Trudeau urges ‘firm response’ to Russia

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with military personnel as he meets with NATO battle group troops in Adazi, Latvia, on Tuesday. (AFP)
Updated 11 July 2018
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Trudeau urges ‘firm response’ to Russia

  • Canada leads one of four battalions deployed by the Western defense alliance on its eastern flank in 2017 in a deterrence and defense posture following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014
  • Canada will not change its attitude toward security of the Baltic countries

RIGA: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday urged NATO to send a “clear and firm response” to Russia at its summit this week, blaming Moscow for a deadly nerve agent attack in Britain and other destabilising actions.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “invasion of Crimea, his interference in the Donbass, his actions elsewhere around the world... most notably on UK soil, in Salisbury, are things that require a clear and firm response,” Trudeau told reporters in the Latvian capital Riga.
A key NATO summit opens in Brussels on Wednesday, with the agenda including US President Donald Trump’s demands for extra spending from allies along with the growing threat members see from Russia on its eastern flank.
Britain on Monday accused Russia of causing the death of a homeless British woman from exposure to the nerve agent Novichok.
The fatality follows the poisoning of a former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury in March. They have since recovered.
“We certainly hope that Russia will choose to become a more positive actor in the global sphere than it has chosen to be in the past years,” Trudeau added.
The Kremlin, meanwhile, on Tuesday branded NATO a relic of the Cold War.
Trudeau also said that Canada would extend its leadership of the NATO battalion based in Latvia until 2023 and boost the number of its troops deployed there from 455 to 540.

Canada leads one of four battalions deployed by the Western defense alliance on its eastern flank in 2017 in a deterrence and defense posture following Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.
“We are ready to support our allies while facing global threats to security,” said Trudeau, adding that Canada’s current mission initially slated to expire in 2019, “will be prolonged for four years.”
“Canada will not change its attitude toward security of the Baltic countries,” Trudeau told reporters at a press conference with his Latvian counterpart Maris Kucinskis.
The Latvian premier hailed Ottawa’s decision to extend its mission as “the perfect gift to Latvia on its centenary.”
Later on Tuesday, Trudeau visited the Canadian troops deployed for Operation Reassurance, which is Canada’s largest sustained military presence in Europe in more than a decade.
In total, over 1,000 NATO troops from nine alliance members are deployed in the Latvian battalion.
The other three NATO battalions are based in Estonia, Lithuania and Poland and are led by Britain, Germany and the United States, respectively.
Trudeau’s visit is the first ever by a Canadian head of government to Latvia, his office said.
He now heads to Brussels for the NATO summit on July 11 and 12.
 


French court rejects bid to reopen probe into black man’s death in custody

Updated 2 sec ago
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French court rejects bid to reopen probe into black man’s death in custody

PARIS: France’s top court on Wednesday ruled against reopening an investigation into the 2016 death of a young black man in police custody, confirming a previous decision to dismiss the case against three arresting officers.
The Court of Cassation’s decision definitively closes the case nearly a decade after the death of 24-year-old Adama Traore following his arrest in the Paris suburb of Beaumont-sur-Oise, a fatality that triggered national outcry over police brutality and racism.
Traore’s family was contesting a 2024 appeal court ruling confirming a prior decision to drop the case, after an investigation led to no charges against the military policemen — or gendarmes — involved and therefore no case in court.
A lawyer representing his family announced after Wednesday’s ruling they would take the case to the European Court of Human Rights to “have France convicted.”
Three gendarmes pursued the young man on July 19, 2016, when temperatures reached nearly 37C, pinning him down in an apartment, after which he told officers he was “having trouble breathing.”
He then fainted during the journey to a gendarmerie station, where he died.
’Probably’ not fatal
In 2023, French investigating magistrates dropped the case against the three gendarmes, in a ruling that was upheld on appeal in 2024.
They had been tasked with probing whether the three arresting officers used disproportionate force against Traore during a police operation targeting his brother, Bagui.
According to the magistrates, Traore’s death was caused by heatstroke that “probably” would not have been fatal without the officers’ intervention — though it concluded their actions were within legal bounds.
His family however has accused the gendarmes of failing to help the young man, who was found by rescue services unconscious and handcuffed behind his back.
In their appeal, Traore’s family criticized the justice system for not carrying out a reconstitution of events as part of the investigation.
But prosecutors requested that the appeal be dismissed.
Internal investigations
Activists have repeatedly accused French police of violence and racism, but few cases make it to criminal court in France as most are dealt with internally.
In January, several thousand people protested in Paris over the death in custody of a Mauritanian immigrant worker, El Hacen Diarra, 35, who died after passing out at a police station following his violent arrest.
Paris police launched an internal investigation after video filmed by neighbors, shared on social media, showed a policeman punching what appears to be a man on the ground as another officer stands by and watches.
In 2024, a judge gave suspended jail sentences to three officers who inflicted irreversible rectal injuries to a black man, Theo Luhaka, during a stop-and-search in 2017.
Prosecutors have also called for a police officer to be tried over the 2023 killing of a teenager at a traffic stop, in a case that sparked nationwide protests.
A court is to rule in March whether he will face a criminal trial over the killing of 17-year-old Nahel M.
Europe’s top rights court in June condemned France over its police discriminating against a young man during identity checks, in the first such ruling against the country over alleged racial profiling.