Category: Foreign

  • Biden tests negative for COVID-19

    Biden tests negative for COVID-19

    Our Reporter

     

    Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has tested negative for COVID-19.

    There were fears he could have contracted the virus from President Donald Trump, who tested positive on Friday.

    The duo debated three days ago.

    But Biden said: “I’m happy to report that Jill and I have tested negative for Covid.

    “I hope this serves as a reminder: wear a mask, keep social distance, and wash your hands.”

    Read Also: Trump, Biden clash over Portland protests

    Biden had wished his 74-year-old adversary and his wife Melania a swift recovery from COVID-19.

    “Jill and I send our thoughts to President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump for a swift recovery,” Biden tweeted.

    “We will continue to pray for the health and safety of the president and his family.”

    Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris put out a similar tweet, saying she and her husband Doug are “keeping them and the entire Trump family in our thoughts.”

    Vice President Mike Pence has tested negative, his spokesman said Friday.

     

     

  • BREAKING: US President Trump, wife contract COVID-19

    BREAKING: US President Trump, wife contract COVID-19

    By Alao Abiodun 

    President of the United States of America, Donald Trump and his wife, Melania have tested positive for coronavirus.

    The President announced this on Friday morning.

    Read Also: COVID-19: Buhari urges IMF support for developing countries

    “Tonight, @FLOTUS and I tested positive for COVID-19. We will begin our quarantine and recovery process immediately. We will get through this TOGETHER!” Trump tweeted shortly on Friday.

  • Police recover guns from Trump associate’s home after suicide attempt

    Police recover guns from Trump associate’s home after suicide attempt

    Agency Reporter

    Fort Lauderdale police confiscated 10 guns on Sunday from the home of President Donald Trump’s former reelection campaign manager, after his wife told them he was suicidal.

    She told police that he had hit her, and racked a handgun during an argument.

    Brad Parscale, 44, was involuntarily hospitalised under Florida’s Baker Act by officers and taken to Broward Health Medical Center on Sunday after isolating himself in the 2.4-million-dollar home he shares in Fort Lauderdale’s Seven Isles with his wife, Candice.

    In reports, audio, and body camera footage released on Monday, police documented a tense scene in which Parscale – after possibly firing a shot inside his house – initially refused to leave his home and was ultimately tackled by officers on the street when he emerged shirtless with a beer in his hand.

    “Listen, I’m not trying to kill myself. She’s lying,” the 6-foot-8-inch Parscale told an officer, who approached him in his driveway before he was driven to the ground and handcuffed.

    “I didn’t do anything!,” he said.

    Police have not charged Parscale with any crimes but were preparing a petition on Monday under Florida’s “red flag” law to request that his guns be taken away, according to a spokeswoman.

    Officers said they were called to the Parscale home around 3:36 pm on Sunday by a realtor, who had encountered a shaken Candice while preparing to show a house nearby.

    The two women called 911 from the realtor’s car parked down the street and remained there when police arrived.

    “I was standing in the backyard. He’s under a lot of stress right now.

    “He’s just pissed at the world so he like walked out, cocked the handgun and was just ranting and raving about something. I don’t know what,” Candice Parscale told an emergency dispatcher.

    Parscale’s wife said she walked to the front yard to get away from him and saw him looking out the front window through blinds, wearing a white bathrobe.

    “I saw him look out the window. Then I heard a loud, ‘boom,’” she told officers, who found her down the street in her bathing suit with a towel wrapped around her waist.

    Officers also wrote in their reports that Parscale’s wife told them he had post-traumatic stress disorder and had become violent in recent weeks.

    Candice Parscale, 41, showed them bruises on her arms from an argument “a few days” prior, they said.

    Police say they took photos of injuries.

    “While speaking with Candace Parscale I noticed several large-sized contusions on both of her arms, her cheek and forehead,” wrote Detective Steven Smith, slightly misspelling Candice Parscale’s first name.

    “When I asked how she received the bruising, Candace Parscale stated Brad Parscale hits her,”

    Parscale’s wife told them her husband had not hit her Sunday but had smacked her phone out of her hand when she tried to call his father, according to the police reports.

    She said he’d talked about shooting himself in recent weeks.

    She said she heard a gunshot from inside the house after “fleeing,” but later said it might have been a car backfiring.

    “Candace stated that they realized that Bradley did not shoot himself when they heard Bradley ranting and pacing around the residence and the dog barking frantically,” stated a report filed by Timothy Skaggs, one of the initial responding officers, who also misspelled her first name.

    “However, they were concerned that Bradley might still try to shoot himself, due to him being in possession of several firearms and refusing to vacate the residence.”

    READ ALSO: Trump seeks pre-debate drug test for `sleepy’ Biden

    Skaggs can be heard on body camera footage talking to Parscale over the phone, trying to coax him out of the house.

    One officer wrote that he sounded drunk and would not leave the house. Another reported that he smelled like alcohol.

    Eventually, a member of the department who considers Parscale to be a friend came to the home, spoke to him by phone and convinced him to come outside and talk.

    Once Parscale got to the edge of his driveway, police ordered him to get on the ground and then two officers tackled him.

    After Parscale was handcuffed face down, he was helped to his feet.

    Later, police-reported removing two shotguns, two rifles, a .22-caliber revolver, and five handguns from the home.

    Attempts to reach the Parscales by phone Sunday and Monday were unsuccessful. The person who initially called police, Terry Behal, would not share details about the incident with a reporter.

    Parscale led Trump’s reelection campaign until he was fired by the president as campaign manager in mid-July.

    He continued working for the campaign as a digital director remotely from Florida.

    His demotion came at a tumultuous time for the campaign and amid a series of incidents that allies of the president blamed on Parscale, most notably a public assertion that one million people had requested tickets for a Tulsa, Oklahoma, speech that ultimately Trump delivered before a partly empty arena.

    Tim Murtaugh, a spokesman for the Trump campaign, wished Parscale well Sunday and blamed Democrats and Republicans-in-name-only, or RINOs, for the incident.

    “Brad Parscale is a member of our family and we all love him.

    “We are ready to support him and his family in any way possible.

    “The disgusting, personal attacks from Democrats and disgruntled RINOs have gone too far, and they should be ashamed of themselves for what they’ve done to this man and his family,” Murtaugh said.

    Several cars were parked Monday morning outside Parscale’s house, ranch home with a manicured lawn in a tony enclave surrounded by canals and pleasure boats.

    A reporter, who approached the home Monday morning was confronted by a man on the property, who said no one was available to speak.

    One neighbor who asked to remain anonymous said he was unaware of any other incidents since the couple purchased the home in January of 2019.

    “I’ve never seen a problem,” the neighbor said.

     

    (tca/dpa/NAN)

  • Roma great Totti meets girl who woke from coma after his message

    Roma great Totti meets girl who woke from coma after his message

    Agency Reporter

    Nineteen-year-old Ilenia Matilli has been in hospital since December, after a car crash that killed her best friend.

    In her gradual awakening from a coma, a video message of support from former AS Roma great Francesco Totti played a part.

    “Hold on and don’t give up,” the 44-year-old former Roma captain and forward told Ilenia in a video he sent following a request from her parents.

    After hearing his voice, Ilenia gave further signs of recovery and wrote on a special blackboard that she wanted to meet her idol.

    Totti and Ilenia spent an hour together, the Gemelli hospital said in a statement.

    READ ALSO: Security guard kills employer’s wife, leaves husband in coma

    Even though she used to play for the women’s team of Roma’s city rivals Lazio, Ilenia was wearing a Roma T-shirt which Totti signed with a golden marker pen.

    “I want to see you out of the hospital soon and get your life back,” Totti was quoted as saying.

    Doctor Luca Padua, who leads the neurorehabilitation unit, said listening to music, sounds, and looking at images were an important part of Ilenia’s therapy.

    “There is still a long way forward, but we are confident,” Padua said.

    Former Italy international Totti spent his whole career at Roma, playing over 600 Serie A matches for the club before retiring in 2017.

     

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • German doctor admits to years of blood doping

    German doctor admits to years of blood doping

    Agency Reporter

    A German sports doctor on trial for masterminding an international doping network for athletes admitted on Tuesday to helping athletes with blood doping for years but said he made no profit.

    The defendant, identified in Germany only as Mark S., is on trial, facing multiple charges in relation to helping at least 23 athletes from eight countries gain an unfair advantage over several years.

    “I did not make a profit from doping,” he said in a statement read by his lawyers in court.

    The defendant also said he never put the athletes’ health at risk but did admit to blood doping.

    “For me, it was always important that there was no damage to the athletes’ health.”

    The case is a result of “Operation Bloodletting” under which police raided the Nordic Ski World Championships in Austria in February 2019 and arrested athletes just hours before the start of an event. Mark S. was arrested in Germany.

    READ ALSO: Russia to pay $6.3m doping fine

    Prosecutors say he was behind performance-enhancing blood transfusions mostly for cross-country skiers and cyclists.

    They believe he was involved in the practice from at least the end of 2011.

    Four other suspects are on trial accused of helping him with the collection and supply of blood.

    If convicted, the doctor could be put behind bars for between one and 10 years. The trial is set to continue until at least mid-December.

    The trial that started earlier in September continues and a verdict is expected in the coming months.

     

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Thailand’s ‘rule breaker’ school uniforms challenge tradition

    Thailand’s ‘rule breaker’ school uniforms challenge tradition

    Agency Reporter

    In Thai classrooms, showing a rebellious or creative streak through what you wear is difficult.

    School uniform rules are strict, down to how pupils’ hair should be cut and the type of socks and shoes they are allowed to wear.

    But as students around the country push back against what they call archaic rules and join a broader pro-democracy movement, a young clothing designer is throwing his support behind them in a colourful way.

    Tin Tunsopon has taken the typical uniform of pleated skirts and white sailor shirts for girls and neat shorts and white shirts for boys and blown them up into exaggerated versions with huge collars and sleeve ruffles made from shoelaces.

    “By re-creating these uniforms and giving them various designs…people can see that we should no longer be attached to the (traditional) uniforms anymore,” 23-year-old Tin told Reuters.

    The clothing line labeled the ‘rule breakers’ was launched in collaboration with the Wacoal lingerie brand in June with prices ranging from $100 to a top end of $475, for a long pleat skirt with a big bow.

    READ ALSO: COVID-19: Thailand extends state of emergency for fourth time

    Tin said they are designed for “modern-day girls, who are not afraid to express themselves and move with confidence”.

    “The uniforms break away from the traditional forms, although still resembles a uniform … I want to support kids to be as creative as they can,” said Tin

    Tin has named his label ‘Post-Thesis’, a nod to his graduation project at Bangkok University, where he examined the purpose of uniforms and how they can be changed.

    The rebellious movement sweeping through Thai high schools has been dubbed “Bad Student” by its leaders.

    Students have worn white ribbons, publicly hacked off their hair, and made “Hunger Games” salutes in a bid to shake up the country’s rigid education system.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Beijing reports no new COVID-19 cases

    Beijing reports no new COVID-19 cases

    Agency Reporter

     

    No new locally-transmitted confirmed, asymptomatic, or suspected cases of COVID-19 were reported in Beijing on Monday, the municipal health commission said on Tuesday.

    According to the commission, the national capital also reported no newly imported confirmed, asymptomatic, or suspected cases on Monday.

    Beijing reported one imported confirmed COVID-19 case on Thursday, who was the first imported asymptomatic case reported on Sept. 19 after the city resumed direct international passenger flights on Sept. 3.

    Read Also: Deepening digital economy amid COVID-19

    The first human cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus causing COVID-19, subsequently named SARS-CoV-2 were first reported by officials in Wuhan City, China, in December 2019.

    Since the first case of a novel coronavirus (COVID-19) infection pneumonia was detected in Wuhan, a series of confirmed cases of the COVID-19 were found in Beijing.

     

    Xinhua/NAN

     

  • British PM promises ‘lifetime skills’ in jobs recovery plan

    British PM promises ‘lifetime skills’ in jobs recovery plan

    Agency Reporter

     

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Tuesday promised a programme of “lifetime skills” for adults with lower educational qualifications.

    The promise is coming as Britain braces for rising unemployment under the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Johnson warned that more jobs are likely to be lost but said the government would help redundant workers to “get the skills they need” through a “lifetime skill guarantee.”

    “As the chancellor (Rishi Sunak) has said, we cannot, alas, save every job,” he said in advance excerpts of a speech to be delivered later Tuesday.

    “What we can do is give people the skills to find and create new and better jobs,” Johnson added.

    Adults without post-16 qualifications will have the chance to take “free college courses valued by employers,” with “flexible loans” for other courses.

    Johnson said the programme would ensure that “everyone has the chance to train and retrain.”

    Read Also: Big Boris is watching you

    Carolyn Fairbairn, director-general of the Confederation of British Industry, said the plan was “an important step forward.”

    “The significant unemployment coronavirus is leaving in its wake only accelerates the need for people to develop new skills and adapt to new ways of working,” Fairbairn said.

    Sunak last week said the government would subsidise “viable jobs” in small and medium-sized firms for six months from November by paying two-thirds of wages lost as a direct result of the pandemic.

    Social distancing measures in response to a second wave of coronavirus infections “pose a threat to (Britain’s) fragile economic recovery,” he told parliament.

    (NAN)

  • Trump seeks pre-debate drug test for `sleepy’ Biden

    Trump seeks pre-debate drug test for `sleepy’ Biden

    Agency Reporter

    President Donald Trump has repeated his calls for “sleepy” Joe Biden, Democratic presidential nominee, to take a drug test before their upcoming debate.

    This call is a continuation of Trump’s nasty line of attack on his opponent.

    “I will be strongly demanding a Drug Test of Sleepy Joe Biden prior to, or after, the Debate on Tuesday night. Naturally, I will agree to take one also,” Trump tweeted Sunday.

    “His Debate performances have been record-setting UNEVEN, to put it mildly. Only drugs could have caused this discrepancy???,” he added.

    For months, Trump and his surrogates have attacked Biden’s mental fitness for the presidency, with the president accusing Biden of using drugs to help his performances in public.

    Trump has offered no evidence for the inflammatory charge though.

    The first presidential debate is scheduled to take place on Tuesday in Cleveland.

    (tca/dpa/NAN)

  • Trump paid just 750 dollars in federal income tax in 2016 – NY Times

    Trump paid just 750 dollars in federal income tax in 2016 – NY Times

    Agency Reporter

    Donald Trump paid just 750 dollars in federal income tax in 2016, the year he won the U.S. presidential election, the New York Times wrote in an explosive investigative report late Sunday.

    The president, a self-proclaimed billionaire, paid the same amount in 2017, and nothing at all in 10 of the 15 previous years largely because he lost so much more money than he made, the paper reported.

    At a news conference held minutes after the newspaper published its report, Trump said it was “fake news” and claimed the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) “does not treat me well.”

    “It will all be revealed, I paid a lot of taxes, I paid a lot of state taxes too. but when you under audit, you don’t publish them.

    “I’m going to release many things and people are going to be shocked,” he told reporters.

    The Times has long sought to get hold of Trump’s tax returns but the president has refused to release them, though his predecessors have traditionally done so.

    On Sunday the paper said it had got hold of more than two decades’ worth of returns, but that it did not include Trump’s personal returns for 2018 and 2019.

    The revelations come just over a month before the U.S. is set to vote in a new presidential election, with polls suggesting Trump is in danger of losing to his Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

    The Times said its reporting showed that Trump, former star of the reality show “The Apprentice,” had been “more successful playing a business mogul than being one in real life.”

    It also suggested that his financial condition in 2015 lent “some credence to the notion that his long-shot campaign was at least in part a gambit to reanimate the marketability of his name.”

    A 2019 investigation by the Times of Trump tax returns it managed to get hold of dating from 1985 to 1994 showed the president lost more money than almost any other individual US taxpayer in many years.

    READ ALSO: Trump paid just $750 in federal income tax in 2016 – NY Times

    In Sunday’s report, the Times said he was “a businessman-president in a tightening financial vise,” with 300 million dollars worth of debt for which he is personally responsible coming due within the next four years.

    It said he was increasingly dependent on income from businesses such as his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, that put him in direct, or potential, conflicts of interest with his job as president.

    It also said that most of his core businesses, including his golf courses and Washington hotel, reported “losing millions, if not tens of millions, of dollars year after year.”

    In response to the Times investigation, Alan Garten, a lawyer for the Trump Organisation said that “most, if not all, of the facts, appears to be inaccurate.”

    He said that over the past decade Trump had paid “tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government” although the Times said he appeared to be conflating personal taxes such as Social Security with income tax.

    Despite hopes that the president’s tax records might shed some light on his ingratiating attitude towards Russia, the Times said they revealed nothing about his connections to the country that had not previously been reported.

    The paper said it would publish further stories on Trump’s tax records in the coming weeks.

     

    (dpa/NAN)