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Canary Islands received record 46,843 migrants in 2024

Update A boat with 136 migrants onboard including 40 women and 17 children arrives at La Restinga port on the Canary island of El Hierro. (AFP)
A boat with 136 migrants onboard including 40 women and 17 children arrives at La Restinga port on the Canary island of El Hierro. (AFP)
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Updated 04 January 2025

Canary Islands received record 46,843 migrants in 2024

Canary Islands received record 46,843 migrants in 2024
  • Sanchez government ‘maintains a transversal policy that prioritizes human rights’

MADRID: A record 46,843 migrants reached Spain’s Canary Islands illegally in 2024 via the increasingly deadly Atlantic route, the second consecutive year of unprecedented arrival numbers, official data showed.

The landmark came as the European country received 63,970 irregular migrants last year, the vast majority in the Atlantic archipelago, up from 56,852 in 2023, the Interior Ministry said.
Spain has moved to the forefront of the EU’s migration crisis as tighter controls in the Mediterranean push more migrants to attempt the perilous trip from West Africa to the Canaries.

BACKGROUND

Spain, a major gateway to Europe along with Italy and Greece, has emerged as an outlier in European migration policy.

EU border agency Frontex has said irregular crossings into the bloc from January to November 2024 fell 40 percent overall.
However, they grew 19 percent on the Atlantic route, with Mali, Senegal, and Morocco being the most common nationalities.
The latest figures confirmed data published in December that showed the record for annual migrant arrivals by boat in the Canaries had been broken for the second year running by November.
Last year’s arrivals surpassed the 39,910 migrants who reached the islands off northwestern Africa by sea in 2023, a level that had smashed the previous record from 2006.
The national figure for 2024 fell short of the record of 64,298 arrivals set in 2018 but exceeded the 56,852 migrants who reached Spain illegally in 2023.
A report last week by NGO Caminando Fronteras said at least 10,457 migrants died or disappeared while trying to reach Spain by sea from Jan. 1 to Dec. 5, 2024.
Caminando Fronteras said it was a 50-percent increase on 2023.
The highest toll since its tallies began in 2007, attributing it to the use of ramshackle boats, dangerous waters and a lack of resources for rescues.
“The loss of a single life is a cause for sadness, and we regret every one of them,” the Migration Ministry said in reaction to the report.
“This government maintains a transversal policy that prioritizes human rights and works in collaboration with other ministries and countries of origin and transit to promote regular and safe migration.”
Local authorities in the Canaries say they are overwhelmed by the waves of arrivals.
Spain’s political parties, however, have failed to agree on a plan to distribute thousands of unaccompanied minors nationwide to ease the burden.
Government minister Angel Victor Torres criticized the conservative opposition Popular Party, or PP, for the impasse.
The children would go to school, “learning our language and integrating into our society” if the PP adopted an attitude of “true solidarity,” Torres told Cadena SER radio.
Despite the crisis, Spain, a major gateway to Europe along with Italy and Greece, has emerged as an outlier in European migration policy.
Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez defends the necessity of migration to support the welfare state and workforce needs as Europe’s population ages.
His successive leftist governments since 2018 have eased regularization rules for illegal migrants in Spain, even as far-right parties with anti-immigration platforms have surged in Italy, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and beyond.
Sanchez last year embarked on a tour of Senegal, Mauritania, and The Gambia, the main departure points for Spain-bound boats, to promote local efforts to curb illegal migration.
PP spokesman Borja Semper slammed the government for presiding over rising immigration numbers while levels fell in other frontline countries such as Italy.
The government uses immigration “frivolously because there is no policy, and when it puts forward something, it’s behind a banner,” he said.


Sierra Leone chimp refuge shuts doors to tourists to protest deforestation

Sierra Leone chimp refuge shuts doors to tourists to protest deforestation
Updated 19 sec ago

Sierra Leone chimp refuge shuts doors to tourists to protest deforestation

Sierra Leone chimp refuge shuts doors to tourists to protest deforestation
  • Authorities acknowledge that the country’s rich wildlife is threatened by land seizures and illegal logging
  • Sierra Leone lost approximately 2.17 million hectares of tree cover between 2001 and 2024
FREETOWN: The eco-lodges and tree-covered footpaths of West Africa’s largest chimpanzee refuge have been devoid of tourists for more than two months as its founder stages a protest about rampant deforestation in Sierra Leone.
Authorities acknowledge that the country’s rich wildlife is threatened by land seizures and illegal logging, but the founder of the Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary, Bala Amarasekaran, says they have not yet done enough about it to convince him to reopen to visitors.
“A few months back, we could see the land grabbing and the encroachment coming closer to the sanctuary,” Amarasekaran said at the refuge, which is home to more than 100 mainly orphaned chimps and normally lets guests stay in its lodges.
“(Deforestation) is really threatening the sanctuary’s existence, because it’s too dangerous when people come close to a wildlife preserve like this,” said Amarasekaran, who founded the refuge 30 years ago and has led it through crises including civil war and the 2013-2016 Ebola epidemic.
Sierra Leone lost approximately 2.17 million hectares (5.36 million acres) of tree cover between 2001 and 2024, representing about 39 percent of the total in 2000, according to online tracker Global Forest Watch.
The Western Area Peninsula, home to the capital Freetown and Tacugama, lost more than 10,000 hectares (24,700 acres) of tree cover during that same period.
Amarasekaran said deforestation in the area was fueled by “land grabbing” for development.
The consequences of rapid deforestation were highlighted by a mudslide on the slopes of Mount Sugar Loaf in 2017 that killed an estimated 1,000 people.
A 2019 paper published by the Geological Society of London blamed the incident on a mix of heavy rain, deforested slopes and unchecked construction. It said tree loss had weakened the soil’s ability to absorb water and hold together, worsening the mudflow.
“It’s a serious problem, an existential problem,” Sierra Leone’s Information Minister Chernor Bah said.
“We regret that the Tacugama authorities have taken the step that they have taken to shut down here, but it’s one that we understand.”
Amarasekaran said President Julius Maada Bio’s government had dispatched a task force to conduct some raids on illegal logging operations, but complained about a lack of follow-up operations.
Bah said the government was committed to protecting the peninsula’s forests.

France sending 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, foreign minister says

France sending 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, foreign minister says
Updated 9 min 14 sec ago

France sending 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, foreign minister says

France sending 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza, foreign minister says
  • A global hunger monitor said on Tuesday that a famine scenario was unfolding in the Gaza Strip

PARIS: French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said on Friday that France is sending four flights carrying 10 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Gaza from Jordan.
“This is emergency aid but still not sufficient” in the face of this “revolting” situation, Barrot told broadcaster franceinfo.
A global hunger monitor said on Tuesday that a famine scenario was unfolding in the Gaza Strip, with malnutrition soaring, children under five dying of hunger-related causes and humanitarian access severely restricted.


‘There is still hope’: Pilgrims from war zones gather in Rome

‘There is still hope’: Pilgrims from war zones gather in Rome
Updated 01 August 2025

‘There is still hope’: Pilgrims from war zones gather in Rome

‘There is still hope’: Pilgrims from war zones gather in Rome
  • Khader Qassis traveled 32 hours from the West Bank, passing military checkpoints across three countries

VATICAN CITY: Khader Qassis traveled 32 hours from the West Bank, passing military checkpoints across three countries, to join hundreds of thousands of other young Catholics in Rome for a week-long pilgrimage.
While Rome thronged with singing pilgrims, the 20-year-old from Bethlehem said he felt some guilt that he was in the cheerful Italian capital while starvation was spreading in Gaza, which has been besieged by Israel for months.
“It’s hard when there are people in Gaza dreaming just to eat and I’m traveling,” Qassis told AFP.
The Vatican is holding its “Jubilee of Youth” this week, with up to a million 18-to-35 year-olds expected to take part.
The Vatican has singled out pilgrims from conflict zones — especially Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Ukraine — that made major “sacrifices” to get to the Eternal City.
For many living in war-scarred countries, the trip was a chance to experience a breath of normalcy.
“Being here lets us feel that we’re free,” said Jessie Khair, an 18-year-old Palestinian woman from the West Bank, wearing a black kufiyah scarf.
She was moved by the outpouring of sympathy over Gaza, “far from the borders, checkpoints and anything that could hurt us.”
At the majestic St. Peter’s Square, a group of pilgrims waved a Syrian flag.
Father Fadi Syriani was accompanying a group of 11 Syrian youths, many of whom left their country for the first time.
“It is a generation that has grown up in the years of war that started in 2011,” he told AFP, saying that Syrian Christian youths, a tiny minority in the country, felt “isolated” from the rest of the Church.
Many Christians have fled war in Syria, where a recent attack on a Damascus church killed 25 people.
In Rome, Syriani said, the youths can “witness that there is still hope.”
The Vatican’s youth event is also unfolding as Moscow pounds Ukraine with more deadly attacks despite Western ultimatums to end its invasion.
Leo XIV, who became pope in May, has brought hope to many Ukrainians after his predecessor pope Francis had repeatedly made comments that infuriated Ukrainians, who accused him of giving in to Russian imperialism.
“For the last few months, the communication is better than what it was,” said 23-year-old Svitlana Tryhub, from the front-line city of Zaporizhzhia but now living in Lviv near the Polish border.
“It’s important to be balanced, but it is important to be brave and speak up,” she said.
Most of Ukraine’s pilgrims came from western Ukraine, the most religious part of the country, with the largest share of Greek Catholics, who pledge allegiance to the Vatican.
Because of the ban on military-age men from leaving Ukraine, almost all were women.
Valerie Fabianska, an 18-year-old economy student, said she could “forgive” or pray alongside Russians only if those responsible for the invasion were jailed and their country “accepted its crimes” against Ukraine.
She said the war had made her more religious.
“When the world around you is so unstable, you can find some peace and stability in God,” she said, acknowledging nonetheless that it was “really hard.”
At Rome’s Ukrainian Greek Catholic church, an all-women choir sang amid a “prayer for Ukraine.”
Maria Khrystofora, a young nun from a western Ukrainian monastery, said she had noticed that more of her countrymen were coming to the church during the war.
“When people have nothing human to rely on, they turn to God to help them,” she said.


Indonesian President Prabowo pardons political opponents

Indonesian President Prabowo pardons political opponents
Updated 01 August 2025

Indonesian President Prabowo pardons political opponents

Indonesian President Prabowo pardons political opponents
  • Prabowo Subianto grants amnesty to Hasto Kristiyanto and Supratman Andi Agtas
  • Prabowo granted the clemencies as the government sees the need to unite all political elements

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto pardoned two political rivals, a former trade minister and a senior politician from an opposition party a few weeks after both were sentenced to jail, officials said.

Prabowo granted amnesty to Hasto Kristiyanto, the secretary general of parliament’s largest party, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDIP), Law Minister Supratman Andi Agtas said late on Thursday in a news conference broadcast by local media, after meeting the House’s deputy speaker.

Hasto was sentenced to 3-1/2 years in prison last week for bribing an election official but the amnesty revokes his sentence though his conviction will still stand.

The president also granted an abolition for Thomas Trikasih Lembong, a trade minister under President Joko Widodo who was sentenced to 3-1/2 years in prison for improperly granting sugar import permits, Supratman said in the news conference.

The abolition means, Lembong, who was the campaign manager of Prabowo’s rival candidate in last year’s presidential election, is acquitted of the charges and his sentence.

Prabowo granted the clemencies as the government sees the need to unite all political elements and as part of Indonesia’s independence celebrations in August, said Supratman.

“We need to build this nation together, with all the political elements ... And both have contributed to the republic,” Supratman said.

It is common for the Indonesian president to give pardons ahead of the national independence day on August 17. The amnesty for Hasto was among the pardons given to more than 1,100 other people, Supratman added.

Lawyers for Hasto and Lembong did not immediately respond for Reuters’ request for comments.

Under Indonesian law, the president has the authority to give amnesty and abolition but it requires approval from the parliament, said Bivitri Susanti from Indonesia’s Jentera School of Law.

Still, she said the amnesty given to Hasto was rather “political” to gain support from the largest opposition party in the parliament while for Lembong, the government is responding to growing protests from the public over his sentence.

Other observers were concerned the pardons undercut efforts by the judiciary to deal with corruption in a country where concerns about graft and government misconduct are high.

“It shows that the government could intervene in law enforcement, make it as a political bargain,” said Muhammad Isnur from rights group Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation.


One dead, five missing in Chilean copper mine collapse

One dead, five missing in Chilean copper mine collapse
Updated 01 August 2025

One dead, five missing in Chilean copper mine collapse

One dead, five missing in Chilean copper mine collapse
  • At least one worker was killed and five others were missing after a copper mine collapse in Chile triggered by an earthquake on Thursday, state-owned operator Codelco said

SANTIAGO: At least one worker was killed and five others were missing after a copper mine collapse in Chile triggered by an earthquake on Thursday, state-owned operator Codelco said.
Nine others were injured — none critically — after the magnitude 4.2 earthquake struck at 5:34 p.m. (2134 GMT) in the world’s largest underground copper mine, El Teniente (“The Lieutenant“), Codelco said.
“Codelco reports the death this afternoon of our colleague Paulo Marin Tapia,” it said in a statement.
El Teniente is located in the city of Rancagua, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the capital Santiago.
The United States Geological Survey reported a shallow magnitude 5.0 earthquake about 35 kilometers from Rancagua at 2134 GMT.
Rescuers were working to enter the collapsed area, and “we have already reached some of them,” Maximo Pacheco, president of Codelco, told Cooperativa radio.
Chile is the world’s leading copper producer and mines nearly a quarter of the global supply.
The valuable metal is used in wiring, motors and renewable energy generation.