Kamis, 29 April 2021

Alexei Navalny: Kremlin critic tells court he looks like a 'creepy skeleton' after ending hunger strike - Sky News

Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has appeared in public for the first time since going on hunger strike - via video link during a court hearing.

The 44-year-old told the court he looks like a "creepy skeleton" and described Russian President Vladimir Putin as the "naked king" as he appealed against his fine for slandering a 94-year-old Second World War veteran.

Moscow court rejected the Russian opposition leader's appeal and upheld his conviction.

He is accused of calling the veteran and other people featured in a pro-Kremlin video last year "corrupt stooges", "people without conscience" and "traitors".

Mr Navalny, who has rejected the charges, denounced Russia's justice system during proceedings as his team said
he faced new criminal charges and that it was disbanding a network of regional campaign offices.

Olga Mikhailova and Vadim Kobzev, lawyers of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, are seen in a courtroom before a hearing to consider an appeal against an earlier court decision that found Navalny guilty of slandering a Russian World War Two veteran, in Moscow, Russia April 29, 2021. Press Service of Babushkinsky District Court of Moscow/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. MANDATORY CREDIT.
Image: Navalny's lawyers Olga Mikhailova and Vadim Kobzev are seen in the courtroom. Pic: Babushkinsky District Court of Moscow/Reuters

"My dear court, your king is naked," he told the court from his cell. "And millions of people are shouting about it because it is quite obvious."

Criticising Mr Putin, he said: "Twenty years of mediocre reign resulted in the crown hanging from his ears. We have spent trillions of dollars, and our country continues to degrade. Unsurprisingly, all economists of Russian origin say that recent years are lost decades."

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He added that the "naked king does not care about the country, he wants to keep it forever for himself".

"And the lost decade will be replaced by the stolen decade. And the naked king can do nothing. And he is looking for pieces of holiness to steal, to use for his own purposes," he said.

Addressing his wife, who was in court for Thursday's proceedings, he said: "Yulia, if you can hear me, stand up for a second, I want to look at you."

Yulia Navalnaya, wife of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, is seen in a courtroom before a hearing to consider an appeal against an earlier court decision that found Navalny guilty of slandering a Russian World War Two veteran, in Moscow, Russia April 29, 2021. Press Service of Babushkinsky District Court of Moscow/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. MANDATORY CREDIT.
Image: Yulia Navalnaya was in the courtroom for her husband's hearing. Pic: Babushkinsky District Court of Moscow/Reuters

He also said that he missed her very much and since their last meeting has lost two kilos - and now weighs 72kg.

"Yesterday I was taken to the bathhouse, there is a mirror. I looked - and I am a creepy skeleton. I weighed this much in seventh grade. If I had taken off my tunic, I would have looked much worse," he added.

Mr Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner and Mr Putin's most vocal critic, began a hunger strike on 31 March to protest against the prison authorities' refusal to let his doctors visit after he developed severe back pain and numbness in his legs.

He said on 23 April that he would start gradually ending it after receiving medical care, even as the political prospects for him and his movement darkened.

On easing his hunger strike, he told the court: "Yesterday I ate four spoons of porridge, today five spoons.

"When I get to 10 spoons, it will be a breakthrough. To get 60 grams of raw carrots, I wrote a petition, they are still considering it."

Alexei Navalny
Image: Navalny is serving a two-and-a-half-year prison sentence

Reporting from the court, Sky News' Moscow correspondent Diana Magnay said Mr Navalny had asked how long the hearing would take as he had lunch and did not want to miss it.

She said he sat with his arms folded, wearing dark glasses, and looked like a "diminished figure" and "clearly thinner" - but said the camera angle did not help as he was squeezed into a corner of a grey cell.

Mr Navalny was arrested earlier this year and is serving a two-and-a-half-year sentence in a prison around 60 miles (97km) east of Moscow for parole violations on an earlier conviction that he says was politically motivated.

On Monday, prosecutors asked the court to prohibit Mr Navalny's groups from publishing anything online, organising protests and taking part in elections.

Pro Nalvalny protest in Moscow
Image: A pro-Nalvalny protest in Moscow

His lawyers said on Thursday that a Russian court has scheduled the main hearing in the "extremism" case against his activist network for 17 May.

It comes after another round of mass demonstrations demanding his freedom swept across Russia last week.

His team has said it was officially disbanding its network of regional campaign offices across Russia.

But Mr Navalny's chief of staff Leonid Volkov said earlier this week the group would continue its work, including investigations into corruption, and that it was "not going to give up".

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2021-04-29 09:45:00Z
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Why is India facing a deadly crunch of oxygen amid COVID surge? - Al Jazeera English

A devastating surge in coronavirus infections has exposed India’s dilapidated health infrastructure and a chronic shortage of oxygen – a key treatment for seriously ill COVID-19 patients.

Dire oxygen shortages as India battles a ferocious new wave means boom times for profit gougers, although some young volunteers are doing their best to help people on social media.

Here is a look at the reasons behind the shortage:

Why is medical oxygen vital?

Oxygen therapy is crucial for severe COVID-19 patients with hypoxaemia – when oxygen levels in the blood are too low.

“Some clinical studies show that up to a quarter of hospitalised (COVID-19) patients require oxygen therapy and upwards to two-thirds of those in intensive care units,” community health specialist Rajib Dasgupta told the AFP news agency.

“This is why it is imperative to fix oxygen-supply systems in hospital settings as this is a disease that affects lungs primarily.”

Experts have long raised the alarm about shortages of medical oxygen in India and other poor countries to treat pneumonia, the world’s biggest preventable infectious killer of children under five years of age.

But the government has for years failed to invest enough money into such infrastructure, experts say.

Does India produce enough oxygen?

The short answer: yes.

Experts say the vast nation of 1.3 billion people is producing enough oxygen – a little over 7,000 tonnes a day. Most is for industrial use but can be diverted for medical purposes.

The bottlenecks are in transport and storage.

Liquid oxygen at very low temperatures has to be transported in cryogenic tankers to distributors, which then convert it into gas for filling cylinders.

But India is short of cryogenic tankers. And such special tankers, when filled, have to be transported by road and not by air for safety reasons.

Most oxygen producers are in India’s east, while the soaring demand has been in cities including financial hub Mumbai in the west and the capital New Delhi in the north.

“The supply chain has to be tweaked to move medical oxygen from certain regions which have excess supply to regions which need more supply,” the head of one of India’s biggest medical oxygen suppliers Inox Air Products, Siddharth Jain, told AFP.

Meanwhile, many hospitals do not have on-site oxygen plants, often because of poor infrastructure, a lack of expertise and high costs.

Late last year, India issued tenders for on-site oxygen plants for hospitals. But the plans were never acted on, local media report.

What is being done?

The government is importing mobile oxygen generation plants and tankers, building more than 500 new plants and buying portable oxygen concentrators.

Industries have been ordered by the government not to use liquid oxygen.

Oxygen supplies are being brought to hard-hit regions using special train services.

The military has also been mobilised to transport tankers and other supplies domestically and from international sources.

Emergency medical supplies – including liquid oxygen, cryogenic tankers, concentrators and ventilators – are being flown in from other countries in a huge aid effort.

What is happening on the ground?

Oxygen shortages are still affecting badly hit regions despite the measures to boost supply, transport and storage.

Reports have emerged of hospitals asking patients to arrange for their own cylinders and of people dying even after being admitted due to low oxygen supplies.

Social media platforms have been filled with posts by desperate families hunting for cylinders and refills.

Meanwhile, there is a growing black market for cylinders and concentrators sold far above their usual retail prices.

The shortages have sparked outrage and frustration in New Delhi.

“The government did not plan in time,” sales executive Prabhat Kumar told AFP.

“Had it been prepared, we would not have to suffer like this for beds and oxygen.”

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2021-04-29 05:12:44Z
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Rabu, 28 April 2021

Rudy Giuliani's home and office 'searched by federal investigators' - Sky News

Rudy Giuliani's Manhattan home has reportedly been searched by federal investigators.

The ex-New York City mayor has been under investigation for a number of years over his dealings in Ukraine.

A law enforcement official, speaking anonymously, confirmed to Associated Press that search warrants had been executed.

Sources said electronic devices were confiscated as searches took place at Mr Giuliani's home on Madison Avenue and his office on Park Avenue.

The probe into his business and overseas dealings stalled last year due to a dispute over tactics as Mr Giuliani, acting as President Trump's personal lawyer, helped him dispute the US election results.

The full scope of the current investigation is unclear, a law enforcement official told AP.

Mr Giuliani was also central to Mr Trump's attempt to press Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and son Hunter over alleged impropriety in dealings with a Ukrainian gas firm.

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The former mayor also tried to undermine America's former ambassador to Ukraine, and met a Ukrainian politician several times who later released edited phone recordings to try to discredit Mr Biden before the election.

In a statement through his lawyer, Mr Giuliani accused authorities of a "corrupt double standard" and said the Justice Department was "running rough shod over the constitutional rights of anyone involved in, or legally defending, former President Donald J Trump".

"Mr Giuliani respects the law, and he can demonstrate that his conduct as a lawyer and a citizen was absolutely legal and ethical," the statement said.

Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump
Image: Mr Giuliani helped Donald Trump's failed bid to dispute the US election results

Federal prosecutors tried last year to obtain search warrants, including for some of Mr Giuliani's communications, but the requests were blocked by Trump-era Justice Department officials, according to multiple AP sources.

The allegations now appear to be actively pursued once again after new attorney general Merrick Garland took office last month, with deputy Lisa Monaco sworn in last week.

Applications for search warrants served on lawyers must be signed off by senior Justice Department officials.

The US Attorney's office in Manhattan and the FBI's New York office declined to comment on the search warrant reports.

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2021-04-28 21:27:22Z
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India's Covid crisis: NI donate oxygen generators to India Covid fight - BBC News

Oxygen generators
Michael Cooper

Three oxygen generators capable of producing 500 litres of oxygen a minute are being sent to India from Northern Ireland.

They are among eight oxygen units built as back ups for local hospitals at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The donation will form part of a wider UK consignment of aid being sent to India which is struggling to cope with a ferocious second surge.

The country's official death toll has surpassed 200,000.

However, experts believe the actual number may be higher.

Stormont Health Minister Robin Swann described the scenes coming from India as "terrifying and worrying".

He said: "One of these units is able to produce 500 litres of oxygen a minute.

"To put that into perspective our Mater Hospital uses 200 litres a minute. So a stand-alone unit is able to supply a hospital twice the size of our Mater Hospital."

Oxygen

Mr Swann said the offer was a "significant contribution" to the international response.

"This is more than PPE (personal protective equipment). This is more than facemasks and gowns," he said.

"This is actually a real, tangible resource that can go into the hospitals in India; hospitals that are crying out for oxygen."

Meanwhile, four other oxygen generators have been installed at hospital sites across Northern Ireland and one has been retained as a reserve.

Mr Swann added: "I hope we never get to the position where we have to actually deploy these but it makes sense still to have."

On Monday, the Irish government announced that the Republic of Ireland would be sending 700 oxygen concentrators to India.

The devices are used to draw oxygen from the air and deliver it to patients at more than 90% concentration.

Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly said the machines "will support frontline healthcare workers in India to deliver care to patients who need it".

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2021-04-28 16:19:43Z
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President to say US must turn ‘peril into possibility’ in address - The Independent

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President to say US must turn ‘peril into possibility’ in address  The IndependentView Full coverage on Google News
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2021-04-28 22:30:49Z
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India coronavirus: Delhi builds makeshift funeral pyres in public parks as it runs out of space for dead - The Independent

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  1. India coronavirus: Delhi builds makeshift funeral pyres in public parks as it runs out of space for dead  The Independent
  2. Crematoriums in Delhi forced to build makeshift pyres as India's Covid crisis intensifies  Guardian News
  3. COVID-19: India crematoriums 'underreporting bodies' as suspicion grows over true number of coronavirus deaths  Sky News
  4. Britain flew the first life-saving aid to Covid-ravaged capital New Delhi...  The Sun
  5. India suffers worst day of pandemic with record number of cases and deaths  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-04-28 14:14:35Z
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Two Spanish journalists and Irish citizen killed in Burkina Faso ambush - Sky News

Two Spanish journalists and an Irish citizen have been killed after they were ambushed during an anti-poaching mission in Burkina Faso.

Reporter David Beriain, 44, and photographer Roberto Fraile, 47, had been filming a documentary.

Spanish media producer Movistar+ paid tribute to those killed including Mr Beriain, who had worked on a number of films for the company.

A photo provided by the Diario de Navarra newspaper showing Spanish journalist David Beriain. Pic: AP
Image: Spanish journalist David Beriain was among those killed in the attack. Pic: Jose Carlos Cordovilla/Diario de Navarra via AP

The Irish citizen has been named as Zambian-born Rory Young, head of the anti-poaching organisation Chengeta Wildlife.

Mr Young was also the co-founder of Chengeta Wildlife, a charity that trains anti-poaching rangers in Africa and which said he had dedicated his life to wildlife protection.

He was leading a patrol in Burkina Faso's Arly National Park when the team was attacked, the charity said in a statement.

The two journalists had been documenting Mr Young's efforts to protect wildlife, it said.

More from Africa

A member of the Burkinabe armed forces also went missing on Monday when the convoy of security forces and forest rangers was ambushed. The soldier is still missing.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the ambush, but officials described the attackers as "terrorists".

The team that was attacked was part of a new joint army, police and forestry unit that had just gone through six months of training and was starting operations in conservation areas around Pama on the border with Benin and Togo.

Ireland's foreign ministry said it had been in contact with the family of Mr Young as well as with European Union and Spanish colleagues.

It said "the situation is complex" and added that officials are working with "relevant actors on the ground".

Spain's prime minister Pedro Sanchez confirmed the "worst of news" and paid tribute to the journalists and recognised their "brave and essential" work in zones of conflict.

The Burkinabe government has reported an increase in violence elsewhere in the past 72 hours, with around 10 civilians killed in a spate of armed raids on villages.

Burkina Faso, like much of West Africa's Sahel region, faces a deepening security crisis as groups with links to al Qaeda and Islamic State step up attacks on the army and civilians despite the presence of French and UN forces.

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2021-04-28 10:46:15Z
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