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MILITARY

Norway announces massive increase in defence spending

Norway, a NATO member bordering Russia, said on Friday it planned to increase its defence budget by 83 percent over the next 12 years.

Pictured is the Norwegian PM Jonas Gahr Støre
Norway has announced a huge increase in defence spending. Pictured is a file photo of Norwegian PM Jonas Gahr Støre. Photo by Sameer Al-Doumy / AFP

Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said that in order to take account of the “degraded security situation in our part of the world”, he was proposing to devote an extra 600 billion kronor ($56 million) to the army between 2024 and 2026.

It was a “historic effort”, he said,

“A stronger defence system here will act as a deterrent to those who seek to threaten our security and our allies,” Støre said when he presented the government’s defence white paper from onboard a navy frigate.

“Our starting hypothesis is that we will have to face a more dangerous, more unpredictable neighbour for many years,” he said of Russia.

Norway and Russia share a 198-kilometre (123-mile) land border in the Far North and a sea border in the Barents Sea.

Oslo, a member of the NATO military alliance, plans to order five new frigates, at least fifty submarines, up to 28 vessels of different sizes, maritime surveillance drones, helicopters and deep strike weapons, according to the white paper.

The number of brigades in the territorial army will rise from one to three.

Brigades operating anti-aircraft systems will double to eight and an earlier decision to shut the maritime patrol air base in Andoya will be reversed.

Finance Minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum said the defence budget would rise from 91 billion kronor this year to 166 billion in 2036.

It represents three percent of Norway’s gross domestic product (GDP), up from this year’s two percent, which is NATO’s minimum threshold.

The centre-left minority government needs the support of other parties to get the bill approved.

The main opposition, the Conservative Party, has already sent out a positive signal and said the white paper constitutes “a good basis for negotiations”.

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POLITICS

Norway to quadruple aid to Palestinians amidst famine fears

The Norwegian government Tuesday proposed 1 billion kroner ($92.5 million) in aid to Palestinians this year as humanitarian agencies warn of a looming famine in the Gaza Strip.

Norway to quadruple aid to Palestinians amidst famine fears

Figures in the revised budget presented on Tuesday, show a roughly quadrupling of the 258 million kroner provided in the initial finance bill adopted last year.

“The urgent need of aid in Gaza is enormous after seven months of war,” Norway’s Minister of International Development, Anne Beathe Tvinnereim, said in a statement.

“The food situation in particular is critical and there is a risk of famine,” she added, criticising “an entirely man-made crisis” and an equally “critical” situation in the West Bank.

According to the draft budget, Norway intends to dedicate 0.98 percent of its gross national income to development aid this year.

The figures are still subject to change because the centre-left government, a minority in parliament, has to negotiate with other parties to get the texts adopted.

For his part, Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide again warned Israel against a large-scale military operation in Rafah, a city on the southern edge of the besieged Gaza Strip.

“It would be catastrophic for the population. Providing life-saving humanitarian support would become much more difficult and more dangerous,” Barth Eide said.

He added: “The more than 1 million who have sought refuge in Rafah have already fled multiple times from famine, death and horror. They are now being told to move again, but no place in Gaza is safe.”

As part of the response to the unprecedented Hamas attack on Israeli soil on October 7th, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he is determined to launch an operation in Rafah, which he considers to be the last major stronghold of the militant organisation.

Many in Rafah have been displaced multiple times during the war, and are now heading back north after Israeli forces called for the evacuation of the city’s eastern part.

On May 7th, Israeli tanks and troops entered the city’s east sending desperate Palestinians to flee north.

According to the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), “almost 450,000” people have been displaced from Rafah since May 6th.

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