South Korea objects as US immigration raids Hyundai plant

South Korea has complained about the arrests of hundreds of workers by American immigration officials in Georgia’s state of the state of Georgia.

Following the previous day’s raid, which resulted in the suspension of factory construction, the Seoul-based Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday demanded the respect of the country’s citizens and investors.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The episode highlights the disruptive impact that President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown is having on his efforts to entice foreign investment. The state of Georgia is home to the largest foreign investment, Hyundai-LG.

According to Lee Jaewoong, a spokesperson for South Korea’s Foreign Ministry, “the rights of our nationals and our business activities must not be unfairly violated in the course of US law enforcement.”

The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency has been strengthened by record funding and increased latitude when Trump took office in January.

The president has stated that he wants to deport “the worst of the worst” criminals. However, ICE data indicate a rise in non-criminal detention.

Although Lee did not specify exactly how many South Koreans were detained, media reports suggested that 300 or more had been taken into custody.

Up to 450 people were detained, according to a post from the US Justice Department agency ATF in Atlanta.

According to The Korea Economic Daily, LG Energy Solution (LGES) and Hyundai Motor Factory employees were among the people being detained.

According to the Reuters and AFP news agencies, about 300 of those are South Korean nationals, citing unnamed sources and South Korean media.

The detainees were being held at an ICE detention facility, according to a South Korean government official.

Lee stated that the ministry is preparing to take proactive steps in the investigation, including sending diplomats to the site from its Washington and Atlanta consulate, and creating a local mission-focused on-site response team.

Belarus arrests Polish priest on spying charges

After Belarus detained a Polish clergyman on suspicion of espionage, Warsaw reacted furiously.

According to a report released by Belarusian state media on Friday, state security service agents detained the man and discovered documents relating to joint military exercises that were being planned by Belarus and its ally, Russia. Poland has referred to the action as a “provocation” and a “response” and called it “provocation.”

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The priest, Grzegorz Gawel, was detained the day before in Lepel, east of Minsk, the city where he had previously been detained. Additionally, a Belarusian national was being held.

The suspect, according to the Polish news agency Belta, has a copy of a document related to the Zapad 25 exercises scheduled for this month. Additionally, he had a portable telephone SIM card registered to someone else and cash in Belarus and other countries.

Because of Belarus’s proximity to three NATO allies, Poland, Latvia, and Lithuania, the Zapad exercises, which are held every two years in either Belarus or Russia, are watched by Western nations with interest.

According to Belta, the Belarusian state news agency, “there is unquestionable evidence of the Polish citizen’s espionage activities.” He was given a secret military document a few minutes before his arrest. All of this was captured on video.

Belta continued, saying that he had been attempting to get the Belarusian national into his business and gave him money and small presents.

On Friday, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk declared to reporters that Warsaw “will not accept” the nonsense that the Belarusian side has uttered.

Although I’m not certain of the nature of our Jesuit’s trip to Belarus, Tusk claimed that he saw a friend or acquaintance there.

According to a spokesman for X, Polish security forces “do not employ clergymen to gather information about military exercises.”

According to deputy foreign minister Marcin Bosacki, the arrest was likely connected to upcoming military exercises. He promised to respond, but he wouldn’t give specifics.

Relations between Belarus, a Russian ally, and Poland, one of Kyiv’s main supporters in the European Union, have sunk to a new low since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

Alexander Lukashenko, the president of Belarus, is one of Vladimir Putin’s closest allies and has authorized the use of his country’s territory by Russia for the Ukrainian invasion in 2022, despite the fact that he has stated that Belarusian servicemen won’t participate in it.

Russians have also moved into Belarus with their tactical nuclear weapons.

FAST to retain power after Samoan election victory confirmed

The incumbent Fa’atuatua i le Atua Samoa ua Tasi (FAST) party has been declared the winner of the Samoa national election.

FAST won 30 of the 50 seats contested, according to the official results released by the Samoan electoral commission on Friday. However, Fiame Naomi Mata’afa, the party’s former leader, will step down in the place of Laaulialemalietoa Leuatea Schmidt, who took over earlier this year.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

14 seats were held by the main opposition, the Human Rights Protection Party. Four more independent candidates were chosen.

Only three seats, including her own, were won by Fiame’s Samoa Uniting Party, which was founded earlier this year. In January, a factional dispute led to her expulsion from FAST.

In the nation of about 220 000 people, rising prices were identified as a pressing issue for voters.

Residents of Apia, the capital of Samoa, had informed the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that they wanted the next government to concentrate on the economy and jobs prior to the election on August 29.

Afioga Tuimalealiifano Vaaletoa Sualauvi II, the head of state of Samoa, had issued a warrant confirming the names of the new members of the next parliament.

Seats have been won by five women. At least six women must be in parliament, according to the Samoa Observer, which would require the creation of an additional seat in accordance with a 10% minimum representation requirement.

In 2021, Fiame won the election that removed Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi from power after 22 years, making her the country’s first female leader.

She hosted the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting last year, which was focused on the Pacific’s impact, to raise the profile of the country internationally.

UN suspects all sides in DR Congo conflict guilty of war crimes

According to UN investigators, the Rwanda-backed M23 militia, the Congolese military, and its affiliates in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) may have committed gross human rights violations, including war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The UN Human Rights Office released a report on Friday, claiming that it had found that all parties to the bloody conflict had committed abuses since late 2024, including widespread sexual violence and summary executions in North and South Kivu provinces.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Non-state armed groups have plagued Eastern DRC, a region that borders Rwanda, for more than 30 years, and have experienced extreme violence.

The M23 armed group has seized large tracts of land in the restive region with Rwanda’s support since beginning to use arms at the end of 2021, sparking an armed conflict with the DRC military, leading to a humanitarian crisis that has claimed the lives of thousands and displaced at least seven million people.

This is the first UN report to show that the abuses may have been crimes against humanity, despite numerous human rights organizations and the UN’s accusations of gross atrocities committed by parties involved in the conflict in the DRC.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk issued a statement in support of the atrocities described in this report, calling for victims’ accountability.

The findings “underscore the scale and widespread nature of violations and abuses committed by all parties to the conflict, including acts that might constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity,” the report continued.

In January, M23 took control of Goma, the largest city in the eastern DRC, and spread its gains throughout South and North Kivu.

(Al Jazeera)

Summary executions, torture, and arbitrary disappearances, according to the UN report, were carried out by the ethnic Tutsi-led M23, which may amount to crimes against humanity.

The group “degraded, punished, and broken the dignity of victims,” according to the report, which included gang rape, which was primarily committed against women.

There are credible allegations of Rwandan personnel being hid in M23, it added, and the Rwandan Defence Forces provided training and operational support for M23.

Rwanda claims that it supports M23 in self-defense against the army and Hutu militiamen linked to the genocide in 1994. Prior to now, M23 has denied carrying out atrocities.

Additionally, the report found that grave crimes, including gang rape, deliberate killing of civilians, and looting, had been committed by the DRC, the military, and affiliated armed groups, such as pro-government militia fighters known as Wazalendo.

A separate UN report revealed that between January and May of this year, more than 17, 000 sexually violent victims were treated by healthcare providers in the eastern region of the DRC.

The DRC and the rebels signed a declaration of principles on July 19 and agreed to begin negotiations for a peace deal in August after Qatar’s mediation.

Thai parliament elects Anutin Charnvirakul as prime minister

Developing a Story

Anutin Charnvirakul, the leader of the conservative Bhumjaithai party, was chosen as Thailand’s parliament’s prime minister.

Anutin will succeed Paetongtarn Shinawatra of the ruling Pheu Thai Party, who was fired from office last month due to an ethics scandal.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

With the support of the liberal People’s Party, Anutin defeated Chaikasem Nitisiri, the populist candidate for Pheu Thai.

Anutin promised to call a general election within four months, giving the largest party in the 500-seat parliament the backing it had.

The Bhumjaithai leader was confirmed to have received more than 247 votes, the 492 active members’ majority, while counting and voting were still being conducted.

After the vote is over, his final score must be verified. In a few days, he and his government are scheduled to take office, according to King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s official announcement.

The Shinawatra clan, a force in Thai politics for the past 20 years, is dealt yet another blow by Veteran Anutin’s election.

Their populist movement has long been at odds with the pro-military, pro-monarchy establishment, but it has been increasingly detested by legal and political obstacles.

In the hours leading up to the vote on Friday, Thaksin Shinawatra, the dynasty’s patriarch, flew out of Thailand and headed for Dubai.

Anutin once supported the Pheu Thai coalition, but he abruptly gave up in the wake of Paetongtarn’s actions during a border dispute with neighboring Cambodia.