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World News Roundup ARAB TIMES, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2015 12 INTERNATIONAL Stateless Britain Preventable tragedy ‘Stop’ locking up people: UN LONDON, Dec 1, (RTRS): European countries must stop locking up stateless people like criminals, human rights campaigners said, describing their detention as “a preventa- ble tragedy” that risks being worsened by the migrant cri- sis. Thousands of stateless people are being held in immigration detention centres across Europe even though they cannot be deported because no country recognises them as citizens, the campaigners said late on Monday. They urged European governments to introduce procedures for identify- ing stateless people so they can be protected in the same way as refugees and given a chance to rebuild their lives. There are an estimated 10 mil- lion stateless people worldwide. With no nationality, they are denied basic rights most people take for granted, including access to education, healthcare and jobs. Many live in destitu- tion and risk detention and exploitation. Silent Francois Crepeau, UN spe- cial rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, said the immigration detention of state- less people was “one of the silent tragedies of our globalised world”. “It is a tragedy that is com- pletely preventable, but due to a lack of will and attention, continues to harm thousands of lives all around the world every year,” he said in a fore- word to new guidelines on pro- tecting stateless people from detention. Chris Nash, director of the European Network on Statelessness (ENS), which pro- duced the guidance, said the detention of stateless people for long periods was an “extremely disturbing trend.” “Across Europe a failure by states to put in place effective systems to identify stateless per- sons leaves thousands exposed to repeated and lengthy deten- tion,” he added. Fleeing Campaigners say there are likely to be stateless people among the hundreds of thou- sands arriving in Europe, as many of the countries they are fleeing, including Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, have significant stateless populations. The guidance, intended for lawyers, judges, legislators and policymakers, was issued a year after the United Nations launched a global campaign to eradicate statelessness in a decade. Stateless people detained in Poland, the Netherlands and Malta told ENS researchers they had been made to feel like crim- inals. Kafil Kafil, an ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar, spent months in detention in Malta after being rescued off a burning boat in the Mediterranean. Myanmar does not recognise the Rohingya. “The policewoman could not believe me when I said I came from Myanmar,” Kafil told ENS. “Nobody spoke my language and there was no translator.” Kafil said people often fell sick because of overcrowding, poor food and lack of exercise. On one occasion he developed a fever and was taken to the clinic in handcuffs “as if I was a crim- inal”. Others interviewed by ENS became stateless following the break-up of the Soviet Union. Ivan Niyazov, an ethnic Russian born in the Soviet Union in what is now Uzbekistan, can obtain neither Russian nor Uzbek nationality. He has been in and out of detention in the Netherlands, losing more three years to imprisonment. “(I’m from) a country that is now seventeen countries. I don’t know who I am,” said Niyazov, who suffers from post-traumatic stress syndrome. “I can’t trust people any more. Detention changed me.” British Prime Minister David Cameron walks out of 10 Downing Street in London on Dec 1. Britain looks poised to join air strikes on Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria this week after Prime Minister David Cameron announced that a vote would be held in parliament on Wednesday. (Inset): In a file picture taken on Sept 27, 2014 a Royal Air Force (RAF) Tornado GR4 fighter jet prepares to land at the Akrotiri British airbase, near the Cypriot port city of Limassol, after returning from a mission over Iraq to strike at Islamic State jihadists. Britain’s parliament is to hold a vote on Dec 2, on joining air strikes against Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria, Prime Minister David Cameron said on Nov 30. (AFP) British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond (right), and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (left), arrive for a press conference in London on Nov 30. Hammond hosted Steinmeier for bilateral talks on a range of issues, ranging from Syria, tackling the threat from ISIL, migration and the EU-Turkey summit (which takes place this weekend) and the UK’s EU reform renegotiation. (AFP) Monarch, Thomson extend stop: Thomson Airways and Monarch on Monday said they were delaying the resumption of regular flights to the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el- Sheikh until mid-December and after the new year respectively. “Monarch can confirm that it has now cancelled all flights from the UK to Sharm El Sheikh up to and including Wednesday 6 Jan 2016,” the company said in a statement. Thomson said it was suspending flights until Dec 16 — a week later than the pre- vious deadline. The two companies said they were extending the suspension of flights as the Foreign Office still had a travel advice warn- ing against air travel to the resort in place. Easyjet and British Airways last week had already delayed flights until Jan 6 and 14 respectively. (AFP) Palace state dining room shut: The state dining room of Britain’s Buckingham Palace, where visiting heads of state retire for coffee after banquets, has been closed off due to safety con- cerns, a palace spokesman said on Monday. “As the result of a routine survey, an issue was found with one of the ceiling beams in the roof space of the state dining room,” the spokesman said. “Following further assessment, access to the room has been suspended as a pre- cautionary measure while additional investigation work takes place.” The palace is Queen Elizabeth II’s London residence and where she hosts vis- its by foreign leaders, including Chinese President Xi Jinping last month. (AFP) ‘You’re fat’ card prompts action: British police stepped in on Monday after Britain Parliament to hold debate, vote Wednesday UK set to back Syria air strikes LONDON, Dec 1, (Agencies): Britain looks poised to join air strikes on Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria this week after Prime Minister David Cameron announced Monday that a vote would be held in parliament Wednesday. The announcement came after the main opposition Labour party decided to let its MPs vote with their individ- ual consciences rather than trying to force them to oppose military action, meaning Cameron is set to get the clear majority he wanted. But Labour was left looking deeply split on the issue after its left-wing leader Jeremy Corbyn confirmed that he would vote against air strikes while a string of other centrist MPs said they would support them. “I can announce that I will be recom- mending to Cabinet tomorrow that we hold a debate and a vote in the House of Commons to extend the air strikes,” Cameron said in a televised statement. “We will make sure that we have a very long and full debate on Wednesday.” Cameron has wanted Britain to extend its operations against IS jihadists in Iraq to Syria for months but held back because he would not have been able to gain support from parliament due to Labour opposition. Action His previous government suffered one of its most embarrassing defeats in 2013 when it was defeated on a plan to take military action against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. However, in the wake of this month’s Paris attacks which killed 130 people, he has made a fresh push for Britain to extend its role in the fight against IS. In his statement, the prime minister said Britain wanted to “answer the call from our allies and work with them because ISIL (another acronym for IS) is a threat to our country and this is the right thing to do.” Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said he was now “confident” that most MPs would support air strikes when there was a vote. Meanwhile, Corbyn faces the tough- est challenge of his nearly three-month leadership over the air strikes vote. His party is split between left-wing MPs, supported by many of the grass- roots activists who swept him to power, who oppose the strikes and centrist lawmakers who are in favour. Monday’s shadow cabinet meeting was told that some 43 percent of Labour MPs — nearly 100 out of 231 — supported air strikes while 57 per- cent or 132 would oppose them. His decision to call a free vote was seen as a way of trying to prevent any resignations from his team over the issue. But analysts said it risked making him look weak because he could not control his party. The Stop The War Coalition, which Corbyn helped found and which held a 5,000-strong anti-strikes protest at Downing Street Saturday, said a free vote made war “much more likely”. Corbyn’s spokesman said there was “no question” that most of the Labour party was against air strikes. “I don’t think it’s a shambles, it’s tak- ing account of the fact that there are very significant differences of opinion,” he added of the decision to hold a free vote. In a sign of the splits, Labour sources said that in Wednesday’s pre- vote debate, Corbyn would open pro- ceedings speaking against air strikes while his foreign affairs spokesman Hilary Benn would speak in favour. Sensitive Another reason the issue is so sensi- tive for Labour is the legacy of past conflicts such as the Iraq war, which former Labour leader Tony Blair led Britain into in 2003 on evidence that was later hotly disputed. The conflict, which left a total of 179 British personnel dead, is now deeply unpopular in Britain. A YouGov opinion poll published last week found that 59 percent approved of Britain joining air strikes in Syria, compared to 20 percent who disapproved and 21 percent who did not know. Some 127,000 people have also signed a petition to parliament urging a vote against military action in Syria. Britain has eight Tornado fighter jets and an unconfirmed number of armed and surveillance drones already deployed in the international mission against IS. But it currently only conducts sur- veillance and intelligence missions over Syria. EU OKs UK state aid for RWE biomass-fired power plant Labour party launches campaign to stay in EU LONDON, Dec 1, (Agencies): The Labour party on Tuesday launched its campaign for Britain to remain in the European Union, saying that the Paris terror attacks showed the need to “stand shoulder to shoul- der” with European partners. The Conservative government has promised an in-out referendum by the end of 2017, with recent polls showing the public split neck-and- neck on the issue despite all the main parties campaigning to stay in. Former interior minister Alan Johnson launched his party’s cam- paign to stay in the 28-member bloc in Birmingham, central England, arguing that Britain would be less safe on its own. “The first duty of any government is to keep our country safe and I firmly believe that leaving the EU would fail that test,” he said. “The lesson from Paris is clear: to tackle terrorism we must stand shoulder to shoulder with our allies in Europe. The security of Britain is inextricably linked to staying in Europe. Britons will be asked whether they want to “Remain” in the bloc or “Leave” after the electoral commis- sion ruled that a “Yes” or “No” question could favour those who want Britain to stay in the EU. Labour has been a solid support- er of the EU since the premiership of Tony Blair, but that was thrown into doubt with the election of vet- eran leftist Jeremy Corbyn as party leader in September. He had previously opposed the bloc’s free-market rules, but threw his weight behind the “Remain” cam- paign shortly after being elected. Johnson also said that British workers, businesses, universities and scientists will all be “damaged and diminished” in the event of a “Brexit”. “There is nothing patriotic about condemning this country to isola- tion,” he added. Prime Minister David Cameron has pledged to campaign to stay in, but only if he secures EU reforms on issues such as welfare pay- ments for migrants and the balance of power between Brussels and national parliaments. The Labour campaign is sepa- rate to the cross-party, pro-EU cam- paign Britain Stronger in Europe. They will be opposed by Leave.EU, which has the backing of UK Independence Party chief Nigel Farage, and Vote Leave, which is supported by eurosceptic Conservative and Labour MPs and business figures. Also: BRUSSELS/LONDON: The European Commission has approved British plans to subsidise the conversion of RWE’s Lynemouth coal-fired power plant in northern England to burning bio- mass, sending the German utility company’s shares higher. The European Commission said on Tuesday a nine-month investiga- tion showed that the project accords with European environmental and energy goals, giving the green light to an agreement struck under Britain’s contracts-for-difference (CfD) electricity pricing mechanism to support the project until 2027. RWE, which bought the coal- fired power plant in 2012, said it would now take 18 months to adapt the station to run 100 percent on biomass with a generation capacity of 420 megawatts. a woman on London’s metro system was handed a card calling her a “fat, ugly human”. Health worker Kara Florish said in a tweet the card she was given on the Underground was “hateful” and “coward- ly” and “could potentially upset people struggling with confidence”. She tweeted a picture of the card, which on one side said “fat” and on the other read: “Our organisation hates and resents fat people. We object to the enor- mous amount of food resources you con- sume while half the world starves.” (AFP) Doctors call off planned strike: Junior doctors in Britain called off a planned strike on Monday after last- minute talks with ministers, the British Medical Association (BMA) said. The government had planned to impose a new type of contract on junior doctors that it says will improve healthcare during evenings and weekends, but medics say the terms would drastically cut their pay. “Following conciliatory talks with NHS (National Health Service) employ- ers and the Department of Health, we have agreed to suspend industrial action in England, which was due to begin at 8:00 am tomorrow,” the BMA said in a statement. (AFP) Crepeau Elizabeth Xi

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Page 1: UK set to back Syria air strikes - Arab Times€¦ · as refugees and given a chance to rebuild their lives. There are an estimated 10 mil-lion stateless people worldwide. With no

World News Roundup

ARAB TIMES, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2015

12INTERNATIONAL

Stateless

Britain

Preventable tragedy

‘Stop’ lockingup people: UNLONDON, Dec 1, (RTRS):European countries must stoplocking up stateless peoplelike criminals, human rightscampaigners said, describingtheir detention as “a preventa-ble tragedy” that risks beingworsened by the migrant cri-sis.

Thousands of stateless peopleare being held in immigrationdetention centres across Europeeven though they cannot bedeported because no countryrecognises them as citizens, thecampaigners said late onMonday.

They urgedE u r o p e a ngovernmentsto introducep r o c e d u r e sfor identify-ing statelesspeople sothey can beprotected inthe same way

as refugees and given a chanceto rebuild their lives.

There are an estimated 10 mil-lion stateless people worldwide.With no nationality, they aredenied basic rights most peopletake for granted, includingaccess to education, healthcareand jobs. Many live in destitu-tion and risk detention andexploitation.

SilentFrancois Crepeau, UN spe-

cial rapporteur on the humanrights of migrants, said theimmigration detention of state-less people was “one of thesilent tragedies of our globalisedworld”.

“It is a tragedy that is com-pletely preventable, but due toa lack of will and attention,continues to harm thousands oflives all around the worldevery year,” he said in a fore-word to new guidelines on pro-tecting stateless people fromdetention.

Chris Nash, director of theEuropean Network onStatelessness (ENS), which pro-duced the guidance, said thedetention of stateless people forlong periods was an “extremelydisturbing trend.”

“Across Europe a failure bystates to put in place effectivesystems to identify stateless per-sons leaves thousands exposedto repeated and lengthy deten-tion,” he added.

FleeingCampaigners say there are

likely to be stateless peopleamong the hundreds of thou-sands arriving in Europe, asmany of the countries they arefleeing, including Syria, Iraq andAfghanistan, have significantstateless populations.

The guidance, intended forlawyers, judges, legislators andpolicymakers, was issued a yearafter the United Nationslaunched a global campaign toeradicate statelessness in adecade.

Stateless people detained inPoland, the Netherlands andMalta told ENS researchers theyhad been made to feel like crim-inals.

Kafil Kafil, an ethnicRohingya from Myanmar, spentmonths in detention in Maltaafter being rescued off a burningboat in the Mediterranean.Myanmar does not recognise theRohingya.

“The policewoman could notbelieve me when I said I camefrom Myanmar,” Kafil told ENS.“Nobody spoke my languageand there was no translator.”

Kafil said people often fellsick because of overcrowding,poor food and lack of exercise.On one occasion he developed afever and was taken to the clinicin handcuffs “as if I was a crim-inal”.

Others interviewed by ENSbecame stateless following thebreak-up of the Soviet Union.

Ivan Niyazov, an ethnicRussian born in the SovietUnion in what is nowUzbekistan, can obtain neitherRussian nor Uzbek nationality.

He has been in and out ofdetention in the Netherlands,losing more three years toimprisonment.

“(I’m from) a country that isnow seventeen countries. I don’tknow who I am,” said Niyazov,who suffers from post-traumaticstress syndrome.

“I can’t trust people any more.Detention changed me.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron walks out of 10 Downing Street in London on Dec 1. Britainlooks poised to join air strikes on Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria this week after PrimeMinister David Cameron announced that a vote would be held in parliament on Wednesday. (Inset):In a file picture taken on Sept 27, 2014 a Royal Air Force (RAF) Tornado GR4 fighter jet prepares

to land at the Akrotiri British airbase, near the Cypriot port city of Limassol, after returning from amission over Iraq to strike at Islamic State jihadists. Britain’s parliament is to hold a vote on Dec 2,on joining air strikes against Islamic State (IS) group targets in Syria, Prime Minister DavidCameron said on Nov 30. (AFP)

British Foreign Secretary PhilipHammond (right), and GermanForeign Minister Frank-WalterSteinmeier (left), arrive for a pressconference in London on Nov 30.Hammond hosted Steinmeier forbilateral talks on a range of issues,ranging from Syria, tackling thethreat from ISIL, migration and theEU-Turkey summit (which takesplace this weekend) and the UK’s EU

reform renegotiation. (AFP)

Monarch, Thomson extend stop:Thomson Airways and Monarch onMonday said they were delaying theresumption of regular flights to theEgyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh until mid-December and after thenew year respectively.

“Monarch can confirm that it has nowcancelled all flights from the UK toSharm El Sheikh up to and includingWednesday 6 Jan 2016,” the companysaid in a statement.

Thomson said it was suspending flightsuntil Dec 16 — a week later than the pre-vious deadline.

The two companies said they wereextending the suspension of flights as theForeign Office still had a travel advice warn-ing against air travel to the resort in place.

Easyjet and British Airways last weekhad already delayed flights until Jan 6 and14 respectively. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Palace state dining room shut:The state dining room of Britain’sBuckingham Palace, where visiting headsof state retire for coffee after banquets,has been closed off due to safety con-cerns, a palace spokesman said onMonday.

“As the result of a routine survey, anissue was found with one of the ceilingbeams in the roof space of the state diningroom,” the spokesman said.

“Following further assessment, accessto the room has been suspended as a pre-cautionary measure while additionalinvestigation work takes place.”

The palace is Queen Elizabeth II’sLondon residence and where she hosts vis-its by foreign leaders, including ChinesePresident Xi Jinping last month. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

‘You’re fat’ card prompts action:British police stepped in on Monday after

Britain

Parliament to hold debate, vote Wednesday

UK set to back Syria air strikesLONDON, Dec 1, (Agencies): Britainlooks poised to join air strikes on IslamicState (IS) group targets in Syria thisweek after Prime Minister DavidCameron announced Monday that a votewould be held in parliament Wednesday.

The announcement came after themain opposition Labour party decidedto let its MPs vote with their individ-ual consciences rather than trying toforce them to oppose military action,meaning Cameron is set to get theclear majority he wanted.

But Labour was left looking deeplysplit on the issue after its left-wingleader Jeremy Corbyn confirmed thathe would vote against air strikes whilea string of other centrist MPs said theywould support them.

“I can announce that I will be recom-mending to Cabinet tomorrow that wehold a debate and a vote in the House ofCommons to extend the air strikes,”Cameron said in a televised statement.

“We will make sure that we have avery long and full debate on Wednesday.”

Cameron has wanted Britain toextend its operations against ISjihadists in Iraq to Syria for monthsbut held back because he would nothave been able to gain support fromparliament due to Labour opposition.

ActionHis previous government suffered

one of its most embarrassing defeats in2013 when it was defeated on a plan totake military action against the regimeof President Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

However, in the wake of this month’sParis attacks which killed 130 people,he has made a fresh push for Britain toextend its role in the fight against IS.

In his statement, the prime ministersaid Britain wanted to “answer the callfrom our allies and work with thembecause ISIL (another acronym for IS)is a threat to our country and this is theright thing to do.”

Foreign Secretary Philip Hammondsaid he was now “confident” that mostMPs would support air strikes whenthere was a vote.

Meanwhile, Corbyn faces the tough-est challenge of his nearly three-monthleadership over the air strikes vote.

His party is split between left-wingMPs, supported by many of the grass-

roots activists who swept him topower, who oppose the strikes andcentrist lawmakers who are in favour.

Monday’s shadow cabinet meetingwas told that some 43 percent ofLabour MPs — nearly 100 out of 231— supported air strikes while 57 per-cent or 132 would oppose them.

His decision to call a free vote wasseen as a way of trying to prevent anyresignations from his team over the issue.

But analysts said it risked makinghim look weak because he could notcontrol his party.

The Stop The War Coalition, whichCorbyn helped found and which held a5,000-strong anti-strikes protest atDowning Street Saturday, said a freevote made war “much more likely”.

Corbyn’s spokesman said there was

“no question” that most of the Labourparty was against air strikes.

“I don’t think it’s a shambles, it’s tak-ing account of the fact that there are verysignificant differences of opinion,” headded of the decision to hold a free vote.

In a sign of the splits, Laboursources said that in Wednesday’s pre-vote debate, Corbyn would open pro-ceedings speaking against air strikeswhile his foreign affairs spokesmanHilary Benn would speak in favour.

SensitiveAnother reason the issue is so sensi-

tive for Labour is the legacy of pastconflicts such as the Iraq war, whichformer Labour leader Tony Blair ledBritain into in 2003 on evidence thatwas later hotly disputed.

The conflict, which left a total of179 British personnel dead, is nowdeeply unpopular in Britain.

A YouGov opinion poll publishedlast week found that 59 percentapproved of Britain joining air strikesin Syria, compared to 20 percent whodisapproved and 21 percent who didnot know.

Some 127,000 people have alsosigned a petition to parliament urginga vote against military action in Syria.

Britain has eight Tornado fighterjets and an unconfirmed number ofarmed and surveillance drones alreadydeployed in the international missionagainst IS.

But it currently only conducts sur-veillance and intelligence missionsover Syria.

EU OKs UK state aid for RWE biomass-fired power plant

Labour party launches campaign to stay in EULONDON, Dec 1, (Agencies): TheLabour party on Tuesday launchedits campaign for Britain to remain inthe European Union, saying thatthe Paris terror attacks showed theneed to “stand shoulder to shoul-der” with European partners.

The Conservative governmenthas promised an in-out referendumby the end of 2017, with recent pollsshowing the public split neck-and-neck on the issue despite all themain parties campaigning to stay in.

Former interior minister AlanJohnson launched his party’s cam-paign to stay in the 28-memberbloc in Birmingham, centralEngland, arguing that Britain wouldbe less safe on its own.

“The first duty of any governmentis to keep our country safe and Ifirmly believe that leaving the EUwould fail that test,” he said.

“The lesson from Paris is clear:to tackle terrorism we must standshoulder to shoulder with our alliesin Europe. The security of Britain isinextricably linked to staying inEurope.

Britons will be asked whetherthey want to “Remain” in the bloc or

“Leave” after the electoral commis-sion ruled that a “Yes” or “No”question could favour those whowant Britain to stay in the EU.

Labour has been a solid support-er of the EU since the premiershipof Tony Blair, but that was throwninto doubt with the election of vet-eran leftist Jeremy Corbyn as partyleader in September.

He had previously opposed thebloc’s free-market rules, but threwhis weight behind the “Remain” cam-paign shortly after being elected.

Johnson also said that Britishworkers, businesses, universities andscientists will all be “damaged anddiminished” in the event of a “Brexit”.

“There is nothing patriotic aboutcondemning this country to isola-tion,” he added.

Prime Minister David Cameronhas pledged to campaign to stay in,but only if he secures EU reformson issues such as welfare pay-ments for migrants and the balanceof power between Brussels andnational parliaments.

The Labour campaign is sepa-rate to the cross-party, pro-EU cam-paign Britain Stronger in Europe.

They will be opposed byLeave.EU, which has the backingof UK Independence Party chiefNigel Farage, and Vote Leave,which is supported by euroscepticConservative and Labour MPs andbusiness figures.

Also:BRUSSELS/LONDON: TheEuropean Commission hasapproved British plans to subsidisethe conversion of RWE’sLynemouth coal-fired power plantin northern England to burning bio-mass, sending the German utilitycompany’s shares higher.

The European Commission saidon Tuesday a nine-month investiga-tion showed that the project accordswith European environmental andenergy goals, giving the green lightto an agreement struck underBritain’s contracts-for-difference(CfD) electricity pricing mechanismto support the project until 2027.

RWE, which bought the coal-fired power plant in 2012, said itwould now take 18 months to adaptthe station to run 100 percent onbiomass with a generation capacityof 420 megawatts.

a woman on London’s metro system washanded a card calling her a “fat, uglyhuman”.

Health worker Kara Florish said in atweet the card she was given on theUnderground was “hateful” and “coward-ly” and “could potentially upset peoplestruggling with confidence”.

She tweeted a picture of the card,which on one side said “fat” and on theother read: “Our organisation hates and

resents fat people. We object to the enor-mous amount of food resources you con-sume while half the world starves.” (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Doctors call off planned strike:Junior doctors in Britain called off aplanned strike on Monday after last-minute talks with ministers, the BritishMedical Association (BMA) said.

The government had planned to impose

a new type of contract on junior doctorsthat it says will improve healthcare duringevenings and weekends, but medics saythe terms would drastically cut their pay.

“Following conciliatory talks withNHS (National Health Service) employ-ers and the Department of Health, wehave agreed to suspend industrial actionin England, which was due to begin at8:00 am tomorrow,” the BMA said in astatement. (AFP)

Crepeau

Elizabeth Xi