Tag: The Hague

  • The Hague to host cross-border homicide investigation team

    The Hague to host cross-border homicide investigation team

    A group of investigators from different countries will have a meeting in The Hague to discuss the murder of a woman in Limerick. This was mentioned in a court in Belfast.

    Organizations from Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland are part of the global effort to bring the man accused of killing Geila Ibram to trial.

    Habib Shamel, a 32-year-old man, has been accused of stabbing a 27-year-old person to death during a sexual encounter on April 4th.

    He is being kept in prison at Maghaberry Prison.

    A person’s badly injured body was found at an apartment building in the Dock Road area of Limerick.

    Ms Ibram, who came from Romania, was killed by being stabbed multiple times in the neck, face, and stomach. The police said it was a very violent and chaotic attack.

    Mr Shamel is a person from Afghanistan who lives on Cecil Street in Limerick. He was caught by the police in the Malone area of south Belfast.

    He was accused of killing Ms Ibram based on a law that lets officials in Northern Ireland punish someone who came from a different area.

    There was a meeting in The Hague.

    On Tuesday, the person who is being accused appeared in court through video connection. A lawyer who is representing the prosecution revealed new information about their ongoing communication with the Department of Justice in Dublin.

    “A group of different agencies from both areas has come together to form a team that will investigate together in order to try to make things go faster,” she explained.

    District Judge Steven Keown was also informed that the process will be taken to the Dutch city where the International Criminal Court is located.

    “The prosecutor said that there was a meeting planned in The Hague, but it hasn’t happened yet. ”

    Despite understanding that the case is complicated, the defense lawyer Chris Sherrard doubted that much progress was being made.

    “He said that it’s really just a bunch of noise and commotion that doesn’t result in anything significant. ”

    Mr Shamel didn’t request to be released on bail at this time and will remain in jail.

    The judge said the case will be put on hold until October. He wants to hear about the meeting in The Hague and what happened there.

  • Zelensky at The Hague amid air strikes in Ukraine

    Zelensky at The Hague amid air strikes in Ukraine

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is due to speak at The Hague as part of an unexpected visit to the Netherlands.

    He is expected to also visit the International Criminal Court, which is investigating alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine.

    Explosions have been heard in Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, a day after Russia accused Ukraine of carrying out a drone attack on the Kremlin.

    Attacks were also reported in Zaporizhzhia and Odesa in the south.

    Russia has accused Ukraine of attempting to assassinate President Vladimir Putin, but Mr Zelensky denied that his country carried out the attack.

    On Wednesday, he said: “We don’t attack Putin or Moscow. We fight on our territory. We are defending our villages and cities.”

    Mr Zelensky was speaking in Finland, where he made a surprise visit and met his Finnish counterpart Sauli Niinisto and the leaders of Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland.

    During his visit to the Netherlands, Mr Zelensky is expected to meet Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte. Dutch media said that the two were likely to discuss Mr Zelensky’s demands for more military support – namely long-range weapons and fighter jets.

    Last January, Mr Rutte said that supplying fighter jets was not taboo, although such a move would be “a really big next step”.

    Following the alleged drone attacks, Russia threatened to retaliate when and where it considered necessary.

    On Wednesday, Russian strikes on Ukraine’s southern Kherson region killed 21 people. Officials said that the victims included supermarket customers and employees of an energy company who were performing repairs.

    And in the early hours of Thursday morning, air raid sirens rang out across many Ukrainian regions. Loud blasts were reported in Kyiv and Odesa.

    At the same time, a drone hit an oil refinery in southern Russia, setting part of it on fire – the latest in a series of explosions, fires and drone attacks that have occurred in Russia in recent weeks.

    Some commentators have argued that the alleged drone strike on the Kremlin was internally conducted and purposefully staged by Russia.

    The Institute for the Study of War said it is “extremely unlikely that two drones could have penetrated multiple layers of air defence and detonated or been shot down just over the heart of the Kremlin in a way that provided spectacular imagery caught nicely on camera”.

    It said that “Russia likely staged this attack in an attempt to bring the war home to a Russian domestic audience and set conditions for a wider societal mobilisation”.

    Yurii Ihnat, a spokesman for the Ukrainian Air Force, said he thought Russia had staged the attack on the Kremlin to try to “show some kind of escalation on the part of Ukraine”.

    But other commentators disagreed, saying that Russia would have little interest in making itself look “weak” by staging an attack that makes the Kremlin look vulnerable.

    It would also lead to questions about how well-protected Mr Putin is – and about the effectiveness of Russian air defences.