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- Dem convention shows Biden wants to reassemble Obama's coalition — not build a new one
- Suspect in Portland Beating Turns Himself in
- Kim Jong-un gives sister Yo-jong 'more responsibilities'
- About 560 wildfires burn in California as more than 100,000 people evacuate: Here's what we know
- US Army’s future missile defense command system nearly simultaneously defeats cruise, ballistic missile threats
- Mask breach forces Delta Air Lines to ban former Navy Seal who said he killed Osama bin Laden
- Coronavirus: Youthful Pakistan appears to avoid worst of pandemic
- Michael Bloomberg robbed the DNC
- Michigan Gov. Whitmer says state will continue to show support for Flint residents with proposed $600M water deal
- Sen. Cassidy tests positive for virus, has COVID-19 symptoms
- Under arrest for corruption, Mexico's former oil boss takes aim at three ex-presidents
- Newsom nears pivotal decision: Should California try to reopen again?
- Judge: Indiana can't reject absentee ballots for signatures without informing voter
- U.S. could see two tropical systems make landfall on same day
- American universities, including Harvard and Princeton, weigh options to protect students from political prosecution under China's new national security law
- Barack Obama put Kamala Harris in an impossible position
- Bannon's Chinese host an irritant to Communist Party
- Kayleigh McEnany defends Trump’s praise of QAnon on Fox News: "Good hardworking people"
- France's most notorious serial killer raped and murdered 'French Maddie' says ex-wife
- Chicago mayor defends beefed-up police presence near home
- Bolivia probes alleged Morales affair with minor
- Mexican president defends brother hit by cash scandal
- Colombia calls on US to extradite warlord over fears he will escape justice
- When you mark your ballot this year, Vladimir Putin will be on it
- Republican senator Bill Cassidy tests positive for coronavirus
- Fox News raves Joe Biden's speech was 'enormously effective,' 'a home run'
- California's notorious 'Golden State Killer' faces sentencing
- 5 killed in California wildfires that continue to destroy homes
- Steve Bannon: The Trump-whisperer's rapid fall from grace
- 'Fort Lori': Chicago police ban protests on Mayor Lori Lightfoot's block, order arrests for anyone who won't leave
- MSC Cruises says family denied reboarding after they broke COVID-19 'social bubble'
- Tropical Storm Laura shifts south, leaving most of Florida outside the projected path
- Southwest is turning down $2.8 billion in CARES Act aid to avoid the federal government's 'onerous' conditions
- Op-Ed: The Belarus crisis is a problem for Moscow. Here's how Putin might respond
- It turns out Mitch McConnell will appear at the RNC after all
- Exclusive: Manchester teen who joined Islamic State with twin sister being held with young son in controversial Syrian detention camp
- The Effects of Hong Kong’s National-Security Law Are Already Clear
- Northern Cyprus set to reopen Cypriot ghost town on ceasefire lines
- Salvors begin sinking ship which ran aground off Mauritius
- The 2021 visa lottery winners have been announced. Egypt, Iran and Russia top the list
- A growing dent in Earth's magnetic field could wreak havoc on satellites and the space station, NASA says
- Mali Coup Leaders Seized Power Days After Returning From Military Training Camp in Russia
- Thousands of chicks arrive dead to farmers amid USPS turmoil
- Portland clashes rage again outside US immigration building
- Senegal port seeks removal of 2,700 tonnes of chemical that caused Beirut blast
Dem convention shows Biden wants to reassemble Obama's coalition — not build a new one Posted: 20 Aug 2020 12:21 PM PDT |
Suspect in Portland Beating Turns Himself in Posted: 21 Aug 2020 01:21 PM PDT The suspect in the beating of a truck driver in downtown Portland turned himself in Friday morning, police said.Marquise Love, 25, turned himself into police and is being held on $260,000 bail at Multnomah County Detention Center. He is accused of felony assault, coercion, and rioting."I am pleased the suspect in this case turned himself in and appreciate all of the efforts to facilitate this safe resolution," Portland Police Chief Chuck Lovell said in a statement on Friday.A crowd of rioters in downtown Portland beat a man unconscious Sunday night after dragging him from his truck, video footage of the incident shows. Police on Tuesday identified Love as the man who delivered a running kick to the head from behind to the man, identified by his family as Adam Haner, as he sat in the street already beaten by the rioters.The crowd surrounded Haner's white truck around 10:30 p.m. near where he crashed into a light pole downtown. At least one individual punched him as he sat inside before he was pulled out of the vehicle. The rioters forced him to sit in the street as he tried to answer a call from his wife.One man in the crowd wearing a "security" vest, allegedly Love, delivered a kick to his head that appeared to knock him out cold and caused his head to bleed after it hit the street. Haner was transported to the hospital.Video clips on social media appear to show the moments just before the attack, when the man attempted to help a person the crowd had previously robbed and beaten.Later, police deployed a large law enforcement response and encountered "a hostile crowd."Police called on Love to turn himself in. Haner has since been released from the hospital and is recovering from multiple serious injuries at home.The incident, which has attracted international attention, has prompted harsh criticism of Portland government officials, including Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler.By Friday afternoon, more than 3,800 people had donated over $137,000 to a fundraiser for Haner set up by his brother. |
Kim Jong-un gives sister Yo-jong 'more responsibilities' Posted: 20 Aug 2020 04:57 AM PDT |
About 560 wildfires burn in California as more than 100,000 people evacuate: Here's what we know Posted: 21 Aug 2020 05:34 PM PDT |
Posted: 21 Aug 2020 08:26 AM PDT |
Mask breach forces Delta Air Lines to ban former Navy Seal who said he killed Osama bin Laden Posted: 20 Aug 2020 08:03 PM PDT A former Navy Seal who has said he killed Osama bin Laden has been banned by Delta Air Lines after removing his mask during a flight. American Robert O'Neill tweeted about his ban on Thursday, and the airline confirmed the action. "Part of every customer's commitment prior to travelling on Delta is the requirement to acknowledge our updated travel policies, which includes wearing a mask," the airline said in a statement. "Failure to comply with our mask-wearing mandate can result in losing the ability to fly Delta in the future." All major US airlines require passengers to wear face coverings to prevent the spread of Covid-19. Delta said it had banned more than 100 passengers for violating the rule. Mr O'Neill posted a selfie showing himself, with no mask, on a Delta Connection flight on Wednesday from Minneapolis to Newark, New Jersey. Other passengers in the photo, including a man across the aisle who was wearing a Marine Corps hat, were wearing masks. The tweet was later deleted. In another tweet on Thursday, Mr O'Neill said: "Thank God it wasn't @Delta flying us in when we killed bin Laden... we weren't wearing masks..." |
Coronavirus: Youthful Pakistan appears to avoid worst of pandemic Posted: 20 Aug 2020 04:06 PM PDT |
Michael Bloomberg robbed the DNC Posted: 20 Aug 2020 08:14 PM PDT We now know how much the going rate is for a spot at the Democratic National Convention. Michael Bloomberg spoke for five minutes on Thursday night not long before the nominee itself, a role arguably more prominent than that of Bernie Sanders, the much-abused runner-up.The former New York mayor's remarks were exactly what you would expect. He began by pointing out that he is not a Democrat. He gloated about the vast amounts of money he has given to buy politicians in all parties. He quoted a children's book. He talked about the importance of experts, like the ones he deferred to when he doubled down on the brutal policing tactics that have been the subject of protests across the country. He even said "hell" twice.The best part is that he didn't even have to pay for it. Bloomberg reneged on his promise back in March to keep the thousands of paid staff members who carried him to his towering victory in the 2020 American Samoa Democratic primary onboard until the general election. He has given a whopping $18 million to the party itself and just over $4 million to other grassroots organizations this year. He also offered them some useless free office space during the lockdown.At least President Trump was watching. > After the worst debate performance in the history of politics, Michael Bloomberg, commonly known as Mini Mike, is trying to make a comeback by begging the Democrats for relevance. They treated him like a dog - and always will. Before politics, he said GREAT things about me!> > -- Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 21, 2020More stories from theweek.com The DNC's stirring eulogy for Joe Biden Lori Loughlin sentenced to 2 months in prison for role in college admissions scandal Trump initially responds to Biden's acceptance speech with brevity and correct grammar |
Posted: 20 Aug 2020 11:29 AM PDT |
Sen. Cassidy tests positive for virus, has COVID-19 symptoms Posted: 20 Aug 2020 11:57 AM PDT U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy announced Thursday that he has tested positive for the coronavirus and is experiencing some COVID-19 symptoms. The Republican senator, 62, who is running for reelection on Nov. 3, is experiencing "mild symptoms that began this morning," from COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus, his spokesperson Cole Avery said. Cassidy is at least the 13th member of Congress known to have tested positive for the coronavirus and only the second senator. |
Under arrest for corruption, Mexico's former oil boss takes aim at three ex-presidents Posted: 20 Aug 2020 06:12 PM PDT |
Newsom nears pivotal decision: Should California try to reopen again? Posted: 21 Aug 2020 09:26 AM PDT |
Judge: Indiana can't reject absentee ballots for signatures without informing voter Posted: 21 Aug 2020 12:42 PM PDT |
U.S. could see two tropical systems make landfall on same day Posted: 21 Aug 2020 01:02 PM PDT |
Posted: 19 Aug 2020 09:51 PM PDT |
Barack Obama put Kamala Harris in an impossible position Posted: 19 Aug 2020 09:05 PM PDT The best that can be said of Kamala Harris' speech at the DNC on Wednesday night is that it was the second best of the evening. But putting it that way doesn't quite capture the reality of what happened. Barack Obama delivered an incredible speech — a rhetorically accomplished, complexly argued case for defeating Donald Trump, and he delivered it impeccably, staring straight into the camera, drilling right to the souls of the American people.In that respect, Harris was in an impossible position. Originally Obama's remarks were supposed to follow the speech of the vice-presidential nominee, but the former president reportedly suggested flipping the order once Harris' name was announced. That inadvertently set Harris up for failure. But if she had gone first, her pedestrian, disjointed speech, delivered in a tone of phony overacting, would have been largely forgotten by the morning. Obama really was that good, and Harris really was that bad.Rather than making an argument, Harris set out to do what she was expected to — introduce herself to the country. But she did it in a cloying, cliché-ridden way. And she wove the story of her family and career into the political history of the country by way of the identity-politics categories so beloved of left-wing activists and the Democratic Party's consultant class. She started by talking about women. Then transitioned to Black women. Then added in her Indian heritage, and Latinos. Later she name-checked Indigenous people, denounced structural racism, and then, in a tone of high earnestness, made the most cringe-inducing declaration of the entire convention so far: "There is no vaccine for racism."Unlike Obama, who used the camera so expertly, Harris delivered her remarks on a large stage ringed with American flags before an auditorium empty of all but a handful of journalists, photographers, and producers. The vibe started at awkward and sank lower from there.The cardinal rule for running-mates is to do no harm to the ticket. I doubt this single speech hurt the Democrats' prospects in November. But there is no way it helped.More stories from theweek.com 5 bitingly funny cartoons about the Democratic National Convention Kansas City Chiefs to ban fans from wearing headdresses to home games A confused Kirsten Dunst asks Kanye West why he put her on his campaign poster |
Bannon's Chinese host an irritant to Communist Party Posted: 21 Aug 2020 02:38 AM PDT The self-exiled Chinese tycoon on whose 150-foot (45-meter) yacht President Donald Trump's former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, was arrested is a high-profile irritant to the ruling Communist Party. Guo Wengui left China in 2014 during an anti-corruption crackdown led by President Xi Jinping that ensnared people close to Guo, including a top intelligence official. Chinese authorities have accused Guo of rape, kidnapping, bribery and other offenses. |
Kayleigh McEnany defends Trump’s praise of QAnon on Fox News: "Good hardworking people" Posted: 20 Aug 2020 10:57 AM PDT |
France's most notorious serial killer raped and murdered 'French Maddie' says ex-wife Posted: 21 Aug 2020 07:26 AM PDT The ex-wife of France's most notorious living serial killer has accused him of raping and murdering a nine-year old school girl whose case has gripped the country for almost two decades. Estelle Mouzin disappeared in Guermantes, 18 miles east of Paris, on January 9, 2003 while walking home from her school. Her body was never found. Reported sightings fuelled speculation she was kidnapped and taken abroad, sparking parallels with Madeleine McCann, the British three-year-old who went missing in Portugal in 2007. Michel Fourniret, 77, already jailed for life in May 2008 for the murder of seven girls and young women, was charged over her disappearance late last year after his wife came forward to contradict his alibi. In March, Fourniret, dubbed the "Ogre of the Ardennes", then made a cryptic statement to police saying he admitted that "a being is no longer there by my fault" and that the body may be in the Ardennes, northeastern France. That sparked a search of his former properties, to no avail. |
Chicago mayor defends beefed-up police presence near home Posted: 20 Aug 2020 02:53 PM PDT |
Bolivia probes alleged Morales affair with minor Posted: 20 Aug 2020 05:47 PM PDT |
Mexican president defends brother hit by cash scandal Posted: 21 Aug 2020 06:05 AM PDT President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Friday said footage showing his brother receiving cash was not corruption because the money was for legitimate election funds, but that the prosecutor's office should investigate the videos. The fallout from the videos threatens to damage Lopez Obrador and his government at a time when Mexico is convulsed by a corruption trial of a former state-oil company boss who has alleged graft against previous Mexican presidents. Lopez Obrador said the money given in the videos to his brother, Pio Lopez Obrador, was "contributed" by supporters to pay for things like gasoline and there was no corruption. |
Colombia calls on US to extradite warlord over fears he will escape justice Posted: 20 Aug 2020 10:33 AM PDT Salvatore Mancuso, free after a 12-year drug sentence, is wanted for gross human rights violations but is seeking to be deported to ItalyColombia has requested the extradition of a notorious paramilitary warlord jailed in the US on drug charges, amid fears that he may be deported to Italy – and escape justice for human rights crimes in the Andean nation.Salvatore Mancuso, 56, led a rightwing paramilitary group which carried out some of the worst violence against civilians during Colombia's decades-long civil war.He was convicted in Colombia of more than 1,500 murders and forced disappearances, and confessed to participating in a string of horrific crimes. But in 2008 was extradited to the US where he served 12 years of a 15-year sentence on drug trafficking charges.When was released in March, his lawyers claimed that he would be killed if he returns to Colombia, and argued that he should instead be deported to Italy, where he also holds citizenship.From there it is unlikely that he will answer for his crimes in Colombia, as the two countries do not share an extradition treaty."Salvatore Mancuso has serious outstanding debts with Colombian justice and for that I reason I have requested his extradition," Colombia's president, Iván Duque, tweeted on Thursday morning amid growing outcry over the case. "His crimes will not continue to be met with impunity."Mancuso, the well-educated son of an Italian immigrant from Colombia's cattle-ranching north-west, is the highest-ranking former commander of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia still alive. He signed off on countless atrocities during a three-way conflict between leftwing rebels and state forces often acting in collusion with the paramilitaries.In February 2000, militiamen under his command tortured and dismembered more than 60 peasant farmers in the rural village of El Salado, in one of the worst single acts of violence in the five-decade war. Victims – including a six-year-old girl and an elderly woman – were stabbed, beaten and strangled to death.Yirley Velasco, now 34, was 14 when four of Mancuso's men pinned her down in front of the village and sexually abused her after killing her neighbours."We're still wearing the scars of what he and his men did to us, every day we are tortured by it, so how could it be fair that he gets to live comfortably in Italy?" she said on Thursday.The conflict between the Colombian state and leftist rebel groups including the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (or Farc) left 260,000 dead and displaced over 7 million.A peace deal was signed with the Farc in 2016, which brought with it a truth and justice tribunal. Campaigners say that Mancuso, who has already implicated high-profile politicians in his crimes, must answer to it."He must come to Colombia to tell the truth about the political and business leaders that were involved," said Iván Cepeda, a prominent leftist senator whose father, a congressman, was murdered by paramilitaries in 1994.Rosario Montoya, 62, an afro-indigenous organiser from Mancuso's home-province of Córdoba, was forced to run from one of his death squads in 1987 after many of her neighbours and fellow activists had been murdered."They exterminated us and they stole our land and yet only Mancuso knows the truth of what happened," Montoya said. "We're not hoping that he gets punished, we're just hoping to hear who gave him the orders." |
When you mark your ballot this year, Vladimir Putin will be on it Posted: 21 Aug 2020 02:00 AM PDT |
Republican senator Bill Cassidy tests positive for coronavirus Posted: 20 Aug 2020 02:10 PM PDT Republican senator Bill Cassidy has tested positive for Covid-19, after he was exposed to someone infected with the virus.On Thursday, Mr Cassidy's office announced that he had become just the second senator to have contracted coronavirus, after Republican Rand Paul tested positive for Covid-19 in April, according to CNBC. |
Fox News raves Joe Biden's speech was 'enormously effective,' 'a home run' Posted: 20 Aug 2020 08:59 PM PDT Joe Biden's presidential nomination acceptance speech is being hailed as a career best, even by his critics. And perhaps no praise was more surprising on Thursday night than that being directed at him on Fox News.Anchor Chris Wallace, who previously panned Kamala Harris' vice presidential nomination speech, called Biden's big moment "enormously effective." "Remember, Donald Trump has been talking for months about Joe Biden as mentally shot," Wallace went on. He added, "I thought that he blew a hole -- a big hole -- in that characterization. … Trump is gonna have to run against a candidate, not a caricature."Commentator Brit Hume also praised Biden's speech, calling it "very good" and "delivered with force and clarity." His colleague, Dana Perino shared the view, saying Biden "just hit a home run in the bottom of the ninth … He had pace, rhythm, energy, emotion, and delivery. I think if he looks back, he's got to say that was probably the best speech of his life."Karl Rove added that Biden's speech was an "excellent end" to the convention, calling the former VP's remarks "very good." Watch more of Fox News' surprisingly favorable coverage below. > Dana Parino said Biden "just hit a home run in the bottom of the ninth," followed by Karl Rove saying "it was a very good speech." pic.twitter.com/trWr5eyrJx> > -- Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 21, 2020More stories from theweek.com The DNC's stirring eulogy for Joe Biden Lori Loughlin sentenced to 2 months in prison for role in college admissions scandal Trump initially responds to Biden's acceptance speech with brevity and correct grammar |
California's notorious 'Golden State Killer' faces sentencing Posted: 20 Aug 2020 03:03 AM PDT A former California police officer dubbed the "Golden State Killer" who confessed to 13 murders and dozens of rapes during the 1970s and '80s faces a life prison term when he is sentenced in Sacramento on Friday. Joseph James DeAngelo, 74, will be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole following three days of emotional hearings in which victims or their family members confronted him in open court. "What a gut punch it was that I had been brutally raped by a full-time police officer," victim Gay Hardwick said, according to the Sacramento Bee newspaper. |
5 killed in California wildfires that continue to destroy homes Posted: 21 Aug 2020 03:42 AM PDT |
Steve Bannon: The Trump-whisperer's rapid fall from grace Posted: 20 Aug 2020 01:45 PM PDT |
Posted: 20 Aug 2020 09:15 AM PDT |
MSC Cruises says family denied reboarding after they broke COVID-19 'social bubble' Posted: 20 Aug 2020 01:30 PM PDT |
Tropical Storm Laura shifts south, leaving most of Florida outside the projected path Posted: 21 Aug 2020 06:42 AM PDT |
Posted: 21 Aug 2020 01:45 PM PDT |
Op-Ed: The Belarus crisis is a problem for Moscow. Here's how Putin might respond Posted: 21 Aug 2020 04:00 AM PDT |
It turns out Mitch McConnell will appear at the RNC after all Posted: 20 Aug 2020 10:16 PM PDT After some back and forth, it's been confirmed that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) will make an appearance at next week's Republican National Convention.McConnell is up for re-election in November, and his campaign spokeswoman, Katharine Cooksey, said in a statement on Thursday that he would not be part of the convention. Instead, he planned on "traveling across all corners of Kentucky next week to speak with families, workers, and job creators about their needs." A few hours later, Cooksey changed course, saying there was a "miscommunication" and McConnell will be recording a message for the convention, The Hill reports. Like the Democratic National Convention this week, the RNC will be mostly virtual. President Trump will give his address from the White House, and told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Thursday night that he wants to have more live parts than the DNC did, because otherwise the event will be "boring."More stories from theweek.com The DNC's stirring eulogy for Joe Biden Lori Loughlin sentenced to 2 months in prison for role in college admissions scandal Trump initially responds to Biden's acceptance speech with brevity and correct grammar |
Posted: 21 Aug 2020 07:10 AM PDT A woman from Manchester who joined Islamic State (IS) as a teenager alongside her twin sister is alive and being held with her young son in a controversial camp run by Syrian Kurdish forces, sources in northeast Syria have confirmed to The Telegraph. Salma and Zahra Halane were 16 when they fled their home in Chorlton in June 2014 to travel to Syria, but their fate has not been known since IS lost the last of its territory in fighting against Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in March 2019. Zahra was recently caught trying to escape from the sprawling Al Hol camp, where she had lived for 16 months, and was transferred last week from a women's prison to a new high-security extension to Roj camp, where humanitarians worry the most dangerous IS supporters are being moved, sources in the camps said. Salma's whereabouts is unknown but she is also believed to be alive. Dubbed the "terror twins" in the media, Zahra and Salma remain committed IS supporters, according to women in Al Hol. The fact that their presence went unreported and that at least one of them attempted to escape illustrates the danger of leaving tens of thousands of jihadists under the guard of a militia in a war-torn country, experts say. The Halane twins, who moved to Manchester at a young age from Denmark, crossed into Syria in July 2014, shortly after IS declared a caliphate. The twins, whose elder brother had reportedly travelled to Syria the year before, moved to Raqqa, the caliphate's capital, and soon married Islamic State fighters. Their youth and apparent enthusiasm for life under IS attracted widespread attention, and their journey to jihad was later copied by the Bethnal Green trio - teenage girls from an academy in London of whom only Shamima Begum is known to have survived. |
The Effects of Hong Kong’s National-Security Law Are Already Clear Posted: 20 Aug 2020 01:12 PM PDT Just a few weeks after China's imposition of a new "national-security law" on Hong Kong, we can already see the law's effects: It has emboldened the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to suppress dissent, punish activism, and create fear within the city's democracy movement.In 1997, the United Kingdom returned Hong Kong, which it had governed for 99 years under a lease extorted from the Qing Dynasty, back to the People's Republic of China. At the time, the PRC promised to preserve the political autonomy and freedoms the city had enjoyed under the British until 2047. The national-security law and the crackdown it initiated marked the breaking of that promise.Beijing's move to exert increased control over the city reflects several factors, first and foremost among them the rise of Xi Jinping. Xi has attempted to strengthen the CCP's control of China and his control of the CCP, and after tightening his grip on the mainland, he naturally sought to inflict the same fate on Hong Kong. The city's democracy movement, in turn, erred by forgetting that it ultimately was dealing with Xi's regime, which had already crushed all opposition at home, and in demanding what the Hong Kong authorities could never provide (full democracy) while delivering what the CCP could never abide (chaos).Hence the imposition of the national-security law by Beijing, with results worse than anyone predicted.The NSL criminalizes separatism, subversion, and terrorism. All of those crimes are vaguely defined, with ultimate interpretation up to Beijing, which uses similar restrictions to stifle dissent on the mainland. Special judges will be appointed to oversee national-security trials, which can be conducted in secret. Chinese security agents now operate in Hong Kong and defendants can be sent to the mainland for trial. The law singles out "collusion with a foreign country or with external forces to endanger national security," which is so broad it could cover something as simple as criticizing Beijing in an interview with a foreign reporter. Under the law, Beijing even claims the power to charge foreign nationals for acts committed overseas, and indeed has already attempted to do so. Those convicted can receive life imprisonment.Representatives of Hong Kong, who had no say in formulating the measure, have spent the weeks since its enactment desperately seeking to defuse international criticism. No doubt, Xi's regime would prefer to win widespread compliance through intimidation; mass arrests would take effort, create international controversy, and undermine Beijing's image. Ultimately the CCP hopes to use indoctrination backed by coercion to tranquilize Hong Kong's population.Indeed, regime allies in the city's government admitted as much when the law was first implemented. Stanley Ng, a delegate to the National People's Congress, the mainland's rubber-stamp legislature, said the law was ambiguous by design in order to incorporate the "real effects of intimidation and deterrence. You can see the rebels in Hong Kong are now in turmoil." Tam Yiu-chung, another NPC apparatchik, also lauded the law's impact: "Those who have stirred up trouble and broken this type of law in the past will hopefully watch themselves in the future. If they continue to defy the law, they will bear the consequences."The law was, in short, intended to trigger the democracy movement's broad retreat from the public square, and it has. But there are already signs that its effects will be much more far-reaching.On Monday, Hong Kong authorities arrested Apple Daily publisher Jimmy Lai, along with two of his sons and four company executives, for alleged collusion with foreign groups. Around 200 police officers raided the paper. China's nationalistic Global Times tagged Lai as a "modern traitor." On passage of the NSL, Lai had warned: "Whatever we write, or whatever we say, they can label secession or subversion or whatever they decide according to their expedience."Detained separately were members of the now-disbanded group Scholarism and an election-monitoring organization, as well as 23-year-old pro-democracy politician and protest leader Agnes Chow. Over the weekend, Chow cited surveillance of her home on social media. After the plethora of arrests, another democracy activist, Sunny Cheung, observed: "Everyone, let's mentally prepare. The road ahead will be darker and more terrifying than what we've imagined."Such arrests might have been expected within Hong Kong when the law was passed. But last week, the authorities also issued warrants for six activists based overseas. The police refused to discuss the case, but the Chinese state-owned CCTV network helpfully explained that the activists were wanted for promoting secession and colluding with foreigners.One is Samuel Muk-man Chu, the head of the Washington-based Hong Kong Democracy Council, which lobbies the U.S. government. Chu, born in Hong Kong, has been an American citizen for 25 years. He is best known for his work as a pastor and for running several social-justice organizations. China seeks to jail him for promoting the cause of human rights in Hong Kong from the U.S. "I might be the first non-Chinese citizen to be targeted, but I will not be the last," he told CNN. "If I am targeted, any American/any citizen of any nation who speaks out for Hong Kong can — and will be — too."Also charged was Nathan Law, a leader of the 2014 "Umbrella Revolution" democracy protests. He was elected to the Legislative Council in 2016, but subsequently disqualified at Beijing's direction. He wisely fled to the United Kingdom after the NSL's passage. If the law is not being applied retrospectively, as China claims it is not, he is being indicted for actions he undertook after leaving the territory.Simon Cheung, another target, worked for the British consulate in Hong Kong. When visiting mainland China last year, he was detained for 15 days, apparently tortured, and questioned about the democracy movement. After his release, he was granted asylum by the United Kingdom. The charges against him apparently relate to his work there.Amid all of these efforts to intimidate dissenters into silence, the law's passage has also prompted Hong Kong's Beijing-backed chief executive, Carrie Lam, to postpone the September Legislative Council elections, allowing Beijing to decide the body's make-up until the vote is held next year. Lam, who defended the NSL despite not having seen it before it was enacted, claimed that "political considerations" played no role in the postponement, which she blamed on the COVID-19 pandemic. But the PRC had real reason to fear that the opposition would gain control of the Council for the first time if the election had been held as scheduled.The council's makeup is determined through a hybrid system, some lawmakers are directly elected by Hong Kongers, while some are chosen by interest groups. Historically that has ensured that China-friendly elites have the upper hand in governing the city, but hostility toward Beijing has peaked in the aftermath of the NSL's imposition, so much so that the traditional barriers to democratic governance were unlikely to hold if the election had been held. Last November, democracy activists won control of 17 out of 18 district councils normally controlled by establishment parties. Even pro-Beijing Legislative Council members expected another devastating election defeat. The vote delay gives the regime even more opportunity to threaten and arrest anyone who poses a threat to its aims.Even before the election was postponed, the Hong Kong government had disqualified a dozen candidates, including four sitting legislators, on the grounds of promoting self-determination/independence, seeking foreign intervention (such as sanctions against Hong Kong and/or Beijing), opposing the NSL, and promising to reject government initiatives. Beijing's Liaison Office, the territory's real government, explained that "these unscrupulous individuals who are plotting to destroy" Hong Kong could not be allowed to sit on the Council. After the election delay was announced, the government admitted that other candidates are being reviewed: "We do not rule out the possibility that more nominations would be invalidated."With unintended irony, Lam's government mixed its announcement with the statement that it "respects and safeguards the lawful rights of Hong Kong people, including the right to vote and the right to stand for elections." Two weeks ago, the same government suggested that 600,000 Hong Kongers may have violated the NSL by voting in an informal primary for democracy activists. If the goal of the ballot was "objecting or resisting every policy initiative of the [Hong Kong] government," Lam said, "it may fall under the category of subverting the state power—one of the four types of offenses under the national-security law." The police subsequently raided the offices of the polling organization that ran the vote.The authorities also recently arrested four activists, as young as 16, for "inciting secession." They were members of Studentlocalism, a group for pro-independence students in secondary school. Notably, the organization ended operations before the NSL officially took effect, but those detained had posted support for independence on social media afterward, and the police explained that making such statements constituted incitement. Regina Ip, one of the PRC's most reliable local factotums, applauded the arrests, which, she told the New York Times, show the authorities are "acting in accordance with the law."After the law's passage, tenured law professor Benny Tai was dismissed by the University of Hong Kong for his pro-democracy activities. Previously punished for his participation in the 2014 demonstrations, he was recently cited by Beijing for assisting in the unofficial primary. The PRC liaison office blamed him for having "poisoned Hong Kong's political environment," calling him "the culprit behind the chaos in Hong Kong and the representative for colluding foreign powers," and his removal "a just act of punishing evil and promoting good and conforming to the people's will."Other Teachers are being targeted, too. Last month, 92 percent of those surveyed by the Hong Kong Professional Teachers' Union said they felt government pressure and had a negative view of the educational system's future; 80 percent avoided sensitive subjects in the classroom. Many who protested or endorsed anti-government demonstrations were reprimanded and in some cases fired. The Education Bureau called for the elimination of any teaching materials that could "provoke any acts or activities which endanger national security." Some subjects, such as human rights on the mainland, seem likely to become verboten. At an education meeting, Lam ominously said that she hoped "the national-security law is also a turning point for returning education to education and returning students to the right track."Beijing has conducted a broad, cruel, and shockingly effective campaign to destroy political and intellectual liberty in Hong Kong in a very short time. There is no need to wait to judge the impact of the national-security law: It has already chilled free speech, precluded political protest, and silenced critics of the PRC's increasingly oppressive rule. Hong Kongers now face the same fate as mainland Chinese, free to talk only about what the government allows them to talk about. Speak out on anything else, and they risk arrest, prosecution, and prison.The West, at least at the moment, has no satisfactory answer to the crackdown facilitated by the NSL. But we should be under no illusions: Xi Jinping is bringing his increasingly totalitarian rule to Hong Kong. Just over a month and a half after the law's passage, that much is all too clear. |
Northern Cyprus set to reopen Cypriot ghost town on ceasefire lines Posted: 21 Aug 2020 04:24 AM PDT Northern Cyprus is almost ready to begin reopening the town of Varosha, the breakaway state's premier said on Friday, a former resort area fenced off and abandoned in no-man's land since a 1974 Turkish invasion that split the island. Turkish Cypriot Prime Minister Ersin Tatar said the revival of Varosha, now an eerie collection of derelict hotels, churches and residences, would bring trade and tourism benefits. The move is likely to anger Greek Cypriots, 39,000 of whom once lived in Varosha before fleeing advancing Turkish forces 46 years ago, and stoke tensions between the two sides. |
Salvors begin sinking ship which ran aground off Mauritius Posted: 20 Aug 2020 11:22 AM PDT |
The 2021 visa lottery winners have been announced. Egypt, Iran and Russia top the list Posted: 21 Aug 2020 07:12 AM PDT |
Posted: 20 Aug 2020 03:03 PM PDT |
Mali Coup Leaders Seized Power Days After Returning From Military Training Camp in Russia Posted: 21 Aug 2020 06:08 AM PDT ABUJA, Nigeria—The leaders of the coup that ousted Mali's President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita spent most of the year training in Russia before returning to boot out the democratically-elected leader at gunpoint, according to sources in the Malian military.The rebels took control of Mali's largest military base in Kati, just outside the capital, Bamako, on Tuesday before storming Keita's official residence, seizing the president and forcing him to resign as leader of the West African nation..Numerous media outlets, including the BBC, immediately reported that the coup was led by Malick Diaw and Sadio Camara, two army colonels who hold top positions at the Kati military base and who are reportedly very close friends. But there's something else both men have in common— they were trained by the military in Russia.Two Malian military officials told The Daily Beast that both Diaw and Camara were in Russia before they returned to Mali to stage Tuesday's coup, confirming a local media report. The two officers are said to have departed Bamako for Moscow early in the year to attend military training sponsored by the Russian armed forces, they returned a little over a week before the coup was executed.Sources in the Malian military told The Daily Beast that a number of senior officers suspect Diaw and Camara planned the coup from Russia and that both men had been in contact with others involved in the plot from their training base abroad. Rumors that some officers were contemplating a coup had begun to spread quietly in the military at the start of August, even before the two colonels returned home."A coup of this nature is not something you plan in a matter of days," a lieutenant in the Malian army, who previously served in Kati, told The Daily Beast on the condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorised to speak. "These two men spent a long time in Russia and within days of their return they executed a coup easily and successfully," said the lieutenant, who did not partake in the plot. "That should tell you that they worked on this for a long time."It's not yet clear if Diaw and Camara sought military assistance or cover from Russia, which has intervened in the election of a number of African leaders in recent years. Some military officials aren't ruling out Russia's direct involvement. "Maybe in terms of communication they got protection from the Russians," said the army lieutenant. "One will assume that the Russians would have been monitoring their communication lines since the officers were foreign military personnel staying in Russia."Just before midday on Tuesday, soldiers loyal to Diaw, the second highest ranked administrator at the Kati military base, took control of the camp's armory and began to arrest their superiors. Once they took control of the base, they headed to Bamako where they arrested President Keita and Prime Minister Boubou Cisse and drove back to the base with the two men before forcing them to relinquish power.At the time of the coup, Diaw, who is believed to be in his late 30s, was the deputy chief of the Kati military base, a position he is said to have held for more than a year. His role in Tuesday's coup is likely to earn him an influential position in the junta.Camara, the co-leader of the coup, previously headed the military academy of Kati. BBC Afrique, citing a local news outlet, reported that he was born in 1979. He was director of the Kati military academy for many years until January when he left the post to attend military training in Russia alongside Diaw. He returned to Bamako from Moscow over a week ago to begin a month-long leave period and, unknown to many, to execute a coup. "There were just a few persons who knew they were back from their trip," a Malian army colonel, who wasn't involved in the coup, told The Daily Beast. "[It was] mostly those close to them and who plotted the coup with the two officers [that knew they had returned from Russia]."Russia has a reputation for swooping into African countries and hoping to reshape their politics for material gain; a candidate backed by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a Russian financier indicted in the U.S. for targeting the 2016 presidential election, has emerged as the president of Madagascar; a former Russian intelligence officer is now the top security adviser to the president of the Central African Republic; and the Kremlin has been caught interfering in the domestic politics of eight African countries through social media networks traced to entities tied to Prigozhin.It's still not clear how the Malian coup plotters plan to lead the country they now rule as a military junta, or if they will be inviting any assistance from Moscow.On Wednesday, Assimi Goita, a colonel in Mali's army announced that he had taken charge of the country and declared himself the head of the junta. Goita—one of the five soldiers who announced the coup on the state broadcaster ORTM—met with senior government officials whom he urged to immediately return to work."By making this intervention, we have put Mali first," Goita explained to the officials, while trying to justify the forceful removal of Keita.Before the coup, he was head of a special military unit based in central Mali and had taken part in the annual Flintlock training put together by the U.S. military to help countries in the Sahel region better tackle militants."Mali is in a sociopolitical and security crisis," he said. "There is no more room for mistakes."Tuesday's mutiny could turn out to be an even bigger mistake. A similar coup in 2012, which began at the same Kati army base, created nationwide disharmony and political uncertainty. That allowed extremist groups to expand their reach in the north of Mali. Despite a French military intervention, which has slowed their advancement, these jihadists groups are still active in the region and may capitalise on the current leadership crisis to extend their jihad, it remains to be seen what the Kremlin makes of that threat.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Thousands of chicks arrive dead to farmers amid USPS turmoil Posted: 20 Aug 2020 12:35 PM PDT |
Portland clashes rage again outside US immigration building Posted: 21 Aug 2020 01:05 AM PDT Protesters in Oregon's largest city have clashed again with federal agents outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building that has become a new focus of the demonstrations that have gripped Portland for months, officials said Friday. People in a group of about 100 late Thursday and before dawn Friday sprayed the building with graffiti, hurled rocks and bottles at agents and shined laser lights at them, Portland police said in a statement. The violence came a day after protesters clashed with federal agents for the first time since July in a demonstration that also targeted the ICE building. |
Senegal port seeks removal of 2,700 tonnes of chemical that caused Beirut blast Posted: 21 Aug 2020 01:23 AM PDT The port of Senegal's capital Dakar on Thursday said it had requested the removal of around 2,700 tonnes of highly explosive ammonium nitrate stored in its complex - the same volume of the chemical that caused Beirut's devastating port blast this month. The unidentified owner of the stockpile has found a warehouse to store the industrial chemical outside the city, according to the general directorate of the port, which sits next to Dakar's densely populated downtown. "He is currently working with the environment ministry to obtain approval to urgently remove this cargo," it said in a statement that did not say how long the port had stored the goods destined for Mali. The port strictly adheres to international rules for the management and storage of dangerous materials, it said. Beirut's port had held 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate for six years without safety measures, before they detonated on August 4, killing more than 150 people, injuring thousands and leaving about a quarter of a million people homeless. "The dramatic situation that Beirut has just experienced" prompted the High Commander of Dakar's port to take journalists on a tour of the port's facilities to show that security measures are up to standard, the statement said. The Beirut blast should be a wake-up call for countries on the dangers of ammonium nitrate, experts say. Commonly used in fertilisers and as an industrial explosive, it is considered relatively safe if handled properly, but has caused some of the world's deadliest industrial accidents. |
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