Minggu, 05 September 2021

Australia: Some experienced surfers 'no longer want to go in water' after latest fatal shark attack - Sky News

A man has died after being attacked by a shark off Australia's eastern coast.

Surfers, bystanders and paramedics tried to give him CPR, but he had a critical arm injury and could not be revived.

The attack occurred off Shelly and Emerald beaches in Coffs Harbour, New South Wales - about 330 miles (530km) north of Sydney.

The incident happened on Sunday, which marked Father's Day in Australia
Image: The incident happened on Sunday, which marked Father's Day in Australia

Beaches in the area were busy at the time of the incident on Sunday, as families celebrated Father's Day in the country.

Aaron Armstrong, who saw what happened, said it was the first shark attack in the community that he and other locals knew of.

He added: "[We were] just out in the surf and we just saw a few people getting out of the water and we were pretty excited to be honest because we were like 'yes, less people in the water'.

"So we started to paddle down to where these people were and then we got called out of the water.

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"Ran down to see what was happening, saw a man without an arm, lots of blood and lots of people helping him so we just stood by just to see if we needed to help anymore.

"And then we just proceeded to watch people work on him, CPR for a good hour, hour and a half, before the ambulances arrived and then, yeah, it doesn't look good."

This is believed to be the first fatal shark attack in Australia since May
Image: This is believed to be the first fatal shark attack in Australia since May

Although New South Wales is under a coronavirus lockdown, people can leave their homes for exercise.

Before Sunday's incident, the most recent fatal shark attack in Australia was in May.

Glenn Coleman, another witness, said there has been a "lot more shark activity over recent years" - and many experienced surfers now no longer want to go into the water.

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2021-09-05 06:31:15Z
52781861357942

Sabtu, 04 September 2021

Mail's Afghan interpreter describes seeing England after his family's escape from the Taliban - Daily Mail

Mail's Afghan interpreter describes his joy at seeing England for the first time and adjusting to life in a strange land after his family's heart-stopping escape from the Taliban

  • Interpreter Bakhtiar Shoresh escaped from the Taliban with his family last week
  • With hours to spare, they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England
  • They have since been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel for the past ten days 
  • Bakhtiar and his family are now expecting to hear where they will be relocated

Last week, Bakhtiar Shoresh, an interpreter for The Mail on Sunday in Afghanistan, described his family's heart-stopping escape from the Taliban when, with just hours to spare, they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England.

For the past ten days, they have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today, as they prepare to begin a new life, they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated.

Here, in his diary, Bakhtiar describes his joy at seeing England for the first time, adjusting to life in a strange land – where he says even the cows are more relaxed than at home…

Tuesday, Aug 24

We arrive in Manchester early in the morning, exhausted but relieved – safe from the Taliban! 

More checks, paperwork and waiting, and three hours later our family group of nine – my wife and I, our four children and my three sisters – set off by coach on a three-hour journey to our temporary home, a Holiday Inn Express at Heathrow where we will quarantine for the next ten days.

From out of the coach window we get our first look at England. Until today, what little I have seen of this country has been in books and on the BBC television news.

Above all else, my clear impression is of a calm and peaceful land. Everywhere is so green. 'Look at the cattle,' says one of the children. 

Bakhtiar Shoresh (pictured), an interpreter in Afghanistan, described his family's escape from the Taliban when they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England

Bakhtiar Shoresh (pictured), an interpreter in Afghanistan, described his family's escape from the Taliban when they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England

Even the animals seem more relaxed. If only my homeland were gentle and free of tension. This, I reflect, is something to be cherished.

Despite the excitement, we all manage a little sleep. For security reasons, we are told that we will not stop en route. What security reasons, I wonder? Nobody can explain. Luckily there is a wash room and toilet on the coach.

Finally, after days of travelling, our journey is at an end. Our hotel is next to the airport. To me, Heathrow looks nothing like an airport. It is surely nothing like the one we left behind in Kabul. 

Where does it begin and end? I ask the driver: 'Are you sure this is an airport? It looks like a city.'

After a wait of 30 minutes in the reception we are shown to our three rooms on the sixth floor – all very comfortable with televisions and bathrooms. My wife and I are with the youngest child, our boy Timor, aged two.

Two of my sisters are with our four-year-old daughter and the other sister is with our eldest child, a boy of 14, and our 11-year-old daughter.

I post on Facebook that I am now in London. The Taliban will see it or hear about it and forget about me. Now we must sleep. Let's see what tomorrow brings.

Wednesday, Aug 25

None of us realised just how strict the Covid rules would be.

This morning, I ventured out into the corridor to check on the rest of the family – only to be met by a security guard sitting outside who leapt up and told me to go back inside my room.

We can't even mix with our own children yet none of us have this illness. For now, we must keep in touch on the room telephones.

I find myself gazing out of the window for long periods. Planes take off and land every two minutes, and every so often I see figures moving in the distance.

After the deafening chaos of Kabul airport, it all seems so incredibly orderly.

Thursday, Aug 26

The food is becoming a problem. I don't want to be ungrateful but it is strange to us. Mashed potatoes? And cauliflower? The vegetables here are boiled – why? Not fried like in my country. And so far there has been no meat.

Breakfast, though, brings Coco Pops, which the children think is wonderful. It would be good if they could have French fries or burgers and pizza, but I am told they are not on the menu.

Mostly it's sandwiches of cold tuna or cheese, left outside the room and accompanied by a sharp knock on the door. Just like prison!

And then, just as we lament the awful food, there is news from home that puts everything into perspective. A suicide bombing has killed many, many people at Kabul airport.

Not for the first time, it occurs to me that we got out just in time.

We are the lucky ones, I tell myself, even though I can't help feeling desperately sad to have left friends and relatives behind.

Saturday, Aug 28

My sister calls from the room next door. My 14-year-old son and 11-year-old daughter are fighting.

Who can blame them? They're jumping on the beds. 'Just don't let them break anything,' I warn my sister. The kids haven't forgiven me for making them leave their iPads and tablets behind in Kabul. 

We were told by the British Embassy to bring just two sets of clothes. Timor has some toy building blocks that someone in Manchester gave us.

I have become addicted to BBC News. With every bulletin comes sad news from home.

To take our minds off it, we are now watching something called Game Of Thrones.

For the past ten days, Bakhtiar (pictured) and his family have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated

For the past ten days, Bakhtiar (pictured) and his family have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated

Sunday, Aug 29

Timor is crying a lot, frustrated at being confined to a small room. I let him run along the corridor outside but the security guards don't like it and tell me to take him back in.

There has been one small victory, though. It turns out I have a cousin who lives just ten minutes away. He is bringing some traditional Afghan dishes – rice and beef with raisins – and, to my surprise, the hotel says this is permissible. My mouth waters at the prospect.

I speak to a good neighbour back in Kabul. We were worried that our house would be taken from us so he has agreed to stay in it, on the ground floor. The other two floors are packed with our belongings.

He says things are getting worse and worse in the city despite the Taliban's assurances when they first arrived.

Girls aged 13 and older can no longer go to school. And young men are now routinely stopped in the street by Taliban officials and told not to shave their beards.

Wednesday, Sept 1

All our Covid tests were negative, and for the past few days we have been going outside two or three times a day for exercise. Seeing the children and my sisters again was fantastic.

We are allowed to walk around a car park. It is good to stretch our legs and be together again. Timor never wants to go back to the room. He just wants to play.

We've still got some of the food my cousin brought us. The hotel won't heat it up for us but it still tastes marvellous.

More news from home: my neighbour has been trying to sell my Toyota 4x4 for me and had a buyer lined up. But the guy couldn't get his money out of the bank because they aren't doing any transactions at the moment. 

He said he could get it in a couple of weeks and asked if he could take the car for now, but I told my neighbour that wouldn't be a good idea.

I hear from others of heavy fighting in the Panjshir Valley, 170 miles north of Kabul, where I am originally from.

This region has not yet fallen and has captured many Taliban fighters. In response, the Taliban is arresting and imprisoning people from Panjshir on the streets of Kabul to use in hostage swaps.

Friday, Sept 3

We've heard nothing from the authorities about what will happen next – where we will live and such like.

Today, we passed another Covid test, which I think is a good sign.

On Sunday, our time in quarantine comes to an end. All of us have had enough and cannot wait to leave the hotel to begin a new life, to make new friends, to work and live in a community again.

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2021-09-05 00:15:46Z
52781861610516

Afghanistan: Taliban breaks up women's rights protests in Kabul by 'firing shots and using teargas' - Sky News

The Taliban has broken up women's rights protests in Kabul by firing shots into the air and using teargas and tasers, witnesses say.

Women marched through the Afghan capital for a second day in a row on Saturday demanding their freedoms are guaranteed under the new Islamist regime.

The demonstrations began peacefully with a number of women laying a wreath outside the defence ministry in honour of Afghan soldiers who died fighting the Taliban.

But as their shouts became louder, Taliban fighters waded into the crowds to ask what the women wanted.

Members of the Taliban wade into crowds of protesting women in Kabul on Saturday
Image: Members of the Taliban wade into crowds of protesting women in Kabul on Saturday

Social media footage then shows members of the special forces firing guns into the air to disperse crowds.

One witness told Reuters that they also used tear gas and tasers to get the women to flee.

A demonstrator who gave her name as Soraya claimed that the fighters "hit women on the head with a gun magazine" and "the women became bloody".

More on Afghanistan

Taliban special forces bring abrupt end to women's forces
Image: Protesters carry a wreath to lay in memory of Afghan soldiers

One prominent protester, 20-year-old Maryam Naiby, defended her right to protest, saying: "We are here to gain human rights in Afghanistan.

"I love my country. I will always be here."

She has previously run a women's organisation and is a spokesperson for Afghanistan's Paralympic team.

Another, 24-year-old university student Farhat Popalzai, said she wanted to represent women too afraid to come out on the street.

Women gather to demand their rights under the Taliban rule during a protest in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. 
PIC:AP
PIC:AP
PIC:AP
Image: Marches also took place in Kabul on Friday. Pic: AP

"I am the voice of the women who are unable to speak," she said. "They think this is a man's country but it is not - it is a woman's country, too."

The Taliban has repeatedly promised to uphold women's rights since seizing power last month.

But many Afghans and international observers are deeply sceptical, with reports of fighters already breaking their pledge.

Afghan women gather during a protest march for their rights under the Taliban rule in the city of Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. 
PIC:  AP
Image: Women hold signs demanding their freedoms in the Afghan capital on Friday. Pic: AP

In one example, a group of Islamists whitewashed murals on Saturday, including ones that promoted healthcare and praised foreign contributors.

They were replaced with slogans congratulating Afghanistan on the Taliban's victory.

Its cultural commission spokesman, Ahmadullah Muttaqi, tweeted that the murals were painted over "because they are against our values".

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"They were spoiling the minds of the Mujahedeen, and instead we wrote slogans that will be useful to everyone," he wrote.

Meanwhile, the Taliban claims to have taken Afghanistan's last remaining province Panjshir in the north east of the country.

Rebel forces insist they have managed to pushback fighters, but the Islamists say they have taken four of seven provinces already.

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2021-09-04 20:28:29Z
52781860069611

Dad killed 'peadophile after seeing video of him raping daughter' - Metro.co.uk

Dad killed 'paedophile friend after finding video of him raping 8-year-old daughter'
Vyacheslav M (inset right) is said to have killed Oleg Sviridov (inset left) in rvenege (Picture: east2westnews)

A father accused of stabbing his friend to death in Russia should not face a murder charge because the victim allegedly raped his eight-year-old daughter, locals have said.

The man, identified as 34-year-old Vyacheslav M, was held after the body of Oleg Sviridov, 32, was found in woodland near the village of Vintai in Samara on Thursday, September 2.

Local reports say the two men were drinking together after work and eventually fell asleep, before Vyacheslav woke up and began scrolling through the Sviridov’s phone.

He reportedly attacked his friend after seeing a video of him forcing his daughter to perform a sex act.

The victim managed to stumble out of the house, but Vyacheslav is said to have gone after him again the following day finding out he was accused of raping someone else’s daughter in the same village.

He later handed himself in to police saying the dead man ‘ran into his knife during an argument’.

Vyacheslav remains in custody while a murder probe is underway.

Criminal investigations have also been launched into the clips filmed on the victim’s phone. They are said to include sex attacks on other young girls dating back five years.

The body of ???paedophile??? Oleg Sviridov, 32 (left ), was found near Vintai village, Samara region, Russia. Vyacheslav M, 34 ( right ), whose nine year old daughter was an alleged paedophile rape victim, was detained after ???confessing??? to killing Sviridov, say Russian law enforcement.
Sviridov (left) pictured with his former friend Vyacheslav (right) (Picture: east2west news)
Russian law enforcment are working near the Vintai village, Samara region, Russia, where the body of ???paedophile??? Oleg Sviridov, 32, was found. Vyacheslav M, 34, whose 8 year old daughter was an alleged paedophile rape victim, was detained after ???confessing??? to killing Sviridov, say Russian law enforcement.
Russian law enforcement are working near the Vintai village (Picture: east2west news)

Villagers and social media users said Vyacheslav should not be charged with murder.

One said: ‘He is not a murderer- he protected his daughter and our children too. Everyone is on his side.’

Prominent TV journalist and former Russian presidential candidate Ksenia Sobchak told her followers: ‘All parents are standing up for the paedophile’s killer.’

Another commenter, Anna Plekhanova, said: ‘If the crime is proven by video facts, then is the girl’s father wrong?

‘Any normal parent, mother or father, would have torn apart such a paedophile right on the spot.

‘Protecting children is the direct responsibility of parents.’

Vintai village, Samara region, Russia GV pic , where the body of ???paedophile??? Oleg Sviridov, 32, was found . Vyacheslav M, 34, whose 8 year old daughter was an alleged paedophile rape victim, was detained after ???confessing??? to killing Sviridov, say Russian law enforcement.
The village is in the Samara region of Russia (Picture: east2west news)
The body of ???paedophile??? Oleg Sviridov, 32, was found near Vintai village, Samara region, Russia. Vyacheslav M, 34, whose 8 year old daughter was an alleged paedophile rape victim, was detained after ???confessing??? to killing Sviridov, say Russian law enforcement.
Police are investigating the clips found on Sviridov’s phone (Picture: east2west news)

Yulia Salinder added: ‘It’s good that he killed the bastard because our law would have put him in jail for only eight years – or even less – and he would be out again.’

Sviridov’s mother said her son had often been a babysitter for Vyacheslav’s children.

The two men had been long-time friends, she added, saying: ‘I don’t know how it got to this.

‘He must have been drunk. Most likely he was drunk. They left their children with him all the time.

‘When he was baby-sat these girls, he came back home as normal, in a good mood.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2021-09-04 14:23:00Z
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US cash funded Wuhan virus lab's research to make diseases more deadly, new book says - Daily Mail

US cash funded controversial Wuhan virus lab where research to make diseases more deadly was backed by Dr Anthony Fauci, new book says

  • Wuhan Institute of Virology was 'creating a database of potentially lethal viruses'
  • Shi Zhengli, aka the 'batwoman', collected thousands of coronavirus samples 
  • The lab had funding from National Institutes of Health, led by Dr Anthony Fauci 
  • Revelations feature in What Really Happened in Wuhan: the Cover-Ups, the Conspiracies and the Classified Research, by Sharri Markson

The US was funding China's controversial Wuhan laboratory as it embarked on a secretive project to identify deadly viruses with pandemic potential, a new book has claimed. 

According to What Really Happened in Wuhan: the Cover-Ups, the Conspiracies and the Classified Research, by Sharri Markson, the Wuhan Institute of Virology was creating a database of potentially lethal viruses with the help of Shi Zhengli - aka 'batwoman'. 

Ms Zhengli, who earned her nickname sampling thousands of bats in remote caves, collected 19,000 samples while at Wuhan, with 2,481 of those containing coronaviruses. 

Her work was all part of China's own version of the Global Virome Project (GVP). 

The GVP was supposed to be an international collaborative effort to identify within 10 years all of the planet's viruses which have pandemic or epidemic potential in humans. 

In a cable sent to the State Department in April, diplomat Rick Switzer made clear how the National Institutes of Health (NIH), headed by Dr Anthony Fauci (pictured), was funding research at the Wuhan lab - which included experimenting with coronaviruses

In a cable sent to the State Department in April, diplomat Rick Switzer made clear how the National Institutes of Health (NIH), headed by Dr Anthony Fauci (pictured), was funding research at the Wuhan lab - which included experimenting with coronaviruses

But during a visit to the Wuhan institute in March 2018, US career diplomat Rick Switzer - alongside US consul-general Jamie Fouss - found that China had launched its own version - in a lab with poor safety practices and no US oversight. 

And in a cable sent to the State Department in April, Mr Switzer made clear how the National Institutes of Health (NIH), headed by Dr Anthony Fauci, was funding the research at the lab - which included experimenting with coronaviruses. 

The cable read: 'NIH was a major funder, along with the National Science Foundation of China, of Sars research by the Wuhan Institute of Virology.' 

It added: 'In the last year, the institute has also hosted visits from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Science Foundation and experts from the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.' 

The Galveston branch also trained Wuhan lab technicians while the US National Science Foundation had just finished a workshop with the Wuhan Institute in Shenzhen involving 40 scientists from the US and China.

But despite the US's help in funding and training the lab and its technicians, few international researchers were welcome to work inside the facility.

'Institute officials said there would be "limited availability" for international and domestic scientists who had gone through the necessary approval process to do research at the lab,' Switzer's cable stated. 

In his book, Markson commented: 'So a laboratory working with the most lethal pathogens known to humankind had effectively cut off collaboration with the international community.'  

The Wuhan Institute of Virology was creating a database of potentially lethal viruses with the help of Shi Zhengli - aka 'batwoman' (pictured)

The Wuhan Institute of Virology was creating a database of potentially lethal viruses with the help of Shi Zhengli - aka 'batwoman' (pictured) 

Despite the US's help in funding and training the lab and its technicians, few international researchers were welcome to work inside the facility (Pictured: Aerial shot of Wuhan lab)

Despite the US's help in funding and training the lab and its technicians, few international researchers were welcome to work inside the facility (Pictured: Aerial shot of Wuhan lab)

When the coronavirus pandemic emerged in late 2019, the work of the lab and Zhengli in particular came under intense scrutiny - with many, including US President Donald Trump, suggesting the institute was the source of the Covid-19 outbreak. 

Zhengli would address the claims in February 2020, saying: 'Those who believe and spread rumours, shut your dirty mouth.' 

China 'kicked French partners' out of controversial Wuhan virus lab 

The Wuhan Institute of Virology was built in conjunction with the Jean Mérieux BSL-4 Laboratory in Lyons, France, and billed as a beacon of international scientific collaboration. 

It was to be China's first high-containment laboratory.  

Construction began in 2004 and took 11 years and $44million to complete. 

Spread out over 3,000sqm and covering four floors, it was accredited in February 2017 by the China National Accreditation Service for Conformity Assessment, and began working on live viruses by 2018.

There were 'intense clashes' between the French and Chinese during construction - and strong objections among the French to France's involvement in the project. 

After the lab was up and running, the French were quickly kicked out.

A cable sent to the US State Department in April 2018 by diplomat Rick Switzer read: 'It is entirely China-funded and has been completely China-run since a "handover" ceremony in 2016'.

Source: What Really Happened in Wuhan: the Cover-Ups, the Conspiracies and the Classified Research

In a post on WeChat, China's version of Twitter, she added that Covid-19 was 'nature’s punishment for uncivilised living habits of human beings.'

She added: 'I, Shi Zhengli, use my life to guarantee that it has nothing to do with our lab.'

Zhengli had been conducting controversial 'gain-of-function' research, which attempts to make viruses more infectious and deadly, often to humans. 

It has been carried out by researchers across the world, who say it helps predict pandemics by identifying viruses which can become infectious to human beings - allowing them to pre-emptively start work on vaccines and medicines.

But the Cambridge Working Group, made up of 200 scientists, released a letter in 2014 warning of the risks involved in the work. 

They wrote: 'Laboratory creation of highly transmissible, novel strains of dangerous viruses, especially but not limited to influenza, poses substantially increased risks. 

'An accidental infection in such a setting could trigger outbreaks that would be difficult or impossible to control. 

'Historically, new strains of influenza, once they establish transmission in the human population, have infected a quarter or more of the world’s population within two years.' 

The US even halted such research in 22 fields in 2014, with the White House saying in a statement on October 17 of that year: 'During this pause, the US government will not fund any new projects involving these experiments and encourages those currently conducting this type of work — whether federally funded or not — to voluntarily pause their research while risks and benefits are being reassessed.'

Dr Fauci supported the move at the time, but argued: 'The benefits of such experiments and the resulting knowledge outweigh the risks. 

'It is more likely that a pandemic would occur in nature [than as a result of a laboratory accident or leak], and the need to stay ahead of such a threat is a primary reason for performing an experiment that might appear to be risky.'

The pause on the research in the US was lifted in 2017. 

A year later, the Wuhan lab started working with live viruses. 

Prior to the pandemic, only two labs in the world were carrying out gain-of-function experiments on coronaviruses, including the Wuhan Institute of Virology.  

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2021-09-04 10:59:37Z
CAIiEBBCC2tDd0-eiJxeNS2MbuQqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowzuOICzCZ4ocDMM7TqQY

New Zealand supermarket stabbing: Government to toughen anti-terror laws - BBC News

New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern has vowed to toughen anti-terror laws following Friday's knife attack in Auckland by a man who was under police surveillance.

"We must be willing to make the changes that we know may not necessarily have changed history, but could change the future," she said at a news briefing.

The man, a Sri Lankan national, stabbed seven people in a supermarket. Three of them are in a critical condition.

The attacker, a known supporter of Islamic State, was shot dead by police.

Ms Ardern, who described the stabbings as a "terrorist attack", said she expected that changes to the country's counter-terrorism legislation would be backed by parliament by the end of September.

The attacker had been arrested a number of times before Friday's incident. But Ms Ardern said that every legal avenue to keep him out of the community had been exhausted.

How did the attack unfold?

It happened at the Countdown supermarket at LynnMall in the Auckland district of New Lynn on Friday afternoon.

A surveillance team and a specialist tactics group had followed the man from his home to the supermarket. But while there were concerns about the him, officials said they had no reason to think he was planning an attack on Friday, and the team believed he was going to do his grocery shopping.

After entering the store, however, the attacker got hold of a knife and went on a stabbing spree.

An armed police officer at the site of a knife attack in Auckland, New Zealand. Photo: 3 September 2021
Reuters

Shopper Michelle Miller told local news outlet Stuff that the man was "running around like a lunatic" and attacking people.

"All I heard was a lot of screaming," she said.

"[People were] running out, hysterically, just screaming, yelling, scared," another witness said, adding that he saw an elderly man lying on the ground with a stab wound.

Witnesses also said the attacker had shouted "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest).

Police commissioner Andrew Coster said said police rushed over upon hearing the commotion and shot and killed the attacker when he charged at the officers with the knife. This happened within 60 seconds of the attack.

What do we know about the attacker?

The man, whose identity cannot be revealed due to court suppression orders, arrived in New Zealand on a student visa in 2011. He became a person of national security interest in 2016.

He had been under round-the-clock monitoring and heavy surveillance due to concerns about his ideology. He was known to multiple agencies, and was also on a terror watchlist.

Local media reports said the attacker was 32 years old and had recently been sentenced to one year of supervision for possessing IS propaganda.

Prosecutors had accused him of plotting a "lone wolf" terror attack using knives, but the judge ruled that planning a terror attack was not in itself an offence under existing laws, the reports said.

His internet search history and bookmarks included heroes of Islamic State, Islamic State dress, and New Zealand prison clothes and food, according to Stuff.

Questions have been raised about why action against the attacker was not taken before the stabbings - especially since he was under close surveillance.

The attacker's family were "shocked and grieving", lawyer Davoud Mansouri-Rad, who represented the man in relation to his immigration matters, told Stuff.

image shows map of the attack location
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2021-09-04 07:12:21Z
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Jumat, 03 September 2021

Afghanistan: Despair of Brits and UK allies stuck behind Taliban lines - BBC News

Guards at the Torkham crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan where some Afghans have tried to cross
Anadolu Agency

Hundreds of UK nationals are stuck in Afghanistan days after the last evacuation flight left Kabul airport. It is feared that hundreds more who are eligible for relocation to Britain are also trapped in the country, which is now in the hands of the hardline Islamist group.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who has taken part in meetings in Qatar and Pakistan this week to discuss how some of the people could be helped to safety, said Kabul airport might reopen "in the near future". He also signalled that Britain was looking for co-operation with the Taliban on crossings.

Here, British nationals and at-risk Afghans share what has happened since the final evacuation flight - and what they plan to do now. The BBC has changed some names to protect the identities of those we spoke to.

Halima - parents stranded after funeral

Halima's parents, who both have British passports, went to Afghanistan for a family funeral in July, before the Taliban's rapid surge to power. Their flights back to London were cancelled and days later the country fell to the Taliban. In an email, the UK government told them to go to Kabul airport to be put on an evacuation flight but they turned back after warnings of an attack.

Halima and her parents before they left for Afghanistan
Subject's own

Since the final UK evacuation, they have had no communication from the government. "We are running out of money here. Banks are closed, there is a shortage of food," they explain. Their only plan is to try to survive until it's possible to come home.

In a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson this week, Halima, who is in her early 20s, asked: "Have you got any idea what my family and I are going through?" She has so far received only an automated reply.

Wahid - NHS worker stuck in Kabul

After working in a London hospital during the Covid-19 pandemic, Wahid went to visit family in Afghanistan in early August. After the Taliban seized power, he was advised by the Foreign Office to go to the Baron Hotel, near Kabul airport, where British troops were processing UK nationals for evacuation.

Wahid
Wahid

At the gates, Taliban guards tried to tear up his British passport. Photos show the bruises from the humiliating beating they gave him in front of his wife.

"Now I'm moving from house to house. It's not safe to stay still. I have nightmares," he explains, adding that his brother was captured by the Taliban last week.

"It's too scary to try to leave through a neighbouring country. We heard a group of Afghans were killed at the border last week," said Wahid, who is in his 20s.

"All I can do is wait. All day I look at my phone hoping for an email - but nothing," he says.

Abdul - worked for the British Council

Abdul was an English language trainer for the British Council, working all over Afghanistan. The council told him he was eligible for the Arap (Afghan Relocation and Assistance Policy) scheme, which gives Afghans who worked for the British government the right to resettle in the UK.

He has not yet heard the outcome of his application. "We are left behind. They've given us to the Taliban," he said as the final evacuation flight left.

Abdul
Abdul

Fearing for their safety, Abdul and his family have now abandoned their home. With no job, he has sold his wife's jewellery to make ends meet.

He says he has no plans and no options. "It's hard for me to return to normal life," he says. "Even if the borders to neighbouring countries open, I don't know how to safely get out. No-one is answering my question - how long should we wait to hear from the government?"

Zahra - family fought the Taliban

"There's no sleep - just worrying," says British-Afghan Zahra. She is in Leeds. Her family, some of whom fought the Taliban or prosecuted militants under the Western-backed Afghan government, are in Afghanistan.

She registered their details with the UK government but was told this week there were no updates and not to call the government hotline again. "They have provided no solutions," she says.

Zahra
Zahra

The family are in hiding and waiting. One relative, tired of being scared, is considering the dangerous crossing into neighbouring Iran.

"There needs to be some kind of confirmation from the government. That's what they're waiting for. If they go to another country, will there be help?" says Zahra, who is in her 20s. "I'm 100% sure my family would take the risk if there was clarity and hope."

Farwad - trapped with young baby

Farwad went to the Baron Hotel three times to join the evacuation by British soldiers. In one attempt he says he waited for 24 hours in the dust and heat. An Afghan-British national, he had gone back to Afghanistan in 2019 and was living with his wife and young baby, neither of whom have British passports.

He was so certain they would be able to leave the country after the Taliban took power that he left their home.

He says he sent numerous emails and called embassy staff. "I told them our passport says the Queen 'will afford the bearer such assistance and protection as necessary' but they didn't care," he says.

Farwad is now staying with neighbours. "I don't have any options. My wife and child don't have British passports and I cannot leave them. It's dangerous to go to neighbouring countries. The embassies are closed. We don't know what to do."

Sayyid - brother threatened by Taliban

"I've dialled the helpline more than 2,000 times," Sayyid, who lives in Edinburgh with his Scottish wife and children, tells the BBC.

"It's a waste of time."

His brother, who worked for a British charity in Afghanistan, has already been threatened by the Taliban, he says. With his mother, he left their home and joined the crowds at Kabul Airport trying to leave. But after missing out on the evacuation, they are left waiting in hope that flights will soon resume.

"I want them to get on one of those flights. They are eligible," Sayyid says. "My mother is asking for my help and I'm helpless. She said 'I don't care about my life, but please take your brother'."

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2021-09-04 00:25:16Z
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