Connect with us

International

Norway tightens entry restrictions for Russian citizens

Published

on

Oslo, May 24 (IANS) The Norwegian government has announced further restrictions on the entry of Russian citizens into Norway, effective from May 29.

The move is aimed at curbing non-essential travel, particularly for tourism purposes, the Norwegian government said on Thursday in a press statement.

The initial restrictions on visa issuance to Russian citizens were implemented in the spring of 2022. Since then, tourist visas have largely been denied, Xinhua news agency reported.

However, Russian citizens will still be allowed entry if they are visiting close family members residing in Norway.

Additionally, those coming for work or study in Norway or other Schengen countries will not be affected by the new rules.

–IANS

int/khz

ALSO READ:  Rescue workers: Iran president's helicopter found
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

International

Three injured as taxi crashes into hospital in South Korea

Published

on

By

Seoul, July 3 (IANS) A taxi crashed into a hospital in South Korea on Wednesday, injuring two people, police said.

The vehicle plowed into the emergency ward of the National Medical Center in the central district of Jung at 5.15 p.m., leaving two people injured, one seriously, Yonhap news agency reported.

The driver was not under the influence of alcohol.

Police were investigating the circumstances of the accident.

–IANS

int/svn

ALSO READ:  3 injured after chemical plant fire in Houston
Continue Reading

International

Main opposition asks Nepali PM to resign

Published

on

By

Kathmandu, July 3 (IANS) The main opposition Nepali Congress party on Wednesday called on Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal to step down, one day after the largest ruling partner initiated the move.

“It would be natural for the prime minister to clear the way as the two largest parties decide to form a new government. Our party urges him to resign,” said Prakash Saran Mahat, spokesperson for the Nepali Congress, the largest in the House of Representatives, Xinhua news agency reported.

A day earlier, the ruling Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist) (CPN-UML), the second largest in the lower house, asked Dahal to resign by Wednesday evening to clear the way for the formation of a “national consensus government,” threatening to quit the coalition government and withdraw its support if the prime minister refuses to do so.

At a meeting on Wednesday, the Nepali Congress also endorsed the agreement reached on Monday night with the CPN-UML about the formation of a new coalition government.

ALSO READ:  UK, US strike Houthi targets in Yemen in combined operation

Under the deal, CPN-UML’s Chairman and former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli shall assume the premiership first and then hand it over to Nepali Congress President and former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba until the general election in 2027.

“The Oli-led government will be formed first. Our party president will lead the next government,” Mahat told Xinhua.

As chairman of the CPN (Maoist Center), Dahal became the head of a coalition government in December 2022 as the general election in November produced no majority party in the lower house, and he has formed alliances with both the Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML ever since.

The CPN (Maoist Center) announced on Tuesday that Dahal would not resign from his post but rather seek a vote of confidence in the lower house.

–IANS

int/svn

Continue Reading

International

Top South Korean envoy discusses North Korea-Russia threats with foreign diplomats

Published

on

By

Seoul, July 3 (IANS) South Korea’s top nuclear envoy discussed the deepening military cooperation between North Korea and Russia in meetings on Korean Peninsula issues with foreign diplomats in Seoul, the foreign ministry said on Wednesday.

Lee Jun-il, director general for Korean Peninsula policy, invited the ambassadors and diplomats from 30 countries to two separate roundtable sessions on North Korean issues on Monday and Wednesday, the ministry said, Yonhap news agency reported.

The participating countries either have a diplomatic presence in North Korea, or have their top envoys to Seoul double as their ambassadors to Pyongyang.

They include Guatemala, Norway, Denmark, Laos, Bulgaria, Brazil, Spain, the Czech Republic, France and Australia, as well as the European Union.

Lee stressed at the meetings that the closer ties between Moscow and Pyongyang clearly demonstrate how security in Asia is closely linked to that in Europe, and called for the international community to sternly deal with the potential threats posed by their relationship.

ALSO READ:  Russia says NATO conducting nuclear strike drills near its border

As North Korea continues to threaten the South with missile launches, and lately with the GPS signal jamming and the sending of trash-carrying balloons across the border, South Korea will firmly deal with any future provocations by the North, the ministry quoted Lee as telling the groups.

The diplomats shared the understanding that countries need to send a strong message to the North about the potential threats posed by its cooperation with Russia, urging Pyongyang to stop acts that raise tensions, the ministry said.

–IANS

int/svn

Continue Reading

International

Fire in Sri Lanka kills 2

Published

on

By

Colombo, July 3 (IANS) Two people were killed in a fire that broke out on Wednesday morning in a row of houses where tea plantation workers live in central Sri Lanka, the police said.

Speaking to local media, police spokesman Nihal Thalduwa said the victims were a 60-year-old man and a 50-year-old woman who were living in the first house that caught on fire, Xinhua news agency reported.

The cause of the fire was an electricity leakage, according to the police. Three houses that estate workers live in were destroyed.

Most of Sri Lanka’s estate workers live in housing provided by plantation companies.

The government has allocated 14 billion rupees (about $46 million) for people without homes in the plantations, a minister said in January this year.

–IANS

int/svn

ALSO READ:  Israel asks Hamas to 'soften stance' amid deadlocked talks for Gaza ceasefire
Continue Reading

International

Online petitioners calling for South Korean President Yoon's impeachment reach 1 mn

Published

on

By

Seoul, July 3 (IANS) The number of people demanding the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol surpassed the 1 million mark Wednesday on the National Assembly’s petition website.

The petition, calling on the National Assembly to propose a bill on Yoon’s impeachment, gained a daily average of 100,000 signatures over a period of 10 days after it was posted on June 24, Yonhap news agency reported.

Lawmakers of the Democratic Party (DP) backed the petition, saying the number of petition approvals rightfully reflects the public’s views of Yoon.

“The president must change first for the state affairs, now on the verge of a catastrophe, to get back on track,” DP floor leader Park Chan-dae said during a Supreme Council meeting.

During the meeting, Rep. Jung Chung-rae also said the petition is “the people’s voice” demanding the “judgment” of the Yoon administration.

A petition approved by more than 50,000 people within 30 days is referred to a parliamentary subcommittee that reviews petitions under the legislation and judiciary committee, and can be submitted to a plenary session.

ALSO READ:  Israel asks Hamas to 'soften stance' amid deadlocked talks for Gaza ceasefire

DP spokesperson Kang Yu-jung said the committee and the subcommittee will impartially examine the petition and they would consider holding a hearing or taking other necessary steps, if needed, over the course of the examination.

The ruling People Power Party (PPP) lashed out at the move.

“The DP is abusing the petition as a means of political fighting,” PPP spokesperson Kwak Gyu-taek told reporters, claiming that it is “obvious that there are no grounds” for Yoon’s impeachment.

Amid deepening political strife, the presidential office accused the opposition of trying to railroad contentious bills and pushing for the impeachment of high-ranking officials.

“The DP should immediately stop anti-civilizational attempts to destroy the Constitution and its unheard-of legislative violence and coup d’etat,” a senior presidential official told Yonhap News Agency.

On Tuesday, the DP proposed a motion to impeach four prosecutors, including those involved in corruption investigations into former party leader Lee Jae-myung.

The DP, which holds a controlling majority in parliament, is also pushing to put forth a bill calling for a special counsel probe into the government’s alleged interference with a military probe into a Marine’s death despite opposition by the ruling People Power Party.

ALSO READ:  Iran, EU to continue consultations on sanction removal: Deputy FM

The bill, seen as ultimately aiming to investigate suspicions of Yoon’s interference with the probe, had been vetoed by the president in the previous National Assembly, but the DP proposed it again after the new National Assembly began its term in late May.

–IANS

int/svn

Continue Reading

Trending