British Prime Minister opens global police assembly in Glasgow

Source: Interpol (news and events)

The 92nd INTERPOL General Assembly takes place from 4-7 November in Glasgow, Scotland

GLASGOW, Scotland: Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, opened the INTERPOL General Assembly, stressing the need for international police cooperation to combat pervasive organized crime.
The General Assembly is INTERPOL’s supreme governing body, made up of representatives from its 196 member countries.
With around 1,000 attendees, it is the largest global gathering of senior law enforcement officials, who collectively decide how INTERPOL operates.
This year, the General Assembly will elect the new Secretary General, after Valdecy Urquiza of Brazil was put forward as the chosen candidate of INTERPOL’s Executive Committee.

The Secretary General is INTERPOL’s chief full-time official and directs the 1,200 staff who work in the organization’s 15 duty stations around the world.
The General Assembly will also elect nine new members to INTERPOL’s 13-member Executive Committee, which oversees the implementation of General Assembly decisions.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
“This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your cooperation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organized criminals to justice, wherever they try to hide.”
In his opening remarks, INTERPOL President Ahmed Naser Al-Raisi said:
“From the rise of organized crime, drug trafficking and terrorism to climate change and migration challenges, our ability to adapt and innovate is crucial. This year’s General Assembly presents an opportunity for member countries to engage in fruitful conversations, share intelligence, and enhance collaborative strategies.”
The Assembly will also consider a number of motions guiding the organization’s activities on terrorism, lawful access to digital evidence and child abuse, among other subjects.

In his statement to delegates, INTERPOL Secretary General Jürgen Stock said:
“INTERPOL was created to serve police by allowing the exchange of information across borders. This mission still drives our work today. We have made INTERPOL’s systems more connected, our products better and our response more coordinated than ever before.”
UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper also addressed delegates, saying:
“International security and domestic security are two sides of the same coin. That is why INTERPOL remains integral to public safety.”
The first day of the General Assembly saw the announcement of the INTERPOL Law Enforcement Academy, an educational centre hosting a range of professional development programmes and events.

Housed within INTERPOL’s Global Complex for Innovation in Singapore, the Academy will notably offer an Executive Leadership Programme for senior police leaders from around the world. INTERPOL member countries will be invited to nominate candidates for the programme’s first cohort.
“Some lessons can only be learned when fellow officers come together face to face. We must equip the next generation of police leaders with the right skills as they face a world that continues to evolve,” Secretary General Stock said.

For news and developments from INTERPOL’s 92nd General Assembly, visit INTERPOL’s website or follow us on social media.

New tartan created for INTERPOL

Source: Interpol (news and events)

GLASGOW, United Kingdom – A new tartan has been created for INTERPOL by one of the world’s leading tartan designers.

The traditional patterned cloth was commissioned by the United Kingdom, in advance of INTERPOL’s 92nd General Assembly which will be held in Glasgow from 4 to 7 November.

The General Assembly is INTERPOL’s supreme governing body, made up of representatives from each of its 196 member countries. It is the largest global gathering of senior law enforcement officials.

The INTERPOL tartan

The design was loosely based on the tartan of Scotland’s Black Watch Regiment, formed in 1739 to “Watch upon the braes”, meaning “to guard the hills”.  The infantry battalion was tasked with keeping the peace in the Scottish Highlands and was described by designer Brian Wilton MBE, also known as Scotland’s “Tartan Ambassador, as “a very worthy forerunner of today’s international police body”.

Colin Brown, Managing Director of Ingles Buchan which produced the INTERPOL tartan said:

“Tartan is woven into fabric of our nation. It is part of Scotland’s history.

“It is lovely to see tartan being used for an organization like INTERPOL, and this will be very unique for the delegates to have and to take back to their country as something with meaning to them.”

The bespoke tartan features the blue of INTERPOL interwoven with the colours of the UK flag. A wide navy-blue band comprised of 92 threads represents the 92 INTERPOL General Assemblies.

On either side of the navy band, are the threads of 7, 9, 19 and 23 signifying 7 September 1923, the precise date of the 1923 Congress which marked the foundation of INTERPOL.

The unique INTERPOL tartan has now been added to the official Scottish Register of Tartans in Edinburgh.

What is tartan?

Tartan is a design of coloured stripes woven to form a repeated textile pattern, usually consisting of two or more solid stripes running both horizontally and vertically in differing proportions, repeating in a defined sequence.

The roots of this famous chequered pattern, which has become synonymous with Scotland around the world, date back to the 3rd or 4th century.

Asset recovery in focus at 4th EuroMed Justice Network meeting

Source: Eurojust

31 October 2024|

On 29-30 October, the 4th EuroMed Justice Network (EMJNet) meeting was held at the Ministry of Justice of Spain in Madrid.

Forty-five criminal justice representatives from eight South Partner Countries (SPCs) and nine European Union Member States gathered to share knowledge and exchange best practices on international judicial cooperation related to the different stages of asset recovery. The meeting focused on asset tracing; asset freezing; asset confiscation and asset management and disposal (reverted to the relevant state, shared among the respective states or returned to the victim).

Representatives from UNICRI and the leader of the Economic Crimes Team at Eurojust also presented international and European recommendations and standards, best practises and challenges on these topics.

Participants also discussed their national asset tracking systems and presented relevant cross border cases.

Over both days, the objectives of EMJNet were reintroduced by the EMJ PMT . EMJNet, the cross-Mediterranean network of criminal justice practitioners aims to strengthen the contacts and the operational cooperation between criminal justice authorities from SPCs and EU Member States. EMJNet acts as the operational network of the EMJ Project and is composed of contact points who are active intermediaries facilitating judicial cooperation in criminal matters.

The participants also benefited from the presentation of Spain’s Asset Management Office by its two Deputy Directors.

NATO reaffirms its commitment to strengthen training and education on international humanitarian law

Source: NATO

This week [28-31 October] a NATO delegation attended the 34th International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent in Geneva. NATO reaffirmed its pledge to continue working with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to identify further opportunities to provide training and education on international humanitarian law. This is the third time that NATO makes this pledge (following the 32nd and 33rd International Conferences in 2015 and 2019).

NATO’s dialogue with the ICRC

As Allies reiterated at the Washington Summit this July, NATO remains committed to promoting the principles of international humanitarian law together with the international community, including the ICRC. It does so by including measures to protect civilians affected by armed conflict in its military doctrine, education, training, planning, exercises and operations.

The International Conference of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent

The International Conference of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent takes place every four years and provides a space for humanitarian actors, international organisations and the 191 National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and all 196 states party to the Geneva Conventions to promote respect for and contribute to the development of international humanitarian law.

The NATO Liaison Office in Geneva

In 2023, Allies agreed to establish a NATO Liaison Office in Geneva to further strengthen the Alliance’s engagement with the United Nations and other relevant international organisations. The office is intended to offer a platform to engage in political dialogue and cooperation with Geneva-based international organizations.

REAFFIRMATION OF NATO’S PLEDGE

Considering:
NATO’s commitment to abide by the rules and principles of International Humanitarian Law; 

NATO’s recognition of, and respect for, the ICRC’s mandate and mission; 

NATO’s continued efforts to advance its Human Security Agenda, which entails the Protection of Civilians; Children and Armed Conflict; Preventing and Responding to Conflict-Related Sexual Violence; Cultural Property Protection and Combatting Trafficking in Human Beings, as well as continued efforts to advance the Women, Peace and Security Agenda; 

NATO’s continued commitment to including measures to protect civilians affected by armed conflict in Alliance’s military doctrine, education, training, exercises, planning, and the conduct of operations;  

NATO reaffirms its pledge to:
Continue substantive dialogue with the ICRC aimed at identifying areas where training and education provided by NATO on International Humanitarian Law may be further enhanced.

NATO Secretary General to visit Germany

Source: NATO

On Monday, 4 November 2024, Secretary General Mark Rutte will travel to Berlin, Germany.

The Secretary General will meet the President, Mr Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the Chancellor, Mr Olaf Scholz, the Minister of Defence, Mr Boris Pistorius, the Minister of Finance, Mr Christian Lindner, and other senior officials.

Media advisory

15:50 (CET)  Joint press conference by the Secretary General and the Chancellor of Germany

Media coverage

The press conference will be streamed live on the NATO website.

A transcript of the Secretary General’s remarks, as well as photographs, will be on the NATO website. Video can be downloaded from the NATO Multimedia Portal after the event.

For more information:
General queries: contact the NATO Press Office
Follow us on X: @NATO@SecGenNATO and @NATOPress

From Lone Stars to Allies – NATO fighter pilots train in Texas

Source: NATO

Wichita Falls, Texas is home to the Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program, where aspiring aviators from 14 NATO member countries see if they have what it takes to fly with the Alliance’s best.

The home of a transatlantic training mission

Wichita Falls doesn’t seem like a place that should mean anything to a European fighter pilot. But if you were to ask Jade, a lieutenant in the Belgian Air Force, if she’s ever heard of the place, she might give you a knowing smirk.

It’s where she learned to fly.

The sky over Sheppard Air Force Base thundered as sleek jets knifed through the air, breaking left over the runway in preparation for landing. Home of the US Air Force’s 80th Flying Training Wing, Sheppard owns the busiest airspace in the United States. Planes are constantly landing, taking off or queueing on the long taxiways. A bumper sticker on the back of one car reads: “I Heart Jet Noise.”

The Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program (ENJJPT) has been turning out NATO fighter pilots since 1981, when seven Allies founded the school at Sheppard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls. Most joint NATO initiatives are based in Europe (where 30 of the 32 NATO member countries are located), but Sheppard was chosen as the ideal location for ENJJPT because of its existing training facilities, year-round good flying weather and the wide-open Texan skies. Today, more than 40 years later, 14 national flags fly outside the squat, brick building that houses ENJJPT’s headquarters, representing the 14 participating NATO Allies: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Türkiye, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Inside, Italian pilots saunter through the maze-like corridors, passing groups of Romanians, Norwegians, Spaniards and Danes. In the gear room, Greek instructors put on their flight vests and G-Suits (trousers lined with inflatable air pockets that keep pilots conscious during high-speed turns) and wait for their students. On their way out, they pass groups of Canadian and Turkish students coming back from training sorties, their hair matted with sweat, their faces flushed with victory: it’s another flight down, another step closer to their wings.

Ask one of the European student aviators how they like living in the Lone Star State, and they’ll twist their mouth into a curious smile and say something like: “I like it.” Which might be a polite way of saying: I’m from a small village in Germany and I’ve never heard someone say “yeehaw” before.

Fixin’ to fly – A rigorous training schedule

Not that the students get many chances to sample the local culture. From the moment they arrive at Sheppard and drop their suitcases, their schedules are packed. First stop is “ground school”, where students learn the fundamental science of flight. Then students get fitted for helmets, harnesses and G-suits and climb into their first aircraft, the T-6 Texan II.

With the instructors watching from the backseat, this is where the student aviators take the stick for the first time. They learn how to take off, fly in formation and land, keeping the aircraft on speed and on course. It’s a time of firsts, each with its own tradition: a student’s first flight is called a “Dollar Ride” because students are expected to give their instructors a Silver Dollar coin. After a student’s first solo flight, their classmates haul them off to a nearby pool of water for a well-deserved bath.

From here, some students leave Wichita Falls to learn how to fly multi-engine transport aircraft like the C-130 Hercules. Those destined for fighter jets, however, must conquer the T-38 Talon.

Save a horse, ride a jet plane – training with the Talon

The Talon is skinny as a scalpel, with wings so thin they seem to disappear when viewed head-on. Its long snout slopes up to a bubble canopy, which encloses two ejection seats. It looks fast, and it is; with afterburners lit, it can punch through the sound barrier and send a sonic boom smashing across the north Texas Plains. One Dutch Major, callsign “Homer”, compares it to a ’66 Mustang sports car – fitting, he notes, because the Talon first entered service in the 1960s.

The jet will be replaced in the coming years, but in the meantime it’s still a worthy teacher. Its hydraulic flight controls demand that students pay attention, feeling the jet through the stick and continuously “trimming out” to ensure balanced flight. Its stubby wings are built for maximum speed, not maximum stability, and if the inattentive student bleeds too much speed in a turn, it will fall out of the sky – or, as the instructors prosaically put it, “depart controlled flight.”

When Lieutenant Jade first took off in a Talon, she was used to the T-6 Texan II, and she wasn’t ready for the raw power pumped out by the jet’s two turbojet engines. She had to stand on the brakes to keep the aircraft static as she pushed the throttle to “mil” – full military power. She felt the aircraft tremor as the afterburners lit. When she released the brakes, the jet leapt forward.

“For me, that day was like… I knew I was on the right track,” she said.

Getting back in the saddle

The Talon curriculum is the hardest part of ENJJPT. When students aren’t flying, they’re studying. When they aren’t studying, they’re in the simulator, practising skills like flying in close formation, or the thrill of high-speed, low-level flight. And when they’re not in the simulator, they’re sleeping.

“Sometimes it’s a bit too fast, and I have to catch up,” Jade said. “That’s the biggest struggle I’ve had so far. That gets me feeling down about it, sometimes. But then it’s even more rewarding when you’re able to step up and strive again.”

The students know that success is not guaranteed. Plenty of their peers buckle under the stress and leave the Program to serve out their military commitments elsewhere in their country’s armed forces. But for most, failure is not an option. Washing out would mean turning their back on something that’s called to them all their life.

“Everyone wishes to have an impact on the world,” Jade said. “That’s how I think I can make the biggest impact.”

Earning their wings

If a student proves that they can master the demands of high-speed flight in the Talon, they head towards “Drop Night” – the ceremony where they find out which jet they’re going to fly. For the US Air Force, which operates a variety of fighter, bomber and transport aircraft, the suspense is real. When a student is assigned to their first-pick aircraft, some literally leap with joy and relief.

For Jade, there was little suspense – the Belgian Air Force primarily flies one tactical jet, the F-16 Fighting Falcon multirole fighter, although Belgium is now replacing its F-16 fleet with F-35 Lightning II fifth-generation stealth fighters – but the glee in having passed a demanding curriculum was undiluted. When she “dropped” the F-16, she leapt into the air, pumping her fists before being carried away by her cheering classmates.

Jade has since left Sheppard to learn how to fly the F-16. Eventually, perhaps, she’ll be deployed to eastern Europe, where NATO Allies have significantly increased the number of fighters on standby to respond to airborne threats, part of the NATO Air Policing mission on the Alliance’s eastern flank. Until then, the next generation of aspiring military aviators has already begun training at Sheppard, joining a decades-long tradition of taking to the skies together.

Invictus Games demonstrate the unconquerable soul of veterans

Source: NATO

On 30 October 2024, the Invictus Games Foundation briefed the NATO Military Committee at NATO Headquarters on the role of Invictus in supporting wounded, injured and sick service members and veterans. Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, addressed the Military Committee via VTC, with a delegation attending the meeting in person. The delegation included: Dominic Reid, Chief Executive of Invictus; Lord Allen, Chancellor of the Board of Trustees; and Richard Smith, the Deputy Chief Executive Officer.

The delegation briefed the Military Committee on the breadth and development of the Invictus programme and the progress it is making to expand the scope of its mission. The core purpose of Invictus is to support the recovery and rehabilitation of Wounded, Injured and Sick (WIS) Service Members through sport and adventure. The Invictus Games Foundation is working to continue establishing a global community where rehabilitation and recovery are better enabled and understood. This is primarily through the delivery of the Invictus Games, taking place in different host cities every two years around the globe, but also through a multi-layered programme beyond the games, which aims to build a network amongst global Wounded, Injured and Sick veterans and promote advocacy of Invictus.

Meeting with representatives of the Invictus Games Foundation provided a platform for the NATO Military Committee to explore and learn how Allied nations can establish or develop a relationship with the Invictus Games. Admiral Bauer emphasised the importance of protecting Allied wounded servicemen and women, veterans and their families. He highlighted the invaluable support and hope the Invictus Games Foundation provides to the unconquerable souls of inspirational wounded, injured and sick service members and veterans. ‘I believe the work of the Invictus Games Foundation to be very important – and it strikes at the heart of our shared values as military personnel’. Admiral Bauer conveyed the power of the Invictus Games Foundation in reaching far beyond the Games themselves, changing and sometimes even saving the lives of both the wounded soldiers and their families.

Today’s Military Committee session follows up a meeting between the Chair of the Military Committee, Admiral Rob Bauer, and Prince Harry in May 2024, where Admiral Bauer attended a Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral in London. 

NATO Acting Deputy Secretary General to visit Croatia

Source: NATO

On Wednesday, 30 October 2024, the NATO Acting Deputy Secretary General, Ambassador Boris Ruge, will travel to Zagreb, Croatia.

Ambassador Ruge will meet with the Prime Minister, Mr Andrej Plenković, and the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence, Mr Ivan Anušić.

He will also attend a joint session of the Foreign Affairs Committee and the Delegation of the Croatian Parliament to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly (NPA), at the Croatian Parliament.

The event will be streamed live on the Croatian Parliament’s YouTube channel.

For more information:

For general queries: contact the NATO Press Office
Follow us on X: @NATO, @RugeBoris and @NATOPress

The Director General of NATO IMS visits Pakistan for Staff-To-Staff Talks

Source: NATO

From 27 to 29 October 2024, the delegation of the NATO International Military Staff (IMS) visited Pakistan for the 11th iteration of NATO-Pakistan Military Staff Talks. During the visit Director General of IMS (DGIMS), Lieutenant General Janusz Adamczak also met with the senior military leaders of this NATO partner country.

The NATO delegation was hosted by the Director General of the Joint Staff Lieutenant General Ahsan Gulrez. “NATO values its relationship with Pakistan and sees potential for further and deeper engagement. We have established solid military-to-military dialogue and laid foundations for practical cooperation” – underscored LTG Adamczak in his opening remarks. Both directors stressed the need for deeper discussion on capacity building and interoperability.

Military staff talks focused on areas of shared interest, including individual and collective training opportunities, participation in exercises and courses as well as exchange of knowledge in countering terrorism. Both sides agreed on the necessity of the continuous dialogue and increased cooperative security measures. At the conclusion of the staff talks LTG Adamczak and LTG Gulrez agreed on a military-to-military cooperation workplan for the coming year.

In the lead up to the staff talks DGIMS also met with Lieutenant General Avais Dastgir, Chief of the General Staff of the Army, Vice Admiral Ovais Ahmed Bilgrami the Vice Chief of Naval Staff and Air Vice Marshal Ahmed Aurangzeb the Director General of Warfare and Strategy of Air Staff. They discussed possible avenues for further military cooperation in the land, maritime and air domain.

While in Islamabad NATO delegation also visited the National Aerospace Science & Technology Park (NASTP), a centre for research, development and innovation in the aviation, space, IT, and cyber domains.

Meeting between NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen

Source: NATO

Today Secretary General Rutte met with President von der Leyen for the first time since Mr Rutte took office at the helm of NATO.

Their discussion focused on the importance of a close and strategic partnership between NATO and the European Union. 

Both agreed that in an increasingly dangerous world, this partnership is vital in order to champion and safeguard peace, freedom and prosperity. 

Russia’s war of aggression on European soil is the single biggest threat to peace and security on the European continent. 

Secretary General Rutte and President von der Leyen both emphasised that the deployment of North Korean soldiers in support of Russia’s war of aggression represented a significant escalation of the war against Ukraine as well as a serious threat to European security and global peace.

They also discussed the growing assertiveness of authoritarian states on the world’s stage. These states challenge our common interests, values and democratic principles, using multiple means – political, economic, technological and military.

To address these evolving threats and challenges, Secretary General Rutte and President von der Leyen have agreed today to set up a new high-level task force to strengthen the existing NATO-EU cooperation.  Planning for the first meeting of the task force is expected to move forward in the coming weeks.