Stort säkerhetspådrag inför Israels match i Paris

Stort säkerhetspådrag inför Israels match i Paris

PARIS. När Frankrike möter Israel i Nations League på torsdagen har 4 000 poliser mobiliserats för att minska risken för våldsamheter – vid en fotbollsmatch dit knappt 20 000 åskådare väntas. Den israeliska regeringen avråder sina medborgare från att gå på matchen.

4 000 poliser och militärer i Paris – inför orolig fotbollsmatch

4 000 poliser och militärer i Paris – inför orolig fotbollsmatch

I samband med en match mellan den israeliska klubben Maccabi Tel Aviv och Ajax i Amsterdam greps 62 personer i torsdags förra veckan. Enligt nyhetsbyrån AFP attackerades de israeliska supportrarna efter att ha rivit ner och bränt palestinska flaggor i Amsterdam – och bland annat The Times of Israel har rapporterat att supportrarna ska ha skanderat hatiska slagord gentemot araber och palestinier. I sociala medier cirkulerade videos där de israeliska supportrarna utropade ”det finns inga skolor i Gaza för det finns inga barn kvar” tillsammans med videor där propalestinska demonstranter attackerade israeliska fotbollssupportrar och skrek ”det här är för barnen!” Stort säkerhetspådrag vid arenan I eftermälet av våldsamheterna fördömde bland annat Nederländernas premiärminister Dick Schoof och Sveriges statsminister Ulf Kristersson attackerna som antisemitiska. Minst fem israeliska fotbollssupportrar fördes till sjukhus och Israels premiärminister Benjamin Nethanyahu bestämde att man skulle flyga hem de israeliska supportrarna. Nu ska israeliska Maccabi Tel Aviv spela nästa Nations League-match mot Frankrikes lag i Paris och den franska polisen har ett stort säkerhetspådrag med 4 000 poliser och militärer på plats för att förhindra eventuella våldsamheter. – Här vid Stade de France där jag står just nu är det väldigt hög säkerhet med mycket poliser runt omkring mig och människor som har fått gå omvägar för att kunna ta sig hem till sina bostäder. Men ändå lugnt så som det ser ut nu några timmar bort, säger utrikesreporter Jennifer Paterson. 1600 säkerhetsvakter inne på Stade de France Fransk säkerhetstjänst har kallat matchen på torsdag kväll ett ”högriskevent” och franska inrikesministern Bruno Retailleau har sagt att han kommer att bevaka matchen. – Det är ett exceptionellt säkerhetspådrag som man pratar om och man verkligen har omringat hela området här, vanligtvis brukar man kunna komma betydligt närmre själva arenan, säger Jennifer Paterson. Hon själv måste stå några minuter bort från arenan eftersom man inte kan komma närmre utan att visa upp en biljett till matchen tillsammans med ett personligt ID-kort. – Det är väldigt ovanligt att man behöver göra för den här typen av match. Sen utöver det så är det 4 000 poliser och militärer som har satsat in. Inne på själva arenan kommer man också ha 1600 säkerhetsvakter, säger Jennifer Paterson. ”Vill visa att vi står tydligt här i Frankrike” Hittills har man sålt cirka 20 000 biljetter till matchen och aktivister har försökt få matchen stoppad. Inrikesministern har försökt stoppa alla palestinska flaggor och vill bara tillåta den franska och den israeliska under matchen. – Det har varit mycket diskussioner. Kanske inte så mycket om att ställa in men framförallt om att placera den någon annanstans där det skulle vara lugnare att hålla den. Jag hörde till och med någon politiker som pratade om att man skulle omlokalisera den ner till Korsika istället, säger Jennifer Paterson. I fransk media har inrikesministern även uttalat sig om säkerhetspådraget inför matchen. – Man vill visa att vi står tydligt här i Frankrike för att man ska kunna hålla den här typen av event. Man ska inte backa för några hot och man menar också att det säkerhetspådraget som man har här är så pass högt så att det inte ska behöva ske några allvarliga saker här ikväll utan man menar att säkerheten är så pass bra, säger utrikesreporter Jennifer Paterson.

Röd varning för regn i södra Spanien

Röd varning för regn i södra Spanien

Spaniens meteorologiska myndighet, AEMET, uppmanar befolkningen i området Sol y Guadalhorce att vidta försiktighetsåtgärder och följa myndigheternas råd. Vidare rekommenderas man att undvika onödiga resor, så länge en röd varning är utfärdad. – Det är den högsta varningen och innebär per definition att det är fara för liv, säger TV4:s meteorolog Peter Kondrup. I översvämningsdrabbade Valencia har en orange varning utfärdats. Även där väntas upp emot 120 millimeter regn komma på mindre än tolv timmar. – Det kommer ett lågtryck från Sicilien som rör sig västerut, säger Peter Kondrup om orsaken bakom den senaste vädervarningen för Valencia. Landslaget flyger hem Det svenska herrlandslaget har befunnit sig i Marbella i veckan för att träna inför de avgörande i Nations League-matcherna mot Slovakien och Azerbajdzjan. Under tisdagskvällen meddelade landslagschefen Stefan Pettersson att man kommer att flyga hem tidigare än planerat. – På grund av risken att torsdagens träning inte kommer kunna genomföras här i Marbella väljer vi att åka hem på förmiddagen istället för eftermiddagen och genomföra det passet på Stockholm Stadion, säger han i ett uttalande.

Orange vädervarning: Blågult mitt i potentiellt regnkaos

Orange vädervarning: Blågult mitt i potentiellt regnkaos

Spanien har drabbats av allvarliga oväder den senaste tiden. Nu har en orange vädervarning utfärdats inför natten till onsdag i området som det svenska herrlandslaget befinner sig i för att ladda upp inför de kommande Nations League-matcherna mot Slovakien och Azerbajdzjan. Det är State Meteorological Agency, spanska motsvarigheten till SMHI, som varnar för kraftigt regn under onsdagen och torsdagen i Marbella. Orange varning innebär att vädret ”kan bli en fara för allmänheten och orsaka skador på egendom och miljö”, enligt SMHI. Nu förbereder sig landslaget för olika scenarion. – Vi kan inte göra så mycket åt väder. Vi avvaktar och ser hur det artar sig. De som arrangerat det här lägret för oss håller koll åt oss också. De har en back up-plan och ser vad vi kan göra om det inte går att träna på planen (som tänkt), säger landslagschefen Stefan Pettersson. Inga inomhusplaner På frågan om det finns inomhusplaner i området svarar Pettersson: – Inte här, vad jag vet. Men de håller på att titta över vad vi skulle kunna göra i värsta fall. Det är inte aktuellt att åka hem till Sverige tidigare, menar landslagschefen. – Det ser jag inte just nu. Hur problematiskt skulle det vara om ni inte kan träna onsdag eller torsdag? – Träna på något sätt kommer vi kunna göra. Vi får hålla igång grabbarna i alla fall. Ni har åkt till Spanien och så kan det sluta med inställda träningar. Känns det typiskt? – Man kan inte rå för allt. Och vi planerade inte det här för en vecka sedan. Det är lång framförhållning. Sverige valde att ha en ledig dag under tisdagen, på grund av hänsyn till tidigare belastning för spelarna. Under måndagen tränade bara delar av truppen ute på planen. Blågult ska resa hem till Stockholm på torsdag. På lördag väntar match mot Slovakien.

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Nations League Recap, NewCo and Arsenal-Chelsea Preview

Flo Lloyd-Hughes is joined by Gilly Flaherty, Jessy Parker Humphreys and Becky Taylor-Gill to recap the dramatic end to England’s UEFA Nations League and Olympic campaign. There’s a debrief on Scotland’s woeful results and reflections on the NewCo era and 3 p.m. blackout. Plus, a preview of the big match between Arsenal and Chelsea in the WSL.Host: Flo Lloyd-HughesGuests: Gilly Flaherty, Jessy Parker Humphreys and Becky Taylor-GillProducer: Jonathan Fisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

England’s Nations League Comeback and Other International Break Drama

Flo Lloyd-Hughes is joined by Kate Longhurst and Jessy Parker Humphreys to discuss a frantic weekend of Nations League action. They break down England’s comeback against the Netherlands at Wembley and big defeats for Sweden and Spain. Plus, listener questions and a European club competition reboot.Host: Flo Lloyd-HughesGuests: Kate Longhurst and Jessy Parker HumphreysProducer: Jonathan Fisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

4: League of Nations Pt. 1 - Foundations

The Paris Peace Conference would result in the creation of the League of  Nations, designed to foster communication and cooperation between all nations. Website Patreon Twitter Facebook Discord Email: historyofthesecondworldwar@outlook.com Sources: Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World by Akira Iriye A History of the League of Nations by F.P Walters The Guardians: The League of Nations and the Crisis of Empire by Susan Pedersen In Pursuit of Equality and Respect: China's Diplomacy and the League of Nations by Alison Adcock Kaufman Collective Security as Political Myth: Liberal Internationalism and the League of Nations in Politics and History by George W. Egerton Transnationalism and the League of Nations: Understanding the Work of Its Economic and Financial Organization by Patrician Clavin and Jens-Wilhelm Wessels Getting Out of Iraq-in 1932: The League of Nations and the Road to Normative Statehood by Susan Pedersen A "Great Experiment" of the League of Nations Era: International Nongovernmental Organizations, Global Governance, and Democracy Beyond the State by Thomas Richard Davies The League of Nations Health Organisation and the Evolution of Transnational Public Health by Patricia Anne Sealey The League of Nations, International Terrorism, and British Foreign Policy, 1934-1938 by Michael D. Callahan Japan and the League of Nations: An Asian Power Encounters the "European Club" by Thomas W. Burkman Exporting Development: The League of Nations and Republican China by Margherita Zanasi The League of Nations and the Great Powers, 1936-1940 by Peter J. Beck The League of Nations and the Minorities Question by Carole Fink Imperialism and Sovereignty: The League of Nations' Drive to Control Global Arms Trade by David R. Stone The League of Nations, Public Ritual and National Identity in Britain, c. 1919-56 by Helen McCarthy The Legacies of Woodrow Wilson and the League of Nations in Russia by Alexander S. Khodnev Mapping the UN - League of Nations Analogy: Are There Still Lessons to be Learned from the League by Alexandru Grigorescu Minorities and the League of Nations in Interwar Europe by Mark Mazower The League of Nations and the Settlement of Disputes by Lorna Lloyd The Transnational Dream: Politicians, Diplomats and Soldiers in the League of Nations' Pursuit of International Disarmament, 1920-1939 by Andrew Webster Turkey's Entrance into the League of Nations by Yucel Guclu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

5: League of Nations Pt. 2 - Around the World

Among its many goals the League of Nations hoped to oversee a new way for European colonialism to manifest around the world. Website Patreon Twitter Facebook Discord Email: historyofthesecondworldwar@outlook.com Sources: Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World by Akira Iriye A History of the League of Nations by F.P Walters The Guardians: The League of Nations and the Crisis of Empire by Susan Pedersen In Pursuit of Equality and Respect: China's Diplomacy and the League of Nations by Alison Adcock Kaufman Collective Security as Political Myth: Liberal Internationalism and the League of Nations in Politics and History by George W. Egerton Transnationalism and the League of Nations: Understanding the Work of Its Economic and Financial Organization by Patrician Clavin and Jens-Wilhelm Wessels Getting Out of Iraq-in 1932: The League of Nations and the Road to Normative Statehood by Susan Pedersen A "Great Experiment" of the League of Nations Era: International Nongovernmental Organizations, Global Governance, and Democracy Beyond the State by Thomas Richard Davies The League of Nations Health Organisation and the Evolution of Transnational Public Health by Patricia Anne Sealey The League of Nations, International Terrorism, and British Foreign Policy, 1934-1938 by Michael D. Callahan Japan and the League of Nations: An Asian Power Encounters the "European Club" by Thomas W. Burkman Exporting Development: The League of Nations and Republican China by Margherita Zanasi The League of Nations and the Great Powers, 1936-1940 by Peter J. Beck The League of Nations and the Minorities Question by Carole Fink Imperialism and Sovereignty: The League of Nations' Drive to Control Global Arms Trade by David R. Stone The League of Nations, Public Ritual and National Identity in Britain, c. 1919-56 by Helen McCarthy The Legacies of Woodrow Wilson and the League of Nations in Russia by Alexander S. Khodnev Mapping the UN - League of Nations Analogy: Are There Still Lessons to be Learned from the League by Alexandru Grigorescu Minorities and the League of Nations in Interwar Europe by Mark Mazower The League of Nations and the Settlement of Disputes by Lorna Lloyd The Transnational Dream: Politicians, Diplomats and Soldiers in the League of Nations' Pursuit of International Disarmament, 1920-1939 by Andrew Webster Turkey's Entrance into the League of Nations by Yucel Guclu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

6: League of Nations Pt. 3 - Failure

During the 1920s and 1930s the League of Nations would have many issues when attempting to execute on one of its most important goals, disarmament. It would not be the only challenge that the League would face in the 1930s. Website Patreon Twitter Facebook Discord Email: historyofthesecondworldwar@outlook.com Sources: Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World by Akira Iriye A History of the League of Nations by F.P Walters The Guardians: The League of Nations and the Crisis of Empire by Susan Pedersen In Pursuit of Equality and Respect: China's Diplomacy and the League of Nations by Alison Adcock Kaufman Collective Security as Political Myth: Liberal Internationalism and the League of Nations in Politics and History by George W. Egerton Transnationalism and the League of Nations: Understanding the Work of Its Economic and Financial Organization by Patrician Clavin and Jens-Wilhelm Wessels Getting Out of Iraq-in 1932: The League of Nations and the Road to Normative Statehood by Susan Pedersen A "Great Experiment" of the League of Nations Era: International Nongovernmental Organizations, Global Governance, and Democracy Beyond the State by Thomas Richard Davies The League of Nations Health Organisation and the Evolution of Transnational Public Health by Patricia Anne Sealey The League of Nations, International Terrorism, and British Foreign Policy, 1934-1938 by Michael D. Callahan Japan and the League of Nations: An Asian Power Encounters the "European Club" by Thomas W. Burkman Exporting Development: The League of Nations and Republican China by Margherita Zanasi The League of Nations and the Great Powers, 1936-1940 by Peter J. Beck The League of Nations and the Minorities Question by Carole Fink Imperialism and Sovereignty: The League of Nations' Drive to Control Global Arms Trade by David R. Stone The League of Nations, Public Ritual and National Identity in Britain, c. 1919-56 by Helen McCarthy The Legacies of Woodrow Wilson and the League of Nations in Russia by Alexander S. Khodnev Mapping the UN - League of Nations Analogy: Are There Still Lessons to be Learned from the League by Alexandru Grigorescu Minorities and the League of Nations in Interwar Europe by Mark Mazower The League of Nations and the Settlement of Disputes by Lorna Lloyd The Transnational Dream: Politicians, Diplomats and Soldiers in the League of Nations' Pursuit of International Disarmament, 1920-1939 by Andrew Webster Turkey's Entrance into the League of Nations by Yucel Guclu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

‘Taking her place amongst the nations of the earth’?—Ireland and the League of Nations

To what extent did the Irish Free State’s joining the League of Nations a century ago realise Robert Emmet’s ambition? Join History Ireland editor Tommy Graham in discussion with John Gibney, Michael Kennedy and Zoë Reid. The Hedge School series of podcasts is produced by History Ireland and the Wordwell Group. For more information or to subscribe, visit historyireland.com This Hedge School is supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under the Decade of Centenaries 2012–2023 initiative.

England bounce back in the Nations League, and who could be the next USWNT head coach?

Flo Lloyd-Hughes and Jessy Parker Humphreys chat through England’s return to winning ways in the Nations League. Plus, they chat through who might be taking on the biggest head coaching role in women’s soccer.Host: Flo Lloyd-HughesGuest: Jessy Parker HumphreysProducer: Jonathan Fisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

184: Versailles Pt. 3 - The League of Nations

One of the major topics for discussion at the Paris Peace Conference was the League of Nations. Do you want to chat with other History of the Great War listeners, and yours truly, come hang out in Discord: https://discord.gg/ASbBjaT Support the podcast on http://patreon.com/historyofthegreatwar where you can get access to special supporter only episodes. For a no strings attached donation: http://buymeacoffee.com/greatwar Sources: A Shattered Peace: Versailles 1919 and the Price we Pay Today by David A. Andelman Anglo-French Negotiations over the Boundaries of Palestine, 1919-1920 by John J. McTague Jr. The Boundaries of Israel-Palestine Past, Present, and Future: A Critical Geographical View by Gideon Biger Britain and Airpower at Versailles, 1919-1920 by Peter V. James The British Military Administration in Palestine 1917-1920 by John J. McTague Jr. Broken Promises of the Mandate: A Study of the Palestine Mandate Society and its Impact on the Proliferation of Zionism within Palestine and Great Britain by Brendon L. Larimore Creating Nations, Establishing States: Ethno-Religious Heterogeneity and the British Creation of Iraq in 1919–23 by Guiditta Fontana On the Economic Consequences of the Peace: Trade and Borders After Versailles by Nikolaus Wolf, Max-Stephan Schulze, and Hans-Christian Heinemeyer France and the Arab Middle East, 1914-1920 by Jan Karl Tanenbaum Mistakes and Myths: The Allies, Germany, and the Versailles Treaty, 1918–1921 by Sally Marks Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World by Margaret Macmillan and Richard Holbrooke Political Economics and the Weimar Disaster by Roger B. Myerson Russia and the Versailles Conference by George Kennan (1960) Syria and Mesopotamia in British Middle Eastern Policy in 1919 by John Fisher The imposed gift of Versailles:the fiscal effects of restricting the size of Germany’s armed forces,1924–9 by Max Hantke and Mark Spoerer The Myths of Reparations by Sally Marks The Role of Illusion in the Making of the Versailles Treaty by Bonnie Baker Unconditional Acceptance of the Treaty of Versailles by the German Government, June 22-28, 1919 by Alma Luckau Wilsonian Self-Determination and the Versailles Settlement by Anthony Whelan Woodrow Wilson's Health and the Treaty Fight, 1919-1920 by Lloyd E. Ambrosius The Zionist Debates on Partition (1919-1947) by Itzhak Galnoor The Deluge: The Great War, America, and the Remaking of the Global Order by Adam Tooze A World Remade by G.J. Meyer Ring of Steel by Alexander Watson The United States and Germany in the Aftermath of War: I-1918-1929 by Frank Spencer The Legend of Versailles by Kenneth R. Rossman Reconstructing the Countryside of the Eastern Somme after the Great War by Hugh Clout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

IGCSE: The League of Nations

In today’s episode of the podcast, I will go over the aims and organisation of the League of Nations, it’s successes and failures and how it was impacted by the Great Depression. If you want some more revision material, you can use the link below to access much more revision information on my website: https://sites.google.com/view/igcse-history-revision/home If you have any suggestions or questions, please fill in this Google Form: https://forms.gle/caEki6L8SzS6wwui7 THANKS FOR YOUR INTEREST IN MY PODCAST!

Was the League of Nations Doomed to Fail?

102 years ago on the 10th of January 1920, the League of Nations was formed out of the Treaty of Versailles. Its aim was to maintain peace after the First World War. With 58 member states by the 1930s, it had successes e against drug traffickers and slave traders, settling border disputes and returning prisoners of war. But much of the treaty was designed to punish Germany after WWI, creating an environment of disillusionment that enabled Nazi ideology to thrive. Across the rest of Europe, it was working up against economic depression, rising nationalism and a lack of support from the two great nations of Russia and the United States. Its ultimate demise began with Hitler's declaration of war in 1939. Was it too utopian and doomed to fail? In this episode Mats Berdal, Professor of Security and Development at Kings College London, joins Dan to discuss the legacy of the League of Nations, its importance in establishing the Geneva Protocol (prohibition of gas warfare), laying the foundations of the UN and the challenges that led to its ultimate failure.If you'd like to learn more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad-free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - subscribe today! To download the History Hit app please go to the Android or Apple store.

The League Part I: All Mouth And No Trousers - the Birth of the League of Nations

Was the League of Nations doomed from the start? How was it created and who was a member? What structures and tools did it have to carry out its mission of preserving the peace after the Great War?