Rabu, 08 September 2021

'Different, but here': Michael Schumacher’s wife updates on husband's condition - ITV News

Michael Schumacher’s wife Corinna has broken her near eight-year silence on her husband’s condition, saying he is “different, but here” during part of a new documentary on the Formula 1 legend’s life.

Schumacher, 52, was placed in a medically-induced coma for six months after suffering a head injury while skiing in the French Alps in December 2013.

Schumacher suffered head injuries in a skiing accident in 2013. Credit: AP

The seven-time world champion is now cared for in private by his family in Geneva, Switzerland, with details around his condition remaining scarce since the accident.

But in an upcoming Netflix documentary, Corrina Schumacher, who has been married to Michael since 1995, told of how her husband is "different, but here", and that he "still shows how strong he is every day".



“Michael is here. Different, but he’s here, and that gives us strength, I find,” she says in the documentary called 'Schumacher', which is due to be released on September 15. “We’re together. We live together at home. We do therapy. We do everything we can to make Michael better and to make sure he’s comfortable. And to simply make him feel our family, our bond. “And no matter what, I will do everything I can. We all will. We’re trying to carry on as a family, the way Michael liked it and still does. And we are getting on with our lives."

Ms Schumacher and her husband have two children together, 24-year-old Gina, and 22-year-old Mick who has followed in his father's footsteps into Formula 1 with Haas.

Mick Schumacher in the paddock ahead of the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, Towcester in July 2021. Credit: PA

In the documentary, which will include unseen archival footage, she also reportedly reveals how her husband expressed concerns about the snow in Meribel - a ski resort in France - shortly before the 2013 skiing accident.

Ms Schumacher emphasises the importance of privacy in protecting their family life.

“'Private is private’, as he always said. It’s very important to me that he can continue to enjoy his private life as much as possible.

“Michael always protected us and now we are protecting Michael.”

Lewis Hamilton and Michael Schumacher. Credit: PA

Schumacher won a record seven world championships - two with Benetton in 1994 and 1995, and five in a row for Ferrari from 2000 to 2004.

The German originally retired in 2006 but returned three years later.

He had achieved 68 pole positions, a record beaten by Lewis Hamilton in 2017.


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2021-09-08 16:59:31Z
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Homophobic slur carved into gay man's buttocks by masked gang of eight - Metro.co.uk

Gay man has homophobic slur carved into his buttocks
The attack has sparked protests and demonstrations across Spain (Picture: Getty Images)

A homophobic attack saw a vile slur carved into a gay man’s buttocks with a knife in Spain.

The victim, aged 20, was attacked by eight masked attackers at the entrance to his apartment building in the Malasana district of Madrid on Sunday.

The gang cut his lower lip with a knife while calling him a ‘s**t-eater’, and then scored the word ‘maricón’ into his buttocks – the Spanish equivalent of ‘f****t’. 

A police spokesperson said officers are investigating and are collecting ‘as much evidence as possible from security cameras and witnesses’.

‘Police are looking to arrest and identify these people and clarify whether it was really a homophobic attack or hate crime,’ they added.

‘This is the first assault of this kind we have heard of.’

No arrests have yet been made and the investigation continues.

Prime minister Pedro Sanchez scheduled an urgent meeting of the hate crimes committee for Friday.

He tweeted on Monday: ‘I condemn this homophobic attack most vehemently.

Spain’s LGBT+ community is still reeling from the killing of 24-year-old gay man Samuel Luiz (Picture: Getty Images)

‘We won’t stand for it and we’ll keep working for an open and diverse country where no one is scared to be who they are, and in which we can all live safely and freely.’

Government spokesperson Isabel Rodríguez García said: ‘Hate crimes require the strongest social and political reproach.’

She added the Government would use ‘every legal instrument available’ to prevent ‘discourse that promotes hatred’.

Several protests have been called in response to the attack, with one planned tonight in Puerta del Sol square, with another called ‘they’re killing us’ in the same place on Saturday.

Spain’s LGBT+ community is still reeling from the shocking killing of Samuel Luiz, who was beaten to death near a nightclub in the northern city of Coruna.

Activists believe the attack on the gay 24-year-old man was motivated by homophobia.

Although a recent YouGov survey in Spain showed 91% of people would be supportive if a family member came out as lesbian, gay or bisexual, there are claims there is a growing issue with homophobic violence in the country.

According to the Madrid Observatory against LGBTphobia, there have been at least 103 homophobic assaults in Madrid in 2021, and 41% of LGBT+ Spaniards suffered harassment in the last year.

Campaigners say official statistics capture only a fraction of the problem because many incidents are not reported.

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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2021-09-08 13:04:00Z
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Ashraf Ghani apologises to Afghans, says he fled to ensure peace - Al Jazeera English

Former president says he left Kabul in order to avoid the risk of bloody street fighting, reiterates denial of stealing millions.

Afghanistan’s former President Ashraf Ghani has said it was never his intent to “abandon the people” as he apologised to Afghans for the way his rule came to an end when he fled the country last month on the same day the Taliban entered the capital, Kabul.

In a statement published on Twitter on Wednesday, Ghani said he left on August 15 at the urging of the palace security to avoid the risk of bloody street fighting, and again denied stealing millions from the treasury.

“Leaving Kabul was the most difficult decision of my life, but I believed it was the only way to keep the guns silent and save Kabul and her 6 million citizens,” he said.

Ghani took the opportunity to deny the claims that he had taken millions of dollars out of the country when he fled, even saying that he was ready to be investigated to prove his innocence.

The claims originated with a former Afghan ambassador to neighbouring Tajikistan, Zahir Aghbar, who alleged Ghani took about $169m with him when he left the country.

Ghani, who is currently in Abu Dhabi, lamented that, like his predecessors, he too had been unable to bring peace and prosperity to the war-torn country.

“It is with a deep and profound regret that my own chapter ended in a similar tragedy to my predecessors,” he said. “I apologize to the Afghan people that I could not make it end differently.”

Taliban fighters took over Kabul after a lightning-fast offensive launched in May as the United States and NATO began withdrawing troops.

In the space of 10 days before taking the capital, the Taliban had seized a string of other cities, meeting little or no resistance in a staggering rout.

In an interview with Afghan outlet TOLO News, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Ghani had told him the night before he fled Afghanistan that he was “prepared to fight to the death”.

“I certainly didn’t know about it, and we certainly did nothing to facilitate it,” Blinken said.

Responding to another question, Blinken said he did not know whether Ghani had taken millions of dollars in cash with him.

“That, I don’t know. What I do know is that he left the country, and again, in a very short period of time. The security forces as an institution collapsed and so did the government.”

Ghani’s statement came a day after the Taliban announced their new interim government, with established hardliners in all key posts and no women, despite previous promises to form an inclusive administration.

Separately on Wednesday, the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross appealed to other humanitarian organisations to return to Afghanistan and for the World Bank to unlock funds to support the country’s weak healthcare system.

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2021-09-08 16:09:01Z
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Taliban 'lock crowd of women in basement' to prevent them from joining protests in Kabul - Daily Mail

Taliban 'lock crowd of women in basement' to prevent them from joining protests in Kabul – where one brave demonstrator has an M-16 pointed in her face by fanatic

  • Video shows women gathered in the underground car park of Kabul's Azizi Bank
  • Women were reportedly taken there to prevent them from joining street protests
  • Scores of people took to the capital's streets on Tuesday, protesting the Taliban
  • They called for protection of women's rights, work and freedom of movement
  • Anti-Pakistan slogans were also chanted during the protests
  • Taliban fired into the air and reportedly made arrests to disperse the crowds 
  • Protests follow 'national uprising' call by Afghan resistance leader and formation of Taliban's new caretaker government three weeks after group seized Kabul

Afghan women say they were locked in the basement of a bank to prevent them from taking part in protests in Kabul yesterday.

Furious protesters took to the streets of the capital on Tuesday after the leader of the anti-Taliban resistance called for a 'national uprising' against the militant group a day earlier.

Pictures showed female demonstrators arguing with Taliban fighters as one woman stared down an M-16 rifle pointed at her face. 

Footage taken on a mobile phone shows a woman in an underground car park, panning around to reveal a crowd of women and some children gathered in the same space. 

The video is hastily cut short after a man's voice is heard shouting. 

Miraqa Popal, the head of news at Afghanistan's Tolo News outlet, shared the clip on Twitter, writing that some eyewitnesses said the women were held in Kabul's Azizi Bank 'to prevent them from joining protesters'. 

Tuesday saw scores of anti-Taliban protesters in Kabul demanding rights for women, work, and freedom of movement. 

Demonstrators also chanted anti-Pakistan slogans, denouncing the 'intrusion' of the country into Afghan domestic affairs. Pakistan has been accused of providing air support to the Taliban.

Taliban fighters fired gunshots into the air to disperse protesters and reportedly made several arrests. 

Dozens of Afghan women were 'kept in the basement of a bank' to prevent them from taking part in protests in Kabul yesterday, according to eyewitnesses

Dozens of Afghan women were 'kept in the basement of a bank' to prevent them from taking part in protests in Kabul yesterday, according to eyewitnesses

A video showed women and some children crowded into an underground carpark
The video was purportedly taken at the Azizi Bank in Kabul on Tuesday

Footage taken on a mobile phone shows a woman in an underground car park, panning around to reveal a crowd of women and some children gathered in the same space

Furious protesters took to the streets of the capital on Tuesday after the leader of the anti-Taliban resistance called for a 'national uprising' against the militant group a day earlier. Pictured: A Taliban fighter points his gun at protesters

Furious protesters took to the streets of the capital on Tuesday after the leader of the anti-Taliban resistance called for a 'national uprising' against the militant group a day earlier. Pictured: A Taliban fighter points his gun at protesters

Many women were among the protesters out in Kabul on Tuesday, where they were seen arguing with Taliban fighters

Many women were among the protesters out in Kabul on Tuesday, where they were seen arguing with Taliban fighters

The rallies came as the Taliban announced a caretaker government, awarding top posts to veteran jihadists as it seeks to bring stability to Afghanistan more than three weeks after seizing power.

On Monday, the Taliban claimed victory over Panjshir - the only one of Afghanistan's 34 provinces not to have fallen to the group.  

National Resistance Front (NRF) leader Ahmad Massoud appeared to admit defeat in an audio message sent to the media in which he called on Afghans to launch 'a national uprising for the dignity, freedom and prosperity of our country.'

Protesters chanted Massoud's name, and many attending were women - an almost inconceivable sight during the Taliban's brutal 1998-2001 rule when women and girls were barred from work and education, forced to wear burqas and effectively consigned to their homes.

In the intervening years, Afghan women have been granted greater freedoms which they fear will be curtailed under the Taliban.

Videos and photographs showed female protesters in Kabul arguing with armed Taliban fighters. 

There were reports of fighters hitting people, including women, with the butts of their rifles. 

Women chant anti-Pakistan slogans at a protest in Kabul on Tuesday. Pakistan has been accused of providing air support to the Taliban in their attack on Panjshir

Women chant anti-Pakistan slogans at a protest in Kabul on Tuesday. Pakistan has been accused of providing air support to the Taliban in their attack on Panjshir

An Afghan woman shouts during a protest. Many women are concerned that hard-won rights will be curtailed under the new regime

An Afghan woman shouts during a protest. Many women are concerned that hard-won rights will be curtailed under the new regime

A female protester speaks with a Taliban fighter during a protest in Kabul on Tuesday

A female protester speaks with a Taliban fighter during a protest in Kabul on Tuesday

A local cameraman was arrested, then released, by the Taliban on Tuesday and the BBC was also prevented from filming the protest

A local cameraman was arrested, then released, by the Taliban on Tuesday and the BBC was also prevented from filming the protest

The Tolo cameraman sent to film the protest was detained but has since been released, according to Popal. The BBC was also prevented from filming the protests.

Basic services have collapsed since the Taliban took power, people cannot withdraw money from banks and Western aid has been cut off.  

The UN has warned that food stocks could run low by the end of the month as the country braces for an economic meltdown.

Ramiz Alakbarov, the UN's deputy special representative for Afghanistan, said that a third of the population was already going hungry. 

'More than half of Afghan children do not know whether they'll have a meal tonight or not,' Alakbarov said at a news briefing last Wednesday. 'That's the reality of the situation we're facing on the ground.'

The Taliban's chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid held a press conference on Tuesday evening to announce UN-sanctioned Mohammad Hassan Akhund as their new leader.

Taliban co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar will serve as his deputy; Mullah Yaqub, son of the one-eyed late supreme leader Mullah Omar, was named defence minister; and Sirajuddin Haqqani, wanted by the FBI and the leader of the feared Haqqani network, was named interior minister.  

The rallies came as the Taliban announced a caretaker government, awarding top posts to veteran jihadists as it seeks to bring stability to Afghanistan more than three weeks after seizing power. Pictured: The Taliban stand in front of protesters in Kabul on Tuesday

The rallies came as the Taliban announced a caretaker government, awarding top posts to veteran jihadists as it seeks to bring stability to Afghanistan more than three weeks after seizing power. Pictured: The Taliban stand in front of protesters in Kabul on Tuesday

There were reports of protesters, including women, being hit with the butts of rifles on Tuesday

There were reports of protesters, including women, being hit with the butts of rifles on Tuesday

Pictured: A protest in Kabul on Tuesday, which came after the Afghan resistance leader called for a 'national uprising' against the group

Pictured: A protest in Kabul on Tuesday, which came after the Afghan resistance leader called for a 'national uprising' against the group

Mujahid said that the cabinet was not complete 'it is just acting' and that they aimed 'to take people from other parts of the country.

'The cabinet is not complete, it is just acting,' Mujahid said. 'We will try to take people from other parts of the country.'

The hardline Islamists have been expected to announce a government since the US-led evacuation was completed at the end of August.

They have promised an 'inclusive' government that represents Afghanistan's complex ethnic makeup - though women are unlikely to be included at the top levels.

Amir Khan Muttaqi, a Taliban negotiator in Doha and member of the first regime's cabinet, was named foreign minister.

As they transition from insurgent group to governing power, the Taliban have a series of major issues to address, including looming financial and humanitarian crises. 

Afghanistan's economy is in tatters after the West withdrew funding following the fall of the government last month.

Washington and international institutions such as the World Bank cut off aid, and the Taliban has been unable to access around $9 billion in treasury reserves held in foreign currency overseas. 

Prices for essentials such as milk and flour have skyrocketed, sparking fears of runaway inflation. 

And then there's the issue of obtaining money in the first place, with most Afghans unable to withdraw cash because banks have been closed and ATMs emptied since the Taliban victory. 

The Taliban have repeatedly sought to reassure Afghans and foreign countries that they will not reimpose the brutal rule of their last period in power, when they carried out violent public punishments and barred women and girls from public life. 

But details are still vague on how the newly-announced government will run the country.

Asked whether the United States would recognise the Taliban, U.S. President Joe Biden told reporters at the White House late Monday: 'That's a long way off.'

The Taliban top brass, from the UN-sanctioned leader freed by the US three years ago to the son of the one-eyed former chief Mullah Omar now serving as interior minister

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, Taliban co-founder and leader of the provisional government 

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, one of the co-founders of the Taliban, was freed from jail in Pakistan three years ago at the request of the U.S. government.  

Just nine months ago, he posed for pictures with Donald Trump's Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to sign a peace deal in Doha which today lies in tatters.

Last month, his forces seized Kabul and he is now tipped to become Afghanistan's next leader in a reversal of fortune which humiliates Washington.  

While Haibatullah Akhundzada is the Taliban's overall leader, Baradar is head of its political office and one of the most recognisable faces of the chiefs who have been involved in peace talks in Qatar. 

In September 2020, Baradar was pictured with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who 'urged the Taliban to seize this opportunity to forge a political settlement and reach a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire,' the US said in a statement

In September 2020, Baradar was pictured with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who 'urged the Taliban to seize this opportunity to forge a political settlement and reach a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire,' the US said in a statement

The 53-year-old was deputy leader under ex-chief Mullah Mohammed Omar, whose support for Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden led to the US-led invasion of Afghanistan after 9/11. 

Baradar is reported to have flown immediately from Doha to Kabul on Sunday evening as the militants were storming the presidential palace. 

Born in Uruzgan province in 1968, Baradar was raised in Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban movement.

He fought with the mujahideen against the Soviets in the 1980s until they were driven out in 1989.

Afterwards, Afghanistan was gripped by a blood civil war between rival warlords and Baradar set up an Islamic school in Kandahar with his former commander Mohammed Omar.

The two mullahs helped to found the Taliban movement, an ideology which embraced hardline orthodoxy and strived for the creation of an Islamic Emirate. 

Fuelled by zealotry, hatred of greedy warlords and with financial backing from Pakistan's secret services, the Taliban seized power in 1996 after conquering provincial capitals before marching on Kabul, just as they have in recent months.

Baradar had a number of different roles during the Taliban's five-year reign and was the deputy defence minister when the US invaded in 2001.  

He went into hiding but remained active in the Taliban's leadership in exile.

In 2010, the CIA tracked him down to the Pakistani city of Karachi and in February of that year the Pakistani intelligence service (ISI) arrested him.

But in 2018, he was released at the request of the Trump administration as part of their ongoing negotiations with the Taliban in Qatar, on the understanding that he could help broker peace. 

In February 2020, Baradar signed the Doha Agreement in which the U.S. pledged to leave Afghanistan on the basis that the Taliban would enter into a power-sharing arrangement with President Ashraf Ghani's government in Kabul.

He was pictured in September with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who 'urged the Taliban to seize this opportunity to forge a political settlement and reach a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire,' the US said in a statement.

Pompeo 'welcomed Afghan leadership and ownership of the effort to end 40 years of war and ensure that Afghanistan is not a threat to the United States or its allies.'

The Doha deal was heralded as a momentous peace declaration but has been proved to be nothing but a ploy by the Taliban.

The jihadists waited until thousands of American troops had left before launching a major offensive to recapture the country, undoing two decades of work by the US-led coalition.

Haibatullah Akhundzada, the future Emir of Afghanistan and the Taliban's Islamic figurehead

Haibatullah Akhundzada, the 'Leader of the Faithful,' is the Taliban's Supreme Commander with the final word on its political, religious and military policy.

Akhundzada is expected to take the title of Emir of Afghanistan.

Believed to be around 60-years-old, he is not known for his military strategy but is revered as an Islamic scholar and rules the Taliban by that right. 

He took over in 2016 when the group's former chief, Akhtar Mansour, was killed in a US drone strike on the Pakistani border.

After being appointed leader, Akhundzada secured a pledge of loyalty from Al Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri, who showered the religious scholar with praise - calling him 'the emir of the faithful'.

This helped to seal his jihadi credentials with the group's long-time allies. 

Akhundzada became head of the Taliban's council of religious scholars after the US invasion and is believed to be the author of many of its fatwas (Islamic legal rulings)

Akhundzada became head of the Taliban's council of religious scholars after the US invasion and is believed to be the author of many of its fatwas (Islamic legal rulings)

Akhundzada was tasked with the enormous challenge of unifying a militant movement that briefly fractured during a bitter power struggle following the assassination of his predecessor, and the revelation that the leadership had hid the death of Taliban founder Mullah Omar for years.

The leader's public profile has been largely limited to the release of annual messages during Islamic holidays.  

Akhundzada was born around 1959 to a religious scholar in the Panjwayi district of Kandahar Province.

His family were forced to flee their home during the Soviet invasion and he joined the resistance as a young man.

He was one of the first new Taliban recruits in the 1990s and immediately impressed his superiors with his knowledge of Islamic law.

When the Taliban captured Afghanistan's western Farah province, he was put in charge of fighting crime in the area.

As the Taliban seized more of the country, Akhunzad became head of the military court and deputy chief of its supreme court. 

After the US invasion in 2001 he became head of the Taliban's council of religious scholars and is believed to be the author of many of its fatwas (Islamic legal rulings), including public executions of murderer and adulterers and cutting the hands off thieves. 

Before being named the new leader he had been preaching and teaching for around 15 years at a mosque in Kuchlak, a town in southwestern Pakistan, sources told Reuters.  

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the son of the famed commander from the anti-Soviet jihad

Sirajuddin doubles as both the deputy leader of the Taliban movement while also heading the powerful Haqqani network.

The Haqqani Network is a US-designated terror group that has long been viewed as one of the most dangerous factions fighting Afghan and US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan during the past two decades.

The group is infamous for its use of suicide bombers and is believed to have orchestrated some of the most high-profile attacks in Kabul over the years.

An FBI wanted poster for Sirajuddin Haqqani, the son of the famed commander from the anti-Soviet jihad

An FBI wanted poster for Sirajuddin Haqqani, the son of the famed commander from the anti-Soviet jihad

The network has also been accused of assassinating top Afghan officials and holding kidnapped Western citizens for ransom - including US soldier Bowe Bergdahl, released in 2014.

Known for their independence, fighting acumen, and savvy business dealings, the Haqqanis are believed to oversee operations in the rugged mountains of eastern Afghanistan, while holding considerable sway over the Taliban's leadership council.

Mullah Yaqoob, the son of the Taliban's founder

The son of the Taliban's founder Mullah Omar.

Mullah Yaqoob heads the group's powerful military commission, which oversees a vast network of field commanders charged with executing the insurgency's strategic operations in the war.

His lineage and ties to his father - who enjoyed a cult-like status as the Taliban's leader - serves as a potent symbol and makes him a unifying figure over a sprawling movement.

However speculation remains rife about Yaqoob's exact role within the movement, with some analysts arguing that his appointment to the role in 2020 was merely cosmetic. 

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2021-09-08 07:44:05Z
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Paris attacks 2015: Historic trial of 20 suspects to open in France - BBC News

French police officers secure a convoy believed to be transporting suspects
Reuters

An historic trial is beginning in France over the 2015 Paris attacks which left 130 people dead.

The shooting and bombing assault by Islamist State (IS) group extremists was the worst post-World War Two atrocity in France.

The only surviving attacker, Salah Abdeslam, will appear in court with 13 other defendants at a purpose-built facility in Paris.

The trial is being described as the biggest in France's modern history.

Over the next nine months, there will be over 140 days of hearings involving about 330 lawyers and 1,800 civil plaintiffs. About 300 witnesses will be heard, including survivors and François Hollande, French president at the time of the attacks.

Ahead of the trial, Mr Hollande told French media that this was an important moment for the victims of the attacks, which he described as an "act of war" at the time.

IS admitted carrying out the attacks on the Bataclan concert hall, a major stadium, restaurants and bars on 13 November, 2015.

Philippe Duperron, who lost his son Thomas in the Bataclan attack, said there were mixed feelings about the trial, not least impatience and anxiety.

"It will be the occasion for all the victims to bear witness, so it will be a very painful moment, and bring back the pain again," he said.

One survivor, Jerome Barthelemy, said he wanted to hear how other victims had been coping since the attacks but didn't expect the accused to speak.

Of the 20 suspects on trial, six are being tried in absentia. They are facing charges of murder, complicity and terrorist conspiracy.

Most of the accused, including Abdeslam, could be sentenced to life in jail if convicted.

French Police forces secure the area near the Paris courthouse
Reuters

Abdeslam, 31, is accused of providing logistical support to the assailants. Abdeslam fled the scene of the carnage after abandoning his suicide belt, which investigators later found to be defective.

Europe's most-wanted man at the time, he was captured four months later in the Belgium capital, Brussels, after a shootout with police.

Abdeslam has since refused to co-operate with French investigators. He remained largely silent throughout a separate trial in Belgium in 2018. There is much speculation about whether he will speak during this trial.

On Wednesday morning he and the other suspects arrived at court in police vehicles under heavy security.

The area around the court was blocked off and armed police with dogs were on patrol ahead of the proceedings.

Those attending the trial will need to pass multiple several checkpoints before being allowed into the specially built courtroom, which can seat hundreds.

The trial will be recorded for the archives, but will not be broadcast live. Plaintiffs not attending the hearings will be able to follow along via streaming radio.

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2021-09-08 09:47:14Z
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World reacts as Taliban announces new Afghan government - Al Jazeera English

US expresses concern over ‘track record’ of people named to top posts, while UN agency decries exclusion of women from government.

The Taliban has announced an all-male caretaker government drawn exclusively from its inner echelons, including a man under United Nations sanctions as prime minister and another on a United States “terrorism” list as interior minister.

The names announced for the new government on Tuesday, three weeks after the Taliban swept to military victory as US-led foreign forces withdrew, gave no sign of an olive branch to its opponents.

Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund – a senior minister during the Taliban’s brutal and oppressive rule in the 1990s – was appointed interim prime minister, while the group’s co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar, who oversaw the signing of the US withdrawal agreement in 2020, was appointed deputy prime minister.

Appointed to the key post of interior minister was Sirajuddin Haqqani, one of the founders of the Haqqani network, classified as a “terrorist” group by Washington. He is one of the FBI’s most wanted men due to his involvement in suicide attacks and ties with al-Qaeda.

Here is how the countries and international groups are reacting to the announcement.

United States

The US said it was concerned about the “affiliations and track records” of some of the people named by the Taliban to fill top posts in Afghanistan’s new government.

“We note the announced list of names consists exclusively of individuals who are members of the Taliban or their close associates and no women. We also are concerned by the affiliations and track records of some of the individuals,” a spokesperson for the Department of State said.

“We understand that the Taliban has presented this as a caretaker cabinet. However, we will judge the Taliban by its actions, not words.”

(Al Jazeera)

Turkey

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he was carefully monitoring developments in Afghanistan.

“We don’t know how long this interim cabinet will last. All we have to do is to follow this process carefully,” he told reporters during an official visit to Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Qatar

The Taliban show “pragmatism” and should be judged on their actions, a top Qatari official told the AFP news agency in an exclusive interview, adding there was “no question” the group were Afghanistan’s de facto rulers.

“They have shown a great deal of pragmatism. Let’s seize the opportunities there… and look at their public actions,” said Assistant Foreign Minister Lolwah al-Khater, who stopped short of announcing formal recognition of Afghanistan’s new rulers.

“They are the de facto rulers, no question about that.”

The Taliban announced Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund as the leader of its new government in Afghanistan on September 7, 2021 [File: Saeed Khan/ AFP]

United Nations

Farhan Haq, a spokesman for the UN, said the global body does not engage in acts of recognition of governments.

“That is a matter that’s done by member states, not by us. From our standpoint, regarding today’s announcement, only a negotiated and inclusive settlement will bring sustainable peace to Afghanistan,” he told reporters.

The UN is committed “to contribute to a peaceful solution, promote the human rights of all Afghans, notably women and girls,” and provide life-saving humanitarian assistance, he added.

UN Women

Pramila Patten, the head of the UN women’s agency said the Taliban’s exclusion of women in Afghanistan’s new government calls into question its commitment “to protect and respect the rights” of women and girls.

She called women’s political participation “a fundamental prerequisite for gender equality and genuine democracy” and said that “by excluding women from the machinery of government the Taliban leadership has sent the wrong signal about their stated goal of building an inclusive, strong and prosperous society”.

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2021-09-08 06:05:01Z
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Tangerang: At least 41 dead after fire breaks out in Indonesian jail - bbc.co.uk

The prison in the aftermath of the fire
Indonesian Ministry of Law and Human Rights

At least 41 people have died in Indonesia after a fire broke out at an overcrowded prison on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta.

The blaze broke out in the early hours of Wednesday morning at Tangerang jail, when most of the prisoners were asleep.

There were 122 inmates staying in Block C - the prison block that was affected - far more than the 40-person capacity.

Some foreigners, including inmates from Portugal and South Africa, are among the victims.

Indonesia's Minister of Law and Human Rights Yasonna Laoly said in a press conference that the embassies of the respective countries had been informed.

Mr Laoly added that multiple rooms in the prison block had been locked and could not be opened as the fire spread.

The block housed inmates held for drug-related offences. One victim was reported to be a murder convict, the other found guilty of terrorism, and the rest were in prison for crimes involving drugs.

Dozens more people are said to be injured, with some in ICU.

A short circuit is suspected to be the cause of the fire, though the spokeswoman for Indonesian correctional institutions said this was yet to be confirmed and would be investigated further.

Only 15 guards were on duty for the entire building, which housed 2,000 inmates - a far higher number than its intended 600-person capacity. Prison overcapacity is a persistent problem in Indonesian jails.

Tangerang jail
EPA

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2021-09-08 06:47:27Z
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