{"id":29673,"date":"2016-11-24T12:54:41","date_gmt":"2016-11-24T01:54:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=29673"},"modified":"2016-11-24T12:54:55","modified_gmt":"2016-11-24T01:54:55","slug":"29673-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/29673-2\/","title":{"rendered":"National security wrap"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Beat<\/strong><\/p>\n UN and INTERPOL forge ties<\/em><\/p>\n This week the United Nations adopted a resolution<\/a> calling for strengthened cooperation between the UN and INTERPOL. The resolution<\/a> focuses on collaboration to tackle terrorism, preventing foreign fighter terrorist travel and combating all forms of transnational crime by enabling exchange of police information and assisting countries to use INTERPOL policing capabilities through their INTERPOL National Central Bureaus. On Tuesday, INTERPOL urged<\/a> countries to obtain biometric data from terrorist fighters to assist in efforts of identifying them when returning home. INTERPOL currently has biometric data for only 10% of the 9,000 foreign terrorist fighters listed in their database.<\/p>\n The costs of identity crime <\/em><\/p>\n The Australian Attorney-General\u2019s Department last week released its report<\/a> on Identity Crime and Misuse in Australia 2016<\/em>. The report pulls data<\/a> from the Australian Bureau of Statistics and Australian Institute of Criminology to estimate that identity crimes cost the Australian economy an alarming $2.2 billion dollars each year. Even more concerning is the fact that identity crime\u2014one of the most common crimes in Australia<\/a>\u2014often acts as a foundation of serious and organised crime which is said to cost Australia around $15 billion annually. The report fed into Australia\u2019s National Identity Security Strategy<\/a>, which was launched back in 2007.<\/p>\n Checkpoint<\/strong><\/p>\n Not alright(s)<\/em><\/p>\n The UN Special Rapporteur on Migrant Rights Francois Crepeau has been in Australia for the past three weeks to examine treatment of asylum seekers and refugees. Crepeau applauded some aspects of Australia\u2019s immigration policy including the humanitarian intake<\/a> and integration programs; others, he concluded \u2018are regressive and fall behind international standards\u2019<\/a>. (Read his full statement here<\/a>). Crepeau also criticised the Australian Government for what he called it permissive approach to \u2018xenophobic ways\u2019<\/a>. On Monday, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton sparked outrage by suggesting<\/a> that the Fraser government erred in allowing Lebanese Muslims to migrate to Australia in the 1970s. While some<\/a> have defended Dutton\u2019s remarks, many others<\/a> have condemned the comments as racist, unfair and likely to vilify<\/a> Australia\u2019s Muslim community.<\/p>\n Phalanx final flight?<\/em><\/p>\n Watchdog.org this week reported the closure of Operation Phalanx<\/a>, the US aerial surveillance program that targets drug smuggling and illegal crossings on the country\u2019s Southwest border. The Department of Homeland Security<\/a> (DHS) rejected the report as \u2018inaccurate<\/a>\u2019, and US Customs and Border Protection has said that the relationship with DHS would continue in 2017. Nevertheless the report triggered a vociferous backlash<\/a> from conservatives who believe the Obama administration is quietly winding back the program, as no requests have been made for Operation Phalanx flights<\/a> in 2017. In Laredo alone, the program carried out 10,559 apprehensions and 4,007 turn-backs, and seized 5,819kgs of narcotics between 2012 and 2015.<\/p>\n CT Scan<\/strong><\/p>\n Terror network resurfaces in France<\/em><\/p>\n French authorities arrested seven men<\/a> in Strasbourg and Marseille for planning a terrorist attack. The men, five of whom were previously unknown to authorities, are reportedly part of the same terror network<\/a> that planned attacks during the Euro 2016 football tournament in June. While the exact targets of the plot are unknown, French officials have said that they thwarted a \u2018co-ordinated attack aiming to target several sites simultaneously.\u2019 The arrests were the culmination of an eight-month long investigation by France\u2019s domestic intelligence agency DGSI, and one of the men was reportedly brought to the attention<\/a> of the French authorities by Portugal.<\/p>\n Daesh attack hits Afghanistan<\/em><\/p>\n While Daesh appears to be on the ropes in Iraq<\/a>, the terror group maintains its hold on parts of Afghanistan. A suicide bombing claimed by Daesh<\/a> killed at least 30 people who had gathered at a mosque to commemorate the Shia observance of Arbaeen this past week. It\u2019s just the latest in a string of Daesh attacks<\/a> against Afghanistan\u2019s Shia minority\u2014another suicide attack<\/a> in July against a protest march killed 80 people. Afghan and NATO troops<\/a> have been attempting to root out Daesh from their stronghold in eastern Afghanistan for months now with some success<\/a>.<\/p>\n First Responder<\/strong><\/p>\n A path to clean power<\/em><\/p>\n The United Nations COP22 climate talks finished this week in Marrakech, Morocco. The talks sought to detail how to implement action agreed upon at COP21 Paris agreement last year. All parties to the COP21 agreement signed on to establish a rulebook<\/a> to implement the Paris agreement<\/a> by December 2018. The most progress came from the 48 most economically disadvantaged countries that compose the Climate Vulnerable Forum, which pledged<\/a> to go with 100% renewable energy by 2050. The spectre of Donald Trump\u2019s election loomed large over the conference, given his 2012 claim that global warming is a Chinese conspiracy<\/a> and his recent appointment of a renowned climate sceptic<\/a> to lead the transition of the US\u2019s Environmental Protection Agency. In Morocco, UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged the<\/a> president-elect to \u2018really work for humanity\u2019.<\/p>\n From quake to wave<\/em><\/p>\n A magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck<\/a> 35km off the coast of the Fukushima Prefecture in Japan on Monday. Subsequent aftershocks up to 5.3 magnitudes have continued to be felt<\/a> as far away as Tokyo. Japanese officials responded quickly<\/a> issuing tsunami warnings, evacuating civilians to higher ground and moving ships out to sea. The Prefecture\u2019s tidal barriers held strong<\/a> against tsunamis, which were smaller than forecast. None of the area\u2019s nuclear reactors (closed since the 2011 Tohoku triple disaster) were damaged. The cooling system for a spent nuclear fuel pool at the Fukushima Daini reactor briefly halted<\/a> during the quake but restarted soon after.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" The Beat UN and INTERPOL forge ties This week the United Nations adopted a resolution calling for strengthened cooperation between the UN and INTERPOL. The resolution focuses on collaboration to tackle terrorism, preventing foreign fighter …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":552,"featured_media":29674,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1477,1178,127,92],"class_list":["post-29673","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-identity-fraud","tag-natural-disaster","tag-terrorism","tag-united-nations"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n