Author: Abigail Ampofo

  • With a landmark bill, Australia sets new climate goals

    Australia has passed legislation establishing a climate target, promising to reduce emissions by at least 43% by 2030.

    The objective puts the nation, which ranks among the top polluters globally per capita, more in line with other wealthy nations.

    But critics say government plans to reach the target are lacking detail.

    Some have been demanding a higher goal as well as a ban on new fossil fuel projects in the country.

    But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had lauded the new law – the Climate Change Bill – as an end to a decade of climate policy inaction.

    The Labor government’s climate bill cleared the Senate by 37 votes to 30 after accepting minor amendments by independent David Pocock.

    Climate change minister, Chris Bowen, told parliament “today is a good day for our parliament and our country, and we’re going to need many more of them”, The Guardian reported.

    The former government had angered allies with its short-term emissions reductions target – which was about half what the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says is needed if the world has any chance of limiting warming to 1.5C.

    But there is strong support within the parliament for greater action on climate change.

    Many independents campaigned on the issue of climate change and wanted a 2030 target of at least 50%.

    Meanwhile, the Greens party said the passing of the bill was a “small step” in tackling the climate crisis.

    Most also want a ban on new coal and gas projects – something they say the target cannot be achieved without.

    Mark Howden, vice chair of the IPCC, told the BBC in June the new commitment is a big improvement on the previous target.

    “[It] would be equivalent to taking all of our cars off the road or taking agriculture out of our economy,” he said.

    It could take Australia’s carbon emission from 24 tonnes per person down to around 14 tonnes per person, he said.

    While it won’t make Australia a global leader on the climate, “we’re no longer a laggard”, Mr Howden said.

    Canada is aiming for a reduction of 40% by 2030 from 2005 levels, while the United States has a target of up to 52%.

    In recent years, Australia has suffered severe drought, historic bushfires, successive years of record-breaking floods, and six mass bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef.

    The country is racing towards a future full of similar disasters, the latest UN IPCC report warns.

    New research also shows that natural disasters have cost Australian households on average more than A$1,485 (£870; $1,000) in the past year.

    A report by the Insurance Council of Australia blames the soaring costs of catastrophic flooding in the east of the country in February and March. The report says costs will continue to rise for years to come because of extreme weather.

  • Ukraine is considering shutting down Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station – Chief nuclear inspector

     The head state inspector for nuclear and radiation safety of Ukraine, Oleh Korikov, stated that due to the deteriorating security situation, Ukraine is thinking of closing the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station.

    If conditions requiring the plant to be shut down arise, the plant and power unit No. 6 will be shut down,” Korikov said on Wednesday.

    Zaporizhzhia is the largest nuclear power station in Europe.

    “The continued deterioration of the situation, the prolonged lack of power supply from an external source of electricity will force us to deploy standby diesel generators, and it is extremely difficult to top up the diesel fuel supply during the war,” Korikov added.

    Korikov said maintaining the diesel generators running would not be sustainable.

    Diesel generators are backups to cool fuel and keep things operational, but there are caveats to using them for an indefinite time and it’s a “dangerous” situation to be in, he explained.

    “Reliability questions could be an issue … because in this case, they could be required to work for an indefinite time, and they have limited capacity to constantly be in work mode,” Kotin added.

    Korikov’s concerns are along the same lines as tensions continue at the plant.

    “Four huge diesel fuel tanks are needed per day,” Korikov explained. “Potentially, we can find ourselves in a situation with no diesel fuel; it can give rise to an accident, damaging the active zone of reactors and releasing radioactive products into the environment. It will not only affect the territory of Ukraine but also produce cross-border effects.”

    Currently, the plant “generates electricity and supplies it for its own needs” through an exceptional process called islanding where the plant — although disconnected from a power grid — uses its own energy to power cooling systems, according to Korikov.

  • Queen receiving medical care at Balmoral

    Buckingham Palace says the Queen is being monitored by medics at Balmoral after they started to worry about her health.

    “Following further evaluation this morning, the Queen’s doctors are concerned for Her Majesty’s health and have recommended she remain under medical supervision,” they said in a statement.

    “The Queen remains comfortable and at Balmoral.”

    Her immediate family has been informed.

    The announcement comes after the Queen, 96, pulled out of a virtual Privy Council on Wednesday, with doctors advising her to rest.

  • Smiling William and Kate enroll “the whole gang” in a new school, and even Louis was well-behaved

    While Charlotte tightly gripped her father’s hand as they walked up the steps into the entrance, Prince George appeared a little contemplative as the headteacher greeted him.

    The Cambridge kids, including the occasionally cheeky Prince Louis, behaved admirably as they were all welcomed to the new school they will all attend.

    Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis will all start at Lambrook school, near Windsor in Berkshire, on Thursday morning.

    But ahead of the big day a small press pack of one TV camera, one photographer, and one reporter, were invited into the grounds, as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge took their three children for a settling-in session.

    The five of them were filmed walking along a path in front of the school to meet the headteacher, Jonathan Perry.

    Four-year-old Louis, who’s beginning full-time education, and his nine-year-old brother and seven-year-old sister, all looked confident and happy, and even mum and dad were smiling too as they all seemed to chat away.

    EMBARGOED TO 2230 BST WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 7 Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, accompanied by their parents the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, are greeted by Headmaster Jonathan Perry as they arrive for a settling in afternoon at Lambrook School, near Ascot in Berkshire.

    William called his children “all the gang” as he ushered them up the steps of the large white 19th-century country mansion, and said the three of them were looking forward to starting.

    “Welcome to Lambrook,” Mr Perry told the children. “It’s lovely to have you with us. We’re very excited for the year ahead.”

    Shaking them each by the hand in turn, he asked: “Are you excited?” with all three replying “Yes.”

    William remarked: “We’re looking forward to it,” adding the children had “lots of questions”.

    The open afternoon was a chance for the children to meet some of the other new pupils, and also no doubt an opportunity for new parents to get used to the fact they may see Prince William and Kate at the school gates.

  • In pictures: Ruins of psychiatric hospital

    A psychiatric hospital in Kramatorsk has been destroyed in Russian shelling. 

    The attack happened in the early hours of this morning.

  • Government attorneys say the Rwandan migrant planes plan is legitimate

    According to the government’s attorneys, the contentious relocation program the government is implementing gives it the legal right to send migrants to Rwanda.

    Attorneys for the Home Secretary said that concerns raised by the United Nations were unfounded on the third day of a court challenge to the program.

    The plan to fly migrants to Rwanda is on hold until the outcome of the case.

    Liz Truss and her new Home Secretary, Suella Braverman, support the plan begun by Priti Patel and Boris Johnson.

    The government is facing a highly unusual five-day legal challenge to the policy involving at least 10 migrants, campaign groups Care4Calais and Detention Action, and the Public and Commercial Services Union, which represents the vast majority of UK Border Force staff.

    The claimants argue the home secretary has no legal right to send migrants to Rwanda and, furthermore, deciding the country is safe was irrational.

    Evidence already aired in court has included warnings from a handpicked government adviser that the African country’s regime has murdered political opponents.

    But opening the government’s defence of the policy, Lord David Pannick QC said it was clear the home secretary could send migrants to another country provided she could show it was safe under a law dating back to Tony Blair’s Labour government.

    That 2004 legislation gave ministers the power to identify “safe third countries” and to relocate asylum seekers there, rather than handle their claims for refuge in the UK.

    The law could only be used if the government was sure migrants would not be sent on to another more dangerous country – and Lord Pannick said the government had obtained those assurances.

    “There is no other criteria stated by Parliament,” said Lord Pannick.

    “It is not for the court to insert more criteria so as to limit the [home secretary’s powers].

    “The [international law] obligation on the UK is to either assess the claim or return the asylum seeker to a safe third country,” said Lord Pannick.

    “If we choose to return the individual to a third country that is safe, then we, the UK, have complied with our obligations under the Refugee Convention.”

    On Tuesday, the court heard the UN’s Refugee Agency believes Rwanda has neither the capacity nor the expertise to deal with the numbers that could be sent.

    Furthermore, it warned the government of Rwanda may not abide by the agreement it had struck with the UK.

    But government lawyers said documents from the Rwandan government showed it has given point-by-point assurances that all migrants will be fairly treated.

    “The home secretary has received detailed assurances from the government of Rwanda regarding both the processing of relocated individuals’ asylum claims and the reception and ongoing treatment of relocated individuals,” said written submissions.

    “The court can and should place great weight on those assurances. Rwanda is a signatory to both the Refugee Convention and the UN Convention Against Torture and a key Commonwealth partner of the UK.”

    The case continues until Friday – with a second stage expected to take place in October.

  • Chris Kaba: Met Police accused of racism by family of guy shot by officer

    The Met Police has been accused of racism by the family of a man who was shot dead by an officer.

    Chris Kaba, who was only a few months away from becoming a father, passed away on Monday night in Streatham Hill, south London, following a police pursuit.

    The 23-year-old’s father Prosper Kaba claimed the shooting was “totally racist and criminal”.

    The Met Police said it understood the incident was “extremely concerning to the local community”.

    Mr Kaba was a rapper known as Madix or Mad Itch and was part of the MOBO-nominated drill group 67.

    Speaking to BBC London, Prosper Kaba said: “For us, it is totally racist and criminal and we want all the community, especially the minority community, to see this as a racism case.”

    Commander Alexis Boon, from the Met, said: “I understand that this incident is extremely concerning and I would like to reassure the community that the Met is co-operating fully with the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) as they carry out a thorough and independent investigation.”

    The shooting is being investigated by the IOPC, as is standard in deaths following police contact.

    The independent body, which oversees police complaints in England and Wales, confirmed one shot was fired from a police-issue firearm.

    IOPC investigators said they were examining police footage and CCTV from the area, as well as carrying out house-to-house inquiries.

    The pastor of a church that Mr Kaba attended as a child said there were discussions in the community about organising a vigil.

    Floral tributes were laid at the scene of the shooting in Streatham Hill

    Reverend Siaa-Liane Mathurin, of New Park Road Baptist Church, said: “Chris came to the church when he was little. He was from round here, he lived just over the road.

    “The community is scared. I’ve had young people come to me asking ‘why did they shoot him?’ There are families who didn’t send their kids to school today.”

    Sal Naseem, IOPC London regional director, said: “When the police use fatal force it is important that there is a robust, independent investigation to establish all of the circumstances surrounding what happened.

    “It is natural that the community wants answers quickly but I would ask that people refrain from speculation that may be unhelpful to all of those affected.”

    A post-mortem examination, which will determine a provisional cause of death, is set to take place.

  • Peppa Pig: The first same-sex couple for a kids’ program

    One of the most recognizable and well-liked cartoon animals in the world, Peppa Pig is adored by young children in the UK, US, Australia, and Latin America.

    Thus, it should come as no surprise that the decision to include the show’s first same-sex couple has generated controversy.

    During an episode titled Families, which first aired on Tuesday on Channel 5 in the UK, where Peppa Pig is made, the eponymous character was introduced to friend Penny Polar Bear’s mother.

    While drawing a portrait of her family, Penny explained: “I live with my mummy and my other mummy. One mummy is a doctor and one mummy cooks spaghetti.”

    The programme, created by British animators Mark Baker and Neville Astley, has been running since 2004. This is the first time in its 18-year history a same-sex couple has been featured.

    It comes two years after a petition was created on a US-based website, demanding a “same-sex parent family on Peppa Pig”. It has garnered almost 24,000 signatures.

    “Children watching Peppa Pig are at an impressionable age,” the creators of the petition wrote. “Excluding same-sex families will teach them that only families with either a single parent or two parents of different sexes are normal.”

    Robbie de Santos, director of communications and external affairs at LGBT rights charity Stonewall, described seeing a same-sex family in fictional Peppatown as “fantastic”.

    “Many of those who watch the show will have two mums or two dads themselves and it will mean a lot to parents and children that their experiences are being represented on such an iconic children’s programme,” he told the BBC.

    Peppa Pig is by no means the first children’s programme to feature same-sex couples. US cartoon Arthur, aimed at four to eight-year-olds, won praise back in 2019 after it showed a gay wedding during its 22nd series.

    At the time, Maria Vera Whelan of PBS KIDS – where Arthur ran until it ended earlier this year – said in a statement PBS believed it was “important to represent the wide array of adults in the lives of children”.

    Other popular cartoons to have touched on LGBT relationships have included Adventure Time and Steven Universe – both are also from the US but aimed at audiences aged 10 and above.

    Following the latest episode of Peppa Pig, Twitter was alive with debate about the introduction of Penny Polar Bear’s family. “Lesbians in Peppa Pig… can’t kids shows just be for kids?” one man wrote, accusing the show of “box-ticking”.

    Another disagreed, saying: “Well what do you know? My kids saw the first same-sex couple on Peppa Pig and the world didn’t end.”

  • ‘There was so much blood’: Railway blast survivor describes losing her leg

    A teen who suffered significant injuries in a horrific Russian attack on a train station has spoken about her experience.

    Anastasiia Shestopal, 19, lost her leg after being injured in the rocket strike on the Kramatorsk train station on April 8’s morning.

    The strike left 61 people dead and 121 injured, according to the Security Service of Ukraine.

    Speaking to the Kyiv Independent, Ms Shestopal said she had traveled from her native city of Druzhkivka to get away from attacks there.

    While waiting for a driver to pick her up and take her to a safer part of the country, she decided to find an empty bench at the train station and do some reading.

    Thousands of civilians were waiting to evacuate at the station at the time.

    Without warning, a powerful blast knocked her off the bench and she found herself laying on the ground.

    “I was lying there in a huge pool of blood. I had jeans on, but nothing was visible. I just felt that my leg was wounded,” she said.

    “There was so much blood, dead people everywhere.”

    She recalled seeing people running around the train station in a panic and she almost lost consciousness.

    A rescue worker spotted her and a team began treating her before she was taken to a nearby hospital. Ms Shestopal later found out she could have died from her injury if she had not received medical assistance quickly.

    The teenager later had to have her leg amputated and is recovering in Germany, where a couple has kindly rented an apartment for her and her mother.

  • After being told to rest by doctors, the Queen postpones the Privy Council meeting

    The 96-year-old queen, who has chronic mobility challenges, will not need to stay in the hospital according to the most recent recommendation.

    According to Buckingham Palace, the Queen’s appointment with the Privy Council has been postponed because doctors have recommended her rest.

    A palace spokesman said: “After a full day yesterday, Her Majesty has this afternoon accepted doctors’ advice to rest.

    “This means that the Privy Council meeting that had been due to take place this evening will be rearranged.”

    The Queen remains at Balmoral Castle, where she appointed Liz Truss as the new prime minister on Tuesday.

    The Queen appointed new prime minister Liz Truss on Tuesday

    The latest advice does not involve a hospital stay for the 96-year-old monarch, who has ongoing mobility issues.

    During the proceedings, Ms Truss would have taken her oath as First Lord of the Treasury and new cabinet ministers would have been sworn into their roles, and also made privy counselors if not already appointed as one in past.

    The Queen appointed the new prime minister at Balmoral for the first time in her reign, in a break from tradition.

    She would normally appoint prime ministers from Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle

    However, the monarch was advised to remain at her Balmoral residence in Aberdeenshire, where she was enjoying her summer holiday.

    It was thought to be best for the Queen not to travel back to London due to her intermittent mobility issues.

    Since last autumn, Her Majesty has suffered from mobility issues and now regularly uses a walking stick.

    This year, she has been forced to cut several official engagements short, and notably missed much of her Platinum Jubilee celebrations, only appearing briefly on the palace balcony.

    In June, she missed Royal Ascot for the first time since her coronation, with the Duke of Kent taking her place in leading the royal carriage procession.

    Earlier in May, the Queen missed the State Opening of Parliament for the first time in 59 years on doctors’ orders after experiencing “episodic mobility issues”.

    And she withdrew from the traditional Easter Sunday service at St George’s Chapel in Windsor this year.

    The Queen also contracted COVID-19 back in February, and later spoke about how it left her feeling “very tired and exhausted”.

     

     

  • Child trafficking: Woman arrested for trafficking 15 children

    A 44-year-old woman was detained by the Nigerian police for allegedly stealing 15 kids in the southern state of Rivers.

    The woman, who pretended to be a nun running an orphanage, is accused by the authorities of kidnapping the kids in order to sell them.

    The children are reportedly aged between four and 15 years.

    The police said they were working to reunite the children with their parents.

    State Commissioner of Police, Friday Eboka, said investigations revealed that some had been abducted years ago, including a nine-year-old boy who had been taken from a market in 2020.

    He said some of the children had recounted to the police their experiences of torture and mistreatment.

    He said a further probe into the incident was ongoing with a view to arresting other suspects linked to the crimes.

    Human trafficking is common in Nigeria.

  • US: Cineworld files for bankruptcy protection

    The British organization had hoped that blockbusters like Top Gun: Maverick, The Batman, and Thor: Love And Thunder would help it recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, but the films’ box office performance fell short of expectations.

    In order to give its heavily indebted company more time to restructure, Cineworld Group has applied for bankruptcy protection in the US.

    The British company said it has filed for Chapter 11 – a type of US bankruptcy which means it will be allowed to stay in business while it tries to bounce back from its problems.

    The world’s second-biggest cinema chain operator said it is “confident that a comprehensive financial restructuring is in the best interests of the group and its stakeholders, taken as a whole, in the long term”.

    Current shareholders are likely to see their positions diluted significantly, Cineworld admitted, but shares are expected to continue trading on the London Stock Exchange.

    The business plans to emerge from bankruptcy in the first quarter of next year and said it would use the restructuring to try to negotiate better lease terms with its landlords in the US.

    It was saddled with £4bn of debt by the end of the last financial year and had pinned its hopes on blockbusters such as Top Gun: Maverick, The Batman, and Thor: Love And Thunder to aid its recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Last September, it struck an agreement to pay £141m to disgruntled Regal shareholders who were angry about the price it paid to buy the chain in 2017.

    In December it was ordered to pay £720m by a court over a decision not to go through with a takeover of Canadian rival Cineplex as the pandemic broke out.

    Chief executive Mooky Greidinger appealed the court ruling, claiming the company acted in “good faith”.

  • US cruise passenger dies from shark attack

    According to regional officials, a US cruise ship passenger was killed by a shark on Tuesday while snorkeling close to the Bahamas.

    The incident happened while the Pennsylvanian woman, 58, was on a trip at Green Cay, which is close to Nassau.

    Police later said that the family identified the shark as a bull shark. A similar incident in the area took the life of a 21-year-old American in 2019.

    Despite gripping public attention, shark attacks are exceedingly rare.

    Bahamian police spokeswoman Chrislyn Skippings told reporters that the woman was on an excursion with a local tour company, which took her to the popular snorkelling area.

    Family members and tour company staff saw her being attacked and managed to pull her from the water. A local news outlet, Eyewitness News, quoted Ms Skippings as saying that the victim suffered wounds to her “upper extremities”.

    The victim was declared dead by authorities after being taken to shore.

    Her cruise ship, the Harmony of the Seas, was docked in Nassau at the time of the attack. It had just begun its seven-day cruise of the western Caribbean from Port Canaveral in Florida on 4 September.

    Cruise operator Royal Caribbean International said in a statement that they are “providing support and assistance to the guest’s loved ones during this difficult time.”

    The incident is the first fatal shark attack in the Bahamas since 2019, when a 21-year-old woman from California was attacked by sharks near Rose Island, about half a mile (0.8km) away from Tuesday’s attack.

    In another recent incident, an eight-year-old British boy was injured after being attacked by three sharks in another part of the Bahamas. His father later told The Sun that the attack “was like a scene out of Jaws”.

    In total, statistics from the Florida-based International Shark Attack File show that only about 32 shark attacks have been reported in the Bahamas since 1749, the highest number in the region.

    Michael Heithaus, a marine biologist at Florida International University in Miami, told the Associated Press that the relatively high number of shark attacks in the area is likely due to the high number of people in the waters, which are home to a vibrant marine ecosystem.

    Globally, there were 73 confirmed unprovoked shark attacks in 2021, including nine which resulted in death.

  • Cyberattack: Albania ends diplomatic relations with Iran

    Albania has severed diplomatic ties with Iran and ordered Iranian embassy staff to leave, accusing it of orchestrating a major cyber-attack.

    Prime Minister Edi Rama said a review had discovered “incontrovertible evidence” that Iran “hired four organizations to mount the attack on Albania” on 15 July.

    The hackers tried to paralyse public services, delete and steal government data, and incite chaos, he added.

    Mr Rama described Albania’s response as “extreme… but entirely forced on us”.

    The United States said it strongly condemned the cyber-attack on a Nato ally and vowed to hold Iran accountable for actions that threatened Albania’s security and “set a troubling precedent for cyber-space”.

    There was no immediate comment from the Iranian government. But relations between Tirana and Tehran have been tense since Albania offered asylum to thousands of Iranian dissidents nine years ago.

    Mr Rama said the goal of the hacking groups had been “the destruction of the digital infrastructure of the government of the Republic of Albania, as well as the theft of data and electronic communications of governments systems”.

    But he added: “The said attack failed its purpose… All systems came back fully operational and there was no irreversible wiping of data.”

    The prime minister nevertheless said the Albanian government’s decision to sever diplomatic relations with Iran was “proportionate to the seriousness and danger posed by the cyber-attack”.

    US National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said American experts had also concluded that Iran “conducted this reckless and irresponsible cyber-attack” and that it was “responsible for the subsequent hack and leak operations”.

    Iran’s conduct, she warned, “disregards norms of responsible peacetime state behaviour in cyber-space”, including one on refraining from damaging critical infrastructure providing public services.

    Earlier this month, US cyber-security firm Mandiant said it had concluded “with moderate confidence” that “one or multiple threat actors who have operated in support of Iranian goals” were involved in the attack.

    Mandiant noted that the disruption had come days before the start of a conference in the Albanian town of Manez that was affiliated with the exiled Iranian opposition group Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MEK). The event was subsequently postponed following warnings of “terrorist” threats.

    The firm likewise cited a video featuring the Albanian residence permits of purported MEK members that was posted on the Telegram channel used by a group named “HomeLand Justice” to claim credit for the cyber-attack.

    It said a ransomware sample also included the text: “Why should our taxes be spent on the benefit of DURRES terrorists?” Manez is a town in Durres County and is the location of a camp where about 3,000 MEK members have been allowed to live since 2013 at the request of the US and United Nations.

  • Pakistan’s largest lake overflows, fear grip villagers

    “There is too much water. We are going to drown.”

    That was the warning from the villagers of Sehta Sehanj, where flooding caused by the overflow of Pakistan’s largest lake has left many residents trapped by rising water levels and fearing for their lives.
    Lake Manchar — which has swelled to an area hundreds of square kilometers wide due to the combined effects of a heavy monsoon and melting glaciers — breached its banks for what was at least the third time on Tuesday, leaving nearby villages under several feet of water.
    Pakistani authorities are in a desperate race against time to lower water levels at the lake in Sindh — the country’s second most populous province, home to nearly 48 million people — fearing that a full-scale breach of its banks could inundate nearby cities.

    Noor Mohammad Thebo said parts of his village have been cut off by the water from Lake Manchar.

    In a bid to avert that scenario, they allowed the lake to overflow twice on Sunday in an attempt to divert some of the lake’s waters into less densely populated areas. But this has led to flooding in smaller villages that has affected around 135,000 people, Sindh province’s irrigation minister Jam Khan Shoro told CNN on Wednesday. Shoro said the move was necessary to avoid wider flooding in the district of Dadu, home to around 1.55 million people.
    The lake also overflowed on Tuesday, in what officials said was a natural occurrence and not part of efforts to divert the water.
    Shoro said officials had on Sunday tried to warn people in towns near the lake that it would overflow and had urged people to leave the area.
    “We are trying our best to provide relief to the people but the scale of the disaster is so high and the number of people affected is also so high,” he said. “It’s nearly impossible for our government to provide everyone with shelter, food, and medicine. It’s difficult.”
    Shoro added that the army and navy were being enlisted to help the relief efforts and authorities were communicating with elected officials in the villages.
    Murad Ali Shah, the chief minister of Sindh, said Wednesday he did not want the lake to overflow but if authorities had not diverted the water, cities up to 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the lake — such as Sehwan, Dadu, and Mehar — would have been put in danger.
    While those areas have been spared, at least for now, villages nearby are bearing the brunt.
    “(Our) village is submerged. There is no way to go (to it),” said Noor Mohammad Thebo, who spoke to CNN on a roadside as rapidly flowing water swirled around his ankles.
    Thebo said 10 to 15 families had been cut off by the rising waters in his village near the lake and that water up to 1.5 meters (five feet) deep now covered its main access road — making any rescue efforts a dangerous affair.
    “There are no rescue teams that could help (the trapped families) and there is no way for (the families) to come out,” Thebo said.
    In Bachal Chana, another nearby village, resident Yar Mohammad said people had been caught completely off guard when overflowing water from Lake Manchar rushed in.
    “It destroyed our crops and houses. The breach took place suddenly and we were unaware (it was about to happen.) No one had informed us,” said Yar Mohammad, standing knee-deep in murky water.
    Around him, cattle were almost completely submerged, with only their heads peaking through and gasping for air.
    Many villagers must now choose between staying put and taking their chances with further floods or leaving their homes and seeking shelter and aid elsewhere.
    New satellite images from the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Sentinel Labs show how the lake has swelled over the past two months into an area covering hundreds of square kilometers following record levels of rain. What were once islands and peninsulas in the lake have disappeared and the surrounding land has been swallowed up.
    The satellite images also show that despite the breaches water levels at the lake remain dangerously high– suggesting there may be more misery to come for nearby villagers.
    Ghulam Murtaza, 35, from Sehta Sehanj, said the government had warned his village that it remained in danger as it was naturally downstream of the lake.
    “They say that there is no other way. But it has left our area inundated,” Murtaza said.
    Source: CNN.com
  • Murder: Nurse Rebecca Searing who murdered husband jailed for life

    The defendant attacked Paul Searing, 57, in February several hours after he returned from the pub to their home in Harlow, the court heard.

    A nurse who stabbed her husband to death as he lay in bed has been sentenced to life.

    Rebecca Searing, 52, who must serve 17 years in prison before she can be considered for parole, told a 999 call handler: “I’ve stabbed my husband twice.”

    She had also sent a message to someone saying “it’s time to kill”.

    She attacked Paul Searing, 57, on 12 February several hours after he returned from the pub to their home in Harlow, Essex, Chelmsford Crown Court heard.

    Judge Christopher Morgan said the defendant, who had also been drinking, helped her husband upstairs and then returned downstairs to their home in Ryecroft.

    “Shortly before 2.30 am you took a knife from the kitchen, you made your way upstairs and you stabbed your husband as he lay in bed,” the judge said.

    He said Searing had later said: “Tonight I took my chance.”

    The judge said the defendant’s husband had “presented no threat” and “in all probability he was asleep”.

    He said Searing had suggested that her husband called her “worthless” or “useless”.

    The judge said: “At whatever stage, those words were no justification for what you were to do later on.”

    Paul Searing was described in court as ‘happy-go-lucky and football-mad

    Searing was found guilty of murder after an earlier nine-day trial.

    Allan Compton QC, for the prosecution, read a statement from Mr Searing’s sister Karen Krokou, in which she said he had “worked hard as a cabinet maker and took pride in his work”.

    She described him as “happy-go-lucky and football-mad, he loved Tottenham Hotspur”.

    Mr Searing, who had children, was an “exceptionally loyal man, caring, warm and kind”, Ms Krokou said.

    She described the defendant’s 999 calls as “chilling”, adding: “She may have been a good nurse but that doesn’t make her a good person.”

    Sasha Wass QC, mitigating, said the married couple had a “complex relationship”.

    She said: “She loved him despite the complexity of that relationship and she still loves him.”

    Ms Wass said it was “a relationship that involved regular domestic violence”.

    Searing, who wore a grey prison-issue tracksuit, looked straight ahead as the judge sentenced her to life in jail

  • Russian-Ukraine war: EU proposes to regulate Russian gas prices

    The EU is preparing its own kind of response after Russia shut down the main Nord Stream 1 pipeline a few days ago, but it acknowledges that consumers and businesses are already paying “astronomical rates.”

    A new confrontation between the European Union and Russia over gas supplies appears to be imminent.

    The bloc has revealed plans for a price cap on Russian gas imports in retaliation for the war in Ukraine and measures to help member states cope with the energy squeeze.

    Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, laid out five proposals on Wednesday, hours after Russia’s leader threatened to turn off the taps to any Western nations moving to impose price caps on his country’s energy.

    She said Russia had become an “unreliable supplier” after state-run Gazprom’s decision to turn off the taps on the major Nord Stream 1 pipeline indefinitely last week, adding that the EU’s reliance on Russian gas had fallen significantly since the invasion and stocks were back at 82% across the bloc.

    One of the other measures however betrayed the perilous position the bloc continues to face ahead of winter.

    She also planned a cap on the revenue of non-gas fuelled generators – bolstered by record raw energy costs – to re-channel their “unexpected profits” into measures that support households and companies.

    Ursula Von Der Leyen
    Image: Ursula von der Leyen said consumers across the EU were facing ‘astronomic’ bills

    A windfall tax on fossil fuel firms was also on the cards, she said, along with aid for utility providers struggling under the weight of wholesale prices.

    The plans, which will have to be agreed upon by member states, may face opposition.

    Some EU countries are wary of capping Russian gas prices in case that costs them the dwindling supply they still receive from Moscow.

    It follows confirmation that the UK is planning to bring down its own energy bills through a taxpayer-funded bailout. The details are expected this week.

    Ms Von der Leyen explained that the planned cap on wholesale prices from Russia was now possible after the bloc had eased its reliance on Russian energy.

    “We have increased our preparedness and weakened Russia’s grip on our energy supply through demand reduction – which allowed our common storage to be at 82%,” she said.

    “Through diversification, we have increased deliveries of LNG or pipeline gas from the US, Norway, Algeria, Azerbaijan, and others. For example, Norway is now delivering more gas to the EU than Russia.”

    The UK has also been pumping record volumes to the EU via interconnectors for months as part of EU efforts to bolster storage.

    Ms Von der Leyen said Russian gas accounted for 9% of imports, down from 40% in February before the invasion of Ukraine.

  • Death by Firing squad and electric chair executions: They are ‘torture’ – US judge rules

    The judge was informed that the bullets used in executions are intended to shatter inside the heart and that the effects of the electric chair on the body’s interior organs are comparable to frying.

    Executions via lethal injection or firing squad are unlawful and constitute “torture,” according to a US judge.

    Lawyers for four inmates in South Carolina who took legal action against the state had argued prisoners would feel terrible pain whether their bodies were “cooking” by electricity or when their heart was stopped by a marksman’s bullet – assuming they are on target.

    And on Tuesday, Judge Jocelyn Newman ruled that both the state’s newly-created firing squad and its use of the electric chair should desist.

    The state’s governor, Republican Henry McMaster, said he planned to appeal her decision.

    From 1995 to 2011 – when the state’s last execution was performed – South Carolina carried out the death penalty with lethal injections on 36 prisoners.

    But, as the state’s supply of lethal injection drugs expired in 2013, an involuntary pause in executions resulted from pharmaceutical companies’ refusal to sell the state more.

    Condemned inmates technically had the choice between injection and electrocution, meaning that opting for the former would in essence leave the state unable to carry out the sentence.

    Execution ‘ought to be humane’

    Struggling to implement new execution protocols, prison officials sought help from state lawmakers, who for several years had considered adding the firing squad as an option to approved methods, but the debate on it never advanced.

    Last year, Democratic Senator Dick Harpootlian and Republican Senator Greg Hembree, both of whom previously served as prosecutors, again argued in favour of adding the firing squad option.

    “The death penalty is going to stay the law here for a while. If it is going to remain, it ought to be humane,” Mr Harpootlian had said.

    ‘The death chamber’ at the state penitentiary in Huntsville, Texas – the state which executes more people than any other

    During last month’s hearing before Judge Newman, lawyers representing the state provided evidence from their experts who appeared to agree with them and said death by the yet-to-be-used firing squad or the rarely used electric chair would be instantaneous and the condemned would not feel any pain.

    The ultimately approved measure, signed into law by Mr McMaster last year, made South Carolina the fourth state in the United States to allow the use of a firing squad, and made the state’s electric chair – built in 1912 – the default method for executions, thereby giving prisoners a new choice.

    The South Carolina Supreme Court subsequently blocked the planned executions of two inmates by electrocution, however, saying they could not be put to death until they truly had the choice of a firing squad option set out in the state’s newly revised law.

    Ammunition ‘splits up in the heart’

    Earlier this year, the state rolled out its updated execution protocols, to include the new method.

    During last month’s trial, a Corrections Department official said he devised the firing squad protocols after consulting a prison official in Utah, the location of the only three inmates to die by firing squad since 1977.

    Colie Rushton, the department’s security director, testified the 308 Winchester ammunition to be used is designed to fragment and split up in the heart to make death as fast as possible.

    In her ruling, Judge Newman recalled the testimony of two physicians, who said an inmate “is likely to be conscious for a minimum of ten seconds after impact”.

    During that time, the judge wrote, “he will feel excruciating pain resulting from the gunshot wounds and broken bones,” a sensation that “constitutes torture” as it is “exacerbated by any movement he makes, such as flinching or breathing”.

    Dr  Jonathan Arden testified the electric chair caused “effects on parts of the body, including internal organs, that are the equivalent of cooking”.

    Just three prisoners in South Carolina have chosen the electric chair since lethal injection was made available in 1995.

    Officials with the state Corrections Department told the Associated Press they were “assessing the ruling”.

     

  • Multiple stabs in chest: Man, 23, admits killing Canadian girlfriend he met on dating app

    Three months after arriving in the UK, Ashley Wadsworth’s boyfriend fatally stabbed her.

    A 23-year-old Essex resident has confessed to killing his young Canadian lover.

    Jack Sepple killed 19-year-old Ashley Wadsworth, from Vernon in British Columbia, at a house in Chelmsford in February after meeting her on a dating app.

    Jack Sepple

    Paramedics tried to save Ms Wadsworth but she was pronounced dead at the scene.

    An inquest hearing was told that she died of “stab wounds to the chest”.

    Christopher Paxton QC, for Sepple, said that the “issue of fitness is now resolved” and requested that the defendant be asked to enter a plea.

    The court clerk read the single charge of murder and Sepple, standing in the secure dock in a long white sleeved top and with tattoos on his face and hand, replied: “I’m guilty.”

    Judge Christopher Morgan told Sepple: “By your plea of guilty to murder there’s only one sentence that can be passed and that’s a life sentence.”

    He remanded the defendant in custody until a date is found for sentencing.

    Ms Wadsworth moved to Chelmsford in November 2021, she wrote on Facebook.

    Earlier this year she posted photos online of her “amazing trip to London”, where she had been sightseeing.

     

  • Vietnam karaoke bar: At least 14 dead

    In southern Vietnam, close to Ho Chi Minh City, a massive fire at a karaoke complex resulted in at least 14 fatalities and numerous injuries.

    On Tuesday night, a fire broke out on the establishment’s top floor, trapping numerous clients inside of their rooms.

    To escape, four people jumped from the second and third floors, local media said. They were injured but survived.

    Firefighters reached the scene shortly after alarms went off.

    Crews say the blaze took just under an hour to bring under control. Investigators are still determining the cause.

    The An Phu karaoke bar, located in the Binh Duong region just north of the city, occupied a significantly sized building with 29 rooms.

    About a third of the building had been on fire, local officials said.

    It had several decorations and wooden decor, BBC Vietnamese reported.

    This is not the first time a fire has broken out at a karaoke bar in Vietnam. Last month, three firefighters died after trying to extinguish a fire at a karaoke venue in the capital Hanoi.

  • Pakistan floods: Biggest lake subsides amid race to help victims

    After last-ditch efforts to keep it from bursting its banks, officials say the water levels in Pakistan’s largest lake are beginning to decrease.

    In Sindh province, Manchar Lake is dangerously filled following record-breaking monsoons that submerged a third of Pakistan.

    Its banks were deliberately breached to protect surrounding areas and more than 100,000 people have been displaced.

    Teams are racing to rescue thousands still stranded in Pakistan’s worst climate-induced disaster in years.

    “We see the water is now starting to come down,” provincial minister Jam Khan Shoro told the BBC. “If we didn’t make the breaches, several towns with big populations would have been destroyed and many more people in danger.”

    Floods in Pakistan have affected some 33 million people and caused at least 1,343 deaths, Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Agency said.

    Officials have said a little over a quarter of a million people are in shelters, a fraction of those who need help.

    Damaged infrastructure is also hampering aid and rescue operations, which cannot keep pace with demand. Some connecting roads in Sindh province have either collapsed, are flooded or are backed up for days with queuing traffic.

    Manchar Lake straddles two districts – Jamshoro and Dadu – with an urban population of more than 1 million.

    A man rows a boat with submerged houses in the background, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Mehar, Pakistan August 31, 2022.
    IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
    Image caption,

    Towns that became virtual islands – Mehar (pictured here) west of Lake Manchar, and Johi to the north-east

    Johi, a town near the lake, has been surrounded by water and now resembles an island. Its residents have built an improvised dyke to slow down water coming into the area, as they did during floods in 2010. Authorities told the BBC they do not know yet if the measure will work this time.

    Meanwhile, the UN children’s agency UNICEF has said more children are at risk of dying from the disease in Pakistan because of the shortage of clean water.

    This year’s floods – Pakistan’s worst climate-induced natural disaster in years – have been caused by record torrential rainfall and melting glaciers in the country’s northern mountains.

    Pakistan’s climate change minister, Sherry Rehman, told the BBC that richer countries needed to do more to help poorer countries faced with the devastation caused by climate change.

    “Richer countries have got rich on the back of fossil fuels… and have been burning their way to kingdom come,” she said in an interview with BBC News.

    The disaster has highlighted the stark disparity between countries that are the largest contributors to climate change and countries that bear the brunt of its impact. Pakistan produces less than 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions but its geography makes it extremely vulnerable to climate change.

    Low-emission countries like Pakistan, Ms Rehman said, “are now feeling the heat – quite literally of other people’s development and greed”.

    “We have made an appeal to the developed world that this is the time to actually do more.”

    She acknowledged flood aid from countries including the US, Qatar, and Turkey – but said international support would be needed to help make Pakistan’s infrastructure climate resilient.

    “We neither have the money or the technical capacity.”
  • Reported missing: Venezuelans on spiritual mountain retreat

    A group of persons who vanished while on a spiritual retreat in the Andes are being sought by emergency personnel.

    In Venezuela’s Táchira state, dogs and drones are being used to search the rugged region surrounding La Grita.

    An official with the civil protection team said between 16 and 20 people were missing, but local media suggest the number could be higher.

    Relatives say they have not heard from their loved ones since they left for the retreat on 22 August.

    Neighbors told local paper La Nación that a number of local families had packed food and camping mats and set off into the mountains on what they described as a four-day spiritual retreat.

    A priest in La Grita said the group had followed a woman who claimed to have received a revelation by the Virgin Mary.

    In his Sunday sermon, the priest warned of the dangers of believing in “fanatics” who made claims about the end of the world being nigh.

    Yesnardo Canal of the local civil protection authority said a newborn and a number of children were among the missing.

    On Tuesday, a search team combed through the area where locals had reported seeing the group but found nothing.

    La Grita is located at a height of 1,440m (4,725ft) but the surrounding moorlands reach a height of 3,000m.

    The mayor of the area said that the families’ disappearance was “very suspicious”. “There are several theories [of what may have happened] but we won’t know what really happened until the investigations have been concluded,” the official added.

  • Retrial: After previous jury discharged, Ryan Giggs faces another trail

    A judge has decided that Ryan Giggs, a former Manchester United football player, will be retried on charges that he beat his ex-girlfriend.

    At a quick hearing on Wednesday at Manchester Crown Court, the judge set a new trial date of July 31 of the following year.

    Jurors had failed to reach verdicts following more than 20 hours of deliberations in his four-week trial.

    Mr Giggs, 48, also denied controlling or coercive behaviour towards his ex-girlfriend Kate Greville, 38.

    He also denied “losing control” headbutting her and assaulting Ms Greville’s sister, Emma, 26, by elbowing her in the jaw during a row at his home in Worsley, Greater Manchester on 1 November 2020.

    In a statement issued following the decision, Mr Giggs said he was “obviously disappointed that a retrial has been ordered” on the charges, following the jury being discharged last week.

    “My not guilty plea remains in relation to all charges. I am confident that justice will eventually be done and my name will be cleared of all the allegations,” said Mr Giggs, who was not required to attend the hearing.

    “I would like to thank my legal team, my mum, my children, my girlfriend Zara, as well as my closest friends, for their support throughout this period.

    “I understand the level of interest and the scrutiny around this case, but I would like to ask that my and my family’s privacy is respected in the weeks and months ahead.”

    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Ryan Giggs quit as Wales manager

    During Wednesday’s hearing, Peter Wright QC, prosecuting, told Judge Hilary Manley: “We do seek a retrial in respect of Mr Giggs.

    “The matter has been considered at a senior level within the Crown Prosecution Service and also the willingness of the complainant to give evidence, although that is not determinative on the matter, has also been canvassed.

    “They indicate a preparedness so to do.”

    Judge Manley approved a retrial and told Mr Giggs’ lawyers in court that his bail would be extended until the trial next year.

    It means Mr Giggs will have been on bail for more than two and a half years before his case goes to trial again, following a pre-trial hearing scheduled for 3 July.

    He quit as Wales’ manager in June.

  • A Hong Kong judge convicts five people for children’s books

    Five speech therapists were convicted guilty of publishing seditious children’s books by a Hong Kong judge.

    Authorities believed that their novels, which are about sheep attempting to keep wolves out of their hamlet, included a blatantly political message.

    After a two-month trial, a government-picked national security judge said their “seditious intention” was clear.

    It comes amid part of a wider crackdown on civil liberties by Chinese authorities in the city.

    The group of five speech therapists, who were founding members of a union, produced three cartoon e-books that some interpreted as trying to explain Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement to children.

    “The seditious intention stems not merely from the words, but from the words with the proscribed effects intended to result in the mind of children,” wrote Judge Kwok Wai-kin in his judgment.

    Lai Man-ling, Melody Yeung, Sidney Ng, Samuel Chan, and Fong Tsz-ho, who were all found guilty, had already been held in jail for more than a year ahead of Wednesday’s verdict.
  • Holiday Inn hotels rocked by cyber-attack

    Holiday Inn owner, Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG), has verified the company has been hit by a cyber-attack.

    IHG, which has some of the world’s largest hotel chains, issued a statement saying it was investigating “unauthorized access” to a number of its technology systems.

    The UK-based company said its “booking channels and other applications” had been disrupted since Monday.

    It manages the Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, and Regent hotels.

    “IHG is working to fully restore all systems as soon as possible,” the company said.

    IHG confirmed it was assessing the nature, extent, and impact of the incident and had implemented its response plans, including appointing external specialists to investigate the breach.

    The company is also in the process of notifying regulatory authorities.

    In a statement, the company said: “We will be supporting hotel owners and operators as part of our response to the ongoing service disruption. IHG’s hotels are still able to operate and to take reservations directly.”

    But many people trying to book accommodation have been complaining.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. View the original tweet on Twitter

    IHG did not say there had been any loss of customer data.

    It also did not specifically say it was a ransomware attack, but most of the speculation points in that direction.

    Last month, a Holiday Inn in Istanbul was breached by LockBit, which released data stolen from the company.

    It is not known if there is a connection between the attacks.

    The hotel chain was also the target of a three-month security breach in 2017 when more than 1,200 of its franchised hotels in the US were affected.

    The hack comes amid increased scrutiny on appropriate defences against cyber-attacks, particularly on Western financial institutions, in the wake of heightened geopolitical tensions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine early this year.

     

  • UK ticket buyer claims £110 million jackpot in EuroMillions

    The record-holder won £195 million in July, making only 15 UK players the only ones to ever win a jackpot above £100 million.

    A UK ticket holder has filed a claim for Friday’s draw’s £110 million EuroMillions jackpot prize.

    Only 15 UK players have ever won a jackpot of more than £100m, with the record-holder winning £195m in July.

    Other winners of more than £100 million this year included the biggest National Lottery win of £195 million from the EuroMillions draw on 19 July and a £109 million jackpot from the draw on 4 February in which both winners remained anonymous.

    Andy Carter, senior winners’ adviser at The National Lottery, said: “This is absolutely incredible news and we’re delighted that we’ve received a claim.

    Gloucestershire couple, Joe and Jess Thwaite celebrated a £184 million win from the draw on 10 May, exactly a month before a UK ticket-holder, who also chose to remain anonymous, scooped £54 million in the draw on 10 June.

    The Thwaites said they are “not materialistic” and were not planning to spend too much of their winnings on items – may be a “new car or something like that”.

    Instead, they said they want to spend the money on experiences.

    They revealed they had to buy suitcases to get to the news conferences as they “never go on holiday”.

    Their children have been excited at the prospect of a holiday, they say, and their youngest has “always wanted to go to Hawaii”.

    “I think YouTube’s to blame for that,” Mr Thwaite said.

    Meanwhile, Frances Connolly, who won £115m in the 2019 EuroMillions, and says she is ‘addicted to helping’ said she has given away more than half of her £115m lottery winnings and busted her budget for the next decade.

     

  • Journey to climb Russian volcano: Eight die, survivors evacuated

    Authorities in the area report that survivors of an eight-person climbing trip on Eurasia’s tallest volcano have been rescued by rescuers.

    The deceased was part of a group of 12 individuals, including two guides, who have been climbing Klyuchevskaya Sopka in the northeastern Kamchatka peninsula region of Russia since August 30, Russian state news agency, RIA Novosti, said. A rescue group began climbing to reach the survivors Monday, Russia’s Ministry of Civil Defense, Emergencies and Disaster Relief told state media.
    At 4,750 meters (15,580 feet), Klyuchevskaya Sopka is one of the world‘s highest active volcanos.
    The Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations reported that as of Tuesday morning the survivors had been transported by helicopter to the nearest village, Klyuchi, in the Ust-Kamchatka district. RIA Novosti noted that one of the survivors had contacted frostbite by the time rescuers reached them.
    According to local media, the plan is to ultimately evacuate the survivors to Petropavlovsk on a Regional Center of Disaster Medicine plane.
    Izvestiya, one of Russia’s main daily newspapers, reported that some of the rescue groups remained on the volcano after the survivors were evacuated. The remaining rescuers will decide on how to evacuate the dead bodies, located at a height of 4158 meters (13,641 feet) after the weather forecast is determined.
    Conditions on the volcano are treacherous and unpredictable, with strong winds, bitterly cold temperatures, and snow at high altitudes.
    Previous search and rescue attempts to reach the trapped individuals were unsuccessful, as strong winds prevented a helicopter from landing on the volcano Sunday, a day after five members of the group fell to their deaths. By Monday morning, three more had died, Russian Deputy Prime Minister of Kamchatka Roman Vasilevsky told RIA Novosti.
    The Minister of Emergency Situations for the region where the volcano is located has opened an information hotline for relatives of the climbing party, a spokesperson told RIA Novosti.
    “Relatives can find out information about the progress of search and rescue operations, as well as, if necessary, get psychological help,” the ministry’s press service said.
    A criminal case has been initiated to look into the cause of the deaths, RIA Novosti reported.
  • New rule: Russians to pay €45 more to enter EU under new rule

    The European Union wants to increase the cost and difficulty of obtaining a visa for Russian nationals.

    The application process would take longer and the charge will increase from €35 (£30; $34) to €80 (£69; $79) for Russians seeking entry to the EU.

    This should continue as long as Moscow wages its war of aggression

    against Ukraine, the EU Commission said.

    More than a million Russians have travelled to EU countries since the invasion of Ukraine in February.

    Margaritis Schinas, an EU Commission vice-president, said Russia had “completely undermined” the trust on which the existing EU-Russia visa agreement was based.

    Under that agreement, Russians had for 15 years enjoyed a streamlined process for getting EU visas.

    EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted to say that the visa agreement should be suspended as there “can be no business as usual” with Russia.

    Tuesday’s move follows a decision last week by EU foreign ministers when they agreed in principle to suspend the existing visa agreement with Moscow.

    The plan had been seen as a compromise, with Ukraine and some EU member states calling for a blanket ban – but others like France and Germany opposed to going that far.

    Some EU countries bordering Russia had already begun to tighten border controls.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov last week admitted that the EU decision would make life more difficult for Russian travelers, calling the proposal “another ridiculous decision in a series of ongoing absurdities”.

    Under the proposals, Russian citizens will face:

    Separately, the EU Commission is proposing that the member states refuse to recognize Russian passports issued in occupied Ukraine.

    “Russians should not have easy access to the European Union and traveling to the EU as a tourist is not a human right,” said EU home affairs commissioner Ylva Johansson.

  • China quake: Tremor hits Sichuan city in lockdown

    A 6.6 magnitude earthquake hit southwestern China, killing at least 65 people state media said.

    The quake struck at 13:00 local time (05:00 GMT) on Monday in Sichuan province at a depth of 10km (6 miles).

    The impact severed telecommunications lines and triggered mountain landslides that caused “serious damage”, local media reports say.

    Some 21 million people in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu were last week ordered to stay at home because of Covid rules.

    The epicentre of the quake was Luding, a town in a remote mountain region located about 226km southwest of Chengdu, according to the China Earthquake Networks Centre.

    State broadcaster CCTV said 17 people died in the city of Ya’an, while 29 deaths were reported in the neighboring prefecture of Ganzi.

    “Another 16 people were missing and 50 were injured,” CCTV said late on Monday.

    Tremors shook buildings in Chengdu and the neighboring mega-city of Chongqing, leaving roads blocked and cutting communication lines in areas home to more than 10,000 residents.

    The shocks also forced some power stations to shut down in the areas of Garze and Ya’an, CCTV said.

    IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption,
    The aftermath Hailuogou in China’s south-western Sichuan province

     

    More than 500 rescue personnel have been despatched to the epicenter, while workers laboured to clear roadblocks caused by landslides, according to state broadcaster CGTN.

    Chengdu residents reported seeing people running out of their high-rise apartments in a panic after receiving earthquake alerts on their phones.

    “There were many people who were so terrified they started crying,” Laura Luo, an international PR consultant, told news agency Reuters.

    When the shaking began, “all the dogs started barking. It was really quite scary”.

    “Some of my neighbors on the ground floor said they felt it very noticeably,” Chen, a resident of Chengdu, told AFP news agency.

    “But because Chengdu is currently under epidemic management, people aren’t allowed to leave their residential compounds, so many of them rushed out into their courtyards.”

    On Friday, Chengdu became the latest city to be locked down by Chinese authorities, in an attempt to stem the rise in Covid cases.

    The latest disaster comes months after a 6.1-magnitude earthquake tore through Sichuan in June. Sichuan is an earthquake-prone area, as it lies along the eastern boundary of the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau.

    The earthquake also called into memory an 8.0-magnitude quake that hit Wenchuan county in northwest Sichuan in 2008, which killed 70,000 and caused widespread destruction.

  • Madhya Pradesh: Indian mother injured while defending her 15 months baby from a tiger

    Serious injuries were sustained by a mother in the Madhya Pradesh state of central India as she fought off a tiger to protect her 15-month-old child.

    Archana Choudhary grappled with the tiger with her bare hands for a couple of minutes before villagers heard her cries for help and intervened.

    Before villagers responded to Archana Choudhary’s calls for assistance, she wrestled the tiger for a few minutes using only her bare hands.

    Both mother and son are receiving treatment in the hospital.

    The attack took place on Sunday on the outskirts of the Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve.

    Animal attacks on people living around the tiger reserve aren’t uncommon. Villagers BBC Hindi spoke to said apart from tigers, elephants have also been entering their villages and damaging their crops.

    Across India, people living in areas close to forests and national parks have been witnessing a rise in man-animal conflicts.

    Experts say this is because rapid urbanization is destroying natural habitats, forcing animals to enter villages and towns in search of prey and shelter.

    In the latest attack, the woman, Archana Choudhary, and her toddler were in a field when a tiger came out of the bushes and attacked the infant.

    Archana Choudhary's son - seen here with his father
    Image caption,

    Her son – seen here with his father – suffered wounds to his head

    The Times of India reported that the tiger had sunk its teeth into the baby’s head and was trying to pull the child away when the mother intervened and attempted to fight off the tiger. Her screams for help attracted villagers from nearby areas who reached the spot with sticks and drove away the tiger.

    The mother is reported to have a punctured lung and has received deep wounds on her body while her son has wounds on his head.

    A doctor told BBC Hindi that the wounds on the child’s body were not serious, but those on the mother were.

    Civil surgeon Dr Misthi Ruhela in the city of Jabalpur said that the mother and child were being treated in the intensive care unit and had been given anti-rabies injections.

    Meanwhile, the tiger attack caused panic among the villagers.

    A forest official told reporters that the biggest challenge for the department was to locate and capture the tiger that had strayed into the village.

    Senior government official Sanjeev Srivastava told BBC Hindi that arrangements were also being made to ensure that more tigers didn’t escape from the reserve.

  • Eliza Fletcher: Body identified by Police in search for heiress

    Officials have reported that a body discovered during the hunt for Eliza Fletcher has been recognized as the missing Memphis heiress.

    The 34-year-old was kidnapped early on Friday morning while jogging close to the University of Memphis campus.

    Cleotha Abston, 38, has been charged with kidnapping and killing the mother-of-two.

    Fletcher was the granddaughter of the late Joseph Orgill III, a billionaire local businessman and philanthropist.

    The Memphis Police Department said on Monday that officers had found a body at around 17:07pm local time (23:07 BST) – but stressed no identification had been made.

    Then on Tuesday, officers said the deceased “located yesterday in the 1600 block of Victor has been identified as Eliza Fletcher”.

    At the time of the discovery, Abston, who was arrested on Saturday, had been charged with aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence.

    Additional charges for him have now “been added for first-degree murder and first-degree murder in perpetration of kidnapping,” police said in the update.

    Abston was arrested after his DNA was detected on a pair of sandals found near where Fletcher was last seen, according to an arrest affidavit.

    Officers also found a vehicle at the address Abston was staying at that matched CCTV footage of Fletcher being forced into an SUV.

    He attempted to flee when US Marshals arrived at the residence but was captured, the affidavit said.

  • Truss addressing nation from Downing Street after rain delay

    Liz Truss is delivering her address to the nation after being appointed the country’s new prime minister by the Queen.

    The Tory leader, who became the UK’s third female prime minister today, begins by paying tribute to Boris Johnson who she says was a “hugely consequential prime minister”.

    She says the UK now finds itself facing “global headwinds” caused by Russia’s war in Ukraine and now is the time to “tackle the issues that are holding Britain back”.

    Ms Truss says she has a “bold plan” to “grow the economy through tax cuts and reform” and says she has three priorities.

    “I will cut taxes to reward hard work and boost business-led growth and investment,” she says.

    The new prime minister says she will deal “hands-on” with the energy crisis caused by Vladimir Putin‘s war and will “secure our future energy supply”.

    “I will make sure that people can get doctors appointments and the NHS services they need. We will put our health service on a firm footing by delivering on the economy, on energy and on the NHS,” she says.

    She adds: “As strong as the storm maybe I know that the British people are stronger.

    “Our country was built by people who get things done. We have huge reserves of talent, energy, and determination. I am confident that together we can ride out the storm, we can rebuild our economy and we can become the modern, brilliant Britain that I know we can be.”

    Source: skynews.com

  • Biden quick to congratulate Truss

    US President Joe Biden has wasted no time in congratulating Liz Truss after her first speech as prime minister. 

    He said he looked forward to “deepening the special relationship” between the US and the UK.

    Ms Truss and Mr Biden will be close allies in supporting Ukraine over the coming months as it continues to fight back against Russia’s war.

    Source: skynews.com

  • Burkina Faso blast: Convoy attacked, killing dozens

    In the north of Burkina Faso, where jihadist militant groups are active, a bomb struck a convoy of vehicles, killing at least 35 civilians, according to the authorities.

    Dozens of others were wounded.

    There were numerous other injuries.

    Deadly attacks have been on the rise in Burkina Faso, despite a coup in January led by soldiers who said they would tackle the insecurity.

    Monday’s blast took place on a stretch of road between the towns of Djibo and Bourzanga, an area where militants have attacked villages, police, and military positions for the past seven years.

    The local authority said that one of the vehicles in the convoy ran over an improvised explosive device. No group has said it was behind the killings.

    The victims were mainly traders who were going to buy supplies in the capital, Ouagadougou, and students who were returning to the city before the start of term next week, one resident told the BBC.

    In an effort to deal with the militants, the government has said it has intensified the army’s “offensive actions” and also initiated dialogue with certain armed groups.

    It argues that this strategy has allowed dozens of young people to lay down their arms and for some communities to go back to their villages.

    This latest attack comes days after military ruler Lt-Col Paul-Henri Damiba met with his counterparts from Mali and Ivory Coast to discuss ways to work together to tackle the region’s security problems.

    In January, Burkina Faso’s President Roch Kaboré was ousted by military men driven by concerns over the government’s inability to deal with growing militant Islamist violence.

    “We have more than what it takes to win this war,” Lt-Col Damiba said when he was sworn in as president in February.

    But going by the number of attacks in recent months, citizens are not safer.

    On Monday, a group of aid organisations said about a tenth of the population had been displaced by conflict. More people fled during the first half of this year than in the whole of 2011, they added.

  • Russians continue to shell Donetsk region but no change on ground

    Russian forces continue to shell Ukrainian towns and villages across the Donetsk region but have made no progress on the ground, according to Ukrainian regional authorities.

    Several towns in Donetsk were shelled on Monday, including Bakhmut and Avdiivka, and four civilians were wounded. No information was provided on Ukrainian military casualties.

    The regional administration said that a mandatory evacuation in much of Donetsk was still in force.

    Despite daily bombardments by Russian artillery, air strikes, and tank fire, there has been virtually no change on the front lines in Donetsk for several weeks. Analysts say that after a string of losses in June on the border of Luhansk and Donetsk, Ukrainian forces have largely held their positions — and almost daily Russian assaults have been rebuffed. In recent days, Ukrainian units even advanced in one area across the Siverskiy Donets river, but it’s unclear how much resistance they met.

    Ukrainian officials say the latest Russian assault was towards Bakhmut overnight Monday.

    “The occupiers launched two rocket strikes, eight artillery shells, and 17 mortar shells. The Russians used MLRS three times, a tank — twice, and an infantry fighting vehicle.”

    Further south in Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk, the Russians shelled the Nikopol district across the river from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, according to the regional administration. Regional administrators said 11 homes and 20 high-rise buildings were damaged.

     

    Source: skynews.com

  • Inhaled Covid vaccine: China, first country to approve

    China is the first country to approve the COVID inhalation vaccine.

    It is produced by CanSino and uses a safe adenovirus as a carrier for the genetic information that instructs the body on how to combat Covid.

    Inhaled as a fine mist, Convidecia Air can provide good protection after just one breath, the company says.

    Other researchers, including teams in the UK and the US, have been investigating nasal spray vaccines.

    Scientists say these may give added immunity to the lining of the nose and upper airways, where Covid typically enters the body.

    The National Medical Products Administration of China granted CanSino approval for its inhaled vaccine to be used as a booster dose.

    It can top up protection in those who have previously had a jab, trials suggest.

    Meanwhile, the latest Covid vaccine booster programme has begun in England, Wales, and Scotland.

    Infections are falling around the UK – but health bosses predict a resurgence of Covid and flu this autumn and winter.

    They are urging those eligible to protect themselves from serious illness by being vaccinated against both.

  • Extreme heat, save power: Californians urged to conserve energy for sixth day in a row to avoid blackouts during heatwave

    The afternoon and evening hours are when the grid is under the most strain due to heavy demand, thus the flex warnings advise individuals to use less energy during those times.

    As the state swelters in record-breaking temperatures, the manager of California’s electricity grid has for the sixth day in a row urged residents to practice energy conservation.

    The California Independent System Operator (ISO) said there could be rolling blackouts in the state if the guidance in the “flex alerts” isn’t followed.

    During a flex alert, consumers are urged to reduce their energy use in the afternoon and evening hours when the grid is most stressed because of high demand.

    People have been asked to use less power between 4 pm and 10 pm local time on Monday (midnight and 6 am UK time on Tuesday) under the latest alert.

    The California ISO had earlier asked people to use less energy between 4 pm and 9 pm local time on Saturday and Sunday as demand spiked and temperatures were still on the rise.

    Speaking at a news conference when alerts were announced for Saturday and Sunday, the California ISO’s president Elliot Mainzer said: “When we’re in a situation like this, where we’re right up against the margin of system capability and you have the kinds of threats to reliability from fires and generation plants coming offline, that consumer flexible demand, that response, can be the difference between the lights staying on or not.”

    The latest alert comes after multiple generators were forced out of service due to extreme temperatures in the state, the Los Angeles Times reports.

    Meanwhile, the California ISO has warned ongoing wildfires and potential new blazes could further strain the power grid by crippling lines and further generators.

    “Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, in particular, are shaping up to be the most difficult of this heat wave,” the agency said in a news release.

    The National Weather Service has warned temperatures in California could reach 115F (46C) by the middle of the week.

    It comes after the southern California city of San Diego sweltered in a record temperature of 95F (35C) on Saturday.

    Meanwhile, firefighters in Northern California’s Siskiyou County have been battling a fire that has left two people dead and caused thousands to evacuate their homes.

  • Another rabies death in Kerala: Stray dog bites and kill girl,12

    The death of a 12-year-old girl after being bitten by a stray dog has sparked fury in Kerala, an Indian state.

    Abhirami, who was bitten in August, died on Monday in hospital. This is the 21st rabies death in Kerala this year.

    She had received three doses of the anti-rabies vaccine and was set to take the fourth soon, reports said.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) says rabies is endemic in India, which accounts for 36% of the world’s rabies deaths.

    “True burden of rabies in India is not fully known; although as per available information, it causes 18,000-20,000 deaths every year in the country,” the WHO says.

    Animal rights activists, however, have questioned this, pointing out a “huge difference” between the WHO’s tally and Indian health ministry numbers

    The question of stray dogs is a sensitive one in India and often leads to arguments between animal lovers and local residents over the issue of feeding and sterilizing them.

    A federal minister told parliament in August that there were 15.3 million stray dogs in India in 2019, according to the Livestock Census. The total number, the minister said, had reduced by 10% from 17.1 million recorded in 2012.

    Kerala, which has 290,000 stray dogs, has seen a number of campaigns aimed at getting them off the streets.

    In 2016, a campaign to kill stray dogs, promoted by some people in Kerala after a rise in dog bites, angered activists. A year before that, dog lovers had trended #BoycottKerala on social media against a proposal to cull strays – the plan was never implemented.

    On Friday, India’s Supreme Court will hear a petition seeking action by federal and state governments against stray dogs.

    The court decided to move up the date of the hearing after lawyer VK Biju on Monday highlighted the issue of dog bites in Kerala and mentioned Abhirami’s condition (this was before she died).

    The plea also calls for canceling the ABC [Animal Birth Control] rules which were introduced in 2001 – under this, stray dogs are collected, sterilised, vaccinated, and returned to the same area from where they were picked up.

    Animal rights activists argue that this is the most humane and effective way of keeping the stray dog population in check and reducing dog bites.

    Critics, however, allege that the programme isn’t being implemented properly and say the solution is to cull dogs.

  • Vladimir Putin backs foreign policy doctrine to ‘protect ideals of Russian World’

    Hardliners have exploited the idea of a “Russian World” in foreign policy to defend acting abroad to help Russian speakers, such as in areas of Ukraine.

    It indicates that although it was initially proposed as a soft power strategy, the concept is now firmly established in government policy.

    The new policy stated that Moscow should further deepen its ties with the self-styled Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic – two breakaway entities in eastern Ukraine, where the war continues to rage.

    It also said it should strengthen its links more with Abkhazia and Ossetia, two Georgian regions recognized as independent by Moscow after its war against Georgia in 2008.

    And the policy stated Russia should increase cooperation with Slavic nations, China, and India, and further push its ties to the Middle East, Latin America, and Africa.

    West Slavs are in Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, East Slavs are in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine, while South Slavs are in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Montenegro, and Slovenia.

    With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, a number of Eastern Bloc countries broke away from the USSR and became independent, but around 25 million ethnic Russians found themselves living outside Russia.

    Mr Putin called the collapse of the USSR the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe” and for years he has been highlighting what he sees as the tragic fate of those millions.

    It was one of his predecessors, Mikhail Gorbachev, who failed to prevent the break-up and who died aged 91 last week.

    Moscow has continued to view the former Soviet lands, from the Baltics to Central Asia, as its legitimate sphere of influence – a notion strongly resisted by many of those countries as well as by the West.

    The new policy said the Russian Federation “provides support to its compatriots living abroad in the fulfillment of their rights, to ensure the protection of their interests and the preservation of their Russian cultural identity”.

    It said that Russia’s ties with its compatriots abroad allowed it to “strengthen on the international stage its image as a democratic country striving for the creating of a multi-polar world”

  • ‘Fat Leonard’ escapes house arrest after US navy bribery scandal with ‘wild sex parties’

    A Malaysian contractor at the centre of the US navy’s worst corruption scandal escaped house arrest in California over the weekend after cutting off his GPS anklet, federal agents have said.

    Leonard Francis, known as “Fat Leonard”, who admitted to offering $500,000 in bribes to US navy officers, has reportedly gone on the run before his sentencing in three weeks.

    Police found his home in the city of San Diego empty on Sunday morning.

    Francis was arrested in 2013, accused of plying navy officers with cash, expensive food and cigars, rare cognac, and wild sex parties in luxurious hotels in exchange for contracts.

    Two years later he pleaded guilty to bribing navy officials as part of a massive fraud and bribery scheme involving his ship-servicing company, Glenn Defense Marine Asia, in Singapore.

    Local officials and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service are now understood to be searching for him.

    Supervisory Deputy US Marshal Omar Castillo told the San Diego Union-Tribune, a local newspaper: “He was planning this out, that’s for sure.”

    Francis’ neighbours reportedly saw U-Haul moving lorries going in and out of his home in recent days.

    Francis had suffered from ill health in recent years and was placed under house arrest in 2018 while cooperating with investigators and acting as a witness for the prosecution.

    He was due to be sentenced on 22 September.

    The US Justice Department previously called Francis’ scheme a colossal fraud.

    They later brought charges against more than 30 others.

    Many of those charged have pleaded guilty or were convicted at trial.

  • Murder in Dublin: Man charged with murder of three siblings

    Early on Sunday morning, Lisa Cash, 18, and her identical twin siblings Christy and Chelsea Cawley, 8, passed away in their Tallaght home.

    The murder of three siblings in Dublin has been blamed on a man.

    Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings Christy and Chelsea Cawley died during an incident at their home in Tallaght in the early hours of Sunday.

    A man has been charged with the murder of three siblings in Dublin.

    Lisa Cash, 18, and her eight-year-old twin siblings Christy and Chelsea Cawley died during an incident at their home in Tallaght in the early hours of Sunday.

     

    Andrew Cash, 24, of Rossfield Avenue, Tallaght appeared at a special sitting of the Criminal Courts of Justice in Dublin on Monday evening charged with their murder.

    The court heard he replied “no comment” to each charge, and he was remanded into custody.

    Garda Robert Whitty told the court the accused was cautioned and charged with three counts of murder at 7.51 pm on Monday.

    Judge Patricia McNamara remanded Cash in custody at Cloverhill Prison to appear in court via videolink on Friday at 10 am.

    Earlier, a vigil was held in Tallaght in memory of the siblings with a large crowd gathered outside the house to mourn alongside family and friends.

    Balloons were released and candles were lit along the wall outside the house in their memory as songs were played to the crowd.

    Dozens of bunches of flowers, teddy bears, and candles have been placed along the wall as well as photographs of the three, showing Christy and Chelsea making their first Holy Communion.

    Officers had been called to the property in the Rossfield estate in Tallaght at about 12.30 am on Sunday.

    The victim’s 14-year-old brother was taken to hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries after the incident.

    Their mother, a woman in her 40s, was released from the hospital on Sunday and is being supported by her family.

    People attend a vigil after the deaths of three siblings in Tallaght

    Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin expressed his “deepest sympathies” to the victims’ families, and said that the “terrible tragedy” had “left the nation shocked and very saddened”.

    Ireland’s Garda Commissioner, Drew Harris, described the deaths as “dreadful and traumatic”, saying it was “one of the worst incidents that I’ve heard of or come across in my service”.

    The commissioner appealed to anyone who was in the area at the time, and who may have any information, to come forward to aid the gardai with their investigation.

  • Pakistan floods: Struggle as officials try to stop biggest lake from overflowing

    Pakistan authorities are struggling to contain their biggest lake from bursting its banks after a last-ditch attempt to drain it failed.

    The attempt to breach it displaced up to 100,000 people from their homes.

    But on Monday, the province’s minister for irrigation told Reuters the water level of the lake had “not come down”.

    Sindh province produces half of the country’s food supply, exacerbating fears that many will face serious food shortages in a country already struggling with an economic crisis.

    Floods in Pakistan have affected some 33 million people and killed at least 1,314, including 458 children, Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Agency said.

    Estimates suggest the floods have caused at least $10bn (£8.5bn) of damage.

    On Sunday, officials breached the lake after it had flooded two rural towns, in hopes that it would prevent it from further bursting its banks and inundating more densely-populated areas.

    But the move risked affecting an estimated 400 villages – a total of 135,000 people – who would be left without homes. Officials told villagers to evacuate at the weekend.

    On Monday however, officials said water levels at the lake had remained dangerously high.

    Jam Khan Shoro, the provincial minister for irrigation told the news agency Reuters that water levels had not come down but declined to say if there would be subsequent attempts to relieve the lake of its bloated banks.

    Pakistan is facing one of its worst climate-induced natural disasters in years, as record torrential rainfall and melting glaciers in the country’s northern mountains have caused devastating floods and submerged almost a third of its territory underwater.

    Meanwhile, the UN children’s agency Unicef said more children were at risk of dying from the disease in Pakistan due to the shortage of clean water.

    The disaster has also highlighted the stark disparity between countries that are the largest contributors to climate change and countries that bear the brunt of its impact.

    Pakistan produces less than 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions but its geography makes it extremely vulnerable to climate change.

  • Ukraine war: North Korea arming Russia – US reports

    As a result of Western sanctions, Russia apparently has been obliged to purchase weapons from North Korea in order to maintain its invading force in Ukraine.

    Russian media reports that it has purchased millions of rockets and artillery ammunition from Pyongyang.

    Last week it received the first order of new Iranian drones, US reports said.

    New Russian missile strikes have been reported across Ukraine, with a fuel depot set on fire in the Kryvyi Rih area and deadly attacks on Kharkiv.

    In the north-eastern city of Kharkiv, a woman’s body was found after a strike destroyed the upper part of a block of flats, local authorities said.

    Firefighters near a damaged building in Kharkiv, 6 September
    IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption,

    Flats were destroyed in Kharkiv

    In Kryvyi Rih, in central Ukraine, thick black smoke billowed from the depot in a photo posted by the governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region.

    It was attacked with two missiles on Monday evening, Valentyn Reznichenko said, adding that there was no immediate information about casualties.

    In another development, Russian-backed separatists controlling Donetsk said parts of the eastern city had been shelled by Ukrainian government forces on Tuesday, with one civilian wounded.

    A US official said Russia would be forced to buy additional North Korean weaponry as the war dragged on.

    Iran and North Korea, themselves both the targets of significant Western sanctions, have sought to deepen ties with Russia since President Vladimir Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine in February.

    Kim Jong-un’s government has blamed the US for the conflict and accused the West of pursuing a “hegemonic policy” that justified Russia’s use of force.

    Last month, North Korea recognized the independence of two Russian-backed breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine – the Donetsk and Luhansk people’s republics – and vowed to deepen its “comradely friendship” with Moscow. Mr Putin said the two countries would expand their “comprehensive and constructive bilateral relations”, according to North Korean state media.

    The exact size and scale of the new weapons deliveries reported by the New York Times and Associated Press news agency remain unclear.

    But a US official said turning to North Korea for support demonstrated that “the Russian military continues to suffer from severe supply shortages in Ukraine, due in part to export controls and sanctions”.

    Broad economic sanctions have done little to damage Russia’s income from energy exports, according to a Finnish think tank the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air. It estimates Russia has made €158bn (£136bn) from surging fossil fuel prices during the six-month invasion, with EU imports accounting for more than half of that.

    However, the US and EU believe that Moscow’s ability to resupply its military has been impaired.

    Last week, officials in the Biden administration told US media that the first shipments of Iranian-made drones had also been delivered to Russia.

    US intelligence officers believe that Russian operators have travelled to Iran to receive training on the Mohajer-6 and Shahed series weapons.

    But they told reporters recently that many of the drones had been beset by mechanical and technical problems since delivery.

    Iran has officially denied delivering weapons to either side of the conflict, but in July US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Tehran was planning to supply Moscow with potentially hundreds of drones for its war in Ukraine, some with combat capabilities.

    On Tuesday, UK defence officials said in a daily update that Russia was struggling to maintain its supply of battlefield drones in the face of significant “combat losses”.

    “It is likely that Russia is struggling to maintain stocks of UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles], exacerbated by component shortages resulting from international sanctions,” the update said.

    “The limited availability of reconnaissance UAVs is likely degrading commanders’ tactical situational awareness and increasingly hampering Russian operations,” the officials added.

  • Car chase: Man shot dead by police after in south London

    At 9:51 p.m. on Monday in Kirkstall Gardens, Streatham Hill, a “suspect” vehicle was stopped after “tactical contact,” according to police.

    After a chase across south London, an armed policeman shot and killed a man in his 20s. He died in the hospital

    The Met Police said in a statement: “At 9.51 pm on Monday specialist firearms officers were in pursuit of a suspect vehicle in the Lambeth area.”

    Officers used a tactic where they deliberately collide with a car to force it to stop to bring the pursuit to an end in Kirkstall Gardens, Streatham Hill, shortly before 10 pm on Monday.

    Locals reported hearing gunshots and the police helicopter hovering overhead.

    A 39-year-old man, who lives on nearby New Park Road and asked not to be named, told the PA news agency: “The (driver) drove up New Park Road and turned up Kirkstall Gardens.

    Another police car came in behind him and they had him locked in at the bottom of Kirkstall Gardens.

    “The car was immobile when he was shot.”

    Officers gave the man first aid while they waited for the London Ambulance Service and air ambulance to arrive.

    He was then taken to hospital where he died at 12.16 am.

    Rachel Cook, who lives on nearby Kirkstall Road, said it was a “very quiet residential street” and that people were “very shook up about it”.

    Cordons were in place on Kirkstall Gardens and New Park Road on Tuesday, with a forensic tent put up and officers gathering evidence at the scene.

    Friends of the deceased have also gathered in Kirkstall Gardens, with a few groups of young men congregating on the street.

    The statement said the Independent Office for Police Conduct has been contacted and an independent investigation launched.

    The charity Inquest, which works with bereaved families, said on Twitter it was seeking to make contact with relatives of the man who died.

  • Stabbings in Canada : One suspect discovered dead

    The body of one of two brothers sought by Canadian police in connection with a Sunday night mass stabbing in the Saskatchewan province that left 10 people dead and 18 injured has been discovered.

    Damien Sanderson, 31, had injuries that did not appear to be self-inflicted, an officer stated, without going into further detail.

    He was found at the James Smith Cree Nation, the indigenous community where most of the victims lived.

    Sanderson’s brother Myles is at large and dangerous, police say.

    The stabbing spree has rocked the usually peaceful province, with police investigating 13 different crime scenes.

    The suspects’ motives remain unknown. Both were charged with murder, despite not being arrested.

    On Monday police said Damien Sanderson’s body had been found “in a heavily grassed area in proximity to a house that was being examined”.

    His injuries were “not believed to be self-inflicted at this point”, police Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore told reporters.

    His 30-year-old brother might also have sustained injuries and police have warned the public he might seek medical assistance. But police did not say whether he was responsible for his brother’s death.

    Myles Sanderson, who was previously known to the police, is described as having an “extensive and lengthy criminal record” dating back a number of years.

    On Monday evening, chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations, which represents all 74 First Nations of Saskatchewan, urged residents to report any information about the attacks,

    “Someone out there knows something,” he said in a statement. “We beg you to come forward for the sake of the families.”

    In Regina, the province’s capital where the suspects were last seen alive, communities are on edge.

    But in the city center on Monday evening, there were no obvious signs of a manhunt. The city was mostly quiet as families gathered to enjoy the Labour Day holiday, the unofficial end to summer.

    Every so often, that calm was interrupted by alerts ringing on mobile phones, warning of two adult male suspects, and then just one, still on the run.

    “Every time a new alert is a broadcast… the families and communities are holding their breath for fear of new fatalities or injuries,” Mr Cameron said.

    “This kind of violence or any kind of violence has no place in our country,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    He said that “tragedies like these have become all too commonplace” – adding that Saskatchewanians and Canadians would be there for each other in “times of difficulty and anguish”.

    Many of the victims were residents of the remote James Smith Cree Nation, home to about 2,000 people – leaving members of Canada’s indigenous community especially shaken. A state of emergency was declared in Saskatchewan.

    Canadian media have identified some of the victims, although no official details have been provided by authorities.

    Saskatchewan’s 1.2 million residents are scattered across 250,000 square miles. Clusters of tight-knit communities, separated by stretches of highways, dot the flat expanse of farmland. Most places feel remote.

  • The Kenyan Supreme Court validates William Ruto’s victory in the presidential election

    Following the election commission chair’s declaration of William Ruto as the winner, protests temporarily erupted in a number of the strongholds of Raila Odinga, the opposition candidate. It’s unclear if there will be any additional demonstrations.

    The highest court of Kenya has dismissed a challenge to the official results of the presidential election.

    Opposition candidate Raila Odinga had alleged irregularities in the otherwise peaceful election on 9 August, which was won by deputy president William Ruto.

    The court found there was little or no evidence for various claims, including accusations of misconduct, and called some of them “nothing more than hot air.”

    Protests briefly broke out in several of Mr Odinga’s strongholds after the election commission chair declared Mr Ruto the winner on 15 August, but Mr Odinga urged his supporters to stay peaceful.

    It is not clear whether the court’s decision could lead to further protests.

    The court overturned the results of the previous presidential election in 2017, a first in Africa, and ordered a fresh vote after Mr Odinga filed a challenge to that year’s result.

    He then boycotted the fresh election that was ordered, allowing President Uhuru Kenyatta to take power.

    At the time, about 100 people were killed in election-related clashes.

    This time, Mr Odinga was backed by Mr Kenyatta, his former opponent, illustrating how political alliances can shift in East Africa’s most stable democracy.

    Mr Ruto had been declared the winner even though four of the seven election commissioners had disowned the result announced by the commission chairman, claiming the count had been opaque.

    Image:Kenya’s opposition leader Raila Odinga

    The supreme court criticised the commission, saying it “needs far-reaching reforms” before questioning whether “are we to nullify an election on the basis of a last-minute boardroom rupture?”

    Mr Ruto will become Kenya’s fifth president at a time when the east African nation faces several challenges, including billions of dollars in loans and surging prices of basic commodities such as food and fuel.

  • COVID-19 virus voice detecting app ‘more accurate than lateral flow tests’ – Researchers

    Users will have to record certain respiratory sounds, like coughing and reading a short sentence, as well as information about their demographics, smoking history, and medical history.

    Researchers claim that a mobile phone app can identify COVID in people’s voices with “possibly high precision” using artificial intelligence (AI).

    An AI model was said to be 89% accurate and cheap to use, which means it could be adopted in low-income countries where PCR tests are more expensive.

    Results can be provided in less than a minute and are said to be a “significant improvement” on the accuracy of lateral flow tests, scientists said.

    Infection normally impacts the upper respiratory tract and the vocal cords and so researchers decided to analyze changes in voices using an AI model to detect COVID.

    Wafaa Aljbawi, a researcher at the Institute of Data Science at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, said: “These promising results suggest that simple voice recordings and fine-tuned AI algorithms can potentially achieve high precision in determining which patients have COVID-19 infection.

    “They could be used, for example, at the entry points for large gatherings, enabling rapid screening of the population.”

    Data was used from the University of Cambridge’s crowd-sourcing COVID19 Sounds app. This included 893 audio samples from 4,352 healthy and non-healthy people.

    Users need to give information about their medical history, smoking status, and demographics and record some respiratory sounds, such as coughing and reading a short sentence.

    A voice analysis technique – called Mel-spectrogram – identified different voice features to “decompose the many properties of the participants’ voices”.

    Ms Aljbawi added: “These results show a significant improvement in the accuracy of diagnosing COVID-19 compared to state-of-the-art tests such as the lateral flow test.

    “The lateral flow test has a sensitivity of only 56%, but a higher specificity rate of 99.5%. This is important as it signifies that the lateral flow test is misclassifying infected people as COVID-19 negative more often than our test.

    “In other words, with the AI LSTM model, we could miss 11 out of 100 cases who would go on to spread the infection, while the lateral flow test would miss 44 out of 100 cases.”

    The AI model is also being used for an app to predict exacerbations in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    The research is due to be presented to the European Respiratory Society International Congress in Barcelona on Monday.

  • Liz Truss will become UK’s next prime minister after beating Rishi Sunak in race to succeed Boris Johnson

    The foreign secretary has won the contest to become the next Tory party leader – and therefore prime minister – in a ballot of Conservative members.

    Liz Truss will become the next prime minister after defeating Rishi Sunak in the Conservative Party leadership contest.

    Ms Truss, who was the favourite to win, will succeed Boris Johnson on Tuesday and become the nation’s third female leader.

    The foreign secretary used her victory speech to indicate she would not trigger an early general election, instead pledging to secure “a great victory for the Conservative Party in 2024”.

    She won by a comfortable margin, but her victory was slimmer than in other recent leadership contests.

    Ms Truss said it is an “honour to be elected” as she thanked her party for organizing “one of the longest job interviews in history”.

    “You got Brexit done. You crushed Jeremy Corbyn. You rolled out the vaccine and you stood up to Vladimir Putin,” she said.

    Mr Johnson, who was forced to resign after a wave of ministers left his government over a series of controversies, will visit the Queen at Balmoral to formally tender his resignation tomorrow.

    Shortly after this, Ms Truss will meet the Queen, who will invite her to form a government.

    Ms Truss is expected to make a speech outside Number 10 once she takes office and will then get to work on appointing her cabinet.

    She faces the immediate challenge of coming up with a package of support to help households weather a worsening cost of living crisis driven by soaring energy bills.

    Ms Truss reiterated her promise to “deliver a bold plan” to cut taxes and grow the economy in her victory speech.

    “I will deliver on the energy crisis dealing with people’s energy bills, but also dealing with the long-term issues we have on energy supply,” she said.

    Ms Truss has remained tight-lipped about what kind of support package she might introduce – though speculation is mounting it could be a freeze in the energy price cap.

    Reacting to her victory, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said she “needs to show that she actually understands and can meet the challenges that are there after 12 years of failure of this Tory government”.

    Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish first minister, also called on her to “freeze energy bills for people and businesses, deliver more cash support, and increase funding for public services”.

    Conservatives have also been reacting to her victory.

    Theresa May said: “I look forward to supporting the government in that task.”

    And former leadership hopeful Penny Mordaunt told Sky’s political editor Beth Rigby that Ms Truss is the strong character the UK needs to “take our country forward”.

    Mr Sunak and Ms Truss were whittled down to the final two candidates after five rounds of voting by Tory MPs.

    The pair went head-to-head over a summer of hustings and live television debates, during which they clashed repeatedly over their plans for the economy.

    Party members had from 1 August to 2 September to cast their votes, which were counted over the weekend.

    Source: skynews.com

  • Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s murder: Fourth man arrested in Liverpool

    Officers looking into the death of nine-year-old Olivia have detained four individuals in the past 24 hours.

    In relation to the Liverpool slaying of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel, a fourth man has been detained.

    The suspect, 34, was stopped on the M42 near Leamington Spa on Sunday evening.

    The man, who is from Liverpool, was arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender and is in police custody.

    Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Kameen said: “I continue to urge anyone who has information that can help our investigation into Olivia’s tragic murder to please come forward so we can bring those responsible to justice.

    “A number of people have been arrested in respect of this investigation. However, we still need the public‘s help in ensuring that we can build a strong evidential picture so justice is served for Olivia and her family.

    The latest development comes after a man, also 34, was arrested on suspicion of murder and attempted murder in connection with Olivia’s killing.

    Two other men, a 41-year-old from Knowsley and a 29-year-old from Liverpool, are being questioned on suspicion of assisting an offender.

    Olivia died after being shot in her home in the Dovecot area of Liverpool when a gunman chased Joseph Nee, a convicted burglar, into the property at about 10 pm on 22 August.

  • Ferry operators apologize for the lengthy waits in Calais

    Travelers waiting in line at the Port of Calais experienced delays of up to six hours.

    The lengthy lines at the UK border controls on Saturday have been apologized for by the ferry companies DFDS and P&O Ferries.

    Passengers shared their “misery” at being stuck in their cars for hours as they headed back from mainland Europe, especially as some had children with them.

    DFDS said queues in Calais have been down to about 45 minutes on Sunday.

    A spokesperson told BBC News: “Calais was affected by ‘the perfect storm’ of summer volumes in combination with post-Brexit border checks, causing six hours of queuing.

    “We worked together with partners to reduce the queues as quickly as we could.”

    Jo Van Herwegen, from Surrey, said she “felt lucky” to have water with her while she waited for five hours in the French heat with her two children.

    Speaking to BBC News, she said: “It was little to do with the amount of people but with the poor layout and no traffic control.

    “We were traveling back from Belgium and expected to be delayed, so arrived early.

    “There weren’t many cars but an hour later we had moved just two cars. The way this terminal is designed is the problem.”

    Passenger Josh Williams added he was also stuck waiting in Calais for five hours on Saturday to get a ferry back to the UK.

    He shared pictures of long lines of cars filled with families trying to get back to Dover ahead of the new school year starting for many in England next week.

    Cars are stuck in queues at the Port of Calais as night time approaches
    IMAGE SOURCE,JOSH WILLIAMS
    Image caption,

    People at the port reported delays lasting nearly six hours

    Leanne Wood, from near York, and her two children arrived home in the early hours of Sunday morning because of the queues at Calais.

    She said: “We arrived early and the queues started forming but it was taking too long because there was no space for the cars.

    “The reason for the delay seemed to be British passport control – they seemed to be on a ‘go slow’.

    “They knew there would be British families coming back but it was as though they wanted to create misery – to make a point.”

    ‘The port can’t cope’

    Earlier on Saturday afternoon, DFDS warned on social media the queues could potentially last for six hours for people traveling from Calais.

    P&O added extra vessels were used for passengers who had missed their booked sailings, to “help with the passengers that have been stuck at border control”, as queues continued into the evening.

    The issue appeared to be improved on Sunday when DFDS said at 12:00 BST there were 45-minute queues at border control, and no waits at check-in.

    It earlier said traffic at the ports in Dunkirk, in France, and Dover, in the UK, was “free-flowing through check-in and border controls” throughout the day.

    P&O Ferries tweeted that queues were at about an hour.

    Passenger Craig Price, from Essex, told the BBC he spent five hours at Calais Saturday afternoon after driving through Italy and France.

    “We arrived at 3 pm and got through at 8 pm,” he said.

    “The design of the port does not seem able to cope with the need for French and UK border control,” he said, adding that two-thirds of UK border control booths were manned.

    The BBC has approached the Home Office and Border Force for comment.

    There were similar wait times in Calais just days earlier on 24 August due to extra traffic arriving from the Eurotunnel.

    Eurotunnel Le Shuttle passengers had to leave their vehicles and walk through an emergency service tunnel when the train’s alarms went off.