Tag: Europe

  • Putin Says Energy Crisis Has Arrived But Russia Is Ready To Work With Europe

    Putin Says Energy Crisis Has Arrived But Russia Is Ready To Work With Europe

    Summary

    • Putin says oil output relying on Hormuz Strait could stop in a month
    • Russia says it is ready to supply oil and gas to Europe
    • Putin says Russian firms should make use of situation
    • Putin says high oil prices may be ​temporary

    MOSCOW, March 9 (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that the U.S.-Israeli war ‌on Iran had triggered a global energy crisis and cautioned that oil production dependent on transport through the Strait of Hormuz could soon come to a halt.

    Putin said that Russia — the world’s second-largest oil exporter and holder of the biggest natural gas reserves — was ready to work ​again with European customers if they wanted to return to long-term cooperation.

    Western powers, however, have spent the past ​four years sharply reducing their reliance on Russian oil and gas in response to Moscow’s ⁠war in Ukraine and subsequent EU and G7 sanctions.

    The loss of the European market has deprived Russia of its ​most lucrative customers and forced it to sell oil and gas at steep discounts to Asia.

    Speaking at a televised meeting with ​government officials and the heads of Russia’s leading oil and gas producers, Putin said that Russia had repeatedly warned that destabilising the Middle East could lead to an energy crisis with grave implications for the global economy — a turn of events he said had now ​materialised.

    Oil prices exceeded $100 per barrel on Monday to reach peaks unseen since 2022 as the Strait of Hormuz, which accounts ​for roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows, has been effectively closed due to the Iran war.

    “Oil production ‌dependent on ⁠the Strait of Hormuz risks halting completely within the next month. It has already begun to decline, and storage facilities in the region are filling with oil that cannot be transported…is extremely difficult to transport, or is extremely expensive to transport,” Putin said.

    He said Russian companies should take advantage of the current situation in the Middle East, though he noted ​that the spike in prices ​was probably temporary. Oil ⁠and gas revenues make up around a quarter of total federal budget proceeds.

    G7 nations said on Monday they were prepared to implement “necessary measures” in response to surging global oil prices, ​but stopped short of committing to release emergency reserves.

    “We’re ready to work with Europeans too. ​But we ⁠need some signals from them that they’re ready and willing to work with us and will ensure this sustainability and stability,” Putin said.

    Last week he instructed the government to consider switching remaining Russian oil and gas flows away from Europe, before the ⁠European Union ​starts enforcing its decision to completely ban Russian fossil fuels.

    Before the Ukraine ​war, Europe was buying more than 40% of its gas from Russia, but combined sales of pipeline gas and LNG from Russia accounted for only ​13% of total EU imports in 2025.

  • COVID-19 vaccines produced in Africa by J&J were secretly exported to Europe, reports say

    COVID-19 vaccines produced in Africa by J&J were secretly exported to Europe, reports say

    For months, while thousands were dying in the pandemic, South Africans wondered why their long-promised deliveries of COVID-19vaccines from Johnson & Johnson had not yet arrived.

    The mystery was finally solved this week. Millions of doses of the J&J vaccine, produced at a South African factory, had been secretly shipped to wealthy European countries where the need for vaccines was far less desperate than in Africa, according to published reports.

    The J&J doses were a crucial element in South Africa’s vaccine plan – and the African Union’s similar plan. Since they are a single-shot vaccine and can be stored at normal refrigerator temperatures, they were scheduled to be the main vaccine for South Africa’s rural population. They were also cheaper than the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna shots.

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    The South African government announced in February that it had secured nine million doses of the J&J vaccine, and the African Union announced its own deal in March for 400 million doses from the U.S.-based company. But many months later, just a tiny fraction have been delivered to governments, with no clear explanation of why.

    The delay was partly because of contamination problems at a J&J factory in Baltimore, which led to a suspension of exports of key ingredients to other factories worldwide. But this was not the entire story.

    This week, health activists were outraged to discover that large numbers of vaccines from a J&J factory in South Africa have been secretly exported to European governments, beginning as early as April and continuing even today, according to a report in The New York Times and a separate report by former British prime minister Gordon Brown.

    This month and next month alone, about 10 million J&J doses from a factory in South Africa – which could be saving lives in Africa in the midst of the latest surge of COVID-19 cases and deaths – will be exported to Europe, Mr. Brown revealed.

    Mr. Brown called it “neocolonial” and “a shocking symbol of the West’s failure to honour its promise of equitable vaccine distribution.”

    Only after a dramatic intervention from South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who threatened to ban all vaccine exports from his country, did the European Union finally agree to allow Africa to receive all of J&J’s future production from its South African factory, beginning in October, Mr. Brown said.

    In total, at least 32 million J&J vaccine doses from the South African factory have been shipped to Europe, according to the Times report. As a result, South Africa has only administered about two million J&J doses so far, and is still awaiting the vast majority of the doses that it ordered from the company. It has been forced to rely instead on much more expensive Pfizer vaccines.

    The Times report said the manufacturer’s contract with South Africa had prohibited the government from imposing the export controls that other countries – including European countries and India – have routinely used this year to ensure a fair share of the vaccine production in their countries would benefit their own people.

    The contracts between the South African government and its vaccine suppliers, including J&J, have been kept confidential at the insistence of the manufacturers.

    The Health Justice Initiative, a local independent group, has been requesting the contracts since June and says it will launch a court action if it does not receive the contracts by Aug. 25.

    Fatima Hassan, founder and director of the Health Justice Initiative, said Johnson & Johnson had given “false hope” by promising vaccines to Africa and then delaying its deliveries and diverting them to Europe, which had a “massive impact” on South Africa by holding up its vaccine rollout.

    “We’ve been put in a perilous situation,” Ms. Hassan told a media briefing on Tuesday. “The conduct of Johnson & Johnson is quite scandalous, and also unconstitutional and immoral.”

    Europe already has sufficient supplies of vaccines and high rates of vaccination, she pointed out, while only about 2 per cent of Africans are fully vaccinated.

    Matthew Kavanagh, a global health expert at Georgetown University in Washington, said the diversion of vaccines to Europe from Africa shows the immense power of a handful of vaccine manufacturers to decide who should receive the vaccines.

    South Africa has been negotiating with J&J since last September, and yet the vaccine deliveries were still hugely delayed, he said. Tens of thousands of lives could have been saved if J&J had allowed the vaccines to remain in Africa rather than exporting them to Europe, he told the media briefing.

    South Africa was “under the gun” to sign a “breathtaking contract” with J&J that was highly unfavourable to the country, Mr. Kavanagh said.

    Jennifer Dent, a Canadian spokesperson for J&J subsidiary Janssen Inc., responded to questions from The Globe and Mail by saying the company has pledged to supply up to 900 million vaccines to the African Union and the COVAX non-profit program by the end of next year.

    “We will continue our ongoing collaboration with the South African government and others to ensure meaningful access to our vaccine,” she told The Globe.

    “We are forging new manufacturing partnerships across four continents, including with Aspen Pharmacare in South Africa, to activate global production of our single-shot COVID-19 vaccine. Aspen was one of the very few manufacturers who could fill-and-finish required quantities of our vaccine in the timespan needed.”

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  • Nigerian Women Trafficking Mafia Exposed

    Nigerian Women Trafficking Mafia Exposed

    Nigerian women made up the largest share of African trafficking victims at 61 percent with most forced into prostitution.

    Last year 41 suspected Nigerian traffickers were also caught, roughly twice as many as in 2017, according to the Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office. Numerous secret societies run the smuggling and authorities say they’re increasingly violent.

    One of Germany’s largest red-light districts is Vulkan Street in Duisburg, a northwest German city and former industrial stronghold. A growing number of Nigerian women are ending up here, and Nigerian human traffickers are responsible for smuggling in most of them, says Barbara Wellner of Solidarity with Women in Distress (Solwodi).

    The organization helps victims of human trafficking and forced prostitution. Wellner says many of these women are disadvantaged, young, have received barely any schooling, and have just a single parent or no parents.

    Such vulnerable women often fall into the hands of traffickers in Africa and get passed along a far-reaching network until they eventually land in Germany. There, they often end up with so-called “madams,” women who pimp them out. Before heading to Europe, these women are told that their journey will be costly, but that this won’t be a problem, since they’ll make good money in Europe.

    To place more pressure on the young women to pay up once they’re in Europe, a juju spell from the West African magical tradition is often cast upon them. This can often be accompanied by ritualistic animal slaughter and the drinking of its blood. The women are then forcefully and repeatedly told that their relatives will die or become ill if they fail to repay their debt or tell anyone of this arrangement. Once on European soil, these women often find that prostitution under the “madams” is the only way for them to earn the money that they owe.

    In 2018 German police registered 68 women who were the victims of Nigerian human traffickers — a significant rise on the previous year.

    In 2012 Germany joined the EU’s ETUTU project, which in cooperation with Nigerian authorities aims to crack down on Nigerian criminals trafficking humans around the world. A transnational approach to fighting these criminal is absolutely essential, as most Nigerian women arrive in Europe via Italy.

    A new ‘Nigerian mafia’

    Over the past three years, over 20,000 Nigerian women, many of them minors, have come to Italy via the Mediterranean. The UN estimates that some 80% are victims of human trafficking or are at great risk of becoming a victim.

    Helen Okoro was once a victim of human traffickers. She arrived in Italy 20 years ago and lives there today. She works for Casa Agata, a Catholic women’s shelter, in the Sicilian city of Catania. So many women ask the shelter for help that its workers can barely keep up. Okoro has seen human trafficking change over the past years. She says she is alarmed by how brutal and professional human traffickers have become.

    Once a victim of human trafficking herself, Okoro now works to help others in a similar position

    Some Sicilians are starting to refer a new “Nigerian mafia.” Yet unlike the Italian mafia, both perpetrators and victims are from abroad and often live on the fringes of society. Some Sicilian journalists accuse Italian authorities of not cracking down hard enough on these trafficking organizations.

    However, public prosecutor Lina Trovato rejects this accusation. She says authorities have been monitoring the activities of Nigerian organized crime networks for a while. She explains that Nigeria’s so-called “new mafia” is not a single coherent unit but is instead compromised of numerous secret societies and criminal gangs, such as the so-called Black AxeVikings or Supreme Eiye Fraternity.

    In Casa Agata, the women learn how to make pasta

    In Nigeria, the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) is out to catch human traffickers, too. Daniel Atokolo, who heads the NAPTIP branch in the metropolis Lagos, says the traffickers are increasingly brutal.

    According to Atokolo, efforts to dispel juju superstition among West Africans mean the madams in Europe now mainly resort to violence, instead of the psychological pressure of spells, to control the young women forced into prostitution.

    Atokolo says that the secret societies active in Europe today, commonly referred to as the Nigerian mafia,

    Are no longer out to psychologically condition their victims with magic spells. They now use sheer terror. There is a clear relationship between the decrease in juju spells and the stronger presence of these gangs, who demand total obedience from their victims.”

    Catania, in Sicily, Italy, is where some Nigerian women who have been trafficked end up seeking help from shelters

    More than 50 secret societies now operate in Nigeria, with influential lawmakers and businessmen supposedly among their members. Little is known about their organizational structure.

    John Omoruan is a former high-ranking Black Axe member. He says he’s repented and he regrets his past actions.

    However, he accuses Europe of being a large part of the problem behind human trafficking. Omoruan says it’s Europe that wants cheaper, younger prostitutes:

    At the end of the day, it’s a question of money. Europe is hungry for prohibited things like drugs, underage prostitutes, everything that’s forbidden. As long as this demand persists, secret groups like Black Axe and others will continue to be successful and make lots of money.”