Rabu, 12 April 2023

Japan issues evacuation order in Hokkaido as North Korea fires missile - The Independent

Japan has issued an evacuation order and warned residents to take cover in the Hokkaido region after North Korea fired a missile.

The missile launch comes days after North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un said he would enhance his nuclear capability in “practical and offensive” ways.

The ballistic missile was launched off the east coast of the Korean Peninsula, according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

A TV shows J-Alert or National Early Warning System to the Japanese residents Thursday, April 13, 2023, in Yokohama, south of Tokyo.

The Japanese government warned residents of the island of Hokkaido to take immediate cover, saying a missile was likely to fall near it around 8am Japan time (2300 GMT).

And officials say that in the end, the missile landed in the waters between the Korean peninsula and Japan. They did not specify how far the missile flew.

The incident also comes a day after Japan announced plans to develop and build an array of advanced long-range missiles to improve the country’s defences.

The Japanese Defense Ministry said it had signed contracts with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to produce the weapons.

The missile launch took place as South Korean officials say North Korea has not been responding to South Korean calls on a set of cross-border inter-Korean hotlines for about a week.

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2023-04-13 01:19:23Z
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Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 414 of the invasion - The Guardian

  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy has urged international leaders to act after disturbing video emerged on Wednesday of Russian soldiers apparently beheading a Ukrainian prisoner of war lying on the ground. Ukraine’s president said the world could not ignore the “evil” footage, which has not been verified by the Guardian.

  • Belarus has extradited a Russian man who was separated from his daughter and sentenced to two years in prison after she drew anti-war pictures at school. Alexei Moskalyov, a 54-year-old single parent from the town of Yefremov, 150 miles south of Moscow, fled house arrest last month, hours before a court handed him a two-year sentence for “discrediting” the Russian army.

  • The EU has pledged to hold those responsible for war crimes in Ukraine to account, a spokesperson said, while the UN said it was “appalled by particularly gruesome videos” circulating on social media.

  • The World Bank said on Wednesday it would finance $200m to help fix Ukraine’s energy and heating infrastructure, with partners and others to provide another $300 million as the project expands.

  • The UK government has imposed sanctions on the “financial fixers” who have allegedly helped Russian oligarchs Roman Abramovich and Alisher Usmanov hide their assets.

  • Britain is ready to provide an extra $500 million of loan guarantees to Ukraine, taking the total this year to $1bn, British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said on Wednesday. Hunt said the British loan guarantees had been important to underwrite a broader $15.6 billion IMF four-year package of support.

  • The US also imposed sanctions on more than 120 individuals and entities around the world over their ties to Russia’s war in Ukraine. The sanctions targeted people and entities across more than 20 countries and jurisdictions.

  • Russia has hit 333 Canadian officials and public figures with sanctions in what it said was a tit-for-tat move in response to Canada’s sanctions against Moscow and support for Ukraine.

  • Ukraine’s military has again rejected claims by Russia that Russian troops have captured more than 80% of the embattled city of Bakhmut. Serhiy Cherevatyi, a spokesperson for the eastern military command, insisted on Wednesday that Ukrainian forces controlled “considerably” more than 20% of it in the east.

  • Russia’s defence ministry has claimed its forces struck Ukrainian army reserves attempting to break through to Bakhmut. It also claimed that fighters from Russia’s private Wagner mercenary group had captured three more blocks in their attempt to seize control of the city. The claims were not verified.

  • Russia has tightened its conscription law, including introducing electronic military draft papers, before a widely anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive in the coming weeks. The lower and upper houses of parliament rushed through legislation that will make it significantly harder for Russians to dodge the draft while automatically banning registered conscripts from leaving the country.

  • Russian-installed authorities in annexed Crimea and the city of Sevastopol have cancelled traditional military parades to celebrate Victory Day and May Day, the Russian-appointed leader of Crimea has said, citing security reasons. Sergei Aksyonov’s statement on Wednesday came a day after he said Crimea was on guard and that Russian forces had built “modern, in-depth defences”.

  • Serbia has agreed to supply arms to Kyiv or has sent them already, according to a classified Pentagon document. Serbia is one of the only countries in Europe that has refused to sanction Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

  • South Korea has reportedly agreed to “lend” the US 500,000 rounds of artillery, as Seoul attempts to minimise the possibility that the ammunition could end up in Ukraine - a move that could spark domestic criticism of President Yoon Suk-yeol.

  • South Africa has said that an international arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin over the Ukraine war was a “spanner in the works” before a Brics summit in the country in August. The Russian president is due to attend a summit of Brics countries but the host nation is a member of the International Criminal Court and would be expected to make the arrest if Putin steps foot in the country.

  • The German government is very worried about the jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s worsening health condition, a government spokesperson has said. Navalny’s spokesperson on Tuesday said he had lost 8kg in 16 days while in solitary confinement, and that he was not receiving any treatment.

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2023-04-12 23:50:00Z
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Zelenskiy urges world leaders to act over PoW beheading video - The Guardian

Volodymyr Zelenskiy has urged international leaders to act after disturbing video emerged on Wednesday of Russian soldiers apparently beheading a Ukrainian prisoner of war lying on the ground.

Ukraine’s president said the world could not ignore the “evil” footage, which has not been verified by the Guardian.

“How easily these beasts kill. We are not going to forget anything. Neither are we going to forgive the murderers,” Zelenskiy said. “There will be legal responsibility for everything. The defeat of terror is necessary.”

The clip appears to show a member of the Russian army using a knife to cut the head off the soldier. It is unclear when or where the video was shot. It may have been filmed last summer, judging by the green foliage in the background.

A second video appears to show the beheaded corpses of two Ukrainian servicemen lying next to a destroyed military vehicle. A voice says: “They killed them. Someone came up to them. They came up to them and cut their heads off.”

In a video address on Wednesday, Zelenskiy said the apparent execution was part of a grim pattern, seen in Russian-occupied areas including Bucha, in the Kyiv region, where invading soldiers tortured and killed hundreds of civilians.

“There are no people for them. A son, a brother, a husband, someone’s child. This is a video of Russia just trying to make that the new norm. Such a habit of destroying life,” he said.

Zelenskiy continued: “This is not an accident. This is not an episode. This was the case earlier. This was the case in Bucha. Thousands of times. Everyone must react. Every leader.”

His remarks come amid Ukrainian requests for more western weapons before an imminent counter-offensive. Leaked classified US documents suggest Washington believes Kyiv may be able to make only modest territorial gains, against a dug-in Russian army.

One top secret document says Ukraine faces significant “force generation and sustainment shortfalls”. There are warnings made in February that Kyiv is also running out of ammunition for its Soviet-era air defence systems, which by May could be fully depleted.

Serhi Leshchenko, an adviser to Andrii Yermak, Zelenskiy’s chief of staff, said the gruesome video underscored why more military assistance was needed. “We are not just fighting against the Putin regime but with a terrorist state,” he told the Guardian. “The west needs to help us stop this new Isis.”

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He added: “If you can form a coalition against Isis in the Middle East you can do the same against Isis in Europe. Russia is a threat to everybody. One day they will behead victims not only in Bakhmut but in London and New York.”

Zelenskiy promised there would be a legal reckoning for those who carried out the beheading and for multiple other Russian crimes. “The main goal is to win … Defeat of the occupier, sentences to murderers. Tribunal for the evil state,” he said.

The video circulated on Telegram, Twitter and other social media channels, causing revulsion among Ukrainians. The journalist Olga Tokariuk pointed out that Russia was the current chair of the UN’s security council, despite vociferous objections from Kyiv.

The Guardian has not independently verified the origins and veracity of the two videos, but Ukrainian authorities are treating them as genuine.

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2023-04-12 20:25:00Z
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Selasa, 11 April 2023

Ukraine war: Leak shows Western special forces on the ground - BBC

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The UK is among a number of countries with military special forces operating inside Ukraine, according to one of dozens of documents leaked online.

It confirms what has been the subject of quiet speculation for over a year.

The leaked files, some marked "top secret", paint a detailed picture of the war in Ukraine, including sensitive details of Ukraine's preparations for a spring counter-offensive.

The US government says it is investigating the source of the leak.

According to the document, dated 23 March, the UK has the largest contingent of special forces in Ukraine (50), followed by fellow Nato states Latvia (17), France (15), the US (14) and the Netherlands (1).

The document does not say where the forces are located or what they are doing.

The numbers of personnel may be small, and will doubtless fluctuate. But special forces are by their very nature highly effective. Their presence in Ukraine is likely to be seized upon by Moscow, which has in recent months argued that it is not just confronting Ukraine, but Nato as well.

In line with its standard policy on such matters, the UK's Ministry of Defence has not commented, but in a tweet on Tuesday said the leak of alleged classified information had demonstrated what it called a "serious level of inaccuracy".

"Readers should be cautious about taking at face value allegations that have the potential to spread misinformation," it said.

It did not elaborate or suggest which specific documents it was referring to. However, Pentagon officials are quoted as saying the documents are real.

One document, which detailed the number of casualties suffered in Ukraine on both sides, did appear to have been doctored.

UK special forces are made up of several elite military units with distinct areas of expertise, and are regarded to be among the most capable in the world.

The British government has a policy of not commenting on its special forces, in contrast to other countries including the US.

The UK has been vociferous in its support of Ukraine, and is the second largest donor after the US of military aid to Kyiv.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the Department of Justice had opened a criminal investigation and he was determined to find the source of the leak.

"We will continue to investigate and turn over every rock until we find the source of this and the extent of it," he said.

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2023-04-11 22:37:04Z
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Senin, 10 April 2023

Louisville shooting — live: Connor Sturgeon, 23, named as bank employee shooter who killed four - The Independent

Shooting with ‘multiple casualties’ reported at bank in downtown Louisville

A disgruntled employee identified as Connor Sturgeon, 23, killed four people in a mass shooting at a bank in Louisville, Kentucky, before being shot dead on the scene.

The shooting unfolded at around 8.30am on Monday morning at the Old National Bank in downtown Louisville when officers responded to reports of a possible active shooter.

Officers arrived on the scene where they encountered the suspect and exchanged gunfire.

Sturgeon was killed by police on the scene.

Louisville Metro Police Department confirmed that four other victims were killed, while nine others – including a police officer – were taken to hospital for their injuries.

Governor Andy Beshear choked up with emotion at a press conference as he revealed that he has “a very close friend that didn’t make it today”. “This is awful,” he said.

Footage posted on social media revealed gunshots ringing out as officers stormed the bank building. Bank workers reportedly took shelter in the vault.

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Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg victim of previous gun violence

Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg, who was among those detailing the shooting that took place Monday at a bank in the city’s downtown, was once the victim of gun violence.

During Mr Greenberg’s 2022 mayoral campaign, a man who reportedly wanted to prevent his election stormed his campaign office and fired several shots at him.

The then-candidate was not wounded in the attack, though a bullet reportedly grazed his sweater, according to the Associated Press.

The shooter, Quintez Brown, was arrested after he fled the scene. He was running as an Independent for the city’s metro council at he time of the attack.

“I want everyone in the city to know that notwithstanding tragedies like today when multiple people are killed by gun violence, notwithstanding tragedies when individuals are killed by gun violence, our community will continue to come together,” Mr Greenberg said Monday during a press conference after the shooting. “We will find ways to love and support one another and the families and friends who have been directly impacted by these acts of gun violence.”

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 23:00
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ICYMI: Kentucky Gov Andy Beshear chokes up as he says two ‘very close friends’ were killed in Louisville shooting

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear choked up during a press conference after a shooting at Old National Bank in downtown Louisville, Kentucky that left five people dead, including the shooter, and eight people wounded, including two officers.

The Democrat said he had “a very close friend who didn’t make it today, and I have another close friend who didn’t either and one who’s at the hospital that I hope is going to make it through”.

“So when we talk about praying, I hope people will for those that we are hoping can make it through the surgeries that they’re going through. And then we’ve got to do what we have done these last three years after everything – We’ve got to wrap our arms around these families and everybody who needs it,” Mr Beshear said.

Read more:

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 22:45
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Kentucky bank shooting: State has ‘among the worst’ gun laws in US, activists say

The state also lacks a number of gun control measures considered standard for reducing gun violence, including safe storage, background checks for hand guns, assault weapons bans, and “red flag” laws allowing courts to seize guns from dangerous people, according to Everytown.

Read more:

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 22:30
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ICYMI: Connor Sturgeon: Who is the suspected gunman in the Louisville bank shooting?

The suspect accused of killing four people at a bank in Louisville, Kentucky, has been named as Connor Sturgeon.

Sturgeon, 23, allegedly stormed the Old National Bank with an AR-15-style rifle at around 8.30am on Monday before dying at the scene himself when officers arrived.

The alleged shooter exchanged gunfire with police but it was not immediately clear whether he died from officer fire or a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Four others were pronounced dead at the scene and a further nine were injured.

Read more:

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 22:15
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Louisville police share image of rookie officer who was shot in the head responding to mass shooting

The Louisville Police Department shared an image of Nicholas Wilt, 26, who just began his career as a police officer when he was called to respond to a mass shooting in downtown Louisville.

Mr Wilt was shot in the head while police exchanged gunfire with suspected shooter Connor Sturgeon.

Sturgeon was ultimately killed in the exchange. Mr Wilt remains in critical but stable condition at a local hospital.

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 22:00
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Police leave home of mass shooter Connor Sturgeon with bags of evidence

Police reportedly have searched the home of Connor Sturgeon, the man who police say killed four people and wounded nine others during a mass shooting at a bank in downtown Louisville.

Officers were seen leaving Sturgeon’s home with bags of evidence, according to WDRB.

Sturgeon was killed by police at the bank.

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 21:40
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Louisville mass shooter was reportedly going to be fired, source claims

Louisville mass shooter Connor Sturgeon reportedly had learned he was going to be fired from the bank where he carried out an attack on Monday that left four people dead.

Law enforcement sources familiar with the situation told CNN that Sturgeon had learned he was going to be fired.

The source also said that Sturgeon left a note for his mother before he attacked the bank.

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 21:30
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Louisville police said they had ‘no prior engagement’ with Connor Sturgeon

Louisville police confirmed on Monday afternoon that they had “no prior engagement” with Connor Sturgeon, who has been identified as the person who shot and killed four people at a bank in the city’s downtown.

Sturgeon, 23, was an employee at Old National Bank.

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 21:15
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Police officer wounded in Louisville shooting had only been on the job for a few days

A police officer who was in critical condition following the Louisville shooting had only been sworn into the department days before, according to officials.

The LMPD officer, who has not been named by the department, graduated from the academy on 31 March and has a brother still training there, said Metro Councilman Anthony Piagentini.

The 26-year-old officer was shot in the head during a confrontation with the gunman, said Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel, the interim chief of the police department.

He was taken to the hospital and had brain surgery, and remains “in critical but stable condition,” she said.

Read more:

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 21:05
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Local reporting confirms SWAT team searched shooter Connor Sturgeon’s home

Local reports from WLKY confirmed that SWAT units have searched mass shooter Connor Sturgeon’s home in Louisville.

Sturgeon shot and killed four people and wouded nine others at his place of employment, Old National Bank, early Monday morning.

Graig Graziosi10 April 2023 20:55

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2023-04-10 21:45:28Z
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UK-Israeli mother dies after West Bank shooting - BBC

Lucy (left), Rina (centre) and Maya DeeDee family

A British-Israeli woman has died after a suspected Palestinian gun attack on Friday, in which two of her daughters were also killed.

Lucy Dee, 45, had been in a coma since the attack in the occupied West Bank.

Her daughters Rina, 15, and Maia, 20, were buried on Sunday in the settlement of Kfar Etzion, with their father and three surviving siblings present.

The family moved to Israel nine years ago from the UK, where Lucy's husband, Leo, had served as a rabbi.

Thousands of mourners attended the emotionally charged funeral of the sisters, where Rabbi Dee eulogised them.

Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem announced that Lucy (who was also known by her Hebrew name, Leah) Dee had died on Monday morning "despite great and constant efforts".

Speaking hours after his wife's death, Rabbi Dee said: "My beautiful wife, Lucy, and myself tried to raise our children with good values and to do good and bring more good into the world," calling the attack "pure evil".

"Alas, our family of seven is now a family of four", he said.

Lucy, Rina and Maia were shot at as they were driving in the Jordan Valley in the northern West Bank on their way to a family holiday. Their vehicle crashed and the gunmen went up to the car and opened fire on the women at close range, Israeli media quoted investigators as saying.

Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported that 22 bullet casings were found, apparently from a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

Rabbi Dee had been further ahead in a separate car when his sister called him with news of the attack.

He said he tried to call his wife and daughters but they did not answer. He then saw a missed call from Maia from the time of the attack.

He said another daughter who was with him saw a photo posted on Instagram by the driver of a car which passed the attacked car and they recognised one of their suitcases on the back seat of the vehicle.

The emergency services were already at the scene of the attack, near the settlement of Hamra, when he got there.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted that he sent his "heartfelt condolences to the Dee family, on the death of the mother of the family, Leah (Lucy), who was murdered in the severe terror attack in the [Jordan] valley".

Radlett United Synagogue in Hertfordshire, to which the Dees had belonged, said the community was "devastated at the terrible news" of Lucy and her daughters' deaths.

"We and the world have been robbed of their presence, but their light can never be extinguished," it said in a statement.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched a hunt for the perpetrators following the attack, which came at a time of spiralling tensions between Israel and the Palestinians.

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2023-04-10 17:37:00Z
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Netanyahu reverses decision to fire Israel defence minister after protests - The Guardian

As Israel faces a surge in violence on almost every front, the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has reversed his decision to fire the defence minister, Yoav Gallant, for warning that his judicial overhaul was harming the military.

In a televised speech late on Monday, Netanyahu said Gallant would stay in his position, two weeks after he dismissed the minister.

“I decided to put the differences we had behind us,” he said. “Gallant remains in his position and we will continue to work together for the security of the citizens of Israel.”

Gallant welcomed Netanyahu’s move, posting on social media a picture of him with the premier and the message: “We continue together with full power for Israel.”

Gallant’s removal triggered an unprecedented surge of protest against the already unpopular plan to disempower the judiciary as many Israelis reached the conclusion that even their security could be sacrificed for Netanyahu’s personal interests.

But Gallant, seen abroad as a key interlocutor in a government where extremists wield considerable power, never received a formal dismissal letter, remaining in office amid a surge of violence triggered by Israeli police raids on Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque.

In the last week, citizens of the country have been rattled by rocket fire from Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, a roadside shooting that killed three British-Israeli women in the West Bank, and a car ramming in Tel Aviv that killed an Italian tourist and wounded seven other people.

The security crisis has further shaken Netanyahu’s popularity with a poll taken on Sunday showing that only 27% of respondents “rely on the government to handle the wave of terror”.

In his televised address, Netanyahu tried to dispel doubts about his leadership, saying the Israeli air force had struck back hard and that troops would “reach and settle accounts with all the terrorists”.

“I am working with determination and responsibility,” he said. “We will repel the dangers and prevail over our enemies.”

The premier said he was “restoring deterrence” that had allegedly been weakened by the previous government.

Referring to the growing number of army and air force reservists who had joined the protest movement, Netanyahu implied they too were responsible for emboldening Israel’s foes. “Our enemies interpreted the calls to refuse service as weakness,” he said. In fact the reservists had made clear they would still take active combat roles when needed.

According to the poll, only a fifth of the Israeli public approved of the premier’s performance.

The survey of 699 Israelis by a respected pollster, Camil Fuchs, for Channel 13 showed that the Likud party-led coalition would be trounced today by the parties that held power before last November’s elections by a 64 to 46 margin, with 10 mostly Arab legislators not falling in either camp.

The poll pointed to a surge in popularity for former defence minister Benny Gantz and his centre-right National Unity party. National Unity would win 29 seats, Yesh Atid, a centrist party currently heading the opposition, would gain 21 seats and Netanyahu’s Likud party would crash from 32 to 20 seats.

The current coalition has 64 seats, including 14 held by two rightwing extremist parties, Religious Zionism and Jewish Power. Their popularity is also declining, with the poll giving them a combined 11 seats. Polls in late March had also shown the coalition losing power, but the new poll results amounted to an all-out “collapse” for the coalition in the words of Israeli analysts.

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2023-04-10 20:40:00Z
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