World
Italy defends decision to expel Libyan warlord wanted by the ICC
Italy’s interior minister says he expelled Libyan warlord wanted by the International Criminal Court because he posed a danger to society.
Italy repatriated a Libyan warlord wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) due to security concerns.
Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi made the comments to lawmakers during a Senate session on Thursday, in the government’s first remarks on its decision to expel instead of hand the warlord over to face charges.
Ossama Anjiem – also known as Ossama al-Masri – was flown back on an Italian government plane back to the Libyan capital, Tripoli, where he received a hero’s welcome. He was arrested over the weekend after he attended a football match in Turin.
Piantedosi says al-Masri was repatriated to Tripoli for “urgent security reasons, with my expulsion order, in view of the danger posed by the subject”. The interior minister told the Senate, refusing to go into greater detail, citing a scheduled address to lawmakers next week.
Senators were concerned that Rome had ignored its obligations to the ICC – based in The Hague – to turn over wanted criminal suspects. They repeated calls demanding Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni respond to lawmakers in an open question session.
The ICC warrant accuses al-Masri of perpetrating war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the Mitiga prison in Libya, starting in 2015. The warlord’s crimes are punishable with life in prison.
The ICC says he was accused of a slew of heinous crimes, among them murder, torture and rape. The court said the warrant was transmitted to member states on Saturday, including Italy. The court also provided real-time information that al-Masri had entered Europe.
The court reminded Italy at the time to contact it “without delay” if it ran into any problems cooperating with the warrant. But Rome’s court of appeals ordered al-Masri freed on Tuesday, after which he was sent aboard an aircraft of the Italian secret services back to Libya.
The Rome court cited a “procedural error in his arrest” as the reason for his repatriation.
The ruling said Justice Minister Carlo Nordio should have been informed ahead of time as the justice ministry is the institution which handles all relations with the ICC.
Human rights groups have documented gross abuses in the Libyan detention facilities where migrants are kept. Following al-Masri’s expulsion and return to Libya, they accuse Italy of complicity in their mistreatment.
World
Trump Considers Building a Military Base in Gaza as Peace Plans Clash With Reality
Israeli strikes on Gaza have killed about 600 people since a cease-fire began, according to health officials in the territory. Many displaced Palestinians are still living in tents. And there are some 60 million tons of war debris to be cleared.
World
Iran covertly repositions strike drones amid Russia drills in Strait of Hormuz, expert says
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Iran repositioned strike drones and other military assets under the cover of joint drills with Russia in the Strait of Hormuz Thursday, a defense expert claimed.
In what he described as a “calculated escalation” amid rising tensions with the U.S., Cameron Chell said Iran’s latest move also followed reports of sightings of U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones with precision strike capabilities in the region.
“The Russian drills would cover for the Iranian forces to move their drones into strike position,” Chell, of defense firm Draganfly, told Fox News Digital. “They’ve gone under the veil of doing the military exercises, which happened to be along the coastline, and this is an escalation.”
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Defense expert Cameron Chell has called Iran’s military moves with Russia a “calculated escalation.” (Iranian Army/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The combined exercises, reported by The Associated Press, also came as President Donald Trump pressed Iran further to make a deal to give up its nuclear weapons ambitions following indirect talks in Geneva.
“We’re going to make a deal, or we’re going to get a deal one way or the other,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Thursday, signaling determination to secure an agreement.
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Iran’s latest moves reportedly follow sightings of U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones. (John Moore/Getty Images)
Meanwhile, on Feb. 18, U.S. Central Command posted photos showing F/A-18 Super Hornets landing on the decks of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea.
Flight-tracking data in recent days also showed U.S. Navy MQ-4C Triton surveillance drones operating near Iran’s coastline.
One Triton was observed Feb. 14 and another on Feb. 18, conducting high-altitude maritime intelligence missions over the Gulf.
“The U.S. deployed an MQ Triton drone, which is a surveillance drone, so it does not have strike capability, and it typically flies at around 50,000 feet,” Chell said.
He added the drones would likely launch from land bases in countries such as Saudi Arabia or Qatar and provide real-time situational awareness to naval commanders.
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“The Russian drills would cover for the Iranian forces to move their drones into strike position,” Chell told Fox News Digital. (Iranian Army/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“These drones can guide the U.S. on Iranian forces performing exercises with the Russians and where they might be moving equipment to,” Chell said before describing how they fly them “at an altitude so that the Iranians can see it so they become a deterrent.”
Chell also said an MQ-9 Reaper drone was deployed, which he said can fly between 25,000 and 40,000 feet.
“This has strike capability, but Iranians do not have great capability to take these down,” he added.
As previously reported by Fox News Digital, the USS Gerald R. Ford, the second aircraft carrier Trump has sent to the Middle East, and its accompanying ships are heading across the Atlantic Ocean into the Mediterranean Sea.
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NATO country and U.S. ally Poland also warned its citizens Thursday to immediately flee Iran, with its prime minister saying the “possibility of a conflict is very real.”
World
French far right asks European Parliament to mark death of activist Quentin Deranque
Patriots for Europe is seeking a minute of silence int he European Parliament for Quentin Deranque, a French far-right activist who died after a brawl with left-wing activists in Lyon, during a session dedicated to the anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
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