Minggu, 28 April 2024

Watch: Biden roasts Trump at correspondents' dinner - BBC.com

US President Joe Biden delivered his annual speech at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner as the country readies for this year's election.

Mr Biden used the traditionally light-hearted occasion to say he was a grown man "running against a 6-year-old", poking fun at his own age and his Republican rival Donald Trump.

The President referred to Mr Trump's legal problems, making fun of the Stormy Daniels hush-money trial.

Mr Trump is accused of trying to cover up a $130,000 (£104,500) payment to porn star Stormy Daniel before he won the presidency in 2016.

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2024-04-28 06:19:55Z
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‘I visited Tenerife’s most notorious town and can see why locals complain so much’ - Express

It’s 1am on the Playa de las Americas strip in Tenerife and the Brits are out in force.

A drunk woman in a mini-skirt stumbles ahead of her friends and collapses on the kerb. As her head rolls back on the concrete the rest of the group catch-up and pull her away from the floor.

It’s just in the nick of time because the place she’d fallen was actually a parking spot and a blindsided driver manoeuvring into the bay avoids a collision by inches.

She’s far from the only one looking worse for wear. 

Across the road in a packed-out bar a man in his 40s runs in circles with his exposed beer gut jiggling, by the wall a young man’s arms flounder as he attempts to stay upright while relieving himself and walking off into the distance a couple sway shoulder to shoulder.

I’m watching the chaos unfold from a spot that overlooks the row of bars and clubs with a notorious reputation for British tourists’ antics. Venturing down into the carnage itself, a more sinister edge to the revelry is revealed.

Like most strips in resorts targeting Brits, club promoters touting for business are quick to approach for business on the main drag. Some are friendly, others a bit too intense as they jostle for attention and quote offers on cocktails.

Single measures don’t exist in this place. The most popular drink for a fiver is a generous glass of house vodka combined with the energy drink Red Bull. Those sinking beers pay even less, at £2-per-pint lager drinkers can get themselves well oiled for less than the cost of 12 first class stamps.

Standing between the bars are men selling nitrous oxide balloons. Their approach to sales is considerably more aggressive. I see one jump into a blonde girl’s face scanning her body from head to toe, as her heavy set boyfriend pushes by and the balloon seller hops around him tapping his shoulders.

She’s far from the only woman to receive male attention bordering on harassment. A middle-aged man is grasping the arms of a girl no older than 21 to shout something in her ear. It takes two friends to pull her from his arms.

The charged atmosphere is intensified by the fact every bar has at least a couple of stag and hen parties, all of them wasted.

They are clearly prized customers and when one group decides to move, they spark a flurry of activity. The strip club promoters are the most keen, sensing a payday.

“Look” one says, gesturing with his right hand to the women who have been brought outside in tight-fitting outfits to entice men into the neon-lit venue. Their weak smiles suggest they’d rather not be paraded on the street.

But it’s not just strippers or hard liquor being pushed, there are also drugs.

As I exit the strip I’m approached by a man in a white tracksuit selling sunglasses, except it turns out that in addition to eyewear he is also flogging cocaine.    

“Do you need something else brother?” he asks me. “I’ve got coke, Charlie. It’s €100 for a gram.”

Escaping his persistent attempts to get me to buy, I make it back to the vantage point where I watched the chaos to find a police car parked up. I wonder who or what they are coming to crack down on and watch with interest when they enter one of the bars with purpose. 

But after a brief conversation with a member of staff they walk off. To be fair most of what was happening isn’t illegal, just unpleasant for the people that call this island home.

I wondered how the locals must feel about all this sleaze being served up on their doorstep and have a new understanding of demands for limits and rules. Nobody wants this where they live, especially in a place that used to be a family destination.

There was little surprise therefore that in the days which followed I heard how young women avoid certain parts of the island to stay safe and have in the most extreme cases chosen to live in isolation

Even the Brits on holiday can understand why the Canarians might object to the mayhem.

Whether this month's huge protests will change any of this remains to be seen because as off-putting as seedy strips might be, they are also very lucrative. 

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2024-04-28 06:00:00Z
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Sabtu, 27 April 2024

Ukraine-Russia war: Kyiv 'hits airfield and oil depots' in drone attack - The Independent

Related video: Congress passes Ukraine aid bill

Ukraine has targeted oil refineries and a military airfield in a Russian region bordering annexed Crimea, officials said, as Russia claimed its air defence systems had intercepted more than 60 drones in the region.

In a rare comment on strikes on Russian soil, Ukraine’s energy ministry said two oil refineries in the Krasnodar region had been hit by drones, while an intelligence source told Reuters that the Kushchevsk military airfield, which lies in the same region, was also targeted.

Meanwhile, Russia launched its own barrage of missiles at Ukrainian power facilities, hitting locations in the centre and western regions of Dnipropetrovsk, Lviv and Ivano-Frankivsk, damaging equipment and injuring at least one energy worker, officials said.

It came as US defence secretary Lloyd Austin said Washington was “rushing” to provide fresh arms supplies to Ukraine, especially Patriot air defence missiles and artillery ammunition, as it finalised a new $6bn aid package for Kyiv.

Volodymyr Zelensky had pleaded with the US and other allies to send more Patriots, warning that at least seven more systems were needed.

1714232363

Russia claims attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure are retaliation

The Russian defence ministry has claimed that a series of its forces’ recent attacks on Ukraian infrastructure and other targets were a response to Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s own facilities.

Russia – which has targeted Ukrainian criticial infrastructure since the early days of its invasion – sad its forces had carried out 35 strikes in the last week against Ukrainian energy facilities, defence factories, railway infrastructure, air defences, and ammunition stocks.

It clamed these were “in response to attempts by the Kyiv regime to damage Russian energy and industrial facilities”, and had been carried out using sea- and air-launched long-range precision weapons, including Kinzhal hypersonic missiles and drones.

The ministry also said it had also targeted and hit Ukrainian troop formations as well as what it described as foreign mercenaries.

Ukraine has systematically targeted Russian oil refineries and other facilities in drone attacks in recent weeks, ignoring US requests not to do so.

Ukrainian officials said Russian missiles had pounded power facilities in central and western Ukraine on Saturday, increasing pressure on the ailing energy system as the country faces a shortage of air defences despite a breakthrough in US military aid.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 16:39
1714229773

Another suspect in Moscow concert hall attack detained

Russian authorities have detained another suspect as an accomplice in the attack by gunmen on a suburban Moscow concert hall that killed 144 people in March, Moscow City Courts said.

Dzhumokhon Kurbonov, a citizen of Tajikistan, is accused of providing the attackers with means of communication and financing. The judge at Moscow’s Basmanny District Court ruled that Kurbonov would be kept in custody until May 22 pending investigation and trial.

Russian state news agency RIA Novosti said Kurbonov was reportedly detained on April 11 for 15 days on the administrative charge of petty hooliganism.

Independent Russian media outlet Mediazona noted that this is a common practice used by Russian security forces to hold a person in custody while a criminal case is prepared against them.

Twelve defendants have been arrested in the case, including four who allegedly carried out the March 22 attack at the Crocus City Hall concert venue, according to RIA Novosti.

Reuters27 April 2024 15:56
1714228093

Government sets out details of military aid package

The government has set out details of what the military aid package announced by Rishi Sunak this week will include.

“We will provide over 400 vehicles to Ukraine, consisting of 160 protected mobility Husky vehicles; 162 armoured vehicles comprised of further AS90 155mm artillery guns and Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked); and 78 all-terrain vehicles made up of Bv-206 and Viking,” defence minister James Cartlidge told Labour’s John Healey.

“These will provide much needed additional artillery support, reconnaissance capabilities, and amphibious mobility to support development of the Ukrainian marine corps.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 15:28
1714226413

Russia has suffered 450,000 casualties since outset of invasion, MoD estimates

Britain’s Ministry of Defence has claimed that Russia has suffered around 450,000 casualties since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Responding to a parliamentary question by Labour, armed forces minister Leo Dochery said: “We estimate that approximately 450,000 Russian military personnel have been killed or wounded, and tens of thousands more have already deserted since the start of the conflict.

“The number of personnel killed serving in Russian private military companies (PMCs) is not clear.

“We also estimate that over 10,000 Russian armoured vehicles, including nearly 3,000 main battle tanks, 109 fixed wing aircraft, 136 helicopters, 346 unmanned aerial vehicles, 23 naval vessels of all classes, and over 1,500 artillery systems of all types have been destroyed, abandoned, or captured by Ukraine since the start of the conflict.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 15:00
1714224673

ICYMI: Europe is ‘too slow and lacks ambition’ in the face of global threats, says Macron

Emmanuel Macron has urged Europe to improve its defences and cut red tape as it faces existential threats from Russian aggression and American isolationism.

In a nearly two-hour speech at the Sorbonne University in Paris, Mr Macron claimed the 27-member European Union (EU) was “too slow and lacks ambition” before demanding that the bloc does not become a “vassal of the United States”.

“Our Europe is mortal. It could die,” the French president said. “We are not equipped to face the risks. We must produce more, we must produce faster and we must produce as Europeans.”

My colleague Tom Watling has the full report:

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 14:31
1714222935

Hackers claim to have infiltrated Belarus' main security service

A Belarusian hacker activist group claims to have infiltrated the network of the country’s main KGB security agency and accessed personnel files of over 8,600 employees of the organization, which still goes under its Soviet name.

The authorities have not commented on the claim, but the website of the Belarusian KGB was opening with an empty page on Friday that said it was “in the process of development”.

Seeking to back up its claim, the Belarusian Cyber-Partisans group published a list of the website’s administrators, its database and server logs on its page in the messaging app Telegram.

Group coordinator Yuliana Shametavets told the Associated Press from New York that the attack on the KGB “was a response” to the agency’s chief Ivan Tertel, who publicly accused the group this week of plotting attacks on the country’s critical infrastructure, including a nuclear power plant.

“The KGB is carrying out the largest political repressions in the history of the country and must answer for it,” said Shametavets. “We work to save the lives of Belarusians, and not to destroy them, like the repressive Belarusian special services do.”

Yuras Karmanau, AP27 April 2024 14:02
1714221313

Zelensky issues new appeal for air defences

Volodymyr Zelensky has issued a new appeal for air defences and fast weapons deliveries after yet another series of Russian strikes on the Ukrainian energy sector.

The Ukrainian president said his country needed sufficient quantities of air defence and other weapons to protect its cities and prevail on the frontline.

“Terror should always lose, and anyone who helps us stand against Russian terror is a true defender of life,” Mr Zelensky said.

(AFP via Getty Images)
Andy Gregory27 April 2024 13:35
1714217884

Full report: Russian court places Forbes journalist under house arrest

A Russian court has placed a journalist from the local edition of US magazine Forbes under house arrest, reports my colleague Arpan Rai.

Sergei Mingazov was detained earlier on Friday on suspicion of spreading false information about the Russian army, according to the magazine.

Vladimir Torkonyak, an official from the Khabarovsk Regional Court said that the 55-year-old journalist was placed under house arrest for spreading “fake news about the Russian army” through a two-year-old post on a Telegram channel, reported Russia’s state-owned RIA news agency.

His lawyer, Konstantin Bubon, said the social media post was about the Russian atrocities in Ukraine’s Bucha where the invading forces were accused of murdering and massacring civilians before abandoning the city in April 2022.

“In short, for reposting a publication about the events in Bucha” on a Telegram channel, the lawyer wrote.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 12:38
1714216140

Kremlin responds to Blinken’s comments about impact of Chinese dual-use goods on Ukraine war

The Kremlin has shrugged off a trip to China by US secretary of state Antony Blinken during which he raised concerns about Chinese support for Russia’s military.

Mr Blinken raised concerns on Friday about China’s support for Russia’s military. Despite its “no limits” partnership with Moscow, China has steered clear of providing arms for Russia’s war in Ukraine, but Mr Blinken said its supply of so-called dual-use goods was “having a material effect in Ukraine.”

China has said it has not provided weaponry to any party and is “not a producer of or party involved in the Ukraine crisis”. However, it says that normal trade between China and Russia should not be interrupted or restricted.

Asked about Mr Blinken’s trip and the US pressure on China, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov insisted Moscow and Beijing would continue to develop their own ties, saying: “China is an absolutely sovereign state, a powerful state that is able to defend and protect its interests.

“At the same time, it [China] is our close partner. We will further develop our co-operation.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 12:09
1714215060

Ukraine shot down 21 of 34 missiles in overnight attack, Kyiv claims

Ukraine’s air defence shot down 21 of 34 Russian missiles fired in an overnight attack, the commander of the Ukrainian air force said on Saturday.

Mykola Oleschuk said Ukrainian fighter planes, air defence missile units, mobile fire groups and means of radio-electronic warfare were involved in repelling the Russian missile strikes.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 11:51

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2024-04-27 19:01:13Z
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Ukraine-Russia war: Kyiv 'hits airfield and oil depots' in drone attack - The Independent

Related video: Congress passes Ukraine aid bill

Ukraine has targeted oil refineries and a military airfield in a Russian region bordering annexed Crimea, officials said, as Russia claimed its air defence systems had intercepted more than 60 drones in the region.

In a rare comment on strikes on Russian soil, Ukraine’s energy ministry said two oil refineries in the Krasnodar region had been hit by drones, while an intelligence source told Reuters that the Kushchevsk military airfield, which lies in the same region, was also targeted.

Meanwhile, Russia launched its own barrage of missiles at Ukrainian power facilities, hitting locations in the centre and western regions of Dnipropetrovsk, Lviv and Ivano-Frankivsk, damaging equipment and injuring at least one energy worker, officials said.

It came as US defence secretary Lloyd Austin said Washington was “rushing” to provide fresh arms supplies to Ukraine, especially Patriot air defence missiles and artillery ammunition, as it finalised a new $6bn aid package for Kyiv.

Volodymyr Zelensky had pleaded with the US and other allies to send more Patriots, warning that at least seven more systems were needed.

1714244473

US intelligence believes Putin probably didn’t order his rival Navalny’s killing, report claims

US intelligence agencies are said to have concluded that Vladimir Putin probably did not directly order the killing of his most prominent critic Alexei Navalny, who suddenly died in his Arctic prison cell in February.

According to The Wall Street Journal, US intelligence services believe Putin most likely did not choose for the killing to be carried out or the date on which it took place.

While the findings by US intelligence agencies did not “dispute Putin’s culpability” for his rival’s death – given the conditions Mr Navalny was being held in and the constant harassment he had faced – the report said it is believed that he “probably did not order it at that moment”.

These findings have been accepted within the intelligence community and shared across several wings of intelligence in Washington, including the CIA, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and the State Department’s intelligence unit, the paper reported, citing people aware of the matter.

My colleague Arpan Rai has the full report:

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 20:01
1714240933

Macron to spend longer in Germany than planned, sources say

Emmanuel Macron will visit Germany in May and will spend more days than planned with chancellor Olaf Scholz, government sources have told Reuters, in a sign of their ambition to bring more unity to EU relations.

Mr Macron’s previously announced state visit from 26-28 May could be followed by another trip to Germany the next month as well, the sources said, in a possible sign that Franco-German relations remain strong, despite reports of deep disagreement between the two leaders.

Although both leaders show support for Ukraine against the Russian invasion, his approaches on how to help the country differ, with Germany being more cautious about weapon deliveries or sending troops.

But at an EU summit last week, Mr Macron and Mr Scholz said they wanted to jointly implement an EU capital markets union and reduce bureaucracy in the single market.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 19:02
1714237753

Moscow may seize private US assets in Russia if US seizes frozen reserves, says Putin ally

Russia may respond to any US confiscation of its currency reserves frozen in the West by seizing the assets, including property and cash, of US citizens and investors in Russia, former president Dmitry Medvedev has threatened.

The US House of Representatives has passed a bill allowing the Biden administration to confiscate Russian assets held in American banks and transfer them to Ukraine, something the Kremlin has said would be illegal and trigger retaliation.

In response to Russia’s war in Ukraine, the US and its allies prohibited transactions with Russia’s central bank and finance ministry and blocked about $300bn of sovereign Russian assets in the West, most of which are in European not American financial institutions. The G7 is also looking at what it may be able to do around the frozen Russian assets.

Mr Medvedev, the deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, said on Saturday that Russia would not be able to retaliate in kind against any US seizure of its reserves.

“The reason is clear - we do not have a significant amount of American state property, including money, rights and other US assets. Therefore, the answer can only be asymmetrical. It is not a fact that it will be any less painful,” Mr Medvedev said.

“We are talking about the foreclosure, for example by a court decision, on the property of private individuals located in the jurisdiction of Russia (money, real estate and movable property in kind, property rights).”

“Yes, this is a complex story, since these individuals usually acted as investors in the Russian economy,” Medvedev said. “And we guaranteed them the inviolability of their private property rights. But the unexpected happened - their state declared a hybrid war on us. This must be answered.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 18:09
1714234213

‘Staggering’ Russian casualties estimate suggests Moscow has lost double its initial invasion force

“Staggering” new British government estimates claiming Russia may have suffered 450,000 casualties since invading Ukraine would suggest Moscow has lost double the number of troops in its initial invasion force, a leading expert notes.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 17:10
1714232363

Russia claims attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure are retaliation

The Russian defence ministry has claimed that a series of its forces’ recent attacks on Ukraian infrastructure and other targets were a response to Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s own facilities.

Russia – which has targeted Ukrainian criticial infrastructure since the early days of its invasion – sad its forces had carried out 35 strikes in the last week against Ukrainian energy facilities, defence factories, railway infrastructure, air defences, and ammunition stocks.

It clamed these were “in response to attempts by the Kyiv regime to damage Russian energy and industrial facilities”, and had been carried out using sea- and air-launched long-range precision weapons, including Kinzhal hypersonic missiles and drones.

The ministry also said it had also targeted and hit Ukrainian troop formations as well as what it described as foreign mercenaries.

Ukraine has systematically targeted Russian oil refineries and other facilities in drone attacks in recent weeks, ignoring US requests not to do so.

Ukrainian officials said Russian missiles had pounded power facilities in central and western Ukraine on Saturday, increasing pressure on the ailing energy system as the country faces a shortage of air defences despite a breakthrough in US military aid.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 16:39
1714229773

Another suspect in Moscow concert hall attack detained

Russian authorities have detained another suspect as an accomplice in the attack by gunmen on a suburban Moscow concert hall that killed 144 people in March, Moscow City Courts said.

Dzhumokhon Kurbonov, a citizen of Tajikistan, is accused of providing the attackers with means of communication and financing. The judge at Moscow’s Basmanny District Court ruled that Kurbonov would be kept in custody until May 22 pending investigation and trial.

Russian state news agency RIA Novosti said Kurbonov was reportedly detained on April 11 for 15 days on the administrative charge of petty hooliganism.

Independent Russian media outlet Mediazona noted that this is a common practice used by Russian security forces to hold a person in custody while a criminal case is prepared against them.

Twelve defendants have been arrested in the case, including four who allegedly carried out the March 22 attack at the Crocus City Hall concert venue, according to RIA Novosti.

Reuters27 April 2024 15:56
1714228093

Government sets out details of military aid package

The government has set out details of what the military aid package announced by Rishi Sunak this week will include.

“We will provide over 400 vehicles to Ukraine, consisting of 160 protected mobility Husky vehicles; 162 armoured vehicles comprised of further AS90 155mm artillery guns and Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked); and 78 all-terrain vehicles made up of Bv-206 and Viking,” defence minister James Cartlidge told Labour’s John Healey.

“These will provide much needed additional artillery support, reconnaissance capabilities, and amphibious mobility to support development of the Ukrainian marine corps.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 15:28
1714226413

Russia has suffered 450,000 casualties since outset of invasion, MoD estimates

Britain’s Ministry of Defence has claimed that Russia has suffered around 450,000 casualties since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Responding to a parliamentary question by Labour, armed forces minister Leo Dochery said: “We estimate that approximately 450,000 Russian military personnel have been killed or wounded, and tens of thousands more have already deserted since the start of the conflict.

“The number of personnel killed serving in Russian private military companies (PMCs) is not clear.

“We also estimate that over 10,000 Russian armoured vehicles, including nearly 3,000 main battle tanks, 109 fixed wing aircraft, 136 helicopters, 346 unmanned aerial vehicles, 23 naval vessels of all classes, and over 1,500 artillery systems of all types have been destroyed, abandoned, or captured by Ukraine since the start of the conflict.”

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 15:00
1714224673

ICYMI: Europe is ‘too slow and lacks ambition’ in the face of global threats, says Macron

Emmanuel Macron has urged Europe to improve its defences and cut red tape as it faces existential threats from Russian aggression and American isolationism.

In a nearly two-hour speech at the Sorbonne University in Paris, Mr Macron claimed the 27-member European Union (EU) was “too slow and lacks ambition” before demanding that the bloc does not become a “vassal of the United States”.

“Our Europe is mortal. It could die,” the French president said. “We are not equipped to face the risks. We must produce more, we must produce faster and we must produce as Europeans.”

My colleague Tom Watling has the full report:

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 14:31
1714222935

Hackers claim to have infiltrated Belarus' main security service

A Belarusian hacker activist group claims to have infiltrated the network of the country’s main KGB security agency and accessed personnel files of over 8,600 employees of the organization, which still goes under its Soviet name.

The authorities have not commented on the claim, but the website of the Belarusian KGB was opening with an empty page on Friday that said it was “in the process of development”.

Seeking to back up its claim, the Belarusian Cyber-Partisans group published a list of the website’s administrators, its database and server logs on its page in the messaging app Telegram.

Group coordinator Yuliana Shametavets told the Associated Press from New York that the attack on the KGB “was a response” to the agency’s chief Ivan Tertel, who publicly accused the group this week of plotting attacks on the country’s critical infrastructure, including a nuclear power plant.

“The KGB is carrying out the largest political repressions in the history of the country and must answer for it,” said Shametavets. “We work to save the lives of Belarusians, and not to destroy them, like the repressive Belarusian special services do.”

Yuras Karmanau, AP27 April 2024 14:02

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2024-04-27 18:02:13Z
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Pro-Palestine student protests spread in second week of demonstrations - Al Jazeera English

Pro-Palestinian demonstrations continue in universities across the United States, as they also spread to schools in Europe and Australia.

In the second week of protests calling for a ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza, which has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, thousands of students are calling on dozens of universities to divest from Israel.

Some universities have been forced to cancel their graduation ceremonies, while others have seen entire buildings occupied by protesting students.

One of the latest to join the movement is The City University of New York (CUNY), where hundreds of students have set up an encampment on campus with banners with slogans like “No More Investment in Apartheid”.

Gabby Aossey, a student organiser at the CUNY protest told Al Jazeera the mobilisation of young pro-Palestinian people in the US is “beautiful to see”.

“Young people are really starting to show up and demand that schools are held accountable for their relationship with the Israeli colonisation,” Aossey said.

Across the US, university leaders have tried, and largely failed, to quell the demonstrations. The police have intervened violently, with videos emerging from different states showing hundreds of students – and even faculty members – being forcefully arrested.

Early on Saturday, police in riot gear cleared an encampment on the campus of Northeastern University in Boston. Several dozen students shouted and booed at them from a distance, but the scene was otherwise not confrontational.

The school said in a statement that the demonstration, which began two days ago, had become “infiltrated by professional organisers” with no affiliation to the school and protesters had used anti-Semitic slurs.

“We cannot tolerate this kind of hate on our campus,” the statement posted on the social media platform X said.

At Columbia University, where more than 100 pro-Palestinian activists were arrested by armed police officers on campus about a week ago, university leaders said in a statement on Friday that if the university calls the New York Police Department again, it would “further inflame what is happening on campus”.

Some university leaders and state officials have strongly condemned the protests, calling them “anti-Semitic”.

Demonstrators reject the accusation, with many Jewish activists and some Orthodox Jews joining the ranks.

“As a child of Holocaust survivors, it disturbs me to my core to see my own people perpetrating something that we’ve been through,” Jewish antiwar protester Sam Koprak told Al Jazeera at a campus gathering.

‘End complicity with genocide’

The protests, which have sprouted all around the globe in the near seven-month period since the start of the war on Gaza, continue to spread this week outside the US as well.

In Berlin, activists set up a camp in front of parliament to demand the German government stop exporting arms to Israel. At the renowned Sciences Po university in the French capital Paris, protesters on Friday blockaded a central campus building, forcing classes to be held online.

The latest pro-Palestine rally in Sweden on Saturday saw people marching in the streets to chants of “Free Palestine” and “Boycott Israel”.

Hundreds gathered on Saturday afternoon in central London in solidarity with Palestinians, with a smaller group organising a pro-Israel event.

“People are gathering here on Parliament Square just outside the houses of parliament for the latest in a series of very major protests in the heart of London,” said Al Jazeera’s Harry Fawcett, reporting from London.

Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, an organiser of the march, said he expected hundreds of thousands to attend from across the United Kingdom.

“Once again, we are delivering a double message. One is to the Palestinian people, a message of solidarity. We see you, we hear you, we stand with you,” he said.

The second message, Jamal said, is addressed to the British political establishment “to end their complicity with Israel’s genocide against Palestinian people”.

Jamal dismissed critics saying that protests have been anti-Semitic.

“This tactic of conflating anti-Semitism with legitimate criticism of the State of Israel is a very familiar one, and is used globally by Israel to silence those who are advocating for Palestinian rights,” he said.

Meanwhile, Rina Shah, a Washington-based political strategist and former senior congressional aide, said protests in US universities are a display of democracy in action, a welcome sight in an election year marked by concerns of voter apathy chiefly due to Israel’s war on Gaza.

“So when I see a movement like this of students taking peaceful, non-violent action and expressing their concern about the US government backing of Israel, of where our tax money is going, I think that’s extremely healthy,” she told Al Jazeera.

“These students are out there concerned about America’s role in backing [Israeli Prime Minister] Benjamin Netanyahu. On the one hand, we are supplying weapons and funds to do what he wants to do in Gaza, while on the other we are sending humanitarian aid to Gaza. This is the hypocrisy these students are concerned about.”

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Tourist fined for getting too close to Walrus in Norway - Sky News

A tourist has been fined NOK 12,500 Norwegian Kroner (£900) for approaching a walrus in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard.

The authorities said the man went out onto an ice floe on Wednesday and "disturbed a walrus that was lying on the ice".

They said members of the public saw him approach the mammal and reported him to the local governor, and that "parts of the incident were also observed by the governor's employees".

There is a law in Svalbard which stipulates people must conduct themselves in a way which does not lead to unnecessary disturbance of wildlife.

The tourist was subsequently brought to the governor's office, where he accepted the fine.

Read more:
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"The governor encourages everyone to keep a good distance from walruses so that they are not disturbed and so that no danger to people occur," his office said in a statement.

Walruses were hunted practically to extinction in the Svalbard Archipelago up until they were protected by law in 1952, according to the government's Norwegian Polar Institute.

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Despite decades of protection, the number of walruses in the region is still low and they remain on the Norwegian National Red List, which identifies species at risk of going extinct in Norway.

There will be new rules for motor traffic at sea from next year specifically aimed at protecting walruses, where it will be illegal to knowingly go within 150 metres of them. The speed limit will be five knots for any motor traffic within 300 metres of them.

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Ukraine-Russia war: US 'rushing' new Patriot missiles to Kyiv, Pentagon says - The Independent

Related video: Congress passes Ukraine aid bill

The Pentagon is “rushing” to provide fresh arms supplies to Ukraine, especially Patriot air defence missiles and artillery ammunition, as it finalised a new $6bn aid package for Kyiv.

The US is working with allies “rushing Ukraine the capabilities to meet its urgent battlefield needs and helping Ukraine to build the future force to stave off and deter Russian aggression over the longer term,” US defence secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters, after a virtual meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group, calling the Russian invasion of Ukraine “Putin’s war of choice”.

He said the group – a coalition of about 50 countries – “pushed especially hard today to rush in more air defence systems and Interceptors”. This is the single largest assistance package Joe Biden’s administration has provided.

The announcement came shortly after Volodymyr Zelensky pleaded with the US and other allies to send Ukraine more Patriot missiles, saying at least seven more systems were needed.

“We urgently need Patriot systems and missiles for them,” he told the Pentagon-led meeting. “This is what can and should save lives right now.”

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Kyiv launches attacks on two Russian oil refineries

Russia said its air defence systems had intercepted more than 60 Ukrainian drones over the southern Krasnodar region, which lies to the east of annexed Crimea.

While Ukrainian officials typically decline to comment on attacks on Russian soil, the Ukrainian energy ministry said that two oil refineries in the Krasnodar region had been hit by drones.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 10:21
1714208340

Xi Jinping meets Antony Blinken for talks on Ukraine war and AI in Beijing

Xi Jinping meets Antony Blinken for talks on Ukraine war and AI in Beijing
Andy Gregory27 April 2024 09:59
1714207200

Forbes journalist placed under house arrest

A Russian court has ordered a journalist for the Russian edition of Forbes to be placed under house arrest, Russia’s state-owned RIA news agency reported on Saturday.

Sergei Mingazov was detained on Friday on suspicion of spreading false information about the Russian army, his magazine said at the time.

Such allegations have been used to fuel a clampdown on reporting which challenges the Kremlin narrative of Vladimir Putin’s war, initially termed a “special military operation”, since Russian authorities introduced harsh new laws shortly after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 09:40
1714206144

Russia launches attacks on Ukrainian power facilities

Russia has launched a barrage of missiles at Ukrainian power facilities, hitting locations in the centre and west of the country, damaging equipment and injuring at least one energy worker, officials said.

Ukrainian energy minister German Galushchenko said the Russian strikes targeted the Dnipropetrovsk region in central Ukraine and the western regions of Lviv and Ivano-Frankivsk.

DTEK, Ukraine’s largest private energy company, said its four thermal power stations were hit and Mr Galushchenko said that one energy worker had been injured.

“The enemy again massively shelled the Ukrainian energy facilities,” DTEK said. “The company’s equipment was seriously damaged. At this very moment, energy workers are trying to eliminate the consequences of the attack.”

The commander of the Ukrainian air force said Russia had launched combined overnight strikes using a total of 34 cruise and ballistic missiles of which Ukrainian air defence shot down 21.

Since 22 March, Russian forces have ramped up their bombardments of the Ukrainian power sector, attacking thermal and hydropower stations and other energy infrastructure almost daily. Ukraine has lost about 80 per cent of its thermal generation and about 35 per cent of its hydropower capacity, officials said.

Andy Gregory27 April 2024 09:22
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Spend more on Nato to fight Putin, Sunak tells EU leaders after his £75bn defence boost

He also defended what he called “entirely reasonable” calls from US counterparts for greater European defence spending.

Read more here:

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 09:10
1714204458

Ukrainian air defence downs 21 of 34 Russian missiles

Ukraine’s air defence shot down 21 of 34 Russian missiles fired in an overnight attack, the commander of the Ukrainian air force said today.

Mykola Oleschuk said Ukrainian fighter planes, air defence missile units, mobile fire groups and means of radio-electronic warfare were involved in repelling the Russian missile strikes.

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 08:54
1714202154

The US will give $61bn to Ukraine. What does it mean for the war?

The new $61bn (£49bn) US aid package for Ukraine approved by Congress will undoubtedly improve the country’s battlefield position. Stocks of ammunition from US bases in Poland and Germany can now be shipped quickly to existing Ukrainian forces and allow newly mobilised troops to be equipped.

Critics of Ukraine’s mobilisation law, recently passed by the parliament in Kyiv, argued it made little sense to draft more men if there were no weapons to arm them: now that concern can be discarded.

The US package includes weapons Ukraine has long sought after and which can make a significant difference in the war, like long-range ATACMS missiles. These will improve Volodymyr Zelensky’s capability to threaten and destroy Russian military targets in occupied Crimea, forcing Russia to withdraw its equipment, enhancing Black Sea security.

The US vote also provides an important boost to morale, restoring hope that Western partners are delivering on their promises and sending a powerful signal to Russia.

Read more here:

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 08:15
1714200354

Ukrainian duo heads to the Eurovision Song Contest with a message: We're still here

Even amid war, Ukraine finds time for the glittery, pop-filled Eurovision Song Contest. Perhaps now even more than ever.

Ukraine’s entrants in the pan-continental music competition — the female duo of rapper alyona alyona and singer Jerry Heil — set off from Kyiv for the competition on Thursday. In wartime, that means a long train journey to Poland, from where they will travel on to next month’s competition in Malmö, Sweden.

“We need to be visible for the world,” Ms Heil said at Kyiv train station before her departure. “We need to show that even now, during the war, our culture is developing, and that Ukrainian music is something waiting for the world” to discover.

Read more here:

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 07:45
1714198554

Russia files hundreds of drone patents as ‘global arms race’ ramps up

Drone patents have soared across the world amid a “new arms race” as the technology is applied increasingly on the battlefield, experts have warned.

Data from the World Intellectual Property Office (WIPO) showed that patents filed for technology relating to drones surged by 16 per cent between 2022 and 2023. This represented an increase from 16,800 in 2022 to 19,700 in 2023 – with China, Russia and the US among the top five countries developing the technology.

Marcel Plichta, a former analyst at the US Department of Defense, told The Independent that the scramble for patents marks a new global arms race for a new kind of warfare.

He said: “This is part of a new global arms race. It’s different to a more traditional arms race of tanks and rifles, and is spurred on much more by the tech sector – especially in Ukraine and Russia, where this sort of technology is being developed to get around attrition warfare, where it is difficult to make any real sort of progress.

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 07:15
1714196754

Ukraine’s farm minister is the latest corruption suspect

A Ukrainian court ordered the detention of the country’s farm minister in the latest high-profile corruption investigation, while Kyiv security officials assessed how they can recover lost battlefield momentum in the war against Russia.

Ukraine’s High Anti-Corruption Court ruled that agriculture minister Oleksandr Solskyi should be held in custody for 60 days, but he was released after paying bail of 75 million hryvnias ($1.77m), a statement said.

Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau suspects Solskyi headed an organized crime group that between 2017 and 2021 unlawfully obtained land worth 291 million hryvnias ($6.85m) and attempted to obtain other land worth 190 million hryvnias ($4.47m).

Read more here:

Arpan Rai27 April 2024 06:45

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