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Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain
Venezuelans were for the first time the largest group applying for asylum in the EU in the first quarter after Germany received fewer Syrians following the toppling of Bashar Assad. (REUTERS)
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Updated 22 August 2025

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain
  • Venezuelans facing US expulsion under Trump
  • Migrants face housing, job challenges rebuilding lives in Spain

MADRID: After surviving the perilous trek through the jungle of Panama’s Darien Gap with his wife and three daughters to reach the United States, Venezuelan policeman Alberto Peña thought he had found a haven from the persecution he says he fled from back home.
But two years later, President Donald Trump’s drive to end temporary protected status for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans in the US forced Peña and his family to move once again — this time to Spain.
“Migrating twice is difficult, both for oneself and for one’s children,” Peña said from Madrid. “But peace of mind is priceless.”
He is among a growing number of Venezuelans who have become the new drivers of migration to Europe.
Venezuelans were for the first time the largest group applying for asylum in the EU in the first quarter after Germany received fewer Syrians following the toppling of Bashar Assad last year and migration controls in the Mediterranean reduced arrivals via Tunisia and Libya.
For years, the US was a haven for Venezuelans fleeing President Nicolas Maduro’s leftist government, but in Trump’s second term many are being branded criminals and forced to seek refuge elsewhere.
Spain, which has pursued a more flexible migration policy to address labor shortages even as European peers take a tougher approach, also shares language and cultural values that make it the natural alternative for many of the 1 million Venezuelans living in the US who fear deportation, said Tomás Paez, head of the Venezuelan Diaspora Observatory.
Fear of being sent to prisons such as the notorious Alligator Alcatraz in Florida is driving many Venezuelans to “self-deport,” said Paez.
“People are even afraid to go to school or work for fear of being raided and arrested,” he said. “They don’t know what to do, so there’s an exodus.”
Spanish NGOs have observed an increase in Venezuelans arriving or seeking guidance on how to relocate to Spain.
At least three of every 10 appointments are with Venezuelans living in the US, said Jesús Alemán, leader of the Madrid-based NGO Talento 58, which advises Venezuelan migrants such as Meliana Bruguera.

RESIDENCE PERMIT
Bruguera, 41, arrived in the US saying she was fleeing threats back in Venezuela. She was pregnant and carrying her five-year-old daughter and a temporary humanitarian visa that Trump canceled for nearly 350,000 Venezuelans when she was in the process of renewing it.
Fearing deportation, she chose to leave her job as a kindergarten teacher to migrate again, this time to Spain.
“I couldn’t stop crying at work. I kept saying: ‘This is inhumane. Why are they kicking me out of the United States too?’,” she said in Madrid.
Spanish official data shows Venezuelan arrivals overall are accelerating. About 59 percent of all 77,251 asylum applications received in the first half of 2025 were by Venezuelans compared with 38 percent of all applications a year ago.
An unknown number of Venezuelans also have EU passports through family links and are applying for residency in Spain via that route.
Overall, there has been a 14 percent drop in asylum applications to Spain in the first half of the year compared with the same period last year. Total asylum applications to the EU are also down in the first quarter this year, compared with the same period in 2024, with fewer Syrians and Afghans arriving, while applications from Venezuelans are up.
According to an internal European Commission report seen by Reuters, 52,943 Venezuelans had applied for asylum in the EU to July 27 this year.

Venezuela’s economy has experienced a prolonged crisis marked by triple-digit inflation and the exodus of more than 9 million migrants seeking better opportunities abroad, according to the Venezuelan Diaspora Observatory. The government has blamed the economic collapse on sanctions by the United States and others, which it brands an “economic war.”
Most Venezuelan migrants have stayed in Latin America, overburdening already struggling public services in places like Colombia, where they get 10-year visas and access to public education and health care.
But Spain offers Venezuelans a relatively easy migration path, since they receive an automatic residence permit for humanitarian reasons if their asylum request is rejected.
That is better treatment than that received by thousands of migrants from West Africa to Spain each year, said Juan Carlos Lorenzo, a coordinator at the Spanish Commission for Refugee Aid in the Canary Islands.
“It is a privileged treatment that is almost only applied to Venezuelans,” he said.
But resettling is not easy. At least four Venezuelans who had moved from the US to Spain told Reuters it was harder to find a house to rent and a job than in the US
Bruguera and her children are staying in a Red Cross refuge while they wait for their application to be approved. Her husband, who joined them in Madrid from Venezuela, has found it difficult to rent an apartment and is living in a garage.
“Migrating a second time is doubly devastating, because you achieve stability ... and then you find that dream vanishing,” she said.
(Reporting by Corina Pons and Charlie Devereux in Madrid and Layli Foroudi in Paris; Additional reporting by Joan Faus in Barcelona; Editing by Alison Williams)


Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show

Updated 5 sec ago

Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show

Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show
HONG KONG: As China stages its largest-ever military parade through Beijing next week, it will be highlighting not just advancements in arms hardware, but also the vital technology required to protect, control and command the weapons it would use in any future conflict.
Among the more eye-catching aircraft, hypersonic missiles and undersea drones, will be equipment such as battlefield sensors on tanks, advanced early warning and targeting radars and air defense lasers — all part of an effort that some analysts describe as transparency designed to intimidate and deter potential rivals. But beyond the unprecedented scale and choreographed display of military might, question marks remain about how effectively China’s armed forces — untested since a bloody border conflict with Vietnam in 1979 — could knit it all together in a future conflict.
Singapore-based security scholar Drew Thompson said while the People’s Liberation Army may unveil advanced weapons and systems to protect and command them, China’s key potential adversaries may not be deterred by the “bling” of a parade.
“It is performative but it doesn’t speak to capability, and we still don’t know how effectively China could tie it all together and operate in a conflict scenario,” said Thompson, a senior fellow at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS).
The parade comes amid protracted military tensions across East Asia as China increases deployments around Taiwan and the disputed South China Sea and the US and its allies prepare potentially to respond to a regional conflict.
China claims Taiwan as its territory and has never renounced the use of force to seize it. Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te and his government strongly object to China’s sovereignty claims, saying it is up to the island’s people to decide their future.
While the military leaderships of the US and its allies like Japan as well as Taiwan may not be deterred, others might be intimidated, Thompson said.
To that end, China might be signalling to India, Russia and smaller regional nations as well as “American libertarian isolationists.”
“As you’re watching the parade, it is easy to get distracted....it is not about the bling, but the effect the bling has on the view of the observer — that is China is too big to fight and US interests aren’t worth the risk or the consequences of a fight with China.”
The Chinese defense ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

VICTORY DAY PARADE
Regional military attaches and security analysts have already been scrutinizing on-line footage of the rehearsals of what Beijing has called a “Victory Day” parade, marking the end of World War Two after Japan’s formal surrender.
The war is also often described by Chinese officials and in state media as the “War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression” and the “World Anti-Fascist War.”
“(The weapons and equipment) will fully demonstrate our military’s robust ability to adapt to technological advancements, evolving warfare patterns, and win future wars,” parade deputy director Wu Zeke told a press conference last week.
If Beijing is to win those wars, it will have to fully integrate a network of military satellites and cyber and electronic warfare capabilities, now considered second only to the United States, and use them to effectively dominate its near seas.
To that end, an early warning plane capable of operating from China’s aircraft carriers, the KJ-600, has been displayed — a vital piece in finishing the complex jigsaw of carrier operations.
China’s jet fighters will also be closely watched, particularly following Pakistan’s use of Chinese-built J-10C fighters against Indian aircraft during clashes in May.
Pakistan has claimed that it shot down six Indian aircraft during the clashes, including a French-made Rafale fighter. India has acknowledged some losses but denied losing six aircraft and,
earlier this month, said it had shot down six Pakistani planes. A suite of new YJ-17, YJ-19 and YJ-20 cruise missiles will also be shown. They could be deployed from bombers and ships, some with hypersonic warheads — potentially complicating operations by US and allied ships across East Asia.
And a new medium-sized tank, the ZTZ-201, has appeared in rehearsals bristling with what analysts believe are advanced sensors and battle management systems.
An entirely new weapon on show is also vexing analysts with its sudden appearance — a torpedo-shaped sea drone too large to be fired from ordinary submarines. Ben Lewis, founder of open source data platform PLATracker, said its emergence suggested China had been closely tracking the US’s own underwater drone program.
While it is unclear how close it is to operational, “if they can produce a lot of these kinds of weapons cheaply, things could get very ugly, very fast in a Taiwan scenario,” Lewis said. Collin Koh, a senior fellow at the RSIS’ Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies in Singapore, said while the sea drone effort had been underway for some time, he was surprised that it had reached the point where the PLA was ready to show it off.
“(It) seems to be imply that the system is either already in service or soon to do so,” he said.

Australia mushroom murderer Erin Patterson left me ‘half alive’, lone surviving victim says

Australia mushroom murderer Erin Patterson left me ‘half alive’, lone surviving victim says
Updated 25 August 2025

Australia mushroom murderer Erin Patterson left me ‘half alive’, lone surviving victim says

Australia mushroom murderer Erin Patterson left me ‘half alive’, lone surviving victim says
  • Patterson was found guilty last month of luring her in-laws to lunch at her home and poisoning them with individual portions of Beef Wellington that contained toxic death cap mushrooms

SYDNEY: The lone surviving guest of a lunch where three others died after being served food laced with deadly mushrooms told an Australian court on Monday the actions of host and convicted murderer Erin Patterson had left him feeling “half alive.”
Patterson was found guilty last month of luring her mother-in-law Gail Patterson, father-in-law Donald Patterson and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson, to lunch at her home and poisoning them with individual portions of Beef Wellington that contained toxic death cap mushrooms.
A jury also found the 50-year-old guilty of the attempted murder of Ian Wilkinson, Heather’s husband, who survived the 2023 meal at Erin Patterson’s home in Leongatha, a town of about 6,000 people some 135 km (84 miles) southeast of Melbourne.
The seriousness of her offenses meant Patterson’s sentence could only be life imprisonment, her own barrister said on Monday during a pre-sentencing hearing.
Earlier, Ian Wilkinson told a court in Melbourne that the death of his wife had left him bereft.
“It’s a truly horrible thought to live with that somebody could decide to take her life. I only feel half alive without her,” he said, breaking down in tears as he delivered his victim impact statement.
Wilkinson, a pastor in a local church, spent months in hospital recovering from the poisoning, and said on Monday he had only narrowly survived.
He called on Patterson, who said the poisonings were accidental and continues to maintain her innocence, to confess to her crimes.
“I encourage Erin to receive my offer of forgiveness for those harms done to me with full confession and repentance. I bear her no ill will,” he said.
“I am no longer Erin Patterson’s victim and she has become the victim of my kindness.”
‘Grim reality’
The court received a total of 28 victim impact statements, of which seven were read publicly.
Erin Patterson’s estranged husband Simon Patterson – who was invited to the lunch but declined – spoke of the devastating impact on the couple’s two children.
“The grim reality is they live in an irreparably broken home with only a solo parent, when almost everyone else knows their mother murdered their grandparents,” he said in a statement that was read out on his behalf.
The extraordinary media interest in the case, which gripped Australia for much of the 10-week trial, had been traumatic for the family, he added.
The current hearing will form part of presiding judge Justice Christopher Beale’s sentencing decision, which is due to be heard on September 8.
“This is very grave offending and we make no argument that the (longest possible) sentence should be anything other than life imprisonment,” Patterson’s barrister Colin Mandy said on Monday.
However, Mandy urged Beale to impose a non-parole period, meaning she would have the possibility of eventual release.
He said Patterson’s “notorious” reputation would make prison more onerous for her than the average offender, and that with a non-parole period of 30 years she would be 80 before she could even be considered for release.
The court earlier heard evidence from Jennifer Hosking, assistant commissioner of Corrections Victoria that runs the prison where she is being held. She said Patterson was currently being kept in isolation for her own safety, and was permitted contact with only one other prisoner, who is in jail for terrorism offenses.
The prosecution argues that Patterson should never be released.
Patterson has 28 days from the day of her sentencing to appeal, but has not yet indicated whether she will do so.


Restoring dignity: Kenya slum exchange offers water for plastic

Restoring dignity: Kenya slum exchange offers water for plastic
Updated 25 August 2025

Restoring dignity: Kenya slum exchange offers water for plastic

Restoring dignity: Kenya slum exchange offers water for plastic
  • The Human Needs Project (HNP) serves some 800 residents daily, allowing them access to modern bathrooms, clean water and menstrual hygiene facilities services that are out of reach for many Kibera households

NAIROBI: Using a crutch to bear her weight, 85-year-old Molly Aluoch trudges from her mud-walled room on the outskirts of a sprawling Nairobi slum, shouldering a sack of used plastic to exchange for a shower or a safe toilet.
For the 31 years she has lived in Kibera, Kenya’s largest informal settlement, water and sanitation have remained scarce and costly — often controlled by cartels who charge residents prices beyond their means.
The Human Needs Project (HNP) seeks to mitigate that. Residents can trade discarded plastic for “green points,” or credits, they can redeem for services such as drinking water, toilets, showers, laundries and even meals.
“With my green points, I can now access a comfortable and clean toilet and bathroom any time of the day,” Aluoch said.
Before, she would spend 10 shillings (eight US cents) to use a toilet and another 10 for a bathroom, a significant chunk from the residents’ average daily income, 200 to 400 shillings, before food and housing costs.
“It meant that without money, I would not use a toilet,” she said.
Unable to use Kibera’s pit latrines owing to her frailty meant she would have to resort to “unhygienic means.”
Now, that money goes toward food for her three grandchildren.
Aluoch, a traditional birth attendant, is among some 100 women who collect plastics for green points, helping them access water, sanitation, and hygiene services.
She takes her plastic to a center 200 meters (yards) from her home, where one kilogramme of recyclable plastics earns 15 green points, equivalent to 15 shillings.
The project serves some 800 residents daily, allowing them access to modern bathrooms, clean water and menstrual hygiene facilities — services that are out of reach for many Kibera households.
Since 2015, the project has distributed more than 50 million liters (13 million gallons) of water and more than one million toilet and shower uses.
In 2024 alone, it distributed 11 million liters of water and enabled 124,000 bathroom and toilet uses.


With water a scarce commodity in Kibera, it is common for vendors to create artificial shortages to inflate prices, forcing residents to pay more than 10 times the normal price.
The city’s water service charges between $0.60 and $0.70 per cubic meter for connected households, but by comparison, Kibera residents have to stump up as much as $8 to $19 for the same amount.
“Getting water was hard. We could go several days without water,” said Magret John, 50, a mother of three.
Today, her reality is different.
“The water point is at my doorstep. The supply is steady and the water is clean. All I need is to collect plastics, get points, redeem and get water,” she said.
John, who has lived in Kibera for nine years, says the project has been a game changer, especially for women and girls.
“Access to proper sanitation services guarantees women and girls their dignity during menstruation.”
Now, with 10 water points spread across Kibera — pulled from a borehole with a daily capacity of half a million liters — NHP shields some residents from informal vendors’ exploitative pricing.
The project’s dual mission is to meet basic human needs while tackling Kibera’s mounting waste problem.
HNP’s director of strategic partnerships Peter Muthaura said it helps to improve health and the daily living conditions in Kibera.
“When people cannot access dignified toilets and bathrooms, the environment bears the impact,” he said.
It also fosters development, he said.
In the first quarter of 2025 alone, Kibera residents delivered two tons of recyclable plastic, with around 250 women directly engaged in daily collection and delivery.
For Aluoch, every sack of plastics and every green point earned goes beyond clean water and sanitation: it restores a sense of dignity.
“My prayer is that this project spreads to every corner of Kibera, and reaches thousands of women whose dignity has been robbed by a lack of sanitation services,” she said.


Iran nuclear talks with European powers to be held in Geneva

Iran nuclear talks with European powers to be held in Geneva
Updated 25 August 2025

Iran nuclear talks with European powers to be held in Geneva

Iran nuclear talks with European powers to be held in Geneva

TEHRAN: Nuclear talks scheduled for Tuesday between Iran and Britain, France and Germany will be held in Geneva, Iranian state media reported.
“On Tuesday, Iran and the three European parties to the 2015 nuclear deal, along with the European Union, will hold a new round of talks at the level of deputy foreign ministers in Geneva,” state television said on Monday.


Japan PM Ishiba bounces back in polls after election debacle

Japan PM Ishiba bounces back in polls after election debacle
Updated 25 August 2025

Japan PM Ishiba bounces back in polls after election debacle

Japan PM Ishiba bounces back in polls after election debacle
  • Approval rating for Ishiba’s cabinet was 39 percent, a record 17 points higher than after the July 20 vote
  • Another poll conducted by Kyodo News put support at 35.4 percent, up 12.5 points from last month after the upper house election

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s poll ratings have rebounded a month after disastrous election results left his premiership hanging by a thread, a clutch of surveys showed Monday.
Ishiba took the helm of the long-dominant Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) last year and has since lost his majority in both houses of parliament, most recently in upper chamber elections in July.
But the self-confessed defense policy “geek” and maker of model ships has defied calls to resign from within the party, which has governed Japan almost non-stop since the 1950s.
According to one poll by the Yomiuri Shimbun daily published Monday, the approval rating for Ishiba’s cabinet was 39 percent, a record 17 points higher than after the July 20 vote.
More respondents (50 percent) now think Ishiba should remain than resign (42 percent), the questionnaire showed, a reversal from July, when 54 percent said he should go and 35 percent stay.
Another poll conducted by Kyodo News put support at 35.4 percent, up 12.5 points from last month after the upper house election, while the disapproval rating stood at 49.8 percent.
A third survey by the Mainichi Shimbun put backing for the prime minister at 33 percent, a rise of four points, the first time it has been over 30 percent since February.
The Yomiuri put the recovery down to the recent trade deal with the United States and efforts by Ishiba’s government to curb the recent meteoric rise in rice prices.
US President Donald Trump announced a “massive” trade deal with Japan only two days after the upper house election, cutting threatened US tariffs to 15 percent from 25 percent, while lowering those on cars to the same level.
Voter backing of Ishiba’s handling of US trade negotiations rose to 42 percent from 29 percent in June.
An overwhelming 86 percent said they approved of the government’s decision to shift policy toward increasing rice production.
Rice prices have skyrocketed due to supply problems linked to a very hot summer in 2023 and panic-buying after a “megaquake” warning last year, among other factors.
Ishiba has appointed a new farm minister – the popular Shinjiro Koizumi, 44, a potential challenger – and his government has released emergency stocks in an effort to bring down prices.
According to media reports, the LDP plans to conduct a review of last month’s election, to be followed by a decision on whether to hold a party leadership election.
Ishiba, 68, said after a recent LDP plenary meeting, where some lawmakers reportedly urged him to step down, that he would “consider appropriately” the results of this investigation.
“I’d like to deepen my thinking as various things are going on simultaneously,” he said.
“Even within the LDP, passion for holding a party leadership election... has been diminishing,” said Mikitaka Masuyama, politics professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.
“They may face criticism that instead of doing their jobs and addressing everyday life struggles like inflation, the LDP is holding a party leadership election,” Masuyama said.