Israel has expanded its targets in its war with the Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon on Monday, killing at least 18 people in its first strike on the Christian-majority town of Aitou in the north, the Lebanese Red Cross said.
Reuters reports:
So far the main focus of Israel’s military operations in Lebanon has been in the south, the eastern Bekaa Valley and the suburbs of Beirut.
The strike in the northern region hit a house that had been rented to displaced families, Aitou Mayor Joseph Trad told Reuters. In addition to the deaths, four people were injured, the Red Cross said.
Israel on Monday ordered residents of 25 villages to evacuate to areas north of the Awali River, which flows through southern Lebanon, as it intensifies its attacks in the region.
An Israeli strike killed Muhammad Kamel Naim, the commander of the anti-tank missile unit of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, in the Nabatieh area of south Lebanon, the military said.
UN mission says Israeli tanks forcibly entered base in southern Lebanon
Unifil seeks explanation from IDF for ‘shocking violations’ while Netanyahu urges peacekeepers to withdraw
The UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon has said two Israeli tanks destroyed a gate and forcibly entered a base in the south of the country as Israel’s ground operation against Hezbollah moved deeper into Lebanese territory.
The incident in Ramyah on Sunday morning was the latest in a string of violations that Unifil, the UN force deployed since 1978 to southern Lebanon, has blamed on the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
After the tanks left, shells exploded about 100 metres from the base, and the ensuing smoke left 15 staffers needing medical treatment for unusual symptoms despite the use of gas masks. Unifil also accused the Israeli military of holding up a logistics convoy.
In a statement released late on Sunday, the Israeli military said a Merkava tank had been trying to evacuate injured soldiers and had backed into the Unifil post accidentally.
Five peacekeepers have been injured since Friday as Israeli ground troops have begun to advance farther north in Lebanon after two weeks of intense fighting and airstrikes. The death toll in the small Mediterranean country now stands at more than 1,400 since late September, after intense Israeli airstrikes overnight on the centre of the southern city of Nabatieh.
Unifil said it had requested an explanation from the IDF for what it called “shocking violations”.
In a videoed statement addressed to the UN secretary general, António Guterres, on Sunday, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, reiterated Israeli calls for Unifil troops to evacuate.
“The time has come for you to withdraw Unifil from Hezbollah strongholds and from the combat zones,” he said. “The IDF has requested this repeatedly and has met with repeated refusal, which has the effect of providing Hezbollah terrorists with human shields.”
He later said on X: “Israel will make every effort to prevent Unifil casualties and will do what it takes to win the war.”
Late on Sunday, UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said: “Unifil peacekeepers remain in all positions and the UN flag continues to fly.
“The secretary-general reiterates that Unifil personnel and its premises must never be targeted. Attacks against peacekeepers are in breach of international law, including international humanitarian law. They may constitute a war crime,” he said.
Israel argues that Unifil has failed in its mission to uphold a UN resolution from two decades ago that was supposed to ensure that Hezbollah, the powerful Iran-allied Lebanese militia, withdrew from the border area.
In the three weeks since a year of tit-for-tat cross-border fire between Israel and Hezbollah escalated into all-out war, the 10,000-strong Unifil force from 50 different countries has refused to leave 29 positions across southern Lebanon, citing the same UN resolution, which ensures freedom of movement for its staff.
Israeli forces have repeatedly fired on medics and first responders as well as Unifil peacekeepers since Israel invaded Lebanon on 1 October, amid growing international opprobrium.
Hezbollah had begun firing on Israel the day after Hamas’s 7 October attack that triggered the new war, ostensibly in solidarity with the Palestinian group. The IDF accuses Hezbollah of using ambulances to carry fighters and weapons and says Hezbollah operates in the vicinity of the peacekeepers, but has not provided evidence.
Relations between Israel and the UN, frosty for decades, have reached a nadir since the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023. In territory under its control, Israel is attempting to close down Unrwa, the world body’s agency for Palestinian refugees, accusing it of routinely employing Hamas operatives. The UN fired nine staff members implicated in the 7 October attack but an investigation stressed that Israel had not provided evidence for its main allegations.
Israel’s foreign minister, Israel Katz, reiterated on Sunday that Guterres was barred from entering the country due to what Katz described as “antisemitic and anti-Israel conduct”.
Elsewhere in Lebanon, at least three people were killed and dozens wounded in Israeli airstrikes overnight in which mosques and residential buildings were targeted, after strikes on several villages on Saturday killed 15. The IDF said it had hit 200 Hezbollah sites over the past 24 hours.
Hezbollah responded with rocket barrages fired across northern and central Israel on Sunday, most of which were intercepted by Israel’s air defence systems. Israel’s N12 News television said at least 67 people were wounded after what Hezbollah said was its attack on a camp of the Israeli military’s Golani Brigade in Binyamina, northern Israel.
Also over the weekend, Israel ordered residents of another 23 villages across southern Lebanon to evacuate north. About 1.2 million people – a quarter of the population – have been driven from their homes since fighting escalated three weeks ago when Israel killed much of Hezbollah’s leadership in airstrikes, including its secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah. Israeli evacuation directives now cover a quarter of the country.
In the Gaza Strip, fierce fighting in the Jabaliya area of Gaza City that the UN estimates has left 400,000 people trapped with dwindling water and food supplies entered a second week. The World Food Programme, the UN food agency, reported on Saturday that no food aid had reached northern Gaza since 1 October, raising new fears of famine and extreme hunger.
An Israeli strike on the central town of Deir al-Balah on Sunday killed a family of eight, local medics said.
The region is still bracing for an anticipated Israeli response to an unprecedented missile attack by Iran two weeks ago, launched in support of its Lebanese ally after Israel’s ground invasion.
NBC reported on Saturday that US officials believed Israel had narrowed down targets to military and energy infrastructure. Miscalculation could propel Iran and Israel into a full-scale war. The US, Israel’s staunch ally, is wary of being drawn into the fighting and of negative impacts on the global oil industry.
In a social media post, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said on Sunday there were “no red lines” for Tehran on the issue of defending itself, and indirectly threatened US forces against operating in Israel.
“The US has been delivering record amount of arms to Israel,” he said on X. “It is now also putting lives of its troops at risk by deploying them to operate US missile systems in Israel.
“While we have made tremendous efforts in recent days to contain an all-out war in our region, I say it clearly that we have no red lines in defending our people and interests.”
Later on Sunday, the Pentagon confirmed that the US would send a sophisticated anti-missile system known as Thaad and operator troops to Israel to protect from missile attacks such as those launched against the Jewish state by Iran in April and September.
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Hezbollah drone attack kills four IDF soldiers as US prepares to send missile system to Israel
Strike on base near Binyamina city is deadliest since Israel’s ground invasion of Lebanon, and follows rare US commitment to deploy Thaad battery to Israel
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A Hezbollah drone attack on an army base in central Israel killed four soldiers and severely wounded seven others on Sunday, the Israeli military said, in the deadliest strike by the militant group since Israel launched its ground invasion of Lebanon nearly two weeks ago.
Hezbollah called the attack near Binyamina city a retaliation for Israeli strikes on Beirut on Thursday that killed 22 people. It later said it targeted Israel’s elite Golani brigade, launching dozens of missiles to occupy Israeli air defence systems during the assault by “squadrons” of drones.
Israel’s national rescue service said the attack wounded 61. With Israel’s advanced air-defence systems, it is rare for so many people to be hurt in aerial attacks, but Israel has struggled to deal with Hezbollah’s newly deployed Iranian-made drones in the past 12 months; they are small and hard to detect as they emit only weak radar signals.
Hezbollah and Israel have traded fire almost daily in the year since the war in Gaza began, and fighting has escalated.
The attack followed news that the US is sending a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (Thaad) missile defence battery to Israel, reportedly along with about 100 US troops, deepening American involvement in the crisis-hit region. The last time the US sent such a missile system to the Middle East was in the immediate aftermath of Hamas’s attacks on Israel on 7 October last year. The Pentagon said a Thaad was deployed to southern Israel for drills in 2019, the last and only time it was known to be there.
When asked why he had decided to give permission for the deployment, the US president, Joe Biden, said: “To defend Israel”, which is weighing an expected retaliation against Iran after Tehran fired more than 180 missiles at Israel on 1 October.
The Pentagon spokesperson Maj Gen Patrick Ryder described the deployment as part of “the broader adjustments the US military has made in recent months” to support Israel and defend US personnel from attacks by Iran and Iranian-backed groups.
US officials did not say how quickly the system would be deployed to Israel, and an Israeli army spokesperson declined to provide a timeline for the arrival of the system.
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, warned earlier on Sunday that the US was putting the lives of its troops “at risk by deploying them to operate US missile systems in Israel”. “While we have made tremendous efforts in recent days to contain an all-out war in our region, I say it clearly that we have no red lines in defending our people and interests,” Araghchi posted on X.
A Thaad battery usually requires about 100 troops to operate. It counts six truck-mounted launchers, with eight interceptors on each launcher, and a powerful radar.
Early on Monday, Hezbollah threatened Israel with more attacks if its offensive in Lebanon continues.
In a statement, the group described the Binyamina attack as a “complex” operation, in which dozens of missiles were launched towards Nahariya and Acre, north of Haifa, “with the goal of keeping Israeli defence systems busy”.
At the same time, it launched “squadrons of various drones, some of which were being used for the first time”, which were able to “get past Israeli air defence radars without being detected” and hit the training camp in Binyamina south of Haifa.
They “exploded in the rooms where dozens of officers and soldiers of the Israeli enemy were present”, the Hezbollah statement claimed. The IDF said the drone struck the dining room at the site during the evening meal, penetrating the roof.
In Lebanon, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, on Sunday denounced attacks that have injured several peacekeepers, his spokesperson said, after a UN peacekeeping mission, Unifil, said two Israeli tanks destroyed a gate and forcibly entered a base in the south of the country. Stéphane Dujarric, Guterres’s spokesperson, said: “Unifil peacekeepers remain in all positions and the UN flag continues to fly.
“The secretary general reiterates that Unifil personnel and its premises must never be targeted. Attacks against peacekeepers are in breach of international law, including international humanitarian law. They may constitute a war crime,” he said.
In a statement released late on Sunday, the Israeli military said a Merkava tank had been trying to evacuate injured soldiers and had backed into the Unifil post accidentally while under fire amid a smokescreen.
In a videoed statement addressed to Guterres on Sunday, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, reiterated Israeli calls for Unifil troops to evacuate. “The time has come for you to withdraw Unifil from Hezbollah strongholds and from the combat zones,” he said. “The IDF has requested this repeatedly and has met with repeated refusal, which has the effect of providing Hezbollah terrorists with human shields.”
He later said on X: “Israel will make every effort to prevent Unifil casualties and will do what it takes to win the war.”
The incident in Ramyah on Sunday morning was the latest in a string of violations that Unifil, the UN force deployed since 1978 to southern Lebanon, has blamed on the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
Inside Gaza, Israeli tank shelling killed at least 20 people including children at a school on Sunday night, according to two local hospitals. The school in Nuseirat was sheltering some of the many Palestinians displaced by the war.
Meanwhile, explosions hit early on Monday in the courtyard of al-Aqsa hospital in Deir al-Balah, killing at least four people and wounding 40.
Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report
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‘Blood on Biden’s hands’: family of US citizen killed by IDF demand justice
Grieving family push for accountability after Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi killed by Israeli sniper at anti-settler West Bank protest
The shooting of Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi is still recent enough that her family slip into the present tense when they talk about her.
Her husband Hamid Ali smiles as he describes their third wedding anniversary just a few months ago, when the young couple took a boat trip in Seattle and ate Vietnamese food. Eygi’s sister Özden Bennett speaks about her younger sibling with tears in her eyes.
“It feels like she’s just going to hop on a plane any day now, and come back and tell us all about her travels and what she learned,” she told the Guardian.
That pain has only been made worse by fears that there will be impunity for those responsible for Egyi’s death.
“I think the trickiest part for me has been trying to grieve the death of my sister while also trying to push for justice. This is something the US government, the Biden administration, should naturally be doing.”
She added: “I wouldn’t wish this on any family.”
The American-Turkish dual national was shot in the head by an Israeli sniper on 6 September while attending a protest against settlement expansion in the West Bank village of Beita. The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) said it was “highly likely that she was hit indirectly and unintentionally by IDF fire which was not aimed at her”, but her family have called for an independent investigation to her killing – and for the US government to support them in this effort.
But as the family await a meeting with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, they have despaired at the reaction from the White House.
Biden initially told reporters that “apparently it was an accident… [the bullet] ricocheted off the ground and [she] just got hit by accident”. He later called for accountability, describing the shooting as “unacceptable”.
But the family fears that without a criminal investigation led by the FBI, the soldier that pulled the trigger could remain anonymous, their commanding officer will face no public scrutiny, and there will be little justice meted out to America’s closest ally.
The 26-year-old went to the West Bank, Ali said, because “justice in all aspects of life was fundamental to who she was and what she did”. Bennett described her sister as someone who was always moved to act when she saw suffering, and that she felt compelled to travel to the West Bank to continue the activism that been a cornerstone of her young life,.
When Ali last spoke to his wife, it was night in Seattle, but it was morning in Nablus where she was preparing for her first protest since joining the International Solidarity Movement, a group founded to observe demonstrations in the West Bank.
Eygi had researched the site, he said, and understood the specific risks associated with protests in the town of Beita. “She was very clear: I’m going to stay towards the back. This is my first demonstration,” he recalled.
A month after Eygi’s death, Biden is yet to call the family to offer his condolences. “President Biden has been portrayed as this deeply empathetic president, and even in the context of the election, in contrast to other candidates,” said Ali. “I think a five-minute phone call is the bare minimum, and that’s pretty easy to do.”
While the family have spoken to the state department and are due to meet with Blinken, Bennett said, officials have suggested that Biden will call afterwards.
“If president Biden wanted to pick up the phone and call us, he definitely could,” she said. “[But] given the remarks he made prior to his official statement, his not calling does make it seem like speaking to our family is not a priority for him.”
Ali said he felt that Biden’s apparent reluctance sends a message: that “he values American lives differently when it comes to crimes committed by the Israeli military.”
The White House is also yet to provide any public response to demand from a growing coalition of US lawmakers over Eygi’s killing. More than 100 members of Congress wrote to the administration last month, demanding the US conduct an independent investigation, as well as details on what Washington might do should the Israeli government refuse to cooperate.
Vice-president and presidential candidate Kamala Harris said after Eygi’s killing that “there must be full accountability”, but said the administration would press Israel for answers.
“The fact that the US government, including the vice-president, are okay with Israel conducting their own investigation of the killing of an American citizen is mind-boggling,” said Ali.
Bennett pointed to the shooting of veteran Al Jazeera journalist and US citizen Shireen Abu Akleh during an Israeli military raid on a refugee camp in Jenin, and what she called a lack of action taken by the Biden administration in response. An FBI investigation into Abu Akleh’s killing will be two years old next month, amid calls for transparency about its progress or findings.
“If there had been real accountability taken for Shireen’s killing, it’s possible, maybe even likely that Ayşenur wouldn’t have died in the manner that she did,” said Bennett. “Likewise if there’s action taken, real accountability and real justice sought out for what happened to my sister, maybe we can save another family from experiencing what we’re going through today.”
If the Biden administration fails this latest test, she added, another killing like Eygi’s “is inevitable”.
“I feel like the blood is really on the hands of the Biden administration or whoever comes next if we don’t uphold our own laws when US citizens are killed abroad,” she said.
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Russia’s shadow fleet of oil tankers grows despite western sanctions
Poorly maintained and uninsured vessels transporting up to 70% of country’s seaborne oil, says report
Russia’s shadow fleet of oil tankers is expanding, according to research, transporting up to 70% of the country’s seaborne oil despite western efforts to curb Moscow’s wartime energy revenues.
The volume of Russian oil being transported by poorly maintained and underinsured tankers has almost doubled in a year to 4.1m barrels a day by June, according to a report published on Monday by the Kyiv School of Economics (KSE).
The findings underscore the multiple difficulties faced by Kyiv’s western allies in their efforts to isolate Russia’s economy in an attempt to force Moscow to end its war in Ukraine.
In December 2022, the UK – alongside G7 countries, Australia, and the EU – implemented a price cap of $60 a barrel to restrict western companies from transporting, servicing or brokering Russian crude oil cargoes in order to undermine Russia’s oil trade, which is heavily reliant on western-owned and insured tankers.
The move was viewed at the time as a compromise amid concerns that a full embargo could lead to rocketing oil prices and a global oil price shock.
However, Russia quickly discovered a workaround to the measures by utilising a so-called shadow fleet of older tankers with opaque ownership, enabling it to sell a significant portion of its oil above the price cap.
The KSE paper estimates that Russia has invested at least $10bn (£7.6bn) into the fleet since early 2022. “The strategy has significantly reduced the sanctions regime’s leverage,” the report says.
More than 630 tankers – some more than 20 years old – are involved in shipping Russian oil, as well as Iranian crude that has been subjected to sanctions, according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence, a maritime information service.
Western governments have attempted to clamp down on Russia’s shadow fleet, with the UK last month announcing sanctions on 10 ships that it believes to be at the heart of the operation.
KSE, which calls for tougher sanctions on Russian oil, has also warned that the uninsured Russian shadow fleet could soon cause an environmental catastrophe in European waters. Much of the Russian oil is transported through busy international transport routes, including the Baltic Sea and the strait of Gibraltar.
“Large oil spills have so far been avoided but a major disaster is waiting to happen and cleanup costs would reach billions,” the KSE paper reads.
The Swedish foreign minister previously told the Guardian that Moscow appeared prepared to create “environmental havoc” by sailing unseaworthy oil tankers through the Baltic Sea in breach of maritime rules.
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Donald Trump pens 1am screed against controversial biopic The Apprentice
Former president calls film about his rise in real estate in 1970s and 80s a ‘politically disgusting hatchet job’
Donald Trump railed against a just released biopic about his life in a social media screed early on Monday, calling it a “cheap, defamatory, and politically disgusting hatchet job” meant to thwart his presidential candidacy.
The Apprentice portrays how Trump created his real estate empire under the tutelage of Roy Cohn, a notoriously cutthroat attorney and power-broker in 1970s and 1980s New York City, Intelligencer notes. Trump is played by the Marvel actor Sebastian Stan and Cohn by the Succession star Jeremy Strong.
Trump’s ex-wife Ivana Trump is played by Maria Bakalova – whose breakout role in Borat Subsequent Moviefilm landed her an Academy award nomination. There is a disclaimer at the beginning of The Apprentice indicating that portions were “fictionalized for dramatic purposes”, Intelligencer notes.
In his rant Trump described the film as “fake and classless”. Trump said he hoped it would “bomb” and alleged that the was “put out right before the 2024 Presidential Election, to try and hurt the Greatest Political Movement in the History of our Country, ‘MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!’”
The Apprentice has spurred praise and controversy since its premiere at the Cannes film festival in May. The screenwriter, Gabriel Sherman, described numerous roadblocks in its production.
Actors were reluctant to “humanize” Trump, Sherman said in Vanity Fair, and Hollywood institutions did not want to fund the project. And, the most significant investor into this project allegedly threatened to kill the film after viewing it.
This investor was Dan Snyder, a billionaire who formerly owned the NFL’s Washington Commanders and a major Trump supporter. Snyder reportedly invested in The Apprentice through his son-in-law Mark Rapaport’s film production company, Variety said.
“He was under the impression that it was a flattering portrayal of the 45th president,” the outlet reported.
The Apprentice is anything but. It contains a scene in which Trump’s character appears to sexually assault his first wife, Ivana, takes amphetamines, undergoes liposuction, and receives a hair transplant.
Ivana claimed that Trump raped her during a divorce deposition, but later recanted this allegation. Trump has denied attacking Ivana. Trump, who has been found liable of sexually abusing the writer E Jean Carroll in civil court, has been accused of sexual misconduct by more than 20 women.
Trump’s lawyers sent The Apprentice’s film-makers cease-and-desist letters, and prominent distributors would not go near it. “Hollywood fashions itself as a community of truth tellers,” Sherman said, “but here they were running from a movie to prepare for a Trump presidency.”
In his social media attack posted just before 1am, Trump focused on the film’s depiction of Ivana, who died in July 2022 after an accidental fall.
“My former wife, Ivana, was a kind and wonderful person, and I had a great relationship with her until the day she died,” Trump wrote. “The writer of this pile of garbage, Gabe Sherman, a lowlife and talentless hack, who has long been widely discredited, knew that, but chose to ignore it.
“So sad that HUMAN SCUM, like the people involved in this hopefully unsuccessful enterprise, are allowed to say and do whatever they want in order to hurt a Political Movement, which is far bigger than any of us. MAGA2024!”
The film’s director, Ali Abbasi, seemed unbothered by Trump’s Truth Social invective.
“Thanks for getting back to us @realDonaldTrump,” Abbasi posted on X this morning, with a screenshot of his post. “I am available to talk further if you want. Today is a tight day w a lot of press for #TheApprentice but i might be able to give you a call tomorrow.”
Asked to elaborate on Trump’s statement, his campaign pointed to Sherman’s comments about fictionalization in the film.
“The filmmakers now readily admit they fabricated scenes and created fake stories to fit some deranged narrative about President Trump that is completely untrue. This garbage is pure fiction which sensationalizes lies that have been long debunked,” Steven Cheung, Trump campaign communications director, said in a statement.
Cheung likened the film to purported “witch-hunts” by his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris, saying it was “election interference by Hollywood elites right before November, who know that President Trump will retake the White House and beat their candidate of choice because nothing they have done has worked.
“This ‘film’ is pure malicious defamation, should never see the light of day, and doesn’t even deserve a place in the straight-to-DVD section of a bargain bin at a soon-to-be-closed discount movie store, it belongs in a dumpster fire,” Cheung also said.
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Harris and Trump have both been making regular appearances in Pennsylvania, the country’s largest battleground state. Today will be Harris’s 10th visit to Pennsylvania this campaign, and just last week Trump made stops in both Scranton and Reading in the state.
AP provides some background on the key battleground state where both candidates will speak today:
Pennsylvania’s energy industry and natural gas fracking are likely topics as they compete for the fraction of the state’s voters who have not made up their minds. Mail-in voting is well underway in the state where some 7 million people are likely to cast votes in the presidential race.
Trump beat Hillary Clinton by more than 40,000 votes in Pennsylvania on his way to winning the presidency in 2016, but native Scrantonian Joe Biden edged Trump by about 80,000 votes in the state four years ago.
Harris will be holding a rally in Erie, a Democratic majority city of about 94,000 people bordered by suburbs and rural areas with significant numbers of Republicans. Erie County is often cited as one of the state’s reliable bellwether regions, where the electorate has a decidedly moderate voting record. Trump visited Erie on Sept. 29.
Trump plans a town hall Monday at the Greater Philadelphia Expo Center and Fairgrounds in suburban Oaks, hoping to drive up turnout among his supporters.
Pennsylvania’s 19 electoral votes, the most of any swing state, have long made it a center of presidential electioneering. Democrats have won three straight elections for governor and both current U.S. senators are Democrats, but its legislature is closely divided and both parties have had recent success in statewide contests.
Far-right leader who burned copies of Qur’an goes on trial in Sweden
Rasmus Paludan is accused of incitement against an ethnic group and insult in relation to gatherings in 2022
A far-right Danish-Swedish politician who burned copies of the Qur’an in Sweden has gone on trial charged with incitement against an ethnic group.
Rasmus Paludan, the leader of the Danish political party Stram Kurs (Hard Line), is the first person to go on trial in Sweden in relation to Qur’an burnings.
He refused to attend Malmö district court as proceedings began on Monday, saying his life would be in danger if he went to the southern Swedish city. Instead, he appeared by video link from an undisclosed location in Sweden.
Paludan, 42, is charged with two counts of incitement against an ethnic group and one count of insult in relation to gatherings held in Sweden in 2022.
In April of that year, Paludan held a public meeting that was followed by riots in Swedish cities including Malmö, Landskrona, Linköping and Örebro during the Easter weekend. At the meeting he made several statements that the prosecutor alleges were incitement against an ethnic group.
At another meeting, in September 2022, Paludan is accused of racially motivated verbal attacks on “Arabs and Africans”. For this he is charged with insult, a crime that under Swedish law is punishable by a fine or imprisonment for up to six months. Paludan denies all the charges.
Taking the stand remotely, Paludan said: “I am a critic of Islam and criticise Islam. Not Muslims.” He added: “I want to criticise ideas not people.”
In the summer of 2023 a string of Qur’an burning protests in Sweden, including outside parliament, prompted domestic debate over Sweden’s exceptionally liberal freedom of expression laws. It also led to a diplomatic row between Sweden and Muslim countries.
Paludan’s burning of the Qur’an outside the Turkish embassy in Stockholm in January 2023 is widely thought to have slowed Sweden’s passage to Nato membership.
Vilhelm Persson, a law professor at Lund University, said Paludan’s trial had “a fundamental significance” in that it was the first case to be tried in connection to burning of the Qur’an. But he said the fact that the trial was being heard in a district court meant it had limitations. In order for it to set legal precedent, it would need to be heard in the Swedish supreme court.
The prosecutor’s office said on Monday: “Today, October 14, the main hearing starts in Malmö district court in the case where a 42-year-old man has been charged with two counts of incitement against an ethnic group and an insult. The events took place in April and September 2022 in Malmö.”
The senior prosecutor Adrien Combier-Hogg said in August: “My assessment is that there are sufficient reasons to bring charges and now the district court will hear the case.”
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Former Stasi officer jailed for 10 years over 1974 Berlin border shooting
Martin Naumann, 80, shot Czesław Kukuczka in the back at close range as he tried to cross into West Berlin
A former officer in the East German secret police has been sentenced to 10 years in jail for the murder of a Polish firefighter at a Berlin border crossing 50 years ago.
Martin Naumann, now 80, shot Czesław Kukuczka in the back at close range on 29 March 1974 as Kukuczka walked towards the last in a series of control posts at a transit area in the divided city, having been told he had a free pass to escape to West Berlin.
The truth surrounding Kukuczka’s death was never revealed to his family. Instead, his cremated remains were sent in an urn to his wife, Emilia, weeks later, after which he was buried in a private ceremony by his family in southern Poland.
It took the dogged research skills of a historian immersed in the history of the Ministry for State Security (MfS), or the Stasi – which was the intelligence service and secret police of the communist GDR – to unearth the details of the case years later.
Stefan Appelius found documents about the shooting and the subsequent attempts to cover it up in the archives of the former Stasi, and tracked down Kukuczka’s family in Poland. They alerted the Polish judiciary to the case, who issued a European arrest warrant for Naumann in 2021, which put pressure on German investigative authorities to reopen the case after decades of inaction. Naumann was charged with murder in October last year.
Details specifically linking Naumann to the killing had only emerged in 2016, after documents shredded by Stasi officers in the dying days of the regime in order to cover up its activities were pieced together by a digital puzzler machine manufactured specially for the purpose.
Naumann, from Leipzig, who had repeatedly denied the charges against him, was one of the first former East German officials to be charged with murder instead of manslaughter. Prosecutors had demanded a 12-year prison sentence for him, highlighting the “particularly treacherous” characteristic of the killing, namely that Kukuczka was shot having believed he had made it to freedom.
The court heard how Kukuczka, a 38-year-old father of three from the mountain village of Kamienica near Krakow in southern Poland, had entered the Polish embassy in East Berlin, demanding permission to allow him to go to West Germany. He had threatened to detonate a fake explosive, which he claimed would have blown up the embassy and other buildings, if he was turned down.
Research by the historians Filip Gańczak and Hans-Hermann Hertle found that embassy staff had contacted the Stasi, telling them of Kukuczka’s threat. In apparent collusion with the embassy, Stasi officials came to meet the Pole, handed him an exit visa and five West Deutschmarks and drove him to the nearby Friedrichstraße border point. While Kukuczka was under the impression he was soon to be a free man, Stasi officers had been ordered that he should be “rendered harmless”, using a euphemism commonly used for the killing of political opponents.
Naumann, hiding behind a strategically placed screen at the station, shot Kukuczka in the back from a distance of around 2 metres after he had crossed two of three control points.
According to the Stasi’s report into the incident, “operative forces” succeeded at around 3pm “to render [Kukuczka] harmless without attracting any special attention from other outgoing travellers”.
Naumann was described by a lawyer for Kukuczka’s daughter, who was 18 at the time of her father’s death, as “the last link in a chain of command” that led to the killing, but ultimately it was he who carried out the order, the court heard.
Naumann’s lawyer, Andrea Liebscher, had insisted her client was innocent and that there was no proof that he carried out the shooting or that the killing could be deemed murder rather than manslaughter, on which the statute of limitations would have already expired. She said having made a bomb threat, Kukuczka was not an innocent party and “would have to have expected authorities to intervene with weapons”.
Naumann typically appeared in court wearing a black corduroy cap and trainers, and clutching an office file to cover his face. He was described as having lived a life of quiet retirement for decades in suburban Leipzig, until his past caught up with him in 2016. He spoke only once to confirm his identity. He was decorated after the murder, for special services to border protection (as was the doctor who treated Kukuczka in hospital before he was pronounced dead).
Among those to give evidence were three pensioners who were at the time teenagers on a school trip to the communist East Berlin from West Germany. Petra L, 65, a retired teacher from Hessen, recalled having spent a “typical day” in East Berlin before returning with her classmates through the border controls in the heavily guarded underground tunnel at Friedrichstraße station. A man in sunglasses caught her attention, she said. “It was odd, because we were underground.” She told the court how the man had pulled a pistol, and shot at a man who had passed him with a briefcase, and recalled how those around her “held their hands to their mouths in shock”.
“Suddenly doors opened where none had been before then, and people in uniform emerged and sealed the passage,” she said.
On the sidelines of the trial, Gańczak said that while authorities in communist Poland and their counterparts in East Germany (GDR) had attempted to cover up the murder, they disagreed on how to present it. “Whilst the Polish side wanted it to look like Kukuczka had taken his own life, the GDR was not in agreement … According to a shortened version of events they prepared, there had been an incident at the border crossing, which had resulted in Kukuczka being killed. The family was not allowed to ask further questions.”
In one version, Kukuczka was said to have been armed, but there is no evidence to back this up. The explosive he alleged he was carrying was nonexistent.
Kukuczka was taken to the Stasi prison hospital in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen, where he was pronounced dead after having bled to death, according to an autopsy.
In a reflection of its historical importance, the trial was recorded, similarly to some Holocaust-related trials of recent years.
Kukuckza’s family, including his sister, and his daughter, now 68, do not know to this day what their father had planned. According to anecdotes he had hankered after a life in Florida.
An estimated 140 people or more were killed trying to cross the Berlin Wall, which divided the city between 1961 and 1989. The handful of East German officials and border guards who have so far faced prosecution for the deaths have mostly been charged with manslaughter.
Higher-ranked officials have often escaped justice. Attempts to try Erich Mielke, head of the Stasi from 1957 to 1989, repeatedly failed until, in 1993, he was sentenced to six years in prison for the 1931 murder of two police officers as a young communist combatant.
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Former Stasi officer jailed for 10 years over 1974 Berlin border shooting
Martin Naumann, 80, shot Czesław Kukuczka in the back at close range as he tried to cross into West Berlin
A former officer in the East German secret police has been sentenced to 10 years in jail for the murder of a Polish firefighter at a Berlin border crossing 50 years ago.
Martin Naumann, now 80, shot Czesław Kukuczka in the back at close range on 29 March 1974 as Kukuczka walked towards the last in a series of control posts at a transit area in the divided city, having been told he had a free pass to escape to West Berlin.
The truth surrounding Kukuczka’s death was never revealed to his family. Instead, his cremated remains were sent in an urn to his wife, Emilia, weeks later, after which he was buried in a private ceremony by his family in southern Poland.
It took the dogged research skills of a historian immersed in the history of the Ministry for State Security (MfS), or the Stasi – which was the intelligence service and secret police of the communist GDR – to unearth the details of the case years later.
Stefan Appelius found documents about the shooting and the subsequent attempts to cover it up in the archives of the former Stasi, and tracked down Kukuczka’s family in Poland. They alerted the Polish judiciary to the case, who issued a European arrest warrant for Naumann in 2021, which put pressure on German investigative authorities to reopen the case after decades of inaction. Naumann was charged with murder in October last year.
Details specifically linking Naumann to the killing had only emerged in 2016, after documents shredded by Stasi officers in the dying days of the regime in order to cover up its activities were pieced together by a digital puzzler machine manufactured specially for the purpose.
Naumann, from Leipzig, who had repeatedly denied the charges against him, was one of the first former East German officials to be charged with murder instead of manslaughter. Prosecutors had demanded a 12-year prison sentence for him, highlighting the “particularly treacherous” characteristic of the killing, namely that Kukuczka was shot having believed he had made it to freedom.
The court heard how Kukuczka, a 38-year-old father of three from the mountain village of Kamienica near Krakow in southern Poland, had entered the Polish embassy in East Berlin, demanding permission to allow him to go to West Germany. He had threatened to detonate a fake explosive, which he claimed would have blown up the embassy and other buildings, if he was turned down.
Research by the historians Filip Gańczak and Hans-Hermann Hertle found that embassy staff had contacted the Stasi, telling them of Kukuczka’s threat. In apparent collusion with the embassy, Stasi officials came to meet the Pole, handed him an exit visa and five West Deutschmarks and drove him to the nearby Friedrichstraße border point. While Kukuczka was under the impression he was soon to be a free man, Stasi officers had been ordered that he should be “rendered harmless”, using a euphemism commonly used for the killing of political opponents.
Naumann, hiding behind a strategically placed screen at the station, shot Kukuczka in the back from a distance of around 2 metres after he had crossed two of three control points.
According to the Stasi’s report into the incident, “operative forces” succeeded at around 3pm “to render [Kukuczka] harmless without attracting any special attention from other outgoing travellers”.
Naumann was described by a lawyer for Kukuczka’s daughter, who was 18 at the time of her father’s death, as “the last link in a chain of command” that led to the killing, but ultimately it was he who carried out the order, the court heard.
Naumann’s lawyer, Andrea Liebscher, had insisted her client was innocent and that there was no proof that he carried out the shooting or that the killing could be deemed murder rather than manslaughter, on which the statute of limitations would have already expired. She said having made a bomb threat, Kukuczka was not an innocent party and “would have to have expected authorities to intervene with weapons”.
Naumann typically appeared in court wearing a black corduroy cap and trainers, and clutching an office file to cover his face. He was described as having lived a life of quiet retirement for decades in suburban Leipzig, until his past caught up with him in 2016. He spoke only once to confirm his identity. He was decorated after the murder, for special services to border protection (as was the doctor who treated Kukuczka in hospital before he was pronounced dead).
Among those to give evidence were three pensioners who were at the time teenagers on a school trip to the communist East Berlin from West Germany. Petra L, 65, a retired teacher from Hessen, recalled having spent a “typical day” in East Berlin before returning with her classmates through the border controls in the heavily guarded underground tunnel at Friedrichstraße station. A man in sunglasses caught her attention, she said. “It was odd, because we were underground.” She told the court how the man had pulled a pistol, and shot at a man who had passed him with a briefcase, and recalled how those around her “held their hands to their mouths in shock”.
“Suddenly doors opened where none had been before then, and people in uniform emerged and sealed the passage,” she said.
On the sidelines of the trial, Gańczak said that while authorities in communist Poland and their counterparts in East Germany (GDR) had attempted to cover up the murder, they disagreed on how to present it. “Whilst the Polish side wanted it to look like Kukuczka had taken his own life, the GDR was not in agreement … According to a shortened version of events they prepared, there had been an incident at the border crossing, which had resulted in Kukuczka being killed. The family was not allowed to ask further questions.”
In one version, Kukuczka was said to have been armed, but there is no evidence to back this up. The explosive he alleged he was carrying was nonexistent.
Kukuczka was taken to the Stasi prison hospital in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen, where he was pronounced dead after having bled to death, according to an autopsy.
In a reflection of its historical importance, the trial was recorded, similarly to some Holocaust-related trials of recent years.
Kukuckza’s family, including his sister, and his daughter, now 68, do not know to this day what their father had planned. According to anecdotes he had hankered after a life in Florida.
An estimated 140 people or more were killed trying to cross the Berlin Wall, which divided the city between 1961 and 1989. The handful of East German officials and border guards who have so far faced prosecution for the deaths have mostly been charged with manslaughter.
Higher-ranked officials have often escaped justice. Attempts to try Erich Mielke, head of the Stasi from 1957 to 1989, repeatedly failed until, in 1993, he was sentenced to six years in prison for the 1931 murder of two police officers as a young communist combatant.
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Italy sends first asylum seekers to Albania under controversial pact
Men from countries deemed safe are transferred to Albania to have asylum claims processed
The first people to be intercepted at sea by the Italian navy under a controversial migration deal with Albania are on their way to the Balkan nation to have their asylum claims processed.
As part of the pact signed off on by Italy’s far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, a navy ship set off on Monday “with some irregular migrants onboard”, the interior ministry confirmed. The ministry did not provide a precise figure.
It is understood that all of the people being taken to Albania are men who were part of a group trying to cross the Mediterranean from Africa to Europe.
Women, children and any men with illnesses or who showed signs of torture were instead taken to the southern Italian island of Lampedusa, after screening was carried out to establish who in the group met the requirements of the deal – men originating from countries that are deemed safe, Italian media reported.
More in-depth screening of the men will be carried out when they disembark at the port of Schëngjin, after which they will be taken to a centre at a former Albanian air force site in Gjadër, where the men will be held while waiting for their asylum applications to be processed.
As part of the Italy-funded deal, three facilities were formally opened in Albania last week: a centre with a capacity to host 880 asylum seekers, a pre-deportation centre known as a CPR with 144 places, and a small prison with 20 places.
The pact, which human rights associations say is in breach of international law but which the EU has tacitly endorsed, was signed by Meloni and her Albanian counterpart, Edi Rama, in November last year.
Meloni said at the time that in exchange for Rami’s backing for the centres, she would do everything in her power to support Albania’s accession to the EU.
The deal will cost Italy €670m (£560m) over five years. The facilities are being run by Italy and will fall under Italian jurisdiction. Albanian guards will provide external security.
Meloni has said officials will try to process asylum requests within 28 days, much quicker than the months it currently takes in Italy. Albania will only process the applications of people from countries designated as “safe” by Italy, a list that has recently expanded from 15 nations to 21. The updated list includes Bangladesh, Egypt, Ivory Coast and Tunisia, among others. In the previous year, 56,588 people from those countries made their way to Italy.
The vast majority of requests are expected to be rejected because the countries the applicants come from are considered safe, which automatically limits the scope for asylum to be granted. Those whose requests are turned down will be detained before their eventual repatriation.
The UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, was criticised by human rights groups and his Labour party backbenchers after expressing “great interest” in the migration pact during a meeting with Meloni in Rome last week while vowing to send £4m to support her crackdown on irregular migration.
Meloni once said Italy should repatriate migrants and then “sink the boats that rescued them”. In the past she has also called for a naval blockade of north Africa.
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Trio of professors win Nobel economics prize for work on post-colonial wealth
British-born Simon Johnson and James A Robinson and Turkish-American Daron Acemoğlu share £810,000 prize
Three US-based professors, including two UK-born academics, have been awarded this year’s Nobel prize in economics, for showing how the political and economic systems introduced by colonisers can determine whether a country is rich or poor today.
The explanation put forward by Turkish-American Daron Acemoğlu, Sheffield-born Simon Johnson and Briton James A Robinson, suggests that inclusive institutions set up for the long-term benefit of European migrants ended up resulting in more prosperous societies in the long term.
However, they found that in countries where the aim was to exploit the Indigenous population and extract resources for the colonisers’ benefit, the impact has been detrimental, and resulted in far poorer societies, leaving some countries trapped in low economic growth cycles.
“The laureates demonstrated that this led to a reversal of fortune. The places that were, relatively speaking, the richest at their time of colonisation are now among the poorest,” the Nobel prize announcement said.
“This is an important reason for why former colonies that were once rich are now poor, and vice versa,” it added.
However, the academics said the effect can be reversed if a country can “break free of its inherited institutions to establish democracy and the rule of law. In the long run, these changes also lead to reduced poverty.”
The trio of academics will share the award, which comes with an 11m kroner (£810,000) cash prize and a gold medal. Established in the 1960s, several decades after the original Nobel prizes, it is technically known as the Sveriges Riksbank prize in economic sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel.
“Reducing the vast differences in income between countries is one of our time’s greatest challenges,” Jakob Svensson, chair of the committee for the prize in economic sciences, said. “The laureates have demonstrated the importance of societal institutions for achieving this.”
Acemoğlu, 57, and Johnson, 61, are both professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in Cambridge, in the US. Together, they co-authored a book last year, called Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity.
Johnson is also known for a brief stint at the International Monetary Fund from March 2007 to August 2008.
Robinson, 64, a professor at the University of Chicago, wrote a book with Acemoğlu – Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty – which was first published in 2012.
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Man arrested near Trump rally on gun charges ‘deeply admires’ ex-president
Vem Miller denies local sheriff’s allegation he was trying to kill Republican and says he is ‘100% a Trump supporter’
A man arrested on gun possession charges near a Donald Trump rally in California on Saturday, spurring significant safety concerns, said that he was a major supporter of the former US president and would never harm him.
“Yes, I’m 100% a Trump supporter,” the man, Vem Miller, told Fox News Digital in an interview. Miller, 49, denied the local sheriff’s allegation that he was bringing weapons to Trump’s event to kill him.
“This is a man that I deeply admire,” the Las Vegas resident also said. He claimed to be a registered Republican and “all-in” with the Republican presidential candidate since 2018.
Miller was not able to get anywhere near Trump. Law enforcement agencies –including the Riverside, California, sheriff’s office, Secret Service and the Los Angeles US attorney – said that Trump was not in any danger.
While authorities said that Trump had been safe, the incident came in the wake of two assassination attempts, fanning the flames of fear over his safety. During a presser on Sunday, the Riverside county sheriff Chad Bianco claimed: “I truly do believe we prevented another assassination attempt,” stoking concerns still more.
Miller was taken into custody at a checkpoint at approximately a half-mile from an entrance to Trump’s Coachella Valley campaign stop, shortly before it was scheduled to start. Authorities claimed that Miller was in possession of a loaded shotgun and handgun, as well as a high-capacity magazine.
Miller was arrested before Trump arrived at the site, according to KTLA. He was released from jail on $5,000 bail shortly after his arrest, according to police records.
Bianco said that Miller caught the attention of law enforcement after he managed to access the initial perimeter near Trump’s campaign stop. Bianco cited visual “irregularities”, noting that Miller’s SUV was not registered and had an “obviously” fake license plate.
A sheriff’s deputy “eventually found multiple passports with multiple names and multiple driver’s licenses with different names”, Fox 5 News quoted Bianco as saying.
Bianco claimed that Miller, who two years ago ran for Nevada’s state assembly, was a “sovereign citizen”. The sovereign citizens do not think they must abide any government laws without consent, and this movement is considered extremist and right wing.
Miller told Fox News Digital that he had firearms due to death threats over his website America Happens Network. “I don’t know anything about guns. I am beyond a novice,” he said. The website claims it intends to fight censorship and “rage against the mainstream media”.
“I always travel around with my firearms in the back of my truck,” Miller said, nonetheless insisting: “I’ve literally never even shot a gun in my life.”
Miller also slammed Bianco’s claim that he was among the “sovereign citizen” movement, saying: “I don’t think there’s such a thing.”
“Government is an inanimate object, it’s the individuals within government that matter, so no, I’m not a part of any of that,” he reportedly said.
“These accusations are complete bullshit,” Miller told the Press-Enterprise. “I’m an artist, I’m the last person that would cause any violence and harm to anybody.”
Miller also released his own video, “because of the false information that is currently being released by the police department”, and said that his website was focused on protecting freedom of press and speech.
“While we are currently, and we have been, for closely eight years staunch supporters of President Donald Trump, we don’t align ourselves with any political party except for one that supports our freedoms … and gets rid of the tyranny of corrupt politicians,” he said.
“President Donald Trump has been near and dear to our hearts because he’s one of the only individuals that I’ve seen have the courage to actually stand up to the tyranny against we the people,” Miller continued, referring to the preamble to the US constitution.
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Human sense of smell is faster than previously thought, study suggests
Some participants were able to discriminate order of smells at intervals 10 times shorter than previously thought
The human sense of smell is nothing to turn one’s nose up at, research suggests, with scientists revealing we are far more sensitive to the order of odours captured by a sniff than previously thought.
Charles Darwin is among those who have cast aspersions on our sense of smell, suggesting it to be “of extremely slight service” to humans, while scientists have long thought our olfactory abilities rather sluggish.
“Intuitively, each sniff feels like taking a long-exposure shot of the chemical environment,” said Dr Wen Zhou, co-author of the research from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, adding that when a smell is detected it can seem like one scent, rather than a discernible mixture of odours that arrived at different times. “Sniffs are also separated in time, occurring seconds apart from one another,” she said.
But now researchers have revealed our sense of smell operates much faster than previously thought, suggesting we are as sensitive to rapid changes in odours as we are to rapid changes in colour.
A key challenge to probing our sense of smell, said Zhou, is that it has been difficult to create a setup that enables different smelly substances to be presented in a precise sequence in time within a single sniff.
However, writing in the journal Nature Human Behaviour, Zhou and colleagues report how they did just that by creating an apparatus in which two bottles containing different scents were hooked up to a nosepiece using tubes of different lengths. These tubes were fitted with miniature check valves that were opened by the act of taking a sniff.
The setup meant the two scents reached the nose at slightly different times during the course of a single sniff, with a precision of 18 milliseconds (ms).
The team then carried out a series of experiments involving 229 participants.
In one experiment, participants were presented an apple-like odour and a floral scent, hooked up to the apparatus with different lengths of tubing that meant one scent would reach the nose about 120-180ms before the other. Participants were then asked to sniff the apparatus twice and report whether the order of the odours was the same or had been reversed.
The team found participants were correct in 597 out of 952 trials (63% of the time), with similar results when another 70 participants carried out the trials with lemon-like and onion-like odours.
Further tests, involving those who fared particularly well on these trials, revealed participants did better than chance even when two odours arrived at the nose a mere 40-80ms apart. The team said this interval was about 10 times shorter than previously thought to be necessary for humans to discriminate between two odours presented in one order and in the reverse order.
However, while participants could tell the smell had changed when the order of odours was switched, they found it harder to identify which odour actually came first. They fared better than chance on this task only for the lemon and onion-like smells, and then only when the odours reached the nose with an average time difference of 167ms. In this case, participants tended to report the overall smell captured in a sniff was more like the first of the two odours delivered – suggesting the order of scents shapes our perception.
“Overall, the discrimination between a pair of temporal mixtures is not dependent on accurately recognising the order of the constituent odorants,” said Zhou. “Instead, it seems to be driven by a mechanism that operates on a much faster timescale than that involved in the serial recognition of mixture components.”
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Families seek to clear names of men who refused to fight for former Dutch colony
Conscientious objectors refused to take part in military campaign against Indonesian independence in 1940s
Families of 20 men who were jailed for refusing to fight to preserve the former Dutch colony in Indonesia have formally asked for their names to be cleared, arguing that instead of “deserters, traitors and cowards” their relatives deserve to be recognised as having been on the right side of history.
An official investigation into the period when Dutch colonies asserted their independence after the second world war found a failed military campaign in Indonesia had systematically used “excessive violence” and massacred hundreds of innocent villagers, whose families eventually won compensation.
The former prime minister Mark Rutte apologised in 2022, and his government agreed that if conscientious objectors who were punished for their refusal to do military service definitely knew about the extreme violence, their reputations could be restored.
Now the relatives of 20 men known as Indonesië-weigeraars (“Indonesia-refusers”) have called on the current rightwing government to clear their fathers’ names. “We want the verdicts cancelled because our fathers are still registered as deserters, traitors and cowards,” said Nel Bak, 68, from Middenbeemster.
She and her 95-year-old mother have asked for a pardon for her father, Jan de Wit, who was imprisoned for three years alongside Dutch second world war fascists. “My father came from a communist background and respected the call for [Indonesian] independence. He thought we’d no business there,” Bak said.
The Dutch government conscripted 120,000 men to “defeat the Republic of Indonesia – which had declared independence on 17 August 1945 – at any cost”, according to the official investigation. “The Netherlands fought a hopeless war that became increasingly violent … The Dutch armed forces used extreme violence on a frequent and structural basis …in close consultation with and under the responsibility of the Dutch government.”
Eelco van der Waals, 68, from The Hague, received an apology for the “harsh” imprisonment of his pacifist father, Koos van der Waals, from the former defence minister Kajsa Ollongren in June. But he said full rehabilitation would bring important historical lessons.
“After the Japanese had been defeated in east Asia, the Americans and the British took over command,” he said. “But especially Dutch companies could not accept the loss of their interests. The Dutch government chose the wrong side … That is why it is so important to choose rehabilitation more than only [apologies].”
Peter Hartog, 70, from Rotterdam, said he also wanted rehabilitation for his father, Rienus Hartog, who realised he could not bring himself to kill when ordered to stab a straw man during training.
“My father always stood up for his choices, and he deserves his place in history,” Hartog said.
Jurjen Pen, a lawyer campaigning on behalf of the conscientious objectors, said it was unfair to ask relatives to prove the men had known about excessive violence, given the limited communication and decades of official denial. “All of the sentences should be wiped,” he said. “They did this in Germany [for people who refused to fight for the Nazis].”
Pen said there were three forms of rehabilitation under Dutch law: an apology for a person’s improper treatment, the restoration of their good name, and a complete pardon that erases the entire verdict. He argued that the latter was most suitable for the Indonesië-weigeraars.
“The Netherlands has a lot to be ashamed of, in retrospect, and that’s why no amnesty comes,” he said. “It is a step that says we were completely wrong … and, actually, we were.”
But Klaas Meijer, a spokesperson for the Dutch ministry of defence, said such a move could have an impact on the Netherlands’ ability to withstand 21st century threats.
“The [last] cabinet said [the men] can only be rehabilitated if it can be shown that they knew about the extreme violence … with a reason. We still have national service, although the obligation to turn up has been suspended. If the threat from Russia became so big that war broke out … you pull the rug out from under national service.”
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