UN Presses Taliban Again to End ‘Heartbreaking’ Curbs on Afghan Women

ISLAMABAD — The United Nations warned Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities Friday that their bans on women’s education and work risk pushing the country further into deeper poverty and international isolation.

The head of the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, or UNAMA, called again on the fundamentalist regime to reverse the restrictions as the world marked International Women’s Day to highlight the need to invest in women.

“It is heartbreaking that we are seeing precisely the opposite unfolding in Afghanistan: a catastrophic and deliberate disinvestment that is causing immense harm to women and girls, creating only barriers to sustainable peace and prosperity,” said Roza Otunbayeva.

Since reclaiming power in August 2021, the Taliban have blocked girls from accessing secondary school education and beyond. They have limited women’s freedom of movement outside the home and prohibited most from public and private sector workplaces, including the United Nations and other aid groups.  

The U.N. Development Program, or UNDP, reported Thursday that nearly 70% of Afghans do not have enough basic resources, and restrictions on women continue to thwart basic rights and economic progress. It said the Afghan economy had contracted by 27%, and unemployment doubled since the Taliban takoever.  

“The biggest challenge is the continued edict that bans girls’ education. Not being able to move forward after the sixth grade is a major stumbling block,” said Kanni Wignaraja, UNDP’s director for Asia and the Pacific, told reporters in New York.

“Last year, no girl graduated the twelfth grade so how are they going to jump from sixth grade to moving into technical colleges or universities need for the medical field?” said Wignaraja, who recently returned from a visit to Afghanistan.

The ban on female aid workers has undermined relief activities in a country where the U.N. estimates more than 12 million women will need humanitarian assistance this year.

In a statement Friday, UNAMA said it “also fears a recent crackdown by the de facto authorities because of alleged non-compliance with the Islamic dress code is pushing women into even greater isolation due to fear of arbitrary arrest.” 

The U.N. refers to the Taliban as de facto authorities because no foreign government has formally recognized their government in Kabul.  

However, the euphemism has upset human rights groups and many women in Afghanistan, who are vehemently opposed to granting legitimacy to the Taliban government until it lifts all bans on women.  

Heather Barr, the associate director at Human Rights Watch, urged diplomats, the UN, and aid workers on Friday to stop referring to the Taliban as the de facto authorities to show solidarity with Afghan women.

“This euphemism kowtows to Taliban demands for normalization,” Barr said on X, formerly known as Twitter. Rights groups oppose any recognition of the Taliban and accuse it of implementing “gender apartheid” policies.

“Every step toward normalizing the Taliban—every time they walk a red carpet, or send a new ambassador, or host a meeting w/smiling foreigners—sends a message to the Taliban that what they’re doing to women & girls is fine and they are free to carry on,” she wrote in a subsequent X post.  

The U.N. acknowledged in a quarterly report Wednesday that the Taliban had consolidated political, security, and economic gains since taking power. However, it noted that Afghan de facto authorities “appear to be facing growing internal disagreements over key governance issues, including the enforcement of the drug ban.”  

The report did not elaborate further, but Otunbayeva suggested after briefing a U.N. Security Council meeting on Wednesday that curbs on Afghan women were among the issues causing internal Taliban disagreements.

“There is a part of the [Taliban] government who understand that they should overcome [these restrictions]. But someone else … decided that no, women and girls should be behind the scene,” she said, without naming anyone.  

Most of the religious edicts or decrees the reclusive Taliban supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, has issued over the past 2½ years have targeted women directly, banning their rights to education, work, to visit public places, including parks and gyms, as well as preventing them from taking road trips without a male chaperone.  

Akhundzada, who directs the government from the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, defends his policies and dismisses international calls to reverse them as interference in Afghanistan’s internal matters.

your ad here

Zimbabwe Women Stand Up for Expectant Mothers in Rural Areas

A group of women from small hold farms in Zimbabwe have mobilized resources to build a shelter for expectant mothers who live far from the nearest clinic. It can literally save the lives of pregnant women who cannot reach a clinic in time to give birth. Columbus Mavhunga reports from Mashava, Zimbabwe, south of the capital, Harare.

your ad here

Zelenskyy Due in Istanbul for Erdogan Talks on War, Black Sea

Istanbul — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was due in Istanbul on Friday for talks with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan over the war with Russia and navigation on the Black Sea.

The two leaders were set to meet at the Dolmabahce Palace in Istanbul and hold a news conference on Friday evening, according to plans published by the Turkish presidency.

Zelenskyy’s office said the pair will discuss Kyiv’s proposal to end the conflict — as well as “Black Sea navigation security, global food stability, and the release of Ukrainian prisoners and political prisoners held by the Russian state.”

NATO member Turkey has sought to maintain good relations with both Moscow and Kyiv throughout the two-year war, with Erdogan pitching himself as a key go-between and possible peacemaker.

A Turkish diplomatic source told AFP on Friday that Ankara “will once again emphasize that our strong support for the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine, including Crimea, continues.”

‘Time for dialogue’    

Turkey also hosted failed ceasefire talks between Kyiv and Moscow in the first weeks of the war.

It hopes to revive those talks at some point in the future.

“Both sides have now reached the limit of what they can achieve through war,” Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said earlier in March.

“We think it’s time to start a dialogue towards a ceasefire.”

Turkey’s strategic location on the Black Sea and its control of the Bosphorus Strait gives it a unique military, political and economic role in the conflict.

In July 2022, Ankara brokered the Black Sea Grain deal, the most significant diplomatic agreement so far reached between Kyiv and Moscow.

Moscow ditched the initiative — which allowed the safe passage of Ukrainian agricultural exports across the mine-laden Black Sea — a year later, complaining the terms were unfair.

Kyiv since launched an alternative export route for ships which hugs the coastline, avoiding the contested international waters.

Turkey has been lobbying hard for an agreement to ensure cargo can once again navigate those waters in safety.

After a visit to Turkey last year, Zelenskyy returned to Kyiv with five top commanders from the Azov regiment who were supposed to have remained in Turkey until the end of the conflict under a prisoner exchange deal with Moscow.

The Ukrainian leader will also visit shipyards where corvettes for his navy are being built and meet Turkish defence companies on Friday, Zelenskyy’s office said.

Russian ties 

Turkey’s Western allies have expressed concern over the closeness of its relations with Moscow.

Ankara is reliant on Russian energy and has faced scrutiny for its role in helping Russia skirt Western trading restrictions.

The United States has sanctioned several Turkish companies for helping Moscow purchase goods that could be used by its armed forces.

The meeting between Zelenskyy and Erdogan comes a week after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met his Turkish counterpart Fidan at a diplomatic forum in Antalya.

President Vladimir Putin was due to visit Turkey last month, but the trip was postponed by Moscow, according to reports in Turkish and Russian media citing diplomatic sources.

The Kremlin has said it is working on rescheduling the visit, but has given no date.

your ad here

Sweden Formally Joins NATO, Prompted by Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine

Sweden formally joined the NATO military alliance Thursday, a decision officials said was prompted by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The announcement came as the alliance was conducting large-scale exercises above the Arctic Circle as a show of force and unity. VOA’s Veronica Balderas Iglesias reports.

your ad here

Kashmir Prospered Since Its Special Status Was Revoked, Says India’s Modi

Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday visited Indian Kashmir for the first time since his government stripped the Himalayan region of its semiautonomous status nearly five years ago. 

Amid tight security, Modi told a crowd that had packed the Bakshi Stadium in the region’s capital, Srinagar, that Kashmir has seen significant changes and prospered since his government took action on August 5, 2019.  

On that day, the Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government nullified Articles 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution. Kashmir’s loss of its special status led to the division of the region into two federal territories – Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh. Both areas are ruled by the central government and have no legislatures of their own. 

“Today Jammu and Kashmir is touching new heights of development because J&K is breathing freely today. This freedom from restrictions has come after the abrogation of Article 370,” Modi said.  

“Few political parties used Article 370 for their own political benefits, but that’s over now,” he added, apparently referring to the two regional pro-India political parties, the National Conference and the People’s Democratic Party, without mentioning their names. 

He also alleged that India’s main opposition party, the Indian National Congress, commonly known as Congress, and its allies in the region “deceived people, J&K and the nation for political benefits” under the guise of the now-revoked special status. 

Kashmiri politicians have described Modi as divisive and anti-minority and have said that the special status designation was a constitutional guarantee, The Associated Press has reported. 

Tight security was put in place ahead of Modi’s visit to the Muslim-majority region. 

Government forces dug holes on the main road and placed wooden rafters in them to erect barricades. Local police also declared Srinagar a “red zone” for drones. Access to the secured compound, decorated with Indian flags, was restricted to individuals with government-approved passes.  

Thousands of individuals from the Kashmir valley attended the speech. Some, however, said that the local government forced them to join Modi’s gathering as they were government employees. 

Their claims were backed by two former chief ministers, Mehbooba Mufti and Omar Abdullah, who shared on social media platform X videos and screenshots of the list of the employees selected by the government to attend.  

“Many of us who work for the government had to attend this event at any cost. We were picked up from different places during the middle of the night,” a government employee told VOA. He asked not to be named, fearing disciplinary action.   

“They made us wear caps in three colors representing the Indian flag when we got into the vehicles. We have been waiting outside since 5 a.m., and we are tired because we haven’t had rest,” he added. 

Many people who said they traveled to Srinagar on their own voiced disappointment, saying they were not allowed to enter the venue where the prime minister was speaking. They said they hoped Modi would listen to their concerns and address them on the spot. 

“I am devastated because security didn’t let me into the stadium to share my grievance directly,” Riyaz Ahmad, a resident of the Kangan area of Ganderbal district, told VOA. 

“I come from an economically weaker section of society, and I wanted to tell Prime Minister Modi that people like me can’t afford to pay for electricity after the regional government installed smart meters in the valley.” 

Manoj Sinha, lieutenant governor of J&K, welcomed Modi and thanked him for re-establishing peace in the valley. 

“Thanks to the efforts of Prime Minister Modi, Kashmir, also known as the Valley of Saints, has become peaceful once again,” Sinha told the gathering. “Street protests are gone forever.”

India and Pakistan have both claimed Kashmir since the two countries gained independence from Britain in 1947. They administer parts of the region with a “Line of Control” as the de facto border.  Kashmir has seen clashes involving Indian forces and separatists. 

Sinha said that people of J&K have sent a clear message of their huge respect and love for Modi. 

“People are standing because there are no seats available in the stadium,” the lieutenant governor said. “The figures reveal the affection for the prime minister. Even if there were enough spaces to accommodate 200,000 people, it too would still be overcrowded.”  

Modi also dedicated “Developed India — Developed Jammu Kashmir,” an agriculture development program worth more than $600 million to boost the economy of J&K. 

During his speech, Modi announced that he would kick off a campaign to promote J&K as a wedding destination.  

“I am starting ‘Wed in India’ campaign. I urge those planning weddings to come and stay here for a couple of days so that locals can earn their bread and butter,” he said. “I won’t leave any stone unturned to repay the debt of the love given to me by the people of Kashmir.” 

Mufti, the former chief minister, while taking a jab at BJP, said that common people in the past thronged venues with great enthusiasm and returned with hope in their hearts.  

“But this time Kashmiris know that everything spoken at Bakshi Stadium will be to showcase the so-called benefits of illegal abrogation of Article 370 akin to putting salt to their wounds,” she wrote on the X platform. 

“This visit is only meant to address and drum support amongst BJP’s core constituency in the rest of India for the upcoming parliament elections,” she added. The elections are set for April. 

Wasim Nabi, Ayesha Tanzeem and Bilal Hussain contributed to this report.

your ad here

LA Russians Send Letters to Support Female Political Prisoners in Their Homeland

Imprisonment based on political dissent is especially difficult for women, says Nadya Tolokonnikova, a creator of Pussy Riot, and someone who spent 16 months in a Russian prison. The Russian diaspora in Los Angeles gathered to write letters of support to women incarcerated on political grounds in their homeland. VOA News reports from Los Angeles, California; Steve Baragona narrates.

your ad here

Ukraine’s Sea Drone Technology Gaining Significance

Ukrainian officials say the Russian military patrol ship Sergey Kotov sank in the Black Sea after being targeted by Ukrainian-made sea drones. The reported hit is calling attention to drones as effective weapons to keep Russian forces from taking control of the Black Sea. VOA Eastern Europe Bureau Chief Myroslava Gongadze gained exclusive access to the development and testing site of this cutting-edge drone technology. VOA footage and video editing by Vladyslav Smilianets.

your ad here

Gunmen in Nigeria Kidnap Dozens of Pupils From School, Parents Say

KADUNA, Nigeria — Gunmen kidnapped dozens of school pupils in northern Nigeria on Thursday, residents and parents of the missing children said, in what would be the biggest abduction targeting a school since 2021. 

Police in Kaduna state did not immediately comment on the abductions, which happened shortly after morning assembly at the Local Government Education Authority School in the town of Kuriga. 

The number of pupils taken was not immediately clear. 

“As we speak, people are writing down the names of their children that have gone to the school today and are not back. It is after these statistics that we will know exactly the number” of missing, said Salisu Ahmed Kuriga, whose three younger brothers were missing. 

Parents said that on arrival at the school the gunmen started shooting sporadically before abducting dozens of pupils and disappearing into the bush. 

The school was housing primary and secondary school students.  

“We don’t know what to do, we are all waiting to see what God can do. They are my only children I have on Earth,” Fatima Usman, whose two children were among those abducted, told Reuters by phone. 

Another parent, Hassan Abdullahi, said local vigilantes had tried to repel the gunmen but were overpowered. 

“Seventeen of the students abducted are my children. I feel very sad that the government has neglected us completely in this area,” Abdullahi said. 

Kidnappings for ransom by armed men have become endemic in northern Nigeria, disrupting daily lives and keeping thousands of children from attending school. 

The last major reported abduction involving school children was in June 2021 when gunmen took more than 80 students in a raid on a school in northwestern state of Kebbi.

your ad here

Zimbabwe Responds to Narrowing of US Sanctions

Harare, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe’s government criticized the modification of U.S. sanctions this week that renew measures against President Emmerson Mnangagwa and some senior leaders while removing others from the list.

U.S. Embassy officials said the new sanctions aim to improve Zimbabwe’s human rights record and reduce corruption.

Zimbabwe Information Minister Jenfan Muswere on Wednesday condemned the United States and called for an immediate and unconditional removal of what he called “illegal” sanctions.

“Government of Zimbabwe would like to dismiss any suggestions that this is a new development between Harare and Washington,” he said, noting that Mnangagwa has long been under U.S. sanctions.

“To this end, the government of Zimbabwe condemns the perpetuation of the heinous sanctions against Zimbabwe and their intended effect to decimate our economy,” Muswere said. “Consequently, we do not celebrate the current delisting of other key players. … Zimbabwe was never supposed to be under any form of sanctions from another nation in the first place.”

U.S. Embassy Chargé d’Affaires Laurence Socha on Wednesday said the Biden administration was committed to ensuring the sanctions are relevant, timely and targeting those closely connected to corruption and serious human rights abuses, including Mnangagwa.

“In Zimbabwe we continue to witness gross abuses of political, economic and human rights, Socha said. “The targeting of civil society and severe restrictions on political activity have stifled fundamental freedoms, while key actors, including government leaders, have siphoned off government resources for personal gains. U. S. sanctions are not on the country of Zimbabwe.”

Zimbabwe’s government blames sanctions for the country’s economic struggles since the early 2000s. Critics attribute the decline to corruption and bad policies by Harare.

Marvellous Kumalo, spokesperson for the rights group Crisis Coalition of Zimbabwe, said, “We have never invited sanctions or celebrated their existence. We are happy now because the Harare administration has always blamed sanctions whenever they failed to deliver in terms of social-economic goods. So now we will keep them in check and see whether they will deliver.”

He continued, “We urge Zimbabwe’s government to revise their human rights record, their public corruption, issues to do with reforms. We will be happier if they institute reforms that make Zimbabwe a better country.”

Obert Masaraure, president of Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, said he hopes the new measures announced by Washington will do more than improve the economic picture.

“Zimbabwe keeps sliding back with respect to issues of human rights, democracy, holding credible elections,” he said. “We have also seen massive looting of our mineral wealth. All this has led to serious poverty among our people. Teachers are also affected; earning below the poverty datum line. That is why at least 4,000 are leaving the country annually to seek greener pastures.

“So, we hope that this [new] sanction regime can apply pressure on Harare so that it reforms and creates a governance architecture that carries the hopes and aspirations of our people,” he said. “That’s democracy.”

In announcing the modified sanctions, U.S. President Joe Biden also terminated the official U.S. state of emergency regarding actions and policies of the Zimbabwe government, which was first imposed in 2003 following reports of election rigging and human rights abuses.

your ad here

Hindu Nationalism Spreading in Nepal

In Nepal, a growing Hindu nationalist movement is calling for the country to adopt Hinduism as its state religion and reinstate the country’s Hindu monarchy. Now there is concern over recent clashes between Hindu nationalists and police. Analysts say the movement stems from a combination of disillusionment with the government, inspiration from neighboring India, and social media influencers. Henry Wilkins reports from Kathmandu.

your ad here

With Turkmenistan Gas Deal, Turkey Aims to Become Regional Energy Hub

Turkey and Turkmenistan have agreed to work toward a major gas export deal, which analysts say takes Ankara closer to becoming a significant energy hub and eases Europe’s energy deficit. But they also warn that Moscow can yet thwart such aspirations. Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul.

your ad here

UN Condemns Mass Abduction of Displaced Persons in Nigeria

Abuja, Nigeria — The United Nations is condemning the reported mass abduction of over 200 internally displaced persons, or IDPs, in Nigeria’s Borno state last week. The U.N. Office for the Coordinator of Humanitarian Affairs in Nigeria said the incident occurred while the victims, mostly women and children residing in government-run camps, went into the forest in search of firewood. 

Mohammed Malick Fall, the U.N. Nigeria resident and humanitarian coordinator, released a statement criticizing the abduction and calling for the immediate release of the victims. 

The majority of victims were women living in camps in Gamboru Ngala town near Nigeria’s border with Cameroon and Chad. 

Fall said the incident, just days ahead of the International Women’s Day commemoration, was a reminder that women and girls are among the most impacted by conflict. 

He also called on Nigerian authorities to provide more job opportunities to IDPs within their camps so they don’t have to venture out and expose themselves to gangs and terrorists. 

According to local media reports, details of the abductions are only emerging now due to deliberate damage of telecommunications lines in the area by terrorists. 

Security analyst Kabiru Adamu says he has been monitoring the situation. 

“It started filtering in early in the week. The first instance we heard about 139, and then later 350. It wasn’t just one camp, it was about three camps. And so this is difficult in identifying the numbers of persons affected,” he said. “As we know, the state government has set up an emergency response team and that team is out there.” 

Neither the Borno state government nor federal authorities have commented on the kidnappings, and there has been no claim of responsibility.  

Borno is where the Boko Haram insurgency was launched in 2009. This week, the state government said 95% of Boko Haram terrorists are either dead or have surrendered to authorities.  

Adamu says the claims may be true, but notes that many parts of Borno remain insecure. 

“At the last count, over 80,000 of the families and members of these groups have surrendered either to the Nigerian military or to the Borno State government. So yes, successes are being made, [but] what we call overall success unfortunately hasn’t been made,” he said. “The ability of the government to stop these groups from generating funding, I don’t think the Nigerian state has done enough.” 

Nigeria’s police force of about 300,000 is controlled by the federal government. But for the first time, the government and Nigeria’s 36 states are seeking to create state police units.  

Security analyst Mike Ejiofor says that would be a step in the right direction. 

“We need to adopt new measures. That’s why I was excited when the president and governors backed the establishment of the state police. Security challenges are local, we must look for local solutions,” Ejiofor said. “The Nigerian police is too centralized to be effective.”

However, the plan for state police units has critics who say officials could use officers for ulterior motives.

your ad here

UN Chief Calls for Sudan Ramadan Cease-Fire

United Nations — U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed Thursday for a cease-fire in Sudan for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, saying it is time for rival generals there to lay down their weapons as the country’s humanitarian crisis reaches “colossal proportions.”

“I call on all parties in Sudan to honor the values of Ramadan by honoring a Ramadan cessation of hostilities,” Guterres told a meeting of the Security Council on the situation in Sudan. Ramadan starts early next week. 

“This cessation of hostilities must lead to a definitive silencing of the guns across the country and set out a firm path towards lasting peace for the Sudanese people,” he added. 

He said the country’s unity is at risk and there is a serious risk of the war igniting regional instability “of dramatic proportions” from the Sahel to the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea. 

Fighting erupted in April of last year between Sudan’s army chief, General Abdel Fattah Burhan, and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. The two generals were once allies in Sudan’s transitional government after a 2021 coup but became rivals for power.

The ensuing power struggle has led to thousands of deaths, a massive displacement crisis and large-scale atrocities, particularly against non-Arab communities in the country’s Darfur region. Hunger is also reaching catastrophic levels. 

 

“We are already receiving reports of children dying from malnutrition,” Guterres said.

He said U.N. efforts to reach millions in need have faced numerous challenges and the parties must comply with the Jeddah Declaration, which calls for full aid access by land and air to all populations regardless of who controls the area. 

Britain, which is in charge of Sudan issues on the 15-nation council, circulated a draft resolution echoing the secretary-general’s cease-fire call and calling for more aid access. 

“The situation in Sudan warrants a robust response from this council and increased attention from the international community,” Deputy Ambassador James Kariuki told the council. “As we approach the holy month of Ramadan, we echo the secretary-general’s call for an immediate cease-fire and urge all parties to allow for unhindered cross-border and cross-line access.” 

He told reporters Britain plans to put the resolution to a Security Council vote on Friday.

On Wednesday, U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said countries supplying the rival generals with arms are fueling “death, destruction and depravity.” 

She said a report released this week from a panel of experts monitoring implementation of sanctions imposed by the Security Council on Sudan chronicled “stomach-churning” atrocities. 

“A conflict that, as this report details, is being fueled by arms transferred from a handful of regional powers — arms transfers that must stop,” she told reporters. 

The United Nations says around 25 million people — half of Sudan’s population — need some form of humanitarian assistance. Of them, 18 million face acute food insecurity.

Sudan is now home to the world’s largest internal displacement crisis, with 6.3 million people forced from their homes in search of safety. Another 1.7 million have fled to neighboring countries. More than 70% of health facilities in areas where there is fighting have stopped functioning. 

your ad here

Sweden Set to Become NATO’s 32nd Member as PM Visits Washington

WASHINGTON/STOCKHOLM — Sweden is expected to formally join NATO in Washington on Thursday, two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced a complete rethink of its national security policy and the realization the alliance offered the best guarantee of safety.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson is in Washington to hand over the final documentation, with the White House saying in a statement ahead of President Joe Biden’s State of the Union Address that Sweden would join on Thursday.

“Having Sweden as a NATO Ally will make the United States and our Allies even safer,” the statement said.

The Swedish government said separately it would take the formal decision for the country to join NATO on Thursday.

For NATO, the accession of Sweden and Finland – which shares a 1,340 km border with Russia – is the most significant expansion for decades. It is also a blow for Russian President Vladimir Putin who has sought prevent any further strengthening of the alliance.

Sweden will benefit from the alliance’s common defense guarantee under which an attack on one member is regarded as an attack on all.

“We have to face the world as it is not how we sometimes wish it were,” Kristersson said after Hungary became the last NATO member to ratify Sweden’s accession last week.

Sweden adds cutting-edge submarines and a sizable fleet of domestically produced Gripen fighter jets to NATO forces and would be a crucial link between the Atlantic and Baltic.

Russia has threatened to take unspecified “political and military-technical counter-measures” in response to Sweden’s move.

While Stockholm has been drawing ever closer to NATO over the last two decades, membership marks a clear break with the past, when for more than 200 years, Sweden avoided military alliances and adopted a neutral stance in times of war.

After World War II, it built an international reputation as a champion of human rights, and when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, successive governments have pared back military spending.

As recently as 2021, its defense minister had rejected NATO membership, only for the then-Social Democrat government to apply, alongside neighbor Finland, just a few months later.

While Finland joined last year, Sweden was kept waiting as Turkey and Hungary, which both maintain cordial relations with Russia, delayed ratifying Sweden’s accession.

Turkey approved Sweden’s application in January.

Hungary delayed its move until Kristersson made a goodwill visit to Budapest on Feb. 23, where the two countries agreed a fighter jet deal. 

your ad here