logo
Demands grow for sanctions over British man detained in Dubai for 17 years

Demands grow for sanctions over British man detained in Dubai for 17 years

Independenta day ago
The Foreign Secretary has faced urgent calls to sanction those responsible for the detention of a British man in Dubai for the past 17 years.
MPs and peers have urged David Lammy to publicly call for the release of Ryan Cornelius, now 71, who was detained for 10 years in 2008 as part of a bank fraud case.
The detention was then extended by 20 years in 2018.
A group of 15 parliamentarians, led by Sir Iain Duncan Smith, said the case of Ryan Cornelius was a 'flagrant example of arbitrary detention and abuse of power'.
A UN working group has found he is subject to arbitrary detention and last week the European Parliament passed a resolution condemning his detention in 'inhumane conditions' and calling for his 'immediate and unconditional release'.
After the European Parliament resolution, Sir Iain and his colleagues asked Mr Lammy to 'immediately clarify the Government 's position on Mr Cornelius's case and confirm what steps you will now take to press for his release'.
Specifically, they asked whether the Government would make 'strong representations to the UAE on his behalf', publicly call for his release and impose 'targeted' sanctions on those responsible for his detention.
They said: 'The UK has a moral and legal duty to act, as well as a diplomatic responsibility to defend its citizens abroad from such mistreatment.
'We urge the Government to act with the utmost urgency to secure his release.'
Sir Iain said it was 'vital' for the Government to take 'decisive action' to secure Mr Cornelius's release.
Foreign Office minister Hamish Falconer has previously said the Government would 'continue to highlight their concerns' in talks with the UAE and was providing Mr Cornelius with consular assistance, while it took reports of human rights violations 'very seriously'.
But the UK's response to his detention has been criticised by Mr Cornelius's wife Heather and brother-in-law Chris Pagett.
They said: 'For more than 17 years, we have had nothing but defensive waffle from the British Foreign Office.
'The European Parliament has made a strong and direct call to the UAE for Ryan's release within months of our taking his case to them.
'The contrast is shameful. The British people deserve better.'
It is understood that the Government is supporting Mr Cornelius's application for clemency, and the issue was raised by the Foreign Secretary during a trip to the UAE in December last year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Top Democrat presidential hopeful delivers bizarre speech about 'Sesame Street in Iraq'
Top Democrat presidential hopeful delivers bizarre speech about 'Sesame Street in Iraq'

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Top Democrat presidential hopeful delivers bizarre speech about 'Sesame Street in Iraq'

Top Democrat Jasmine Crockett has delivered a rambling speech about how Iraqi 'Sesame Street' helps fight anti-American radicalization. The Trump administration dismantled the US Agency for International Development (USAID) in February over its alleged misuse of taxpayer money, including spending $20 million on a Middle Eastern version of the children's show. During a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday, Crockett defended USAID's support for the muppet-based TV program, saying it helps prevent potentially hostile countries from becoming 'radicalized' against the US. '[When] we start to talk about whether or not 'Sesame Street' or anything else that's on NPR or PBS ends up in other places, this is so there is not this warped thought process about the western world or the United States,' the Texas lawmaker said. 'We're talking about making sure that we don't end up allowing people to be radicalized against us because they have a terrible vision of us because they maybe in a government that actually puts out bad, terrible propaganda about us.' Crockett, 44, who has represented Texas's 30th congressional district since 2023, did not elaborate on how the show prevents anti-American radicalization. It comes as news emerged that the Missouri-born politician appears to be considering running for the US Senate in the 2026 midterm elections. In an interview last week with liberal comedian Hasan Minhaj, Crockett said that she already has her 'expiration date in mind for the House,' and has been 'eyeing people to replace' her. Polling released by the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) this week shows Crockett leads a hypothetical Democratic primary with 35 percent of likely voters, followed by former Rep. Colin Allred at 20 percent. As a rising star in the Democratic Party, Crockett could even become the next presidential hopeful for liberals. Crockett isn't alone in defending USAID's funding of the Iraqi Sesame Street scheme, as other progressives have also spoken out in favor of the project. USAID gave the $20 million grant to a nonprofit called Sesame Workshop, which delivers the show known as Ahlan Simim, or 'Welcome Sesame', in order to help it make a slicker version of the show in 2021. The project is made up of direct healthcare outreach programs, alongside a version of the popular kids program screened to around 29 million children in the Middle East and North Africa, often in areas where schooling has been disrupted by war. The Ahlan Simsim YouTube channel has 1.38 million subscribers and videos dating back nine years. Early videos posted before the USAID funding featured low-quality video production and puppetry. Later videos show classic characters such as Elmo and the Cookie Monster along with 'new characters such as 'Jad,' who was forced to flee his home, 'Basma,' who welcomed Jad when he arrived in his new community, and 'Ameera', who lives with a disability', according to the International Rescue Committee (IRC), which helps deliver the show. They 'act out stories that help marginalized children understand their emotions and experiences and teach them early learning fundamentals like counting and the alphabet'. Delaware representative Chris Coons also argued the project could benefit the US's interests overseas as a form of soft power. 'This isn't just funding a kids' show for children — millions of children — in countries like Iraq,' Coons told CNN. 'It's a show that helps teach values, helps teach public health, helps prevent kids from dying from dysentery and disease and helps push values like collaboration, peacefulness, and cooperation in a society where the alternative is ISIS, extremism, and terrorism.' Coons quoted President Donald Trump's previous Secretary of Defense General James Mattis, who was also a proponent of soft power. 'If you slash development and aid spending then I'm going to need more bullets for our troops,' he said. Coons also claimed that the project is 'pennies on the dollar' when compared to the $850 billion defense budget. Republican Senator Joni Ernst cited the project as another example of 'wasteful' spending by the embattled federal agency. 'USAID asked, 'Can you tell me how to get how to get to Sesame Street?' and ended up in Iraq,' Ernst said. 'USAID authorized a whopping $20 million to create a Sesame Street in Iraq. USAID has long been a reckless, out-of-control, unaccountable rogue agency.' According to the defunct USAID website, Ahlan Simsim is 'designed to promote inclusion, mutual respect, and understanding'. Over the last six years, Ahlan Simsim has reached over 3.5 million children and caregivers with direct services, as well as millions more through its TV show. René Celaya, Managing Director for Ahlan Simsim, wrote in a 2022 Medium post that USAID funding went towards early childhood development (ECD) services in the Middle East countries including Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. 'As we entered a more mature phase of the program, we shifted our focus to scaling and partnerships to ensure the long-term sustainability of Ahlan Simsim's impact on the systems that deliver ECD across the region and around the world,' she wrote. The IRC claims that the project functions in areas where millions of children have been displaced by war, serving as an educational tool when schooling is disrupted. Its Wash Up! program has educated more than 200,000 children on proper hygiene to help prevent deadly waterborne diseases across 15 countries, according to the IRC. USAID spending has come under scrutiny since Elon Musk took a sledgehammer to the agency in hopes of reducing public spending. The White House has touted schemes such as a 'transgender opera' in Colombia, a DEI musical in Ireland and $2.5 million on electric vehicles in Vietnam as evidence of wasteful spending by the department.

Illinois woman with flying saucer tattooed on her forehead commits unhinged crime
Illinois woman with flying saucer tattooed on her forehead commits unhinged crime

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Illinois woman with flying saucer tattooed on her forehead commits unhinged crime

An Illinois woman with a flying saucer tattooed on her forehead was sentenced to 30 years behind bars for murdering her girlfriend. Alexia Telles, 28, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder last week in connection to the tragic death of Annissa Ellen-Williams, 25, the Kendall County State's Attorney's Office announced Monday. Telles, who has several other face tattoos, was charged in connection with the February 2023 slaying after Ellen-Williams died of a traumatic head injury at a home in Oswego - about an hour outside of Chicago. Life-saving attempts were made on Ellen-Williams, but she died at the scene, according to prosecutors. After her death, authorities discovered the couple, who appeared to be in a long-term relationship, had gotten into some sort of disagreement while Ellen-Williams was driving just before they arrived at the home. Forensic and digital evidence, along with statements made to police, soon revealed Telles 'intentionally killed' her partner and made it look like Ellen-Williams had committed suicide, investigators concluded. Investigators did not specify what sparked the argument and how the killing was carried out. 'These cases can be difficult to prosecute because only two people know exactly what occurred that fateful night,' Kendall County State's Attorney Eric Weis said. 'However, the investigative work done by law enforcement and the Coroner's Office led to the successful prosecution of Telles for the murder of Ms. Ellen-Williams.' Telles, who has remained in custody since her arrest, was ordered to serve her entire 30-year prison sentence, followed by three years of supervised release, prosecutors said. 'This sentence ensures that justice is served, and the victim's family does not have to endure the pain of a trial,' Weis stated. 'Telles has accepted responsibility for the heartless act she committed against someone she professed to care so much for.' Daily Mail contacted Weis and Telles' attorneys, Josh Adams and Alana De Leon, for comment. The couple appeared to be in a relationship for years, as their first ever post on Telles' Facebook was from 2016. In a post from 2019, Telles wrote: 'Love you fo [sic] ever,' alongside an image of her and Ellen-Williams. This story comes months after a 22-year-old woman was found naked and discarded in the grass after getting into a domestic dispute with her abusive boyfriend. Nahomi Citttadini, of Miami Beach, Florida was found abandoned on the side of the highway in early December. Lorent Pion, a 29-year-old convicted felon, was charged with his girlfriend's murder murder, despite initially telling officers that she had been struck by another car during an argument, CBS News reported. Disturbing video footage from August captured Pion violently beating Cittadini along a street in Miami Beach, relentlessly chasing after her before grabbing her hair and aggressively throwing her to the ground.

Turkey has conveyed its views on Syria strikes to Israel via intelligence agency
Turkey has conveyed its views on Syria strikes to Israel via intelligence agency

Reuters

time3 hours ago

  • Reuters

Turkey has conveyed its views on Syria strikes to Israel via intelligence agency

ANKARA, July 16 (Reuters) - Turkey has conveyed its views regarding Israel's air strikes on Syria to Israeli authorities via its intelligence agency, Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said on Wednesday, adding Ankara was also in close contact with regional powers and the U.S. Turkey has condemned Israel's strikes against other regional countries, including Lebanon, Iran and Syria, while calling its military assault on Gaza a genocide. It has halted all trade and recalled its ambassador in Tel Aviv for consultations too. Speaking to state media in New York, Fidan said he was in close contact with Tom Barrack, U.S. Special Envoy for Syria and the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, adding he had discussed the issue in phone calls with his Syrian, Jordanian, and Saudi Arabian counterparts. "At the same time, we have conveyed our own views on the matter to the Israelis via our intelligence agency, that we do not want an instability here," Fidan said, and added Syria's new government could not solve the conflict without measures to ensure security in the region.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store