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NATO bid: Turkey-Sweden talks likely ahead of summit

Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO last year but faced objections from Turke…reports Asian Lite News

Turkey and Sweden have agreed to hold more talks for the latter’s NATO bid as the fourth meeting on a joint permanent mechanism between the bloc, Turkey, Sweden and Finland concluded in Ankara.

At the meeting, which came when Sweden was seeking membership approval at the NATO summit in July, participants evaluated the progress on the Nordic country’s commitments for its NATO bid and agreed upon taking subsequent concrete steps, the Turkish presidency said on Wednesday in a statement after the meeting.

Earlier on Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey will only admit Sweden’s NATO bid in the upcoming Vilnius summit if the latter takes concrete steps to prevent anti-Turkey “terror” activities in the country.

Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO last year but faced objections from Turkey on the grounds that the two countries harbour members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party and the Gulen movement, Xinhua news agency reported.

Turkiye eventually lifted its objection to Finland earlier this year after it took “concrete steps” against such organisations, and the country went on to become NATO’s 31st member in April. But Ankara maintains its veto of Sweden.

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‘Sweden has fulfilled agreement with Turkey to join NATO’

Finland joined NATO at the beginning of April while neighbouring Sweden is still awaiting the go-ahead from Turkey and Hungary…reports Asian Lite News

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg made no breakthrough on Sunday in talks about Sweden’s membership in the military organization with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, with officials from the two countries to meet in just over a week to try to bridge their differences.

After meeting with Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday in Istanbul, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Sweden has fulfilled its obligations regarding Turkey’s security concerns and hopes the country will be able to join NATO in the coming weeks.

At a press conference following the meeting, the Secretary-General said, “We still have time to achieve this at the allies’ summit” in Vilnius on 11 and 12 July. What we have seen is that Sweden has implemented the agreement that President Erodgan negotiated with Sweden and Finland at the [NATO] summit in Madrid [in June 2022].”

He added that the Scandinavian country has since amended its constitution, strengthened anti-terrorism legislation, and lifted its arms embargo. “It is now as easy to export military equipment from Sweden to Turkey as it is to any other NATO ally,” Stoltenberg said.

Finland joined NATO at the beginning of April while neighbouring Sweden is still awaiting the go-ahead from Turkey and Hungary.

To advance Sweden’s NATO membership, representatives from Turkey, Finland and Sweden will meet on the 12th of June, Stoltenberg added.

NATO wants to bring Sweden into the fold by the time U.S. President Joe Biden and other allied leaders meet in Lithuania on July 11-12, but Turkey and Hungary have yet to endorse the move. All 31 member countries must ratify a candidate’s accession protocol for it to join the trans-Atlantic alliance.

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NATO chief to visit Turkey to push Sweden’s accession

Stoltenberg called the informal meeting of foreign ministers an “opportunity to discuss key issues as we prepare for our summit in Vilnius (Lithuania) in July”…reports Asian Lite News

Jens Stoltenberg, NATO Secretary General, has said that he is working hard to ensure Sweden’s accession to the alliance is completed as soon as possible, and that he will soon travel to Turkey to facilitate the process.

He made the remarks on Thursday at a press conference after the conclusion of a two-day informal meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Oslo, Norway’s capital. The meeting was also attended by Sweden’s foreign minister, but Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu was notably absent.

Stoltenberg welcomed Sweden’s new anti-terrorism laws that entered into force on Thursday. “That shows that Sweden has delivered on what they committed to do under the Trilateral Memorandum concluded last year in Madrid (by Finland, Sweden and Turkey),” he said.

In March, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed to ask his country’s Parliament to vote on Finland’s NATO membership bid, but delayed that of Sweden, arguing that Turkey still expected Sweden to extradite 120 members of what it considers terrorist groups before his country approaches the Swedish membership bid “positively”.

Stoltenberg called the informal meeting of foreign ministers an “opportunity to discuss key issues as we prepare for our summit in Vilnius (Lithuania) in July”.

“(At the summit) we will take decisions to further strengthen our deterrence and defence. We will agree a new Defense Investment Pledge, with two per cent of GDP spent on defence as the minimum,” he said.

He told reporters that the foreign ministers also discussed upgrading the existing NATO-Ukraine Commission to a new NATO-Ukraine Council.

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‘Sweden will join NATO soon’

He also voiced hope that the process would get finished before an ensuing NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius in July…reports Asian Lite News

US President Joe Biden has said he is certain that Sweden will join North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) “as soon as possible,” in spite of Turkey and Hungary continuing to obstruct the Scandinavian nation’s entry into the alliance, reported Al Jazeera.

On Thursday, Biden lauded NATO’s unity in the face of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine while speaking at the graduation ceremony for the United States Air Force Academy. The US President said, “NATO is more energised and more united that it’s been in decades. It’s now even stronger with the accession of our newest ally, Finland – and soon Sweden – to the alliance, as soon as possible. It will happen. I promise you”, reported Al Jazeera.

Biden’s remarks came a few days after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken appealed to Turkey to give its nod to Sweden’s bid to become a NATO member.

“From the perspective of the United States, the time is now to finalise Sweden’s accession,” Blinken told reporters in the northern Swedish city of Lulea on Tuesday.

He also voiced hope that the process would get finished before an ensuing NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius in July.

The NATO countries must ratify new members. An attack on one NATO member state constitutes an attack on the entire alliance, according to Article 5 of the US-led bloc’s collective defence pact, read a report published in Al Jazeera.

After Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Sweden and its neighbour Finland started applying for membership in NATO. Sweden’s application is still pending, while Finland’s official affiliation with the alliance began in April.

Sweden’s accession is still pending in the absence of approval from Hungary and Turkey, but Ankara is thought to be the primary impediment. Turkey has charged Sweden of giving the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which it regards as a “terrorist” organisation, a safe haven.

According to Sweden, it is addressing Turkey’s concerns in accordance with a trilateral agreement that the two nations and Finland inked last year.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu tweeted to his Swedish counterpart on Thursday as the foreign ministers of NATO member states met in Norway, posting, “Fulfil your commitments arising from Trilateral Memorandum & take concrete steps in the fight against terrorism. The rest will follow”, reported Al Jazeera.

Biden said earlier this week that he brought up with the recently re-elected Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan the subject during a phone call.

Referring to a push by Ankara to finalise a USD 20 billion deal for US-manufactured F-16 fighter jets, Biden said on Monday, “I congratulated Erdogan. He still wants to work on something on the F-16s. I told him we wanted a deal with Sweden, so let’s get that done.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gives a speech in Ankara, Turkey, on May 18, 2022.(Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua/IANS)

Biden on Thursday refrained from mentioning Turkey when he voiced Sweden’s NATO bid. However, he laid emphasis on the alliance continuing to stand united in response to the invasion of Ukraine, adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin thought NATO would “crack”.

The US president reaffirmed US support for Ukraine’s defence against the invasion. Since the war began last year, Washington has given Kyiv billions of dollars in humanitarian and military assistance.

Biden said, “The US has rallied the world to stand strong with Ukraine and defend the values that the American people hold so dear – freedom, sovereignty, democracy, simple dignity.”

“The American people’s support for Ukraine will not waver,” Al Jazeera quoted him as saying in a report. (ANI)

ALSO READ-Time is now for Sweden to join NATO, says Blinken

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Time is now for Sweden to join NATO, says Blinken

Turkey, Sweden, and Finland signed a so-called trilateral memorandum in June of last year to address Ankara’s concerns about banned armed organisations…reports Asian Lite News

The United States has urged Turkey to approve Sweden’s NATO membership, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken declaring that “the time is now” for the northern European country to join the alliance, Al Jazeera reported.

On Tuesday, the senior US diplomat said Sweden has been eligible to join NATO “from day one” and has made considerable steps to address Turkey’s “legitimate” security concerns. He was speaking alongside Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. Blinken told reporters in the northern Swedish city of Lulea, “From the perspective of the United States, the time is now to finalise Sweden’s accession.”

Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year, Sweden and neighbouring Finland began seeking NATO membership. The alliance is commanded by the United States, and has a collective defence pact, meaning an attack on one member is considered an attack on all.

To allow new countries into NATO, all members must agree. Finland joined the alliance officially last month, while Sweden’s application is still pending, according to Al Jazeera.

Hungary and Turkey have yet to ratify Sweden’s accession, though Ankara is considered as the primary hurdle. Turkey has accused Sweden of harbouring members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which it regards as a “terrorist” group.

Turkey, Sweden, and Finland signed a so-called trilateral memorandum in June of last year to address Ankara’s concerns about banned armed organisations.

Turkey, on the other hand, claims that Sweden has not met all of its commitments under the agreement. An Islamophobic Quran-burning protest in Stockholm in January, which the government condemned, further soured relations between the two countries, as per Al Jazeera.

“Turkey has raised important and legitimate concerns. Sweden and Finland both addressed those concerns. And so, the time to move forward is now. We’d like to see that happen before the Vilnius summit,” said Blinken on Tuesday, referring to a NATO meeting in the Lithuanian capital in July.

US President Joe Biden stated earlier this week that he addressed Sweden’s NATO bid with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was re-elected on Sunday. They also discussed Turkey’s push to purchase F-16 combat jets.

“I congratulate Erdogan. He still wants to work on something on the F-16s. I told him we wanted a deal with Sweden, so let’s get that done,” the US President told reporters on Monday.

Blinken on Tuesday also said that the Biden government does not see the USD 20bn F-16 deal and Sweden’s NATO bid as connected, but he warned that some US lawmakers do, as per Al Jazeera.

He said, “Some members of Congress …. are linking Sweden’s accession to NATO to the moving forwards on the F-16s. Congress is a fully equal and independent branch of government,” adding, “Their voice and their vote in any such decisions, of course, is critical.”

Although Congress has the authority to veto arms transactions approved by the administration, it has never successfully blocked weapon sales to foreign countries.

Blinken on Tuesday also stressed that regardless of Sweden’s NATO position, the US will support Swedish security.

He said, “We and our allies are both committed to and well-positioned to help Sweden address its security needs, irrespective of whether accession happens tomorrow or in two weeks or in a few weeks after that.”

Swedish Prime Minister Kristersson said that his country is moving ahead with fulfilling its pledges to its “Turkish friends” in accordance with the trilateral memorandum.

He said, “We have always recognised the fact that every NATO ally has to make its own decision, and only Turkey can make Turkey’s decisions, and we fully respect that,” Al Jazeera reported. (ANI)

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India, Sweden take bilateral ties to higher level

EAM Jaishankar held a meeting with Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson in Stickholm….reports Asian Lite News

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Monday held a meeting with Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. The EAM stated that he values the commitment of Kristersson towards strengthening the ties between the two nations.

“Delighted to meet PM Ulf Kristersson of Sweden. Conveyed the personal greetings of PM @narendramodi. Value his commitment towards strengthening the India-Sweden relationship,” Jaishankar tweeted. He also met Sweden’s National Security Advisor Henrik Landerholm and exchanged strategic assessments of Europe and the Indo-Pacific.

“A good discussion with Henrik Landerholm, National Security Advisor of Sweden. Exchanged strategic assessments of Europe and Indo Pacific,” EAM Jaishankar said in a tweet.

Jaishankar, who is on a Sweden visit, also held a meeting with Swedish Parliament Speaker Andreas Norlen.

“Met Dr. Andreas Norlen, Speaker of the Riksdag of Sweden this morning. Welcomed contacts between our two Parliamentary democracies. Also exchanged perspectives on our respective regions,” the EAM said in another tweet.

On Sunday, Jaishankar met Sweden’s Defence Minister Pal Jonson and Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom during his three-day visit to Sweden.

Taking to Twitter, Jaishankar said, “Good to meet Defence Minister Pal Jonson of Sweden. Useful exchange of views on regional and global security.”

After meeting his Swedish counterpart, Jaishankar said that both countries are committed to taking bilateral cooperation to a higher level. Both nations had exchanged views on the Indo-Pacific, the European strategic situation and de-risking the global economy.

“Wide-ranging discussions with FM @TobiasBillstrom as India and Sweden mark 75 years of diplomatic ties,” Jaishankar said in another tweet.

After arriving in Sweden, Jaishankar attended the EU-India Pacific Ministerial Forum.

Jaishankar on Sunday (local time) interacted with the Indian diaspora in Sweden and discussed transformations underway in India. He also apprised them about the progress in the bilateral relationship with Sweden on the 75 years of diplomatic ties between the two nations.

During his visit to Sweden, Jaishankar discussed India-EU relations during his visit as Sweden currently holds the Presidency of the Council of the European Union.

Earlier, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) in a press release noted, “This will be his first visit as EAM and comes at a time when India and Sweden are celebrating 75 years of establishment of diplomatic relations. Sweden currently holds the Presidency of the Council of the European Union.”

Diplomatic relations between Sweden and India were established in 1948, a year after India became independent.

During the 2018 visit of Prime Minister Modi to Sweden, the two sides adopted a wide-ranging Joint Action Plan and signed a Joint Innovation Partnership.

The first high-level Dialogue on Innovation Policy was co-chaired by Prime Minister Modi and the King of Sweden in December 2019. PM Lofven was the Chief Guest at the 2016 Make in India event and Sweden hosted a major Make in India event in 2017. (ANI)

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Sweden’s Loreen wins Eurovision Song Contest

Käärijä of Finland took second place with the industrial metal-meets-hyperpop banger “Cha Cha Cha.”…reports Asian Lite News

Swedish singer Loreen was named the winner of the Eurovision Song Contest for her pop ballad “Tattoo,” beating out 25 other nations at the event’s final on Saturday night.

It’s her second time winning over the hearts of the jury and public, having first won for Sweden in 2012.

The eclectic, extravagant event honored war-torn Ukraine’s spirit of resiliency as it stuck to the 2023 contest’s theme, “united by music,” held at the M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool, England. Traditionally, the host country is the winner of the previous year’s event. But since last year’s winner, Ukraine, is in the middle of a war, 2022 runner-up Britain is hosting this year’s event on its behalf.

Loreen, sandwiched between illuminated platforms, reeled on stage as she belted the lyrics to her anthem — “You’re stuck on me like a tattoo-hoo-hoo.” The performance tended toward a more classic pop pick for a contest that has in recent years favored the bombastic and fantastical act.

Käärijä of Finland took second place with the industrial metal-meets-hyperpop banger “Cha Cha Cha.” The song emerged as NPR’s pop culture critic Glen Weldon’s top pick. The “catchy-as-hell bop,” Weldon wrote, “exists to get you up and moving; imagine a Crossfit instructor shouting at you in Finnish.”

Another standout act, at least according to the American public, came from Austria, ending in 15th place. “Who the Hell is Edgar?” by Teya & Salena (a song about being possessed by the ghost of gothic horror writer Edgar Allen Poe, of course) started trending on Twitter in the U.S. shortly after the duo took the stage.

Representing Croatia, Let 3 performed “Mama ŠČ!,” a hallucinogenic trip of a stage production bearing an anti-war message, not so thinly veiled with mustaches, drag and rockets — think deranged Sgt. Pepper.

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Sweden shuts its embassy in Pakistan

The sources within the embassy of Sweden said they cannot say anything about the reopening of the embassy at present…reports Asian Lite News

Sweden has closed its Embassy in Islamabad for an indefinite period of time due to the “current situation” of Pakistan, according to the official release from the embassy.

In the statement, the embassy said, “The Migration Section is not, at the moment, able to handle requests of any kind. Also, we cannot send any documents to our consulates, Gerry’s, Sweden or your home address. We understand that this will cause inconvenience however, the safety of our applicants and staff members is of the highest priority.”

The embassy further stated, “We cannot answer any questions regarding re-opening at the moment. If you have questions regarding your case please contact the Migration Agency. Thank you for your patience.”

Reacting to the move taken by Sweden’s Embassy, Pakistan Embassy in Sweden tweeted, “Many Pakistani students are applying for Swedish universities this year asked us about the status. We hope they can apply for visa soon Education is an important aspect of our longstanding relationship and students bridge the two countries.”

According to ARY News, overseas Pakistanis are unable to call their families in Sweden as the embassy in Islamabad has been closed. The diplomatic sources said normally the issuance of a Swedish visa takes 4 to 6 months.

Citing diplomatic sources, a Pakistan-based news channel reported that the Swedish Embassy has also been contacted about the issue by the concerned Foreign Office officials.

Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Asad Majeed Khan has been apprised of the situation by the overseas Pakistanis and students.

Meanwhile, the sources within the embassy of Sweden said they cannot say anything about the reopening of the embassy at present, reported ARY News. (ANI)

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Sweden, Finland discuss NATO accession with Turkey

The participants also agreed that rapid ratifications for both Finland and Sweden would be in NATO’s interest, and that their membership would strengthen the bloc, the statement said…reports Asian Lite News

Representatives of Sweden, Finland and Turkey held talks in Brussels to discuss progress on fulfilling Turkey’s conditions for agreeing to the Nordic countries’ accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the military bloc said in a statement.

Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO in 2022 but faced objections from NATO-member Turkey on the grounds that the two countries harbour members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), considered a terrorist group by Ankara.

The accession needs a unanimous agreement by all members of NATO.

According to NATO’s statement, “the participants welcomed the progress that had been made” on a three-way deal called the Trilateral Memorandum, struck last year in Madrid, aimed at satisfying Turkey’s complaints.

The participants also agreed that rapid ratifications for both Finland and Sweden would be in NATO’s interest, and that their membership would strengthen the bloc, the statement said.

“Finland and Sweden have taken unprecedented steps to address legitimate Turkish security concerns. It is now time for all allies to conclude the ratification process and welcome Finland and Sweden as full members of the alliance ahead of the upcoming NATO Summit in Vilnius,” said NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

As agreed in the Memorandum, there won’t be any arms export restrictions between the parties; they need to significantly enhance counter-terrorism cooperation; and Sweden is now in the process of tightening anti-terrorism legislation, including against the PKK.

The three countries on Thursday agreed to meet again in the same format ahead of the NATO summit in July.

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Food prices surge dramatically in Sweden

Matpriskollen’s survey also found that some items for which inflation was relatively modest in 2022 suddenly became considerably more expensive in January…reports Asian Lite News

Inflation continues to hover at lofty levels in Sweden with food prices registering the largest monthly increases in a year, according to a survey released here.

In the survey covering around 44,000 items, price comparison site Matpriskollen found that food prices increased by 1.3 per cent in January, which is one of the largest monthly increases since inflation took off sharply in January 2022, Xinhua news agency quoted Swedish Television (SVT) as saying.

The prices of snacks and sweets increased by 3.1 per cent month-on-month in January and by 14.8 per cent year-on-year, followed by fish and seafood 2.4 per cent (20.2 per cent year-on-year), desserts 2.3 per cent (17.2 per cent), vegetables 1.9 per cent (13.5 per cent) and bread and cookies 1.9 per cent (16.3 per cent), SVT reported.

Although the price hikes for cheese and dairy products were not as steep in January as for some other categories, cheese became 25.4 per cent more expensive year-on-year, while the price of dairy products increased by 23.6 per cent.

Matpriskollen’s survey also found that some items for which inflation was relatively modest in 2022 suddenly became considerably more expensive in January.

“For some items, the price hike was brutal in January,” Ulf Mazur, founder and managing director of Matpriskollen, told SVT.

“This concerns, for example, sugar and beer. The remarkable thing is that it was not a long and slow increase but a shock increase (in January) for certain items.”

As an example, SVT listed a brand of sugar in a particular size of packaging that was 44 per cent more expensive in January.

There are also examples where tomato juice and gluten-free pasta became 40 per cent and 33 per cent more expensive, respectively, SVT reported.

According to the latest data released by Statistics Sweden in January, 12-month inflation measured as Consumer Price Index (CPI) stood at 12.3 per cent in December 2022, which was the highest rate of inflation since February 1991.

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