Turkiye seeks to host next COP as co-presidency plans falter

Security personnel block entrance doors as Indigenous people and students attempt to storm the venue during the COP30 UN Climate Change Conference in Belem, Para State, Brazil, Nov. 11, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 17 November 2025
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Turkiye seeks to host next COP as co-presidency plans falter

  • Australia and Turkiye are locked in a stalemate over who should host COP31 in 2026
  • Brazil has appointed a representative to help resolve the disagreement between the two countries

ISTANBUL: Turkiye wants to host next year’s UN climate change talks and is ready to organize the event alone if there is no agreement on sharing the event, a Turkish diplomatic source told AFP Sunday.
Australia and Turkiye are locked in a stalemate over who should host the 31st United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP31) in 2026.
The host is selected by consensus, so unless Australia or Turkiye withdraws or the countries agree to share the conference, both will miss out. A decision should be made at the current COP conference in Belem, Brazil.
If no consensus is reached, the summit would revert to Bonn, the German city that hosts the UN’s climate secretariat.
The Turkish source said discussions with Australia at the UN General Assembly’s annual meetings in September yielded initial proposals for joint management of the event and shared high-level meetings.
But a letter from Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejected the agreements, citing UN rules against joint hosting and concerns about diverting COP’s Pacific-focused agenda, the source said.
Ankara supports developing flexible arrangements through good-faith consultations to ensure the success of COP31, the source said.
“Turkiye continues to advocate a co-presidency model as a step to strengthen multilateralism but is prepared to host the conference independently if consensus cannot be reached,” the source told AFP. Erdogan underlined this position in his response to the Australian prime minister, the source added.

-’Inclusiveness’-

Leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer attended a summit in Brazil on November 6-7 to start COP30, but Erdogan and Albanese were not among them.
Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yilmaz attended the summit, while Australia was represented by Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen.
Brazil has appointed a representative to help resolve the disagreement between Australia and Turkiye, but diplomats say that no progress has been made yet toward reaching an agreement before COP30 wraps up on November 21.
Turkiye wants COP31 to focus on the world’s most vulnerable regions, with potential special sessions addressing Pacific issues, the source added.
The Turkish candidacy is framed as a call for global solidarity and constructive dialogue in climate action.
“Turkiye will continue to act on the principles of cooperation and inclusiveness rather than competition in combating climate change,” the source said, adding that it invites all parties to advance the process on the basis of “constructive dialogue and mutual respect.”


Cuba says island is no ‘black hole’ on drug trafficking route to US

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Cuba says island is no ‘black hole’ on drug trafficking route to US

  • Cuba and the United States in 2017 agreed to cooperate in the fight against drug trafficking
  • The Caribbean island sits directly astride a key route between major drug producers in South America and the US

HAVANA: Top law enforcement officials in Cuba said on Thursday the island was prioritizing the fight against narcotics trafficking in the Caribbean and continued to provide information to the US Coast Guard amid escalating tensions and surging US military presence in the region.
Cuba and the United States in 2017 agreed to cooperate in the fight against drug trafficking, but Col. Ybey Carballo, chief of Cuba’s Border Guard, told reporters in Havana formal engagement between the two long-time rival nations had ended under the second administration of US President Donald Trump.
Carballo said Cuba nonetheless routinely provides the US Coast Guard with intelligence, locations, routes and characteristics of boats suspected of trafficking drugs near its waters.
“Cuba is not a black hole like some like to say,” said Carballo, adding that the island’s proactive approach contributed both to the security of the region and “especially to that of the United States, because the boats are often headed (there).”
Carballo said Cuba had provided more than 1,500 tips and intelligence on drug traffickers to the US Coast Guard between 1990 and November 30, 2025, proof, he said, of the island’s long-standing commitment to fighting the drug trade.
Cuba sits directly astride a key route between major drug producers in South America and top consumer, the United States, and the US State Department as recently as 2016 said the island “is not a major consumer, producer or transit point of illicit narcotics.”
The Trump administration has launched an offensive on alleged drug-trafficking boats elsewhere in the Caribbean and Pacific in recent months, killing dozens through targeted missile strikes while accusing Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a key Cuba ally, of profiting from the trade.
Cuba has criticized those attacks and accuses the US of seeking a violent overthrow of the Venezuelan government.
Carballo told Reuters that Cuban security forces had not noticed a dramatic change in drug-running activity around Cuba despite the surging US military activity and strikes.