Selasa, 23 November 2021

Nurse, 79, and Dancing Grannies member is one of five killed in Waukesha tragedy - Daily Mail

Dancing with the Devil: Tragic pictures emerge of Waukesha's 'Dancing Grannies' with their pompoms taken hours before Darrell Brooks killed four of them in his SUV at Waukesha Xmas parade

  • The victims have been identified as Virginia Sorenson, 79; Leana 'Lee' Owen, 71; Tamara Durand, 52; Jane Kulich, 52; Wilhelm Hospel, 82  
  • Gabrielle Kamentz, a nursing student and clinical research assistant at Oshkosh College, posted a tribute to her late grandmother Virginia on Monday 
  •  'I'm still in shock and trying to process this as I write. As I continue through nursing school, I will live that legacy to her,' Gabrielle wrote
  •  Virginia had been a member of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a group of elderly women marching in the parade, for almost two decades
  • Jane's daughter, Taylor Smith, took to social media to post a tribute to her mother
  •  'There's no words. It's so unreal. My mom was killed last night. We are told she didn't suffer,' Taylor wrote on Facebook 
  • 'The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies are devastated by this terrible tragedy with of loss of life and injuries in the Waukesha Christmas parade,' the group wrote
  • Online footage shows some of the dancing grannies just seconds before Brooks plowed through the crowd, as horrified pedestrians tried to save their lives 
  • The Dancing Grannies march approximately 25 parades every year and to join the group the only requisite is to be a grandmother

Four of the five people who were killed when a red SUV sped into a crowd of participants in the annual Christmas parade in Waukesha were members of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies. 

Waukesha police identified the fatal victims as Dancing Grannies Virginia 'Ginny' Sorenson, 79; Leana 'Lee' Owen, 71; and Tamara Durand, 52; and 82-year-old Wilhelm Hospel, the husband of one of the Grannies. 

Citizen Bank employee Jane Kulich, 52, was also identified as one of the fatalities. She was representing Citizens Bank in the parade procession when she was stuck and killed, according to her daughter.

Durand last Facebook post which she made just hours before the deadly events of Sunday night show her smiling and holding her pompoms while dressed in a winter coat and hat.

'HERE WE GO!' Durand wrote, adding a few Santa Claus emojis. 'First Milwaukee Dancing Grannies parade! So excited!' 

It was also the first time Durand performed with the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies.  

Tamara Durand, 52
Leana 'Lee' Owen, 71

Tamara Durand (left), 52, and Leana 'Lee' Owen (right), 71, were two members of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies who died in Sunday's tragedy.

Virginia Sorenson, 79, was a nurse and member of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a group of elderly woman marching in the parade
Wilhelm Hospel, 82, the husband of one of the grannies, died from internal bleeding, according to his older brother

Virginia Sorenson (left), 79, was a nurse and member of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a group of elderly woman marching in the parade. Wilhelm Hospel (right), 82, the husband of one of the grannies, died from internal bleeding, according to his older brother

Jane Kulich was a Citizen Bank employee who was walking with a parade float before she was fatally struck

Jane Kulich was a Citizen Bank employee who was walking with a parade float before she was fatally struck

A GoFundMe set up by family to raise funeral costs described Jane ( right) as a 'loving, beautiful and charismatic mother, grandmother and friend to so many. 'The world is a much darker place without a woman like this in the world,' continued the description. Almost $600 have been raised out of the $2,000 goal

A GoFundMe set up by family to raise funeral costs described Jane ( right) as a 'loving, beautiful and charismatic mother, grandmother and friend to so many. 'The world is a much darker place without a woman like this in the world,' continued the description. Almost $600 have been raised out of the $2,000 goal

The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a marching, dancing holiday fixture in Wisconsin for nearly 40 years was hit by tragedy as they marched on Sunday

The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a marching, dancing holiday fixture in Wisconsin for nearly 40 years was hit by tragedy as they marched on Sunday

An Interfaith candle lit vigil was held at Cutler Park in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Monday

An Interfaith candle lit vigil was held at Cutler Park in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Monday

Hundreds of people were on hand at Waukesha's Cutler Park for Monday evening's candlelight vigil

Hundreds of people were on hand at Waukesha's Cutler Park for Monday evening's candlelight vigil 

Members of the Waukesha community came out to a candlelight vigil in Cutler Park on Monday

Members of the Waukesha community came out to a candlelight vigil in Cutler Park on Monday

'She was super energetic, she was that type of person who when she walks in the room, everybody notices her smile,' her husband, Dave, told The Daily Beast on Monday. 

'She literally danced her way through life. She was the youngest one in the Dancing Grannies. Dancing was her favorite thing. It was her first time even with them, which is what's so tragic, too.'

Tamara was a hospice and critical care chaplain at Waukesha Memorial. In 2009, she saved a homeless man from drowning in the Wisconsin River. 

Tamara Durand and Leana Owen were also with the Dancing Grannies, while Wilhelm Hospel was the husband of one of the members. 

Jane Kulich was a Citizen Bank employee who was walking with a parade float before she was fatally struck. 

A GoFundMe set up by family to raise funeral costs described her as a 'loving, beautiful and charismatic mother, grandmother and friend to so many.

'The world is a much darker place without a woman like this in the world,' continued the description. Almost $600 have been raised out of the $2,000 goal.   

Hospel was helping the group at the parade because his wife is one of its members, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hospel's brother, Theodore, told the New York Post that he was on a golf course in Florida when he heard that his younger brother was among those struck by the out-of-control SUV driver.

Wilhelm, who was the youngest of five brothers, died after suffering from internal bleeding and injuries to his pelvis, according to Theodore.

'I was talking to him this summer, and he said, "Who do you think is going to be the first one to go," you know,' Theodore said.

'And lo and behold, the youngest one goes first.'  

Theodore told the Post that he would frequently visit his younger brother and his wife, Lola, in Wisconsin. He said Wilhelm was 'always repairing things' in a rental property that he owned. 

'His job was never done, but he was so healthy,' Theodore said.

'He was not on any major medication. He was a strong person and even would help me out a lot of times because he was so strong. I cannot believe it.

'It's so tragic.'

Wilhelm Hospel is seen right with his wife, Lola, in the above undated file photo

Wilhelm Hospel is seen right with his wife, Lola, in the above undated file photo

Gabrielle Kamentz (left), a nursing student and clinical research assistant at Oshkosh College, posted a tribute to her late grandmother Virginia Sorenson (right), 79, killed in the Waukesha tragedy on Sunday

Gabrielle Kamentz (left), a nursing student and clinical research assistant at Oshkosh College, posted a tribute to her late grandmother Virginia Sorenson (right), 79, killed in the Waukesha tragedy on Sunday 

Virginia still worked part-time in medical records and despite her bad knee and hip was an active member of the grannies

Virginia still worked part-time in medical records and despite her bad knee and hip was an active member of the grannies

'What did she like about it? Everything,' Virginia's husband of 56 years, Dave, said. 'She liked the instructing. She liked the dancing and the camaraderie of the women. She liked to perform'

'What did she like about it? Everything,' Virginia's husband of 56 years, Dave, said. 'She liked the instructing. She liked the dancing and the camaraderie of the women. She liked to perform'

Sorenson was a former registered nurse and mother of three children. She is also survived by six grandchildren.

According to the Journal Sentinel, Sorenson helped with the group's choreographer and was a mentor to some of the newer members of the Dancing Gannies. She kept up her activities with the group despite nursing a bad back and hip.

'She liked the instructing,' her husband David told the newspaper.

'She liked the dancing and the camaraderie of the women. She liked to perform.' 

Sorenson was planning to take part in the parade from inside a van. But at the last minute, she decided she was going to help carry the banner at the rear of the group during the procession, according to her husband.

When she wasn't dancing with the Grannies, Owen worked as a manager at Packard Glen Apartments for nearly 10 years, according to CNN

Dave Schmidt, the property owner, told CNN that his staff posted a statement for residents informing them of her death.

'This was one of her passions that she truly loved,' the statement said. 'She was so proud to be part of this group and lit up when she talked about it.' 

The Dancing Grannies posted a statement on its Facebook page saying it was 'devastated' by the tragedy.

'Our group was doing what they loved, performing in front of crowds in a parade putting smiles on faces of all ages, filling them with joy and happiness,' the group wrote.

'While performing the grannies enjoyed hearing the crowds, cheers, and applause which certainly brought smiles to their faces and warmed their hearts.

'Those who died were extremely passionate Grannies. Their eyes gleamed.....joy of being a Grannie. They were the glue....held us together.'

Dancing Granny Betty Butula Streng, who had just joined the group, was also badly injured.

Dancing Granny Betty Butula Streng, who had just joined the group, was also badly injured.

The degree of Betty's injuries is unknown but she's now in ICU, according to members of the community

The degree of Betty's injuries is unknown but she's now in ICU, according to members of the community

The Grannies wrote: 'Our hearts are heavy at this most difficult time, as more information and updates become available it will be posted.

'Please keep them their families, friends, the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, and everyone whose lives have forever changed in your thoughts and prayers.' 

Two children are in critical condition, 18 minors remain in the hospital and 48 are injured in total, but police say the number may rise. 

Gabrielle Kamentz, a nursing student and clinical research assistant at Oshkosh College, posted a tribute to her late grandmother Virginia on Monday. 

Mourners paid their respects to the five people who died and the dozens of others who were injured in Sunday's horrific incident

Mourners paid their respects to the five people who died and the dozens of others who were injured in Sunday's horrific incident

Mourners attend a candlelight vigil in Cutler Park in Waukesha on Monday - a day after Sunday's carnage at the annual Christmas parade

Mourners attend a candlelight vigil in Cutler Park in Waukesha on Monday - a day after Sunday's carnage at the annual Christmas parade

'She had such a good heart. Such a good soul. She was the glue that held the family together. I'm still in shock and trying to process this as I write. As I continue through nursing school, I will live that legacy to her,' Gabrielle wrote. 'My grandmother was an incredible nurse. I'm so proud to be following in her footsteps.'  

Jane Kulich's  daughter, Taylor Smith, also took to social media to post a tribute to her mother. 

'There's no words. It's so unreal. My mom was killed last night. We are told she didn't suffer. Thank God. I'm so grateful I got to have her this long, but da**,' Taylor wrote. 'She was walking in the parade last night. She was so happy. I love you mom. Rest in peace my beautiful angel.'

Virginia was a nurse and member of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, a group of elderly women marching in the parade, for almost two decades.  

She had been married to her husband, Dave, for 56 years and had two adult children and six grandchildren. Virginia worked part-time in medical records.

'What did she like about it? Everything,' her husband told the Milwaukee Journal. 'She liked the instructing. She liked the dancing and the camaraderie of the women. She liked to perform.'

He said Virginia was helping dancers from the parking lot to the start of the route on Sunday.

'[She] was going to ride in the van behind the woman and be an instructor. They were short help so she offered to hold the banner going down the street. so she did that. I was at the end in the car. I was sitting in the car waiting,' he added.  

'The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies are devastated by this terrible tragedy with of loss of life and injuries in the Waukesha Christmas parade,' the Dancing Grannies wrote on Facebook. This picture was posted after the incident on Sunday

'The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies are devastated by this terrible tragedy with of loss of life and injuries in the Waukesha Christmas parade,' the Dancing Grannies wrote on Facebook. This picture was posted after the incident on Sunday

Among the 18 children injured at the parade was Jessalyn Torres, 11, who suffers from a lost kidney, broken pelvis and lacerations to her lungs and remaining kidney

Among the 18 children injured at the parade was Jessalyn Torres, 11, who suffers from a lost kidney, broken pelvis and lacerations to her lungs and remaining kidney

Torres attended the parade with her older sister Yeliana and little sister Averie

Torres attended the parade with her older sister Yeliana and little sister Averie

'Those who died were extremely passionate Grannies. Their eyes gleamed.....joy of being a Grannie. They were the glue....held us together,' the group posted on Facebook. 

Dave told the outlet that despite her bad hip and knee, Virginia loved to make new members of the grannies feel welcomed. 

In a Facebook comment, Virginia encouraged newcomer granny Betty Butula Streng writing 'Our future Milwaukee Dancing Granny...great picture, she has the moves and the smile.'  

Betty, who had just joined the group, was also badly injured. The degree of her injuries is unknown but she's now in ICU, according to members of the community. 

'Dear friends, please hold in prayer Betty. This parade in Waukesha was the first gig for her as a part of the Dancing Grannies. She is currently in ICU. Please lift her and all others impacted by this tragedy in prayer. Lord, in your mercy...' Betty's friend, Kris Ertl posted on Facebook.  

A suspect identified as 39-year-old Darrell Brooks was taken into custody for reportedly plowing his red SUV through crowds at parade. Police said they found his red Ford SUV parked neatly in a driveway five blocks from where he drove through crowds of kids and elderly dancing groups.  

Police said Brooks was fleeing domestic dispute, and the attack was not fueled by terrorism sentiments.   

Five victims were transported to Waukesha Memorial and one of them died. Twelve others were treated by first responders at the scene. 

More than one of the fatal victims were part of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies. 

'The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies are devastated by this terrible tragedy with of loss of life and injuries in the Waukesha Christmas parade,' the Dancing Grannies posted on Facebook.     

Footage shared online shows some of the dancing grannies just seconds before Brooks plowed through the crowd, as horrified pedestrians try to get out of the way. 

The grannies voiced their heartbreak after the tragedy.  

The Facebook statement read: 'Our group was doing what they loved, performing in front of crowds in a parade putting smiles on faces of all ages, filling them with joy and happiness. While performing the grannies enjoyed hearing the crowds cheers and applause which certainly brought smiles to their faces and warmed their hearts.' 

'Our hearts are heavy at this most difficult time, as more information and updates become available it will be posted . Please keep them their families, friends, the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies and everyone who lives have forever changed in your thoughts and prayers,' it concluded. 

Among the injured are Romelia Perez and her 11-year-old daughter Camila, her husband, Rigoberto, 47, told the New York Post

He said he had stayed home on Sunday while his wife and daughter went to enjoy the Waukesha parade, hours later he received the call. 

'I don't understand,' Perez told the outlet. 'I was eating with my wife and daughter yesterday. Now they're sleeping in the hospital. It's hard.' 

Camila has a broken femur and underwent emergency surgery, while his wife reportedly has many broken bones. 

According to her father, Camila has not said anything since the horrific attack.

'[She] hasn't said nothing yet. She's only crying, crying, crying,' he said. 

Brooks was taken into custody in Waukesha on Sunday night.

Footage shared online shows some of the dancing grannies just seconds before Brooks plowed through the crowd, as horrified pedestrians try to get out of the way

Footage shared online shows some of the dancing grannies just seconds before Brooks plowed through the crowd, as horrified pedestrians try to get out of the way

Darrell Brooks Jr, 39, from Milwaukee, was detained shortly after a red SUV ploughed into the annual Christmas parade in the town of Waukesha, leaving at least five people dead and 40 injured - including at least 12 children on Sunday night. He is shown in a November 3 mugshot, when he was arrested for battery and domestic abuse

Darrell Brooks Jr, 39, from Milwaukee, was detained shortly after a red SUV ploughed into the annual Christmas parade in the town of Waukesha, leaving at least five people dead and 40 injured - including at least 12 children on Sunday night. He is shown in a November 3 mugshot, when he was arrested for battery and domestic abuse 

The Christmas parade began on Sunday at 4pm, with participants starting at Main St. and Whiterock Ave. It was always intended to be a short parade, ending half a mile away at the northeast corner of Cutler Park. At 4.39pm, the red SUV is filmed speeding down Main Street. It smashed into the crowd, and sent bodies flying, before carrying on down towards the end of the parade, where the car broke through barriers. The SUV was found less than five blocks away and the driver was taken into custody but it's unclear exactly where 

The amateur rapper has a long criminal history dating back to 1999 with more than 15 arrests in the state of Wisconsin alone for charges including possession of drugs, strangulation and suffocation, battery, illegally possessing firearms as a convicted felon and resisting arrest.

On Sunday he was fleeing the scene of a domestic dispute when he crashed into the crowds.

Police had just arrived at the home that he had fled when he plowed into the parade crowds, killing five adults. The victims have been identified as four women and one man, aged 52 to 81.

The Waukesha Police Department have now arrested Brooks on five murder charges.

At a press conference on Monday afternoon, Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson said: 'This is not a terrorist event.' 

The incident comes just two days after Kyle Rittenhouse, the accused Kenosha shooter, was acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of two men during the unrest that erupted last year in the wake of a police shooting of a black man. Kenosha is located about 55 miles south of Waukesha. There is no indication yet that the two are connected

The incident comes just two days after Kyle Rittenhouse, the accused Kenosha shooter, was acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of two men during the unrest that erupted last year in the wake of a police shooting of a black man. Kenosha is located about 55 miles south of Waukesha. There is no indication yet that the two are connected 

The SUV was found around five blocks from where the parade carnage took place, parked in a driveway. It's unclear whose home it was or if he was found inside, but he was taken into custody nearby

The SUV was found around five blocks from where the parade carnage took place, parked in a driveway. It's unclear whose home it was or if he was found inside, but he was taken into custody nearby 

Brooks' lengthy rap sheet includes felonies for bail jumping, battery, drugs offenses, weapons offenses and domestic abuse but he has never spent a significant amount of time in prison
Brooks' lengthy rap sheet includes felonies for bail jumping, battery, drugs offenses, weapons offenses and domestic abuse but he has never spent a significant amount of time in prison
Brooks' lengthy rap sheet includes felonies for bail jumping, battery, drugs offenses, weapons offenses and domestic abuse but he has never spent a significant amount of time in prison

Brooks' lengthy rap sheet includes felonies for bail jumping, battery, drugs offenses, weapons offenses and domestic abuse but he has never spent a significant amount of time in prison 

Pictured, the suspect's home in Milwaukee. A man who came to the door said he could not speak to DailyMail.com. ¿If you¿re trying to get some information I can¿t talk to you. I know what this is related to but we¿re not going to talk to you,' he said

Pictured, the suspect's home in Milwaukee. A man who came to the door said he could not speak to DailyMail.com. 'If you're trying to get some information I can't talk to you. I know what this is related to but we're not going to talk to you,' he said

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2021-11-23 13:52:34Z
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Bulgaria bus crash: Children among at least 46 killed - BBC News

A view shows the site where a bus with North Macedonian plates caught fire on a highway
Reuters

At least 46 people, including 12 children, died when a bus crashed and caught fire in western Bulgaria, officials say.

The bus was registered in North Macedonia and most of those on board were tourists returning from a trip to Istanbul in Turkey.

It rammed a crash barrier on a motorway south-west of the capital Sofia at about 02:00 local time (00:00 GMT).

Seven people escaped from the bus and were taken to hospital with burns.

Bulgarian Interior Minister Boyko Rashkov visited the "terrifying scene" and said the survivors had been badly burned.

The cause of the disaster was not immediately clear. Bulgarian officials described how the bus swerved off the motorway and tore away a 50m (164ft) section of the crash barrier, but it was unclear if that was before or after it caught fire.

Pictures of the aftermath showed a section of the road where the barrier had been shorn off. No other vehicles were involved in the accident.

The mayor of the nearby village of Pernik said the motorway was in poor condition on that section and there were often accidents in the area.

Macedonian Foreign Minister Bujar Osmani told reporters the coach party had been returning to the capital Skopje from a weekend holiday trip to Istanbul.

Bulgarian media said the bus had been travelling as part of a convoy of four buses and had stopped off at a petrol station near Sofia about an hour before the accident. The other buses returned to North Macedonia safely.

An investigator takes a picture of the wreckage of a bus with North Macedonian plates that caught fire on a highway
EPA

The victims have not yet been officially named, but officials said they included children, and young people aged between 20 and 30.

Macedonian TV channel Alsat released a list of names it said were passengers on the bus. Comments by Albania's foreign minister indicate that most, if not all, the passengers were ethnic-Albanians from North Macedonia.

Earlier, Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said he had spoken to one of the survivors, who told him that passengers were asleep when the sound of an explosion woke them.

"He and the other six survivors broke the windows of the bus and managed to escape and save themselves," Mr Zaev told reporters.

The bus belonged to Besa Trans, a travel company that organises trips in Europe.

Within hours of the crash, relatives of people who travelled to Turkey with Besa Trans last week gathered outside the firm's office in Skopje, anxiously looking for information.

Dzelal Bakiu told reporters in the Macedonian capital he was concerned for his nephew and had not heard from him since learning of the crash. He tried to contact the travel agency but had not been able to get any information.

Bulgaria's interim Prime Minister Stefan Yanev described the incident as "an enormous tragedy".

"Let's hope we learn lessons from this tragic incident and we can prevent such incidents in the future," he told reporters as he visited the crash site.

The area around the site of Tuesday's incident on the Struma motorway has now been sealed off. Footage from the scene shows the charred vehicle, gutted by the fire.

Investigative service chief Borislav Sarafov said "human error by the driver or a technical malfunction are the two initial versions for the accident".

Map of Bulgaria showing the site of the crash.
line
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2021-11-23 12:36:16Z
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Saudi Arabia boosts defence sector in drive for self-reliance - Financial Times

On the outskirts of Riyadh, officials show visitors around one of the latest investments by the sovereign wealth fund at the forefront of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s plans to modernise the economy of the Gulf state: a defence electronics factory.

Advanced Electronics Company, whose Riyadh factory makes parts for bombs and drones, is the “crown jewel” of Saudi Arabia’s nascent military industry, say the kingdom’s officials. AEC was bought last year by Saudi Arabian Military Industries (Sami), the company set up four years ago by the Public Investment Fund to localise defence production.

Saudi Arabia has one of the world’s biggest defence budgets. The kingdom spent $57bn on protecting the country last year, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. AEC is at the heart of its plan to increase local production to 50 per cent of its defence spending within a decade. In 2017, the year Sami was established, it accounted for just 3 per cent.

The project, in line with Prince Mohammed’s Vision 2030 plan to diversify the oil-dependent economy, is ambitious, but analysts said it would be a mistake to dismiss it.

“Just look at the amount the Saudis spend on weapons . . . that type of budget can get you an industry if you want it,” said Francis Tusa, a defence consultant and editor of Defence Analysis. “They will get a capability. Absolutely.”

The plan also reflects Saudi Arabia’s desire for self-reliance — Riyadh is at war in neighbouring Yemen, its oil facilities and other infrastructure are exposed to drone and missile attacks from Iran-backed rebels, and weapon sales from the US, its biggest supplier, often face opposition in Washington. Two motions are at present making the rounds in Congress to block a $650m sale of air-to-air missiles to Saudi Arabia.

“There is a strong need to boost military capabilities and self-sufficiency and strengthen defence ecosystems in our region, including Saudi Arabia’s, so I see big defence budgets being ramped up,” said Walid Abukhaled, Sami’s chief executive, in an interview with the Financial Times.

“One of the main reasons Sami has been established is sovereignty, you want that self-sufficiency. Another is the time it takes sometimes to repair and maintain a product, to wait for a spare part can take two years,” he said.

To accomplish that, Sami wants arms manufacturers to move production and maintenance to the kingdom. “All my partners know, the good old days . . . [the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs)] who come sign a contract and deliver it all from abroad are gone. That’s not going to happen any more,” Abukhaled said.

“That’s forcing the big players to say we need to think differently, we need to work with Sami, or other Saudi local partners, to win contracts. OEMs could build their own facility in the kingdom,” he said.

Sami is already looking to assemble Lockheed Martin’s Blackhawk helicopters in Saudi Arabia with local labour, and armoured vehicles in partnership with a United Arab Emirates company. Sami, whose divisions include aeronautics, defence systems and missiles, is in talks with other companies as well.

“Other companies and countries have taken 30 to 50 years to do it, so it’s impossible to do it all organically, so you have to look outside and look at acquisitions,” Abukhaled said.

Chart showing Saudi Arabia’s defence spending compared with some countries

One of its priorities will be a drone defence system, he added. A 2019 drone and missile attack that Iran was accused of masterminding temporarily knocked out two Saudi oil facilities and took offline about 5 per cent of global oil production.

Still, Sami, which has begun to manufacture its first surveillance drone, is a latecomer to domestic military production in the region. Its neighbour, the UAE, already produces surveillance drones and armoured fighting vehicles that saw combat temporarily in the Yemen and Libya wars. Israel, whose military budget is less than half of Saudi Arabia’s, makes some of the world’s most advanced armaments. Iran, its main regional rival, has an increasingly sophisticated domestic arms industry.

Given the massive spending on arms, the Saudi market is too big for the foreign defence industry to pass up, said Charles Forrester, lead analyst for Middle East industry and budgets at Janes, the defence specialist. “For them Saudi Arabia is too big to ignore and there are some countries and companies out there that are realising they need to catch up because they have lost ground over the past few years,” he said.

For now, the facility in Riyadh has become a showcase for reforms sweeping the kingdom, which include the “Saudization” of a workforce traditionally reliant on foreigners, and the entry of women into the workplace.

The AEC foyer features some of its products — circuit boards for US-made F-15 jet fighters, military radios and, at the centre of the display, an upright laser-guided missile for which the company makes components.

A young Saudi woman who led the FT on a tour of the factory pointed out that her compatriots made up more than 80 per cent of the workforce. In a hallway, she paused at an old group picture of the company’s employees, all men, and noted that she needed to get it updated, before continuing the tour.

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2021-11-23 05:00:46Z
CBMiP2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50L2E4NGJhOTAyLTE3ZjAtNGZiYS1hOTIxLTViM2JmNmEzNDUzMdIBP2h0dHBzOi8vYW1wLmZ0LmNvbS9jb250ZW50L2E4NGJhOTAyLTE3ZjAtNGZiYS1hOTIxLTViM2JmNmEzNDUzMQ

Senin, 22 November 2021

COVID-19: Austria coronavirus lockdown feels not just like a health crisis, but also a cultural, social and political storm - Sky News

On Saturday, the streets of Vienna were packed with shoppers.

Today, they were quiet, if not deserted. Yes, this is lockdown, but it isn't quite the eerie emptiness of 18 months ago.

Instead, the Austrian capital feels like it's closed for business. The clothes shops, the ice rinks and, of course, the Christmas markets. All shut.

Maria Fridrichovsky usually sells chestnuts in one of Vienna's Christmas markets
Image: Maria Fridrichovsky, who usually sells chestnuts, says she is 'angry' that only 65% of Austrians are vaccinated

Maria Fridrichovsky normally sells chestnuts in one of the markets. She told me she is "angry" at what has happened, bemused that only 65% of the Austrian population is vaccinated against COVID.

"I feel very sad because the companies are closed down," she said. "We sell chestnuts and potatoes to the people. It should be lovely here at Christmas.

"But now it's so hard - many people are calling up by telephone - what can I do? What can I tell them? It's so sad."

Austria has seen a precipitous rise in the number of coronavirus infections recently, recording far more daily cases than it did during the first wave of the pandemic.

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So it has now introduced a national lockdown that largely resembles the original version - people told to work from home and only to leave the house for essential purposes.

Schools are open, although parents are asked to keep children at home if possible.

Normally busy, the streets in Vienna are deserted because of the latest lockdown
Image: Normally busy, the streets in Vienna are almost deserted because of the latest lockdown

The lockdown is in place for 10 days but can be extended for a further 10 if necessary. After that point, if rates have fallen, the ties may be removed for vaccinated people, while restrictions remain in place for those who have not been inoculated.

Perhaps that's why this new lockdown feels so very different to previous incarnations.

Last year, the people of disparate European towns and cities seemed to share a sense of "in it together" camaraderie as they faced up to the hardships of lockdown.

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Thousands protest new lockdown in Austria

Vienna didn't feel like that.

Yes, the streets were a lot quieter than normal, but they weren't deserted. Maybe people were just making essential journeys, but there seemed to be a surprisingly large number of them.

The police watched, but I didn't see anyone get quizzed about their reasons for being out. Maybe they were going easy on the first day.

Or maybe it's wearily difficult to define "exercise", or essential purpose. Even the word lockdown feels vague and undefinable now.

We meet a group of young men strolling through the town, all of them dubious about the lockdown.

One of them, Matthew, tells me that he only allowed himself to be vaccinated because it was the only way he could be guaranteed access to bars and restaurants. But he insists that this latest lockdown is "a breach of human rights".

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Why isn't UK having COVID surge like in Europe?

His friend, Andrew, was vaccinated early, and is at pains to say he's not an anti-vaxxer, but is troubled by what he sees as the changing narrative.

"When we were saying that it's 95% effective at the beginning, we're seeing that it's definitely not the case now. We're saying no more lockdowns yet we're in lockdowns now. How can we really trust the information that's being given to us at the moment?

"I think at this point, it's very, very difficult to trust anything that's going on. And I don't necessarily think we can trust the reasons for why we're in this lockdown at the moment."

That's why this lockdown is different. Europe saw a series of protests over the weekend, vehement in their opposition to either new restrictions, or vaccination programmes, or the spectre of mandatory vaccinations, or perhaps all of them put together.

Police officers check the vaccination status of shoppers against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the entrance of a store in Vienna, Austria
Image: Police officers in Vienna checking the vaccination status of shoppers against COVID last week

Many Europeans, rightly or wrongly, have had their faith eroded in both the political and scientific establishment. Very public promises have, in the eyes of many Austrians, been broken and now those disenchanted people feel as if they are being stigmatised.

This doesn't feel simply like a health crisis anymore, but also a cultural, social and political storm. Many other nations will be watching, and waiting to see what happens in Austria, and learning lessons.

Nobody's happy, and that includes the tourists. But as we walked through the heart of the city, we saw small knots of visitors still trying to make the most of it.

There was a group of Romanians, two couples, who had been looking forward to their break, only to find the city shut. "Still, at least it's quiet," said one of them, with magnificent understatement.

Not far away was a family from North Macedonia who come to Vienna every year and buy presents for their two children.

Now, the shops are shut, so they were studying monuments instead of buying toys. The parents were still smiling; the children, emphatically, were not.

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2021-11-22 22:12:17Z
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Germans will be 'vaccinated, recovered or dead' by end of winter, health minister Jens Spahn says as COVID cases surge - Sky News

Germany's health minister has warned that by the end of this winter "pretty much everyone" in Germany "will have been vaccinated, recovered or died".

Jens Spahn urged Germans to get vaccinated amid a rapid rise in COVID cases.

Official figures showed more than 30,000 new coronavirus cases in Germany in the last 24-hour period, an increase of about 50% compared to a week ago.

Germany's acting Health Minister Jens Spahn speaks at a news conference on Germany's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) situation and vaccination with Moderna and BioNTech, in Berlin, Germany November 22, 2021. REUTERS/Christian Mang
Image: Germany's acting health minister Jens Spahn has urged people to get vaccinated

Hospitals have warned that intensive care capacities are nearly exhausted, with some patients being transferred to clinics some distance away.

Mr Spahn urged Germans to get the jab, including booster shots if their first round of inoculation occurred more than six months ago, to reduce the risk of serious illness.

"By the end of this winter pretty much everyone in Germany will have been vaccinated, recovered or died," he said.

He acknowledged that some had described this view as cynical.

More on Covid

"But it's true. With the highly contagious Delta variant, this is very, very likely and that's why we are recommending vaccination so urgently."

Mr Spahn said around 50 million doses of the Moderna and BioNtech/Pfizer vaccines would be made available for the rest of the year to allow people to get first, second or third doses.

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COVID cases in Germany hit record high

To achieve this, Germany was holding back tens of millions of doses, which were meant for poor countries.

Some politicians in Germany have suggested the country may need to consider compulsory vaccinations, like its neighbour Austria.

About 68% of Germany's population has been fully vaccinated but the government has said it wants to push that rate above 75% to curb the spread of the virus, but a sizeable minority in the population has resisted calls to take the vaccine.

Karl Lauterbach, a prominent politician with the centre-left Social Democrats, called for a "radical" application of rules requiring people to present vaccination or recovery certificates to access some shops and public places.

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"A general vaccine mandate (shouldn't be) taboo either," he wrote on Twitter.

Bavaria's conservative governor, Markus Soeder, said on Monday that he also favoured mandatory vaccines for all.

But a spokesman for outgoing German chancellor Angela Merkel made clear that her government had no plans to tackle the controversial issue of vaccine mandates.

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2021-11-22 20:13:39Z
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Covid: Austria back in lockdown despite protests - BBC News

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Austria has returned to a full national lockdown as protests against new restrictions aimed at curbing Covid-19 infections spread across Europe.

From midnight, Austrians have been asked to work from home and non-essential shops have closed.

New restrictions have sparked protests throughout Europe. People clashed with police in the Netherlands and Belgium.

Infection rates have risen sharply on the continent, prompting warnings from the World Health Organization (WHO).

On Saturday WHO regional director Dr Hans Kluge told the BBC that unless measures were tightened across Europe - such as on vaccines, wearing masks and with Covid passes for venues - half a million more deaths could be recorded by next spring.

Last week Austria became the first European country to make Covid vaccination a legal requirement, with the law due to take effect in February. Politicians in neighbouring Germany are debating similar measures as intensive care units there fill up and case numbers hit fresh records.

'A sledgehammer' to cut cases

This is Austria's fourth national lockdown since the pandemic began.

Authorities have ordered residents to stay home for all but essential reasons, including work, exercise and shopping for food.

Restaurants, bars, hairdressers, theatres and non-essential shops must all close their doors. These measures will continue until 12 December, although officials said they will be reassessed after 10 days.

Speaking on ORF TV on Sunday night, health minister Wolfgang Mueckstein said the government had to "react now".

"A lockdown, a relatively tough method, a sledgehammer, is the only option to reduce the numbers [of infections] here," he reportedly told the broadcaster.

Tens of thousands of people protested in the capital Vienna ahead of the lockdown. Brandishing national flags and banners reading "Freedom", protesters shouted "Resistance!" and booed the police.

Demonstrations and unrest

Several European countries saw angry protests against tougher restrictions turn violent over the weekend.

In Belgium's capital, Brussels, demonstrators clashed with police after tens of thousands of people marched through the city centre.

Protesters are mainly opposed to Covid passes that stop the unvaccinated from entering cafes, restaurants and entertainment venues.

The march started peacefully but some launched stones and fireworks at officers, who responded with tear gas and water cannon.

Across the border in the Netherlands, rioting took place for the third night in a row.

Local media report that police arrested 15 people in the southern city of Roosendaal where a primary school was set ablaze. An emergency order has also been imposed in the town of Enschede to keep people off the streets overnight.

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On Saturday, people hurled fireworks at police and set fire to bicycles in The Hague. That followed what Rotterdam's mayor called "an orgy of violence" on Friday, when officers opened fire after protesters threw rocks and fireworks and set police cars ablaze.

Four people thought to have been hit by police bullets remain in hospital, authorities said on Sunday.

The Netherlands is under a three-week nationwide partial lockdown, forcing restaurants to shut earlier and banning fans at sports events.

Protesters are also angry at a ban on fireworks on New Year's Eve and government plans to introduce a vaccine pass for indoor venues.

Thousands of demonstrators were also on the streets in Croatia's capital Zagreb on Saturday, while in Denmark around 1,000 people protested in Copenhagen against government plans to order public sector workers to be vaccinated in order to enter workplaces.

The French Caribbean department of Guadeloupe, meanwhile, has been rocked by three days of looting and vandalism, over a mandatory vaccine order for health workers as well as high fuel prices.

Some 38 people were reportedly arrested and special police forces were sent to the island on Sunday in a bid to quell the unrest after protesters ransacked and torched shops.

Cases rising in Europe
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2021-11-22 01:26:01Z
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Minggu, 21 November 2021

Covid: Huge protests across Europe over new restrictions - BBC News

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Tens of thousands of people have been marching in the Belgian capital, Brussels, to protest against anti-Covid measures.

Some protesters threw fireworks at police officers, who intervened with tear gas and water cannon.

Demonstrators are mainly opposed to the use of Covid passes, which stops the unvaccinated from entering venues such as restaurants or bars.

This comes after fresh protests in the Netherlands against new lockdown rules.

On Saturday, people hurled fireworks at police and set fire to bicycles in The Hague, one night after protests in Rotterdam turned violent and police fired gunshots.

Thousands of demonstrators also took to the streets in Austria, Croatia and Italy as anger mounted over new curbs.

In Belgium, rules on face masks have been tightened, including in places such as restaurants where Covid passes are already required, and most Belgians will also have to work from home four days a week until mid-December. There are also plans to make vaccinations for health workers compulsory.

Earlier, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it was "very worried" about rising coronavirus cases on the continent.

Its regional director, Dr Hans Kluge, told the BBC that unless measures were tightened across Europe, half a million more deaths could be recorded by next spring.

"Covid-19 has become once again the number one cause of mortality in our region," he said, adding "we know what needs to be done" in order to fight the virus - such as getting vaccinated, wearing masks, and using Covid passes.

Many governments across the continent are bringing in new restrictions to try to tackle rising infections. A number of countries have recently reported record-high daily case numbers.

Demonstrations and unrest

In the Netherlands, a second night of riots broke out on Saturday in several towns and cities.

Hooded rioters set fire to bicycles in The Hague, as riot police used horses, dogs and batons to chase the crowds away. Officials announced an emergency order in the city, and at least seven people were arrested.

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Police said a rock was thrown through the window of an ambulance carrying a patient. Officers in the city tweeted that five police officers were injured, with one taken away by ambulance with a knee injury.

Elsewhere in the country, two top-flight football matches were briefly halted after supporters broke into the grounds and ran on to the pitch. Fans are currently banned from stadiums because of new coronavirus rules.

The unrest followed a night of riots in Rotterdam condemned by the city's mayor as "an orgy of violence". Police fired warning shots and direct shots "because the situation was life-threatening", a police spokesperson told Reuters.

At least three demonstrators are receiving hospital treatment for gunshot wounds, officers said. Authorities have launched an investigation.

The Netherlands imposed a three-week partial lockdown last weekend after recording a record spike in Covid cases. Bars and restaurants must close at 20:00, and crowds are banned at sports events.

Tens of thousands of people protested in Austria's capital, Vienna, after the government announced a new national lockdown and plans to make jabs compulsory in February 2022. It is the first European country to make vaccination a legal requirement.

Brandishing national flags and banners reading "Freedom", protesters shouted "Resistance!" and booed the police.

The country will enter a 20-day nationwide lockdown from Monday, shutting all but essential shops and ordering people to work from home.

The mandatory vaccinations have been described as a "double-edged sword" by Andrea Ammon, director for the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

She told the BBC's Andrew Marr that the strict rules could make people who were still doubting the vaccine - but not fully rejecting it - completely turn away from it.

In Croatia, thousands marched in the capital, Zagreb, to show their anger at mandatory vaccinations for public sector workers, while in Italy, a few thousand protesters gathered at the ancient Circus Maximus chariot-racing ground in Rome to oppose "Green Pass" certificates required at workplaces, venues and on public transport.

French authorities are sending dozens more police officers to quell unrest on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, a French overseas department.

Overnight riots saw looters ransack dozens of shops and set businesses alight after protests against France's own Covid pass turned violent.

Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said that some involved in the unrest used "live ammunition" against law enforcement, and promised a "firm" response to those committing public disorder.

UK Health Secretary Sajid Javid has said there are no plans to change travel rules between the UK and Germany at the moment, in view of the rising number of cases there.

He said this was because Germany was dealing with the Delta variant: "We have Delta here already, I'm not sure there is much benefit in having more rules, but we do keep an eye out for any potential new variants," he told Andrew Marr.

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Are you in the Netherlands? Have you been affected by what's been happening? You can get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission.

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2021-11-21 18:24:17Z
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