Minggu, 06 Juni 2021

Why Kim Jong-un is waging war on slang, jeans and foreign films - BBC News

Illustration of family watching South Korean TV

North Korea has recently introduced a sweeping new law which seeks to stamp out any kind of foreign influence - harshly punishing anyone caught with foreign films, clothing or even using slang. But why?

Yoon Mi-so says she was 11 when she first saw a man executed for being caught with a South Korean drama.

His entire neighbourhood was ordered to watch.

"If you didn't, it would be classed as treason," she told the BBC from her home in Seoul.

The North Korean guards were making sure everyone knew the penalty for smuggling illicit videos was death.

"I have a strong memory of the man who was blindfolded, I can still see his tears flow down. That was traumatic for me. The blindfold was completely drenched in his tears.

"They put him on a stake and bound him, then shot him."

'A war without weapons'

Imagine being in a constant state of lockdown with no internet, no social media and only a few state controlled television channels designed to tell you what the country's leaders want you to hear - this is life in North Korea.

And now its leader Kim Jong-Un has clamped down further, introducing a sweeping new law against what the regime describes as "reactionary thought".

Anyone caught with large amounts of media from South Korea, the United States or Japan now faces the death penalty. Those caught watching face prison camp for 15 years.

And it's not just about what people watch.

Recently, Mr Kim wrote a letter in state media calling on the country's Youth League to crack down on "unsavoury, individualistic, anti-socialist behaviour" among young people. He wants to stop foreign speech, hairstyles and clothes which he described as "dangerous poisons".

Kim Jong-un
EPA

The Daily NK, an online publication in Seoul with sources in North Korea, reported that three teenagers had been sent to a re-education camp for cutting their hair like K-pop idols and hemming their trousers above their ankles. The BBC cannot verify this account.

All this is because Mr Kim is in a war that does not involve nuclear weapons or missiles.

Analysts say he is trying to stop outside information reaching the people of North Korea as life in the country becomes increasingly difficult.

Millions of people are thought to be going hungry. Mr Kim wants to ensure they are still being fed the state's carefully crafted propaganda, rather than gaining glimpses of life according to glitzy K-dramas set south of the border in Seoul, one of Asia's richest cities.

The country has been more cut off from the outside world than ever before after sealing its border last year in response to the pandemic. Vital supplies and trade from neighbouring China almost ground to a halt. Although some supplies are beginning to get through, imports are still limited.

This self imposed isolation has exacerbated an already failing economy where money is funnelled into the regime's nuclear ambitions. Earlier this year Mr Kim himself admitted that his people were facing "the worst-ever situation which we have to overcome".

What does the law say?

The Daily NK was the first to get hold of a copy of the law.

"It states that if a worker is caught, the head of the factory can be punished, and if a child is problematic, parents can also be punished. The system of mutual monitoring encouraged by the North Korean regime is aggressively reflected in this law," Editor-in-Chief Lee Sang Yong told the BBC.

He says this is intended to "shatter" any dreams or fascination the younger generation may have about the South.

"In other words, the regime concluded that a sense of resistance could form if cultures from other countries were introduced," he said.

Choi Jong-hoon, one of the few defectors to make it out of the country in the last year, told the BBC that "the harder the times, the harsher the regulations, laws, punishments become".

"Psychologically, when your belly is full and you watch a South Korean film, it might be for leisure. But when there's no food and it's a struggle to live, people get disgruntled."

Will it work?

Previous crackdowns only demonstrated how resourceful people have been in circulating and watching foreign films which are usually smuggled over the border from China.

For a number of years, dramas have been passed around on USB sticks which are now as "common as rocks", according to Mr Choi. They're easy to conceal and they're also password encrypted.

"If you type in the wrong password three times in a row, the USB deletes its contents. You can even set it so this happens after one incorrect input of the password if the content is extra sensitive.

Illustration of family watching TV powered by a car battery

"There are also many cases where the USB is set so it can only be viewed once on a certain computer, so you can't plug it in to another device or give it to someone else. Only you can see it. So even if you wanted to spread it you couldn't."

Mi-so recalls how her neighbourhood went to extreme lengths to watch films.

She says they once borrowed a car battery and hooked it up to a generator to get enough electricity to power the television. She remembers watching a South Korean drama called "Stairway to Heaven".

This epic love story about a girl battling first her step-mother and then cancer appears to have been popular in North Korea around 20 years ago.

Mr Choi says this is also when fascination with foreign media really took off - helped by cheap CDs and DVDs from China.

The start of the crackdown

But then, the regime in Pyongyang started to notice. Mr Choi remembers state security carrying out a raid on a university around 2002 and finding more than 20,000 CDs.

"This was just one university. Can you imagine how many there were all over the country? The government was shocked. This is when they made the punishment harsher," he said.

Kim Geum-hyok says he was only 16 in 2009 when he was captured by guards from a special unit set up to hunt down and arrest anyone sharing illegal videos.

He had given a friend some DVDs of South Korean pop music that his father had smuggled in from China.

Stairway to Heaven, 2003
SBS

He was treated like an adult and marched to a secret room for interrogation where the guards refused to let him sleep. He says he was punched and kicked repeatedly for four days.

"I was terrified," he told the BBC from Seoul where he currently lives.

"I thought my world was ending. They wanted to know how I got this video and how many people I showed it to. I couldn't say my father had brought those DVDs from China. What could I say? It was my father. I didn't say anything, I just said, "I don't know, I don't know. Please let me go."

Geum-hyok is from one of Pyongyang's elite families and his father was eventually able to bribe the guards to set him free. Something that will be near impossible under Mr Kim's new law.

Many of those caught for similar offences at the time were sent to labour camps. But this didn't prove to be enough of a deterrent, so the sentences increased.

"At first the sentence was around a year in a labour camp - that changed to more than three years in the camp. Right now, if you go to labour camps, more than 50% of the young people are there because they watched foreign media," says Mr Choi.

"If someone watches two hours of illegal material, then that would be three years in a labour camp. This is a big problem."

We have been told by a number of sources that the size of some of the prison camps in North Korea have expanded in the last year and Mr Choi believes the harsh new laws are having an effect.

"To watch a movie is a luxury. You need to feed yourself first before you even think about watching a film. When times are hard to even eat, having even one family member sent to a labour camp can be devastating."

Why do people still do it?

"We had to take so many chances watching those dramas. But no-one can defeat our curiosity. We wanted to know what was going on in the outside world," Geum-hyok told me.

For Guem-hyok, finally learning the truth about his country changed his life. He was one of the few privileged North Koreans allowed to study in Beijing where he discovered the internet.

"At first, I couldn't believe it [the descriptions of North Korea]. I thought Western people were lying. Wikipedia is lying, how can I believe that? But my heart and my brain were divided.

"So I watched many documentaries about North Korea, read many papers. And then I realised they are probably true because what they were saying made sense.

Kim Geum-hyok (L) and Yoon Mi-so (R)
Collage

"After I realised a transition was going on in my brain, it was too late, I couldn't go back."

Guem-hyok eventually fled to Seoul.

Mi-so is living her dreams as a fashion advisor. The first thing she did in her new home country was visit all the places she saw in Stairway to Heaven.

But stories like theirs are becoming rarer than ever.

Leaving the country has become almost impossible with the current "shoot-to-kill" order at the tightly controlled border. And it is difficult not to expect Mr Kim's new law to have more of a chilling effect.

Mr Choi, who had to leave his family behind in the North, believes that watching one or two dramas will not overturn decades of ideological control. But he does think North Koreans suspect that state propaganda is not the truth.

"North Korean people have a seed of grievance in their heart but they don't know what their grievance is aimed towards," he said.

"It's a grievance without direction. I feel heartbroken that they can't understand even when I tell them. There is a need for someone to awaken them, enlighten them."

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2021-06-06 23:38:14Z
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Kremlin may restrict more food exports to shield it from high prices - Financial Times

Russia has warned that it is prepared to continue with its export curbs on key food products after recent price rises prompted the Kremlin to cap the domestic cost of staple goods such as sugar and flour, the country’s economy minister said.

Maxim Reshetnikov, minister of economic development, told the Financial Times that Russia, one of the world’s biggest grain exporters, was considering how to best support its food exports while protecting domestic consumers from rising prices.

The United Nations global food price index hit its highest level in almost a decade in May, surging nearly 40 per cent year-on-year. Food prices are a key political issue for the Kremlin given that 20m people, or one in seven Russians, live below the poverty line, and rationing and hyperinflation are within living memory.

In December, Vladimir Putin ordered officials to impose temporary price controls on key foodstuffs such as sunflower oil and pasta. A wheat export quota was announced earlier this year with export duties added this month. Moscow said the moves were needed to compensate for years of falling incomes that have made essential goods unaffordable for many.

Reshetnikov said that Russia was continuing to monitor and adopt export measures, including a floating tariff of “flexible export duties” on additional goods, as prices continue to rise. As for domestic consumption, Russia was ending most of the price caps but would continue to subsidise certain staples, such as bread and flour.

“There’s no guarantee that global food prices have stabilised and peaked,” Reshetnikov said. “Any news about crop forecasts can provoke . . . yet another rally for some foodstuffs, so we are constantly paying close attention to them and taking some measures when need be.”

The export curbs, which Reshetnikov called a price “shock absorber”, are also meant to encourage domestic producers to invest more. “This is one of our sources of growth by adding new value chains — grain moves animal husbandry forward, animal husbandry moves milk forward, and so on,” he said.

Russia only began exporting key foodstuffs such as wheat after 2014, when it banned most western food imports in response to US and EU sanctions and then began heavily developing domestic agriculture. Agricultural goods such as wheat accounted for almost 8 per cent of Russia’s $419bn of exports in 2019, according to World Trade Organization data.

However, the country still lacks the infrastructure to amass food stores on the same level as the US or Europe. These would allow it to weather price spikes by increasing supplies, warehousing the extra production and releasing it as needs be.

Still, the proposed export limits have won support in the food retail sector, where executives claim recent price rises are due to increased demand from Chinese importers willing to pay more. Sugar prices rose 65 per cent in Russia last year.

By contrast, officials have blamed higher Russian food prices on what Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has called “the greed of certain producers and retail networks”. This has prompted fears of a crackdown throughout the sector.

More than three quarters of Russian businessmen said they feel unsafe from unfounded criminal prosecution by the state, according to a presidential security service survey last month; moreover, 18 per cent of prosecutors agreed with them.

The worries are so widespread that one MP joked at Russia’s showcase economic conference in St Petersburg last week that “we’ve taken the first step [to an investment climate] — three days into the forum and nobody’s been arrested”.

Reshetnikov said any future business measures would probably take the form of higher taxes.

“If you invest all your profits, even if they’re very high, in new production, development, research, and so on, that’s one thing. If you pay dividends, which is also fine [ . . .] it may well be that another tax level is appropriate to stimulate investment in business,” he said.

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2021-06-06 19:46:10Z
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Merkel’s party surges in German state vote, beating far right - Financial Times

Germany’s Christian Democrats won a decisive victory in elections in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt on Sunday, in a huge boost for their leader Armin Laschet and his bid to succeed Angela Merkel as chancellor in September.

The CDU was able to hold off a strong challenge from the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which had sought to capitalise on widespread public discontent over the Covid-19 lockdown.

It was a sobering night for the Greens, who have been riding high in the polls since naming the popular MP Annalena Baerbock as their first candidate for chancellor in April. They had hoped for a breakthrough but scored only 6.0 per cent.

Projections by German public broadcaster ARD, traditionally seen as an accurate predictor of final results, put the Christian Democratic Union on 36.6 per cent, up more than 6 points on the state’s last elections in 2016. The AfD trailed at 22.0 per cent, down 2.3 percentage points on its 2016 result.

The projections, based on exit polls, suggest that the current coalition of CDU, Social Democrats and Greens, led by the CDU’s Reiner Haseloff, will have enough seats in the regional parliament to continue in power. But the CDU could also choose to form a partnership with the SPD and the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP).

“I have been prime minister for ten years, and people know me, they know . . . what I stand for,” Haseloff, a 67-year-old former academic, told ARD. “I think this credibility was a decisive factor.”

Annalena Baerbock © Mika Schmidt/POOL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

He also thanked voters for “building a clear firewall against the far-right” by supporting the centre-right CDU rather than the AfD.

Some polls prior to the election had suggested the AfD could beat the CDU into the second place. Even if that happened, however, it would not be in a position to form a government as no other party is willing to form a coalition with it.

The AfD’s stunning result in 2016, when it won nearly a quarter of the vote, reflected the public backlash against Angela Merkel’s liberal immigration policies and the influx into Germany of more than a million asylum-seekers, most of them from the Middle East, north Africa and Afghanistan.

It was a depressing night for the Social Democrats, junior partner in Merkel’s grand coalition government, who saw their share of the vote shrink 1 point to 8.4 per cent — one of its worst results in postwar Germany. The Greens rose to 6.0 per cent, up 0.8 points on 2016.

“We increased our share of the vote, but not as much as we had hoped,” said Annalena Baerbock, the Greens’ candidate for chancellor.

“This evening the Baerbock train derailed,” said Friedrich Merz, one of the CDU’s most prominent politicians. 

The pro-business FDP garnered 6.5 per cent of the vote, up 1.6 points on 2016. The hard-left Die Linke, which has its roots in the former Communist Party that once governed East Germany, slumped to 11.0 per cent, down from 16.3 per cent five years ago.

Saxony-Anhalt is a small state with a voting-age population of only 1.8m. German reunification plunged it into an economic depression from which it is still recovering, and the population has shrunk by 24 per cent since 1990 as young people drifted westwards in search of better jobs.

The state also faces more economic upheaval in coming decades as Germany moves to shut down its lignite mines — a big employer in Saxony-Anhalt — as part of efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

The result was a victory for Armin Laschet, prime minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany’s most populous state, who will stand as the joint chancellor candidate of the CDU and its Bavarian sister party the CSU in September’s federal election, which will mark the end of Angela Merkel’s 16 years as chancellor.

The CDU slumped in the polls earlier this year, hit by public frustration at the slow pace of the vaccination campaign, and a corruption scandal involving a clutch of Christian Democrat MPs.

There have also been doubts about Laschet’s ability to win the Bundestag election which were exploited by the Bavarian prime minister Markus Söder, who sought himself to be named the CDU/CSU chancellor candidate, triggering a bitter power struggle. Laschet will be hoping that the decisive result in Saxony-Anhalt finally dispels those doubts.

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2021-06-06 17:18:04Z
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Turkey commits to defeating record 'sea snot' outbreak - but it could take three years - Sky News

Turkey's environment minister has promised to defeat a plague of "sea snot" threatening the Sea of Marmara - but warns the disaster management plan could take up to three years.

Marine biologists and environmentalists have been alarmed by a huge mass of marine mucilage - a thick, slimy substance which has bloomed in Turkey's Marmara, as well as in the adjoining Black and Aegean Seas.

Harbours, shorelines and swathes of seawater have been blanketed by the viscous, greyish substance, some of which has also sunk below the waves, suffocating life on the seabed.

It was first found in Turkey in 2007 but has also been discovered in the Aegean Sea near Greece.

The recent outbreak along Turkey's Sea of Marmara coast is believed to be the biggest in history and is causing chaos for local communities.

Sea snot is cause by algae blooms and pollution
Image: Sea snot is cause by algae blooms and pollution

And now environment minister Murat Kurum has outlined a plan to rid the area of the blight.

"Hopefully, together we will protect our Marmara within the framework of a disaster management plan," he said.

More on Sky Ocean Rescue

Speaking from a marine research vessel which has been taking samples of the slimy substance, he added: "We will take all the necessary steps - and within three years realise the projects that will save not only the present but also the future together."

On Saturday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan instructed the Ministry of Environment and Urbanisation to coordinate with relevant institutions, experts and universities to work together on the plan.

He said untreated waste dumped into the Marmara Sea and climate change had caused the sea snot bloom.

Marine experts agree. They say human waste and industrial pollution is choking Turkey's seas.

The snot overwhelms a harbour south of Istanbul
Image: The snot overwhelms a harbour south of Istanbul

Istanbul, Turkey's largest city with some 16 million residents, factories and industrial hubs, borders the sea.

Mr Erdogan said teams are now inspecting waste water and solid waste facilities, along with other potential sources of pollution.

"We will save our seas from this mucilage calamity, leading with the Marmara Sea," he said.

"We must take this step without delay."

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2021-06-06 15:31:06Z
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Trump speech live updates – Viewers think Donald had ‘pants on backwards’ during wild North Carolina GOP sp... - The Sun

VIEWERS think Donald Trump had his pants on backwards during his big comeback speech on Saturday night.

The former president railed against the "radical left" and the "corrupt" 2020 election at the North Carolina’s annual state Republican Party convention, in his first major return to the political stage.

Posting on Twitter, people racked their brains as they shared screenshots of the event and claimed there was no zip on the front of Trump's suit pants.

One wrote: "Others are noting this, but it can't be shared enough: Donald Trump gave his big speech today with his pants on backwards. Look close and tell me I'm wrong."

Another said: "His pants are definitely on backwards. There is no fly and the creases are those found at the back of the legs."

A third shared a picture of the infamous fly on former vice president Mike Pence's head and wrote: "No fly on Trump's pants? I think I know where it went."

During his speech, Trump blasted Biden and the Dems over the border "crisis" and jobless figures in the wake of the pandemic.

"Joe Biden had to do is sit back and do nothing and it was taking off like a rocket ship nobody's ever seen in between the economy and all of the other things we did the border," he said.

"Instead, the economy is going to hell and inflation is going to cause a catastrophe," he added.

The former president spoke at the June 5 convention dinner in Greenville.
Trump narrowly carried North Carolina in 2020 and held numerous events in the state toward the end of his campaign.

Trump has kept a relatively low public profile since leaving office. His last significant public speech was in February at the CPAC convention

He’s still banned from Twitter and Facebook, and his blog shut down this week.

Trump has expressed interest in running for president again in 2024 but has not yet announced a decision.

The state party hopes Trump can help Republicans retake control of the U.S. House in the upcoming midterms.

  • TRUMP CALLED FOR 100% TARIFFS ON CHINESE PRODUCTS

    The former president said that Democrats were fighting the tariffs and that Biden has taken off those tariffs.

    Trump said that if the tariffs were raised, China will stop building its military and that a lot of companies would move back to the US.

    “The time has come for America in the world to demand reparations and accountability from the Communist Party of China,” he said. “We should all declare within one unified voice that China must pay they must pay.”

  • CONCERNS OVER RISE OF PRO-TRUMP CANDIDATES

    Some party leaders worry that a rise of pro-Trump candidates in the coming months could jeopardize the GOP's fight for control of Congress in 2022.

    While Trump remains a dominant force within his party, he is deeply unpopular among key segments of the broader electorate.

    He lost last year to Democrat Joe Biden, drawing about 7 million fewer votes, after alienating Republican-leaning suburban voters.

  • TRUMP SAYS HIS ADMINISTRATION DID THINGS NO ONE HAS DONE

    "We’ve done an incredible job and so many things have happened and we built the economy, not once we built it twice stick of it because we built it, we had the highest stock market ever the best job numbers," he said.

    "And we’ve done a tremendous job we never got the credit that we deserve for that. We do get the credit for from everybody, even the other side, although they try and disparage it as much as possible," he added.

  • LARA TRUMP NOT RUNNING FOR SENATE

    Invited to the stage briefly during his remarks, Trump's daughter-in-law and North Carolina native, Lara Trump, announced she would not run for the Senate because of family obligations.

    "I am saying no for now, not no forever," she said.

    Minutes later, Trump announced his endorsement of loyalist Rep Ted Budd in the crowded Republican primary - adding a slap at former Gov Pat McCrory, who has been critical of Trump's falsehoods about the 2020 election.

    "You can't pick people who have already lost two races and do not stand for our values," Trump said.

  • TRUMP TEASES 2024 PRESIDENTIAL BID

    Trump teased the prospect of another presidential bid of his own in 2024 - but vowed first to be an active presence on the campaign trail for those who share his values in next year's fight for control of Congress.

    "The survival of America depends on our ability to elect Republicans at every level starting with the midterms next year," Trump charged early in a rambling speech that spanned nearly an hour and a half.

  • TRUMP CRITICIZED BIDEN'S IMMIGRATION POLICY

    He said that immigrants who are crossing the border illegally "are up nearly 1,000% compared to the same period last year."

    Trump said that when he was in office he managed to decrease "The number of illegal aliens coming across our border by an astounding 91%.

    "They're emptying their prisons they're sending murderers, drug dealers human traffickers, and others just as bad, to the United States," he continued.

  • TRUMP SAID HE COULD HAVE HAD AN IRAN DEAL IN ONE WEEK

    The former president criticized Biden's approach to foreign policy and heavily focused on the administration's willingness to lift sanctions on Iran.

    "The Biden administration has been one shameful and embarrassing foreign policy disaster after another," he said.

    "The former Secretary of State, he said Joe's never made a good foreign policy decision, lifted sanctions on Iran. I would have had a deal in one week," he added.

  • HE CALLED FOR BANNING CRITICAL RACE THEORY

    Trump said that the Joe Biden administration is pushing "toxic critical race theory and illegal discrimination into our schools."

    “Republicans at every level should move immediately to ban critical race theory in our schools,” he said.

    “And we should ban it in workplaces, we should ban it in our states, and we should ban it in the federal government,” he added.

  • THE 'ECONOMY IS GOING TO HELL'

    Trump blasted Biden and the Dems over jobless figures in the wake of the pandemic.

    "Joe Biden had to do is sit back and do nothing and it was taking off like a rocket ship nobody's ever seen in between the economy and all of the other things we did the border," he said.

    "Instead, the economy is going to hell and inflation is going to cause a catastrophe," he added.

  • THE 2020 ELECTION WAS THE 'CRIME OF THE CENTURY'

    The former president accused Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg of "breaking the law" to "destroy" the election.

    "An election will go down as the crime of the century in our country is being destroyed by people who perhaps have no right to destroy it. Zuckerberg broke the law spending millions of dollars," he said.

  • TRUMP BELIEVES THAT CHINA OWES THE REST OF THE WORLD

    "All nations should work together to present China a bill for a minimum of $10 trillion to compensate for the damage they caused," he said.

    The former president believes that China should pay reparations for the damage it inflicted with Covid-19 that originated in Wuhan.

    "We should all declare with one unified voice that China must pay," he added.

  • TRUMP CRITICIZED BIDEN'S SENTIMENT TOWARDS ISRAEL

    Trump criticized President Joe Biden for slamming Israel over recent attacks per the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    "He [Biden] actually criticized Israel while the Jewish homeland was under attack by thousands of rockets and missiles launched by Iran," he said.

    "It was a betrayal of Israel when you look at what happened in Congress, you know, it used to be 10 years ago 12 years ago 15 years ago everybody was with Israel," he added.

    "Today I guess it's just not invoked, but you look at some of these radicals that they have in the House of Representatives, you have to deal with them all the time. And Israel is really almost out," he continued.

  • TRUMP ENDED HIS SPEECH HONORING THE NORMANDY ANNIVERSARY

    Trump ended his speech in North Carolina honoring the achievement made in American history as Sunday marks the 77th Normandy anniversary.

    "One of the most epic military drives in the history of the world the Allied invasion of Normandy Day. As we remember this incredible achievement. Let us summon the spirit of generations of Americans before us, who gave their blood, sweat, and tears for our beloved country," he said as he wrapped up his 85-minute speech.

  • TRUMP CALLED FOR CHINA TO PAY 'REPARATIONS'

    Trump believes that China should pay "reparations" for the destruction caused by Covid-19.

    Covid-19 first started in China's Wuhan late in 2019.

    The US went into lockdown in March 2020 to slow the spread of the virus.

  • TRUMP COMPLAINED ABOUT BEING BANNED FROM FACEBOOK

    Trump criticized Facebook's CEO Mark Zuckerberg over his decision of not allowing the former president back on Facebook for at least two years.

    “Zuckerberg, that is another beauty, they say they may allow me back in two years but I’m not too interested in that,"

    "It is so unfair, it is not just me, they are shutting down the voice of a much more powerful and a larger group,” he added.

  • TRUMP THINKS BIDEN SHOULDN'T HAVE LIFTED TRAVEL BAN

    The former president said that the Joe Biden administration eliminated the travel ban on "terror."

    Trump introduced the travel ban in 2017 in which he banned people from over 10 countries to enter the United States including citizens from Iran, Yemen, Syria, and Venezuela.

    Biden removed the travel ban once he took office.

    "I said I don't want people in from countries that blow up each other. I don't want them in [and] I don't want people in that are going to blow up our shopping centers, I don't want people in that are going to blow up our cities. And I won in [the Supreme] court," Trump said.

  • FORMER PRESIDENT THINKS NORTH KOREA LEADER IS "DIFFERENT"

    Trump said that the North Korean leader Kim Jung Un is a "different kind of a guy to get along with him."

    In 2019, Trump was the first sitting US president to cross the line separating North and South Korea, according to NBC News.

  • THE 2020 ELECTION "CRIME OF THE CENTURY"

    Trump said that many of the votes were cast in the name of dead people and "illegal aliens."

    "An election will go down as the crime of the century in our country is being destroyed by people who perhaps have no right to destroy it," he said.

  • TRUMP: "FAUCI BECAME A RADICAL MASKER"

    Trump said that Dr. Anthony Fauci was against closing the US borders when the Coronavirus pandemic began but thanked Trump "months later" for his decision.

    "Fauci said powerfully at the beginning, no masks you remember that no masks, and then he went into masks and then he became a radical masker," he said.

  • TRUMP SAID THAT THE US "SYSTEM" IS BROKEN NOW

    Trump slammed Biden for his foreign policy and decisions since taking office.

    He said that the US has a "broken" system now, "whether it's elections, whether it's business whether it's taxation."

    "The Biden administration has been one shameful and embarrassing foreign policy disaster after another," he added.

  • TRUMP CALLED FOR 100% TARIFFS ON CHINESE PRODUCTS

    The former president said that Democrats were fighting the tariffs and that Biden has taken off those tariffs.

    Trump said that if the tariffs were raised, China will stop building its military and that a lot of companies would move back to the US.

    "The time has come for America in the world to demand reparations and accountability from the Communist Party of China," he said. "We should all declare within one unified voice that China must pay they must pay."

  • TRUMP HIGHLIGHTED HIS VACCINE EFFORTS

    He said that his former administration bought billions worth of vaccine and without his efforts the vaccine wouldn't have been available until October of this year.

    The administration worked on "getting that vaccine into your body, the needles the bottles, the whole thing," according to Trump.

    "You wouldn't have the vaccine until probably October it might have even been later than that. And one of the things I'm most proud about is we did the vaccine developed a vaccine and I push the FDA," he added.

  • TRUMP SAYS HIS ADMINISTRATION DID THINGS NO ONE HAS DONE

    "We've done an incredible job and so many things have happened and we built the economy, not once we built it twice stick of it because we built it, we had the highest stock market ever the best job numbers," he said.

    "And we've done a tremendous job we never got the credit that we deserve for that. We do get the credit for from everybody, even the other side, although they try and disparage it as much as possible," he added.

  • TRUMP ENDORSES TED BUDD

    "I am giving him my complete and total endorsement, We're going to work with him, we're going to campaign with him," Trump said.

    "You can't pick people that have already lost two races. You can't pick people that have already lost two races and do not stand for our values," he added.

    Budd said in response: "We got a lot of hard work ahead. So let's win this together, and let's get back to making America great again."

  • TRUMP IS LOOKING FORWARD TO 2024

    Trump is optimistic about winning North Carolina's US Senate race.

    "We're going to win North Carolina's all important US Senate race, and we're going to lay the groundwork for making sure that Republicans once again carry the great state of North Carolina, in a number, a year that I look very much forward to 2024," he said.

    "We're gonna do things like you've never ever seen before I stand before you today, confident that the people of North Carolina will decisively reject Joe Biden and the radical Democrats the war on the American worker, the American family and the American nation," he added.

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2021-06-06 12:33:34Z
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Donald Trump teases return to White House as he hits out at China and Anthony Fauci in campaign appearance - Sky News

Donald Trump has again teased supporters about the prospect of another run for the US presidency, just days after some backers pushed a theory that he could be back in the White House by August.

He also used a speech at a convention to support candidates loyal to him ahead of next year's mid-term elections to denounce China, attack infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci, and describe investigations into his finances as a "witch-hunt".

Mr Trump again continued to peddle false claims that his defeat in the election in 2020 was 'the crime of the century". He won 75 million votes but lost the election to President Joe Biden by 7 million.

Trump supporters holding placards saying he won elections
Image: Trump supporters are still convinced he should have won the election

Rally organisers in Greenville, North Carolina, estimated around 1,200 supporters attended - in contrast to packed-out stadiums when he was president.

He told them: "The survival of America depends on our ability to elect Republicans at every level starting with the mid-terms next year."

Mr Trump went on to describe Mr Fauci as "not a great doctor", and said the country's top coronavirus adviser has been "wrong on every issue".

He has led Republicans in criticising Mr Fauci for asking Americans to wear masks and for being sceptical about allegations China covered up the escape of the virus from a lab in Wuhan.

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He also demanded China pay $10 trillion dollars to the US and the world for its handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

And referring to a criminal investigation launched by the New York attorney general's office into his finances as a "witch hunt" and a "hoax", the former president said: "They'll never stop until November 2024."

Donald Trump and Lara Trump at North Carolina GOP rally
Image: Mr Trump with Lara Trump at the North Carolina GOP rally

Since his defeat, Mr Trump has consistently teased supporters about running again without explicitly saying he would.

And there have been reports in the US media of his fans suggesting he could somehow be reinstated as president as soon as this August - something his daughter-in-law Lara Trump has denied having any knowledge of.

Mr Trump also used his speech to take aim at Mr Biden, who he accused of leading "the most radical left-wing administration in history".

He said: "As we gather tonight our country is being destroyed before our very eyes."

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In a statement released ahead of the speech, Democratic National Committee spokesman Ammar Moussa attacked mr Trump's "recklessly dangerous rhetoric" - and Republicans who are reluctant to break with a "loser president".

Some Republican leaders are also concerned that the rise of Trump-supporting candidates will jeopardise their chances of winning back control of Congress from the Democrats in 2022.

Mr Trump's appearance at the rally comes days after Facebook suspended his account for another two years.

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2021-06-06 09:05:17Z
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Joe Biden humiliation as US ‘in danger’ of not hitting vaccination target, warns analyst - Daily Express

An analysis of stats and polls regarding the vaccination programmes suggested that the US President’s goal to have at least 70 percent of all adults vaccinated with at least one dose by July 4 could be missed. The latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that the vaccination rate has dropped.

The CDC’s June data showed that 63 percent of adults had taken their first dose of the jab.

It a slight increase from 62 percent registered in the week of May 27.

CNN's Harry Enten said Mr Biden is “in danger” of missing his vaccination target.

He wrote in the publication that the problem was “that we really haven't seen the vaccination rate pick up since they become readily available in April. We've only seen declines pause.”

The analyst added: “The fact is, we're running out of people who have indicated that they want the vaccine as soon as possible.

“The latest Kaiser Family Foundation poll from late May found that 66 percent of Americans either had received a first Covid-19 vaccine dose or wanted one as soon as possible.

“This 66 percent is near the same percentage as where the current vaccination rate trendline indicates we'll end up by July 4.”

Mr Enten concluded that to achieve the President’s 70 percent target, “some people will have to be convinced” to receive the jab in the next month.

He added: “The key over the next month will be for these unvaccinated people to have a sense of urgency to receive their first dose.”

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2021-06-05 23:34:12Z
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