Sabtu, 04 Desember 2021

Biden and Putin to hold call amid Ukraine invasion fears - BBC News

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US President Joe Biden and Russia's Vladimir Putin will speak via video call on Tuesday, the Kremlin says, amid mounting tensions over Ukraine.

It comes after Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US had evidence that Russia had made plans for a "large scale" attack on Ukraine.

He said it was unclear if Mr Putin had made a final decision to invade.

Russia has denied any such intention, and accused Ukraine of executing its own troop build-up.

Ukraine says Russia has deployed armoured vehicles, electronic warfare systems and 94,000 troops along their shared border.

It is the largest massing of Russian forces on its borders since it annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.

Citing intelligence reports, Ukraine's Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said Moscow could be planning a military offensive at the end of January.

The Russian troop movement has strained already tense relations between Russia and the US.

On Friday, Mr Biden warned he would make it "very, very difficult" for Mr Putin to "go ahead and do what people are worried he may do".

The US and its European allies have discussed imposing sanctions on Russia if it takes aggressive action.

While Ukraine is not a Nato member, it has close ties with the bloc and has received Western weapons including US Javelin anti-tank missiles.

Russian officials have denied any plans for an invasion, and say the border troops are there for military exercises.

Moscow has accused Nato of engaging in provocative behaviour by holding drills in the Black Sea, off Crimea. Russia's foreign ministry also said Ukraine has itself sent 125,000 troops to their shared border. Kyiv declined to comment on the claim.

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This week Britain's most senior military officer said "we have to be on our guard" about the potential for conflict in the region.

Gen Sir Nick Carter told the BBC that he "distinctly hoped" there would not be a war with Russia, but added that Nato would have to be ready for that eventuality.

Tensions between Russia and Ukraine are nothing new. In 2014 Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and soon after started to back a separatist insurgency in Ukraine's east.

More recently, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky has imposed sanctions on a powerful friend of President Putin and banned broadcasts by three pro-Russian TV stations.

Presidents Biden and Putin held their only face-to-face talks in Geneva in June. Reuters reports that their last phone call was on 9 July.

Eastern Ukraine map

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2021-12-04 18:53:39Z
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US warns Russia could invade Ukraine in early 2022 - Financial Times

Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden are set to hold a phone call next week amid heightened military tensions on the border between Russia and Ukraine, with Washington warning that Moscow could launch an invasion in early 2022.

The two presidents will speak on Tuesday, following a meeting this week of top US and Russian diplomats, where warnings were traded about the military situation on the border.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed the phone call would take place, the Interfax news agency reported on Saturday.

The Kremlin has repeatedly denied it has any plans to attack and has called the warnings inflammatory.

The US warned on Friday night that Russia could be planning to invade Ukraine “as soon as early 2022” with an estimated 175,000 troops.

A Biden administration official said that Moscow’s plans “call for a military offensive against Ukraine as soon as early 2022 with a scale of forces twice what we saw this past spring during Russia’s rapid military build-up near Ukraine’s borders”.

This would include “extensive movement of 100 battalion tactical groups with an estimated 175,000 personnel, along with armour, artillery and equipment”.

According to the administration official, half the units were already near Ukraine’s border, having arrived in the past month. Russia had already moved to established a “ready reserve of contract reservists” to prepare for the offensive.

Before heading to the presidential retreat at Camp David on Friday evening, Biden said: “We’ve been aware of Russia’s actions for a long time and my expectation is we’re going to have a long discussion.”

Details of the US assessment of Russia’s plans, first reported by The Washington Post, emerged a few hours after Biden said he was in “constant contact” with European allies and Ukraine about the threat. He warned that he would try to stop Putin from following through with this plans, hinting at punitive measures.

“What I am doing is putting together what I believe . . . will be the most comprehensive and meaningful set of initiatives to make it very, very difficult for Mr Putin to go ahead and do what people are worried he may do,” the US president said. “But that’s in play right now,” Biden added.

The National Security Council said Washington was “deeply concerned by evidence that Russia was stepping up its planning for significant military action against Ukraine” — noting this had been discussed by Antony Blinken, US secretary of state, on a trip to Europe this week.

“The Biden administration has been consistent in our message to Russia: the United States does not seek conflict, and the best way to avert a crisis and a negative spiral in the broader relationship is through diplomacy and de-escalation,” the NSC said.

© US government

The strength of the US intelligence assessment has surprised some European officials, and authorities on both sides of the Atlantic have spent weeks comparing and contrasting their evaluations. The Biden administration is seeking to flag the risks of a Ukraine invasion as part of a diplomatic push to deter Putin from deciding to act.

A US defence official last week told the Financial Times that the Biden administration was considering providing weaponry to Ukraine, but that inter-agency discussions were continuing and no decisions had yet been made.

The official said the US was “mindful of what we are seeing” close to the Ukrainian border, and that if weapons were provided, that would help the Ukrainians defend themselves if attacked.

Earlier on Friday an administration official said: “Since the beginning of this administration we have demonstrated that the United States and our allies are willing to use a number of tools to address harmful Russian actions, and we will not hesitate from making use of those and other tools in the future.”

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2021-12-04 17:01:31Z
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Parents of Michigan school shooting suspect Ethan Crumbley deny charges of involuntary manslaughter - Sky News

The parents of a teenage boy charged with killing four students at his high school in Michigan have pleaded not guilty to four counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The bail bond for James and Jennifer Crumbley, aged 45 and 43, was set at $500,000 each at an arraignment hearing which was held virtually.

The couple were also told they could each face up to 15 years behind bars.

Mrs Crumbley cried as she told judge Julie Nicholson that she understood the charges.

Their son, Ethan Crumbley, 15, is accused of opening fire at Oxford High School on Tuesday in a rampage that killed four people and injured eight others.

Ethan Crumbley, 15, who is charged as an adult with murder and terrorism. Pic: AP
Image: Ethan Crumbley, 15, is charged as an adult with murder and terrorism. Pic: AP

Mr and Mrs Crumbley are accused of buying their son the handgun used in the shooting.

They are also accused of ignoring warning signs before their son's rampage, such as a drawing found at his school desk which had the words "blood everywhere".

The pair had gone missing hours after the charges were announced and were eventually found in a commercial building where they "appeared to be hiding".

A later statement from the couple's lawyers denied they were on the run and claimed they were returning to the area after leaving "for their own safety" on the night of the shooting.

Oakland County prosecutor Karen McDonald said the parents have committed "egregious" acts, from buying a gun on Black Friday and making it available to their teenage son, to resisting his removal from school when they were summoned a few hours before the shooting.

Investigators said the gun was purchased legally by Mr Crumbley last week - apparently as a Christmas present - and was "freely available" to the teenager.

Ethan is said to have posted images of the gun used in the shooting on social media, writing: "Just got my new beauty today" and adding a heart emoji, Oakland County prosecutor Karen McDonald said.

Mrs Crumbley posted the next day that they were "testing out his new Christmas present".

School officials had grown concerned after a teacher had previously seen the teenager searching for ammunition on his phone during class, said Ms McDonald.

Yet when Mrs Crumbley was contacted, she told her son in a text message: "Lol. I'm not mad at you. You have to learn not to get caught."

The victims in the shooting are 16-year-old Tate Myre, 14-year-old Hana St Juliana, 17-year-old Madisyn Baldwin and 17-year-old Justin Shilling.

Crumbley's parents were called to the school on the day of the shooting "for behaviour in the classroom that was concerning".

The shooting occurred a few hours later.

Crumbley entered a bathroom with a backpack and came out with a semi-automatic handgun, firing at students while moving down the hallway.

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2021-12-04 15:22:30Z
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Russia planning military offensive in Ukraine, according to US intelligence officials - Sky News

Russia is planning a military offensive against Ukraine, which could begin as soon as early 2022, according to United States intelligence officials.

The finding estimates that Moscow is planning to use 175,000 troops and almost half of them are already deployed along various points near Ukraine's border, according to an anonymous official in Joe Biden's administration.

The official added that plans call for the movement of 100 battalion tactical groups along with armour, artillery and equipment.

It comes as Mr Biden pledged on Friday to make it "very, very difficult" for Vladimir Putin to take military action in Ukraine.

"We've been aware of Russia's actions for a long time and my expectation is we're gonna have a long discussion with Putin," Mr Biden said.

"I don't accept anyone's red line."

US intelligence officials have also observed an uptick in Russian propaganda through the use of proxies and media outlets to denigrate Ukraine and NATO ahead of a potential invasion, the White House official said.

More on Russia

Meanwhile, Ukrainian officials also warned that Russia could invade in the new year.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said on Friday that the number of Russian troops near Ukraine and in Russia-annexed Crimea is estimated at 94,300, warning that a "large-scale escalation" is possible in January.

The Kremlin has previously dismissed accusations from Washington that it is preparing for an invasion, while the US has threatened to hit Russia with the harshest sanctions yet if it takes military action against Ukraine.

Russia has also picked up its demands on Mr Biden to guarantee that Ukraine will not be allowed to join NATO and has warned the US it will respond if Ukraine is drawn into any "geopolitical games".

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2021-12-04 12:59:34Z
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Jumat, 03 Desember 2021

Michigan school shooting: Parents of gunman charged with manslaughter - BBC News

A memorial to the victims of the Oxford High School shooting
Getty Images

Prosecutors have charged the parents of a suspect in a deadly Michigan school shooting with involuntary manslaughter.

They allege James and Jennifer Crumbley ignored warning signs and called some of their actions prior to the shooting "egregious".

Ethan Crumbley is accused of using his father's gun during a rampage in Oxford, about 35 miles (60 km) north of Detroit, this week.

He has pleaded not guilty on multiple charges including terrorism.

James and Jennifer Crumbley are facing four counts each.

Authorities in Oakland County have told US media they are currently searching for the pair after the Crumbleys' lawyers were unable to reach them by phone.

But, in a joint statement via text message to the BBC, lawyers Shannon Smith and Mariell Lehman said the Crumbleys "are not fleeing from law enforcement" and had left town on the night of the shooting "for their own safety".

They added the pair would return for their arraignment, which was expected to be take place later on Friday.

Four people were killed and seven injured in the shooting on Tuesday. The victims have been named as Tate Myre, 16, Madisyn Baldwin, 17, Hana St Juliana, 14, and Justin Shilling, 17.

Why have the parents been charged?

On Friday, Oakland County lead prosecutor Karen McDonald acknowledged that charging parents in a child's alleged crime was highly unusual.

According to her office's investigation, the boy was with his father last Friday when Mr Crumbley bought the firearm believed to have been used in the shooting.

A post on his social media later that day showed off his dad's new weapon as "my new beauty", Ms McDonald said.

Just one day before the shooting, a teacher said she saw Ethan searching online for ammunition, which prompted a meeting with school officials, Ms McDonald said. After being informed of the incident, Ms Crumbley texted her son: "LOL I'm not mad at you. You have to learn not to get caught."

And on Tuesday morning - hours before the rampage - Mr and Mrs Crumbley were called into the school for an urgent meeting after teachers found a note by their son, including several drawings of guns and bloodied people alongside captions like "the thoughts won't stop" and "blood everywhere". School officials told the pair they would have to seek counselling for his son.

Ethan's parents did not want their son to be removed from school that day, Ms McDonald said, did not ask him whether he had the gun with him or search the backpack he brought with him to school.

Ms McDonald said the charges are meant to hold the Crumbleys accountable as well as to send a message about responsible gun ownership.

"The notion that a parent could read those words and also know that their son had access to a deadly weapon that they gave him is unconscionable, and it's criminal," she said.

The prosecutor had previously noted that, although the gun had been purchased legally, it "seems to have just been freely available" for the child's use. According to her, the suspect took the gun from an unlocked drawer in his parents' bedroom and brought it to school.

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Neither federal nor state law requires gun owners to keep their weapons locked away from their children.

In a video message posted to YouTube on Thursday, the school's superintendent Tim Throne said that - while the boy and his parents had been called to the office - "no discipline was warranted" at the time.

He added that the school looked like a "war zone" and would not be ready to operate again for weeks.

Ms McDonald alleged on Friday that, when James Crumbley heard about the shooting, he "drove straight to his home to look for his gun" before calling authorities to say he suspected his son was the perpetrator.

"I'm angry as a mother. I'm angry as a prosecutor. I'm angry as a person that lives in this county," she said. "There were a lot of things that could have been so simple to prevent."

On Wednesday, prosecutors charged 15-year-old Ethan as an adult. He now face charges of terrorism and first-degree murder.

Announcing the charges, Ms McDonald said her office had "a mountain of digital evidence" to show the suspect had planned the attack "well before the incident".

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2021-12-03 20:28:08Z
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Maxwell’s lawyers try to scorch women accusers’ credibility - Financial Times

There was a moment of seeming levity this week in Ghislaine Maxwell’s otherwise grim trial on sex trafficking charges. It came as her defence lawyer was recounting all the roles one of Maxwell’s accusers had played in her career as a soap opera actress: car crash victim, cancer patient, prostitute and someone stalked by a serial killer, among others.

“I forgot about that one,” the woman, now in her early 40s and identified pseudonymously as “Jane”, quipped.

Then the attorney, Laura Menninger, got to the point: Jane was, she said, essentially a trained liar. Her testimony about the sexual abuse she suffered, beginning at age 14, had been a performance. “You are an actor who convincingly portrays someone else for a living,” the lawyer stated. “You are able to cry on command.”

The exchange revealed the ugly contours of the Maxwell trial: in order to prevail, the British socialite’s lawyers will have to destroy the credibility of Jane and three other victims who are expected to also testify that Maxwell lured them into Jeffrey Epstein’s clutches and sometimes participated in his sexual abuse of them. Maxwell has denied any wrongdoing.

Attacking an accuser’s credibility in such a case is hardly a novel legal strategy. What may be changing is how it plays in a MeToo era in which much of society is revising ideas about how to receive and respond to women’s complaints of abuse. An aggressive defence that might have once swayed jurors, say lawyers, might now be viewed by some as victim-shaming.

“It’s certainly a risky strategy,” said Elie Honig, a former prosecutor who has handled sexual abuse cases. “It’s also probably the only strategy Ghislaine Maxwell has. If the jury credits and believes these women, she’s cooked.”

Maxwell is one of two high-profile women who is this week on trial in a case that touches on issues of gender and justice. In San Jose, California, Elizabeth Holmes, the once-vaunted founder of failed blood-testing company Theranos, attempted to fend off fraud charges by telling jurors she had, in fact, been under the control of a domineering boyfriend and business partner. “He impacted everything about who I was and I don’t fully understand that,” she said on Monday.

In Manhattan, another of Maxwell’s lawyers, Bobbi Sternheim, also cast her client as a victim, arguing in a biblical opening statement that Maxwell was being made the scapegoat for Epstein’s sins. “Ever since Eve was accused of tempting Adam with the apple, women have been blamed for the bad behaviour of men, and women are often vilified and punished more than men are,” Sternheim declared.

To an extraordinary degree, the Maxwell trial is a contest of accomplished women. The formidable Menninger and Sternheim are leading the defence against an equally distinguished prosecution team that features Alison Moe, Lara Pomerantz and Maurene Comey. The presiding judge is the no-nonsense Alison Nathan, nominated last month by President Joe Biden to the federal appeals court. Then there is Maxwell, herself.

The Oxford-educated daughter of the late British press baron and embezzler Robert Maxwell sliced through the Manhattan social scene when she arrived in the early 1990s. She became Epstein’s close confidante and the manager of his luxury properties, including New York’s largest private residence and a Caribbean island. She was arrested in 2020, a year after he was found hanged in a Manhattan prison cell awaiting trial on charges that he abused dozens of underage girls.

Prosecutors claim she was instrumental in Epstein’s scheme because she enabled him to win the trust of vulnerable young women such as Jane, who recounted to jurors this week how the pair struck up a conversation with her while she was eating ice cream on a picnic bench at a summer arts camp in Michigan in 1994. She was 14. “I just assumed they were married,” Jane said.

Her father had died of cancer months earlier and the family had lost their house, Jane recalled. Weeks after that first encounter, Epstein sent a chauffeur-driven car to bring her and her mother to his Palm Beach estate for tea where, he explained, he liked to support young artists, she recounted.

She began to return by herself about every other week, Jane testified. There was fun by the pool with Ghislaine, who seemed to her like “an older sister”, and trips to the movies and shopping. Then one day Epstein led her into his pool house and assaulted her, Jane said. Later, she testified, Maxwell showed her how to perform sexualised massages on Epstein that sometimes turned into orgies.

“They moved me over to the bed and took their clothes off,” she said, recalling how the first such episode began.

By testifying, Jane said, she was hoping for closure: “This is something I’ve been running from my entire life.”

But first she had to endure a cross-examination by Menninger, who spent most of a day attacking every part of Jane’s story. The witness, she claimed, had exaggerated her family’s hardship, was motivated by money (she won a $5m financial settlement from an Epstein victims fund that apparently became $2.9m after lawyers’ fees), and should have come forward years earlier. She also flagged up apparent inconsistencies between Jane’s testimony and authorities’ records of various interviews they had conducted with her.

“You have come up with that memory in the last two years?” Menninger demanded at one point, after confronting Jane with a document from a 2019 meeting stating she had “no specific memory” of her first sexualised massage with Maxwell. Jane was also peppered with embarrassing questions about her recollection of performing oral sex on Epstein, nipple squeezing, masturbation and the use of vibrators.

To Barry Salzman, a Florida attorney who specialises in sexual abuse cases and has represented Epstein victims, it was standard fare. “So many years have passed that the defence has a lot to play with in terms of faulty memory,” Salzman said. More broadly, he observed: “In this country, usually — but not always — victims of sexual abuse sort of become the villains in these cases by the defence attorneys.”

Salzman does not expect Maxwell’s lawyers to pull their punches when the other women take the stand. “They’re going to just throw everything they can at this. She’s facing 70 years [in prison],” he said, asking: “Who would put themselves through this?”

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2021-12-03 13:24:23Z
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Will an F1 race mark the end of Saudi Arabia's ban on alcohol? - The Economist

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THIS YEAR the drivers of Formula 1 (F1) made a change: instead of celebrating after a race by spraying each other with champagne, they switched to sparkling wine. Not to be frugal—F1 is not that kind of sport—but because of a new sponsorship deal. Officials in Saudi Arabia face a harder decision. The kingdom, which will host a race on December 5th, bans alcohol. Some, though, think it may loosen up for the event. “Champagne is part of the ceremony,” says a royal adviser. “Jeddah [the host city] will have seen nothing like it.”

Saudi-watchers predict boozy parties on yachts and, perhaps, at select venues on land. That would be in keeping with the reforms of Muhammad bin Salman, the crown prince, who has ignored puritanical clerics and curbed the morality police, while breaking taboos by opening up cinemas and letting women drive. Concerts were largely prohibited not long ago; now female DJs jive in public. The F1 race could mark the lifting of the alcohol ban, says a senior official.

The kingdom is reconsidering alcohol as it tries to lure tourists away from destinations like the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which has long allowed foreigners to partake and legalised drinking for everyone last year. Prince Muhammad has invested in cruise ships that serve alcohol offshore and carved out vast royal preserves with their own (non-Islamic) bylaws. He hosts a Red Sea festival where spirits flow. Luxury hotels are going up on the coast and near tourist sites inland. A launch party for one in October featured illicit sangría laced with whisky (which deserves to be banned for bad taste alone) and a rave on the sand.

Some of Prince Muhammad’s advisers want him to enlist liberal clerics to help explain to Saudis why what was once haram (forbidden) may soon be halal (permitted). “The sin [of drinking wine] is greater than the benefit,” says the Koran rather mildly. It does not prescribe a punishment for the act, though Saudi judges have been known to sentence offenders to 80 or more lashes. For centuries the early caliphs hosted parties with alcohol and let jurists argue over whether Islam banned all booze or just that from fermented grapes.

“We’re opening our country up to the world,” says Khalid al-Faisal, a royal overseeing the race in Jeddah. Still, there are reasons to think that the podium, at least, will be dry. Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE have all hosted car races—and used blander fizzy drinks, such as sparkling rose water, on the winner’s stand. Years ago an F1 team sponsored by Saudi Arabia’s state airline celebrated (in public) with orange juice. It got their clothes just as wet as champagne would have done.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline "Drinking and driving"

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2021-12-03 07:40:01Z
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