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Maine’s wood product manufacturing sales increased by 45% in a five-year period. That’s according to a report published in October from the Maine Forest Products Council on the economic contribution of the state’s forest products sector from 2019 to 2024.
Executive director Krysta West says during that period, Maine saw a lot of investment in sawmills, both in the expansion of existing infrastructure and in new facilities that are able to process lower grade lumber that would have previously gone to pulp and paper.
“Everybody was staying home during the pandemic building things. It was a real boom time for that sector of the industry,” West says. “Since then, interest rates and inflation have caught up, and it’s slowed down significantly in that sector as well.”
During that same time period, the state’s pulp and paper industry continued to contract, with paper manufacturing sales falling by 41%.
West says despite the instability, the overall economic contribution of Maine’s forest product sector is still $8.3 billion, and the industry is actively trying to diversify.
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Switzerland deports another Afghan back home
Keystone-SDA
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In mid-December, the Swiss government deported a second Afghan criminal. After a failed repatriation attempt last year, Switzerland’s negotiations with the Taliban regime now appear to be yielding results.
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Another offender was deported to Kabul in mid-December, the State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) confirmed on Sunday at the request of the Keystone-SDA news agency in response to a report by Sonntagsblick newpaper.
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Of twenty convicted Afghans nationals in Switzerland, only two have been deported. The Taliban have been in power since 2021 making deportations to Afghanistan difficult as Switzerland has no official relations with the Taliban government.
Just over a year ago, an attempt to deport an Afghan criminal failed. Having already landed in Kabul, the man had to travel back to Switzerland. In August, the SEM therefore invited representatives of the unofficial Taliban government to Geneva airport for negotiations in order to organise future deportations.
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Foreign Affairs
Swiss government to deport rejected asylum seekers from Afghanistan
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The State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) is changing its asylum policy for Afghanistan. Single men with rejected applications can now be deported.
Read more: Swiss government to deport rejected asylum seekers from Afghanistan
The Taliban representatives identified 13 out of a total of twenty offenders from Afghanistan. Among them was the man who was deported to Afghanistan in December, the SEM told Keystone-SDA. According to the SEM, preparations are underway for further deportations.
Adapted from German by DeepL/ac
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