Kamis, 26 Januari 2023

Ukraine war: Zelenskyy 'not interested' in meeting 'nobody' Putin for peace talks - Sky News

The Ukrainian president has told Sky News he is "not interested" in meeting Vladimir Putin for peace talks, describing him as a "nobody" who lives in an "information bubble" and does not really know what's happening on the battlefield.

In an exclusive interview with Kay Burley, Volodymyr Zelenskyy also responded to speculation of a Russian offensive in Ukraine in the coming weeks, and recalled the first moments of the invasion and how close enemy forces got to him.

He said he "doesn't understand who makes decisions in Russia" and while Moscow asks for peace, it then lies by attacking his country with missiles at night.

'Chilling' signs Putin has become 'reckless and emotional' - Ukraine latest

"They don't want any talks, and this was the case before the invasion. President Putin decided so," said Mr Zelenskyy.

"He doesn't want negotiations because he doesn't want peace.

"I am convinced that Ukraine is just the first step for him. I am convinced that he is waging a big war. And having the whole world helping Ukraine now - he is not thinking about that. He is thinking, 'Well, it's not working out in Ukraine now but we will wait… the world won't stay united, they will get tired and I will move further'.

"But after Ukraine there will be further steps, there will be other countries, if we fail to withstand. I think we will manage, we will get support and we will win."

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Assassination attempts

Recalling the night of the Russian invasion almost a year ago, he described it as the start of a long, difficult day that has not yet come to a close.

"I remember there were explosions and calls in the night and I said [to my wife], 'Get ready. You should get our children ready and tell them what's going on and be prepared because it won't be safe to stay in the president's residence [where we had been living at the time]'."

Asked how close the invading Russian forces got to him, the president said "nobody knows".

"There were some people who were being detained in this district, this government district, and this is just a few kilometres from here," he said.

"There was a lot of intelligence... And a lot of this intelligence suggested that I should move fast and I should go somewhere... Don't believe it when they say that there have been dozens of attempts, and so on. I don't know, maybe secret services know about that more."

Putin 'says one thing and does another'

When asked if a face-to-face meeting with Mr Putin would help to resolve the ongoing conflict, Mr Zelenskyy said: "It is not interesting for me. Not interesting to meet, not interesting to speak. Why? Because we had meeting with him in Normandy Format, it was before full-scale invasion. I saw the man who said one thing and then did another.

"I can't understand - is it his decisions or somebody else? So to meet what, to shake hands? Not interesting. To speak? I really don't understand who makes decisions in Russia.

"Who is he now? After full-scale invasion, for me he is nobody, nobody."

A war-torn family

Mr Zelenskyy not only spoke of the toll of the war on his people, but also his family - and notably his 10-year-old son.

He revealed he rarely sees his wife and children, but when he does, they share a meal together and talk about the war.

"It's a pity that I can't see my children, once per... now it's often than from the very beginning. Last two, three months we have once per 10 days I can see my children, one, two weeks, I see, have some food, have some talks and I can see my daughter because she's a student from this year and that's why I often see her than my son.

"He's 10 years but he's thinking like... it's tragedy... it's tragedy for all our families through Ukraine. All our children are adults. All of them. They speak about war, they speak about when we will win. They know it exactly. They know better than me I think.

"It's tragedy they speak about it, not about children, not about their games between each other, not about soccer, no dialogues about soccer. That is the difference but we will change this situation I think soon."

'I'm proud of my people'

Asked about the number of Russian boys being sent to their deaths, Mr Zelenskyy said: "As a father I don't understand how you can let your child go, realising that they are going to die whilst trying to take something that doesn't belong to them.

"In other words, by letting your child go, you're already making them a criminal. And this is a crime. This is murder. This is not self defence. This is murder, a deliberate murder. And they will have to be accountable for this. If they become war prisoners, they will have to accept responsibility for their actions, or, in any case, they will face judgment in front of God.

"But they are left behind, having died young, on our land because of the ambitions of President Putin, just one person."

A comedian and actor before moving into politics, Mr Zelenskyy said of his own wellbeing: "I'm well, I'm strong, as are our people. Sometimes, a little bit sad when we have some attacks, and each day proud of our soldiers and our army... And of course first of all I'm proud of our people.

"I didn't imagine before this war, before this job that I will have to do it so that's fine for me. I'm okay, really okay."

Read more on Ukraine:
What are F-16 fighter jets and could they be sent to Ukraine?
Wagner Group boss laughs off claims of assassination plot

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Moment Zelenskyy learns tank news

'I haven't lost my sense of humour'

When asked about the importance of keeping his sense of humour, he said: "I never lost my sense of humour. I think when people lose it, they lose... state of mind."

He continued: "You have to wake up and think what will you do today to make victory closer? That is very important. And that's why, to be adequate, you have to sometimes you know... yes... in the night... have some 15 minutes to think about... to speak with children by phone... something like this... to not, without any crying... it's so difficult and very huge to lead the country without all these things.

"You have to be strong and that's why sense of humour shows, when you can joke, show sometimes of course, show that you are okay, that you are strong, that you control the situation... The result depends on you. So that's why you have to concentrate. And humour makes you human."

'Russians don't count their war dead'

The city of Bakhmut, where Russia's Wagner mercenaries and Ukrainian forces have been locked in battle, has witnessed months of fierce fighting.

As speculation of a Russian surge in southern and eastern Ukraine grows, Mr Zelenskyy said it is crucial for Ukrainian forces to be prepared for a possible wave of attacks.

He said: "It all depends on our defensive strength. It all depends on how much we can hold them back.

"In the east they are moving forward and losing a lot of people. It's just an extraordinary number. They don't care about it. I mean, they don't count their people. This is a fact.

"We are counting their people. But we don't have exact numbers. There are much more casualties from their side. But from what we have already seen and counted, there are thousands of people dead from their side, and they are just throwing them, and throwing them, and throwing them and throwing them."

What countries are sending tanks to Ukraine?

  • The US will send 31 M1 Abrams tanks
  • Germany will send 14 Leopard 2 A6 tanks
  • The UK has announced it will send 14 Challenger 2 tanks
  • Poland has pledged to send 14 Leopard 2 tanks

'Thankful for tanks'

During the interview - filmed on Mr Zelenskyy's 45th birthday - the Ukrainian president learnt that Germany had decided to send 14 Leopard 2 tanks to Kyiv after weeks of indecision.

He told Sky News that he was "very thankful" for the tanks but warned that the number and timing of their delivery was "critical".

Washington also announced yesterday that it would send 31 M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, with US President Joe Biden saying armoured capability has been "critical for Ukraine" and the US "will train Ukrainian troops as soon as possible".

The UK became the first Western nation to promise main battle tanks when Rishi Sunak pledged 14 Challenger 2s this month.

The series of announcements of the modern battle tanks for Ukraine marks a significant blow to Mr Putin's forces.

Mr Zelenskyy added: "For me, people are the number one priority. That's why I don't want to fight on Russian territory. I just want them to stop the war as quickly as possible, and leave our country as fast as possible.

"I can tell you for sure if they leave our territory the war will stop."

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2023-01-26 07:32:29Z
1745303663

Selasa, 24 Januari 2023

US and Germany ready to send tanks to Ukraine - reports - BBC

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz delivers a speech in front of a Leopard 2 tank in October 2022Reuters

Both the US and Germany plan to send tanks to Ukraine after months of debate, according to media reports.

US President Joe Biden's administration is expected to announce plans to send dozens of M1 Abrams tanks.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has also reportedly decided to send at least 14 Leopard 2 tanks.

Ukrainian officials have said the potential shipments could have a significant impact on the battlefield against the Russians.

Both Washington and Berlin have come under internal and external pressure to announce the weapons transfers.

Citing anonymous sources, US media outlets are reporting that an announcement regarding Abrams shipments to Ukraine could come as soon as Wednesday.

One unnamed official told the New York Times that between 30 and 50 tanks could be sent.

The timeline of any potential delivery, however, remains unclear.

According to US media reports, German officials had privately insisted that they would only agree to the transfer of Leopard 2s to Ukraine if the US also sent M1 Abrams. Officials in both countries have denied the transfers were linked.

"If the Germans continue to say we will only send or release Leopards on the conditions that Americans send Abrams, we should send Abrams," Democratic Senator Chris Coons, a Biden ally, told Politico on Tuesday.

Britain has already said it will send Challenger Two tanks to Ukraine.

Poland this week said it wants to send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, but they are made in Germany and so Berlin needs to approve their export.

At least 16 European and Nato countries have the Leopard 2 tanks, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Not all will send tanks to Ukraine - but Mr Scholz's apparent decision now means they can, should they wish.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Jonathan Beale, defence correspondent

Ukraine is still unlikely to get the 300 modern main battle tanks it says it needs to win the war.

But if half a dozen Western nations each provide 14 tanks, then that would bring the total to nearly a hundred - which could make a difference.

Western tanks - including the UK's Challenger 2, Germany's Leopard 2 and the US-made Abrams - are all seen as superior to their Soviet-era counterparts, like the ubiquitous T-72.

They will provide Ukrainian crews with more protection, speed and accuracy.

But Western modern main battle tanks are not a wonder weapon or game-changer on their own. It's also what's being supplied alongside them.

In recent weeks, there's been a step change in heavy weapons being supplied by the West - including hundreds more armoured vehicles, artillery systems and ammunition.

Combined together, they are the kind of military hardware needed to punch through Russian lines and to retake territory.

If Ukrainian troops can be trained and the weapons delivered in time, they could form key elements of any spring offensive. A missing element for offensive operations is still air power.

Ukraine has been asking for the West to provide modern fighter jets since the war began. So far, none has been delivered.

2px presentational grey line

The news of Mr Scholz's decision was broken by Der Spiegel in Germany, citing government sources, before being seemingly confirmed elsewhere.

There has been no official statement from the German government yet. The chancellor is due to address the German parliament on Wednesday morning.

However, Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann of the liberal FDP party, who chairs the defence committee of the German parliament, welcomed the reports.

"The decision was tough, it took far too long, but in the end it was unavoidable," she said, adding that it would come as a relief to "the battered and brave Ukrainian people".

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Allied nations had become frustrated at what they perceive as German reluctance to send the armoured vehicles in recent days.

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius earlier said that Berlin had given other nations the green light to train Ukrainians to use Leopard 2 tanks, but did not commit to sending their own.

The Ukrainian president's chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, on Tuesday called on Western countries to give Kyiv hundreds of tanks to form a "crushing fist" against Russia.

"Tanks are one of the components for Ukraine to return to its 1991 borders," he wrote on Telegram after the reports emerged of Germany agreeing to send tanks.

Graphic showing details of the German Leopard 2 tank.

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2023-01-25 01:20:30Z
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Half Moon Bay: Seven dead in another California mass shooting - BBC

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The US state of California is reeling from its third mass shooting in eight days after a man shot dead seven former co-workers south of San Francisco.

The attacks took place in the coastal city of Half Moon Bay. Some of the victims were Chinese-American.

Suspect Chunli Zhao, 66, was arrested after driving to a police station.

It comes as the state mourns the deaths of 11 people in Monterey Park - about six hours south-east of Half Moon Bay - during Lunar New Year celebrations.

And just over a week ago, six people including a teenage mother and baby were killed at a property in Goshen, central California.

In emotional remarks at a news conference in Half Moon Bay on Tuesday afternoon, California Governor Gavin Newsom said he's grown weary of having to "say the same things we hear again and again" in the wake of mass shootings.

"What the hell is wrong with us that we allow these weapons of war and large capacity magazines out on the streets and sidewalks?" he asked. "Why have we allowed this culture, this pattern, to continue?"

"Only in America do we see this kind of carnage," he added.

The latest bloodshed to hit the state took place at two farms around the Half Moon Bay community in what officials have described as instances of workplace violence.

Four victims were discovered at a mushroom farm, while the other three were later found at a nearby trucking business. An eighth victim who was transported to hospital is out of surgery and in a stable condition, San Mateo County Sheriff Christina Corpus said at a news conference on Tuesday.

The victims were five adult men and two women, Sheriff Corpus said. All of them were agricultural workers, Half Moon Bay Mayor Deborah Penrose told CNN on Tuesday.

The suspect was a resident of Half Moon Bay and employed at the Mountain Mushroom Farm, Sheriff Corpus said.

"The only connection between the suspects and the victims is that they may have been co-workers," Sheriff Corpus said. "All of the evidence we have points to this being an instance of workplace violence."

The operator of the farm - California Terra Garden - later confirmed that the suspect lived at one of the two locations where people were killed.

The suspect is due to be arraigned on Wednesday in Redwood City, California, according to local US media outlets.

Half Moon Bay shooting locations

Alicia Ortega said her partner, Martin Martinez, a manager of the mushroom farm, was shot and killed in the attack.

The last time she spoke to him was in "the morning, when he [went] to work", she told KPIX, a local affiliate of CBS News, the BBC's US partner.

A number of children who had recently been let out of school and lived on the rural property saw the attack take place, Sheriff Corpus said.

"For children to witness this is unspeakable," the sheriff's office said.

After carrying out the killings, the suspect drove to a local police station where his arrest was caught on camera.

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US news channels showed the suspect being pinned to the ground and arrested by police.

He used a legally purchased semi-automatic pistol, Sheriff Corpus said.

San Mateo County Board of Supervisors President Dave Pine told the Associated Press news agency that the attacks were committed by a "disgruntled worker".

In a statement, President Joe Biden said he was praying for the victims and called on Congress to pass legislation reintroduced this week by Democratic senators that would raise the minimum age to purchase assault weapons in the US to 21.

Just hours after the attack, seven people were injured and one person was killed in a shooting in Oakland - about 40 miles (64 km) north-east of Half Moon Bay.

Zhao Chunli, seen in an undated driver's licence photo
Police handout/ CBS

The Half Moon Bay attack is the 37th mass shooting in just 24 days, according to Gun Violence Archive.

Even as details of the deadly attack in Half Moon Bay were coming in, detectives in the south of the state were still hunting for a motive for the killings in Monterey Park.

There, an elderly Asian immigrant murdered 11 people in a suburban dance hall, before killing himself as police closed in.

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2023-01-25 00:07:45Z
1749386303

German reluctance over tanks threatens arms sales, officials warn - Financial Times

Berlin’s reluctance to approve re-exports of German-made tanks to Ukraine is damaging trust in the country’s defence sector, prompting warnings from Polish, Slovak and industry officials that future purchases and military co-operation are at risk.

The EU and Nato have sought to respond to the war in Ukraine by encouraging European governments to work on joint defence projects, but the furore over chancellor Olaf Scholz’s refusal to allow Leopard 2 tanks to be exported to Kyiv has given other countries a reason to question Germany’s partnership credentials, officials told the Financial Times.

“It’s always better to go national. If you have to go multinational, there may be some strings attached and there are some lessons learned that are indeed derived from the current crisis,” said Tomasz Szatkowski, Poland’s ambassador to Nato.

“The Leopard case is just one of them,” he added. “And we are implementing those lessons now with the new procurement decisions.”

Poland’s prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Monday that Warsaw would formally apply to Berlin for permission to export Leopards to Ukraine, in a bid to pressure Scholz into approving the tank deliveries.

The war in Ukraine has been a boon for German defence producers. The Düsseldorf-based Rheinmetall, which manufactures the cannon and electronics for the Leopard 2 as well as a range of other vehicles and ammunition, has seen its share price more than double since last year’s invasion.

A promise by Scholz to overhaul Germany’s armed forces and increase its defence spending also raised market expectations of a flurry of orders for German arms manufacturers.

Germany has long been regarded as one of the world’s top manufacturers of tanks. Many countries, including the US, require customers to agree to re-exporting restrictions. But those restrictions usually do not apply to Nato partner countries such as Ukraine.

Several defence industry officials said that the country’s arms makers were fearful that the Leopard row would dent the sector’s potential.

One German defence industry lobbyist who declined to be named said his country’s re-exporting rules were seen as stricter than, for instance, France and UK’s. “Although the label ‘made in Germany’ still stands for quality, it is never entirely clear to the customer whether the export permits will be granted,” the lobbyist said.

Leopards, which are operated by a dozen EU armies, are widely viewed as well-suited for Ukraine’s needs. Multiple bloc foreign ministers used a meeting in Brussels on Monday to demand Germany agree to their export to Kyiv.

“Put simply, it is great news for any of Germany’s competitors in the defence space,” said a second defence industry official.

Last May, the EU responded to concerns over the bloc’s defence capabilities by setting up a new body tasked with exploring “future joint procurement projects”. But EU officials said that the Leopards experience could impact appetite for future co-operation with Berlin.

“The risk is that this idea takes hold that ‘if the Germans are involved, then we don’t know if we can fully trust it’,” said one bloc official involved in talks over closer defence co-operation.

“These are the times when trust is being built,” said Peter Bator, Slovakia’s ambassador to Nato. “If this [permission] is going to be refused by anyone, then it would definitely not contribute to trust.”

Sash Tusa, an aerospace analyst at the London-based Agency Partners, said that the row risked harming Germany’s plan for pan-European defence industrial co-operation on projects such as a joint fighter jet developed by France, Germany and Spain. Paris and Berlin have also floated plans for a common tank to replace both the Leopard and the French-made Leclerc.

“The French are clearly very worried that Germany will not be reliable,” said Tusa. “And what we are seeing now does not help this impression.”

Sven Weier, an analyst at the Swiss bank UBS, said that “whether it was tied into frustration [with Berlin] or not, we have already seen evidence for market share loss of German contractors.”

Weier noted that Poland bought tanks from the US and South Korea rather than Germany and that the Czech Republic and Slovakia purchased British combat vehicles. “Some decisions could have been in favour of Rheinmetall but weren’t.”

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2023-01-24 04:00:21Z
1745175922

Half Moon Bay: Suspect held after another California mass shooting - BBC

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The US state of California is reeling from its second mass shooting in days after a man shot dead seven former co-workers south of San Francisco.

The attacks took place in the coastal city of Half Moon Bay. The victims were all Chinese-American farm workers.

Suspect Zhao Chunli, 67, was arrested after driving to a police station.

It comes as the state mourns the death of 11 at Monterey Park - about six hours south east of Half Moon Bay - during Lunar New Year celebrations.

California Governor Gavin Newsom tweeted that he was at a hospital meeting with victims of the earlier mass shooting when he was pulled away to be briefed about the second attack, describing it as "tragedy upon tragedy".

'Unspeakable'

The latest bloodshed to hit the state took place at two farms around the Half Moon Bay community.

Four victims of the shooting attack were discovered at a mushroom farm while the other three were later found at a nearby trucking business. An eighth victim is being treated in hospital and is in a critical condition.

A number of children who had recently been let out of school and lived on the rural property saw the attack take place, San Mateo County Sheriff Christina Corpus said.

"This kind of shooting is horrific. It's a tragedy we hear about far too often, but today it's hit home here in San Mateo County," the office said.

"For children to witness this is unspeakable."

After carrying out the killings, the suspect drove to a local police station where his arrest was caught on camera.

US news channels showed Zhao Chunli being pinned to the ground and arrested by police.

He was found with a semi-automatic pistol that may have been used in the attack, and was co-operating with police, Sheriff Corpus said.

Zhao Chunli, seen in an undated driver's licence photo
Police handout/ CBS

San Mateo County Board of Supervisors President Dave Pine told the Associated Press news agency that the attacks were committed by a "disgruntled worker".

"We are sickened by today's tragedy in Half Moon Bay," Mr Pine said in a statement. "There are simply too many guns in this country and there has to be a change."

The attack in Half Moon Bay is the 37th mass shooting in just 24 days according to US not-for-profit Gun Violence Archive.

They define a mass shooting as four or more people injured or killed.

Even as details of the deadly attack in Half Moon Bay were coming in, detectives in the south of the state were still hunting for a motive for the killings in Monterey Park.

There, an elderly Asian immigrant murdered 11 people in a suburban dance hall, before killing himself as police closed in.

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2023-01-24 07:59:01Z
1750994644

Senin, 23 Januari 2023

German government faces growing rift over Scholz’s reluctance to send Ukraine tanks - POLITICO Europe

BERLIN — An internal row within the German coalition government spilled out into the open Monday as Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s allies publicly questioned his reluctance to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine.

Leading politicians from the Greens and the Free Democratic Party (FDP), the two junior partners to Scholz’s Social Democrats, have been urging the chancellor to step up military support for Kyiv. They argue that at the very least, Scholz should grant the necessary permission for countries like Poland and Finland to send their own German-made Leopards to Ukraine. Kyiv says it urgently needs these more powerful tanks to fend off an expected new Russian offensive in a war that has dragged on for 11 months.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock declared on Sunday that Berlin “would not stand in the way” if countries like Poland wanted to send their Leopards to Ukraine. Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki then said Monday his country would officially ask Berlin for permission to deliver Leopards to Ukraine.

But Scholz’s spokesperson Steffen Hebestreit suggested Monday that Baerbock’s statement did not represent a decision agreed upon within the government, highlighting the growing disunity within the coalition over the issue. Hebestreit said any request for sending Leopards would first have to be discussed and decided upon according to the “established procedures” within Germany’s federal security council — a reduced Cabinet formation involving Scholz, Baerbock and a few other ministers.

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The chancellor’s continued hesitance to send tanks and his public split on the matter with his own foreign minister is increasingly rankling his other allies in the coalition.

The Greens’ co-leader, Omid Nouripour, said Monday it is “necessary” to finally have clarity on the topic, “as quickly as possible.”

“It is unclear to me why infantry fighting vehicles are not escalating, but battle tanks are,” Nouripour said in reference to Scholz’s readiness to supply Ukraine with Marder infantry fighting vehicles, but not the more powerful Leopards.

The liberal Free Democrats’ Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, chair of the Bundestag’s defense committee, has called Scholz’s reluctance on the tank issue a “catastrophe” and said the German government had “failed.”

Strack-Zimmermann also got into a public argument with the Social Democrats’ parliamentary group leader, Rolf Mützenich, who accused her of “talking us into a military conflict.” The FDP politician responded on Twitter, calling Mützenich “the symbol of all the central failures of German foreign policy.”

This in turn prompted a sharp response from the Social Democrats’ co-leader, Lars Klingbeil, who on Monday urged the leadership of Greens and FDP to rally their politicians behind the government coalition and stop the continued attacks against the chancellor and his party.

The German parliament’s main opposition group, the center-right CDU/CSU bloc, latched onto the spat to launch a renewed push to split Scholz’s ruling coalition.

“The FDP and the Greens must ask themselves whether they are willing to share responsibility for this failure against their own convictions,” the CDU’s Norbert Röttgen, a member of the Bundestag’s foreign affairs committee, told the newspaper Bild.

Thorsten Frei, chief whip of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, also urged the FDP and the Greens to “finally act consistently,” and added: “The scenes that are playing out right now in the … coalition are reminiscent of divorce proceedings.”

The CDU/CSU was Germany’s main ruling bloc for 16 years under former Chancellor Angela Merkel, until it was ousted from power when she stepped down during the 2021 election. The conservative bloc has since sought to drive a wedge between the current three ruling parties, in particular by highlighting their differences on Ukraine. They have submitted multiple parliamentary resolutions calling for Germany to send more heavy weapons like tanks to the war-torn country, hoping to attract votes from Green and liberal lawmakers who disagree with Scholz.

However, the ruling parties have so far refrained from siding with the opposition — and there’s no sign that they’re willing to do so now, despite the growing discontent.

Still, CDU member Frei reiterated an offer to the FDP and Greens to form a new coalition under the leadership of the CDU/CSU: “In any case, we stand ready to take responsibility.”

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2023-01-23 22:31:00Z
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Eleven people confirmed dead after Chinese New Year shooting in California - Sky News

The number of people confirmed dead following a mass shooting at a Chinese New Year celebration in California has risen to 11.

One of 10 people wounded in the atrocity in Monterey Park, about seven miles (11 km) east of Downtown Los Angeles, has now died of their injuries, health officials said.

Two women, My Nhan, 65, and Lilian Li, 63, have been named as being among the dead.

Sky News understands that Ming Wei Ma, owner of the Star Ballroom Dance Studio, also died.

In a news conference late on Monday night, LA County Sheriff Robert Luna said Alvero Valentino, 68, had been killed too.

All but one of the victims was 60 or older, according to the Los Angeles coroner's office.

A total of 42 rounds were fired in Monterey Park, Mr Luna said, adding that a large capacity magazine was found at the scene.

About 20 minutes after the shooting there, the 72-year-old suspect, Huu Can Tran, entered the Lai Lai Ballroom and Studio dance club in the neighbouring city of Alhambra.

Brandon Tsay, who operates the family-run venue, described how he managed to wrestle the weapon from him before he was able to start shooting.

"That moment, it was primal instinct," Mr Tsay told The New York Times, adding that the gunman fled the scene after a 90-second struggle.

"Something happened there. I don't know what came over me."

This combination image created using photos provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department shows a male suspect allegedly involved in a shooting on Saturday, Jan. 21, 2023, in Monterey Park, Calif. A second incident occurred about 20 minutes later in Alhambra, Calif. Investigators have identified him as a homicide suspect and he should be considered armed and dangerous. A gunman killed 10 people at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park and then may have tried, but failed, to target a second dance hall, authorities said Sunday, Jan. 22. (Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department via AP)
Image: Photos of the suspect were released by officers

Mr Tsay told ABC: "When I got the courage, I lunged at him with both my hands, grabbed the weapon and we had a struggle.

"We struggled into the lobby, trying to get this gun away from each other. He was hitting me across the face, bashing the back of my head."

After finally getting control of the gun, Mr Tsay said he pointed it at Tran and shouted: "Get the hell out of here! I'll shoot! Get away! Go!"

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Police surround van of shooting suspect

About 12 hours later, police officers in Torrance, 20 miles southwest of Monterey Park, cornered a white van Tran was driving.

As officers approached, they heard a single gun shot from inside as Tran killed himself.

A handgun recovered from the van's interior was registered to the suspect, Mr Luna told reporters.

He also revealed that the weapon wrestled from Tran in Alhambra was a 9mm semi-automatic mach-10 assault weapon.

Mr Luna described Mr Tsay as a "hero".

Tran's mobile home in a community for pensioners has been searched, where numerous electronic devices, such as mobile phones and computers were recovered, Mr Luna said in his update.

A 308 calibre rifle was also discovered, and there were hundreds of rounds of ammunition.

Tran had a "limited criminal history", Mr Luna said, and was arrested in 1990 for the unlawful possession of a firearm.

A man lays flowers at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio
Image: A man lays flowers at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio

Law enforcement forces said evidence gathered so far indicated a personal motive rather than terrorism or a hate crime, NBC reported.

It has emerged that Tran visited police in his town of Hemet twice this month to allege he was the victim of fraud, theft and poisoning by family members between 10 and 20 years ago in the LA area, spokesman Alan Reyes said.

Tran said he would return to the station with documentation but never did.

A former tenant described him as "angry and distrustful".

"There's a lot of speculation and we don't know," said Mayor Henry Lo of Monterey Park, as he was asked about a potential motive.

It was the USA's fifth mass killing this month.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2VsZXZlbi1wZW9wbGUtY29uZmlybWVkLWRlYWQtYWZ0ZXItY2hpbmVzZS1uZXcteWVhci1zaG9vdGluZy1pbi1jYWxpZm9ybmlhLTEyNzkzODk00gFyaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL2VsZXZlbi1wZW9wbGUtY29uZmlybWVkLWRlYWQtYWZ0ZXItY2hpbmVzZS1uZXcteWVhci1zaG9vdGluZy1pbi1jYWxpZm9ybmlhLTEyNzkzODk0?oc=5

2023-01-23 23:32:58Z
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