Friday, June 30, 2023

The family of a 6-year-old boy in Mexico who fell from a zipline after a harness failed will file a lawsuit against the ride's operator.

Family members of the 6-year-old said on Facebook that the incident happened on Sunday at Parque Fundidora's Amazonian Expedition, an amusement park attraction located in the Mexican state of Nuevo León.

According to the family members, the boy's harness broke while he was on the zipline, sending him into an artificial pool that was located below the attraction. Mexican media outlet ABC Noticas reported that the child fell nearly 40 feet into the artificial pool, citing local authorities.

Video provided to Fox News Digital shows the child riding the zipline before coming to a stop, where the harness can be seen failing shortly after.

AMUSEMENT PARK HORROR: 6-YEAR-OLD BOY FALLS FROM ZIPLINE AFTER HARNESS FAILS

J Cesar Sauceda told Fox News Digital that his family is filing a lawsuit against the zipline ride's operator and the park. 

According to the family, a tourist nearby jumped into the pool and saved the 6-year-old child, named Cesar. Members of the family blame poor training of the park's staff members for not handling the situation better.

ROLLER COASTER IN SWEDEN DERAILS, KILLING 1 AND INJURING 9

Sauceda previously said that his brother suffered minor injuries and is recovering from the incident, but is "psychologically damaged" and "afraid."

A Nuevo León government agency suspended several attractions at the amusement park following the incident.

Authorities said the zipline is an attraction within Parque Amazonia that is operated by an individual. A government investigation into the incident is underway, according to officials.



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Canadian police on Thursday identified a young girl whose remains were found in a construction-site dumpster in Toronto more than a year ago.

Hank Idsinga, unit commander of Toronto’s Homicide and Missing Persons Unit, identified her as four-year-old Neveah Tucker.

Police said there have been no arrests or charges in the case and they continue to investigate. A cause of death has not yet determined.

MISSING SUZANNE MORPHEW: COLORADO PROSECUTORS REVEAL BODY IS IN ‘VERY DIFFICULT SPOT’

"She would have been nearing 5 years old when her body was found in the dumpster," Idsinga said.

Investigators believe Neveah, who was born in May 2017, died sometime in 2021. Her remains were found in the dumpster in May 2022.

Idsinga said police were able to make the identification in part through a tip from a member of the community and the work of forensic investigators.

Police say the girl’s mother, who lives in Toronto, was told earlier Thursday about the identification.

Last year Toronto police released two sketches of the girl, completed by an artist with Ontario Provincial Police who works with the coroner’s office.

The girl’s body was found wrapped in a butterfly patterned baby blanket inside a plastic bag, which itself was wrapped in a burgundy and red blanket, investigators said.

The discovery last year shocked the neighborhood – one of the wealthiest in the country – and sent investigators in search of the missing girl all over Canada and around the world.



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France has seen a wave of massive protests over the last six months for a litany of reasons. This week, violent rioting following the death of a teen continued across the country, and on Thursday, air traffic controllers at Paris’ Beauvais Airport saw a complete shutdown of flights as travelers flock to the top tourism destination.

The U.S. State Department issued a travel advisory for France earlier this year due to "civil unrest," when protests turned violent amid changes to the national retirement age. 

Issues relating to climate change and police brutality have also spurred nationwide protests that turned into violent riots as law enforcement struggle to cope with an increasingly frustrated population. 

FRANCE WILL DEPLOY 40,000 OFFICERS TO CRACK DOWN ON RIOTS AFTER DEADLY POLICE SHOOTING

However, travelers heading to Paris this week will have more to grapple with than avoiding large unruly crowds and political movements when vacationing in the top destination.

Air traffic controllers protesting working conditions at the Beauvais Airport – the main hub for Irish airline RyanAir and other budget airlines – saw all flights grounded Thursday according to Paris’s Le Monde newspaper.

The major airports like Charles de Gaulle and Orly have not yet been affected by strikes, which means travelers coming straight from the U.S. for the City of Light will likely not see disruptions to their flights this week.

Though they will still need to remain vigilant while touring France as the nation saw a fourth day of unrest following the deadly police shooting of an Algerian-Morroccan teenager during a traffic stop over the weekend in a Paris suburb. 

Some 40,000 police officers have been deployed across France as the unrest grows. Travelers should check where they are staying to ensure they abide by any curfews that may have been put in place through the weekend. 

FRENCH OFFICER KILLS 17-YEAR-OLD DELIVERY DRIVER NEAR PARIS, VIOLENT PROTESTS ERUPT AMONG ANGRY RESIDENTS

In a statement to Fox News Digital a State Department spokesperson said, "The U.S. Department of State has no higher priority than the safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas."

"We encourage U.S. citizens traveling overseas to enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program, so they can receive important messages about their destination directly, including timely Alerts and updates to Travel Advisories, and to enable the U.S. Embassy to assist in an emergency," the spokesman added. 

Last week, the department reissued a level two travel advisory warning to "Exercise increased caution in France due to terrorism and civil unrest."

"Peaceful demonstration and strikes in Paris and other cities throughout France occur regularly and can disrupt transportation. On rare occasions, demonstrations have included violence and property damage and police have responded with water cannons and tear gas," the department warned. 

The U.S. embassy in Paris also issued a warning Thursday to remind "U.S. citizens they should avoid mass gatherings and areas of significant police activity as they can turn violent and result in clashes" as the ongoing protests continue. 

"As always, it is a good practice to notify friends or family of your whereabouts," the statement posted in a tweet added. "Affected U.S. citizens can contact the Embassy at any time for assistance: +33143122222."



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More than 600 people were arrested in France Thursday evening and into Friday morning as the country experienced its third day of rioting since police used deadly force on 17-year-old who attempted to evade arrest.

Some 40,000 police officers were deployed across France and at least 200 officers were injured after tensions boiled over in the Paris suburb of Nanterre, where a police officer shot a teen, only identified by his first name, Nahel, on Tuesday.

Following a peaceful march Thursday afternoon in honor of Nahel, unrest spread across the country with protesters erecting barricades, lighting vehicles on fire and shooting fireworks at police in the streets of various towns.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin on Friday said police detained 667 people, denouncing what he called a night of "rare violence." About 300 of those were arrested in the Paris region alone, according to the Paris police headquarters.

FRENCH OFFICER KILLS 17-YEAR-OLD DELIVERY DRIVER NEAR PARIS, VIOLENT PROTESTS ERUPT AMONG ANGY RESIDENTS

Schools, town halls and police stations were targeted by people setting fires, and police used tear gas, water cannons and dispersion grenades against the rioters, a spokesperson for the Parisian police said.

Armored police vehicles could be seen clearing the streets in Nanterre, ramming through the charred remains of cars that had been flipped over and torched. 

On the other side of Paris, in the suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois, protesters lit a fire at the city hall and set a bus depot ablaze in Aubervilliers. Directly in the French capital, several stores with ransacked and fires burned in various areas.

In the Mediterranean port city of Marseille, regional authorities said police dispersed violent groups in the city center.

The violence also forced President Emmanuel Macron to leave an EU summit in Brussels, where France impacts European policymaking, and return to Paris where he held an emergency security meeting Friday.

The government has stopped short of declaring a state of emergency, which it declared in 2005 following weeks of rioting around France following the accidental death of two boys fleeing police.

PROTESTS IN FRANCE AGAINST MACRON'S PENSION REFORMS ESCALATE AS POLICE USE 4,000 NONLETHAL DISPERSION GRENADES

The rioting was prompted by a police officer who fired a single bullet at the teen following a pursuit, killing him. Police said the teen refused to pull his vehicle over and could have caused injury to others.

The officer’s name has not been released, which is standard practice in French criminal cases.

The accused officer was handed a preliminary charge of voluntary homicide after Nanterre prosecutor Pascal Prache said his initial investigation led him to conclude "the conditions for the legal use of the weapon were not met." The officer remains detained.

A preliminary charge means magistrates strongly suspect wrongdoing but wish to investigate more before sending a case to trial.

FRANCE WILL DEPLOY 40,000 OFFICERS TO CRACK DOWN ON RIOTS AFTER DEADLY POLICE SHOOTING

Prache said officers tried to stop Nahel because he looked young and was driving in a bus lane. He allegedly ran a red light to avoid being stopped then got stuck in traffic.

Both officers said they drew their guns to prevent him from fleeing, with the officer who fired the shot saying he did so as he feared someone could be hit by the car, according to Prache.

Attorney Laurent-Franck Lienard, who is representing the officer, told French TV channel BFMTV that he was apologetic and "devastated," adding that he did what he thought was necessary at the moment.

"He doesn’t get up in the morning to kill people," Lienard said of the officer. "He really didn’t want to kill."

The shooting, which was captured on video, shocked France and stirred up long-simmering tensions between police and young people.

The teenager’s family and their lawyers haven’t said the police shooting was race-related and they didn’t release his surname or details about him.

The unrest extended as far as Brussels, the Belgian capital city, where about a dozen people were detained.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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The DOJ announced last week the first prosecutions against Chinese chemical companies and nationals for the trafficking of precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl.

DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said of the prosecution, "These companies and individuals are alleged to have knowingly supplied drug traffickers in the United States and Mexico with the ingredients and scientific know-how needed to make fentanyl."

The U.S. has seen nearly 100,000 deadly overdoses from fentanyl – a powerful opioid 50 times stronger than heroin – in a little more than a year. Although the substance is usually found on the streets of almost every American city, mixed with heroin and inside counterfeit Oxycontin and Xanax pills, fentanyl is produced far from the U.S.

CHINA CRITICIZES US SANCTIONS ON FENTANYL TRADE, SAY THEY 'UNDERMINE' WASHINGTON-BEIJING RELATIONS: REPORT

This is a step-by-step roadmap detailing the route of fentanyl from China-based factories to the streets of the U.S., following the increase in prices and revenue, starting from a single precursor valued at $200 in China to more than $1 million in revenue on the streets of the U.S.

The order comes out of Sinaloa, Mexico, through a private Telegram chat group. On the other side of the messaging app is an employee of a Chinese company based out of Wuhan, which states it sells "chemical products for industrial cleaning services," according to recent research published by financial crime risk think tank Elliptic. 

The offer is to ship one kilogram of a single precursor called 4-Piperidone, a chemical whose only use is to manufacture fentanyl. 

"The rest of the precursors can be easily found or obtained in Mexico or anywhere in the U.S. The important one is the piperidone," a high-ranking Sinaloa Cartel operative told Fox News Digital.

The price invested per kilogram at this point is $200.

Precursors and ready-made fentanyl is shipped through two Mexican ports at the Pacific Ocean: Lazaro Cardenas in Michoacan, heavily controlled by the ruthless Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG for its Spanish acronym), and the Mazatlan port in Sinaloa, controlled by the eponymous cartel.

The precursors are transported by commercial shipping vessels from China to Mexico among hundreds of thousands of other imported products, making it almost impossible for Mexican authorities to find illegal products hidden in the containers, according to Manelich Castilla, former commissioner of Mexico's Federal Police.

SINALOA CARTEL EXPORTS FENTANYL ‘KITCHENS’ FROM MEXICO TO COLOMBIA AMID INTERNATIONAL CRACKDOWN

"To transport fentanyl, you don't need big shipments. Now you can hide a very profitable load inside a trailer container, and it would be almost impossible to find," Castilla told Fox News Digital.

Once on Mexican soil, the precursors are transported to small, temporary laboratories set up in luxury residential apartments in Culiacan, Sinaloa’s capital, and cradle of the cartel.

"Here, you only need a couple of hours to manufacture over 100 thousand fentanyl pills," the cartel operative said.

The Sinaloa Cartel’s most popular products are the counterfeit "M30" pills, small, blue-colored fentanyl pills made to look like Oxycontin pills.

The cost of production for these pills is around $.50 and are sold individually in the U.S. for around $5 to $15.

At this point, a kilogram of already pressed fentanyl pills rises up to more than $3,500.

Once the fentanyl is turned into pills or mixed with bricks of heroin, the product is packed to be transported to cities along the Mexico-U.S. border on cargo trucks. The Sinaloa Cartel shipments work as a pool of investors, transporting different products for different drug traffickers within the same organization, according to the cartel operative.

"A full truck carries drugs from different individuals. Each one of us pays an amount, depending on the quantity. It is usually $1,500 per kilogram, but it includes the bribes to the Mexican authorities to get through checkpoints and [elsewhere]," the operative said. 

From a Mexican border city like Tijuana or Ciudad Juarez (across from El Paso, Texas), the fentanyl gets across the border on private vehicles through a regular port of entry. 

"We pay each mule around $500 per ride, however, much product fits on their car. We provide the car, and we tell them where to unload on the other side of the border," the cartel member said.

CBP seized more than 17,000 pounds of fentanyl from October 2022 through April 2023, as compared with about 6,600 pounds from October 2021 through April 2022, according to official figures.

The price at this point jumps to around $25,000 per kilogram.

The big price spike happens at what U.S. authorities call "the mills," small houses or apartments set up in suburban cities away from where the drug will be eventually sold in the streets, according to U.S. authorities.

Here is where the pills get packed into smaller quantities or the heroin mixed with fentanyl gets mixed with other substances for profit.

"At the point where the pills reach the local dealers, we have no control. They buy the wholesale stuff from us, and they cut it with whichever they can or want, and then they make their cut from it," the operative said.

From these "mills," the small, individual packages with pills or heroin get distributed little by little to the bigger hubs, cities like New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Portland or other major cities. The drug starts reaching the streets and is sold at retail price.

The final price at this point is more than $1 million.



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Thursday, June 29, 2023

Images captured by the European Space Agency’s Sentinel 2 satellites on Tuesday appear to show what may be a new Wagner military base near the Belarusian capital of Minsk.

The images, if confirmed, would suggest a rapid build-up for Wagner in the days after the Russian mercenary company, led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, engaged in a short-lived mutiny. 

Russian media has reported that Wagner troops arrived in Belarus on Tuesday and could set up a new base at a vacant military facility near the town of Asipovichi, some 50 miles from Minsk. 

The recent satellite image shows rows of long structures in the nearby village of Tsel, in a field that was empty as recently as June 24 – well over a week before Wagner’s short-lived mutiny. 

The images are publicly available through searches on the ESA website. Fox News Digital has reached out to the Defense Department for comment on the satellite imagery. 

PENTAGON ADDRESSES RUMORS OF RUSSIAN MILITARY PURGE FOLLOWING SHORT-LIVED WAGNER MUTINY

In a statement to Fox News Digital, former U.S. defense intelligence officer Rebekah Koffler said Russian President Vladimir Putin aims to open a second front in Belarus as he builds a combat-ready strategic reserve of his most capable force of Wagner "musicians." 

"From here, Wagner hit squad can launch a blitzkrieg south using Poland's border to their advantage with Polish troops sitting right behind," Koffler said. "Don't rule out the possibility that Putin will order Russian units stationed in the Moldovan enclave of Transnistria where the Russians have a huge Soviet-era ammunition depot.

"From this position, Russian threatens NATO's borders with tactical nukes that Putin just gifted [Belarusian President Alexander] Lukashenko," Koffler said. 

PENTAGON ADDRESSES RUMORS OF RUSSIAN MILITARY PURGE FOLLOWING SHORT-LIVED WAGNER MUTINY

Lukashenko invited Wagner to set up operations in his country as part of a deal that ended the mutiny on Saturday.

Putin has said Wagner fighters were free either to move to Belarus, join the Russian military or go home, following the mutiny, which posed one of the most significant threats to Putin’s grip on power after more than two decades.

Prigozhin said he launched his mutiny to demand changes in military leadership he blamed for failures in the war in Ukraine, and to prevent the destruction of his force after it was ordered to submit to control of the Ministry of Defense.

Reuters contributed to this report. 



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The House Foreign Services Committee is forming a bipartisan task force to "modernize U.S. foreign military sales" that are "plagued with delays" to deliver military equipment to key allies like Taiwan "as quickly as possible."

Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, announced Tuesday that House Foreign Affairs Committee will assemble a bipartisan Technical, Industrial, and Governmental Engagement for Readiness (TIGER) Task Force to rapidly supply allies with weapons. 

"Our partners, like Taiwan, order American military equipment because they need it. They should receive that hardware as quickly as possible," said Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., who is co-leading the task force.

MAJORITY OF AMERICANS SUPPORT INCREASING US MILITARY PRESENCE NEAR TAIWAN TO COMBAT CHINA THREAT: POLL

The committee’s formation comes after Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated that U.S. does not support Taiwanese independence, which has been a longstanding understanding between the America and China — which claims the island as part of its territory.

"We remain opposed to any unilateral changes to the status quo by either side. We continue to expect the peaceful resolution of cross strait differences," said Blinken on June 19 after a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

 BLINKEN SAYS US 'DOES NOT SUPPORT TAIWAN INDEPENDENCE' DURING CHINA VISIT

Nonetheless, the bipartisan task force seeks to push through regulatory roadblocks and streamline shipping routes to provide allies and partners with military provisions. 

"For years, U.S. foreign military sales have been plagued with delays that have put many of our allies and partners across the globe at risk," said TIGER task force leader Rep. Michael Waltz, R-Fla.

In March, the U.S. approved a $619 million arms sale to Taiwan, which included 200 anti-aircraft Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles and 100 AGM-88B HARM missiles. Additionally, the U.S. bolstered its Taiwan training program in February, adding 100-200 more troops to prepare for a potential attack from the mainland. 

Last year, U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission blamed a diversion of weapons to Ukraine as the reason for a backlog in weapons shipments to Taiwan. In response, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. said in a letter to Blinken that the China threat "requires us to expedite delivery to Taiwan of the weapons it needs to defend itself."

"We will examine where Congress needs to cut bureaucratic red tape and where industry needs to invest in addressing bottlenecks," said Moulton. "All parties will be held accountable so that equipment gets out the door in time for it to be relevant on the battlefield."

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Waltz, Moulton and McCaul will be joined by Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Ca., and Jason Crow, D-Colo., on the task force. 

The State Department announced that sales of military equipment to foreign governments spiked 49 percent in fiscal year 2022, with $205.6 billion in sales. 



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Two of Russia's senior commanders have reportedly disappeared from public view after the Wagner Group's aborted mutiny, which targeted Russian military leadership.

One general was reportedly arrested in the days since Yevgeny Prigozhin called off his short-lived rebellion and relocated his forces to Belarus. Prigozhin's "march for justice" on Moscow was seen as the most significant challenge to Russian President Vladimir Putin's regime in decades, and Putin now seeks to reassert his authority.

The other commander, Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov, has not appeared in public or on state TV since the aborted mutiny on Saturday, when Prigozhin demanded Gerasimov be handed over. Nor has he been mentioned in a defense ministry press release since June 9, Reuters reported.

Gerasimov, 67, is the commander of Russia's invasion force in Ukraine and one of three Russian commanders who hold "nuclear briefcases," according to some Western military analysts. 

RUSSIAN COMMANDER WHO MAY HAVE KNOWN ABOUT WAGNER REBELLION IS ARRESTED: REPORT

Also missing is deputy commander Gen. Sergei Surovikin, nicknamed "General Armageddon," who The Moscow Times reported was arrested on Sunday, though those reports are unconfirmed. 

Rumors of the deputy commander’s arrest were previously discussed by military blogger Vladimir Romanov, who reported that Surovikin was arrested Sunday, the day after Wagner mercenary troops led by Prigozhin engaged in a short-lived mutiny. 

News of Surovikin’s possible arrest came after The New York Times reported that he had advanced knowledge of Prigozhin’s plans to rebel against Russia’s military leadership. 

U.S. officials briefed on American intelligence told the Times they are trying to determine whether Surovikin helped Prigozhin. 

KREMLIN SAYS IT ONLY HITS ‘MILITARY INFRASTRUCTURE’ AFTER STRIKE AGAINST RESTAURANT IN UKRAINE

The Kremlin on Wednesday played down the reports, saying there would be a lot of speculation and gossip. 

Rybar, an influential Telegram channel run by a former Russian defense ministry press officer, said a purge was underway, Reuters reported.

Rybar claimed Russia's top brass were trying to remove military personnel believed to have shown "a lack of decisiveness" in crushing the rebellion amid reports that Wagner fighters met little resistance from Russia's armed forces in the first hours of the rebellion. 

"The armed insurgency by the Wagner private military company has become a pretext for a massive purge in the ranks of the Russian Armed Forces," Rybar said, per Reuters. 

UKRAINIAN FORCES CLAWBACK TERRITORY HELD BY RUSSIA SINCE 2014: UK INTEL

Gerasimov was not present on Tuesday when Putin thanked the army for preventing a civil war, unlike Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, a long-time Putin ally who Prigozhin had accused of corruption and incompetence in prosecuting the war in Ukraine. 

Surovikin, Gerasimov's deputy, has not been seen since Saturday when he appeared in a video appealing to Prigozhin to stop the mutiny. Western analysts suggested Surovikin looked exhausted and may have been speaking under duress. 

The general first gained notoriety in 1991 for ordering Russian soldiers to fire on protesting civilians in Moscow in the final months of the Soviet Union. He displayed similar brutality when Putin deployed him to Syria in 2017, allegedly ordering the indiscriminate bombings of Aleppo and other anti-government strongholds.

Prigozhin had previously praised Surovikin as "the most able commander in the Russian army." 

Former U.S. defense intelligence officer Rebekah Koffler agreed that Putin looks to be consolidating power and surrounding himself with loyalists. 

"Putin is orchestrating a purge to capitalize on the coup, which in my intelligence assessment was a false flag operation," Koffler told Fox News Digital. "He is continuing to advance the narrative that he is the one and only strong leader who is able to crush all the traitors, squash the mutiny and save Mother Russia — this is in preparation for his 2024 re-election run. He is consolidating power even further, ensuring he is only surrounded by loyalists." 

Koffler said Putin wants to drive the narrative that instability in Russia, which possesses the world's largest nuclear arsenal, is bad for the entire world. 

"General Armageddon is arrested and Gen. Gerasimov, of the holders of Putin’s 3 nuclear footballs is missing — a threatening situation. Until Ukraine is crushed by Russia and Putin gets to keep Crimea and the provinces he has annexed, no one will sleep safely," Koffler said. "This is what Putin wants the world to know."

Fox News' Bradford Betz, Anders Hagstrom and Reuters contributed to this report.



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A suspected cooking gas explosion in the Philippines injured at least 15 people and damaged a restaurant and two nearby food outlets on Thursday in a province south of Manila, officials said.

Twelve parked cars were slightly damaged by the blast at Mr. Won’s Samgyeopsal Korean restaurant in the port city of Calapan in Oriental Mindoro province.

The injured included four restaurant employees and a delivery crew member who were preparing to open the restaurant, which is located on the ground level of a shopping mall, officials said.

MISSING TITAN SUBMERSIBLE FOUND: SEE THE KEY VESSELS THAT AIDED THE DESPERATE SEARCH

"We understand the concerns and anxieties of the community and we want to emphasize that the situation is being given the highest priority," regional police chief Brig. Gen. Joel Doria said.

Doria urged the public to report any information that may help in an ongoing police investigation.



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Austrian authorities said Thursday they they have seized large amounts of drugs and weapons in a raid on a far-right biker gang tied to organized crime.

Public broadcaster ORF reported that police searched properties in Upper Austria and detained 10 people on suspicion of breaching firearms, narcotics and extremism laws.

GERMAN POLICE WARN OF ‘BLUE PUNISHER’ ECSTASY PILL FOLLOWING 2 TEEN DEATHS

Tabloid daily Krone reported that the suspects were members of the Bandidos biker club, which has been trying to gain a foothold in Austria. It reported that the raids Monday were sparked by investigations resulting from the 2022 discovery of firearms and ammunition in a vehicle belonging to a German man.



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Since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Belarus has stood out as one of Moscow’s few allies and the only European nation to offer Russia direct support in its war effort, including in its most recent endeavor to end a mutiny against the Kremlin.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said he helped bring about a peaceful resolution to an apparent mutiny by Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin by offering him and his private military company troops a safe haven within Belarus' borders in exchange for his "exile" from Russia.

Lukashenko's claims have been questioned by regional experts and analysts alike who have asked why he stepped in and how his actions play into his deep allegiances to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

PUTIN CLAIMS WAGNER DID NOT HAVE PUBLIC BACKING IN MUTINY ATTEMPT: 'THE PEOPLE WERE NOT WITH THEM'

Though Belarus and Russia share a long history together, Minsk has not always acted as Moscow's subservient.

Belarus declared its independence from the Soviet Union in August 1991, and by early December of that year, leaders from Belarus, Ukraine and Russia met to sign the Belovezha Accords. The agreement solidified the dissolution of the Soviet Union – a collapse that Putin would one day call the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century."

While Belarus and Russia have a shared past, their allegiances to one another have become far more pronounced in recent years.

"Belarus is a de facto vassal of Russia," Peter Rough, senior fellow and director of the Center on Europe and Eurasia for the Hudson Institute, told Fox News Digital.

"This asymmetry is not what Lukashenko had in mind when he first launched the Union State with Russia in the 1990s," he added in reference to a 1999 agreement signed by Lukashenko and Putin's predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, to bolster Minsk and Moscow's defense and economic ties.

The neighboring nations saw a shift in their geopolitical dynamic after Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014, prompting concern in Minsk that Putin may have plans for other former Soviet states as well.

"Putin wants to re-create the Russian Empire at least as big as the Soviet Union. To do so, he's using every trick in the book tailored to the weaknesses and unique situations of his neighbors," former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe and NATO Michael Ryan told Fox News Digital. "Lukashenko wouldn't be in power today if not for Putin."

By the end of 2020, the dynamics between Lukashenko and Putin had shifted after the Belarusian leader saw massive uprisings after an allegedly botched presidential election.

Large-scale protests broke out after Belarusians, Western nations and human-rights groups accused Minsk of falsifying the election’s results to secure Lukashenko – who had been in power since 1994 – another win.

LUKASHENKO WARNS OF BELARUSIAN ‘COMBAT READINESS’: 'IF RUSSIA COLLAPSES, ALL OF US WILL DIE'

Lukashenko responded by violently cracking down on protesters and calling in Russia to help suppress the uprisings as Minsk faced international ire.

Rough explained that Putin’s willingness to jump in and help Lukashenko was down to more than maintaining region stability; it has enabled him to keep Lukashenko beholden to Russia.

"Putin has established dominance over Lukashenko since riding to his rescue during the Belarusian protests," he said. "Now, Putin is turning Belarus into a front-line Russian garrison state, stationing Russian troops and deploying tactical nuclear weapons there."

Belarus has not only allowed Russia to station and train troops within its borders, even serving as a launching point for the Russian troops that marched south on Kyiv in the early days of the war in Ukraine, Lukashenko has further allowed Putin to place tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus – a move that marked the Kremlin’s first deployment of such weaponry outside of Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union.

Belarus once again found itself embroiled in the fallout of Russia's war in Ukraine this past weekend after Prigozhin ordered his troops to head for Moscow in a "march for justice" in retaliation for the ill-treatment his forces received while on the front lines by the Russian Ministry of Defense.

PRIGOZHIN MOVE TO BELARUS COULD BE STRATEGIC MOVE BY PUTIN, THREATEN BORDERING NATO COUNTRIES: EXPERT

But the terms of the alleged agreement brokered by Lukashenko remain opaque, and some experts are wary over its authenticity. 

Russia expert Rebekah Koffler, a former Defense Intelligence Agency intel officer specializing in Russian doctrine, told Fox News Digital that she believes the attempted mutiny over the weekend was most likely staged by Putin to strategically establish the Wagner forces in Belarus and potentially set up a second front to stretch Ukraine’s forces thin.

"Lukashenko became the beneficiary of Putin’s nuclear weapons, so Lukashenko supposedly negotiating Prigozhin’s ‘exile’ was in [on] it," she said, alleging that she suspects the Belarusian leader of being aware of a Putin-directed scheme. "It's part of the whole package."

"Belarus is highly dependent on Russia economically and militarily," she continued. "Lukashenko pretty much has to take orders from Putin."

Though experts agree Lukashenko is beholden to Putin, they are divided on whether the mutiny signified that Putin is in a weakened state or acting as a strategically savvy maneuverer. Opinions on how Lukashenko and Prigozhin fit into the scenario are also divided.

"While Lukashenko likely relishes the attention he’s getting for the Putin-Prigozhin stand-down, he is not a meaningful actor in that feud," Rough said. "Prigozhin must impress on Putin that going after him may spawn civil war. Lukashenko is insignificant in any of these calculations or decisions."

But Rough also pointed out that if Russia does see a decline in Putin's authority or power, it could "give Lukashenko an opportunity to break free" from Putin’s clutches.



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Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Drone footage captured by rangers shows dozens of tiger sharks feeding on the carcass of a humpback whale off the Australian coast

The feasting involved some 50 tiger sharks scavenging a humpback whale that died of natural causes and was floating adrift in the Great Sandy Marine Park off Hervey Bay, which is about 180 miles north of Brisbane. 

MONTANA MAN SENTENCED TO OVER 3 YEARS FOR TRAFFICKING EAGLE FEATHERS, PARTS

The frenzy, captured on video by marine park rangers Sunday afternoon, prompted a warning from the Queensland Department of Environment and Science, reminding people to keep their distance from stranded or deceased marine animals. 

"Where there are dead whales, there are likely sharks nearby and this vision clearly shows why this is the case," senior ranger Daniel Clifton told Australia’s news.com.au

"The death of one whale, although sad, creates a life source for many other scavenging animals, including fish, sharks, and other marine like. We’re fortunate here in the Great Sandy Marine Park that we can experience these natural processes firsthand," he said. 



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A Russian strike on a pizzeria in Ukraine killed nine and injured dozens, authorities announced.

The Russian missile strike hit the RIA Pizza restaurant in Kramatorsk, Ukraine, on Tuesday evening. 

The attack killed nine people and injured 56 others, according to the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs. 

Two sisters, both 14 years old, were killed in the blast from Russian artillery. 

PENTAGON SAYS US NOT INVOLVED IN SHORT-LIVED WAGNER MUTINY, CALLS IT IN 'INTERNAL RUSSIAN MATTER'

"Russian missiles stopped the beating of the hearts of two angels," the Kramatorsk city council said in a Telegram post.

A 17-year-old teenager also perished in the attack, according to Prosecutor General Andrii Kostin.

BIDEN ADMIN SLAPS SANCTIONS RELATED TO PRIGOZHIN'S WAGNER GROUP IN AFRICA OVER 'DEATH AND DESTRUCTION'

Missile strikes have made ordinary urban life in Ukraine increasingly dangerous, as civilian casualties continue to mount with missile strikes and coordinated bombings.

Fragments from downed Russian missiles started a fire that killed at least two people and injured eight others in Kyiv, on Saturday, according to Ukrainian officials.

A Telegram post from Serhiy Popko, the head of Kyiv's military administration, revealed that falling debris caused a fire on several floors of a 24-story apartment building in a central district, The Associated Press reported.

RUSSIA OPENS CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION INTO WAGNER GROUP CHIEF

More than 20 missiles were detected and taken down by anti-aircraft units, Popko said. Video of the scene appeared to show the upper floors of the building on fire and the parking lot covered with ash and debris.

Kharkiv and other Ukrainian cities were also hit by missiles early on Saturday as residents throughout the country heard air alerts, Reuters reported.

At least three Russian missiles targeted Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-biggest city, and one of them started a fire after striking a gas line, according to Mayor Ihor Terekhov. He said emergency services were at the scene but did not disclose the number of casualties – if any.

The mayor of Dnipro, a city in eastern Ukraine, also reported damage as eight private homes were destroyed in an attack.



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A British man vacationing in Jamaica died after trying to drink 21 cocktails on a bar's menu, according to reports out of the UK.

Timothy Southern, 53, of Staffordshire, England, was on vacation with his family in May 2022 in Saint Ann, Jamaica, when he met two Canadian women at a bar trying to complete a 21-drink challenge to celebrate a birthday, according to ITV News.

Southern had been drinking brandy and beer prior to taking up the challenge, according to an inquest.

He joined the women and managed to have 12 drinks before returning to his room at the Royal Decameron Club Caribbean, where he later died.

TOURIST SHOT TO DEATH IN POPULAR MEXICAN RESORT TOWN DAYS AFTER ANOTHER TOURIST KILLED IN MACHETE ATTACK

His family has since criticized the medical treatment he received when they first realized he was ill

"He was on his back choking. I put him in the recovery position and screamed for an ambulance," a family member said, according to an inquest reported by ITV. "He was making a gurgling sound. As soon as he was in the recovery position he vomited. I was shouting his name with no response.

AMERICANS TRAVELING BETWEEN MEXICO, US SEE VACATIONS TURN INTO NIGHTMARES AT THE BORDER

"When the nurse arrived I said had an ambulance been called and she said 'no'. I thought she would take over. But that was not the case. I noticed he was starting to lose temperature. I checked his pulse and couldn't find it," the family member continued. 

The nurse reportedly told the family remember that Southern still did have a pulse, and the family member started "to lose it" over witnessing Southern's reported treatment.

"I got a full look at his face and I thought he had passed away. I said, 'Don't just sit there looking at him, start CPR'. She only gave him chest compressions. Maybe if she had known what she was doing, maybe he would still be here."

TOURIST KIDNAPPINGS, RAMPANT CRIME SPARK TRAVEL WARNINGS IN CARIBBEAN, SOUTH AMERICA

"The service and treatment he received was disgusting," the family member continued in their comment to the inquest, according to ITV News.

A pathologist in Jamaica's capital of Kingston ruled that Southern died from "acute gastroenteritis due to alcohol consumption." The inquest into Southern's toxicology report, however, could take up to three years before it makes it to the UK, according to ITV News.



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An American man who videotaped a tourist defacing the ancient Colosseum in Rome, Italty, said he was "stunned" to see the vandalism unfold in real time.

The message, "Ivan+Haley 23," was carved into a wall inside the Colosseum in an incident filmed by fellow tourist Ryan Lutz, of Orange, California, whose video went viral on social media and was ultimately picked up by Italian officials.

Lutz, who posted the video on YouTube and Reddit, told The Associated Press he was "dumbfounded" that the tourist would deface the well-known monument.

Italian Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano described the carving as "serious, undignified and a sign of great incivility that a tourist defaces one of the most famous places in the world, the Colosseum, to engrave the name of his fiancée."

TOURIST DEFACES ROME'S ANCIENT COLOSSEUM, ENGRAVES NAMES ON WALL

"I hope that whoever did this will be identified and sanctioned according to our laws," Sangiuliano tweeted.

Tourism Minister Daniela Santanche said she hoped the tourist would be sanctioned "so that he understands the gravity of the gesture." She also called for respect for Italy’s culture and history and said, "We cannot allow those who visit our nation to feel free to behave in this way."

According to Italian news agency ANSA, this was the fourth time this year that graffiti was reported at the Colosseum. The suspect in the latest incident could face $15,000 in fines and up to five years in prison.

ROME'S MAYOR BLASTS ‘ABSURD’ CLIMATE PROTEST AT TREVI FOUNTAIN

Lutz, who is on a two-month backpacking trip through Europe, had just finished a guided tour of the Colosseum on Friday when he witnessed the man "blatantly carving his name" into the wall – an incident that was so shocking to him that he began recording.

"And as you see in the video, I kind of approach him and ask him, dumbfounded at this point, 'Are you serious? Are you really serious?'" Lutz recalled. "And all he could do is like smile at me."

Lutz said he alerted a guard to the situation, but that the guard and his supervisor did nothing, even after Lutz identified the man and offered to share the video. He decided to publish the video online the morning after the incident once he had calmed down.

Lutz, who says he appreciates graffiti and art, said "carving your name seems like a pretty selfish act," adding that people visiting foreign countries cannot repay their hosts "with blatant disrespect like this."

In 2014, a Russian tourist was hit with a fine of 20,000 euros, or $25,000, and received a four-year suspended jail sentence for engraving a big letter 'K' on a wall of the Colosseum.

Two American tourists were cited the following year for aggravated damage after they carved their names in the monument.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Israel continues to explore innovative uses for artificial intelligence (AI) in various aspects of security and law enforcement, helping to foil numerous threats.

"AI technology has been incorporated quite naturally into the Shin Bet's interdiction machine," Shin Bet Director Ronen Bar said in a speech to the Cyber Week conference in Israel. "Using AI, we have spotted a not-inconsequential number of threats."

Shin Bet, the Israeli counterpart to the FBI or Britain’s MI5, has created its own generative AI platform, akin to ChatGPT, Bar revealed. He explained that the platform has allowed the intelligence service to streamline its work by flagging surveillance anomalies and sort "endless" amounts of intelligence.

"Since the beginning of 2022, ISA handled 600 ISIS-related cases, many of them consumed similar violent and dangerous content on social media and on the web. Some were even arrested just before attacking," Bar said. "They are added to roughly 800 major attacks we have foiled since January 2022."

NEW TECHNOLOGY SAVES FARMERS TIME IN FIELD BY TACKLING MOST ‘TEDIOUS, TIME-CONSUMING’ PROBLEM

"An alarming number of them have a strong basis on the web – posts, inspiration, knowledge or social groups," he added. "The trend is clear. Traditional security organizations must adapt to the new situation, where any angry person with access to the Internet may become a threat."

"Already today, with AI, we have identified a significant number of threats," he said. "The machine and its ability to detect anomalies create a protective wall against our enemies, alongside our traditional capabilities. … Since we have understood we can't fight this war with sticks and stones, we recognize the threats but also see opportunities using AI."

Retired Maj. Gen. Isaac Ben-Israel, director of Blavatnik Interdisciplinary Cyber Research Center at Tel Aviv University, argued that the "accelerated increase in the use of artificial intelligence has a drastic impact on the cybersecurity arena, cyberdefense and the nature of malicious cyberattacks."

"Accelerating rise in the use of artificial intelligence has a drastic impact on the cybersecurity arena, cyberdefense and the nature of malicious cyberattacks," he said. "As the use of AI increases, our society becomes more and more dependent on computers, leading to a greater need for strong cyberdefense measures."

UN CALLS FOR AI WATCHDOG AGENCY DUE TO ‘TREMENDOUS’ POTENTIAL

Gaby Portnoy, director-general of Israel National Cyber Directorate, told the Cyber Week conference that "Anyone who carries out cyberattacks against Israeli citizens must take into account the price he will pay." 

"In the past year, we have been working hard to develop our resilience and expand our capabilities to detect cyberattacks, raise our shields and expose malicious activities, specifically Iranian," Portnoy said, adding that the vast majority of attacks are thwarted.

Portnoy described some of the projects the Cyber Directorate has pursued over the past year, saying that Israel is working with "our partner from the UAE [United Arab Emirates], His Excellency Dr. [Mohamed] Al Kuwaiti" to build "a multinational cybercollaboration platform for cyberinvestigation and knowledge building."

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd., a global leader in defense technology, helped develop a new system called Puzzle, which uses AI to combine and analyze visual data, communications information and other information to create a "comprehensive and filtered dataset," according to a company press release.

AI REVEALS CHEMICALS THAT COULD STOP AGING IN ITS TRACKS

Puzzle seamlessly interfaces with existing command and control systems, helping to make sense of the incoming data to prioritize necessary targets within tight time frames, helping improve the efficacy of AI targeting.

Essentially, the Puzzle system works like a filter for the incredible amount of information AI can handle as many analysts and officials look to keep the human element involved in any AI-powered process.

Israel has remained on the cutting edge of AI and its uses across various security fields: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has invested in AI, which officials have argued presents "a leap forward" even as researchers raise concerns about the potential escalation it would create.

Col. Uri, head of the data and AI department, Digital Transformation Division, previously told Fox News Digital that "Anyone who wants to make such a change faces a huge challenge."

The IDF used AI in a 2021 operation to successfully target at least two Hamas commanders, producing "200 new target assets" by using the new digital methods to create likely targets and locations to hit.

"Because we don't have a lot of manpower, we need to find creative ways to compensate," Ram Ben Tzion, founder and CEO of tech firm Ultra, previously told Fox News Digital. "So, when it comes to data and intelligence, many times we've had to rely on innovation and technology to compensate for lack of resources, human or other."



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The European Union is set to look into blocking rays from the sun as a possible option to combat climate change, according to a report.

According to Bloomberg News, the European Union on Wednesday will announce a framework for assessing possible security implications of climate change, which includes a study regarding the possible dangers of re-engineering the atmosphere itself.

"These technologies introduce new risks to people and ecosystems, while they could also increase power imbalances between nations, spark conflicts and raises a myriad of ethical, legal, governance and political issues," a document obtained by Bloomberg states.

The technology, described as solar radiation modification, will be studied by the EU.

SERBIAN COURT RELEASES 3 POLICE OFFICERS FOLLOWING US, EU DEMANDS THAT THEY BE SET FREE

"The EU will support international efforts to assess comprehensively the risks and uncertainties of climate interventions, including solar radiation modification," the document states.

GREECE’S CONSERVATIVES WIN LANDSLIDE VICTORY IN ELECTIONS

Among the options to combat climate change that will be looked at are stratospheric aerosol injection, which would increase the atmospheric concentration of particles in order to reduce the overall sunlight which will reach the Earth's surface.

According to Bloomberg, critics of the strategy say it moves attention away from reducing emissions and could have some unintended impacts, such as changing rain patterns.



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Four people died and three others were missing after landslides hit a county in China’s southwestern Sichuan province on Tuesday, leading authorities to evacuate more than 900 people.

The landslides, triggered by flash floods, occurred in Miansi and Weizhou townships in Wenchuan county, according to the county’s emergency management bureau.

More than 400 rescuers searched for missing people after the landslides hit early Tuesday, state media said. Four people, including a couple from Miansi township, were found dead later on Tuesday, while three others remained missing, according to official broadcaster CCTV.

WHAT CHINA IS DOING IN CUBA IS A BIG THREAT TO ALL OF US

More than 900 people in the area were evacuated, Xinhua news agency reported.

Wenchuan county was the site of a devastating earthquake in 2008 that claimed at least 69,000 lives, according to the Chinese government.

China is experiencing extreme weather patterns, with heavy rainfall in southern regions and record-breaking temperatures in the north including in the capital, Beijing.



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A group tracking antisemitism in Germany said Tuesday that it documented 2,480 incidents in the country last year — just under seven incidents per day on average.

In its annual report, the Department for Research and Information on Anti-Semitism, or RIAS, said that while it registered a slight decrease in antisemitic incidents in 2022, compared to the year before, there were nine incidents of extreme violence — the highest number of such cases since nationwide record keeping began in 2017.

Those extremely violent crimes include a shooting at a former rabbi’s house next to an old synagogue in the western city of Essen last November. Germany's federal prosecutor is now investigating the case along with two other violent antisemitic crimes on suspicion that they may have been carried out in cooperation with Iran's Revolutionary Guards.

CALIFORNIA EDUCATIONAL LEADERS PUSH CRT LESSONS THAT PRAISE MARXIST WHO LOOKED UP TO OSAMA BIN LADEN

More often, however, "it is everyday situations in which Jews are confronted with antisemitism," Benjamin Steinitz, the head of RIAS, told reporters in Berlin.

These incidents can take place anywhere from work to home, to public transport, in the supermarket or at a concert. Such "everyday" antisemitic incidents have diverse political backgrounds and often include trivialization of the Holocaust, in which Germany's Nazis and their henchmen murdered 6 million European Jews.

Many antisemitic hate crimes also include common tropes linked to Jews or conspiracy theories such as the coronavirus pandemic with its anti-Jewish narratives and the Middle East conflict with antisemitic criticism of Israel.

Every fifth antisemitic incident has a conspiracy background, according to what RIAS documented. A right-wing extremist background was involved in 13 % of all incidents, while 53% of the incidents could not be clearly linked to a specific political background.

The German government’s commissioner to combat antisemitism, Felix Klein, pointed specifically to antisemitic incidents in Germany's cultural sector, in which the head of a major art show in Germany, the documenta fifteen, resigned last year after an exhibit featuring antisemitic elements prompted an outcry in the country.

"Documenta fifteen was rightly the talk of the town," Klein said. "But many anti-Semitic incidents also occur below the threshold of public attention in the cultural sector — as in other parts of social life, they are part of everyday life for Jews."

Jews who are exposed to antisemitism in Germany can reach out to RIAS, which will not only document the incidents, but also help those concerned with further contacts to criminal police focused on combatting antisemitism and groups helping victims of Jew hatred.



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The president of Belarus touted his country's "combat readiness" during the short-lived revolt staged by the Wagner Group.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko told state news outlet Belta that the Wagner Group mercenaries' mutiny attempt last week threatened the national security of the nation and demanded military preparedness.

"I gave all the orders to bring the army to full combat readiness," Lukashenko told the outlet, according to translations from The Moscow Times.

BIDEN ADMIN SAYS IT DOESN'T KNOW WHERE WAGNER GROUP LEADER YEVGENY PRIGOZHIN IS AFTER SHORT-LIVED MUTINY

"I won't hide it, it was painful to watch the events taking place in southern Russia. I’m not the only one," the president continued. "Many of our citizens took [these events] to heart. Because the Fatherland is one."

Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin shocked the world this weekend when he turned his private military group against Russian forces while taking control of Russian military bases. 

He relented on Saturday after Belarus held negotiations between the two sides.

WHAT DOES PUTIN'S STANDOFF WITH WAGNER MERCENARY GROUP MEAN FOR RUSSIA?

"If Russia collapses, we will be left under the rubble, all of us will die," Lukashenko added.

Last week, Prigozhin posted an 11-minute voice recording on social media outlining his reasons for going against Putin as his forces headed toward Moscow before an abrupt halt. 

The march toward Moscow was intended to be a protest against the prosecution of the war in Ukraine and not aimed at regime change in Russia, he said, according to a Reuters translation. 

INNER WORKINGS OF WAGNER MERCENARY GROUP REVEALED AMID CALL TO ADD ORGANIZATION TO US TERROR LIST

The Kremlin said it made a deal in which the mercenary chief would move to Belarus, and he and his soldiers would receive amnesty. 

Prior to his revolt, Prigozhin had criticized Russian military leaders, including Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov, for failing to provide his troops with enough ammunition during the bloody battle of Bakhmut. 

Prigozhin held back from directly criticizing Russian President Vladimir Putin.

State Department spokesman Matt Miller said the conflict between Putin and his former ally is an internal Russian affair "in which the United States is not involved and will not the involved." He added that the U.S. does not take a position as to who leads Russia.

"We want a Russia that is not invading its neighbors and not trying to violate the territorial sovereignty of its neighbors," Miller said. 

He noted that Wagner forces had committed numerous human rights violations and generally bring destruction and chaos in any country the group operates in. 



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A jet linked to Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin landed in Belarus from Russia on Tuesday, days after he called off his armed rebellion against the Russian military. 

Flight tracking website Flightradar24 showed an Embraer Legacy 600 jet, bearing identification codes that match a plane linked to Prigozhin in U.S. sanctions documents, descending to landing altitude near the Belarus capital Minsk, Reuters reported. It first appeared on the tracking site above Rostov, the southern Russian city Prigozhin's fighters captured on Saturday.

The jet is believed to be carrying Prigozhin to exile after the Kremlin said it made a deal where Prigozhin would move to Belarus and his fighters would not be prosecuted. Russian authorities announced Tuesday a criminal investigation into the Wagner Group's purported mutiny has been closed, with no charges filed against anyone involved. 

The Federal Security Service said its investigation revealed that the participants in the mutiny had "ceased actions directly aimed at committing the crime," Reuters reported, citing Russia's RIA state news agency. 

RUSSIA DROPS CHARGES AGAINST PRIGOZHIN, OTHER PARTICIPANTS OF WAGNER GROUP REBELLION

Despite Russian President Vladimir Putin calling them traitors, the Kremlin stated over the weekend that it would not prosecute Prigozhin and his troops after he pulled his men back on Saturday to avoid bloodshed, less than 24 hours after the revolt began. Prigozhin said he would go to Belarus at the invitation of President Alexander Lukashenko. However, details of his proposed journey into exile were not made public, and his whereabouts remained unconfirmed for three days.

His last public appearance was Saturday night, when he was seen smiling and high-fiving bystanders while an SUV carried him out of Rostov after Wagner Group forces made their about-face.

Putin delivered a speech Monday night, when he condemned the mutiny leaders but did not mention Prigozhin by name. Putin said Wagner fighters would be allowed to leave for Belarus, join the Russian military or go home. 

Prigozhin avoiding prosecution contrasts with how the Kremlin has been responding to people staging anti-government protests. Many opposition figures in Russia received lengthy prison sentences and are serving time in penal colonies known for harsh conditions.

TIMELINE OF WAGNER GROUP'S STANDOFF THAT SHOOK PUTIN'S RUSSIA

Until Prigozhin's mutiny, the 62-year-old ex-convict and mercenary leader was a long-time Putin ally whose Wagner fighters participated in the bloodiest battles of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Prigozhin claimed he launched the rebellion to oust Russian military leaders who he had accused of corruption and incompetence in prosecuting the war. 

Wagner mercenaries ostensibly seized control of Russian military facilities in the city of Rostov-on-Don Saturday morning and had nearly advanced to Moscow later that day when Prigozhin called off his march. The only reported incident of violence was a confrontation between Wagner forces and a Russian helicopter that ended with the aircraft being shot down, he said. 

"We went as a demonstration of protest, not to overthrow the government of the country," Prigozhin said in an audio message posted to social media Monday. 

Putin confirmed on Monday that Russian pilots had been killed fighting Wagner mercenaries and thanked Russians for remaining united during the crisis. 

RUSSIAN WAGNER GROUP GAINS GLOBAL NOTORIETY FROM AFRICA TO UKRAINE, BUT DIVISION BREWS AT HOME

He said Russia's enemies wanted to see the country "choke in bloody civil strife," but Russia would not succumb to "any blackmail, any attempt to create internal turmoil," according to Reuters.

The short-lived rebellion was seen as the biggest challenge to Putin's rule in his more than 20 years in power. 

On Monday night, the Kremlin showed Putin meeting with top security, law enforcement and military officials, including Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, whose removal was demanded by Prigozhin. Earlier on Monday, the Defense Ministry released a video of Shoigu inspecting troops in Ukraine.

Prigozhin said Monday that the Belarusian leadership proposed solutions that would allow the Wagner Group to operate "in a legal jurisdiction." He provided no further details on the extent of those operations. 

Fox News' Landon Mion, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Russian authorities announced Tuesday a criminal investigation into the armed rebellion led by Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin has been closed with no charges filed against anyone involved.

The Federal Security Service said its investigation revealed that the participants in the mutiny "ceased activities directed at committing the crime," according to The Associated Press.

Despite President Vladimir Putin calling them traitors, the Kremlin stated over the weekend that it would not prosecute Prigozhin and his troops after he pulled his men back on Saturday to avoid bloodshed, less than 24 hours after the revolt began.

The charge of mounting an armed mutiny carries a punishment of up to 20 years in prison. 

TIMELINE OF WAGNER GROUP'S STANDOFF THAT SHOOK PUTIN'S RUSSIA

Prigozhin avoiding prosecution contrasts how the Kremlin has been responding to people staging anti-government protests. Many opposition figures in Russia received lengthy prison sentences and are serving time in penal colonies known for harsh conditions.

It remains unclear where Prigozhin is located as of Tuesday. The Kremlin has said it made a deal where Prigozhin would move to Belarus, but neither he nor the Belarusian authorities have confirmed his whereabouts.

A business jet Prigozhin reportedly uses landed near the Belarusian capital of Minsk on Tuesday morning, according to independent Belarusian military monitoring project Belaruski Hajun, but it's not clear if the leader was on it.

Prigozhin's brief rebellion over the weekend was the biggest challenge to Putin's rule in more than 20 years in power.

RUSSIAN WAGNER GROUP GAINS GLOBAL NOTORIETY FROM AFRICA TO UKRAINE, BUT DIVISION BREWS AT HOME

Putin, in a nationally televised speech over the weekend, attempted to show stability and control as he criticized the uprising's "organizers" without calling out Prigozhin by name. The president also praised Russian unity in the midst of the crisis and rank-and-file Wagner Group fighters for not allowing the rebellion to lead to "major bloodshed."

Prigozhin had defended his efforts in an audio statement, in which he taunted the Russian military, but said he did not seek to stage a coup against Putin.

On Monday night, the Kremlin showed Putin meeting with top security, law enforcement and military officials, including Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, whose removal was demanded by Prigozhin. Earlier on Monday, the Defense Ministry released a video of Shoigu inspecting troops in Ukraine.

During his speech, Putin offered Prigozhin's fighters to either come under Russia's Defense Ministry's command, leave service or depart to Belarus.

Prigozhin said Monday that the Belarusian leadership proposed solutions that would allow the Wagner Group to operate "in a legal jurisdiction." He provided no further details on the extent of those operations. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Monday, June 26, 2023

Russia’s notorious mercenary organization known as the Wagner Group once again made global headlines after its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin led a mutiny against the Kremlin over the weekend in apparent retaliation for the treatment of his contract fighters.

While the mutiny came to an end before Prigozhin reached Moscow due to an ambiguous deal struck by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko – who granted safe haven to the Wagner leader and his forces – it remains unclear what will happen to the mercenary troops doing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s bidding in places like Africa and the Middle East.

Putin allegedly agreed to drop the criminal case against Prigozhin by Moscow’s Federal Security Services (FSB), first opened Saturday morning, in exchange for his exile from Russia.

TIMELINE OF WAGNER GROUP'S STANDOFF THAT SHOOK PUTIN'S RUSSIA

But reporting by Russian media outlets Monday suggested the case has not yet been dropped and speculation has mounted over Prigozhin’s whereabouts, his security and the future of his mercenary group – which Putin has relied on to carry out objectives that Moscow does not want its military linked to.

The Russian government has denied any connection with the private military company (PMC) despite numerous U.N.-level reports showing that Wagner forces have been used to pursue Russian interests abroad – a claim that was further dismantled by Prigozhin who repeatedly accused the Russian Ministry of Defense of not providing his forces with adequate arms in Ukraine.

African nations like the Central African Republic (CAR) and Mali, who’s close ties with Putin have become a top priority in the geopolitical sphere, have previously claimed that the controversial mercenary group accused of human rights abuses was not working within their borders and instead suggested their militaries had agreements with the Kremlin.

But Prigozhin’s recent devotional shift has left leaders from these nations questioning how the severed relations between the Wagner chief and Putin could affect their security at home.

"The Africans are asking the same questions we are, trying to understand what the implications are for what happened over the weekend," Cameron Hudson, a senior associate in the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) told Fox News Digital. "Those countries where Wagner is present, they need both Wagner and Putin."

RUSSIAN WAGNER GROUP GAINS GLOBAL NOTORIETY FROM AFRICA TO UKRAINE, BUT DIVISION BREWS AT HOME

Hudson explained that while Moscow outwardly distances itself from the mercenary group, the security they both provide to African leadership is one and the same to these nations.

Wagner is believed to operate not only in Ukraine and Syria but throughout Africa with some 10,000 troops spread out across Angola, CAR, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Madagascar, Libya, Mali, Mozambique, Sudan, Zimbabwe and possibly Eritrea.

Using Wagner forces has proven controversial for the nations that have allowed them to operate within their borders, but it has also come with the powerful backing of Russia, which sits as permanent member of the United Nation’s Security Council.

This geopolitical support was witnessed this month when Russia backed Mali’s efforts to end a decade-long U.N. peacekeeping mission formed in an attempt to counter the rise in Islamic extremism.

In an address to the U.N. Security Council, Mali’s foreign minister accused the mission of becoming "a part of the problem in fueling intercommunal tensions."

But despite accusations of human rights abuses and provocations levied against Wagner mercenaries, they have been allowed to stay and assist Mali's military aims.

This relationship is indicative of Wagner’s presence across Africa and has put these nations in a precarious diplomatic position.

"They need Putin for the kind of high-level political cover that he can give them in New York and globally," Hudson said. "And they need the day-to-day security services that Wagner is providing."

The expert explained that if Russia is able to find a way to successfully take over Wagner’s operations, it could prove beneficial for Moscow and its African allies, but the Kremlin’s ability to do this remains questionable.

"I’m assuming this isn’t over," Hudson continued in reference to the Wagner-Putin controversy. "Wagner serves a function for Moscow that it doesn’t have right now. Wagner has built relationships, it's built a network of businesses both official and unofficial.

"So, I think the question is if Prigozhin were to be replaced or removed, could the Kremlin co-opt Wagner?" he said.

BIDEN ADMIN SAYS IT DOESN'T KNOW WHERE WAGNER GROUP LEADER YEVGENY PRIGOZHIN IS AFTER SHORT-LIVED MUTINY

One Wagner expert said this dilemma has actually granted Prigozhin the upper hand when it comes to ensuring Putin’s interest in Africa remain safeguarded.

Oleksandr Kovalenko, a military supervisor of the Information Resistance group in Ukraine, which began countering propaganda following Russia’s 2014 invasion of the Crimean Peninsula, explained that Wagner operations are not merely a business where security services are carried out in exchange for cash. 

The Kremlin and Putin have a long-term interest in Russia’s ability to not only gain access to natural resources available across Africa but to gain influence particularly as relations with the West have collapsed after Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year.

"For Russia, control over its external ‘colonies’ is very important," Kovalenko said. "Therefore, the Wagnerites will not be taken away [from Africa] or replaced by any other groups. The Russian authorities do not have [another] private military company that could replace the Wagnerites in Africa."

"Prigozhin has a monopoly in this matter," he added.

Putin’s greatest hurdle, when it comes to not only handling Russia’s top mercenary network but its global reach, is in figuring out how to deal with its leader. 

A predicament for which Kovalenko argued that "the Russian leadership has no answer."



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Italian officials are calling for a man to be identified and reprimanded after he was filmed defacing the ancient Colosseum in Rome. 

In a video shared by Gennaro Sangiuliano, Italy's culture minister, a tourist is seen carving the name of his fiancée into a wall inside the landmark with "Ivan + Hayley."

He also shared a blurred image of the suspect. 

"I consider it very serious, unworthy and a sign of great incivility that a tourist defaces one of the most famous places in the world, the Colosseum, to engrave the name of his fiancee," Sangiuliano tweeted. "I hope that whoever did this will be identified and sanctioned according to our laws."

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The video appears to show the man turning around and smiling into the camera. The Colosseum has been the target of vandalism in recent years. 

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In 2020, an Irish tourist was seen by private security guards carving his initials into the centuries-old structure, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

The incident happened just a few days after another tourist, a 40-year-old Polish man, crashed a drone inside the Colosseum after he was told it was a no-fly zone, according to the report.



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White House National Security Council John Kirby said Monday it’s too soon to know what will become of the Wagner mercenaries after troops were led by Yevgeny Prigozhin on a short-lived mutiny over the weekend. 

The comment from Kirby came in response to a reporter who questioned what implications the weekend’s events will have on Wagner’s power and ability – both inside Ukraine and in other regions, like Africa. 

"Where does Wagner go from him? Do you have any early read on that?" the reporter asked. 

"No, we don’t. And we don’t know the answer to your question. It’s just too soon to know," Kirby said. "We recognize that Wagner still has a presence in Africa. I think you know, we have worked to hold Wagner accountable." 

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The mercenary group is listed as a transnational criminal organization and has been sanctioned by the U.S. government. 

"We will continue to take those actions that are appropriate to try to limit their ability to sow chaos and violence wherever it is," Kirby said. "But it’s just too soon to know after the weekend’s events where Wagner goes as an entity or where Prigozhin goes in terms of his leadership of it." 

Kirby said he did know where the group’s leader was. 

The Wagner Group was founded in 2014 by Russian Oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, who is reported to have fled to Belarus, and was closely linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin before he announced his march to Moscow with a contingent of 25,000 mercenaries. 

Prigozhin pulled the plug on the march to apparently avoid bloodshed. Wagner’s total force is estimated to have more than 50,000 members.

Fox News’ Benjamin Weinthal and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Military retirees living in Turkey were told they will lose access to U.S. bases in the country this fall – cutting them off from vital services and access to American products.

Air Force Col. Calvin B. Powell, commander of the 39th Air Base Wing at Incirlik Air Base, issued a memo last week warning the small population of retirees of the impending move, which is set to take place on Oct. 1, according to the Military Times.

The restriction of access to base facilities is expected to affect about 121 U.S. military retirees living in Turkey, barring them commissaries stocked with American groceries and from Army and Air Force Exchange Service locations -- department stores where members and retirees can get familiar American products.

The retirees will also lose access to the American post office boxes located at on-base post offices, which one retiree said are used for everything from receiving vital medications to casting their ballots in U.S. elections.

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"They use the P.O. box to get vital diabetes medicine and things like cast their vote in America," the retiree, who asked to be identified by his first name Michael, told Fox News Digital. "If they lose access to the base, they lose access to their medicine they get from America."

Michael, who was medically retired from the military as a result of injuries he sustained while serving in Iraq in 2008, said the Turkish post offices are not dependable enough for vital shipments like medication, estimating that one or two of every three packages sent through the system will not arrive at the intended destination.

The unreliability of the Turkish postal system could also have an impact on their ability to vote, Michael said, noting that the more dependable military post offices give retirees the peace of mind that their votes reach their destination and are counted.

"Every election, we go [to the military post office] to cast our vote because we know our vote will get there," he said. "If we have to use the Turkish system… it's like rolling your dice. You just don't know if your vote is ever going to get there."

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One of the perks of retiring from the military has long been the lifetime access to military installations and services, a benefit viewed as even more vital to those who have retired far from home. Yet Michael said retirees in Turkey were given very little justification for the sudden decision to revoke their access.

"There are many retirees who believe that this is a way of forcing them to go back to the United States, because if they don't have base access here to be able to get the medicine they need, that pretty much closes the door for them," he said.

As part of the memo Powell sent out about the new restrictions, the Air Force commander argued the decision was made necessary by the rules governing the status of U.S. forces in Turkey.

"The United States’ bilateral agreements with Turkey do not permit U.S. Forces to extend [Status of Forces Agreement] privileges or access to installations, facilities and activities to retirees," Powell said in the memo.

Powell did not immediately respond to a Fox News request for comment.

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Meanwhile, other bases around the world have been considering the same restrictions. According to the Military Times, officials at Aviano Air Base, Italy have been looking into similar changes to base access for retirees.

"At this time we cannot confirm if/when this change may take place" at Aviano, Air Force Capt. Mark Goss, a spokesman for U.S. Air Forces in Europe and Air Forces Africa, told the outlet. "If there is a change in installation access policies, wing leadership will communicate this to those affected."

Restrictions on access to bases in the Philippines have also been considered, according to the report, but were at least temporarily put on hold while officials reviewed the policies.

However, Michael argued that retirees have for years enjoyed access to these installations without issue, leading to speculation that the true reasoning behind the move is more likely an attempt at a "cost-saving measure." Michael made clear that most retirees understand that restrictions could be enforced for security reasons, but he does not believe that has been an issue in Turkey.

"If ISIS all of the sudden appeared in Turkey or something and we have to get off the bases, we understand, we play ball," he said.

Michael also expressed doubt that restricting retirees from base could save money, instead arguing that allowing their access is "extraordinarily profitable" for bases.

"The retirees use the retiree paychecks on base, so there's also a huge monetary hit," he said.

The combat veteran also pointed out that many of the exchanges on base feature kiosks that are owned by local vendors, who heavily depend on the retiree population for the business that sustains their income.

"There's a lot of third party vendors who rent out a stall and they sell here in Turkey," he said. "They tell me that 90% of their business is from retirees. So they're not able to keep living and keep their livelihood."

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a Fox News request for comment on the restrictions.



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