Monday, October 31, 2022

The single, white rose is sheathed in plastic. The flower is affixed to a stucco wall next to an automated cash machine on Shankill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

Frizzell’s Fish Shop once stood here.

Once stood here.

It just so happened that I visited this spot 29 years to the day after two Provisional Irish Republican Army members walked into Frizzell’s with a bomb. It was just after 1 pm on October 23, 1993. The bombers looked customers in the eye, placed a bomb on the counter and blew the place sky-high.

Nine people died in the attack in the mostly Protestant neighborhood.

When I walked on Shankill Road the other day, someone has lashed a bouquet of young, pink flowers to a nearby light post.

A small, white card is taped to the flowers. The writing is in block letters and blue, ballpoint pen. 

"Michael, Evelyn Michelle, murdered 23rd Oct 1993. Remembered Always By Your Brother, Marcus & Family," reads the card.

Head a few miles away you’ll find Falls Road. It was one of the most violent locations in all of Belfast during "The Troubles," the sectarian fight which ran for decades until the Good Friday Accord in the late 1990s. Off of Falls Road, the locals have even renamed Beechmount Avenue "RPG Avenue."

Milltown Cemetery is in West Belfast. Some of IRA’s most controversial figures are buried there. "Terrorists" is how Unionists would characterize them.

Nonetheless, their ornate, alabaster tombstones perpetually glisten in Belfast’s near-constant mist.

At Milltown Cemetery, you’ll find the grave of Bobby Sands. Sands is one of the most notorious figures of the Provisional IRA. Sands was serving time for helping plan the bombing of a furniture company in Belfast in 1971. Sands was a Member of the British Parliament who died in jail after a 66-day hunger strike in 1981.

One of the most unsettling episodes of The Troubles unfolded in the cemetery right by Sands’ grave. It epitomizes the stridency and violence of the conflict.

IRELAND GAS STATION EXPLOSION LEAVES AT LEAST 7 DEAD, MORE INJURED AND MISSING: 'VERY TRAUMATIC SITUATION'

During the height of The Troubles, the lesson from Milltown Cemetery is that even those who go to mourn the dead could end up dead themselves.

Those tied to the IRA and its political wing Sinn Fein came to Milltown for a funeral on March 16, 1988. The funeral was for three Provisional IRA members who were killed by British Special Air Service in Gibraltar on March 3, 1988. Gibraltar is a British territory.

The IRA allegedly planned to bomb British soldiers in Gibraltar. Republicans claimed their men were unarmed and the British fired on them without provocation.

When their families tried to lay to rest the men killed in Gibraltar by the British forces at Milltown, Ulster Defence Association member Michael Stone snuck up a hillside. As he approached the funeral party, Stone lobbed hand grenades toward the crowd and began shooting with a pistol.

Stone’s attack killed three people at Milltown and injured 60.

Back and forth the violence went during The Troubles. Tit-for-tat. It’s complicated and hard to keep up.

There was Bloody Sunday in Derry in 1972 when British forces opened fire into a Republican march in the town’s Bogside neighborhood, populated by Catholics. U2 documented the massacre in its song "Sunday Bloody Sunday." Black Sabbath was more than a decade ahead of U2 with "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath," noted for one of the angriest, foreboding riffs in the history of rock. The Kenneth Branagh movie "Belfast" just hit the screens.

The Catholics call the town Derry – as does the sitcom "Derry Girls." However, Unionists might prefer Londonderry. Years of attacks and conflict add up in places like Omagh, Loughinisland, Greysteel and Enniskillen. There was the bombing in Brighton, England in 1984 during a visit by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

When I worked at another news organization decades ago, an editor famously put out a memo that we should never refer to various killings between the Israelis and Palestinians as "retaliation" in copy. The reason, the editor said, was that it was all retaliation. The same could be said in Northern Ireland.

BIDEN AND BRITISH PM TRUSS TALK NORTHERN IRELAND PROTOCOL IN CONGRATULATORY CALL

Fortunately, the Good Friday Accord doused many of the flames from the conflict. There hasn’t been a major killing or bombing in years. However, a power-sharing arrangement to govern Northern Ireland between the sides is stalled. The Good Friday Accord wasn’t built for Brexit. Northern Ireland now has no functioning government in its "devolved" parliament. A weak British pound, a weak Euro, staggering inflation and heating costs, a push for Scottish independence from the rest of the United Kingdom and political instability at Westminster with the U.K. burning through Prime Ministers – don’t help matters in Northern Ireland.

Covering the violence of The Troubles constituted part of the main beat for journalists from England, Ireland and Northern Ireland between the late 1960s through the early 2000s. It came with the territory. The bombings. The clashes with the Royal Ulster Constabulary. It was just part of the job.

This sounds familiar to a journalist who has covered the U.S. Congress for years now. Granted, some of the violence hasn’t been as gruesome as The Troubles. But the incidents have been just as shocking. And, like the back-and-forth in Northern Ireland, it’s a challenge to keep track.

There was the mass shooting in 2011 which nearly killed former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., wife of Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz. The assassination attempt forced Giffords to resign from Congress. In fact, Giffords’ aide who later took her seat, former Rep. Ron Barber, D-Ariz., was also shot during the attack. There was the baseball practice shooting in 2017 which nearly killed House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La. There was the riot at the Capitol during the certification of the Electoral College. In just the past few months, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., has been the victim of multiple "swatting" attempts. That’s where someone phones in a false alert about someone’s house. The hope is that the SWAT team will barge in and unwittingly shoot the target. A man attacked Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y., with a knife as he campaigned for governor. Serious threats to injure or kill lawmakers from both parties have spiked to frightening levels. The savage, brazen attack on Paul Pelosi, husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., now commands headlines.

The incidents add up. The fear increases.
 

Those of us who have covered Congress for a while have something in common with our journalist colleagues who reported on The Troubles. We can quote specifics about how Republicans on the Congressional team dove for cover in the first base dugout during the baseball practice shooting in the same way and an Irish journalist might talk specifics about the fish shop massacre. Those of us who cover Capitol Hill can tell stories about marauders stalking Speaker Pelosi during the Capitol siege just like those in Northern Ireland can rattle off details about the mayhem at Milltown.

It's all political violence. And the U.S. has endured it for a while now.

Democracies only function when there is mutual respect from both sides. Trust is paramount. The violence from The Troubles didn’t solve the political disputes in Northern Ireland.

The same with the spate of political violence and unrest which now grips the United States.

There is at least a tenuous peace now in Northern Ireland – bereft of violence – despite the uneasy politics.

However, American politics is more than unnerving right now. And unfortunately, the violence associated with American politics is beyond commonplace.

 CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Voters cast ballots for federal office next week for the first time since the Capitol riot. The Department of Homeland Security warns of a "heightened alert" driven by "domestic violent extremism" as the election approaches.

Just like the uneasy peace in Northern Ireland, there won’t be political détente after the election. However, the days and weeks after the election will tell us if the political violence is subsiding or intensifying.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/osAPwEH

Indonesia's food and drug agency (BPOM) said on Monday it had revoked licenses of syrup-type drug production of two local firms for violating manufacturing rules, as it probes the deaths of more than 150 children due to acute kidney injury (AKI).

The decision comes after Indonesia temporarily banned sales of some syrup-based medications and identified the presence in some products of ethylene glycol and diethylene glycol as possible factors in the AKI deaths, most of which were of children under five.

The two are used in antifreeze and brake fluids and other industrial applications but also as a cheaper alternative in some pharmaceutical products to glycerine, a solvent or thickening agent in many cough syrups. They can be toxic and lead to acute kidney injury.

BLOOD PRESSURE MEDICATION RECALLED OVER POSSIBLY CONTAINING CANCER-CAUSING 'IMPURITY'

BPOM chief Penny K. Lukito told reporters "oral liquid" manufacturing licenses of the two companies, PT Yarindo Farmatama and PT Universal Pharmaceutical Industries, has been revoked, adding BPOM are pursuing criminal action against them.

The two firms produced drugs with substandard raw materials, failed to report a change in ingredients and used some materials in excess of guidelines, Penny said.

PT Yarindo Farmatama did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment. A lawyer with PT Universal Pharmaceutical Industries declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.

Indonesia has seen a surge in AKI cases among children since August, which its health minister said was most likely due to changes in the raw ingredients used in cough and fever syrups.

Indonesia imports its raw ingredients for medicine mostly from China and India, according to the health ministry.

Authorities said solvents used in the syrups from the two companies contained impurities.

BPOM said on Monday one of these solvents, propylene glycol, was made by Dow Chemical Thailand. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

BPOM said it would look into distributors of the two drug makers to see if they supplied materials to other pharmaceutical firms.

Indonesia has been investigating AKI cases in consultation with the World Health Organization (WHO) following a similar incident in Gambia earlier this year, which has seen at least 70 deaths related to syrup medications made by India's Maiden Pharmaceuticals.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/7fVE3hO

Two men in London were left dead after a suspected gang-related gun fight broke out on the streets of a residential neighborhood. 

"I am shocked and saddened by this incident. Our thoughts are with the families and friends of the two young men who have tragically lost their lives. This incident will cause a great deal of concern throughout the local community and across London," Chief Superintendent Colin Wingrove of the Central South Command Unit for the Metropolitan Police said, according to Sky News. 

Armed police responded to the Brixton district of South London Sunday evening just ahead of 8 p.m. local time after gunshots rang out, the Sun reported. 

Detectives say that two cars were driving in the Railton Road area before one of the cars collided with a moped. That car also hit some parked cars on the street. 

MAN KILLED IN SHOOTING INVOLVING POLICE NEAR UK ROYAL PALACE

An armed man then allegedly got out of the second car and pursued a man driving the car involved in the collision, according to Sky News on Monday. 

Roughly a dozen gunshots were heard by witnesses, according to the BBC. The shooting has been described as a suspected "gang" rivalry incident by British media. 

KNIFE-WIELDING MAN SHOT BY UK POLICE NEAR LONDON'S TRAFALGAR SQUARE

The man from the car involved in the crash was shot and died at the scene. 

The man on the moped, who was reportedly a delivery driver on his last run of the evening, also died at the scene. He was described as an "innocent" bystander who got caught in the violence, the Sun reported. 

"I've got a teenage son. He came in at 1900 [7 p.m.] yesterday and I was thinking, 'what if I gave him another hour to stay out?,’" one area resident told the BBC. 

"It makes me scared, I have anxiety all the time. I don't really want to let him out but at the same time you have to let them make their own choices and be their own person."

LONDON OFFICER SHOT DEAD WHILE DETAINING SUSPECT AT STATION

Roads in the area have been shut down as police continue investigating the incident. 

"I would urge anyone with any information, however small, to come forward to help bring whoever is responsible to justice," Wingrove said. 

The shooting comes after a triple shooting in East London last week that left two men dead and a series of shootings in the city in July that left three other men dead, the BBC reported.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/q7t16fs

A Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit has unveiled a report outlining a "maximum pressure" strategy the Biden administration could take to support anti-government demonstrators protesting the Iranian regime

The steps announced by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) come as Iran, according to the Associated Press, said Monday it will hold public trials in Tehran for 1,000 people detained during the demonstrations, which began on Sept. 16 after the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman who was reportedly murdered by the country’s police. 

"The ongoing street protests in Iran, as well as the evolving pattern of anti-regime protests in Iran since 2017, illustrate the need for developing -- in addition to a ‘maximum pressure’ strategy on the regime that incorporates all tools of American power -- a transnational strategy of ‘maximum support’ for the Iranian people," the FDD report says. 

One step the White House could take is to provide information to Iranian demonstrators about the movements of the regime’s security forces. 

IRANIAN ACTIVISTS LAUNCH BILLBOARD CAMPAIGN IN NYC’S TIMES SQUARE SEEKING BIG TECH’S HELP 

"The Biden administration likely possesses intelligence through signals and imagery that it should share with Iranian protestors to warn them about the movement of all security services involved in repression and to inform them about Tehran’s weaknesses and strengths," the report says. 

The administration could support labor strikes and use "its cyber capacities to disrupt the normal operation of these strategic sectors," back efforts to "provide the Iranian people access to uncensored internet via satellite," and expand human rights sanctions against the regime, the report says. 

It could also "move to isolate the Islamic Republic politically by pushing for its removal from, or censure in, international organizations, while also pressuring allies to sever or downgrade their bilateral diplomatic relations," it adds. 

"U.S. policy since the 2009 election-related uprising in Iran has gradually incorporated a variety of human rights related sanctions and designations to name, shame, penalize, and deter Iranian officials and institutions that commit human rights abuses," the FDD report says. "Yet U.S. policy toward the Islamic Republic of Iran has prioritized Tehran’s nuclear program and, to a considerably lesser extent, its ballistic missile program and material support for international terrorism, but not human rights." 



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/7nFjEa8

Officials in the western Indian state of Gujarat said at least 132 people were killed after a pedestrian suspension bridge collapsed into the Machchu river Sunday evening.

Authorities said the century-old cable suspension bridge collapsed because it couldn't handle the weight of the large ground that had gathered. The bridge had only just reopened four days before the collapse. It had been closed for renovations for nearly six months before that.

The Hindu festival season drew hundreds of people to the recently opened tourist attraction.

Hundreds of people were sent plunging into the water when the bridge gave way. State minister Harsh Sanghvi said those killed and injured were mostly teens, women and older people.

AT LEAST 60 DEAD, MANY MORE INJURED AFTER BRIDGE COLLAPSE IN INDIA: REPORT

Officials said it's not clear exactly how many people ware on the 761-foot-long bridge, but they fear the number of dead could rise.

Sanghvi told reporters that 132 people have died so far and many were admitted to hospitals in critical condition.

Emergency responders and rescuers have been searching for survivors since the collapse happened.

Teams from the Indian Army, Navy and Air Force were dispatched to help with the rescue.

INDIA'S TOP COURT SPLIT ON BANNING MUSLIM HEADSCARVES IN SCHOOLS

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was "deeply saddened by the tragedy."

His office announced compensation to the families of the dead and urged for speedy rescue efforts.

The state government said it formed a special team to investigate the disaster.

INDIA HAS RESCUED AT LEAST 130 WORKERS HELD CAPTIVE AND FORCED TO COMMIT CYBER FRAUD

The bridge collapse is Asia’s third major disaster involving large crowds in a month.

On Saturday, a Halloween crowd surge killed more than 150 mostly young people who attended festivities in Itaewon, a neighborhood in Seoul, South Korea. 

On Oct. 1, police in Indonesia fired tear gas at a soccer match, causing a crush that killed 132 people as spectators attempted to flee.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/M0scZdx

Sunday, October 30, 2022

BRASILIA,Brazil - Brazil’s left-wing former president Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, commonly known as Lula, narrowly won a tightly contested presidential election tonight with a margin of just under 2%.

With 50% of precincts reporting, Bolsonaro clung to a narrow 0.5% lead, but the general trend over the course of the evening was a slow and steady upswing for Lula, as votes trickled in from the northeast. Just before 7pm, with 72% of precincts reporting, Lula took his first lead of the night, and continued to expand his lead.

It was also going to be difficult for Bolsonaro in the second round, as Lula won the first round by 5 points, 48% to 43%, nearly winning outright on October 2. Bolsonaro also faced an uhpill battle in the sense that both third place Simone Tebet and fourth place Ciro Gomes backed Lula in the second round.

Bolsonaro turned in a strong showing in the wealthier south of the country, winning Sao Paulo and his native Rio de Janeiro by margins of over 10%, but it was not enough to compensate for Lula’s massive turnout in the Northeast of Brazil, where the Workers Party has long enjoyed dominance. Indeed, Lula won numerous states by margins of 30%, 40% or even 50%, turning in particularly strong performances in the vote-rich states of Bahia, Ceara, and his native Pernambuco.

Bolsonaro flipped the pivotal swing state of Minas Gerais, winning by a narrow margin, and backed by the endorsement of Governor Romeu Zema, but it was not enough to reach 50%.

However, it was not all bad news for the Bolsonaro camp. In the second most important race in the country, for Sao Paulo’s governorship, Bolsonaro-backed candidate Tarcisio de Freitas handily defeated Workers Party candidate Fernando Haddad, who was the 2018 presidential candidate who lost to Bolsonaro.

BRAZIL ELECTION: COUNTRY'S COURTS ACCUSED OF TAKING SIDE OF LULA AGAINST INCUMBENT BOLSONARO

Bolsonaro aligned candidates will now control the three largest states in Brazil: Romeu Zema in Minas Gerais, Claudio Castro in Rio de Janeiro, and Tarcisio de Freitas in Sao Paulo. While he did not win, the Bolsonaro movement remains strong, and Brazil’s 156 million voters will remain deeply culturally and politically divided.

After voting in his native Sao Bernardo do Campo, in the south of Sao Paulo state, Lula headed to downtown Sao Paulo to give a press conference and walk the famous Avenida Paulista, often considered the "main drag" of Brazil. Lula proclaimed, "Today may be the most important day of my life…the people of Brazil are defining the model that they desire to have…the way of life they want."

Bolsonaro voted in Vila Militar in his home state of Rio de Janeiro, saying he had "the expectation of victory, for the good of Brazil…if it is God’s will, we will be victorious tonight."

Critics have charged that Bolsonaro would not accept the electoral results in case of a loss, but on Friday he sang a different tune: "Whoever has the most votes takes it. This is democracy."

In Vila Planalto, Brasilia, a largely pro-Bolsonaro middle class neighborhood near the Palacio da Alvorada, where Bolsonaro is known for taking walks, groups of family and friends had gathered to view election results, with the majority sporting Brazil’s yellow soccer jerseys. They nursed the disappointing news over large bottles of Brazilian beer, served in typical style in tiny glasses.

One voter said, "In my family we are divided. My daughter called me to say that I should vote for Lula, but I said in Brazil we have a secret ballot."

Across town at the iconic TV tower, Lula’s supporters, many clad in red, packed into a plaza to cheer the results. 

Most polls had showed Lula with a slight lead, but there appeared to be a tightening over the last week of the campaign. Furthermore, polls during the first round election on October 2 proved to be biased in favor of Lula, while significantly undercounting support for Bolsonaro.

BRAZIL ELECTION: BOLSONARO, TRAILING BEHIND LULA IN POLLS, SCORES KEY ENDORSEMENT

Lula will likely face a difficult term in office, with considerable Congressional opposition from the large block of Bolsonaro-aligned federal deputies and Senators.

His election tonight represents one of the greatest comeback stories in Latin American history. Lula was convicted and imprisoned on corruption and money laundering charges that were later overturned on a technicality by Brazil’s Supreme Court, clearing the way for him to run for an unprecedented third term.

Lula also is regarded to have made a shrewd move in selecting business-friendly centrist former Sao Paulo Governor Geraldo Alckmin as his vice presidential running mate. In 2018, Workers Party candidate Fernando Haddad selected Rio Grande do Sul federal deputy Manuela D’Avila, from the Brazilian Communist Party, who was widely viewed as too extreme.

Haddad ended up losing the 2018 election to Bolsonaro by 10%. 



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/yASWqiD

At least 100 people were killed and 300 people were wounded by two car bombs in Somalia's capital of Mogadishu on Saturday, Somalian President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said. 

Al-Shabaab, which the Pentagon describes as the "most kinetically active al-Qaeda network in the world," claimed responsibility for the attacks, which targeted the country's education ministry

President Mohamud took office in May and recently declared "total war" on al-Shabaab, saying Saturday that the death toll could rise. 

"Our people who were massacred... included mothers with their children in their arms, fathers who had medical conditions, students who were sent to study, businessmen who were struggling with the lives of their families," he said. 

POLISH SENATE RECOGNIZES RUSSIA AS 'TERRORIST STATE'

It was the deadliest attack to rock Mogadishu since 2017, when a truck bomb at the same location killed over 500 people

The U.S. military has been coordinating strikes with the Somalian government against al-Shabaab this year, including an airstrike earlier this month that took out Abdullahi Nadir, a top official who was in line to replace al-Shabab's leader. 

President Biden redeployed about 500 special forces troops to Somalia in May. 

Reuters contributed to this report. 



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/ZEURzpS

Politicians in the United Kingdom are calling for a probe into the report that former Prime Minister Liz Truss’ phone was hacked by Russian spies over the summer and was possibly covered up while she challenged for the leadership role.

Following the report of the alleged hack by the Daily Mail, opposition parties demanded an independent investigation into the hack and into the leak of the information to the newspaper.

"Was Liz Truss’s phone hacked by Russia, was there a news blackout and if so why?" said Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokeswoman Layla Moran. "If it turns out this information was withheld from the public to protect Liz Truss’ leadership bid, that would be unforgivable."

Then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Cabinet Secretary Simon Case suppressed details about the security breach, the newspaper reported.

RUSSIAN AGENTS MAY HAVE HACKED FORMER BRITISH PM LIZ TRUSS' PHONE: REPORT

The newspaper, citing unnamed sources, said Russian spies were suspected of the hack. It said the hackers gained access to sensitive information, including discussions about the Ukraine war with foreign officials, as well as private conversations between Truss and a political ally, former Treasury chief Kwasi Kwarteng.

Labour Party law-and-order spokeswoman Yvette Cooper said "the story raises issues around cybersecurity."

"It’s why cybersecurity has to be taken so seriously by everyone across government, the role of hostile states," she told Sky News. "But also the allegations about whether a Cabinet minister has been using a personal phone for serious government business, and serious questions about why this information or this story has been leaked or briefed right now."

The U.K. government spokesperson declined to comment on security arrangements but said it had "robust systems in place to protect against cyber threats," including regular security briefings for ministers.

Truss resigned on Oct. 20 after less than two months in office following weeks of criticism over her economic plans.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/B5ZmG9J

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak plans to crack down on "woke" policing, pushing authorities to be "fighting actual crime in people’s neighbourhoods, and not policing bad jokes on Twitter."

Sunak's government hopes to emulate the efforts of Stephen Watson, chief of the Greater Manchester Police, who has successfully rehabilitated two police departments in recent years, according to The Telegraph. Watson reportedly implemented a policy requiring officers to go out on patrol more often and demanding that every crime lead be investigated.

"We want to get officers on to the front line doing what they are supposed to do which is preventing and solving crime. The chief constable of Greater Manchester has done a great job on that. We want to see what Greater Manchester have done replicated across other forces," a source within Sunak's government told The Telegraph.

Recent incidents have seen U.K. police arresting citizens for social media posts determined to "cause anxiety," among other things.

BRITAINS FIRST ASIAN PRIME MINISTER FACES WOKE CRITICISM OVER WEALTH AND RACE

Shocking footage revealed in August showed Hampshire police arriving at a British Army veteran's home to arrest him after the man had shared a social media post criticizing the LGBT Pride movement.

The post, originally shared by British actor and leader of the British Reclaim Party Laurence Fox, showed a Pride flag transitioning into a Swastika. Fox said the post was a commentary on the authoritarian nature of the movement.

RISHI SUNAK RICHER THAN KING CHARLES III THANKS TO WIFE AKSHATA MURTHY'S $800 MILLION TECH COMPANY STAKE

The veteran, Darren Brady, shared the post, and officers soon arrived at his home demanding that he either agree to attend an "educational course" or be arrested. Brady said he would think it over and then called Fox, who then arrived to film the incident.

"I don’t understand. I posted something that he posted," Brady told police. "You come to arrest me. You don’t arrest him. Why has it come to this? Why am I in cuffs over something he shared, then I shared?"

"Because someone has been caused obviously anxiety based on your social media posts," the officer responded. "That’s why you’ve been arrested." 

Hampshire Police and Crime Commissioner Donna Jones later appeared to condemn the actions of her officers in a statement to The Epoch times after the story gained media coverage.

"When incidents on social media receive not one but two visits from police officers, but burglaries and non-domestic break-ins don’t always get a police response, something is wrong," she said. "This incident has highlighted a really topical issue which Hampshire Constabulary and other police forces need to learn from." 

Fox News' Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/DikR7en

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered a period of national mourning Sunday after at least 153 people were killed in a crowd stampede in Seoul.

The crowd rush occurred during Halloween festivities as a massive crowd pushed into a narrow alleyway, crushing those in the middle of the group. Mourners laid flowers at the scene hours after first responders described carrying body after body out of the alleyway, finding few alive.

Seoul officials have received more than 350 missing persons reports following the tragedy.

"This is truly tragic," Yoon said in a statement. "A tragedy and disaster that should not have happened took place in the heart of Seoul last night.

NORTH KOREA LAUNCHES BALLISTIC MISSILE TOWARD EASTERN WATERS, SOUTH KOREA SAYS

Interior Minister Lee Sang-min confirmed that 90% of the victims had been identified as of Sunday morning, according to Reuters. 

Crowds gathered at the Hannam-dong Community Center in Seoul to learn the fate of loved ones who had been reported missing. One person reportedly fell to their knees and wept after speaking with officials.

Those killed in the incident were overwhelmingly young people, most in their 20s and some even teenagers. Halloween is a massive event for nightclubs and restaurants in Seoul, generating large crowds every year.

Officials say an additional 82 people were injured in the stampede, with 19 suffering critical injuries.

CHILD DEATHS FROM ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY RISES TO 133 IN INDONESIA

Yoon's office ordered flags to half staff and said the government will pay for the medical expenses of the injured and the funeral expenses of those who were killed.

Chilling social media footage showed throngs of people trapped and pressed against one another in the narrow alleyway as bystanders and first responders attempted to pry people free. 

President Biden offered his condolences to South Korea in a statement.

"We grieve with the people of the Republic of Korea and send our best wishes for a quick recovery to all those who were injured," Biden said. "The Alliance between our two countries has never been more vibrant or more vital – and the ties between our people are stronger than ever. The United States stands with the Republic of Korea during this tragic time."

Reuters contributed to this report.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/eJ2Hw5o

Hannah Pick-Goslar, a Holocaust survivor and one of Anne Frank's best friends, died at 93-years-old.

Pick-Goslar died just two weeks before turning 94. She is survived by her three children, 11 grandchildren and 31 great-grandchildren.

The Anne Frank Foundation paid tribute to Pick-Goslar for helping to keep Frank's memory alive by telling stories about their youth. Pick-Goslar is mentioned in Frank's famous diary about her experience hiding from the Netherlands' Nazi occupiers.

"Hannah Pick-Goslar meant a lot to the Anne Frank House, and we could always call on her," the foundation said in a statement.

ZILLI SCHMIDT, AUSCHWITZ-BIRKENAU SURVIVOR, PASSES AWAY AT 98

The foundation said Pick-Goslar "shared her memories of their friendship and the Holocaust into old age. She believed everyone should know what happened to her and her friend Anne after the last diary entry. No matter how terrible the story."

Pick-Goslar was born in 1928 in Berlin-Tiergarten, according to the Anne Frank House Museum. She and her family left for London, England, in 1933 when the Nazis came into power. 

She and her family later moved to Amsterdam, Netherlands, where she met Frank's family. The two girls attended kindergarten together and became close friends.

But the friends were separated when the Frank family went into hiding in 1942.

About a year later, Pick-Goslar and her family were deported to Camp Westerbork. Dubbed the "gateway to Hell," Westerbork was a transit camp before victims were taken to any of the bigger concentration camps.

Pick-Goslar and her family were transferred in 1944 to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where she would reunite with Frank the following year, shortly before Frank died there of typhus. Pick-Goslar and her younger sister Gabi were the only members of her family to survive the events of Bergen-Belsen.

In 1947, after being freed, Pick-Goslar emigrated to what is now Israel, where she would become a nurse and get married.

HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR WHO SURVIVED 2018 PITTSBURGH SYNAGOGUE SHOOTING DIES AT 84

She recounted her friendship with Frank in a 1997 book by Alison Leslie Gold titled "Memories of Anne Frank; Reflections of a Childhood Friend." The book was turned into a film released last year, called "My Best Friend Anne Frank."

Pick-Goslar is referred to in Frank's diary as Hanneli, the name Anne called her.

"Hanneli and Sanne used to be my two best friends. People who saw us together always used to say: 'There goes Anne, Hanne and Sanne,'" Frank wrote on June 14, 1942.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/xVeoKJA

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Guantanamo Bay detention center's oldest prisoner was released from U.S. custody on Saturday and returned to Pakistan.

Saifullah Paracha, 75, was in custody since 2003 on suspicion of being tied to al Qaeda while never being charged for a crime. In May, he was notified that his release was approved, being among two other men cleared by the prison review board for release in 2020.

The notification said that Paracha is "not a continuing threat" to the U.S., Shelby Sullivan-Bennis said, who represented him at a hearing.

In a Saturday statement, the Department of Defense said that the U.S. is appreciative of "the willingness of Pakistan and other partners to support ongoing U.S. efforts focused on responsibly reducing the detainee population and ultimately closing the Guantanamo Bay facility."

POLISH SENATE RECOGNIZES RUSSIA AS 'TERRORIST STATE'

Paracha appeared before the review board for the eighth time in November 2020. The board was established by Former President Barack Obama's administration in an attempt to prevent prisoners who may engage in anti-U.S. activities from being released from Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

Paracha's repatriation was facilitated by Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"We are glad that a Pakistani citizen detained abroad is finally reunited with his family," read a statement from the Pakistani government agency.

Paracha was living in the United States and owned real estate in New York City when authorities alleged that he served as a "facilitator" for al Qaeda in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks by assisting two of the conspirators with a financial transaction.

US FORCES KILL TWO AL-SHABAAB TERRORISTS IN AIRSTRIKE IN SOMALIA, PENTAGON SAYS

However, Paracha said that he wasn't aware that the individuals were associated with al Qaeda and denied involvement in terrorism.

He was taken into custody by the U.S. while in Thailand in 2003, and has been at Guantanamo Bay since 2004.

Paracha's son, Uzair Paracha was convicted of providing support to terrorism in 2005, based in part by testimony from people being held at Guantanamo Bay. The witnesses were also used to justify the father's detention.

A judge threw out the witness testimony against Uzair Paracha in March 2020 and the U.S. government didn't push for another trial, allowing Paracha to be released to Pakistan.

The Department of Defense says that 35 detainees are at Guantanamo Bay, adding that 20 are eligible to be transferred.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/smlvGEY

Eric Jean Baptiste, a former presidential candidate and leader of a political party in Haiti, has been killed in a shooting, a party official said Saturday. The killing stunned many in a nation already in crisis.

Baptiste was killed Friday in the community of Laboule in the capital of Port-au-Prince along with his bodyguard, according to Ricardo Nordain, spokesman for his Rally of Progressive National Democrats, which was founded in 1979 by former President Leslie Manigat.

US AND MEXICO PROPOSE 'NON-UN INTERNATIONAL SECURITY ASSISTANCE MISSION' TO HAITI AMID HUMANITARIAN CRISIS

Baptiste also owned one of the biggest lottery companies in Haiti, "Pere Eternel."

No one has been arrested.

Prime Minister Ariel Henry said he and others were revolted by the killing.

"The horrific assassination of the political leader Eric Jean Baptiste and his bodyguard has once again plunged the Haitian nation into turmoil. We strongly condemn this heinous crime against this patriot, this moderate politician committed to change," he tweeted.

CHINA MAY SEEK GREATER ROLE IN HAITI AS UN SECURITY COUNCIL EXTENDS POLITICAL MISSION

The killing occurred in an area where the Ti Makak gang, which means "Little Macaques," is fighting with the Toto gang for control of territory. The community is located near Pelerin, where President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated in his private residence in July 2021.

In August, Yvon Buissereth, a former senator who worked for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor, was killed and his body set on fire.

In January, two journalists also were killed in Laboule and their bodies were set on fire.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/2wbgKmv

BRASILIA, BRAZIL - Political observers fear that Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court, the equivalent of the U.S. Supreme Court, and the Supreme Electoral Court, the equivalent of the U.S. Federal Election Commission (known in Brazil as STF and TSE, respectively), have both taken an authoritarian turn as they have repeatedly exercised broad powers to intimidate, censor, fine and even jail critics, in a move seen as an attempted check on the powers of right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, his supporters and the media.

During Friday's final presidential debate, on TV Globo, Jair Bolsonaro raised the issue, accusing the Lula camp of using the court to censor critics, and specifically referencing Jovem Pan, the nation’s largest network of radio stations, which has been a frequent target of the court. Jovem Pan is seen as being favorable to Bolsonaro.

Lula made light of the situation asking Bolsonaro about the radio network: "Is Jovem Pan, by any chance, that television channel of yours?"

The Lula camp argues that the Supreme Electoral Court is merely protecting the legal principle of "isonomia" or equal time granted for the other political side to respond.

BRAZIL ELECTION: BOLSONARO, TRAILING BEHIND LULA IN POLLS, SCORES KEY ENDORSEMENT

Yet, Jovem Pan CEO Roberto Araujo told Fox News Digital that the machinations of the court extend far beyond that, while noting that Brazil's Supreme Electoral Court, known as the TSE, is also involved.

"The TSE decided not only to grant the right of reply to Lula's campaign, but also to order that the station abstain from dealing – in either news or opinion coverage – with certain facts . . . the comments that were questioned dealt with the conviction of the former president (Lula) and the annulment of legal processes by the judiciary itself. We are, therefore, by the judiciary's determination, unable to address in our programming, facts that are widely known to the Brazilian people." 

The two powerful courts have also assumed widespread and arbitrary power to censor, and even eliminate, a wide variety of social media posts, campaign materials and opinions. In the American context, it is almost unthinkable that the Supreme Court would get involved in prohibiting individual political statements. 

The means by which the STF assumed this power in the first place, appear to be on shaky legal ground. The STF assigned itself the powers in 2019, in a move viewed as a reaction to the perceived undemocratic machinations of Bolsonaro. Dias Toffoli, the court's chief justice, ordered the policy as a means to silence online critics of his court, specifically citing the events of January 6, 2021, in the United States, as a rationale for taking muscular measures to protect democracy and the interests of the court.

Yet critics belief free speech is under assault.

BRAZIL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: JAIR BOLSONARO PROVES POLLS WRONG, FORCES SOCIALIST OPPONENT INTO RUNOFF

Araujo argues, "The decision by the TSE clearly calls into question fundamental principles of our Constitution, such as freedom of expression and freedom of the press. Who defines what is disinformation? The TSE? The STF? This discussion goes far beyond the powers of the judiciary, the legislature and the executive. It is a debate that involves the whole of society and that cannot be used as ammunition to attack political opponents."

Measures taken include the arrest of five people for posts made on social media that were critical of the STF and other Brazilian institutions.

One court justice, Alexandre de Moraes, reportedly spearheaded the effort, going so far as to order the removal of an article that alleged corruption on the part of Chief Justice Toffoli. He later reversed the decision when the matter in question proved to be factually accurate.

With virtual unanimity, critics say the actions of the Supreme Federal Court have benefited the candidacy of the Workers' Party’s Lula da Silva, while harming the campaign of the incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. Furthermore, it was only due to a decision on the part of the Supreme Federal Court that Lula was able to run for office.

Despite overwhelming evidence, and a series of convictions for money laundering and corruption, Lula was freed and cleared to run for president for an unprecedented third term. The Bolsonaro camp views an inherent conflict of interest in the decision in that seven of the eleven justices on the Supreme Federal Court were appointed by the Workers' Party: three by Lula, and four by his predecessor, Dilma Rousseff.

BRAZIL’S ECONOMY MINISTER WARNS WORLD OF STAGFLATION AND ‘VERY ROUGH TIMES AHEAD’

Rio de Janeiro state deputy Marcio Gualberto believes the STF has overstepped its bounds: "the institution of the STF, without a doubt, is very important. It should be concerned with the Constitution, ensuring that the Constitution is enforced . . . it should not be used for political purposes, and much less, for partisan or ideological purposes. This is inconceivable."

Gualberto cited persistent legal harassment of Jovem Pan: "We now have Jovem Pan censored because of the opinion of its journalists. This mortally wounds a principle that is enshrined worldwide, called ‘freedom of expression.’"

Bolsonaro supporters suggest that Supreme Court justice Alexandre de Moraes is on a misguided and devious mission in his quest to exterminate what he deems to be "misinformation."

Political analyst Flavio Morgenstern, who himself has been investigated at the behest of de Moraes, argues: "Alexandre de Moraes does not even bother to give reasons. He can. He commands. He censors. He investigates . . . . He can do anything in the country. For he himself judges everything. So we live in fear, as any criticism can make us the next victim, and we will be censored . . . or worse."

When queried about the court’s actions, Vice President Walter Braga Netto told Fox News Digital, "I'm not going to comment about the STF, but I will say the following. . . . We need to have a system of checks and balances that is provided for in the Constitution. This should work, and when it doesn't work, this is bad for democracy, and it's really not working."

Regardless of Sunday's outcome, the court’s actions will be questioned and debated for some time in the context of political bias.

Araujo argues, "I believe that there is an excessive judicialization of this entire electoral process. Lula's campaign resorts to the STF and the TSE all the time, trying to prevent facts from being shown. . . . What is surprising is that democracy is being attacked under the pretext that it has to be defended, and that STF and TSE justices are giving strength to this narrative."



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/6injMFb

South Korean officials said around 50 people were in cardiac arrest and a number feared dead after being crushed by a large crowd pushing forward on a narrow street during Halloween festivities in the capital Seoul.

Choi Cheon-sik, an official from the National Fire Agency, said around 100 people were reported as injured during the crowd surge Saturday night in the Itaewon leisure district and that around 50 were being treated for cardiac arrest as of early Sunday.

Choi said it was believed that people were crushed to death after a large crowd began pushing forward in a narrow alley near Hamilton Hotel, a major party spot in Seoul.

CHILD DEATHS FROM ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY RISES TO 133 IN INDONESIA

He said more than 400 emergency workers from around the nation, including practically all available personnel in Seoul, were deployed to the streets to treat the injured. Officials didn't immediately release a death toll.
Video on social media showed multiple first responders simultaneously performing CPR on people lying scattered in the street.

Police also confirmed that dozens of people were being given CPR on Itaewon streets while many others have been taken to nearby hospitals.

A local police officer said he was also informed that a stampede occurred on Itaewon's streets where a crowd of people gathered for Halloween festivities. The officer requested anonymity, saying the details of the incident was still under investigation.

NORTH KOREA LAUNCHES BALLISTIC MISSILES TOWARD ITS EASTERN WATERS, SOUTH KOREA SAYS

Some local media reports earlier said the crush happened after a large number of people rushed to an Itaewon bar after hearing an unidentified celebrity visited there.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol issued a statement calling for officials to ensure swift treatment for those injured and review the safety of the festivity sites. He also instructed the Health Ministry to swiftly deploy disaster medical assistance teams and secure beds in nearby hospital to treat the injured.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/Tyhumkx

An FBI investigation into alleged unlawful activity to help Qatar obtain World Cup 2022 hosting privileges may have extended further to help improve Qatar’s image in the U.S. and influence U.S. policy, according to an Associated Press report. 

The initial investigation focused on former CIA officer Kevin Chalker’s work to help Qatar through alleged foreign lobbying, surveillance and exporting sensitive information to undermine the country’s rivals in bidding for the World Cup, according to individuals with knowledge of the investigation. 

Chalker’s company Global Risk Advisors employed a number of methods, such as a Facebook "honeypot" trap, in which an attractive woman connected with a target, or someone posed as a photojournalist to keep tabs on one nation’s bid. 

Kevin Carroll, Chalker’s lawyer, pushed back on the allegations and said that Global Risk Advisors never engaged in any unlawful activity and remained unaware of any federal investigation. He added that the company received proper authorization from the U.S. government whenever its work required it. 

AUSTRALIAN MEN'S SOCCER TEAM CALLS OUT QATAR'S HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD AHEAD OF WORLD CUP

Global Risk Advisors allegedly tried to undermine critics of Qatar, whom many accused of financing terrorism and other crimes. He tried to set up meetings between Qatari officials and top CIA leaders in an effort to strengthen Qatari influence, which did not happen. 

Internal memos, reviewed by the Associated Press, boasted of the company’s ability to use spycraft to achieve its goals to "protect" Qatar by "attacking the attackers," including efforts to discredit an unnamed congressman who sponsored legislation that Qatar opposed. 

QATAR'S RULING EMIR BERATES ‘UNPRECEDENTED CAMPAIGN’ OF CRITICISM AGAINST WORLD CUP HOST SITE

The company may have pursued the work with Qatar as a way to help it attain "rapid expansion" through "a number of extraordinary projects." 

Such activities may have included providing military and intelligence training to Qatari officials, including members of the royal family, with courses like hostage rescue and operating undercover. 

WHITE HOUSE TO SEND OFFICIAL US DELEGATION TO WORLD CUP, DESPITE QATAR HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE CLAIMS

"Essentially, he wants us to conduct mini-Farm courses both for ops and for tech ops," said an internal Global Risk Advisors' document describing a Qatari official’s request for training. "The Farm" is the nickname given to the CIA’s covert training facility in Virginia.

One member of the Qatari royal family received a perfect score of 100 in a "technical surveillance countermeasures" course despite missing much of the instruction and not showing "a genuine desire to learn the material," according to a company document.

Global Risk Advisors also created a detailed security plan in 2014 to install a surveillance system in Qatar that could track mobile phones in the country "with extreme accuracy" and allow analysts to "isolate individual conversations and listen in real-time," according to internal company records that include a draft contract.

Several individuals who identified as associates of Chalker described him as a man who prized secrecy, often keeping employees in the dark about the work the company did for Qatar. 

Qatar has worked through other retired U.S. national security officials, such as former Marine Gen. John. R. Allen, the former head of the Brookings Institution, who allegedly tried to help Qatar influence U.S. policy during a crisis in the Gulf region in 2017.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/lHekSAG

JERUSALEM — As Israelis trudge to the polls for the fifth time in less than four years, both the public and pundits agree that this election — just like the previous four — is about whether former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should return to power as the country’s leader.

Most also agree that the Nov. 1 vote will do little to shift the logjam that has left the country in political limbo since December 2018.

Relegated to the role of opposition leader for more than a year, Netanyahu, who is also embroiled in a criminal trial over allegations of breach of trust, bribery and fraud, has become the single most divisive issue in the country’s 74-year history.

Fierce debates and even altercations over whether he should be allowed to serve as prime minister — even as he appears in court — triggered the first election; it is also what has prevented any new government from forming and enduring ever since.

ISRAEL CALLS FOR NEW ELECTIONS ONE MONTH BEFORE BIDEN VISIT

But, love him or hate him — and Israelis appear pretty equally divided on this — Netanyahu is fighting vigorously to return to power and, according to the latest polls, there’s a small chance he might just be able to do it this time.

"Anyone who gives a yes or no answer on the question of whether Netanyahu can return is someone you should stop listening to. And there’s no better proof than the fact that we're going for a fifth election in three and a half years," Reuven Hazan, a professor of political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told Fox News Digital in an interview.

ISRAELI PM LAPID ISSUES WARNING TO IRAN IN UN SPEECH: ‘WE HAVE CAPABILITIES AND WE ARE NOT AFRAID TO USE THEM'

"If we knew in advance exactly where we were going, we would have done that after the first or the second round, definitely the third. We really don’t need five elections, and the reason we are at five is because we don’t know," he said. "Every poll shows that it’s coming down to the wire."

A poll published Friday — among the final polls taken ahead of Election Day — by Israel’s highest-rated news show, Channel 12, shows Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party receiving 31 seats in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, and the bloc of parties that have committed to supporting the former prime minister receiving only 60, making him still one seat short of what he needs to form a solid coalition.

The Yesh Atid party, headed by caretaker Prime Minister Yair Lapid, the polls show, will only have 25 seats, and the bloc of parties that might potentially align with him in their opposition to Netanyahu returning to power is only 56. The Joint List, a predominantly Arab party, which is also against Netanyahu’s return, is slated to receive four seats but will not back any government.

"In other words, there are 120 members in the Israeli parliament, and in order to form a government because it’s a parliamentary system, not a presidential democracy, as in the U.S., you need a majority of at least 61 seats, and he [Netanyahu] doesn’t have that yet," said Hazan. "In the best of polls, he’s at 60, so it ain’t over till the fat lady sings, and she’s gonna sing on Tuesday night."

AFTER CLAIM THAT POSSIBLE NEW ISRAEL GOV’T WILL DAMAGE RELATIONS WITH US, SEN. MENENDEZ STAYS SILENT

While most elections worldwide usually hinge on a group of undecided voters who stand somewhere in the middle of the political spectrum, in Israel the vote appears to hinge on those whose views are somewhere on the fringes.

On the far right of Israel’s political spectrum lies the Religious Zionism party, a conglomeration of what some claim are extremist, once persona non-grata agitators who have tried to clean up their act to make inroads into Israel’s parliament. They have committed to supporting Netanyahu and Bibi, much to the chagrin of some Western governments and Jewish communities worldwide.

The party, led by Bezalel Smotrich, a former transport minister in Netanyahu’s previous government, and Itamar Ben-Gvir, a lawyer with a criminal record and a disciple of the American Rabbi and Knesset Member Meir Kahana who was assassinated by a terrorist in New York in 1990, are both bold in their views toward the country’s Arab population and have declared plans to overhaul the country’s judicial system, which they claim is corrupt, biased and far too powerful.

Latest polls show them drawing as many as 14 seats in Israel’s parliament, making it the third-largest faction and the potential kingmakers who could bestow Netanyahu the prime ministerial crown.

On the far left of Israel’s political map are three Arab parties, which could be an equally decisive factor in whether Netanyahu wins or loses. Previously united, the three factions once formed a significant power bloc in the Knesset, but the endless cycle of elections has left them squabbling and running separately in this round.

According to polls, each party hovers on the electoral threshold, and a defeated and dejected Arab public — roughly 20% of Israel’s population — appears more apathetic than ever toward Israel’s politics. The failure of any one of these parties, as well as three additional smaller parties, to receive the requisite 3.25% of the vote could drastically change the outcome of the election.

Dr. Gadi Taub, a political commentator and professor of U.S. history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told Fox News Digital that Netanyahu definitely "has an advantage" this time around, but he emphasized, "There are still a lot of variables that make it very hard to predict."

WATCH: BIBI 'EYE TO EYE' WITH TRUMP, 'DIVERGED' WITH OBAMA ON PEACE AND POWER, TOUTS 'SHARING VALUES' WITH US

The possibility of smaller parties, including one that is on the right of the political spectrum, falling below the electoral threshold, he said, "changes the situation not only for the parties, but also for the distribution of votes to other parties" that can drastically change the outcome.

"That said, it looks like Netanyahu has a fair chance, although if he only gets 61 (seats) in his coalition, it will be an unstable government, and many of his voters are hoping that this time around the right wing will not bow its head down before the liberal deep state," said Taub, who also writes a column for Israeli daily Haaretz.

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Netanyahu said he was working hard to return to power, and "I think there’s a very good chance we'll win this time because people have tasted the difference."

"They put in a different government that made an alliance – this will shock you – with the Muslim Brotherhood, and they’re actually part of the existing coalition that was unraveled," he said, adding that it is "unfathomable because these people don't recognize the Jewish state … and I think many in Israel want to see a return to a government that is committed to Israel as a Jewish state, to restoring a powerful economy, a powerful military and security for all Israelis."

Whether Netanyahu will succeed still remains to be seen, but leaders in the U.S. and around the world, as well as many Jewish communities, are watching Israel’s election closely, wondering if the former leader's return to power will also mean empowering inflammatory elements on the far right such as Smotrich and Ben-Gvir.

Asked by Fox if he would definitely include their party in a future government, even if it were to put a strain on relations with the Biden administration, which has already aired its concern on the matter, Netanyahu dismissed such fears as "ridiculous" and "hypocrisy."

"I mean, I’ve had parties on my right, including parties of this same persuasion, and they didn't control the policy," he said. "For God’s sake, we’re the biggest party, I’m the prime minister, and we control policy.

"I always questioned the people who leveled this question against me. I said, ‘Where are you when the current government made a coalition with the Muslim Brotherhood that wants to see the disappearance of Israel and doesn’t accept the United States as currently formed?’"

Tal Schneider, political correspondent for The Times of Israel, said Netanyahu’s intention to include controversial figures in a possible future coalition should have "anyone who cares about democracy" paying close attention to events in Israel.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/Y6T3na1

Friday, October 28, 2022

A town in Wales that has been overrun by feral goats since the early days of the coronavirus pandemic has formed a task force to address the problem.

In 2020, a pack of Kashmiri goats from the nearby coast had made their way to Llandudno, Wales, and remained in the town's locked-down streets.

The goats began to reproduce and have been occupying local streets, destroying residents' gardens and standing on roofs.

Officials met this week and agreed to establish a group to manage the goats terrorizing the town, North Wales Live reported.

BRAZIL'S NEYMAR NO LONGER FACING PRISON, PROSECUTORS DROP ALL FRAUD AND CORRUPTION CHARGES

"Just to emphasize, these are feral goats," City Councillor Chris Cater said this week at a council meeting. "They are not owned by anyone. They are on land on the Great Orme, and in fact, they were there quite comfortably until the pandemic lockdown."

Before the COVID pandemic, the goats were native to the Great Orme headland, an outcropping extending into the Irish Sea. But since the lockdown began, the animals navigated into Llandudno.

"During the pandemic, they really uplifted the people of Llandudno," Cater said. "They were a joy to see, and they gave us a lot of good publicity, and I think we have to do the right thing for them. I entirely support this initiative."

Councillor Geoff Stewart urged council members to support the task force.

"Goats in Llandudno, much maligned by some, much loved by others," Stewart said.

ANGERED, MOURNING IRANIAN ACTIVISTS LAUNCH BILLBOARD CAMPAIGN IN NYC'S TIMES SQUARE SEEKING BIG TECH'S HELP

"But there has been an issue there for some time," he continued. "Frankly, we should be very proud to have these wonderful animals on our doorstep. They are nowhere else in the UK, and it has been asked that we set up a group to establish a way forward for these."

The task force is expected to begin its work in managing the goats within the next month.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/eiQ5tVj

It's been more than 40 days since 22-year-old Mahsa Amini was beaten to death in the custody of Iran’s brutal morality police for not wearing the mandatory Muslim headscarf. 

At least 250 people have been killed in the unrest since Amini's death, including 27 children, according to Javaid Rehman, a United Nations representative on Human Rights in Iran.

The United States has announced sanctions on 14 individuals and multiple entities, including six government officials responsible for the violence on Iranian activists. But Iranian activists like journalist Masih Alinejad, who is in the U.S. and facing threats against her life, says the Biden Administration can do much more.

"The whole world ignored that for eight years. They were like, ‘You know, this is part of your culture. We don't want to touch it.’ For me, it's sad. It's beyond sad that it didn't need for Mahsa Amini to be killed for the whole world to understand that this is important," Alinejad told Fox News.

PANICKING IRANIAN OFFICIALS SEEKING BRITISH PASSPORTS TO USHER FAMILIES OUT OF COUNTRY AMID PROTESTS: REPORT

"These are the Rosa Parks of Iran. These are like the women suffragists. … This is just the beginning. Iranian women are furious, and by burning their headscarf, by taking to the street in large numbers across Iran, they're sending a message to the rest of the world that this is a revolution not only against compulsory hijab, it's against gender apartheid regime."

A bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers sent a letter to tech companies Friday, including Google, Facebook and Apple, urging them to expand communication services in Iran. Activisits say that's how the Biden Administration can help, with technology like Starlink so protesters can communicate.

Video from cities in southeast Iran showed Iranian security forces shooting protesters Friday as they shouted "Death to Khamenei," Iran's Supreme leader. At least two were killed.

Alinejad, who has 8 million social media followers and around-the-clock security in the U.S. due to threats from the Iranian regime, says this is different than the Green Revolution in 2009 that was crushed.

"This is different because this is the first time in the history that women across Iran burning their headscarves. It means that we had enough. We want to end this barbaric regime," she said. "That's why I always said that compulsory hijab is like the Berlin Wall. If we get success, we could tear this wall down. The Islamic Republic won't exist."

Female students at Isfahan University of Medical Sciences waved their headscarves in the air chanting "freedom, freedom, freedom" to mark the 40th day of mourning after Amini was allegedly murdered by Iran's brutal morality police for showing her hair.

In the hometown of Amini, tens of thousands of people ignored governmental threats and roadblocks this week and showed up to mourn.

IRAN'S ELITE TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY EMERGES AS HUB OF PROTESTS

The Iranian Diaspora Collective, a nonpartisan multi-faith group, bought a billboard in Times Square with an image of Mahsa Amini and three silhouetted women holding up their headscarves and the words "Woman Life Freedom," a message they want on billboards in cities across the U.S. to highlight what they say is the revolution taking place in Iran. They have raised more than $420,000 through a Go Fund Me campaign to pay for more billboards. 

Alinejad started posting videos of women taking off their veils in 2014 in a Facebook feed called "My Stealthy Freedom." She says she first realized how oppressive the Iranian regime was when she was 7 years old as her parents got her ready for school and tried to tame her curly hair. That's when she realized her hair was controlled by the government. 

"I remember when I had to go to school, I had to cover these — like big hair, massive hair. It was not easy. My mom was holding me, and my father was just, you know, cutting between, like, get some of the hair out to make it easy to cover them up," Alinejad recalled while showing a picture of herself at age 7.

Now, two Iranian female journalists — Niloofar Hamedi, who first reported about Amini's death at the hands of the morality police, and Elaheh Mohammadi, who covered Amini's funeral — are charged with espionage. Hamedi has been held in prison for over a month. Journalist watchdogs say these two female journalists' lives are now in serious danger. 

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and Iran’s Intelligence Ministry are trying to blame the CIA, Mossad, MI6 and the Saudi government for starting the protests.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/C9MXF20

A venomous king cobra which escaped from its home in a Swedish zoo six days ago has been located inside the building where its terrarium is located but has not yet been recaptured, the park said Friday.

The deadly snake escaped on Saturday via a light fixture in the ceiling of its glass enclosure at the Skansen Aquarium, part of the zoo on Stockholm’s Djurgarden island. Park guests who were inside the building where the snakes are located were evacuated. 

The zoo later assessed that there was no general risk for employees or guests and the rest of the zoo remained open.

INCOMING SWEDISH PM INTRODUCES NEW CENTER-RIGHT COALITION GOVERNMENT

The park said it had located the reptile overnight in a confined space near its terrarium and staff were now working to retrieve it.

If the snake had gotten out of the building, it would not have survived the cold climate, the park said.

The snake's official name is Sir Vass (Sir Hiss), but since its escape has been nicknamed Houdini, after the escape artist who thwarted every attempt to cage him. The reptile had just moved into the terrarium.

EUROPE'S RIGHTWARD SHIFT COULD BRING PRO-AMERICAN ALLIES IF CONSERVATIVES FOLLOW REAGAN PLATFORM

King cobras can be up to 5.5 meters (18 feet) long and mainly live in India, southeast Asia, in Indonesia and the Philippines.

The zoo is home to about 200 exotic species including fish, corals, crocodiles, turtles, lizards, snakes, naked mole-rats, marmosets, golden lion tamarins, baboons, lemurs, spiders and parrots.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/hPkV2NB

Thursday, October 27, 2022

The White House on Thursday said that any attacks on U.S. satellites or infrastructure will be met with an "appropriate response" after a senior Russian official told the United Nations that the Kremlin sees commercial satellites helping Ukraine as "a legitimate target for retaliation."

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said that Russians have been "trying to pursue anti-satellite technology and capability."

"Any attack on U.S. infrastructure will be met with an appropriate response in an appropriate way," Kirby told reporters Thursday. "And we're going to continue to pursue all means to expose, deter and hold Russia accountable for any such attack should it occur."

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre later said that the U.S. will "pursue all means to explore, deter and hold Russia accountable" for any attacks on U.S. satellites. 

PUTIN SAYS COMING DECADE WILL BE ‘MOST DANGEROUS’ SINCE END OF WORLD WAR II

The comments came after Russian foreign ministry spokesman Konstantin Vorontsov told the United Nations that the U.S.' use of "civilian, including commercial, infrastructure elements in outer space for military purposes" is an "extremely dangerous trend." 

"These States do not realize that such actions in fact constitute indirect participation in military conflicts," Vorontsov said, according to his prepared remarks. "Quasi-civilian infrastructure may become a legitimate target for retaliation."

Vorontsov did not call out any companies by name, but Elon Musk's SpaceX has spent more than $80 million to support Ukrainian forces through Starlink, a network of thousands of satellites that connect with user terminals on the ground. 

SpaceX had asked the Pentagon for funding, but Musk tweeted this week that he assured Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov that SpaceX "would not turn off Starlink even if [the Department of Defense] refused to provide funding." 

SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday. 



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/rQbIuEw

Women’s rights groups in South Africa expressed outrage Thursday and criticized police for perceived failures after charges were dropped against 14 men accused of gang raping and robbing female members of a film crew at an abandoned mine in Krugersdorp, west of Johannesburg.

State prosecutors said there was insufficient evidence against the men to proceed with the case.

The men, believed to be illegal miners, were arrested during a police raid at the mine after at least eight women were attacked and raped while they were filming a music video in July.

Reports of the rapes sparked violent protests in townships around Krugersdorp as community members accused the small-scale miners working in the abandoned mine shafts of committing the crimes.

The protesters also descended on the abandoned mines, blocking the holes the miners use to go underground and burning their makeshift tents and belongings. Miners were apprehended, assaulted and handed over to the police.

Police Minister Bheki Cele called the rapes the "shame of the nation" and police initially arrested more than 80 men before charges were ultimately laid against 14.

PEACE TALKS BEGIN IN SOUTH AFRICA TO END ETHIOPIA'S TIGRAY CONFLICT

However, the rape and robbery charges were withdrawn on Thursday and South Africa's National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) said DNA results could not link any of the men to the rapes.

"Upon consultation with the complainants in the matter, and evidential material currently at the disposal of the NPA, it became apparent that there is insufficient evidence to proceed with the prosecution," said NPA spokeswoman Phindi Mjonondwane.

RUSSIAN BILLIONAIRE DOCKS SUPERYACHT IN SOUTH AFRICA

The Commission for Gender Equality, an organization that advocates for women’s rights, called on the police to quickly relaunch an investigation.

"We are completely outraged at these latest developments, which means the police have no idea who committed this crime. They arrested the wrong people, so the real criminals are still out there," said spokesman Javu Baloyi.

The Sisonke organization, which staged demonstrations at court during the suspects' appearances, also called on police to act quickly to find those responsible.

Prosecutors said the 14 men are now only facing charges related to immigration offenses as they are suspected to be in South Africa illegally.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/WBbkV5y

A judge on Thursday discharged a jury in the high-profile trial of a former government advisor charged with raping a colleague in the Australian Parliament House because a juror had brought a research paper on sexual assaults into the jury room.

Australian Capital Territory Chief Justice Lucy McCallum said a juror had undertaken research in relation to the case and brought it into the room where a panel of 12 had been deciding their verdict.

"I have received evidence that at least one juror has had access to research material that was not provided to the jury during the trial," McCallum said.

WIMBLEDON FINALIST NICK KYRGIOS TO APPLY FOR ASSAULT CHARGE DISMISSAL, CITING MENTAL HEALTH

"It is beyond question the conduct of a juror is such to abort the trial," she added.

A court official had discovered the research paper in the room late Wednesday. The jury was supposed to reach its verdict solely on the evidence presented during the 12-day trial.

Former ministerial advisor Bruce Lehrmann, 27, had pleaded not guilty in the Australian Capital Territory Supreme Court to a charge of sexual intercourse without consent in a minister’s office in March 2019 after a night of heavy drinking. He faced a potential 12-year prison sentence if convicted.

His alleged victim, then his 24-year-old junior colleague Brittany Higgins, reacted to the news of a mistrial with a searing attack on the justice system.

"I chose to speak up. Speak up against rape, speak up against injustice, to speak up and share my experiences with others. I told the truth no matter how uncomfortable or unflattering to the court," a tearful Higgins told reporters outside court.

"Today’s outcome does not change that truth. But I did speak up, I never fully understood how asymmetrical (the) criminal justice system (is), but I do now," she added.

The Associated Press does not usually identify alleged victims of sexual assault, but Higgins has chosen to identify herself in the media.

She recounted how she was questioned for days in the witness box and forced to surrender her telephones, messages, photos and data to Lehrmann’s lawyers. Lehrmann exercised his right not to give evidence. His lawyers argued there had been no sexual contact.

"My life has been publicly scrutinized, open for the world to see. His was not," Higgins added.

Lehrmann declined to speak to the media as he left the court. He has not been held in custody since he was charged and remains free on bail until Feb. 20 when a retrial could commence.

Prosecutors have yet to decide whether a retrial will go ahead.

Lehrmann's lawyer Steven Whybrow told reporters outside court: "We’re disappointed by what’s happened."

The jury had been deliberating its verdict since the trial ended on Wednesday last week.

The jurors sent a message to the judge on Tuesday saying they could not reach a unanimous verdict, but she told them to continue deliberating.

Higgins has become a household name in Australia since she went to the media last year with her accusations that the former government had treated her rape allegation as a political problem and failed to adequately support her.

The case sparked nationwide protests as an example of a toxic work culture in Australian politics that is criticized as hostile toward women.

She quit her government job in January last year and then made a statement to police about the then-two-year-old incident.

Then-Prime Minister Scott Morrison responded in February last year by apologizing to Higgins in Parliament for the "terrible things" that she had endured in the building.

"The place that should have been a place of safety and contribution turned out to be a nightmare," Morrison said.

McCallum revealed on Wednesday that defense lawyers had focused on this apology when they applied in March to have the prosecution postponed or discontinued on the grounds that Lehrmann could not receive a fair trial.

Morrison's apology was "particularly egregious" and had elevated Higgins "to a status she should not have," the lawyers argued, adding she "walks into court with an aura about her."

McCallum rejected the application in March and on Wednesday published her reasons for that decision.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/uOiTCcN

A former colleague of a neonatal nurse who allegedly murdered multiple newborns told jurors this week that she thought "not again" when an infant suddenly collapsed after her twin brother had collapsed and died the night before.

Lucy Letby, 32, is standing trial in the U.K. for allegedly murdering seven babies and attempting to murder 10 more at the Countess of Chester Hospital’s neonatal unit between 2015 and 2016.

The prosecutor said she injected some infants with insulin or milk, while others she injected with air. She allegedly attempted to kill one baby three times.

Child A, whose family remains unidentified for legal reasons, was one of the babies Letby allegedly killed by injecting him with air when she came on shift June 8, 2015, just a little more than 24 hours after his premature birth, according to The Standard. Prosecutors allege she attempted to murder his twin sister, Child B, in the same way the following night.

ALLEGED KILLER NEONATAL NURSE LUCY LETBY WROTE CONFESSION NOTE: ‘I AM EVIL. I DID THIS.’

Letby's coworker, who also remains unidentified, testified to the Manchester Crown Court on Monday that she had been preparing medicines when the alarm went off at Child B's incubator. The coworker recounted that Letby was the first to go to the child's cot and called for her help.

Regarding how Child B looked at the time, Letby's colleague said: "She looked very ill. She looked very like her brother did the night before. Pale, white, with this purple blotchy discoloration. It was all over her body."

"I just remember thinking ‘not again’ – to see his sister with the same appearance," the colleague told the jury.

When they inserted a breathing tube into Child B, the child "started to stabilize quite quickly," the witness said, going on to add that Child A's "deterioration was very sudden and to an unusual degree. Babies can be very poorly quickly, but there is usually some indication that is happening. We had no undue concerns."

ALLEGED KILLER UK NEONATAL NURSE TRIAL: TWINS' MOTHER PLEADED FOR CHILD'S LIFE: ‘DON’T LET MY BABY DIE'

"To go from that is very unusual and then [Child B] had been good throughout the evening for me… then she became ill very quickly," said the witness. "She deteriorated very quickly and then this discoloration."

"You never want any baby to die. You want to help them go home to their families. That’s always been my goal," the witness added.

Child B ultimately recovered and was discharged a month later, the court was told. The twins' mother had pleaded for the lives of her children as medics attempted to save them, according to recently heard court testimony.

Letby was a "constant, malevolent presence" in the neonatal unit of the hospital in northwestern England, prosecutor Nick Johnson argued before a jury when her trial opened last month.

Johnson told jurors "a poisoner was at work" at the hospital, which he said had been marked by a "significant rise in the number of babies who were dying and in the number of serious catastrophic collapses" after January 2015, before which he said its rates of infant mortality were comparable to other busy hospitals.

Investigators found Letby was the "common denominator," and that the infant deaths aligned with her shifting work hours.

When searching her home in 2018, police found handwritten notes reading, "I am evil" and "I killed them on purpose because I'm not good enough," according to the prosecution.

Letby pleaded not guilty to seven counts of murder and 15 counts of attempted murder. Her trial is slated to last for up to six months.



from Latest World News on Fox News https://ift.tt/7XZkNqY