Jumat, 17 Mei 2024

No genocide taking place in Gaza, Israel tells UN’s top court – as it happened - The Guardian

Israel on Friday defended the military necessity of its Gaza offensive at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) after South Africa asked judges to order it to halt operations in Rafah and completely withdraw from the Palestinian territory.

Reuters reports that Israeli justice ministry official Gilad Noam called South Africa’s case, which accuses Israel of violating the genocide convention, “completely divorced from facts and circumstances”.

According to Reuters, before Israel’s presentation at the ICJ, several dozen pro-Israeli protesters gathered outside, displaying photographs of hostages taken by Hamas on 7 October and demanding their release.

People demonstrate in support of Israel outside the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague on Friday.

On Thursday, South Africa’s ambassador to the Netherlands, Vusimuzi Madonsela, requested the court to order Israel to “immediately, totally and unconditionally, withdraw the Israeli army from the entirety of the Gaza Strip.”

The South African legal team framed the Israeli military operation as part of a genocidal plan aimed at bringing about the destruction of the Palestinian people.

In past rulings, the court has rejected Israel’s demands to dismiss the case and ordered it to prevent acts of genocide against the Palestinians, while stopping short of ordering it to halt the assault.

On Friday Noam told the ICJ that there is a “tragic war going on but no genocide”. “This war, like all wars, is tragic. For Israelis and Palestinians and it has exacted a terrible human price but it is not genocide,” he said.

It has just gone 5pm in Gaza and in Tel Aviv. We will be closing this blog soon, but you can stay up to date on the Guardian’s Middle East coverage here.

Here is a recap of the latest developments:

  • Israel on Friday defended the military necessity of its Gaza offensive at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) after South Africa asked judges to order it to halt operations in Rafah and completely withdraw from the Palestinian territory. Israeli justice ministry official Gilad Noam called South Africa’s case, which accuses Israel of violating the genocide convention, “completely divorced from facts and circumstances”. On Friday Noam told the ICJ that “this war, like all wars, is tragic … it has exacted a terrible human price but it is not genocide”. This week’s hearings focused only on issuing emergency measures and decision on the request is expected next week.

  • Noam told the ICJ hearing that South Africa’s charge of genocide was “an obscene exploitation of the most sacred convention,” referring to the international treaty banning genocide, agreed after the Holocaust in the second world war. Noam said that Israel’s military operations were not aimed at civilians, but at Hamas terrorists using Rafah as a stronghold, who have tunnel systems which could be used to smuggle hostages and militants out of Gaza.

  • Hearings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) were briefly interrupted on Friday by a protester who called out “liars” as an Israeli official was presenting arguments. Reuters reported that a woman was seen being removed by court security guards.

  • Before Israel’s presentation at the ICJ, several dozen pro-Israeli protesters gathered outside, displaying photographs of hostages taken by Hamas on 7 October and demanding their release.

  • Israel must comply with international law in Gaza and address the devastating humanitarian crisis there, a group of western nations wrote in a letter to the Israeli government seen by Reuters on Friday. All countries belonging to the G7, apart from the US, signed the letter, along with Australia, South Korea, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland.

  • Israeli forces battled Hamas fighters in the narrow alleyways of Jabalia in northern Gaza on Friday in some of the fiercest engagements since they returned to the area a week ago, while in the south militants attacked tanks massing around Rafah. Residents told Reuters that Israeli armour had thrust as far as the market at the heart of Jabalia, the largest of Gaza’s eight historic refugee camps, and that bulldozers were demolishing homes and shops in the path of the advance.

  • The US military said trucks carrying humanitarian assistance had started moving ashore from a temporary pier in Gaza on Friday morning. The US Central Command (Centcom) said no US troops went ashore in Gaza.

Trucks in the Nuseirat area of Gaza wait to transport aid supplies to be delivered through the temporary port, on Friday.
  • Israeli settlers attacked and burned a truck in the occupied West Bank overnight on Thursday, injuring the driver, the Israeli military said. Troops who arrived to separate the settlers from the Israeli driver were attacked and three soldiers were slightly hurt, the military said. Israel’s Kan public radio reported that the protesters believed the truck was carrying aid supplies to Gaza but the military said the truck was not.

  • At least 35,303 Palestinians have been killed and 79,261 have been injured in Israel’s military offensive on Gaza since 7 October, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Friday. The Hamas-run health ministry does not distinguish between combatants and non-combatants.

  • Spain has refused permission for a ship carrying arms to Israel to dock at a Spanish port, its foreign minister, José Manuel Albares, said on Thursday. “This is the first time we have done this because it is the first time we have detected a ship carrying a shipment of arms to Israel that wants to call at a Spanish port,” he told reporters in Brussels.

  • Deir al-Balah is “now unbearably crowded” as Palestinians seek refuge from Rafah, said the UN agency for Palestine refugees (Unrwa) on Friday. In a social media post on X, Unrwa said more than 630,000 people have been forced to flee Rafah since Israel’s military offensive on the area started on the 6 May. It said that many Palestinians had “sought refuge” in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, and warned of “dire conditions”.

  • Israeli airstrikes on Friday hit an area of southern Lebanon far from the border killing an adult and two children, according to Lebanese official media. Hezbollah announced a fighter from Najjariyeh had died, while Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said two Syrian children were killed in the Najjariyeh strike, identifying them as Osama and Hani al-Khaled.

Smoke billows during Israeli bombardment over the Lebanese village of Najjariyeh on Friday, in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel.
  • Staff at the Kuwaiti Speciality hospital in Rafah said they fear a full-scale advance into the southern Gaza city by Israel would produce a crush of new patients that would overwhelm exhausted doctors, who already complain of shortages of medicine and proper equipment.

  • Thailand’s prime minister Srettha Thavisin said he was “deeply saddened” by the deaths of two Thai nationals who were killed in the 7 October attack on Israel. It had previously been believed the men, named as Sonthaya Oakkharasri and Sudthisak Rinthalak, were alive and being held among hostages in the Gaza Strip.

  • Belgium’s University of Ghent is severing ties with three Israeli educational or research institutions which it says no longer align with its human rights policy. The university’s rector Rik Van de Walle, said in a statement that ties were being cut with Holon Institute of Technology, MIGAL Galilee Research Institute, and the Volcani Center, which carries out agricultural research.

  • Yemen’s Houthis said they downed a US MQ9 drone on Thursday evening over the south-eastern province of Maareb, the group’s military spokesperson said on Friday. The Iran-aligned group said they would release images and videos to support their claim and added that they had targeted the drone using a locally made surface to air missile.

  • Pro-Palestine protesters and University of Melbourne administrators remain in a deadlock despite a warning that police could be called to enter the campus at any time. After a meeting held between a handful of University of Melbourne student protesters and two university executives on Friday afternoon, the activists said no resolution was reached.

  • Monash University on Friday said the student encampment on its Clayton campus, in Melbourne’s south-east, had ended, while the University of Queensland has signalled it aims for its pro-Palestine camps to end.

  • The Palestine Football Association (PFA) has called for the “immediate” suspension of Israel from Fifa, according to the Times of Israel. The Israeli online newspaper reported that Jibril Rajoub, the head of the PFA, told Fifa president Gianni Infantino at a meeting in Bangkok that “the ball is in your court”. The publication said Israel rejected the call as “cynical.”

  • Police dismantled a pro-Palestinian encampment at DePaul University in Chicago on Thursday, less than a week after the school’s president said public safety was at risk. All the protesters at the encampment “voluntarily left” the area when police arrived early on Thursday, said Jon Hein, chief of patrol for the Chicago police department. Hein said two people were arrested outside the encampment “for obstruction of traffic”.

Here are some of the latest images from the newswires:

Smoke rises in northern Gaza, as seen from Israel on Friday.
An aerial view of the makeshift tents in Deir al-Balah, on Thursday.
Two children look out from a makeshift tents on the coastal area in Deir al-Balah, Gaza on Thursday.

Israeli forces battled Hamas fighters in the narrow alleyways of Jabalia in northern Gaza on Friday in some of the fiercest engagements since they returned to the area a week ago, while in the south militants attacked tanks massing around Rafah, reports Reuters.

According to a report by the news agency, residents said Israeli armour had thrust as far as the market at the heart of Jabalia, the largest of Gaza’s eight historic refugee camps, and that bulldozers were demolishing homes and shops in the path of the advance.

As fighting raged in the north and south of the territory, the US military said trucks carrying humanitarian assistance had started moving ashore from a temporary pier in Gaza on Friday morning.

“Israel’s focus is Jabalia now, tanks and planes are wiping out residential districts and markets, shops, restaurants, everything. It is all happening before the one-eyed world,” Ayman Rajab, a resident of western Jabalia, told Reuters.

“Shame on the world. Meanwhile, the Americans are going to get us some food,” Rajab, a father-of-four, told Reuters via a chat app. “We want no food, we want this war to end and then we can manage our lives on our own.”

According to Reuters, Israel had said its forces had cleared Jabalia months earlier in the Gaza war, but said last week it was returning to prevent Hamas re-establishing itself there.

The fighting has coincided with the assault on Rafah at the southern edge of the strip, sending hundreds of thousands of people fleeing from both ends of the territory at once.

Further to the reports of Israeli airstrikes on Friday that hit an area of southern Lebanon far from the border (see 11.16 BST), there has been an update on the three people reported killed.

According to Agence France-Presse (AFP), Hezbollah announced a fighter from Najjariyeh had died. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said two Syrian children were killed in the Najjariyeh strike, identifying them as Osama and Hani al-Khaled.

The Kuwaiti Speciality hospital is one of the few places in Rafah the wounded or dying can turn for care, but that role may come under unbearable pressure if Israel launches a full-scale advance into the southern Gaza city, doctors there say.

Reuters reports staff at the Kuwaiti Speciality hospital say they fear such an assault would produce a crush of new patients that would overwhelm exhausted doctors, who already complain of shortages of medicine and proper equipment.

“We have been here from the start of the war until now, and I do hope they will not target us, they will not threaten us,” doctor Jamal al-Hams told Reuters.

“I do hope the whole medical team will continue to present its services to the injured people, to the critically ill patients, to the people who have chronic diseases,” he added.

More than 630,000 people have been forced to flee Rafah since Israel’s military offensive on the area started on the 6 May, said the UN agency for Palestine refugees (Unrwa) on Friday.

In a social media post on X, Unrwa said that many Palestinians had “sought refuge” in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, and described it as “now unbearably overcrowded with dire conditions”.

Unrwa reiterated its plea for an immediate ceasefire.

Here are some of the latest images from the newswires:

Palestinian official Ammar Hijazi, director general of the ministry of international relations of South Africa, Zane Dangor and South African ambassador to the Netherlands Vusimuzi Madonsela speak to the media outside the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Friday.
Displaced Palestinians queue for water from a truck next to their temporary camp in Rafah on Friday.
People practise yogain Tel Aviv, as they call for the release of yoga practitioner Carmel Gat among all other hostages kidnapped during the 7 October Hamas attack.
Silhouettes of children are seen on Thursday near the US-origin weapons and ammunition that were used by the Israeli army in the ground operation, after their withdrawal from Khan Younis city.

Israeli airstrikes on Friday hit an area of southern Lebanon far from the border, Lebanese official media said, with a source close to Hezbollah reporting three dead including two Syrian nationals.

According to Agence France-Presse (AFP), Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said “Israeli strikes targeted Najjariyeh and Addousiyeh”, two adjacent villages about 30 kilometres (19 miles) from the Israeli border just south of the coastal city of Sidon. The NNA reported “victims” without elaborating.

A source close to Hezbollah told AFP that three people were killed in Najjariyeh – two Syrians and a Lebanese man.

An AFP photographer saw ambulances heading to the targeted sites, saying the strikes hit a pickup truck in Najjariyeh and an orchard.

Smoke billows during Israeli bombardment over the Lebanese village of Najjariyeh on Friday, in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel.

Hezbollah announced on Friday that it had launched “attack drones” on Israeli military positions. It came a day after the Lebanese group said it had attacked an army position in Metula, a border town in northern Israel, wounding three soldiers, reports AFP.

Hezbollah said the attack was carried out with an “attack drone carrying two S5 rockets”, which are normally launched from jets.

Also on Thursday the group announced the deaths of two of its fighters in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon. The NNA said they were killed when their car was targeted.

Hezbollah earlier on Thursday said it had launched dozens of Katyusha rockets at Israeli positions in the annexed Golan Heights.

AFP reports that Israel retaliated with overnight air raids on Lebanon’s eastern Baalbek region, a Hezbollah stronghold near the Syrian border.

Earlier this week Hezbollah said it had targeted an Israeli base near Tiberias, about 30 kilometres from the Lebanese border – one of the group’s deepest attacks into Israeli territory since clashes began on 8 October.

The Wednesday strike came a day after the death of a Hezbollah member, which Israel said was a field commander, in an attack on southern Lebanon.

The cross-border fighting has killed at least 418 people in Lebanon, mostly militants but also including 80 civilians, according to an AFP tally.

Israel says 14 soldiers and 10 civilians have been killed on its side of the border.

Israel must comply with international law in Gaza and address the devastating humanitarian crisis there, a group of western nations wrote in a letter to the Israeli government seen by Reuters on Friday.

All countries belonging to the G7, apart from the US, signed the letter, along with Australia, South Korea, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Finland.

The five-page letter comes as Israeli forces bear down on the southern Gaza city of Rafah as part of its drive to eradicate Hamas, despite warnings this could result in mass casualties in an area where displaced civilians have found shelter.

“In exerting its right to defend itself, Israel must fully comply with international law, including international humanitarian law,” Reuters quotes the letter as saying. It also reiterates “outrage” for the 7 October Hamas attack.

Israel denies blocking humanitarian aid and says it needs to eliminate Hamas for its own protection.

According to Reuters, the western nations said they were opposed to “a full-scale military operation in Rafah” and called on Israel to let humanitarian aid reach the population “through all relevant crossing points, including the one in Rafah”.

“According to UN estimates, an intensified military offensive would affect approximately 1.4 million people,” the letter said, underscoring the need “for specific, concrete and measurable steps” to significantly boost the flow of aid.

Reuters reports that the letter recognises Israel made progress in addressing a number of issues, including letting more aid trucks into the Gaza Strip, the reopening of the Erez crossing into northern Gaza and the temporary use of Ashdod port in southern Israel.

But it called on Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to do more, including working towards a “sustainable ceasefire”, facilitating further evacuations and resuming “electricity, water and telecommunication services”.

Hearings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) were briefly interrupted on Friday by a protester who called out “liars” as an Israeli official was presenting arguments.

Reuters reports that a woman was seen being removed by court security guards. Our video team have produced this report:

Israeli justice ministry official Gilad Noam told an International Court of Justice (ICJ) hearing on Friday that South Africa’s charge of genocide was “an obscene exploitation of the most sacred convention,” referring to the international treaty banning genocide, agreed after the Holocaust in the second world war.

The convention requires all countries to act to prevent genocide, and the ICJ, also known as the world court, which hears disputes between states, has concluded that this gives South Africa a right to make the case.

According to Reuters, Noam said that Israel’s military operations were not aimed at civilians, but at Hamas terrorists using Rafah as a stronghold, who have tunnel systems which could be used to smuggle hostages and militants out of Gaza.

Examples of alleged violations by Israel raised by South Africa were “not evidence a policy of illegal behaviour, let alone a policy of genocide”, he said. Ordering Israel to withdraw its troops would sentence remaining hostages in Gaza to death, Noam added.

This week’s hearings focus only on issuing emergency measures and it will probably take years before the court can rule on the underlying genocide charge. A decision on the request for emergency measures is expected next week.

Reuters reports that the ICJ hearing was “briefly interrupted by an anti-Israel protest”.

More details soon …

Israeli settlers attacked and burned a truck in the occupied West Bank overnight on Thursday, injuring the driver, the Israeli military said, days after aid trucks heading towards the Gaza Strip were ransacked by protesters, reports Reuters.

Troops who arrived to separate the settlers from the Israeli driver were attacked and three soldiers were slightly hurt, the military said.

According to Reuters, Israel’s Kan public radio reported that the protesters believed the truck was carrying aid supplies to Gaza. It said the military said the truck was not carrying aid.

Pro-Palestine protesters and University of Melbourne administrators remain in a deadlock despite a warning that police could be called to enter the campus at any time.

As tensions simmer between university administrations and student activists across the nation, those camped inside the Arts West building have defied the University of Melbourne’s demands and the threat of police intervention.

Monash University on Friday said the student encampment on its Clayton campus, in Melbourne’s south-east, had ended, while the University of Queensland has signalled it aims for its pro-Palestine camps to end.

Students chant following a press conference about a pro-Palestine encampment at the University of Melbourne.

After a meeting held between a handful of University of Melbourne student protesters and two university executives on Friday afternoon, the activists said no resolution was reached. The protesters said their encampment in the Arts West building would continue until their calls for the university to disclose and divest their ties to weapons manufacturers were met.

Dana Alshaer, from the University of Melbourne for Palestine group, was among the group that met with the acting provost, Prof Pip Nicholson, and the deputy vice-chancellor for research, Prof Mark Cassidy.

Alshaer said the protesters had attempted to have an “open dialogue” but the university’s executives had not met their key demands.

You can read more on this story here:

Israel on Friday defended the military necessity of its Gaza offensive at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) after South Africa asked judges to order it to halt operations in Rafah and completely withdraw from the Palestinian territory.

Reuters reports that Israeli justice ministry official Gilad Noam called South Africa’s case, which accuses Israel of violating the genocide convention, “completely divorced from facts and circumstances”.

According to Reuters, before Israel’s presentation at the ICJ, several dozen pro-Israeli protesters gathered outside, displaying photographs of hostages taken by Hamas on 7 October and demanding their release.

People demonstrate in support of Israel outside the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague on Friday.

On Thursday, South Africa’s ambassador to the Netherlands, Vusimuzi Madonsela, requested the court to order Israel to “immediately, totally and unconditionally, withdraw the Israeli army from the entirety of the Gaza Strip.”

The South African legal team framed the Israeli military operation as part of a genocidal plan aimed at bringing about the destruction of the Palestinian people.

In past rulings, the court has rejected Israel’s demands to dismiss the case and ordered it to prevent acts of genocide against the Palestinians, while stopping short of ordering it to halt the assault.

On Friday Noam told the ICJ that there is a “tragic war going on but no genocide”. “This war, like all wars, is tragic. For Israelis and Palestinians and it has exacted a terrible human price but it is not genocide,” he said.

You can follow along with the ICJ hearing via the live stream in the video posted at the top of this page.

Reuters reports that Israel has told the ICJ hearing that it did not want a war with Gaza but is “under attack and fighting to defend itself and its citizens”.

Israel has repeated its claim that Rafah is a “focal point for ongoing terrorist activity” and is a “Hamas stronghold”.

Israel has asked judges to reject a request from South Africa to order its withdrawal from the Palestinian territory.

Israel has told the ICJ hearing that South Africa’s case is “completely divorced from the facts and circumstances” and “makes a mockery of the heinous charge of genocide”.

Israel said it was given less than 24 hours to respond to South Africa’s latest request at the world court.

The second day of a two-day hearing at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague has begun.

South Africa has asked the international court of justice (ICJ) to urgently order Israel to end its assault on Rafah, halt its military campaign across Gaza, and allow international investigators and journalists into the territory (see 08.02 BST).

We will post key lines as they come in via the newswires.

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2024-05-17 14:02:00Z
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Russia’s Putin eyes greater support from China for Ukraine war effort - Al Jazeera English

In a visit also focused on trade, the Russian leader hails the partnership with China that guarantees energy security.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is wrapping up his visit to neighbouring China, aiming to win greater support from Beijing for his military operation in Ukraine and expand crucial trade to his country’s increasingly isolated economy.

Russia and China’s partnership has only grown closer since the invasion of Ukraine, and Beijing has rebuffed Western claims that it is aiding Moscow’s war effort while offering a critical economic lifeline with trade hitting $240bn in 2023.

Putin visited the northeastern city of Harbin on Friday, the final day of his two-day visit, to highlight the two countries’ “trade and cultural exchange”, Chinese state news agency Xinhua reported.

On Thursday, Putin arrived in Beijing on his first trip abroad since his March re-election, meeting President Xi Jinping for talks in which the leaders framed their nations’ ties as a stabilising force in the international arena.

The two leaders “had an in-depth exchange of views on the Ukraine crisis”, Xinhua reported, adding that Xi spoke of China’s “consistent position and efforts to promote the political settlement of the Ukraine issue”.

China has not sent weapons and ammunition to Russia and its peace plan unveiled last year was criticised by both Ukraine and its Western allies.

There are limits to the two nations’ ties, despite their insistence that it is limitless, said Alexey Muraviev, a Russia specialist and associate professor of national security and strategic studies at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

“The limits are that the two countries don’t have a formal alliance agreement. To me, that’s very clearly a sign that there are limitations to what seems to be a limitless relationship,” he told Al Jazeera, adding that neither side is prepared to “unconditionally commit to support each other” on issues like Ukraine.

Xi said he would continue to work with Putin to “achieve steady and lasting progress, bring more benefits to the two peoples, and contribute to world security and stability”.

Western countries have been heaping pressure on China to cut off support for Russia’s economy as the war in Ukraine grinds on.

Putin visited Harbin to promote trade ties. Lying just a few hundred kilometres from the border with Russia, Harbin has long served as a key hub for cross-border trade and cultural exchange.

Speaking at the opening ceremony of a Russia-China trade exposition on Friday, Putin hailed energy ties between the two countries and promised to “strengthen” them.

“Russia is ready and able to continuously power the Chinese economy, businesses, cities and towns with affordable and environmentally clean energy,” he said.

He later told reporters that Russia’s offensive in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region was aimed at creating a buffer zone but there were no plans to capture it.

Russian forces have made steady gains in the northeastern border region after launching a new incursion last week. On Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy travelled to the area and acknowledged that the situation remained “extremely difficult” but was “generally under control”.

Putin said Russian troops were making daily advances there according to plan”.

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Trump in Florida for son's graduation after Michael Cohen grilled at trial: Live - The Independent

Trump says his Republican ‘surrogates’ are ‘speaking beautifully’ at his hush money trial

Donald Trump will be in Florida on Friday for the high school graduation of his teenage son Barron Trump before jetting out for a fundraising dinner in Minnesota.

The Republican presidential candidate’s hush money trial wrapped up for the week on Thursday after a day of heated cross-examination in which key witness Michael Cohen was grilled by defense attorney Todd Blanche.

The former “fixer” for the defendant spent the entire day on the stand in Judge Juan Merchan’s Manhattan courtroom, with much of the questioning revolving around previous occasions in which he had lied under oath.

Mr Blanche zeroed in on whether Cohen, who received tens of thousands of calls per year, could specifically remember what was discussed in a 90-second call in 2016.

The witness remained calm and steadfast during his testimony, walking the jury through the strategy allegedly employed by Mr Trump’s inner circle to delay making the $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in October 2016 to buy her silence about the sexual encounter she claims he had with the politician in July 2006.

Judge Merchan has now asked both sides to prepare for closing arguments on Tuesday.

Alex Woodward is covering the trial from Manhattan Criminal Court.

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New York hush money trial: The best sketches from Trump’s five weeks in court

With no cameras permitted inside Manhattan Criminal Court, it has been left up to the courtroom sketch artists to give life to the proceedings, with the drawings of professionals Jane Rosenberg, Elizabeth Williams and Christine Cornell capturing the key moments and helping to illustrate the many twists and turns.

Here’s a look at some of their best work.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 13:45
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Trump’s dinner with oil executives sparks inquiry by House Democrats

House Democrats are investigating Trump’s alleged promise that he will undo certain all-important climate policies to please the fossil fuel sector if its denizens agree to bankroll his return to the White House.

Here’s Stuti Mishra’s report.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 13:15
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Tim Scott enlists Kellyanne Conway to boost chances of becoming Trump’s veep

Former 2024 Republican candidate and South Carolina senator Tim Scott is lobbying hard among Trump’s inner circle in the hope of becoming his pick for vice president.

Scott is leaning on Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s 2016 campaign manager, as he pushes himself as the top choice, The Daily Beast reported on Thursday.

His private lobbying effort is coupled with a very public one – Scott has hit cable news and declared in recent days that he would do “whatever it takes” for the man who worked to overturn the 2020 election and is facing 88 felony counts.

John Bowden has more.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 12:45
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Kamala Harris agrees to debate with Trump’s running mate

The US vice president has agreed to take part in a veep debate with Trump’s so-far-unnamed running mate just a day after the Republican candidate and President Joe Biden agreed to two showdowns.

The Biden-Harris campaign said on Thursday that it had accepted an invitation from CBS News to take part in a VP debate either on 23 July or 13 August.

Gustaf Kilander has the story.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 12:15
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‘Stand back and stand by’: Matt Gaetz invokes Trump’s infamous call to Proud Boys at trial

MAGA Republican Matt Gaetz invoked Trump’s notorious – and widely condemned – call to the far-right group the Proud Boys as he showed up in court in Manhattan to support the former president at his hush money trial.

“Standing back and standing by, Mr President,” Gaetz wrote on X, along with an image of himself at the courthouse.

The phrase echoed Trump’s infamous comments on stage at one of the 2020 presidential debates against now-president Joe Biden.

Other fringe GOP goons present at court yesterday including representatives Lauren Boebert (who was booed and heckled with cries of “Beetlejuice!”), Andy Biggs, Anna Paulina Luna, Mike Waltz and Eli Crane.

Gustaf Kilander reports.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 11:45
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New York hush money trial: Key takeaways from Day 18

Here’s Alex Woodward and Ariana Baio with yesterday’s wrap.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 11:15
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New York hush money trial: Jury hears audio of Cohen celebrating Trump’s indictment

Scathing audio played to the jury yesterday revealed Cohen celebrating his former boss’s indictment on criminal charges, saying “I hope he rots” in jail “for what he did to me”.

During a tense morning of cross-examination on Thursday, Todd Blanche worked hard to undermine the witness’s credibility, painting the former lawyer as a revenge-seeking liar.

The defence played audio from an October 2023 episode of Cohen’s podcast Mea Culpa, in which he excitedly says he “truly f***ing hopes” that Trump “ends up in prison”.

“Revenge is a dish best served cold,” he is heard to say in the clip.

Alex Woodward reports from the courthouse.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 10:45
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New York hush money trial: Trump attorney screams at Cohen over critical phone call

Let’s have a quick recap of yesterday’s events in Judge Merchan’s courtroom.

Trump’s defence attorney unleashed a furious line of questions to accuse star witness Michael Cohen of lying about his testimony that he spoke to Trump after finalising a deal to pay Stormy Daniels hush money in 2016.

Todd Blanche, after spending several hours painting the former “fixer” as a serial liar, raised his voice and screamed from inside the courtroom after grilling him about a pivotal phone call that connected the former president to a conspiracy at the centre of the case.

“That’s a lie!” he fumed.

Alex Woodward watched proceedings on Thursday.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 10:15
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What we know about Donald Trump’s youngest son Barron

Here’s a brief introduction to the young man whose high school leavers’ ceremony Trump so desperate to attend.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 09:45
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Trump to headline political fundraiser after crying off court to attend son’s high school graduation

Somewhat outrageously, Trump is planning to headline a political fundraiser today, the very same day he demanded a break in the hush money trial so that he could attend his youngest son Barron’s high school graduation.

The Minnesota Republican Party has announced that the former president will headline its annual Lincoln Reagan Dinner event on Friday 17 May, the same day that Barron Trump graduates from Oxbridge Academy in the Sunshine State.

“We are thrilled to welcome President Trump back to Minnesota,” state GOP chairman David Hann said in a statement. “I can think of no one more fitting to join us this year than President Trump.”

The fundraiser will be held in St Paul, Minnesota, a roughly three hour and 45 minute flight from West Palm Beach, where Barron’s graduation ceremony will take place.

Here’s more from Graig Graziosi on Trump being given an inch and taking a yard.

Joe Sommerlad17 May 2024 09:15

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Pier opens for Gaza aid as US warns of 'imminent famine' - Financial Times

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Trump trial live updates: Trump attorney questions Michael Cohen’s credibility - The Independent

Trump arrrives at hush money trial flanked by 14 surrogates in court

Donald Trump’s hush money trial has wrapped up for the week after a day of heated cross-examination of key witness Michael Cohen by defense attorney Todd Blanche. The former “fixer” for the defendant spent the whole day on the witness stand in Judge Juan Merchan’s Manhattan courtroom.

Much of the questioning revolved around previous occasions in which he had lied under oath. These had been previously brought up by the prosecution with Cohen noting that his lies were to protect Mr Trump, then his boss.

Blanche zeroed in on whether Cohen, who received tens of thousands of calls per year, could specifically remember what was discussed in a 90-second call in 2016.

The witness remained calm and steadfast during his testimony, also walking the jury through the strategy allegedly employed by Mr Trump’s inner circle to delay making the $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in October 2016 to buy her silence about the sexual encounter she claims he had with the politician in July 2006.

As court ended on Thursday, Judge Merchan asked both sides to prepare for closing arguments on Tuesday.

Alex Woodward is covering the trial from Manhattan Criminal Court.

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Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 23:45
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Sketchy characters: The best courtroom drawings from Donald Trump’s New York hush money trial

But with no cameras permitted inside Manhattan Criminal Court, it has been left up to the courtroom sketch artists to give life to the proceedings, with the drawings of professionals Jane Rosenberg, Elizabeth Williams and Christine Cornell capturing the key moments and helping to illustrate the many twists and turns.

Joe Sommerlad looks at some of the best of the work:

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 23:15
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Cartoonist Liz Donnelly shares her view of court today

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 22:30
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Will Trump testify?

As proceedings wound down today, Judge Juan Merchan instructed both sides to be prepared for closing arguments on Tuesday.

Lead defense attorney Todd Blanche told the judge he expects to conclude his cross-examination of Michael Cohen on Monday morning and the prosecution says re-direct will take approximately an hour.

That means things will then turn over to the defense if they want to make a case and call witnesses.

Donald Trump has said he will testify but he has said that before without it happening.

Blanche said there would be a quick decision regarding rebuttal witnesses (perhaps as soon as tomorrow) but we likely won’t find out whether Trump will take the stand himself until Monday. Blanche said the former president has yet to decide whether he will or not...

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 22:15
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Professional ‘line sitters’ charge hundreds for access to Trump trial

Professional ‘line sitters’ are making hundreds of dollars from holding spaces in the queue for Donald Trump’s hush money trial.” The press has been hiring us for this court case. That’s $50 per hour” Owner of Same Ole Line Dudes, Robert Samuel, told The Independent. For members of the public his team of more than 25 line sitters charge $25 per hour.”We have sleeping bags and tents and tarps” Mr Samuel said on a wet and rainy morning in Lower Manhattan.

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 22:10
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Trial hears audio of Michael Cohen celebrating Trump’s indictment: ‘I hope he rots'

Alex Woodward reports from the courthouse in Lower Manhattan:

Scathing audio played at Donald Trump’s hush money trial revealed Michael Cohen celebrating his former boss’s indictment on criminal charges, saying “I hope he rots” in jail “for what he did to me”.

During a tense morning of cross-examination on Thursday, Mr Trump’s lawyer Todd Blanche sought to undermine Cohen’s credibility as the prosecution’s star witness, painting the former lawyer and fixer as a revenge-seeking liar.

The defense played audio from an October 2023 episode of Cohen’s podcast Mea Culpa, in which he excitedly says he “truly f***ing hope” that Mr Trump “ends up in prison”.

“Revenge is a dish best served cold,” he says.

Read on...

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 22:00
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Trump’s hallway remarks in brief

Per the pool report:

Trump spoke for around 11 minutes, again reading off papers.

“I think it was a very interesting day, a fascinating day and it shows what a scam this whole thing is.”

He quoted at least 13 people, by my count, and dropped a couple references to Engoron and Kaplan. Spoke on electric vehicle mandate, inflation, china and Russia working together.

“I didn’t violate any law. It’s a scam.”

“That was my crime — I won an election I wasn’t supposed to win against Hilary Clinton.”

“When I announced I running again it was a hot iron again.

“These are people who were Democrats and they want to vote for Trump”

“That beautiful resolute desk in the Oval Office

“This is a witch hunt. This is prosecution without a case this is all political. This is done to damage your political opponents like a third world country would do.”

“You look at Judge Engoran you look at Judge Kaplan, it’s disgraceful.”

On Merchan saying court could go later to get the case done on time:

“We’re here early in the morning and we leave in the evening. Now the judge wants to extend the time periods so that we can get this thing done fast, before the election. It’s terrible. Nobody’s seen anything like it, that includes the civil cases too.”

“I’ve been sitting here for almost four weeks and we still have a long way to go. And I just want to thank all the lawyers involved because they’ve been really working hard. And I’m spending a lot of time and I’m spending a lot of money which is what they want. They want me to spend my time and my money.”

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 21:45
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Watch: Unexpected Ashton Kutcher reference

Oliver O'Connell16 May 2024 21:32
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So here’s what is next...

By the end of this week: Blanche will have a decision on rebuttal witnesses for the defense’s case, but they will likely be brief on the stand.

Over the weekend: Merchan will think about Bove’s arguments to expand what their expert witness can say about campaign finance laws.

Monday: Defense will have made a decision about Trump testifying. Blanche will finish his cross-examination of Cohen. Prosecutors will do re-direct, then the defense will do re-cross.

Tuesday: Closing arguments begin – maybe.

If they don’t, and the defense does want to present a case with witnesses that eat up time on the clock, then that’ll play out over next week.

Reminder: Court is off tomorrow for Barron Trump’s graduation.

Court is also off next Friday and the following Monday for Memorial Day.

Alex Woodward16 May 2024 21:24
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Blanche says he’ll be done with Cohen on Monday morning. There are no further prosecution witnesses.

Is there a defense case? asks Judge Merchan.

Blanche anticipates making a decision about bringing up rebuttal witnesses soon, maybe later today, but they’ll be quick.

That doesn’t include Trump, he says.

Merchan wants everyone to prepare for closing arguments on Tuesday.

What happens with Trump is basically a whole ’nother conversation.

Alex Woodward16 May 2024 21:21

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French police shoot dead armed suspect who 'planned to set fire to synagogue' - Sky News

French police have shot and killed an armed suspect who appeared to be planning a synagogue attack, the interior minister has said.

The incident in Rouen, northern France, on Friday morning happened after the individual was intent on setting fire to the town's synagogue, Gerald Darmanin said.

"I congratulate [national police officers] for their reactivity and their courage," he added.

According to regional authorities, the man was carrying a knife and an iron bar. His identity and motive are unclear.

Local broadcaster France 3 reported fire fighters were at the scene. A city hall official said shortly before 8am that the fire has been brought under control.

Rouen mayor Nicolas Mayer-Rossignol also said on social media the town is "bruised and in shock".

The president of France's Consistoire Central Jewish worshippers body Elie Korchia added police "avoided another anti-Semitic tragedy".

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