Jumat, 03 Maret 2023

Wagner chief urges Ukraine’s Zelenskyy to abandon Bakhmut - Al Jazeera English

Russian troops and mercenaries have rained artillery down on the last access routes to the besieged Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, bringing Moscow closer to its first victory in half a year after the bloodiest fighting of the war.

The head of the Wagner Group, a private Russian army, said on Friday that the eastern salt-mining city, which has been blasted to ruins, was now almost completely surrounded with only one road still open for Ukraine’s soldiers.

The Reuters news agency reported intense Russian shelling of routes leading west out of Bakhmut, an apparent attempt to block Ukrainian forces’ access in and out of the city. A bridge in the adjacent town of Khromove was damaged by Russian tank shelling

Ukrainian soldiers were working to repair damaged roads, and more soldiers were heading towards the front line in a sign that Ukraine was not yet ready to give up the city. To the west, Ukrainians were digging new trenches for defensive positions.

The commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, Oleksandr Syrskyi, visited Bakhmut on Friday for briefings with local commanders on how to boost the defence capacity of front-line forces.

Victory in Bakhmut, with a pre-war population of about 70,000 people, would give Russia the first major prize of a costly winter offensive after it called up hundreds of thousands of reservists last year. It says it would be a stepping stone to capturing the surrounding Donbas region, an important Russian war aim.

Ukraine says the city has little intrinsic strategic value but that the huge losses there could determine the course of the war. It recaptured swathes of territory in the second half of 2022, but its forces have now been on the defensive for three months.

Ukrainian forces drive a tank
Ukrainian servicemen ride a tank towards the front-line town of Bakhmut [Lisi Niesner/Reuters]

“Units of the private military company Wagner have practically surrounded Bakhmut,” Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin said, appearing in combat uniform in a video posted on Telegram.

“Only one route [out] is left,” he said. “The pincers are closing.”

He called on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to order a retreat from Bakhmut to save his soldiers’ lives. The camera panned to show three captured Ukrainians – a grey-bearded older man and two boys – asking to be allowed to go home.

The commander of a Ukrainian drone unit active in Bakhmut, Robert Brovdi who goes by the name “Madyar”, said in a video posted on social media that his unit had been ordered by the military to withdraw immediately. He said he had been fighting there for 110 days.

Both sides say they have inflicted devastating losses in Bakhmut. Kyiv has said its forces are still holding out there while acknowledging that the situation has deteriorated this week.

Volodymyr Nazarenko, Ukraine’s deputy national guard commander, told Ukrainian NV Radio the situation was “critical”, with fighting going on “round the clock”.

“They take no account of their losses in trying to take the city by assault,” he said. “The task of our forces in Bakhmut is to inflict as many losses on the enemy as possible. Every metre of Ukrainian land costs hundreds of lives to the enemy.”

“We need as much ammunition as possible,” Nazarenko said. “There are many more Russians here than we have ammunition to destroy them.”

Scholz-Biden meeting

The Kremlin, meanwhile, warned the West against providing more arms to Ukraine as key Kyiv backers, United States President Joe Biden and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, were to meet on Friday in Washington.

The past few days have generated alarm in Russia over its own potential vulnerabilities after Moscow reported a number of drone attacks on targets deep within Russia followed by what it said was an armed cross-border raid on Thursday.

President Vladimir Putin was shown on television on Friday telling his Security Council to step up “anti-terrorism measures”.

Scholz was due to meet Biden at the White House to discuss additional military aid to Ukraine. Germany makes the Leopard tanks promised in January and expected to be the core of a new Ukrainian armoured force.

Scholz has been criticised by some Western allies for taking a cautious public stance towards arming Ukraine although he has overseen a big shift in policy from a country that was Russia’s biggest energy customer on the eve of the war.

Kyiv’s ambassador in Berlin, Oleksii Makeiev, said Germany was now taking more of a leadership role in arming Ukraine.

Washington is expected to announce its latest military aid package worth $400 million and mainly made up of ammunition and armoured vehicles. The US has provided nearly $32bn in weaponry to Ukraine since the invasion.

Tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians and soldiers on both sides are believed to have been killed since Russia invaded its neighbour a year ago.

Moscow, which says it has annexed nearly a fifth of Ukraine, accuses Kyiv of posing a security threat. Ukraine and its allies say the invasion was an unprovoked war of aggression.

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2023-03-03 18:30:22Z
1798550053

Alex Murdaugh verdict: Disgraced lawyer guilty of killing wife and son - BBC

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A powerful South Carolina lawyer has been found guilty of murdering his wife and son to distract from his multi-million dollar financial crimes.

The jury deliberated for less than three hours before convicting Alex Murdaugh, 54, of two counts of murder at the end of a six-week trial.

He faces 30 years to life in prison without parole for each murder charge.

Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were shot at close range near the dog kennels on their family estate on 7 June 2021.

Alex Murdaugh stood impassively as he learned his fate during Thursday evening's hearing in Walterboro.

"Today's verdict proves that no-one, no matter who you are in society, is above the law," said South Carolina's top prosecutor, Attorney General Alan Wilson.

The case - chronicling the downfall of a family born to power and privilege - has captivated the country, inspiring documentaries on Netflix and HBO.

Murdaugh was once an influential personal injury attorney in the state, and for decades until 2006 his family members had served as the leading prosecutors in the area. Such was their influence that the jurisdiction became known as "Murdaugh Country".

But the trial heard that for years he had been stealing from his law partners and clients to feed an addiction to painkillers and an extravagant lifestyle.

Murdaugh had pleaded not guilty to killing his wife and youngest son in an attempt to conceal years of financial corruption - fraud that he himself had acknowledged in court.

After the 12-person jury's verdict, dozens of spectators gathered outside the back of the court where officers ushered a handcuffed Murdaugh quickly into a black van.

Reporters shouted questions, though he remained silent. As police tucked him inside the vehicle, one man behind the media line shouted that he was praying for him.

Maggie and Alex Murdaugh
Maggie Murdaugh/Facebook

It took more than a year for investigators to arrest Murdaugh as they untangled the complex case.

In a risky move for any murder defendant, Murdaugh took to the witness stand, trying to convince the jury that someone angry over a deadly 2019 boating accident involving Paul could have killed his son to seek revenge.

"I would never hurt Maggie, and I would never hurt Paul - ever - under any circumstances," Murdaugh testified.

The case against him was based entirely on circumstantial evidence. No direct evidence - things like a murder weapon, blood on his clothing or an eyewitness - was presented at trial.

Instead the prosecution focused on an incriminating Snapchat video taken by Murdaugh's son just before the murders.

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Paul and his mother were killed at the kennels on the family's sprawling hunting estate, known as Moselle.

For 20 months after their murders, Alex Murdaugh told law enforcement repeatedly he had not been at the dog kennels at all that evening, and was at home napping.

But in the Snapchat video filmed by Paul just minutes before the shootings, the defendant's voice could be heard in the background.

On the stand at trial, Murdaugh admitted he had lied, saying his years-long addiction to painkillers had put him in a paranoid state.

The court also heard of Murdaugh's bizarre attempt to stage his own death in an insurance fraud scheme just three months after he murdered his 52-year-old wife and 22-year-old son. The hitman he hired botched the shooting and the bullet only grazed his head.

The Murdaugh family
Facebook/Maggie Murdaugh

Local resident Jessica Williams, 38, stood outside the court watching the proceedings on the phone with her six-year-old daughter.

"I am so happy," she told BBC News after the verdict was announced, adding: "I remember where I was when the verdict for OJ Simpson came down [in 1995]. This was the same thing."

Early on in the proceedings, Judge Clifton Newman ruled that prosecutors could bring in evidence of Murdaugh's alleged financial crimes.

Investigators say he stole millions from clients and colleagues, including $3.7m (£3m) in 2019 alone. And at trial, Murdaugh admitted to wide-scale theft.

Prosecutors argued it was these crimes that drove him to murder - that he thought the deaths of Maggie and Paul would gain him sympathy and stave off a reckoning over his other misdeeds.

Murdaugh and his defence team had argued in court that this theory was ludicrous and financial problems would never have led him to murder.

Several witnesses testified that on the night of the murders Alex Murdaugh had asked Maggie, who had been at the family's other property in nearby Edisto Beach, to return to Moselle.

Maggie much preferred Edisto to Moselle and hadn't planned on leaving, her sister Marion Proctor told the court. But Murdaugh's elderly father was dying, and so Mrs Proctor encouraged her to support him.

Alex Murdaugh and his two sons were fond of hunting, and Moselle was home to a collection of guns.

Prosecutors alleged that Murdaugh had used one of these - a .300 Blackout assault-style rifle - to kill Maggie, and another weapon to kill Paul. But they were unable to find either firearm and produce them at trial.

Maggie was shot four or five times with a rifle and their son was shot twice with a shotgun, the trial heard.

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2023-03-03 06:10:00Z
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Greece train crash which left 57 dead was 'mainly due to tragic human error', prime minister says - Sky News

At least 57 people have died in a train crash in Greece, with the country's prime minister saying the disaster appeared to be mainly down to "tragic human error".

The search continues for survivors after a passenger service collided with a freight train carrying shipping containers and travelling in the opposite direction but on the same track at speeds believed to be up to 100mph.

Carriages derailed and then burst into flames in Greece's deadliest rail crash in living memory. Temperatures in one carriage rose to 1,300C (2,370F) after it caught fire.

Some passengers kicked through windows to escape the inferno late on Tuesday, while others were thrown 40 metres due to the impact of the crash.

Rescuers operate on the site of a crash, where two trains collided, near the city of Larissa, Greece, March 1, 2023. REUTERS/Giannis Floulis

The passenger service had left Athens and was heading to the northern city of Thessaloniki when the collision happened near the central town of Larissa, 200 miles north of the capital.

Many of the victims were thought to be university students returning home after a long holiday weekend.

Some 48 people remain in hospital.

More on Greece

The passenger train was said to be carrying around 350 passengers. More than 200 people who were left unharmed were taken by buses to Thessaloniki.

Stergios Minenis, 28, who jumped to safety from the wreckage, said: "There was panic... The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned, fire was right and left."

'People were screaming'

A passenger, who escaped from the fifth carriage, told Skai TV: "Windows were being smashed and people were screaming... One of the windows caved in from the impact of iron from the other train."

Another said: "There was fire next to us. We found a hole and from there we managed to get out. The wagon started to spin, and then it ended up on its side and we got out.

"It was a nightmarish 10 seconds, in the flames. There was panic in the carriage, you couldn't see around you because of the smoke."

Rescuers operate at the site of a crash, where two trains collided, near the city of Larissa, Greece, March 1, 2023. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis
A general view of the site of a crash, where two trains collided, near the city of Larissa, Greece, March 1, 2023. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called it "a horrific rail accident without precedent in our country," as he promised a full, independent investigation.

He said it appeared the crash was "mainly due to a tragic human error," but did not give further details.

A station master was arrested as investigators tried to work out why the two trains had been on the same track "for many kilometres", while the country's transport minister Kostas Karamanlis has resigned.

Eight rail employees were among those killed, including the two drivers of the freight train and the two drivers of the passenger train, according to Greek Railroad Workers Union president Yannis Nitsas.

Read more:
What we know so far about the crash
Questions now turn to how the tragedy happened

The location of the Greece train crash
Image: The location of the rail crash

The rescue operation will continue into the night, with heavy machinery needed to move the huge train carcasses, so crews can painstakingly search through the wreckage.

"It's unlikely there will be survivors, but hope dies last," said rescuer Nikos Zygouris.

Larissa's chief coroner, Roubini Leondari, said 43 bodies had been brought to her for examination, and would require DNA identification as they were largely disfigured.

"Most (of the bodies) are young people," she told ERT. "They are in very bad condition."

The government declared three days of national mourning until Friday, with flags flying at half-mast in a tribute to the victims.

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2023-03-03 04:41:15Z
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Belgian mother who murdered her five children euthanised at own request - on 16th anniversary of killings - Sky News

A mother who killed her five children has been euthanised at her own request - 16 years to the day after their murders, her lawyer has said.

Genevieve Lhermitte slit the throats of her son and daughters - aged three to 14 - with a kitchen knife at their family home in the Belgian town of Nivelles on 28 February 2007.

The children's father was out of the country at the time of the killings, after which Lhermitte attempted to take her own life, but failed and was charged with the murders.

Psychologists and psychiatrists told her trial jury she was suffering from a severe mental disorder at the time of the killings.

She was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in December 2008, before being moved to a psychiatric hospital in 2019.

Genevieve Lhermitte (back, centre) sits behind a photograph of her five children at the Palace of Justice in Nivelles in December 2008 during her trial
Image: Experts said Lhermitte's was suffering from a severe mental disorder at the time of the killings

The 56-year-old's lawyer Nicolas Cohen confirmed reports in local media that his client had been euthanised on the 16th anniversary of the killings on Tuesday.

She died at Leonard de Vinci hospital in Montigny-le-Tilleul, according to Belgian news site Sudinfo.

Under Belgian law people can choose to be euthanised if they are deemed to be suffering from "unbearable" psychological, and not just physical, suffering that cannot be healed.

Read more:
MPs to debate assisted dying after petition reaches 100,000 signatures
Briton to plead guilty to manslaughter over 'mercy killing' of terminally ill wife in Cyprus

The person must be conscious of their decision and be able to convey their wish in a reasoned and consistent manner.

Psychologist Emilie Maroit told the RTL-TVI channel that Lhermitte likely chose to die on 28 February in a "symbolic gesture in respect for her children".

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK

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2023-03-03 08:12:29Z
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Kamis, 02 Maret 2023

Greece train crash: 57 people confirmed dead as public anger grows - BBC

Remains of destroyed train carriage being removed by crane on Thursday morningReuters

The death toll from Tuesday's train crash in Greece has increased to 57, a coroner has told the BBC.

Eleni Zaggelidou, one of ten coroners working on the investigation, said DNA had been taken from 57 intact bodies.

Meanwhile, a government minister said austerity during Greece's economic crisis in the 2000s contributed to a lack of investment in the railways.

Rail workers held a one-day strike on Thursday following the disaster, blaming government neglect.

More than 2,000 people protested for a second day in Athens and Thessaloniki, shocked by Tuesday's disaster near the city of Larissa.

"We are angry at the company, at the government and past governments that did nothing to improve conditions in the Greek railway," said pensioner Stavros Nantis in Athens.

Rescue workers are still going through burned and buckled carriages, searching for victims.

This was the "most difficult moment", rescuer Konstantinos Imanimidis told Reuters news agency, because "instead of saving lives, we have to recover bodies".

The crash happened just before midnight on Tuesday. A passenger train carrying 350 people collided with a freight train after both ended up on the same track - causing the front carriages to burst into flames.

Athens protest, 2 Mar 23
EPA

The railway workers' strike began at 0600 local time (0400 GMT), hitting national rail services and the subway in Athens.

Many in Greece see the crash as an accident waiting to happen, and the union blamed successive governments' "disrespect" towards Greek railways for leading to this "tragic result".

During a visit to a hospital where relatives of the missing had gathered, Zoe Rapti, Greece's Deputy Minister of Health, told the BBC that investing in the rail network had been made more difficult by the Greek debt crisis around 2010, which led to drastic austerity measures in exchange for a financial rescue by the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

"Of course, things should have been done during these years but, as you remember, Greece faced a big economic crisis for more than 10 years, which means that many things went back," she said.

She said a "wide investigation" would take place, which she promised would provide answers.

Larissa blood donation, 2 Mar 23
AFP

Government spokesman Giannis Oikonomous also said "chronic delays" in implementing rail projects were rooted in "distortions" in the country's public sector going back decades.

A 59-year-old station master in Larissa has been charged with manslaughter by negligence and is due to appear in court on Thursday. He has admitted to having a share of responsibility in the accident, his lawyer Stefanos Pantzartzidis said outside the courthouse.

"He is literally devastated. Since the first moment, he has assumed responsibility proportionate to him," Mr Pantzartzidis said, hinting that the station master, who has not been publicly named, was not the only one to blame.

Greece's Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis resigned over the crash, saying he would take responsibility for the authorities' "longstanding failures" to fix a railway system that was not fit for the 21st Century.

But Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis's suggestion that "tragic human error" was to blame has caused anger.

On Wednesday, rioters clashed with police outside the headquarters of Hellenic Train in Athens - the company responsible for maintaining Greece's railways.

Tear gas was used to disperse protesters, who threw stones and lit fires in the streets.

At a silent vigil in Larissa to commemorate the victims of the incident, one demonstrator said he felt the disaster had been long coming.

"The rail network looked problematic, with worn down, badly paid staff," Nikos Savva, a medical student from Cyprus, told AFP news agency.

The station master arrested should not pay the price "for a whole ailing system", he added.

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Many of the passengers on board were students in their 20s returning to Thessaloniki after a long weekend celebrating Greek Orthodox Lent.

Fire brigade spokesperson Vassilis Varthakogiannis said temperatures inside the first carriage - which burst into flames - had reached 1,300C (2,370F), making it "hard to identify the people who were inside".

Local media have reported that more than 10 people are still missing, as Greece observes three days of national mourning.

Families have given DNA samples to help identification efforts, with the results expected on Thursday.

One of those, a woman called Katerina searching for her missing brother, a passenger on the train, shouted "Murderers!" outside the hospital in Larissa, directing her anger towards the government and the rail company, Reuters reports.

Kostas Malizos, a recently retired surgeon and Emeritus Professor at Greece's University of Thessaly, has returned to work to perform surgery on injured passengers.

"It's a disaster, it's catastrophic," he said. "Families are crying tonight. Unfortunately, the majority of the lost people are young students. They left home, happy after the long weekend, to go for their studies or to see their relatives and never reached them."

Image shows map of train crash and direction of trains travelling
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2023-03-02 20:15:06Z
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Firefighters battle high-rise blaze in Hong Kong shopping district - The Guardian

Hong Kong firefighters have been battling a blaze that engulfed a construction site in the city’s shopping district.

Officials said the fire broke out at 11.11pm (1511 GMT) on Thursday in the heart of Tsim Sha Tsui, a busy shopping and tourist area on the waterfront.

No casualties had been reported early on Friday, according to the government.

view of skyline with building on fire

Flames were first spotted near scaffolding at the top of the building, with the blaze visible across the harbour and causing sparks to rain down on neighbouring streets.

About an hour later, the fire had spread down the building towards street level, where hundreds of onlookers had gathered.

building on fire

Large debris – apparently from the site – were visible on the ground, and an acrid smell permeated the air, a reporter at the scene said.

The building under construction was a 42-storey “harbourside icon” intended to house the famous Mariners’ Club and a hotel, according to the website of its developer, the Empire Group.

building on fire

The HK$6bn (£639m) redevelopment project was approved in 2019 and was expected to be completed in the first half of this year, according to local media.

Empire Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Rabu, 01 Maret 2023

Human error to blame for train crash - Greek PM - BBC

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One of Greece's worst-ever rail disasters, which claimed at least 43 lives, was due to "tragic human error", the country's prime minister has said.

PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis spoke after visiting the site of Tuesday night's head-on collision between a passenger service and a freight train.

The local stationmaster has been charged with manslaughter. The Greek transport minister has resigned.

Rescue teams are continuing to search for survivors.

The accident happened just before midnight on Tuesday. The passenger train carrying some 350 people collided with a freight train as it emerged from a tunnel after leaving the town of Larissa.

It is still unclear why the two services were running on the same track.

The stationmaster, who is in charge of signalling, denies wrongdoing and has blamed the accident on a possible technical failure.

After visiting the site, Mr Mitsotakis said everything pointed to "a tragic human error".

"Justice will do its job," he said in a televised address. "People will be held accountable, while the state will be on the side of the people."

Announcing his resignation, Transport Minister Kostas Karamanlis stated: "When something so tragic happens, it is impossible to continue and pretend it didn't happen."

Trade unions said collisions have multiple factors and the crash had highlighted chronic deficiencies, including lack of staff, broken signals and outdated facilities.

Train crash
Getty Images

The first four carriages of the passenger train were derailed and the first two caught fire and were "almost completely destroyed", Thessaly regional governor Kostas Agorastos said.

The train was travelling from Athens to Thessaloniki, which has a sizeable student population, and it is believed many on board were students returning there after a holiday for Greek Orthodox lent.

Survivors have described the chaotic scenes after the crash, with one shaken passenger telling the BBC: "People were panicking and screaming."

Giannis Antonoglou, who escaped from the fifth compartment of the passenger train, said the windows suddenly smashed and "we ended up being tilted 45 degrees as if about to tip".

Stergios Minenis, a 28-year-old passenger who jumped to safety from the wreckage, told Reuters news agency: "The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned."

Some passengers said they were forced to break carriage windows with their bodies or luggage to escape the burning wreckage.

Larissa's mayor said some of those who died would only be identifiable through genetic testing.

Relatives of missing passengers have provided DNA samples to help the identify bodies, a hospital in Larissa said.

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2023-03-01 20:42:06Z
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