Europe |
Wilders alliance hurt Dutch reputation abroad |
2012-11-05 |
![]() Ministers said foreign governments understood that Wilders was not officially part of government. However, official papers show that time after time diplomats wanted instructions on how to avoid reputation damage as much as possible for example, when Wilders published a new book. Often this did not work, the documents state. Rob de Wijk, director of research institute HCCS and an expert on international relations, said this should be no surprise. He said, "Wilders position was impossible to explain abroad." All the problems have not been solved now that Wilders is no longer part of the alliance. "He was a symbol of the way the Netherlands had turned in on itself," added de Wijk. Former Dutch foreign minister Ben Bot told a television show last month The Netherlands can regain its previous influence in the world if the new government ditches its current surly image. He said that over the past few years, the Netherlands has become known as the country which opposes everything. "Diplomacy with a smile and a soft voice" will put the Netherlands back on the map, Bot stated. |
Link |
China-Japan-Koreas | |
Dutch FM: North Korean threat 'dangerous' | |
2006-10-08 | |
![]() Bot said after the weekly Cabinet meeting that everything possible should be done to prevent North Korea carry out the test. The Christian Democrat CDA minister urged the US and Japan to wage a tough campaign against North Korea. "The situation is dangerous," Bot said.Bot also said China should apply pressure to the North Koreans. In the past, China has advocated quiet diplomacy, along with Russia. The foreign minister is convinced that North Korea can be persuaded against carrying out the nuclear test if sufficient international pressure is brought to bear.
| |
Link |
Europe |
After all the fuss, Hirsi Ali to keep Dutch citizenship |
2006-06-27 |
Immigration and Integration Minister Rita Verdonk is expected to inform parliament that Somali-born Ayaan Hirsi Ali is to keep her Dutch passport. The announcement will come on Tuesday or Wednesday, according to various media reports. This follows an agreement reached by senior Cabinet ministers during a meeting in the Hague apartment of Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende late on Monday. Deputy Prime Minister Gerrit Zalm (Finance), the first to leave the meeting, told journalists he had "good hope" Hirsi Ali's case could be finalised this week. Zalm was leader of the Liberal Party (VVD) when he recruited the Somali critic of Islam to run for election for the party. She told him at the time that she had given a false name - Ayaan Hirsi Ali - to get asylum in the Netherlands in 1992. She was naturalised under this name five years later. The other ministers at the meeting were Verdonk, Balkenende, Ben Bot (Foreign Affairs) and Piet Hein Donner (Justice). Verdonk, who was campaigning to become leader of the VVD in May, caused consternation in parliament and abroad when she informed Hirsi Ali that she had six weeks to explain why she should not be stripped of her Dutch passport. Hirsi Ali gave a press conference the next day to announce her resignation as an MP for the VVD. She also said she was accelerating her plans to relocate to the US to take up a job with a neo-conservative think tank. Prior to this, Hirsi Ali was a staunch ally of Verdonk and her restrictive immigration policies. The foreign media blasted the Netherlands for what was seen as an attempt to silence a person who had faced death threats for her criticism of fundamentalist Islam. Parliament passed motions calling on Verdonk to ensure Hirsi Ali remained a Dutch citizen, no matter what. Verdonk is expected to send a letter to parlaiment on Tuesday or Wednesday to explain her about-face in Hirsi Ali's case. The reasoning is that under Somali law a person is entitled to use a grandfather's name. The Minister's letter will be studied closely by MPs who still have not forgiven Verdonk for causing the crisis in the first place. Left-wing groups will scrutinise it to see if it affords an opportunity for at least 60 other people stripped of their Dutch nationality for giving a false name during the asylum process. |
Link |
Europe |
EU Getting Another Year on Constitution |
2006-05-28 |
![]() The constitution was designed to reorganize bloc's decision-making and raise its profile as a global player by establishing an EU president and foreign minister. But all 25 member states had to approve it for it to take effect. Bot suggested a new EU treaty or constitution be in place by 2009. He reiterated, however, that the Dutch government would not put the charter to a popular referendum or a parliamentary vote. |
Link |
Europe |
World's press slams Dutch over Hirsi Ali |
2006-05-24 |
AMSTERDAM The saga surrounding Ayaan Hirsi Ali continues to make international headlines despite efforts by Dutch ambassadors to improve the image of the Netherlands. The International Herald Tribune (IHT) and France's 'Le Figaro' carried front page stories about the case on Wednesday, more than a week after Hirsi Ali, a native of Somalia, announced she is leaving the Netherlands and moving to the US. Under the headline 'Fight over lawmaker divides the Dutch' in the IHT, journalist Marlise Simons of the New York Times wrote, "Once friends, Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Rita Verdonk are now caught in an ugly conflict triggered by the fight for their ideas." The IHT is owned by and supplied with articles by the New York Times. The article said Hirsi Ali "has been a lightning rod in a country that is moving to the right as it struggles with how to deal with immigrants, most of them Muslim. After two high-profile assassinations, people are deeply divided over whether to be cautious or blunt toward Muslims who settle in the Netherlands but do not adapt to the country's social mores". Simons also noted that half the Dutch people questioned in opinion poll agreed with Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk for casting doubt on whether Hirsi Ali's naturalisation as a Dutch citizen was valid. The international media has largely accepted this as the reason Hirsi Ali announced last week that she is leaving the country to work for a neo-conservative think tank in America. Dutch ambassadors have been writing letters to the media since then to highlight the fact that she had decided to leave the Netherlands before the naturalisation issue arose. This is putting another spin on the story. Hirsi Ali told a press conference that there were three main reasons for moving to the US. In the first instance, she wants a bigger stage from which to present her views. Verdonk's letter about her naturalisation and a court order forcing her of her rented apartment in The Hague caused her to accelerate the move. Neighbours worried about their own safety convinced a judge that the government should not have moved Hirsi Ali into the apartment without consulting them. Her decision has been a publicity nightmare for the Netherlands as news reports and columnists suggest that Hirsi Ali is being denied freedom of speech in the Netherlands. "I don't care for the image that tolerance and freedom of speech are being oppressed in the Netherlands. There is every reason to remove this incorrect impression," Balkenende said recently. Following confirmation by Foreign Minister Ben Bot that the affair had damaged the countrys image, Balkenende ordered Dutch ambassadors around the world to mount a charm offensive, but it doesn't seem to be working. Conservative French newspaper 'Le Figaro' focused on Wednesday on the 'Iron Lady' Rita Verdonk. While the Minister declined to talk to the paper about her role in the Hirsi Ali affair, she was certain of one thing about herself: she will survive the political storm. The Wall Street Journal publicised a comment piece entitled 'Dutch Disease' and Germany's 'Die Welt' carried the headline: Dutch break Islamic critic's spirit'. International politicians have also weighed in. Daniël Cohn-Bendit, leader of the Greens in the European Parliament, described the case as "scandalous". He said the image of Dutch tolerance had been totally changed and he asked Verdonk of kicking Hirsi Ali when she was down. The Flemish Liberal Party (VLD) of Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt has even suggested giving Hirsi Ali a Belgian passport should she lose her Dutch one. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
EU halts Palestinian aid |
2006-04-12 |
![]() Jack Straw, the British foreign secretary, said: "We do not wish to punish the Palestinian people for the decision they freely made to elect a Hamas-dominated government. At the same time, Hamas has got to recognise that being elected as a government, democratically, they have responsibilities as democrats to do what everybody else has to do as democrats, which is to eschew violence." Javier Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, said that the Palestinians were not being abandoned and that the EU "will do business as usual with the Palestinian people". However, Ben Bot, the Dutch foreign minister, said: "The Palestinian people have opted for this government, so they will have to bear the consequences." |
Link |
Europe |
Obsessed with Constitution as Europe Sinks |
2006-03-09 |
![]() After the Titanic hit the iceberg it took a while before the captain, officers, crew and passengers realized that they were doomed. The first to realize that the vessel was going down were the passengers below deck. The same is true for Europe today. While the indigenous lower classes have in a panic, but rationally begun to vote in ever growing numbers for so-called populist, islamophobe politicians, the European establishment politicians and mainstream media are discussing how to revive the European Constitution which the voters in France and the Netherlands rejected last year. Cue the great RB Titanic desk graphic, perfect for the EU. Instead of trying to prevent an impending clash of cultures, the establishment politicians are totally absorbed in efforts to circumvent the rejection of their constitutional project. The assassinations of Pim Fortuyn and Theo van Gogh, the bombings in Madrid and London, the French riots, the Danish cartoon case, should have been so many warnings to even the blindest establishment, but all Europes politicians care about is that when Europe goes down it goes down with a constitution. Europes current predicament has two causes. A self-inflicted demographic winter is setting in on the continent. Last week the Finance committee of the French Assembly wrote that by 2030 Europe will represent only 8% of the worlds population, compared with 22% in 1950. Within the same period the average age of its citizens will rise from 29 to 39 years and the fertility rate will drop from 2.6 to 1.4. The situation is particularly serious in Germany, Italy and Spain. These dramatic figures are all the more worrying as they take into account the large immigrant population that has settled Europe since the 1960s and 70s. In the midst of its demographic implosion Europe invited in large numbers of fecund people belonging to an alien culture and religion. This in itself was asking for problems. The latter were exacerbated by the second cause of Europes predicament: the refusal of Europes ruling elites to uphold law and order and to defend its traditional values and institutions, such as the nation-state. It is this combination of lazy multiculturalism and corroded civil society that is killing Europe. The EU Constitution is an example of the corrosion of one of the most important of Western institutions, the national state. But Europes politicians, including its new leaders, fail to notice and are foolishly exacerbating the situation. Last Saturday it was revealed that German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who never made a secret of her desire to revive the European constitutional treaty, along with the cunning French president Jacques Chirac, have devised a Franco-German plan to present the core of the EU Constitution to the French and Dutch voters again. According to the German weekly Der Spiegel Berlin and Paris have been hatching the following scheme to save the EU Constitution: The rejected constitutional treaty would be reduced to its first two parts, that which sets out the EUs competences and the charter of fundamental rights of the union. A political declaration would be added and the new document would be put to a fresh poll in both France and the Netherlands. The remaining third part of the text, detailing the EUs policies, would subsequently be ratified by the French and Dutch parliaments, thus completing the ratification of the entire EU Constitution. Earlier Ms Merkel had proposed to attach a social protocol to the failed Constitution in order to make it more acceptable to French and Dutch public opinion. Europes leaders would be required to sign a declaration on the social dimension of Europe in order to soothe the fears of Socialist voters that the EU will liberalize the economy. The Franco-German plot seems already to have met with the approval of Belgium, which throughout its 175-year history has always been a French vassal (apart from the short periods when it collaborated with Germany). Belgiums Prime Minister, Guy Verhofstadt, is an outspoken proponent of a federal European superstate, a United States of Europe, which will be a Greater Belgium. Yesterday Matti Vanhanen and José Socrates, the Prime Ministers of Finland and Portugal also called for a European Constitution based on the existing draft. Earlier Miguel Angel Moratinos, the Spanish Foreign Minister, made it clear that Spain also wants the Constitution implemented. Another cunning old Frenchman, former President Valéry Giscard dEstaing, also wants a revival of the rejected Constitution. Mr Giscard, the chairman of the group that authored the European Constitution and an anti-democratic conspirator, said in a recent lecture [pdf] at the London School of Economics on 28 February that the rejection of the Constitution [by the French and Dutch voters] was a mistake which will have to be corrected. Referring to earlier EU referendums on the Maastricht and Nice treaties where Ireland and Denmark were forced to vote over and over again until they accepted the texts imposed by the EU, he said that if the Irish and the Danes can vote yes in the end, so the can the French [and the Dutch]. The Constitution will have to be given a second chance, Mr Giscard added, because the electorate, he claimed, had voted no out of an error of judgement and ignorance. He stressed that Europes leaders would not be stopped by the people: In the end, the text will be adopted. He also said We want a political union, adding it is no longer a case of debating what we want to do, but determining how we do it. He said that an urgent task for the EU now is to carefully prepare a realistic timetable and binding commitments with a view to establishing the European political Union. He made it quite clear that It was a mistake to use the referendum process, but when you make a mistake you can correct it. He also predicted that the Constitution would be a stepping stone to further integration later, arguing that adoption of the Constitution will not be enough to complete Europes political union, and that the Constitution is for this generation, but for the next generation there will be something else. It is unclear why an otherwise sensible woman such as Ms Merkel is willing to play the game of the anti-democratic and corrupt Mr Giscard and save the Constitution he authored. Does she wants to prove that as a woman she will be able to succeed where the men failed? Or is she eager to divert attention from her own domestic problems, such as the increase of Germanys unemployment rate to 12.2%, with over 5 million now out of work. Next week, at their meeting on 14 March, the EU finance ministers will probably decide to give Germany one more year to bring its budget deficit below the maximum set by the EU. Germany set the deficit rules in the 1990s, but last year it pressured the EU to relax them because it can no longer comply with them. The French political class, however, has not yet reached an agreement on how to proceed with the EU Constitution. Nicolas Sarkozy, the French interior minister and presidential hopeful, is reluctant to put the Constitution to the voters a second time. Instead he would prefer to adopt only those proposals of the rejected treaty which enjoy a large consensus. This is the so-called cherry-picking approach, which is designed to lead to a Constitution lite. The cherries that Mr Sarkozy wants to pick include the new system of weighted votes, a restriction of the national veto, the creation of an EU foreign minister and increased checks against over-regulation by national parliaments. He stressed, however, that he does not favour a new French referendum on the Constitution, saying I will not be the one who will tell the French that they have misunderstood the question. Mr Sarkozy is currently touring Europe to promote his idea for a mini constitutional treaty (and also to enhance his international prestige for the 2007 French presidential elections). A recent survey conducted among the Brussels establishment of Eurocrats EU politicians, journalists, lobbyists, NGO chiefs and bureaucrats shows widespread support for constitutional cherry-picking. Of those questioned in the survey 70% believed that such moves towards a Constitution lite would not be undemocratic. However, there are also hardliners who insist that the Constitution is dead since the French and the Dutch rejected it. Outspoken proponents of this position are Poland and the Netherlands. Last January the Polish president Lech Kaczynski said that the EU should draft a new text because the one currently on the table pushes for more integration than the citizens are willing to accept. That constitution created a certain hybrid, which was not a European superstate yet, but was not that far from it, he said. Adam Bielan, the spokesman of Law and Justice (PiS), Mr Kaczynskis party, said that Europe should focus on more pressing matters rather than waste time trying to revive the dead Constitution. The Constitution must be ratified by all. The decisions of France and the Netherlands have closed the matter, he said. Ben Bot, the Dutch Foreign Minister, also said that the Constitution was as good as dead. He ruled out the possibility of the Dutch parliament ratifying a treaty which the people had rejected in a referendum. |
Link |
Europe | |
Dutch PM 'has no use' for Hirsi Ali cartoon views | |
2006-02-11 | |
Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende said on Friday he did not think much of the contribution of outspoken MP Ayaan Hirsi Ali to the debate about the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Speaking in Berlin on Thursday, Hirsi Ali said she wished Balkenende had as much courage as Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Hirsi Ali said publishing the cartoons is a matter of freedom of expression. Rasmussen has consistently refused to apologise to Muslims on behalf of the Danish newspaper that first printed the 12 caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed. He contends his government has no control over the free press.
Somali-born Hirsi Ali is a member of the Liberal Party (VVD) and a leading critic in the Netherlands of aspects of Islam. She wrote the script for the movie 'Submission' and approached director Theo van Gogh to make it. Van Gogh was murdered by Muslim extremist Mohammed Bouyeri on 2 November 2004. Balkenende said his government was attempting to bring about a de-escalation in the cartoon row. He told parliament on Tuesday there is broad support for the coalition government's stance. Jozias van Aartsen, the VVD's leader in parliament, said he had not known in advance what Hirsi Ali planned to say in Germany. Noting she had just repeated the party's stand on freedom of speech, he said her comment about Balkenende was a personal view. "Now, yes. That is Ayaan," he said. Balkenende said he supported freedom of speech and totally rejected the use of violence by some opponents of the cartoons. He said Dutch Foreign Minister Ben Bot and Javier Solana, EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, will visit the Middle-East region next week for talks aimed at reducing the tension over the cartoons. | |
Link |
Europe | |
Iran intimidates Dutch MP at Tehran airport | |
2005-05-12 | |
![]() During her 10-day visit to Iran her fifth visit to the Middle East country Karimi met with human rights activists, including Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi. She also spoke with reformist politicians, journalists and others campaigning to reform the dictatorial regime in Iran. The visit passed without incident until Karimi checked in for her return flight to the Netherlands on Monday night. Public servants with the Information Ministry then questioned her and indicated they were displeased with her initiative to set up a satellite broadcaster in Iran. They warned that in future visits, Karimi might be restricted to just visiting family. After her passport was checked, Iranian soldiers twice inspected her three carry-on bags and took her notebooks, diaries, two mobile phones and address book to another room. She was given her belongings back, but Karimi fears they have been copied. "I am very concerned about the people I spoke with in Iran. The Ministry of Information knew of my contacts and discussions, but the army, prosecutors and police form a parallel structure and can arrest people because they spoke with me," she said. Karimi said she chose to go public with her story because her contacts in Iran said only political pressure from outside Iran can help. Meanwhile, Liberal VVD MP Hans van Baalen said Minister Bot must condemn the intimidation and demand guarantees for the people listed in Karimi's address book. He'd also said the Iranian ambassador must be called to explain the incident and the Dutch ambassador to Iran be recalled for consultation. Co-initiator of the plan to set up a satellite broadcaster to support free Iranian media, Van Baalen said the intimidation of Karimi was "unacceptable". "Iran violates human rights and threatens to develop nuclear weapons. Actions such as these make it clear where Iran stands," he said.
| |
Link |
Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||||||
Dutch furious about alleged intimidation | ||||||
2005-05-10 | ||||||
AMSTERDAM Foreign Minister Ben Bot is demanding an explanation from the Iranian ambassador to the Netherlands following the alleged intimidation of a Dutch MP at Tehran airport on Monday. The minister's spokesman said Bot will write a letter to his Iranian counterpart demanding an explanation.
The visit passed without incident until Karimi checked in for her return flight to the Netherlands on Monday night. Public servants with the Information Ministry then questioned her and indicated they were displeased with her initiative to set up a satellite broadcaster in Iran. They warned that in future visits, Karimi might be restricted to just visiting family.
Meanwhile, Liberal VVD MP Hans van Baalen said Minister Bot must condemn the intimidation and demand guarantees for the people listed in Karimi's address book. He'd also said the Iranian ambassador must be called to explain the incident and the Dutch ambassador to Iran be recalled for consultation. Co-initiator of the plan to set up a satellite broadcaster to support free Iranian media, Van Baalen said the intimidation of Karimi was "unacceptable". "Iran violates human rights and threatens to develop nuclear weapons. Actions such as these make it clear where Iran stands," he said. | ||||||
Link |
Europe |
Green light for Dutch Afdghan anti-terror mission |
2005-03-11 |
AMSTERDAM Main opposition party Labour PvdA has refused to back a new mission in which Dutch soldiers will join US and British forces in the hunt for al-Qaeda terrorists in Afghanistan. PvdA MP Bert Koenders said the mission represented a break from a tradition in which the Netherlands always operated within the bounds of international law. The green-left GroenLinks and Socialist SP parties also withheld approval from the new mission. Despite the opposition, the Cabinet gained majority support with the Christian Democrat CDA, Liberal VVD, Democrat D66 and populist LPF all voting in favour of the troop deployment. The coalition government failed however to gain the overwhelming backing it was hoping for. It is customary in the Netherlands that the cabinet seeks convincing majority support for military operations that involve great risks for the troops involved, news service NOS reported on Thursday. The cabinet decided last month to dispatch 165 commandos and 85 military police and helicopter personnel to Afghanistan. They will be deployed as part of the Enduring Freedom mission launched by the US after the 11 September terrorist attacks. Although the majority parliamentary support means that the soldiers will be sent to Afghanistan in the coming weeks, MPs remain concerned by that fact that any suspects arrested by Dutch troops will be sent to the US detention centre at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The legal rights of prisoners at Guantanamo have been subject to international criticism, prompting concerns from Dutch MPs. The parliament has also expressed alarm about reports of torture at Guantanamo Bay and the fact that Dutch-detained suspects could also be subjected to similar interrogation techniques. Liberal VVD MP Hans van Baalen demanded that detainees be treated humanely, but he did not reject the notion they will be sent to Guantanamo. "I prefer to have the terrorists in Guantanamo Bay than in the Laakkwartier in The Hague," he said, referring to the two suspected terrorists arrested in The Hague last November. Foreign Minister Ben Bot also told MPs that he had reached an agreement with the US deputy defence secretary Paul Wolfowitz that Dutch experts would enter into discussions with US authorities about Guantanamo Bay. The parliament was also concerned about the legal status of soldiers involved in the anti-terror operation. They are concerned the troops will be confronted with both US and British rules of violent engagement. MPs want to avoid a similar situation to that in which marine Erik O. was arrested in Iraq in December 2003 after an Iraqi man was allegedly shot and killed in a looting incident. Charges of murder or manslaughter against O. were eventually dropped, but the prosecutor has appealed against his October 2004 acquittal of breaching military rules of engagement. Defence Minister Henk Kamp said specialist Dutch troops to be deployed in Afghanistan will operate under Dutch regulations. He also said detailed agreements had been reached with the Public Prosecution Office (OM). Discussions were sparked earlier this week after Dutch military union AFMP raised concerns about the legal position of the troops. It also questioned the fact that Dutch troops are involved in two conflicting missions in Afghanistan; namely the peacekeeping duties with the Nato-led stabilisation force and the new anti-terror mission. MPs also backed on Thursday night the deployment of four F-16 fighter jets in Afghanistan. They will replace the Apache combat helicopters the Netherlands has already deployed on peacekeeping duties in the central Asian nation. |
Link |
Afghanistan/South Asia | |
Dutch commandos set for Afghanistan tour | |
2005-02-25 | |
The Cabinet is reportedly planning to send 150 commandos to Afghanistan to fight alongside US soldiers in secret operations against terrorists holed up along the Pakistan border. The elite troops would be deployed for initially one year as part of the US military's Enduring Freedom operation aimed at flushing out and destroying radical-Islamic Taleban fighters and the terrorist network al-Qaeda of Osama bin Laden, newspaper De Telegraaf reported on Friday. Foreign Minister Ben Bot and Defence Minister Henk Kamp want the soldiers to engage in combat operations with US and British troops, plus those from other willing nations such as Denmark and Australia. They will be involved in destroying terrorist training camps along the rugged Afghan-Pakistan border. Preparations for the mission are believed to have been secretly discussed between the US and the Netherlands. Political sources claim Bot and Kamp will present their proposal during the cabinet's weekly meeting on Friday. But neither the Defence Ministry nor the Foreign Affairs Ministry has officially confirmed the report, news agency ANP reported. The mission is politically sensitive, with government coalition party Democrat D66 labelling the cabinet's plans "a radical intention", demanding guarantees over the safety of the troops. It also said the plan must not be a form of redemption with the US for the withdrawal of Dutch peacekeeping troops from Iraq. Theoretically, the cabinet does not need to discuss the mission with the Parliament because of its secret nature. But government coalition party Christian Democrat CDA is demanding the Lower House be informed, possibly also in secret. And because the 150 commandos and marines will be deployed in "the highest theatre of war", the mission warrants a decision by the parliament, CDA MP Henk Jan Ormel claimed on Radio 1 on Friday. He is not opposed to the mission, but is demanding more information. The Dutch military union VBM/NOV said it is concerned about the legal position of the elite troops and wants to prevent any possible prosecution of the soldiers. A spokesman for the union denied that the commando mission will lead to confusion due to the fact that there is also a Dutch peacekeeping force in the nation. He told Expatica that the population is happy the Taleban regime has been forced out of power and that the Afghan people will look upon the peacekeeping mission and the Dutch combat operations as being one and the same. The Netherlands was only previously involved in the Nato-led peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan. There is an Apache combat helicopter deployment and 135 soldiers in the Afghan capital Kabul and a further 130 soldiers deployed in the north of the country. But it was also revealed on Thursday that the Netherlands is expected to dispatch four F16 fighter jets and 100 air force personnel to Afghanistan for a mission of at least one year. The fighter jets will replace the combat helicopters which are due to return home on 31 March and the cabinet is expected to make a decision later on Friday. The cabinet is also planning to send 600 to 750 marines to the central Asian nation to maintain security during parliamentary and regional elections later this year. The troops are currently part of Nato's strategic reserve.
| |
Link |