Cyclone season
https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/02/india/cyclone-fani-evacuations-india-intl/index.html
2019-05-02 08:18:00Z
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CNN's Brandon Miller and Taylor Ward contributed
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SUBSCRIBEBy Reuters
BANGKOK — Just days before his official coronation, Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn on Wednesday married the deputy head of his personal guard force and gave her the title Queen Suthida.
The surprise announcement was carried in the Royal Gazette, and footage from Wednesday's wedding ceremony was later shown on the nightly Royal News segment aired on all Thai television channels.
Vajiralongkorn, 66, also known by the title King Rama X, became constitutional monarch after the death of his revered father, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, in October 2016, after 70 years on the throne.
He is due to be officially crowned in elaborate Buddhist and Brahmin ceremonies on Saturday, followed by a procession through Bangkok the next day.
In 2014, Vajiralongkorn appointed Suthida Tidjai, a former flight attendant for Thai Airways, as a deputy commander of his bodyguard unit.
Some royal observers and foreign media had linked Suthida romantically with the king, but the palace had previously never acknowledged a relationship between them.
The king made Suthida a full general in the Royal Thai Army in December 2016, and the deputy commander of the king's personal guard in 2017.
Among the dignitaries at the wedding were Prayuth Chan-ocha, the leader of the military junta that has run Thailand since a 2014 army coup, as well as other members of the royal family and palace advisers, the wedding footage showed.
Vajiralongkorn has previously been married and divorced three times and has seven children.
While the king took the throne after the death of his father, his formal coronation follows a mourning period for King Bhumibol, whose royal cremation was held a year after his death.
CNN's Lauren Said-Moorhouse contributed to this report.
As the unrest continued in Venezuela on Wednesday, National Security Adviser John Bolton said that “there’s a lot at stake here for the people of Venezuela but for the hemisphere as a whole.”
Opposition leader Juan Guaidó has called for a new round of mass protests on Wednesday after a day of violent uprising in Venezuela against President Nicolas Maduro.
After being absent for most of the day, Maduro took to the airwaves to proclaim that Guaidó's rebellion had been defeated. However, that did not stop Guaidó, who is recognized by the U.S. and more than 50 other nations as Venezuela's rightful president, from calling for more protests.
“Honestly, our judgment is that the overwhelming number of military service members in Venezuela support Juan Guaidó and the opposition,” Bolton said on “Fox & Friends” Wednesday.
He added: “It’s just a matter of time before they come over to the opposition and some of that could happen today.”
Bolton went on to say that how Guaidó and the actions are being referenced in a serious problem.
"That's really a major part of the problem here. People incorrectly refer to what Juan Guaidó is doing as a coup. He’s the legitimate president. He’s trying to take control of the government,” Bolton said.
“The coup here has been by the Cubans and the Russians who have sort of grafted themselves on to Venezuela. I think they're running it in some sense more than Maduro is.”
Opposition forces hope that fed-up Venezuelans will be so angered by broadcast images of armored vehicles plowing into protesters that they will continue to riot in the streets.
Bolton said he believes Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has a call scheduled on Wednesday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
“The main point to make here is that we're not going to see the Russians take over a country in the western hemisphere, not directly, not through their surrogates the Cubans and that’s why President Trump yesterday suggested that if the Cubans don't get off the body politic in Venezuela they’re going to face significant consequences on their own,” Bolton said.
VENEZUELA'S U.N. AMBASSADOR BLAMES TRUMP, OTHER 'FOREIGN POWERS' FOR TRYING TO DESTABILIZE REGIME
He said the United States “already started” exerting pressure on Cuba to get their hands out of Venezuela and listed several examples: “We’ve restricted travel to Cuba, we've done a number of steps to stop the transfer of oil from Venezuela to Cuba at subsidized prices. That will put an enormous squeeze on the Cuban economy. I think the point about sending 20 to 25,000 Cuban security forces back to Cuba will have a big impact.”
“In parts of the hemisphere they call Venezuela Cuba-zuela, that’s how much influence the Cubans have.”
He then referenced President Trump’s tweets on a possible embargo if the Cubans don’t stop the violence.
Trump tweeted on Tuesday night, “If Cuban Troops and Militia do not immediately CEASE military and other operations for the purpose of causing death and destruction to the Constitution of Venezuela, a full and complete....
"....embargo, together with highest-level sanctions, will be placed on the island of Cuba. Hopefully, all Cuban soldiers will promptly and peacefully return to their island!”
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Bolton said, “There’s a lot at stake here for the people of Venezuela but for the hemisphere as a whole, which is why the organization of American states, the Lima group (a coalition that includes more than a dozen Latin American countries) and others have been very clear, they support Juan Guaidó and the opposition. This is not made in Washington by any stretch of the imagination.”
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SUBSCRIBEBy Daniella Silva
Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaidó called for the “largest march” in the country's history, as Venezuelans braced for a new round of dueling demonstrations on Wednesday.
Thousands took to the streets as demonstrators clashed with pro-government forces Tuesday, resulting in dozens of injuries, after Guaidó announced what he called the “definitive phase” of an operation to oust President Nicolás Maduro.
The opposition leader, who has declared himself interim president, appeared Tuesday in a dramatic video alongside formerly detained activist Leopoldo López and a small group of armed military personnel.
On Wednesday morning, Guaidó again urged Venezuelans to show their support in public protests.
"We go on with more strength than ever, Venezuela," he said in another post on Twitter.
Following the protests Tuesday, Guaidó released a statement calling for the “largest march” in Venezuela’s history.
“Maduro does not have the backing, nor the respect of the armed forces, much less of the Venezuelan people,” he said in the statement.
In a video posted to social media Tuesday evening, he referred to Tuesday’s protests as a “historic day” for Venezuela.
“Tomorrow, all of Venezuela to the streets,” he said.
Meanwhile, a defiant Maduro in a television address Tuesday evening called the opposition puppets of the United States and downplayed the demonstrations as a "failed" coup attempt, calling for his supporters to also rally on Wednesday.
“Tomorrow, the first of May, we will have a large, millions-strong march of the working class,” Maduro said. “We have been confronting different types of aggression and attempted coups never before seen in our history.”
Guaidó has urged the military to turn against Maduro in support of the opposition's claim to the presidency. Despite the show of support for Guaidó from a few dozen groups of military personnel Tuesday morning, it remained unclear how much support he actually has. The military has largely remained loyal to Maduro throughout the political upheaval, and top security leaders appeared alongside Maduro during his address Tuesday.
Some of the clashes Tuesday were violent, with tear gas and rubber bullets used on protesters and local media showing video of what appeared to be a military vehicle running over demonstrators.
By Tuesday afternoon, 57 people had been injured by rubber bullets, and one woman was shot with a firearm twice in the stomach, according to a Venezuelan health official.
The Venezuelan defense minister said a pro-government colonel had been shot in the neck, although his condition was unclear. Venezuelan officials also said eight members of security forces were injured by "violent groups" involved in the "failed coup."
On Tuesday, some Venezuelans said they were unsure how everything was going to end but remained hopeful that change was coming.
"I hope this time it turns out, but I find it hard for me to think that today's movement is final," said César Mendoza, 31, of the El Cafetal neighborhood. "I see lack of credibility in the street, and people are tired. Right now, we have the favor of the international movement that did not exist before."
Carlos Morales, 62, of the neighborhood Los Rosales, said he believed people were "more determined to achieve a change.
"People were saying this is our last chance, and I believe it is," he said.
"Nobody knows if the majority of the military is with the opposition," he said. "We only see that they are joining in. It's the first time that I see armed military join."
French police have fired tear gas on masked protesters who joined large May Day demonstrations in Paris.
Traditionally a union-led day of action in the country, this year's event saw both the yellow vest movement and so-called "black blocks" of dark-clad and masked protesters.
Some smashed shop windows and threw projectiles at the police. Dozens of people have been arrested.
The clashes forced the head of the CGT union to temporarily flee the march.
Philippe Martinez told news outlet Franceinfo that "police charged the CGT", though other witnesses had said the "black blocks" had attacked the union march.
AFP news agency says Mr Martinez planned to return.
Police issued a statement saying the union was never targeted, but that police "have carried out their mission with determination against violent thugs".
French broadcaster BFMTV reports that the clashes forced the teachers' union FSU to leave the event.
By early afternoon, France's interior ministry said more than 150,000 demonstrators had taken to the streets around the country, and at least 16,000 in the capital - a significant increase on last year's estimates.
Another estimate from media groups put the number far higher, at some 40,000 in Paris.
More than 200 arrests have been made in the capital.
Yet most demonstrators have been non-violent, and clashes with police have occurred in isolated pockets.
France's National Police tweeted a message saying it was guaranteeing the write to express opinions, and called on peaceful protesters to disassociate themselves from violent groups.
Elsewhere, one French journalist reported that while the riot police from France's CRS were subjected to insults, the firefighters of Paris were warmly applauded by passing demonstrators.
Many protesters have joined from the yellow vests movement, which has been protesting on the streets every weekend for months.
French President Emmanuel Macron has made a series of concessions to the movement which has been fuelled by the high the cost of living - most recently with a wave of tax cuts.
One demonstrator, Florence, said the concessions had not made a difference.
"We've been trying to fight, to make ourselves heard for six months and nobody cares," she told Reuters news agency.
"People don't understand the movement though it seems pretty simple: we just want to live normally."