a limit on the number of visas Deportation,” he said.
How many planes the United States will require to act as a substantial disincentive to Cuban Deportation is still being determined.
Since November, the two countries have scheduled five removal flights, but each has been canceled due to various operational challenges, according to Fernandez de Cossio, who emphasizes that Cuba has supported the flights in theory.
Last year, Border Patrol personnel halted more migrants than at any other time in history, owing partly to landings from Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, all of which have strained diplomatic relations with the United States. The United States has found it incredibly difficult to fund deportation flights to those countries, requiring the Biden administration to resort to Mexico for assistance in hosting the migrants.
The Biden administration has gone into overdrive in preparation for the repeal of Title 42, the public health authority under which migrants have been deported from the United States more than 2.7 million times without the right to seek asylum in the name of preventing the spread of COVID-19.
This Monday, the United States, Panama, and Colombia unveiled a plan to halt migration through Panama’s dangerous Darien Gap, where people are frequently killed. Deportation It has also begun trying faster initial screening for asylum at an unnamed border crossing, hoping to promptly return those who do not pass.
During negotiations in Washington, Fernandez de Cossio claimed he advocated for modifications to the Cuban Adjustment Act, which allows Cubans to apply for legal status after one year in the United States.
SOURCE – (AP)
World
India, At UN, Is Mum About Dispute With Canada Over Sikh Separatist Leader’s Killing
UNITED NATIONS — As he addressed world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, India’s top diplomat avoided addressing his country’s dispute with Canada over the assassination of a Sikh separatist leader. However, he indirectly criticized how other nations respond to “terrorism.”
Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar devoted most of his speech to praising India’s rising global stature and aspirations for leadership, highlighting its recent tenure as chair of the Group of 20 industrialized nations and presiding over a substantial summit meeting last month.
However, he also stated that the international community must not “allow political expediency to determine responses to terrorism, extremism, and violence.”
India has frequently attacked Pakistan at the United Nations over what New Delhi perceives as Pakistan’s sponsorship of terrorism. This time, however, the remark could be interpreted as an attack on Canada, whose representative is scheduled to speak at the United Nations later on Tuesday.
As a result of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s statement last week that India may have been involved in the June murder of a Canadian citizen in a Vancouver suburb, relations between the two countries have reached their lowest point in years.
Hardeep Singh Nijjar, 45, was murdered by masked assailants, but Canada has not yet provided any public evidence of Indian involvement in the murder. India had designated him as a terrorist because he led the remnants of a once-powerful movement to establish an independent Sikh homeland, Khalistan.
India’s top diplomat avoided addressing his country’s dispute with Canada over the assassination of a Sikh separatist leader.
The Indian Ministry of Foreign Affairs dismissed the allegation as “absurd” and accused Canada of harboring “terrorists and extremists.” It also asserted that the allegations were politically motivated, indicating that Trudeau sought domestic support from the Sikh diaspora.
“Such unsubstantiated allegations seek to divert attention away from Khalistani terrorists and extremists, who have found refuge in Canada and continue to threaten India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” the ministry said in a statement released last week.
However, they have long accused Canada of allowing Sikh separatists, including Nijjar, unfettered reign.
Even though the active insurgency ended decades ago, the Modi administration has warned that Sikh separatists are attempting a comeback. New Delhi has urged nations such as Canada, where Sikhs account for more than 2% of the population, to do more to prevent a separatist revival.
After the G20 summit, Canada’s allegation obscured India’s diplomatic moment. Jaishankar sought to refocus attention on his country’s ambitions in the international arena, noting that India is the world’s most populous nation and a growing economic superpower.
“When we aspire to be a leading power, it is not for self-promotion, but to assume more responsibility and make more contributions,” he explained. “The goals we have set for ourselves will distinguish us from those who rose before us.”
SOURCE – (AP)
Entertainment
Spain Charges Pop Singer Shakira With Tax Evasion For A Second Time And Demands More Than $7 Million
BARCELONA, SPAIN — Spanish prosecutors have charged Colombian pop sensation Shakira with failing to pay 6.7 million euros ($7.1 million) in tax on her 2018 earnings, authorities announced Tuesday. This is Spain’s most recent fiscal accusation against the Colombian singer.
Prosecutors in Barcelona alleged in a statement that Shakira used an offshore company based in a tax refuge to avoid paying the tax.
According to the statement, she has been notified of the allegations in Miami, where she resides.
Shakira is already scheduled to be tried in Barcelona on November 20 for a separate case involving her residence between 2012 and 2014. Prosecutors allege she neglected to pay 14.5 million euros in taxes in this instance.
Prosecutors in Barcelona have asserted that the Grammy winner spent more than fifty percent of the 2012-2014 period in Spain and thus should have paid taxes in the country, even though her official residence was in the Bahamas.
Spanish prosecutors have charged Colombian pop sensation Shakira with failing to pay 6.7 million euros ($7.1 million) in tax on her 2018 earnings.
Last July, Spanish tax officials launched a new investigation against Shakira. Prosecutors have decided to file charges after reviewing the evidence compiled over the past two months. No trial date has been set.
Llorente y Cuenca, the public relations firm previously managing Shakira’s affairs, had no immediate comment.
Last July, it was stated that the artist had “always complied with the law and followed the advice of her financial advisors.”
Since she began dating the now-retired football player Gerard Pique, Shakira, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, has been linked to Spain. The couple, who have two children, resided in Barcelona until the end of their 11-year relationship last year.
In the past decade, Spain’s tax authorities have cracked down on football superstars such as Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo for not paying their entire tax obligations. These athletes were found guilty of tax evasion but were spared prison time due to a provision that enables judges to forego sentences of less than two years for first-time offenders.
SOURCE – (AP)
Entertainment
Toymaker Lego Will Stick To Its Quest To Find Sustainable Materials Despite Failed Recycle Attempt In 2023
COPENHAGEN, Denmark – Lego stated on Monday that it remains committed to its quest to find sustainable materials to reduce carbon emissions despite the failure of an experiment to use recycled bottles. Lego is the world’s largest toy manufacturer.
After more than two years of testing, Lego “decided not to proceed” with producing its trademark colorful bricks from recycled polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottles because “the material did not reduce carbon emissions.”
Nonetheless, the toymaker remains “fully committed to making Lego bricks from sustainable materials by 2032,” according to the company’s website.
Two years ago, the private company that manufactures bricks from oil-derived plastic began researching a potential transition to recycled plastic bottles made of PET plastic, which does not degrade in quality when recycled.
The company stated that it had invested “more than $1.2 billion in sustainability initiatives” to transition to more sustainable materials and reduce carbon emissions by 37% by 2032.
The company reported that it was “currently testing and developing Lego bricks made from a range of alternative sustainable materials, including other recycled plastics and plastics made from alternative sources such as e-methanol.”
Nonetheless, the toymaker remains “fully committed to making Lego bricks from sustainable materials by 2032,” according to the company’s website.
E-methanol, also known as green methanol, is composed of residual carbon dioxide and hydrogen and is produced by splitting water molecules using renewable energy.
The company said it would continue to use bio-polypropylene, the sustainable and biological variant of polyethylene — a plastic used in everything from consumer and food packaging to tires — for elements in Lego sets such as leaves, trees and other accessories.
Long-term, “we believe that this will encourage increased production of more sustainable raw materials, such as recycled oils, and help support our transition to sustainable materials,” the report stated.
The company was founded by Ole Kirk Kristiansen in 1932. The name comprises the Danish words leg and godt, meaning “play well.” The brand name was created without knowledge of the Latin Lego, meaning “I assemble.”
SOURCE- (AP)
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