Friday, September 30, 2022

Elina Konavalyuk and her family had a relaxed if not indifferent attitude towards Russia before all this. Some family members had even felt a bit nostalgic for the USSR over the years. But no more. Not after living under attack by Russian soldiers who occupied the Kherson region of Ukraine early in the war, sleeping months, frightened, in a basement and Konavalyuk, her mother and grandparents finally making a dangerous escape from their homeland.

"It was a fight for survival," she said about living under Russian occupation last winter, something she had never imagined could happen to her or anyone she knew. The port city of Kherson, just north of Crimea, was the first major city to fall to the Russians in their 2022 war. "I don’t have that adrenaline right now. Then all my thoughts were just about standing in line for six hours for a slice of bread. You would see your neighbors’ corpses lying outside your house. It was both mentally and physically so hard because you needed to acquire new skills just to survive."

UKRAINE HAS 'ACCELERATED' NATO APPLICATION IN WAKE OF RUSSIA ANNEXING TERRITORIES, ZELENSKYY SAYS

Last winter and spring, I posted some of what Konavalyuk shared with me during her time underground, never using her name out of fear for her safety. And in fact, she says Russian border guards checked her phone and interrogated her intensely on the way out, suspicious as they are of each fleeing Ukrainian. Her "Diary of Survival" memoirs read like poetry with descriptions of what it feels like to forget the smell of fresh laundry and the taste of jam.

Konavalyuk is a journalism student. Documenting what was going on in her hometown and teaching herself what blasts correspond to what sort of weapons fire in order to know when to run, how to react to the constant noise and bombardment all around her, she says, helped her get through the long and terrifying months. Now, in the safety of Europe, she finds it hard sometimes, she says, to see people enjoying the worry-free life of those who are not living in a state of war.

FURTHER TROUBLE IN RUSSIA’S BACKYARD AS RECENT FIGHTING BETWEEN ALLIES CREATES NEW HEADACHE FOR PUTIN

And Friday was a particularly somber day for people like Konavalyuk who hail from the Ukrainian territories Russia just declared its own, annexing Kherson and three other regions that together account for fifteen percent of Ukraine’s territory. The formal annexation followed what has widely been called illegitimate referendums. 

"People were forced to vote at gunpoint, rounded up on the street. They came to their homes and threatened them," Konavalyuk said. "So it’s very easy to refute this referendum." Russian President Vladimir Putin, speaking in the Kremlin’s chandeliered Georgievski Hall whose shining parquet floors seemed in striking contrast to the grim-faced government officials who filled the room, said Russia would never give those territories back. Konavalyuk has a different view, that Ukraine will get its land back, but she says, the "fact that this will now be considered an attack on Russia complicates things," she says. "It will be more difficult for us to get back the Kherson region and the rest of the occupied territories."

When I ask who will do the fighting, who will get Kherson back, she says, "Different Ukrainians from different parts are fighting for Kherson. The most incredible thing for me is that Ukraine is now more united than before. There’s no difference at all right now—if you’re from the South or from the West. In other words, we are united as one people in returning our lands. We are also one people."



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North Korea fired its fourth ballistic missile in one week, following Vice President Kamala Harris making a mistake during her prepared remarks at the Korean Peninsula's Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)

The missile was fired into the East Sea on Saturday, South Korea's military told Yonhap.

It's the fourth missile fired by North Korea in the past seven days.

The provocation comes after Harris said on Thursday that the United States has a "strong alliance" with "the Republic of North Korea."

VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS COMMENDS US ALLIANCE WITH 'REPUBLIC OF NORTH KOREA' IN DMZ SPEECH GAFFE

Harris intended to refer to the Republic of Korea, which is South Korea's official name.

"I cannot state enough that the commitment of the United States to the defense of the Republic of Korea is iron-clad, and that we will do everything in our power to ensure that it has meaning in every way that the words suggest," Harris said when visiting the DMZ.

VP KAMALA HARRIS VISITS JAPAN TO DISCUSS TAIWANESE SECURITY SITUATION: OFFICIAL

North Korea also fired two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea within hours of Harris leaving South Korea on Thursday.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Wednesday that the missile tests are "not unusual," adding that it wouldn't stop Harris from going to the DMZ.

"As you know, North Korea has a history of doing these types of tests," Harris said.

Fox News' Andrea Vacchiano and the Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Iranian authorities have intensified their crackdown against protesters in the wake of Mahsa Amini’s death, and the Intelligence Ministry announced the arrest of nine foreign nationals as well as journalists and celebrities. 

"They [the regime] want to silence them. The Achilles’ heel of this regime has always been its people," Lisa Daftari, a Middle East expert and editor-in-chief of The Foreign Desk, told Fox News Digital. 

"They know that the people have reached a tipping point and are fueled by the disenchantment.

"They are literally putting their lives on the line to tell the world that they do not want this regime. The regime has doubled down on using any force needed to quash these protests. By rounding up journalists, poets, singers and celebrities, they are trying to make an example out of them to stop the protests." 

IRAN PROTESTERS INSIST ISLAMIC REGIME ‘DOES NOT REPRESENT’ THE PEOPLE IN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW

Protests started at the funeral for Amini, 22, after her death while in the custody of the morality police. The police claim she merely fell into a coma following her arrest. Her family and some witnesses say they saw evidence police had beaten her.

As of Friday, the protests reportedly spread to over 140 Iranian cities, with at least 83 killed and 3,000 arrested across 31 provinces, according to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which released an update Friday on its monitoring of the protests. 

The regime sought to quell the protests by cutting off access to social media in more than a dozen cities in recent days, a move that has precluded the widespread killing of protesters in previous instances of unrest.

TRIBUNAL DECLARES IRAN COMMITTED 'CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY DURING CRACKDOWN OF 2019 PROTESTS

Police over the weekend arrested Niloofar Hamedi, the journalist who first reported Amini’s death, and have arrested 28 other journalists, including several from the Iranian reformist newspaper Shargh, according to the Committee for Protecting Journalists. 

The Foreign Desk reported that most of the journalists were taken during post-midnight raids on their homes with electronic devices confiscated. 

IRAN POLICE WARN THEY WILL CRACK DOWN WITH ‘ALL THEIR MIGHT’ AS PROTESTS NEAR THIRD WEEK

Even prominent artists, including poet Mona Borzouei and singer Shervin Hajipour, have been arrested after posting media in support of the protests. The regime has accused foreign nations of stirring up violence through these celebrities and journalists. 

But the world has shown support for the protests. The U.S. responded to Amini’s death by sanctioning the morality police and seven other Iranian security officials "responsible for suppressing nonviolent protests" in the country, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Sept. 22. He directly blamed the morality police for Amini’s death. 

"The people of Iran are getting support from all over the world, especially on social media," Daftari said. "Iranians inside Iran with large followings are using their popularity and platforms to post support for the protests and that’s why the regime is targeting them. They want to silence them."



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As swirling mists and light rain rolled in from the Atlantic over the port city of Santos, embattled incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro, who is locked in a tough re-election bid with leftist icon Lula da Silva, roared into a rockstar reception at a packed convention center at the head of a motorcade of two dozen motorcycles. In Brazilian politics, all roads lead to Sao Paulo, a state of 45 million people, which constitutes 22% of the Brazilian electorate. The energy was palpable as thousands of flag-waving party supporters chanted, "Mito! Mito! Mito!" (legend).

Bolsonaro wasted no time in launching into his opponent, the gravelly voiced union leader Lula, deeming him "the greatest thief in the history of Brazil," to thunderous acclaim. His son Eduardo Bolsonaro, a federal deputy for Sao Paulo, worked the crowd and posed for selfies with delighted supporters.

Lula da Silva closed his campaign earlier in the week in Anhembi, Sao Paulo, with an event featuring a who’s who of Brazilian artists and musicians and a video appearance by outspoken Pink Floyd frontman Roger Waters, a longtime Lula admirer. Lula presented himself as a great unifier and blamed Bolsonaro for the nation’s divisive climate, saying, "The time of hate and war is over" while promising "a time of peace, democracy, unity, prosperity, love and hope."

BRAZILIAN JUDGE TEMPORARILY SUSPENDS EASING OF GUN CONTROL LAWS DUE TO ELECTION VIOLENCE FEARS

The frontrunner, Lula finds himself on a remarkable political roller-coaster ride, from beloved ex-president, to reviled paragon of corruption, to an inmate serving a 12-year sentence, to a sympathetic figure of wrongly persecuted politician seeking redemption, to presidential frontrunner.

It’s an unprecedented turn of events for the Workers Party, who saw their president, Dilma Rousseff, unceremoniously impeached by the Brazilian Congress in 2016, and then lost the 2018 election by a wide margin.

Political analyst Cristian Derosa notes that "The reason for Lula leading in the polls is still a mystery. The fact is that the anti-Workers Party movements had some specificities. Dilma was not Lula, and this made it difficult for the left to come out in force in her defense. Second, there was a political negotiation operation to, let's say, hand over Dilma's head to the people in order to preserve the entire system. With that, the anti-Workers Party movement was temporarily satisfied and neutralized … but Michel Temer, the great ‘butler’ of the republic, was in power as a guardian of the establishment." Temer served as Brazil's president before Bolsonaro came to power.

It is this establishment that loathes Bolsonaro and has now unified around Lula with remarkable efficiency and discipline.

TRUMP GREETS BRAZILIAN PRESIDENT JAIR BOLSONARO, SAYS ‘STRONGLY’ CONSIDERING NATO PRIVILEGES FOR BRAZIL

Yet, the tempestuous Brazilian presidential election is beset with great ironies: while incumbent Jair Bolsonaro is routinely criticized for injecting violence into the political debate, he himself was a victim of a near-fatal stabbing on the campaign trail in 2018. While Lula leads the charge that Bolsonaro will not respect the results of a democratic election and embraces military dictatorship, it is Lula himself who has built a foreign policy on uniting a who's who of leftist military dictatorships for an annual geopolitical pow-wow, under the auspices of the Sao Paulo Forum.

Nonetheless, Bolsonaro is certainly not blameless for the precarious position in which he finds himself. To say that Bolsonaro is viewed unfavorably by the Brazilian and international media is putting it mildly. He has reveled in his "Trump of the Tropics" role, and he lives to antagonize the media, much like his counterpart from the Northern Hemisphere.

Also like Trump, Bolsonaro has experienced difficulties in building the kind of political coalitions necessary to pass legislation and govern. The Bolsonaro movement is known for frequent infighting and power struggles.

However, despite the international media's frequent depiction of Brazil as a failed state, the nation has fared reasonably well during the pandemic compared to its peers. Paulo Guedes, a University of Chicago-trained economist, has kept a steady hand on the reins of the economy.

As Daniel Raisbeck, Latin American policy analyst at the Cato Institute, notes, "Bolsonaro’s government has taken actions to free Brazil’s highly bureaucratized economy, among them the "Economic Freedom Act" to reduce interventionism, and other measures to simplify business operations," yet believes "he moved too slowly to privatize Petrobras, the majority state-owned oil concern."

BRAZIL PRESIDENT RIPS LEONARDO DICAPRIO OVER AMAZON DEFORESTATION TWEET: 'GIVE UP YOUR YACHT BEFORE LECTURING'

The first-round election will take place on October 2, followed by a second round on October 30 if no candidate wins 50%.

Bolsonaro has lagged in the polls, as the Brazilian public seems to have forgotten or ignored Lula’s corruption conviction, which the Supreme Court overturned on a technicality. Political analyst Flavio Morgenstern argues, "Without getting Lula out of jail, the left's chance against Bolsonaro would be zero."

The Bolsonaro camp believes that the polls are flawed, pointing to erroneous predictions in previous congressional races, and suggests that the results will be much tighter than current polls indicate. Goldman Sachs, in a report for its clients last week, shared a similar view, noting that actual results could diverge from polls. Still, Lula's support has been ticking upwards recently, with the last five polls giving him leads of between 7% and 17%.

Nycollas Liberato, president of the classical liberal group Brazil Students for Liberty, notes, "It is frowned upon in countless social circles to be a Bolsonaro supporter" and believes that "embarrassed voters" (those reluctant to admit their Bolsonaro support to a pollster) may make for a surprise on election day. 

Liberato noted that "although many polls show the possibility of Lula winning in the first round, I would say that the possibility of a second round is 70%."

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A suicide bomber struck an education center in a Shiite area of the Afghan capital on Friday, killing 19 people and wounding 27, a Taliban-appointed spokesman for the Kabul police chief said.

The explosion inside the center in the Dashti Barchi neighborhood of Kabul — populated mostly by members of Afghanistan’s minority Shiite community — took place in the morning hours, said the spokesman, Khalid Zadran.

The victims included high school graduates, both girls and boys, who were taking a practice university entrance exam when the blast went off, Zadran said. The center is known as the Kaaj Higher Educational Center and helps students prepare and study for college entrance exams, among its activities.

Zadran said education centers in the area will need to ask the Taliban for additional security when they host events with big gatherings, such as the study prep on Friday.

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN MOSQUE EXPLOSION LEAVES 7 DEAD, 41 WOUNDED: TALIBAN

One eyewitness, 19-year-old high school student Shafi Akbary, had been attending the center for the past six months. The center had invited students to come at around 6:30 a.m. on Friday for the practice exam, and Akbary said around 300 students were present.

"First, we heard the sounds of a few gunshots at the main gate. Everyone was worried and tried to run to a different direction. Soon after that, a huge explosion occurred inside the center," said Akbary, speaking to The Associated Press over the phone..

Akbary, who was unharmed in the explosion, said he saw dozens of bodies and wounded people scattered around him. "I was so afraid and couldn’t even move myself to help them. Later, other people ran inside and took us out," he added.

The suicide bombing was the latest in a steady stream of violence since the Taliban seized power. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

TALIBAN OFFICIAL CONFIRMS AT LEAST 3 DEAD IN EXPLOSION AT AFGHAN CAPITAL

The Islamic State group — the chief rival of the Taliban since their takeover of Afghanistan in August 2021 — has in the past targeted the Hazara community, including in Dashti Barchi.

"Our teams have dispatched at the site of the blast to find out more details," Abdul Nafi Takor, a Taliban-appointed spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said earlier.

The U.S. chargé d’affaires for Afghanistan, Karen Decker, condemned the attack in a tweet.

"Targeting a room full of students taking exams is shameful; all students should be able to pursue an education in peace & without fear," she said. "We hope for a swift recovery for the victims & we grieve with the families of the deceased."

Afghanistan’s Hazaras, who are mostly Shiite Muslims, have been the target of a brutal campaign of violence for the past several years, blamed on the regional affiliate of the Islamic State group. Militants have carried out several deadly attacks in Dashti Barchi, including a horrific 2020 attack on a maternity hospital that killed 24 people, including newborn babies and mothers.

The United Nations children's fund said it was appalled by Friday's horrific attack, adding that violence in or around educational establishments was never acceptable.

"This heinous act claimed the lives of dozens of adolescent girls and boys and severely injured many more," UNICEF tweeted. "Children and adolescents are not, and must never be, the target of violence."



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Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday signed an order that will officially, in Russia’s view, annex four Ukrainian regions under the rule of the Russian Federation.

The signing ceremony held at the Georgievsky Hall of the Great Kremlin Palace in Moscow took place just days after referenda concluded in the Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions which allegedly showed overwhelming support in favor of seceding from Ukraine.

"The people have made their choice," he began his speech according to a translation by a Financial Times reporter. 

"This is the will of millions," Putin said, declaring residents of the territories Russian citizens.

Putin vowed that Russia will now use "all available means" to guard the annexed territory in Ukraine and suggested Moscow could use any attack in the war torn region – where fighting has raged since February – to further escalate its aggressive tactics. 

Russian proxies in the regions claimed to have garnered 87% of civilian support in Kherson, 93% in Zaporizhzhia, 98% in Luhansk and 99% in Donetsk.

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN TO ANNEX 4 UKRAINIAN REGIONS IN FRIDAY CEREMONY

Western officials have rejected the results and alleged they were falsified to serve the Kremlin’s political aims, mimicking similar steps taken in Crimea in 2014. 

Putin paved the way for the annexation of Zaporizhizhia and Kherson earlier Friday by signing an executive order that recognized their "state sovereignty and independence."

The move echoed steps Putin took in February in the lead up to the invasion when he "recognized" the independence of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic (LPR) and the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR).

RUSSIAN STRIKE KILLS 25 PEOPLE IN UKRAINE AMID MOSCOW PREPARATION TO ANNEX TERRITORY: OFFICIALS

Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday claimed the order followed the "will expressed by the people" and was done "in accordance with the generally accepted principles and norms of international law."

In a statement posted to Telegram the ministry said Moscow was "recognizing and reaffirming the principle of equal rights and self-determination of the peoples as set forth in the United Nations Charter."

However, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres on Thursday condemned Russia’s attempts to seize roughly 15% of Ukraine’s territory and said it was a "clear" violation of the U.N. Charter.

"Any annexation of a state’s territory by another state resulting from the threat or use of force is a violation of the principles of the UN Charter and international law," he told reporters. 

Putin is expected to meet with representatives from the LPR, DPR and Moscow-installed regional officials from Zaporizhzhia and Kherson Friday.

Check back on this developing story.



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As protests continue to sweep across Iran, a who’s who of legal experts announced in London on Friday that the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ali Khamenei, and the current President Ebrahim Raisi, carried out a lethal plan to "commit crimes against humanity," resulting in the mass murder of 1,500 protestors.

The Iran Atrocities Tribunal — also known as the Aban Tribunal for the Iranian calendar month in which the elimination of regime opponents took place — has been meeting in London and conducted an exhaustive investigation into the clerical regime’s violent crackdown on Iranian protestors during waves of demonstrations against rising fuel prices and the legitimacy of the regime in November 2019. The tribunal is not legally binding, but organizers hope the evidence and findings contained in it will lead to a United Nations inquiry.

The panel implicated Raisi, who was head of Iran’s opaque judiciary at the time, and the so-called "moderate" former president of the theocratic regime, Hassan Rouhani, for crimes against humanity. The non-binding legal finding raises a new dimension of criticism against the existence of the reportedly totalitarian regime in Tehran.

According to the 24-page "Judgment Summary" authored by the tribunal, the panel of lawyers unanimously determined "the Iranian government and security forces (including Ministry of Interior, Supreme Council of National Security, Provincial Security Councils, police forces (NAJA), the IRGC [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps], the paramilitary Basij, Ministry of Intelligence, other plainclothes forces and the Ministry of Justice) designed and implemented a plan to commit crimes against humanity of murder, imprisonment, enforces disappearances, torture and sexual violence in order to quell the protests and conceal the crimes committed."

IRAN REGIME LEADERS ACCUSED OF MASS MURDER IN 2019 PROTESTS

The tribunal’s sweeping indictment of the Islamic Republic’s autocratic government and its pervasive security apparatus provides news evidence for opponents of the Biden administration’s nuclear negotiations with Tehran.

Biden and other world powers seek to provide Iran’s regime with more than $100 billion in sanctions relief in exchange for temporary restrictions on the Islamic Republic’s alleged plan to build a nuclear weapon. 

When asked about the tribunal report before its official release, a U.S. State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital "While we cannot comment on a report that has not been made public, the United States welcomes efforts by civil society organizations to promote justice and accountability for Iran’s long history of using violence as a means to suppress peaceful dissent, which we are seeing yet again in the Iranian government’s violent and repressive response to the ongoing protests today."

A Reuters news agency investigation determined that the Islamic Republic of Iran murdered about 1,500 people during the November 2019 nation-wide protests.

IN DESPERATE EFFORT TO SALVAGE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL, WILL US CAVE TO EU APPEASEMENT?

Alireza Nader, an Iran expert, told Fox News Digital "The U.S. policy toward the Islamic Republic regime is inherently contradictory. U.S. officials like Jake Sullivan [National Security Advisor] condemn the regime’s brutal treatment of protestors but at the same time are negotiating an agreement with the regime to provide the regime with tens of billions of dollars to crush the same protestors."

Amin Ansarifard, the father of the victim Farzad Ansarifard, said about the tribunal that "This result does not bring peace for those of us who lost family members in 2019 to the government’s indiscriminate killing of protestors, but it is the necessary step to getting justice for those we lost."

Wayne Jordan, an international lawyer and the tribunal chair, said "This could not come at a more urgent time. Once again, the people of Iran are taking to the streets to demand accountability and justice for a government that has shown, time and time again, their willingness to violate human rights to quell the voice of the people. The judgment of the Iran Atrocities (Aban) Committee is a vital step to establishing an accurate record to bring the perpetrators to justice through international law, so that we do not see a repeat of 2019."

DOZENS DEAD, OVER 1,200 ARRESTED IN IRAN AS REGIME WARNS OF 'DECISIVE' CRACKDOWN

The tribunal held public session in November 2012 and in February 2022 to collect evidence from 55 witnesses, including protestors and individuals who were allegedly tortured and arrested by the regime. The panel received written statements from 169 witnesses.

Iran’s regime lashed out at the proceedings and declined to appear at the tribunal to refute the allegations. Fox News Digital reached out to Iran’s foreign ministry and its U.N. mission for a comment.

Shadi Sadr, a prominent Iranian human rights lawyer and co- organizer of the tribunal, said "We must prevent this happening again. This judgment establishes beyond doubt the culpability of named individuals who are directly accountable for human rights abuses in the 2019 protests. The result of this tribunal ought to trigger a UN-led independent review. There must be a coordinated response by the international community to hold those responsible for crimes against humanity to account under international law."

Fox News Digital reached out to the United Nations for comment.



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A Russian strike against the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia killed at least 25 people and injured 28 others, officials say.

Oleksandr Starukh, the regional governor of Zaporizhzhia, announced the grim news in a statement on Friday. He stated that Russian troops targeted a humanitarian convoy heading to a Russian-occupied area.

Starukh posted pictures of bodies lying on the ground and destroyed vehicles in the wake of the attack, which was not immediately acknowledged by Russia.

The governor said the people in the convoy traveled to rescue their relatives from Russian-occupied territory. Moscow plans to officially annex four regions of Ukraine on Friday after holding a controversial referendum vote in the disputed areas.

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN TO ANNEX 4 UKRAINIAN REGIONS IN FRIDAY CEREMONY

The "sham referenda", which was conducted by Russian proxies earlier this month, allegedly asked Ukrainians in disputed territory if they would like to become part of Russia. The votes were held in the Luhansk and Kherson regions, in addition to the partially Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions.

After five days of voting, Russian-appointed officials in Ukraine claimed that they garnered 98 percent of civilian support in Luhansk and 99 percent in Donetsk, in addition to 93 percent in Zaporizhzhia and 87 percent in Kherson.

DECADES OF KREMLIN PREJUDICE IN DAGESTAN FUELS PROTESTS AMID PUTIN'S CONSCRIPTION DECREE

Moscow-installed officials from all four regions claim that the votes show support for Russia’s illegal seizure of Ukrainian territory. Russia previously held a similar referendum in Crimea and used the results to annex the peninsula in 2014.

The illegal referendums, which have been repeatedly criticized by Western leaders, are expected to escalate the Russo-Ukrainian War. 

The four territories are planned to be officially annexed by Russia during a ceremony in Moscow on Friday. Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to give a speech at the Kremlin afterward. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Iranian protesters spoke exclusively to Fox News Digital to express their outrage against the Islamic regime in their country as well as the desire to remove Ayatollah Khamenei as supreme leader of Iran since the man "does not represent the people."

"We wanted to demonstrate not only to the regime but also want people the world over [to know] — the Iranian people reject this regime, and they want it overthrown," Mashhad, a 42-year-old teacher in Iran, explained.

"Our ultimate goal and ultimate desire and demand is the overthrow of the regime in its entirety, and we are very, very determined to bring this about," she continued. "We want our voices to be heard, and I assure you that we will bring down this regime. We have absolutely no doubt in our minds that we can do it."

Protests started at the funeral for Mahsa Amini, 22, after her death while in the custody of the morality police, who claim that she merely fell into a coma following her arrest. Her family and some witnesses instead said they saw evidence that the police had beaten her.

IRAN PROTESTS: DEATH TOLL CONTINUES TO CLIMB AS REPORTER WHO FIRST HIGHLIGHTED AMINI'S DEATH IS ARRESTED

As of Thursday night, the protests reportedly spread to 164 cities, with 300 people killed and 15,000 more arrested, according to the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK). Fox News Digital could not verify these numbers, but other outlets have reported at least 100 cities with protests and dozens dead as of this week.

Iran has seen an increasing number of protests over the past few years, but the protests that started with Amini’s death feel different to the citizens — both in scope, with women taking a more prominent role, and in the severity of the regime’s response.

"It was much, much harsher, much more severe," said Reyhaneh, 19, from Tehran. "Not only in the numbers of the forces they had — the morality police, security force, plainclothes agents and others — but also their treatment. They were very vicious, very brutal, much more brutal before."

IRAN POLICE WARN THEY WILL CRACK DOWN WITH ‘ALL THEIR MIGHT’ AS PROTESTS NEAR THIRD WEEK

"What I have seen the last two days in Tehran, they have risen up. I myself have taken part in these protests … what I have seen is exemplary bravery and courage, especially because the uprising is being led by women," she added.

"We wanted to demonstrate not only to the regime but also people the world over: the Iranian people reject this regime."

The women spoke to Fox News Digital after Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi spoke before the United Nations General Assembly. Raisi allegedly helped carry out the 1988 "death commission" that led to the deaths of thousands of political dissidents.

IRAN SUMMONS BRITISH, NORWEGIAN AMBASSADORS AMID NATIONWIDE PROTESTS

Mashhad asked why Western governments allowed Raisi to speak to the U.N. and did not show they were "standing with the people of Iran."

"Where is … freedom and support [in] supporting this criminal? And [has] the blood of thousands on his hands, especially in 1988, the massacre," she said. "Why don't they … prosecute him and hold him accountable?"

Mashhad first joined protests two years ago, but she feels this one is different because people have seen how "shameless" the Ayatollah and his regime are, leading to people of many ages and backgrounds across the country to take to the streets.

Reyhaneh said there are examples of previous protests that led to regime change and that the people have no reason to believe this one can’t be same.

"We in our struggle … have put our lives in our hands, willing to sacrifice our lives, and we will fight to the very end to bring about freedom in Iran and already dramatic fundamentalism," she said.



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Thursday, September 29, 2022

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday signed decrees paving the way for the occupied Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia to be formally annexed into Russia.

BLUMENTHAL, GRAHAM CALL FOR ECONOMIC, MILITARY CUTS TO NATIONS THAT RECOGNIZE RUSSIA ANNEXATION OF UKRAINE

The decrees, made public by the Kremlin, said Putin had recognised the two regions as independent territories. This is an intermediary step needed before Putin can go ahead with plans to announce on Friday that the regions are part of Russia.



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A Russian billionaire oligarch with Kremlin ties was federally charged with violating American sanctions along with three others who worked to ensure his child was born in the United States, the Justice Department said. 

Oleg Deripaska, 52, has been the subject of U.S. sanctions imposed by the Treasury Department since 2018. He was accused of acting for or on behalf of a senior Russian official and had operated in the energy sector of the Russian economy.

Deripaska was the owner and controller of Basic Element Limited, a private investment and management company used to advance his various business interests.

"As today’s charges reveal, while serving the Russian state and energy sector, Oleg Deripaska sought to circumvent U.S. sanctions through lies and deceit to cash in on and benefit from the American way of life," Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco said in a statement. 

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN TO ANNEX 4 UKRAINIAN REGIONS IN FRIDAY CEREMONY

Federal prosecutors said he conspired with others to evade the sanctions over several years and illegally used the American financial system to retain three luxury properties. 

Olga Shriki, 42, a New Jersey resident is the only one of the four in police custody. She is charged with trying to help Ekaterina Olegovna Voronina, who is also charged, with getting into the U.S. to give birth to Deripaska's child. 

Authorities said Deripaska spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to make it possible for his child to be born in the United States, so the child could take advantage of the U.S. health care system and benefits of a U.S. birthright. The child, upon birth, received U.S. citizenship.

In an effort to conceal the name of the child's father, the three co-defendants slightly misspelled the child's last name, according to an indictment unsealed Thursday. 

Authorities are demanding Deripaska and his co-defendants forfeit assets in the United States - including a Washington, D.C., property and two Manhattan properties.

The Biden administration has stepped up efforts to sanction Russian billionaires and other supporters of Russian President Vladimir Putin following Moscow's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine earlier this year. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Germany plans to spend up to $195 billion helping consumers and businesses as surging energy prices due to the war in Ukraine are pushing Europe's largest economy into a looming recession.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Thursday that the government was reactivating an economic stabilizing fund previously used during the global financial crisis and the coronavirus pandemic.

The fund will be used to limit the price customers pay for natural gas, which is used to heat homes, generate electricity and power factories. The government is dropping a previously proposed surcharge on natural gas that was meant to help spread the rising cost of purchasing the fuel on the global market.

"One can say this is a double whammy," Scholz said, speaking at a news conference by video link because he is isolating due to a COVID-19 infection.

GERMANY WILL KEEP 2 OF THEIR 3 NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS RUNNING AHEAD OF POSSIBLE ENERGY CRISIS

Scholz said Russia’s decision to cut back natural gas to Europe and the recent leaks on the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines running from Russia to Germany showed that further Russian energy supplies couldn’t be expected in the near future. European officials say gas reductions by state-owned exporter Gazprom are energy blackmail aimed at pressuring European governments over their support for Ukraine and for sanctions against Moscow.

"We're well prepared for this situation though," Scholz said. "We have taken decisions that allow us to deal with this changed situation."

The fund, part of wide efforts across Europe to provide relief on energy bills to households and businesses, was announced as German inflation hit double digits for the first time in decades, reaching 10.9% in September under the EU's harmonized standard. Leading economists warn Germany faces a recession because high prices for food, fuel, electricity and heating are leaving people with less money to spend on other things.

"We are sliding into a recession and will only come out of recession next spring," said economist Torsten Schmidt from the Leibniz Institute for Economic Research. "The main burden is currently being felt by private households, which are suffering a massive loss of purchasing power."

Germany was heavily dependent for years on cheap gas from Russia, and businesses that use a lot of energy have been hard hit after Gazprom's cutbacks sent gas prices through the roof. The government and utilities have turned to more expensive liquefied gas that comes by ship from suppliers including the U.S. and have filled the country's underground storage to 91% ahead of the winter heating season. A gas shortage should be avoided if the winter is average.

Still, the government could be forced to ration energy to businesses if there is an exceptionally cold winter, a scenario that could cause a further sharp drop in the economy. Even now, high prices are making steel and fertilizer makers shut down production, saying it's not profitable due to the cost.

INFLATION IN GERMANY HITS NEAR 50-YEAR HIGH AMID ENERGY CRISIS

Finance Minister Christian Lindner insisted that the fund would not entail further regular borrowing, saying Germany is "expressly not following Great Britain’s path."

The U.K. government recently announced tax cuts funded by borrowing despite plans to spend billions shielding homes and businesses from soaring energy prices, resulting in a sharp fall of the pound this week.



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China has opened dozens of "overseas police service stations" around the globe to monitor its citizens living abroad, including one location in New York City and three in Toronto.

"These operations eschew official bilateral police and judicial cooperation and violate the international rule of law, and may violate the territorial integrity in third countries involved in setting up a parallel policing mechanism using illegal methods," reads a report by Safeguard Defenders, a human rights watchdog, released earlier this month.

The report, titled "110 Overseas: Chinese Transnational Policing Gone Wild," details China's extensive efforts to combat "fraud" by its citizens living overseas, in part by opening several police stations on five continents that have assisted Chinese authorities in "carrying out policing operations on foreign soil."

VP KAMALA HARRIS EXPRESSES SUPPORT FOR TAIWAN, TORCHES CHINA WHILE ADDRESSING NAVY SAILORS IN JAPAN

Europe is home to most of the police stations, with locations spread across the continent in places such as London, Amsterdam, Prague, Budapest, Athens, Paris, Madrid and Frankfurt. North America is also home to four of the stations, with three locations in Toronto and one in New York City. In all, there are 54 such stations in 30 different countries.

The report details how China has attempted to "combat the growing issue of fraud and telecommunication fraud by Chinese nationals living abroad," running operations that have resulted in 230,000 Chinese nationals being "persuaded to return" to China "voluntarily" over the last year to face criminal prosecution.

The Chinese government has claimed that the stations provide vital services to its citizens living abroad, though the report notes that many of the services are those that would be traditionally carried out by an overseas embassy. Instead, the report argues that the stations have been used to enhance China's overseas law enforcement capabilities in possible violation of international law.

The report also outlines the potential human rights abuses associated with the stations, including using harassment and intimidation methods, such as threatening the family members of the overseas citizens. The stations have also served as centers to spread Chinese government propaganda and monitor the behavior and opinions of Chinese nationals.

"As these operations continue to develop, and new mechanisms are set up, it is evident that countries governed by the standards set by universal human rights and the rule of law urgently need to investigate these practices to identify the (local) actors at work, mitigate the risks and effectively protect the growing number of those targeted," the report concludes.



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India's Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that all women, regardless of marital status, can obtain abortions up to 24 weeks into their pregnancies.

Previously, under India’s abortion law, married women could have abortions up to 24 weeks into their pregnancies, but single women were limited to 20 weeks. On Thursday, the court extended the 24-week period to all women.

The judgment was cheered by reproductive rights activists, who said the court had ensured that the law does not discriminate and expands the right to safe and legal abortions to single women.

INDIAN GIRL, 10, GRANTED ABORTION AFTER RAPE

"Now, all the rights that married women have, single women will also have," said Aparna Chandra, an associate professor of law at the National Law School of India, who works on reproductive justice. In its judgment, the court "breaks away from the stigma that is attached to single women getting pregnant," she said.

Abortion has been legal in India since 1971 under the Medical Termination Pregnancy Act. In 2021, the law was amended to allow certain categories of women -- including married women who were divorced or widowed, minors, rape victims or mentally ill women -- to obtain abortions up to 24 weeks, raising it from the previous 20 weeks. But the changes did not include single women, causing many to question why the law differentiated on the basis of marital status.

"The artificial distinction between married and unmarried women cannot be sustained. Women must have autonomy to have free exercise of these rights," Justice Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud said.

The court said denying single women the same access to abortion violated the right to equality before the law under India's Constitution.

Abortion rights have been a contentious issue across the world, especially after the U.S. Supreme Court in June overturned the Roe v. Wade judgment which had established a constitutional right to abortion in the country.

MICHIGAN MAN SAYS HE ACCIDENTALLY SHOT ELDERLY PRO-LIFE VOLUNTEER WHO WAS ALLEGEDLY 'SCREAMING' ABOUT ABORTION

"Internationally, judgments affect each other -- and this is a landmark one because it recognizes a woman's right over her body and reproductive freedom regardless of what governments and legislatures might say," said Supreme Court lawyer Karuna Nundy.

The ruling came after an unmarried woman in a consensual relationship was denied an abortion by a lower court in July because she was past 20 weeks in her pregnancy. Later that month, the Supreme Court allowed her to get an abortion up to her 24th week of pregnancy, and on Thursday extended that right to all women.



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A court in Pakistan's capital city on Thursday acquitted the daughter of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif after she was sentenced to seven years in prison over charges connected with the purchase of luxury apartments in London.

Maryam Nawaz, the vice president of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League, said outside the Islamabad High court that she is "thankful to God that justice has been done." The luxury apartments at issue are owned by her brothers.

FORMER PAKISTANI GOVERNMENT MINISTER MEETS WITH ISRAELI FOREIGN MINISTRY OFFICIALS IN JERUSALEM

The court also acquitted her husband, Mohammad Sadar, who had been sentenced to one year in jail on charges of giving false information to investigators in 2018.

Sharif, who had also been sentenced to 10 years in jail in the same case, has been living in self-imposed exile in London since 2019 after authorities released him on bail so that he could travel abroad to seek medical treatment.

PAKISTAN IS FACING AN OUTBREAK OF WATER-BORNE DISEASES



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The NATO alliance issued a joint statement calling the Nord Stream pipeline leaks a "deliberate, reckless" act of sabotage Thursday and urged an investigation.

The NATO statement came hours after a fourth leak was discovered along the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipeline systems Thursday. The first three leaks all occurred and were discovered within 24 hours on Tuesday.

"The damage to the Nordstream 1 and Nordstream 2 pipelines in international waters in the Baltic Sea is of deep concern," NATO wrote in a statement. "All currently available information indicates that this is the result of deliberate, reckless, and irresponsible acts of sabotage."

"These leaks are causing risks to shipping and substantial environmental damage," the statement continued. "We support the investigations underway to determine the origin of the damage."

GAS PRICES RISE FOR THE FIRST TIME IN NEARLY 100 DAYS

The Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipeline systems lie at the bottom of the Baltic Sea. Two of the four leaks were discovered in Sweden's exclusive economic zone, while the other two were in Danish waters. Sweden discovered one hole in its NS1 pipes and the other hole in its NS2 pipes. Denmark experienced the same.

Seismologists say they recorded explosions near the pipelines prior to the leaks.

NORD STREAM PIPELINE BLASTS WERE LIKELY FROM EXPLOSIONS, NOT EARTHQUAKES, SEISMOLOGIST SAYS

Neither pipeline system was in operation at the time of the explosions. NS1 had been operating at just 20% capacity since July and stopped service entirely at the end of August. Operators stated that international sanctions against Russia had made maintenance impossible.

NS 2, meanwhile, has never entered official operation as Germany declined to certify its completion last year. The project was stopped altogether just days ahead of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24.

Accusations have flown across Europe and the world following the leaks, with Ukraine arguing Russia is to blame. Moscow dismissed the accusation on Wednesday.

"It's quite predictable and also predictably stupid to give voice to these kinds of narratives — predictably stupid and absurd," Peskov said. "This is a big problem for us because, firstly, both lines of Nord Stream 2 are filled with gas — the entire system is ready to pump gas and the gas is very expensive ... Now the gas is flying off into the air."

"Are we interested in that? No, we are not, we have lost a route for gas supplies to Europe," he continued.



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Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday will officially begin annexing four more regions in Ukraine in a signing ceremony following the conclusion of self-run referenda this week that the West and Kyiv have decried as a sham.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Thursday the ceremony would take place in Moscow "on agreements on the accession of new territories into the Russian Federation," first reported Reuters.

The "agreement" will apparently be signed "with all four territories that held referendums and made corresponding requests to the Russian side," he added. 

RUSSIA PLAYS DEFENSE AS UKRAINE ADVANCES IN LUHANSK DESPITE REFERENDUM

Moscow-installed regionals officials from Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaphorizhzhia and Kherson are expected to represent the four regions after claiming to have achieved a monumental show of support for Russia’s illegal seizure of Ukrainian territory.

Polls close Tuesday following five days of voting organized by Russian proxies who have claimed to have garnered 93 percent of civilian support in Zaporizhzhia, 87 percent in Kherson, 98 percent in Luhansk and 99 percent in Donetsk.

Western officials have repeatedly rejected the referenda and have pointed to the last move by Russia to annex parts of Ukraine when it held a 2014 vote in Crimea and claimed that some 97 percent of Crimeans supported leaving Ukraine. 

RUSSIAN PROXIES INTIMIDATE UKRAINIANS AND FORCE REFERENDUM VOTE ON ANNEXATION: LOCAL OFFICIAL

Reporting later showed the election had been falsified with only 30 percent of Crimeans even voting in the proceedings and with just 15 percent backing the peninsula’s annexation. 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken last week accused the Kremlin of bussing in Russians to vote in the referenda and Ukrainian officials over the weekend reported coercive tactics involving intimidation to force Ukrainian’s to vote. 

Annexing the four eastern and southern regions means Russia will begin to claim another 15 percent of Ukraine as Russian territory. 

Moscow has repeatedly said it will consider an attack on the regions, where heavy fighting has persisted for seven months, as an attack on Russia itself – leaving some defense officials concerned that Russia could resort to even more aggressive tactics like nuclear escalation. 

Putin is expected to give a speech following the ceremony. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Protests have broken out across Russia over the last week following a new decree by Russian President Vladimir Putin who called for 300,000 fighting-age men to be added to Moscow’s ranks and shipped off to fight in Ukraine.

But one region in particular has grabbed headlines after hundreds were detained in Russia’s first mobilization order since World War II in an area known as Dagestan.

Located in the high Caucasus Mountains in southern Russia and sharing a border with two former Soviet states, Georgia and Azerbaijan, Dagestan's complex history has led to the outcry seen today.

"The Putin regime has brought the people to the brink," one Dagestani political refugee in Ukraine told Fox News Digital. 

PUTIN'S CALL FOR RUSSIAN CONSCRIPTS WILL REQUIRE ARMS MOSCOW DOESN'T HAVE, NATO CHIEF SAYS

Ali Charinsky fled from the Kremlin in 2016 after being accused of "justifying terrorism" in his work to cover human rights abuses across not only the Caucasus Mountain regions but in areas like Crimea.

The political refugee, now located in Odesa, Ukraine, explained that anger over Putin’s latest order in his home region stems from decades of oppression.

After taking up the presidency in 2000 and his subsequent 22-year reign (including a second stint as prime minister from 2008 to 2012), Putin prioritized an agenda of unification and began cracking down on religious radicalism in the years following the 9/11 attacks on the U.S., Charinsky said. 

Human rights advocates have argued that Putin’s security measures lent credence to oppressive policies that targeted ethnic minorities in areas like Dagestan, a predominately Muslim region.

Aggression among ethnic minorities toward the Kremlin predates Putin’s presidency, and turmoil in Dagestan arose with the Chechen fight for independence after the fall of the Soviet Union in December 1991.

A series of deadly wars raged in Chechnya — which neighbors Dagestan's western border — starting in 1994 before a peace treaty was signed by then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin in 1996, granting broad autonomy.

But by 1999, Putin, in his first stint as Russian prime minister, voided the treaty and launched a decades-long military campaign. By the end of the second war, an estimated 160,000 civilians were believed to have been killed.

Russia has since grappled with simmering insurgencies across the Caucasus Mountains.

"A partisan movement was formed in Dagestan, so [it became] the epicenter of those who still give armed resistance to Russia," Charinsky said in an interview translated with the help of the Ukraine Frontline Media Platform.

But Moscow’s attempts to crack down on radicalism created a system of unchecked police brutality that was impartial in who it targeted in Dagestan.

RUSSIA DETAILS WHO WILL EVADE CONSCRIPTION, WAR IN UKRAINE

"The security forces in the fight against the partisans began to commit atrocities, they began to pressure relatives and acquaintances," he said, adding that anyone could be pulled off the street and brutally interrogated under the guise of counter-terrorism.

"They subjected people to terrible torture in the hope that they would confess to something," he said.

Before he fled Russia, Charinsky said he personally saw people dragged from the streets into unmarked cars and described how a relative of his was illegally detained for two days and tortured before being released.

"In the end, he was simply let go and forgotten," he said, noting that neither he nor his family have ever found out what his relative was suspected of.

Charinsky explained that years of oppressive policies have created a prejudicial view of ethnic minorities, and reports this week suggested that minority groups like Dagestanis have been disproportionately targeted in Putin’s war effort.

"The fact is that everything is chaotic in Russia," he said, claiming that the majority of Russians do not want to go fight in Ukraine.

"When full-fledged mobilization had already begun, they began to squeeze all the juice out of Dagestan, as the largest republic of the Caucasus in terms of population," he continued. "They took everyone."

Charinsky said the level of opposition in Dagestan has taken even its own residents by surprise, and he said, "Putin has … brought them to the peak with his aggressive policies."

"The fact is that everything is chaotic in Russia," he said. "For every Dagestani and Caucasian in general, it is now a fight for their relatives' [lives]."



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Vice President Kamala Harris is visiting the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the Korean Peninsula on Thursday as the vice president's trip to Asia concludes.

The heavily-fortified buffer zone, which separates North and South Korea, is Harris's final stop on the diplomatic trip. The gesture of visiting the DMZ is designed to illustrate America's "rock-solid commitment" to regional security, according to White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

The vice president is expected to discuss nuclear threats from North Korea and Washington's commitment to assist South Korea with defense measures. Shortly before the DMZ visit, Harris met with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and praised the U.S.-South Korean alliance as a "linchpin of security and prosperity." 

She and Yoon also discussed South Korea's economic and technology partnerships with the United States earlier on Thursday, in addition to a gender equity roundtable.

VP KAMALA HARRIS VISITS JAPAN TO DISCUSS TAIWANESE SECURITY SITUATION: OFFICIAL

The visit comes a day after North Korea fired a third ballistic missile into the sea in an act of provocation by Kim Jong-Un. The country has previously fired two short-range ballistic missiles during Harris's stay in Japan.

North Korea also made a similar gesture in June by firing a trio of missiles before President Biden's visit to Seoul that month.

Harris has condemned North Korea’s "illicit weapons program" during a Wednesday speech at United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka, a U.S. Naval base. 

Jean-Pierre said North Korea's missile test was "not unusual" on Wednesday, while affirming that it would not dissuade Harris from visiting the DMZ.

"As you know, North Korea has a history of doing these types of tests," she said.

CONSERVATIVES SLAM VP HARRIS VISIT TO KOREAN BORDER AS ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION SURGES IN US: 'AMERICA LAST'

South Korean activists were seen protesting against Harris' visit near the Presidential Office in Seoul on Thursday. The protestors wore masks showing the faces of Harris and President Yoon as they demonstrated against the U.S.-South Korean alliance.

Harris's visit has also drawn criticism from Republicans who claim she has neglected the migrant crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border. 

After the DMZ visit, Harris will depart from Osan Air Base and fly back to Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Two plans clipped each other while taxiing at Heathrow Airport in London Wednesday night, according to reports. 

Emergency services responded to what appeared to be a Korean Air and Icelandair collision. The two planes avoided a "full on collision" the airport told the Daily Star.

Fox News reached out to Heathrow Airport for comment but did not receive a response. 

A spokesperson told The Telegraph that emergency services responded to the accident, but there were no injuries reported.



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The U.S. Embassy in Moscow has urged all Americans in Russia to flee the nation following President Vladimir Putin’s "partial mobilization" decree last week.

"Russia may refuse to acknowledge dual nationals’ U.S. citizenship, deny their access to U.S. consular assistance, prevent their departure from Russia, and conscript dual nationals for military service," the embassy warned Tuesday.

RUSSIA'S BORDERS SEE DESPERATION AS DRAFT-ELIGIBLE MEN FLEE

The embassy warned that the ability to leave Russia has already become increasingly difficult with limited commercial flights and crowded border check points.

"Those residing or traveling in Russia should depart Russia immediately while limited commercial travel options remain," the statement released by the embassy added.

Putin’s decree to mobilize 300,000 soldiers to go fight in his war in Ukraine has reportedly resulted in hundreds of thousands of conscription age men attempting to flee Russia.

Images have surfaced on social media showing packed airports and Finnish border check point officials have said thousands of cars have jammed up highways as Russians, mostly fighting age men, look to flee from Putin's order.

WHITE HOUSE SAYS 'WE WELCOME' RUSSIANS APPLYING FOR US ASYLUM AMID PUTIN CONSCRIPTION

Russian men have reported flooded into Finland, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Mongolia as other European nations have blocked their borders to Russian citizens. 

The White House said Tuesday it will accept Russian refugees attempting to forgo joining the war in Ukraine. 

Over a five-day period after Putin announced the mobilization on Sept. 21 some 261,000 men had already fled Russia according to Novaya Gazeta Europe Monday.

The embassy warned all Americans in Russia that the State Department has a limited ability to assist, particularly as tensions between Moscow and Washington continue to escalate to levels not seen since the Cold War, and said, "conditions, including transportation options, may suddenly become even more limited."

The State Department has also advised Americans not travel to or through Russia at this time. 



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Vice President Kamala Harris called out China during a speech she made at a U.S. Naval base in Japan on Wednesday, accusing the Asian superpower of "disturbing" activity towards Taiwan.

Harris arrived at United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka – a U.S. Naval base – and toured the USS Howard before addressing Navy personnel that afternoon.

After applauding the work of the U.S. Navy, the vice president launched into a heated rebuke of Chinese military actions. Harris accused the Asian superpower of "undermining" international rules-based order with its acts of aggression against Taiwan.

"China has challenged freedom of the seas. China has flexed its military and economic might to coerce and intimidate its neighbors," the vice president said.

VP KAMALA HARRIS ATTENDS FORMER JAPANESE PM SHINZO ABE'S STATE FUNERAL IN TOKYO

"And we have witnessed disturbing behavior in the East China Sea and in the South China Sea, and most recently, provocations across the Taiwan Strait," she added.

During the speech, Harris briefly alluded to America's role in ensuring "peace and stability" in the region, saying that Washington will continue to support Taiwan.

"The United States believes that peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait is an essential feature of a free and open Indo-Pacific," the vice president said. "We will continue to fly, sail, and operate, undaunted and unafraid, wherever and whenever international law allows."

"We will continue to support Taiwan’s self-defense, consistent with our long-standing policy," she attested, calling Taiwan a "vibrant" democracy that "contributes to the global good."

"The United States is a proud Pacific power. The American people have a profound stake in the future of this region. And we will continue to promote an Indo-Pacific that is free and open, connected, secure and resilient," Harris concluded.

CONSERVATIVES SLAM VP HARRIS VISIT TO KOREAN BORDER AS ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION SURGES IN US: 'AMERICA LAST'

The speech came as Harris's trip to Japan nears an end. Harris is scheduled to visit the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating North and South Korea on Thursday.

Harris's trip to the DMZ prompted backlash from American conservatives, who accuse her of avoiding addressing the migrant crisis at the US-Mexico border. 

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital about the backlash.



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Bill Browder spent a decade navigating the anarchic environment of post-Soviet Russia after moving to Moscow in 1996. He ran a hedge fund that would eventually become the largest outside investor in the country with more than $4.5 billion under management. 

The Stanford Business School graduate took a "naming-and-shaming approach" to his work, clashing with oligarchs and other Russian officials who he believed were taking advantage of the lawlessness of the "Wild East." 

"But, of course, exposing corrupt oligarchs didn’t make me very popular in Russia," Browder writes in his new book, "Freezing Order." "And, in time, my actions led to a cascade of disastrous consequences." 

Russian President Vladimir Putin blacklisted Browder in 2005, expelling him from Russia and sending his cronies to seize the assets of Browder's fund. 

RUSSIAN PROXIES INTIMIDATE UKRAINIANS AND FORCE REFERENDUM VOTE ON ANNEXATION: LOCAL OFFICIAL

Browder evacuated his staff, liquidated the fund's holdings and hired a team of attorneys who would eventually accuse Interior Ministry officials of working with criminals to orchestrate a $230 million tax rebate fraud. 

One of those attorneys, Sergei Magnitsky, was arrested in November 2008 and spent nearly a year in a jail cell, where he was refused medical care for a host of issues he developed. On Nov. 16, 2009, Magnitsky was transferred to another detention center and beaten to death by a group of riot guards with rubber batons. 

In 2012, former President Obama signed the Magnitsky Act into law, which sanctioned the individuals believed to be responsible for the attorney's death and allowed the Treasury Department to target other human rights abusers in Russia. 

Browder has spent the years since then encouraging dozens of other countries around the world to adopt their own version of the Magnitsky Act, a mission that has taken on increased significance in the wake of Putin's invasion of Ukraine earlier this year. 

"This war is, for Putin, an existential war," Browder told Fox News Digital in an interview at the Texas Tribune Festival. 

"He started this war — not because of NATO or of some grand vision of Russian Empire — he started this war because he was afraid that someone was going to, or I should say, the people of Russia, were going to finally say enough is enough."

More than seven months into the invasion, Putin has failed to achieve his immediate goals, prompting the Kremlin to announce a "partial mobilization" last week and conscript 300,000 men into the military, a move that could backfire. 

"He's really walking a tightrope between having to be seen to be strong and upsetting a lot of people by drafting them, putting them in harm's way, having young men killed, in order to stay strong," Browder said. 

ZELENSKYY LAYS OUT ‘PEACE FORMULA’ TO END WAR, BUT SAYS ‘RUSSIA WANTS WAR’

The partial mobilization has met some resistance within Russia. 

More than 2,300 protesters have been arrested during demonstrations in dozens of cities. Some draft offices have been set on fire, while one 25-year-old Russian man opened fire at a miliary enlistment center in the Siberian town of Ust-Ilimsk, wounding the head of the office, according to Reuters. 

"You can be assured of one thing, which is that Putin always escalates. He has only a forward gear, no reverse gear. There's no possibility of negotiation. I've never seen him negotiate anything, so he's going to fight until he can no longer fight," Browder said. 

Putin recently threatened to use "all the means at our disposal" if Russia's "territorial integrity" is threatened, a statement that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy derided as "nuclear blackmail." 

RUSSIA AND US IN 'VERY SPORADIC' TALKS OVER NUCLEAR ISSUES, KREMLIN SAYS 

U.S. officials, meanwhile, have warned of "catastrophic" and "horrific" consequences for Russia if Putin did use nuclear weapons. 

"Putin is a psychopath. He holds nuclear weapons. He only cares about his own survival, and if he somehow saw the use of tactical nuclear weapons as a way of staying alive and staying in power, then he very well might," Browder said. 

The U.S. and Western allies have sent billions of dollars worth of military aid to Ukraine while slapping sanctions on Russian industry and oligarchs. 

Throwing a wrench in Russia's war machine won't be possible until the rest of the world joins in cutting off Russia though, according to Browder. 

"A lot of other countries — China, India, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, South Africa, Brazil — are sitting it out, they're not involved in the sanctions," Browder said. 

"I think that we have to say to the countries that aren't participating, ‘You have a choice. You can either do business with the G7, which makes up the vast majority of the economic output of the world, or you can choose Russia.’"



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Tuesday, September 27, 2022

The special prosecutor leading the Attorney General’s Office investigation into the abduction and disappearances of 43 students in southern Mexico in 2014 has resigned, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Tuesday.

The resignation of Omar Gómez Trejo came one day after the families of the missing students marched on the eighth anniversary of their disappearances.

Gómez Trejo himself appeared to have gained the trust of the families. But the Attorney General’s Office has come under fire for cancelling some 21 arrest orders for suspects -- including 16 members of the military -- without explanation and for sensitive portions of a Truth Commission report being leaked to the press.

MEXICAN AUTHORITIES ISSUE WARRANTS FOR MILITARY, POLICE ALLEGEDLY LINKED TO DISAPPEARANCE OF 43 STUDENTS

That followed some advances in the case, including the arrest of former Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam and of the army officer commanded the base in Iguala, Guerrero, when the students disappeared. He is now a retired general.

At his daily news conference Tuesday, López Obrador alluded to there being "differences," but added that all points of view are respected. He said Gómez Trejo "didn’t agree with the procedures that were followed to approve the arrest orders," but did not elaborate.

The Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez Human Rights Center, a nongovernmental organization representing the students’ families, said in a statement Tuesday that Gómez Trejo’s resignation signaled unjustified interference by superiors in the Attorney General’s Office, including "rushed accusations and cancelled arrest orders."

They expressed confidence in Gómez Trejo and his team’s work and called the developments "extremely concerning" for the pursuit of justice in the case.

At Monday’s march, the students’ families called for the resignation of Attorney General Alejandro Gertz Manero.

MEXICO'S MISSING STUDENTS: 'ANARCHISTS' PROTESTING WITH VANDALISM

Security forces abducted the students from buses in Iguala on Sept. 26, 2014, and turned them over to a local drug gang. New revelations implicate the military in the disappearances, but the motive for the students' abduction remains unclear, though there is growing evidence it involves police and military collusion with drug traffickers."



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Sudanese medical officials warned Monday that more than 1,500 unidentified bodies piled up in several of the country’s morgues could lead to an outbreak of disease, amid accusations the government is covering up their causes of death.

Among the deceased are believed to be pro-democracy protesters, who activists say were killed by government forces in their crackdown on demonstrations. They believe the failure to conduct proper autopsies is an attempt to conceal evidence of those killings.

Mahjoub Babaker, a forensic medicine and toxicology consultant for the country’s autopsy body, expressed concerns because of the proximity of one of the morgues to a market, saying the bodies "could spread a plague among local residents."

SUDAN REPORTS 5 MORE MONKEYPOX INFECTIONS, STOKING FEARS OF LARGER OUTBREAK

At a press conference Monday, he and three other officials argued against the need to carry out independent autopsies, saying instead that there should be a mass burial of the bodies for public safety reasons. They announced a postponement of any autopsies in order to discuss matters with the deceased individuals' families.

Reports of the backlog of bodies awaiting autopsy first emerged in May, with a news video released earlier this month showing piles of corpses and limbs kept in a building that appeared to have no refrigeration. Then, the country’s top public prosecutor authorized the mass burial of the bodies last month without an autopsy.

It came as the country faced an ongoing crackdown on anti-military protests after a military coup last year. In October, Sudan’s short-lived democratic transition was upended when the country’s leading general, Abdel-Fattah Burhan, deposed the government and locked up hundreds of officials and activists.

Pro-democracy groups and families of missing protesters have said the failure to conduct proper autopsies is an attempt to conceal evidence of the killing of hundreds of pro-democracy demonstrators by Sudanese armed forces following the 2019 popular uprising that ousted long-time ruler Omar al-Bashir. In June 2019, the Rapid Support Forces, a powerful armed paramilitary group, opened fire on a group of sit-in protesters in Khartoum, killing more than 100 people.

The prosecutor’s decision in May has sparked several demonstrations outside the morgues from pro-democracy groups.

US CONDEMNS SUDAN MILITARY COUP, PAUSES $700M IN AID

On Sunday, the Sudanese Doctor’s Committee, which has tracked protester deaths and injuries since the coup, held a protest outside the prosecutors’ headquarters. In a statement, the group, called for all burials to be stopped until "a team of international, independent and reliable forensic medicine is retrieved, protecting the rights of the missing and their relatives, and seeking to reach the truth and achieve justice."



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Tens of thousands of Russians have fled the country to Mongolia, Georgia and Kazakhstan as military-age men flea Russian President Vladimir Putin's mobilization order.

Putin ordered a partial mobilization earlier this month, drafting up 300,000 reserve troops. The move has led to widespread fear of general conscription amid the country's invasion of Ukraine.

Mongolia, Georgia and Kazakhstan have borne the brunt of the migration wave, with Georgia stating that daily border crossings have nearly doubled in less than a week.

 "About four to five days ago, there were five to six thousand visitors [from Russia] daily, and now it has increased to about ten thousand," Georgia Interior Minister Vakhtang Gomelauri told reporters Tuesday.

RUSSIAN TROOPS BOXED IN BY UKRAINIAN FORCES AND DNIEPER RIVER, BARGE CARRYING SUPPLIES TO RUSSIAN TROOPS SINKS

Meanwhile, Russians fleeing to Mongolia have had to wait in lines more than a dozen hours long to be processed. The majority of those leaving were men, with some leaving behind their families.

TOP MILITARY BRASS IN UKRAINE'S SOUTH CALLS FOR VOLUNTEERS AS FORCES LOOK TO TAKE BACK KHERSON

"My country has started partial mobilization and I think it is negatively affecting society," one Russian man who fled to Mongolia told Reuters. "We waited a very long time at the Russian side of the border: about 16 hours."

"There were a lot of young people, a lot of people trying to get away from Putin," another man, Aleksey, told the outlet. Aleksey says he left behind his wife and two children and plans to return when the draft has passed.

"We are not afraid, but why do we have to fight in Ukraine, why?" he told Reuters. "If other countries would attack Russia, we would fight for our country. But why are we going to Ukraine? For what?"

Putin ordered the military mobilization on September 21, and since then, nearly 100,000 Russians have fled to Kazakhstan alone. The country is among the most convenient for Russians to flee to, as the Russian language is widely spoken there, and there is no need for a passport to travel across the border.

Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has refused to support Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and he vowed to care for those fleeing the country.

"A lot of people from Russia have come here over the last few days. Most of them were forced to leave by the desperate situation," he said in a Tuesday speech, according to Reuters. "We must take care of them and ensure their safety. This is a political and humanitarian matter."



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Vietnam imposed a curfew and evacuated over 800,000 people as a powerful typhoon that had flooded villages and left at least eight dead in the Philippines aimed Tuesday for the country's central region.

People living near the coast where Typhoon Noru was expected to slam early Wednesday had been ordered to take shelter, national television VTV said. Schools were closed and public events canceled.

In Da Nang and Quang Nam provinces, a curfew will be in effect starting Tuesday evening. It forbids people from venturing out except those on official duty, the TV said.

HURRICANE FIONA: PUERTO RICO FACES ANOTHER DAY WITHOUT POWER, FLASH FLOODING AND ‘CATASTROPHIC’ DAMAGE

Flights at five regional airports were canceled and train service halted until the typhoon passes.

The weather agency said Noru was packing maximum sustained winds of 180 kilometers (111 miles) per hour.

RAINY WEATHER OVER THE WEST LEADS TO FLASH FLOODING CONCERNS

The typhoon deaths in the northern Philippines on Sunday included five rescuers who drowned in San Miguel town in Bulacan province after their boat overturned when it was hit by a collapsed wall, tossing them into rampaging floodwaters, police said.

Nearly 80,000 people had been moved to emergency shelters, some forcibly, across the main Luzon island, where many villages were flooded.



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Russian-led referendums in parts of eastern and southern Ukraine are set to conclude Tuesday with results expected to show that an alleged majority of Ukrainians supports the Kremlin’s illegal annexation of four regions. 

Kyiv and Western officials have already decried Moscow’s referenda as a "sham" political ploy that mimics steps it took in 2014 when Russia reportedly falsified voting results to show Crimeans supported seceding from Ukraine. 

A similar fate for the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions are expected to be announced Tuesday or Wednesday following four days of "voting." 

RUSSIAN PROXIES INTIMIDATE UKRAINIANS AND FORCE REFERENDUM VOTE ON ANNEXATION: LOCAL OFFICIAL

Reports over the weekend suggested Russian proxies forced Ukrainian citizens still in the war torn regions to vote by appearing at their houses with ballots, in some cases with armed personnel, and keeping track of those who voted against annexation. 

Moscow has already said it will view any attack on the four regions as an attack on Russian soil following the results of the referenda.

Absorbing Ukrainian territories – where brutal fighting has raged since the invasion began seven months ago – as a part of Russia could provide Moscow with a pretext for even more aggressive measures.

RUSSIA AND US IN 'VERY SPORADIC' TALKS OVER NUCLEAR ISSUES, KREMLIN SAYS 

On Tuesday acting deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council Dmitry Medvedev warned that Russia would use nuclear weapons if "conventional weapons threatens the very existence of our state."

"If the threat to Russia exceeds the established danger limit, we will have to respond," he said in a Telegram post. "Without asking anyone's permission, without long consultations. And it's definitely not a bluff."

Medvedev’s comments are just the latest in a series of escalatory rhetoric that has brought the threat of nuclear war front and center amid the conflict in Ukraine. 

The acting chairman additionally claimed that the U.S. and NATO would not respond if Moscow decided to use nuclear weapons over concerns of engaging in a nuclear war. 

"I believe that NATO will not directly intervene in the conflict," he continued. "After all, the security of Washington, London, Brussels is much more important for the North Atlantic Alliance than the fate of a dying Ukraine that no one needs."

White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Sunday that the White House has warned the Kremlin that any use of nuclear weapons will have "catastrophic consequences" for Russia.



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