Category: Foreign

  • Suspected UAE spy commits suicide in Istanbul prison

    One of two detainees held by Turkey on suspicion of spying for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has committed suicide in the prison, a justice ministry official on Monday said.

    The two suspects were arrested on April 19 and confessed to spying on Arab nationals, a senior Turkish official said at the time.

    Turkey was investigating whether the arrival in the country of one of them was related to the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

    The justice ministry official said that the suspect hung himself but did not provide further details.

    One of the two men arrived in Turkey in October 2018, days after Khashoggi was murdered inside Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul, the official said at the time of their detention.

    Read Also: Akeredolu signs MoU with UAE firm

    The official added that the other had arrived later to help his colleague with the workload.

    The two men were charged with international, political and military espionage and sent to Silivri prison, west of Istanbul, according to state-owned Anadolu news agency.

    Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was killed in the consulate on Oct. 2 by a team of Saudi operatives, provoking an international outcry.

    NAN

  • Breaking: Shoot out as police raid suspected bomb factory in Sri Lanka

    A shootout has been reported in Sri Lanka as armed forces raided a suspected bomb factory.

    The army and police were attempting to search a location thought to have been used to manufacture suicide vests when they were shot at.

    The incident happened in Kalmunai, south of Batticaloa, in the wake of the Easter Sunday bombings that left more than 250 dead. (Skynews)

    Details shortly…

  • We paid nothing to North Korea for Warmbier’s release-Trump

    President Donald Trump said the U.S. paid nothing to North Korea to secure the freedom of student Otto Warmbier, who died in 2017 shortly after his return to the United States.

    “No money was paid to North Korea for Otto Warmbier, not 2 million dollars, not anything else,’’ Trump tweeted on Friday.

    The Washington Post and CNN reported this week that North Korea demanded 2 million dollars for Warmbier’s hospital care during negotiations in 2017.

    CNN reported that Trump administration did not pay the bill.

    Warmbier was 21 when he was convicted in March 2016 for crimes against North Korea after he allegedly took a propaganda sign from a hotel where he was staying during a tourist visit.

    He was sentenced to 15 years and hard labour.

    He was returned to the U.S. in a comatose state in June 2017 and died days later.

    He was 22.

    He showed possible signs of torture, including damaged teeth and a scar that may have resulted from electric shocks.

    Pyongyang said his brain damage was the result of a rare disease, but the U.S. side said it appeared he has lost blood to his brain for a number of minutes.

    A U.S. court awarded the Warmbier family 501 million dollars; though it is unlikely North Korea will ever pay.

    dpa/NAN

  • Prince William visits Christchurch massacre mosque

    Britain’s Prince William has visited a mosque in New Zealand where 42 people were killed in March, saying “the forces of love will always prevail over the forces of hate.

    “In a speech at the Al Noor mosque in Christchurch Friday, the second day of his tour of the country, he said the attacks in which 50 people died were intended “to sow division and hatred in a place that stands for togetherness and selflessness.”

    “The message from Christchurch and the message from Al Noor and Linwood mosques could not be more clear – the global ideology of hate will fail to divide us.” — The Duke of Cambridge Authorities charged Brenton Tarrant, a 28-year-old Australian man, on 50 counts of murder.

    “An act of violence was designed to change New Zealand but instead the grief of a nation revealed just how deep your wells of empathy, compassion, warmth and love truly run,” William said.

    The Duke of Cambridge was accompanied by New Zealand’s Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern. Standing in the mosque in the room where the attack took place; he called it “an act of unspeakable hate.”

    “You showed the way we must respond to hate with love,” he added. “You showed that when a particular community is targeted with hate and violence, simple acts like wearing a headscarf or broadcasting the call to prayer can reassure those who have reason to be afraid.

    “Referring to the far-right gunman accused of the shootings, William said he had come to New Zealand to “help you show the world that he failed.

    “The Duke of Cambridge meets five year old Alen Alsati and her father Wasseim, who are recovering in Starship Children’s Hospital in Auckland after being injured in the Christchurch mosques terrorist attack.

    Earlier, the prince met with survivors of the shootings, such as 5-year-old Alen Alsati, who is being treated at the Starship Children’s Hospital in Auckland, and her father, Wasseim.

    CNN

  • 19 students commit suicide in India’s Telangana for failing exams

    No fewer than 19 students in India’s Telangana state are thought to have committed suicide, after failing school final examinations, officials and news reports said on Thursday.

    Parents and students have been protesting across the state since the results of the Intermediate Examination for students of the two senior most grades were announced on April 18.

    Out of the 974,000 students, who appeared for the Intermediate Exam, a total of 328,000 failed, Telenga Chief Minister, Chandrasekhar Rao, said in a statement.

    He has set up a three-member panel to probe conduct and assessment of answer papers.

    “There have been a spate of suicides which, on preliminary investigations, are linked to the examination results,’’ Senior Police Official, Shika Goel said.

    The number of students, who appeared for the exam and had committed suicide since the results were announced, clocked 19 on Thursday with two more deaths, the Times of India newspaper reported.

    Rao held a meeting with senior officials of the education and related departments late on Wednesday and announced a free-of-cost re-evaluation of answer papers.

    He appealed to the students to be courageous and not to commit suicide.

    “Though one fails in the examination, there will be plenty of opportunities,’’ Rao said.

    Activists say there is intense pressure on students, especially in the southern Indian states, to secure high marks in board examinations and entrance tests to engineering and medical colleges.

    “Counselling should be made mandatory before the examinations and after results are declared,’’ Rajendra Prasad, Chief Coordinator of the Hyderabad-based non-profit MV Foundation, said.

  • Couple fined $8,400 for having sex on Berlin train

    A man and a woman have been fined $8,400 for having sex in the middle of the day on a Berlin train, a court spokesman said on Thursday.

    The incident took place on a Sunday in April, 2018.

    Police at the time said the man and woman were performing oral sex in full view of passengers, including children, on a train heading into the city centre.

    Witnesses reportedly intervened, leading to a physical altercation that eventually prompted one passenger to pull the emergency brake.

    The man and woman were arrested at the scene.

    The 37-year-old woman was fined 3,900 euros and the 39-year-old man 3,600 euros, according to the decision, which was handed down on April 10.

    NAN

  • North Korea threatens retaliation over U.S.-South Korea drills

    Pyongyang on Thursday threatened a “corresponding response”, three days after South Korea and the U.S. kicked off two weeks of joint air-force drills.

    The “acts of perfidy’’ by Seoul had “greatly disappointed us’’ and represented a “military provocation,’’ a spokesman for North Korea’s reunification committee was quoted as saying by state-run news agency KCNA.

    The drills are a scaled back alternative to the huge Max Thunder drills that the U.S. and South Korea have staged every year since 2009.

    The two countries have also announced the suspension of several major joint military exercises over the past year, including Foal Eagle and Key Resolve in March, as part of a diplomatic push for North Korea to denuclearise.

    Pyongyang has long viewed the exercises as a provocation and a rehearsal for an invasion of North Korea.

    On Thursday, the spokesman said the changes “can never conceal the aggressive, offensive and confrontational nature of their hostile acts no matter how hard they may try to give (an) impression about ‘reduction in scope’ by replacing the code-name.

    The drills were an “outright challenge’’ to the Panmunjom Declaration signed by North and South Korean leaders in 2018, he said.

    “There will be a corresponding response to it from our army.’’

    Tensions have been simmering between the U.S. and North Korea since U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, cut short a summit in Hanoi in February, after failing to reach an agreement on denuclearisation.

    dpa/NAN

  • Suicide bomb attacks: Officials arrest 16 more suspects in Sri Lanka

    Police have arrested another 16 people in connection to a series of bombings in Sri Lanka over Easter weekend which claimed at least 359 lives, officials said on Thursday.

    Fresh security measures, including a ban on the use of drones, were introduced as police and security forces continued in their efforts to crack down on the network of people involved in the bombings.

    The latest arrests brought the number of suspects in detention up to 76.

    Vehicles used by the suspects have also been seized in the operations.

    Teams from the United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and from international police organisation Interpol were in the country assisting local investigators.

    The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) also banned the use of drones and unmanned aircraft within Sri Lankan airspace until further notice.

    Tight security was maintained around hotels, places of worship and government buildings with authorities carrying out random checks on cars and passenger buses.

    Read Also: Sri Lanka attacks: Death toll hits 290

    On Wednesday, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena directed two top officials to step down amid allegations they failed to share intelligence reports with him about possible suicide attacks which were available to officials earlier in March.

    Sirisena claimed that Defence Secretary, Hemasiri Fernando and Inspector-General of Police, Pujith Jayasundara also failed to inform Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe and his cabinet.

    The country has been under a state of emergency since late on Monday.

    NAN

  • Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-un pledge stronger ties

    North Korea’s Kim Jong-un and Russia’s Vladimir Putin have pledged to boost ties at their first ever summit.

    The Kremlin said the leaders would discuss denuclearisation but Kim is also expected to be seeking support after talks with the US collapsed.

    The talks in Hanoi with US President Donald Trump failed to reach a deal on North Korea’s nuclear programme.

    At their opening remarks the Russian and North Korean leaders referred to their two countries’ long history of ties and Putin said he wanted to help calm Korean tensions.

    It’s the first time the two leaders have met in person

    “I am confident your visit today to Russia will help us to better understand how we can resolve the situation on the Korean peninsula and what Russia can do to support the positive processes currently taking place,” Putin said.

    Kim said he hoped for “a very useful meeting in developing the relationship between the two countries, who have a long friendship and history, into a more stable and sound one”.

    The North Korean leader greeted Russian officials warmly when he arrived on Wednesday.

    Kim was entertained by a brass band before he got inside a car flanked by bodyguards, who – in now familiar scenes – jogged alongside the vehicle as it departed.

    Read Also: Trump invites Putin to Washington

    According to the Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin believes the six-party talks on North Korea, which are currently stalled, are the only efficient way of addressing the issue of nuclear weapons on the peninsula.

    Those talks, which began in 2003, involve the two Koreas as well as China, Japan, Russia and the US.

    “There are no other efficient international mechanisms at the moment,” Peskov told reporters on Wednesday.

    “But, on the other hand, efforts are being made by other countries. Here all efforts merit support as long as they really aim at de-nuclearisation and resolving the problem of the two Koreas.”

    This visit is being widely viewed as an opportunity for North Korea to show it has powerful allies following the breakdown of nuclear talks with the US in February, the BBC’s Laura Bicker says.

    The country has blamed US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for the collapse of the Hanoi summit.

    Earlier this month North Korea demanded that Mr Pompeo be removed from nuclear talks, accusing him of “talking nonsense” and asking for someone “more careful” to replace him.

    The summit is also an opportunity for Pyongyang to show that its economic future does not depend solely on the US, our correspondent adds.

    Kim may also try to put pressure on Moscow to ease sanctions.

    Analysts believe this summit is a chance for Russia to show that it is an important player on the Korean peninsula.

    President Putin has been eager to meet the North Korean leader for quite some time. Yet amid the two Trump-Kim summits, the Kremlin has been somewhat sidelined.

    Russia, like the US and China, is uncomfortable with North Korea being a nuclear state.

  • Trump renews threat to close Mexican border, send more troops

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday again threatened to close part of the Southern border and send more “armed soldiers” to defend it if Mexico did not block a new caravan of migrants traveling toward the U.S.

    “A very big Caravan of more than 20,000 people started up through Mexico,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

    “It has been reduced in size by Mexico but is still coming. Mexico must apprehend the remainder or we will be forced to close that section of the Border & call up the Military.”

    Trump also said, without offering details, that Mexican soldiers recently had “pulled guns” on U.S. troops in what he suggested was “a diversionary tactic for drug smugglers.”

    “Better not happen again! We are now sending ARMED SOLDIERS to the Border. Mexico is not doing nearly enough in apprehending & returning!” Trump tweeted.

    It was not clear what Trump meant by “armed soldiers’’ since at least some of the troops on the border already are armed. It also was unclear what specific caravan Trump was alluding to.

    U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said they are expecting a request from the Department of Homeland Security in the coming days for additional troops, although that number is expected to be in the low hundreds.

    About 5,000 active duty and National Guard troops already are at the border.

    The U.S. Defence Department said earlier this month that six Mexican military personnel questioned two U.S. Army soldiers near Clint, Texas, about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of El Paso.

    The U.S. military said the Americans were in an unmarked car and an inquiry had found that they were in U.S. territory.

    Newsweek magazine, citing the military report on the incident, said the U.S. soldiers were briefly held at gunpoint by the Mexicans, who took one American soldier’s gun and put it in the car.

    The Mexican troops had believed the U.S. soldiers were south of the border and therefore in Mexico.

    After a brief discussion, the Mexican troops left the area, a Mexican official said.

    The two U.S. soldiers were traveling in an unmarked vehicle, according to a brief statement issued later on Wednesday by the Mexican foreign ministry, which added to the confusion.

    Asked about Trump’s tweet at a news conference, Mexican President Andres Obrador said his administration would investigate the incident Trump mentioned.

    “But we’re not going to fight with the U.S. government,” he said. “We are not going to allow ourselves to fall into any provocations.”

    Trump has made a tough stance on immigration a cornerstone of his presidency.

    He called the situation at the southern border a national emergency as a way to get money to build a border wall after Democrats in Congress thwarted traditional means of funding.

    Officials arrested or denied entry to more than 100,000 people along the Mexican border in March, more than twice as many as during the same period in 2018, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    In March, Trump threatened to close the border if the Mexican government did not immediately stem illegal migration, although later he praised Mexico for efforts to stop people from crossing illegally into the U.S.

    Mexico has returned 15,000 migrants in the past 30 days, a senior government official said on Tuesday, pointing to an uptick in deportations in the face of pressure from Trump to stem the flow of people north.

    The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments on Wednesday on the Trump administration’s controversial policy of sending asylum seekers back to Mexican border towns to await their U.S. immigration court hearings.

    A lower-court judge ruled against the policy but the 9th Circuit said it could continue while the legal fight continues.

    The Trump administration says the policy is one way to reduce the number of asylum seekers being released into the U.S. for the months or years it can take their deportation cases to be decided.

    Critics say returning vulnerable migrants to often dangerous cities in Mexico violates U.S. and international laws. (Reuters/NAN)