Monday, 20 May 2024

Sunak decries infected blood scandal cover-up

An infected blood scandal in Britain was no accident but the fault of doctors and a succession of governments that led to 3,000 deaths and thousands more contracting hepatitis or HIV, a public inquiry reported on Monday.Inquiry chair Brian Langstaff said more than 30,000 people received infected blood and blood products in the 1970s and 1980s from Britain’s state-funded National Health Service, destroying lives, dreams and families.The government hid the truth to “save face and to save expense”, he said, adding that the cover-up was “more subtle, more pervasive and more chilling in its implications” than any orchestrated conspiracy plot.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said it was “a day of shame for the British state”.“The result of this inquiry should shake our nation to its core,” he said, adding that ministers and institutions had failed in the most “harrowing and devastating way”.“I want to make a wholehearted unequivocal apology for this terrible injustice,” he told parliament and promised full compensation to those affected.The families of victims and survivors had sought justice for years and Langstaff, who led a six-year inquiry, said the scale of what happened was both horrifying and astonishing.In some cases, blood products made from donations from US prisoners or other high-risk groups paid to donate were used on children, infecting them with HIV or hepatitis C, long after the risks were known.Other victims were used in medical trials without their knowledge or consent. Those who contracted HIV were often shunned by their communities.“This disaster was not an accident,” said Langstaff to a standing ovation from campaigners.“The infections happened because those in authority – doctors, the blood services and successive governments – did not put patient safety first.”Stephen Lawrence received blood after he was knocked down by a police car in London in 1985. Two years later, he was diagnosed with HIV and Hepatitis C at the age of 15.“I was accused of being on drugs, drinking, all that,” he told Reuters, adding that he had not been compensated because his records had gone missing.“It’s about justice,” he said. “I’ve been struggling with this for 37 years.”The use of infected blood has resulted in thousands of victims in the United States, France, Canada and other countries.The British government agreed in 2022 to make an interim payment of £100,000 ($126,990) to some of those affected.Clive Smith, chair of the Haemophilia Society, said the scandal had rocked faith in the medical establishment. “(It) really challenges the trust that we put in people to look after us, to do their best and to protect us,” he told reporters.Infected blood and blood products were used for transfusions, which were not always clinically needed, and as treatments for bleeding disorders like haemophilia.Haemophiliacs received Factor 8 concentrates from the United States which carried a particularly high risk.Some of the concentrates carried the HIV virus, the inquiry said, but authorities failed to switch to safer alternatives and they decided in July 1983, a year after risks were apparent, not to suspend their importation.Systemic failures resulted in between 80 and 100 people becoming infected with HIV by transfusion, the inquiry found, and about 26,800 were infected with Hepatitis C, often from receiving blood after childbirth or an operation.Both groups were failed by doctors’ complacency about Hepatitis C and their slowness to respond to the risks of AIDS, it said, compounded by an absence of meaningful apology or redress.“It will be astonishing to anyone who reads this report that these events could have happened in the UK,” Langstaff said.The former judge’s inquiry does not have the power to recommend prosecutions.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682978/international/sunak-decries-infected-blood-scandal-cover-up

Trump biopic Apprentice premieres at Cannes

The Apprentice, Iran-born director Ali Abbasi’s much-anticipated drama of a young Donald Trump’s ascendancy as a New York real estate mogul, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on Monday.Part of the pull of the film is its timing, as Trump, now 77, looks to win another term as US president in November.The film shares its title with the reality show that helped turn Trump into a household name.Sebastian Stan, who made his name in the Captain America trilogy as the Winter Soldier, morphs into Trump, from his early stages as an upstart working for his father’s business to a brazen, self-centred tycoon.The story focuses on Trump’s time under the tutelage of Roy Cohn, a political fixer best known for his involvement in Senator Joseph McCarthy’s anti-communist scare campaigns of the 1950s and portrayed by Succession’s Jeremy Strong.His three rules for success, which Trump later takes credit for while speaking with the writer of his business advice book The Art of the Deal, are prescient of his traits in office: deny everything, always be on the attack and never admit defeat. Abbasi is known for his eclectic film repertoire.Critics were mixed, praising for Stan and Strong while seeing the film’s basis in actual events as a limitation.Sebastian Stan Plays Donald Trump in a Docudrama That Nails Everything About Him but His Mystery, read the headline for entertainment website Variety, while trade publication IndieWire pointed out that the film “can’t get around the fact that Trump is too base and pathological to be of much dramatic interest”.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682977/international/trump-biopic-apprentice-premieres-at-cannes

Sunday, 19 May 2024

Slovak PM’s life no longer in danger after shooting

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico’s life was no longer in danger following an assassination attempt, Deputy Prime Minister Robert Kalinak said on Sunday.The suspected gunman appeared in court on Saturday after Fico was shot four times last Wednesday, leaving him fighting for his life at one stage.“He has emerged from the immediate threat to his life, but his condition remains serious and he requires intensive care,” Kalinak, Fico’s closest political ally, told reporters.The Slovak premier was shot as he was greeting supporters after a government meeting in the central town of Handlova. He underwent a five-hour operation on Wednesday and another on Friday at a hospital in the central city of Banska Bystrica.“We can consider his condition stable with a positive prognosis,” Kalinak said outside the hospital, adding that “we all feel a bit more relaxed now.”Kalinak added that Fico would stay at Banska Bystrica for the moment.The suspected gunman, identified by Slovak media as 71-year-old poet Juraj Cintula, has been charged with premeditated attempted murder and was held in custody following a hearing on Saturday.Interior Minister Matus Sutaj Estok said that if one of the shots “went just a few centimetres higher, it would have hit the prime minister’s liver”.Sutaj Estok added on Sunday that police were looking into the possibility that the gunman may not have acted alone.“One version is that the culprit was part of a group of people who encouraged each other to commit the crime,” he said, adding the gunman may also have disclosed his intentions to someone. Citing intelligence reports, Sutaj Estok said that someone had erased the gunman’s history and communication on Facebook while he was detained.The attempted assassination has highlighted acute political divisions in the country where 59-year-old Fico took office in October after his centrist populist Smer party won a general election.He is serving his fourth term as prime minister after campaigning on proposals for peace between Russia and Slovakia’s neighbour Ukraine, and to halt military aid to Kyiv, which his government has done.Fico leads a coalition comprising his Smer party, the centrist HLAS and the small nationalist SNS party.Kalinak said the government would carry on without Fico “according to the programme he has outlined”. Slovakia was already sharply divided over politics since the 2018 murder of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee.Kuciak pointed at links between Italian mafia and Fico’s then government, and his murder sparked nationwide protests that resulted in Fico’s resignation in 2018.The divisions deepened further with the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.Following the attack on Fico, outgoing President Zuzana Caputova and her successor Peter Pellegrini, a Fico ally who takes over in June, tried to quell the tensions.Following a proposal by Caputova and Pellegrini, several parties have suspended campaigning for European Parliament elections scheduled for June.But some politicians have been quick to blame the Fico attack on their opponents or media.SNS chairman Andrej Danko blamed the media just after the shooting, and Kalinak took on the opposition and media in an emotional speech on the Smer website on Friday.Pellegrini on Sunday said that a meeting of parliamentary party leaders he was planning to host tomorrow to help ease tensions would probably not take place.“The past few days and some press conferences have shown us that some politicians are simply not capable of fundamental self-reflection even after such a huge tragedy,” said Pellegrini.“It has turned out that the time is not ripe for a round table with the representatives of all parliamentary parties yet,” he added.In a debate on the TA3 news channel, Danko said it was “false to say that a meeting tomorrow would reconcile society”.Police have meanwhile charged several people who expressed approval for the attack on Fico on social media.Sutaj Estok said police were monitoring places with increased movement of people and guarding top politicians and those facing death threats, newspaper publishers and TV studios as well as hospitals.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682895/international/slovak-pms-life-no-longer-in-danger-after-shooting

Blue Origin flies thrill seekers to space, including oldest astronaut

After a nearly two year hiatus, Blue Origin flew adventurers to space yesterday, including a former Air Force pilot who was denied the chance to be the United States’ first black astronaut decades ago.It was the first crewed launch for the enterprise owned and founded by Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos since a rocket mishap in 2022 left rival Virgin Galactic as the sole operator in the fledgling suborbital tourism market.Six people, including the sculptor Ed Dwight, who was on track to become the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa)’s first astronaut of colour in the 1960s before being controversially spurned, launched around 9.36am local time (1436 GMT) from the Launch Site One base in west Texas, a live feed showed.The passengers, also including a venture capitalist, were paying customers of Blue Origin’s space tourism business, though Dwight’s seat was sponsored by a space-focused nonprofit and a private foundation.Blue Origin has not disclosed how much it charges customers.Dwight – at 90 years, eight months and 10 days – became the oldest person to ever go to space.“This is a life-changing experience, everybody needs to do this,” he exclaimed after the flight.“I thought I didn’t really need this in my life,” he added, reflecting on his omission from the astronaut corps, which was his first experience with failure as a young man.“But I lied,” he said with a hearty laugh.Mission NS-25 is the seventh human flight for Blue Origin, which sees short jaunts on the New Shepard suborbital vehicle as a stepping stone to greater ambitions, including the development of a full-fledged heavy rocket and lunar lander.Including yesterday’s crew, the company has flown 37 people aboard New Shepard – a small, fully reusable rocket system named after Alan Shepard, the first American in space.The programme encountered a setback when a New Shepard rocket caught fire shortly after launch on September 12, 2022, even though the uncrewed capsule ejected safely.A federal investigation revealed an overheating engine nozzle was at fault.Blue Origin took corrective steps and carried out a successful uncrewed launch in December 2023, paving the way for yesterday’s mission.After liftoff, the sleek and roomy capsule separated from the booster, which produces zero carbon emissions. The rocket performed a precision vertical landing.As the spaceship soared beyond the Karman Line, the internationally recognised boundary of space 62 miles (100km) above sea level, passengers had the chance to marvel at the Earth’s curvature and unbuckle their seatbelts to float – or somersault – during a few minutes of weightlessness.The capsule then re-entered the atmosphere, deploying its parachutes for a desert landing in a puff of sand.However, one of the three parachutes failed to fully inflate, possibly resulting in a harder landing than expected.The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), which oversees launchsite safety and commercial rocket mishaps, did not immediately respond to questions about the New Shepard capsule’s parachute and whether the agency would investigate.Asked for comment, a Blue Origin spokesperson stressed its system was designed with multiple fail-safes. “The capsule is designed to safely land with one parachute. The overall mission was a success, and all of our astronauts are excited to be back.”In all, the mission lasted around 11 minutes.Bezos himself was on the programme’s first ever crewed flight in 2021.A few months later, Star Trek’s William Shatner blurred the lines between science fiction and reality when he became the world’s oldest ever astronaut at age 90, decades after he first played a space traveller.Dwight, who was almost two months older than Shatner at the time of his flight, became only the second nonagenarian to venture beyond Earth.Astronaut John Glenn remains the oldest to orbit the planet, a feat he achieved in 1998 at the age 77 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery.Yesterday’s mission finally gave Dwight the chance he was denied decades ago.He was an elite test pilot when he was appointed by President John F Kennedy to join a highly competitive Air Force programme known as a pathway for the astronaut corps, but was ultimately not picked.Dwight left the military in 1966, citing the strain of racial politics, before dedicating his life to telling black history through sculpture.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682881/international/blue-origin-flies-thrill-seekers-to-space-including-oldest-astronaut

SA top court to rule on Zuma election ban

South Africa’s graft-tainted former president Jacob Zuma today will learn whether he can legally be barred from standing as a candidate in the country’s May 29 general election.The decision by the Constitutional Court could have deep implications on the result of the imminent vote, and observers fear violent unrest if the decision goes against Zuma.Zuma left office in 2018, dogged by corruption allegations, and was briefly jailed for contempt. He has since founded a party to challenge his successor Cyril Ramaphosa’s ANC.The ANC has won every South African election since the country became a democracy in 1994, and Zuma served as the party’s fourth president between 2009 and 2018.But his era has come to symbolise the corruption allegations haunting the former anti-apartheid movement, and electoral authorities argue that Zuma’s 2021 conviction bars him from the ballot. Zuma and his new party, named uMkhonto Wesizwe (MK) after the ANC’s former armed wing, challenged that ruling, but their case will come before the top court today. In a social media post, the court said it would make a judgment at 10.00am (0800 GMT) on whether “Mr Zuma (is) disqualified from standing as a candidate for the National Assembly”. After a South African general election, the president is chosen by MPs from among their own ranks, so if Zuma is not on the ballot he could not become president.Under section 47 of the South African constitution, anyone convicted of an offence and sentenced to 12 or more months cannot stand for office until five years after the end of the jail term.But the court will also rule on Zuma’s case that the electoral commission exceeded its authority and that a contempt of court conviction, which cannot be appealed, should not lead to a ban.Today’s ruling could have deep and destabilising political consequences. Ramaphosa’s ANC is still expected to remain South Africa’s largest party, but some polls indicate that it may struggle for the first time to win an absolute majority.Zuma’s MK does not poll well nationwide but among his native KwaZulu-Natal and among Zulus he retains support – more than 30,000 supporters cheered him at a Soweto stadium rally on Saturday. If his party eats into the ANC’s traditional support base, Ramaphosa may be forced to negotiate a coalition after the election to ensure he is re-elected to the presidency.Any attempt to strike Zuma from the ballot may also trigger a deadly wave of unrest. Rioting after his 2021 imprisonment left more than 350 people dead.South Africa’s respected Independent Electoral Commission says ballot papers have already been printed with Zuma’s image on them, but he would be unable to sit as an MP if ineligible.The ANC was the leading political force in the struggle of black South Africans against the former apartheid regime, and has led the country for 30 years.But late liberation leader Nelson Mandela’s party has struggled in the polls in the run up to this year’s vote, dogged by corruption allegations and soaring crime and unemployment rates.Just under a third of the workforce is unemployed and the murder rate has reached 84 a day.But Ramaphosa’s party still has a formidable nationwide electoral machine, has overseen the creation of a broad social welfare system, and many older South Africans remain loyal to its historic role.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682879/international/sa-top-court-to-ruleon-zuma-election-ban

Saturday, 18 May 2024

SA’s Zuma stages rally despite candidacy doubts

Graft-tainted former South African president Jacob Zuma staged a huge election rally on Saturday, vowing to return to power despite a legal challenge to his candidacy.More than 30,000 supporters packed the Orlando Stadium in Soweto to hear their champion promise black South Africans more jobs and better wages.“When we reach the final destination nobody will be poor, or unemployed, we are going to be doing things for all of us,” the 82-year-old declared to cheers.The elderly party leader appeared tired as he arrived in the stadium, escorted by MK fighters in military fatigues and traditional Zulu warriors with spears and leopard skins.But he rallied as he stepped forward to speak, leading the crowd in revolutionary song and speaking for more than an hour before launching into another chorus.Between 2009 and 2018 Zuma served as a South Africa’s fourth president in the post-apartheid era and leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC).But he left office under the shadow of a corruption probe and was jailed in 2021 for contempt of court, a decision that triggered a wave of riots that left 350 people dead. He has now launched a new party, uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK), to challenge his ANC successor Cyril Ramaphosa for the presidency in the general election on May 29.In South Africa, a president is chosen by newly elected MPs, but electoral authorities say he should be barred from standing because of the conviction.The Constitutional Court has been called on to decide the matter after a lower tribunal found in Zuma’s favour, but Zuma’s supporters plan to push on regardless. There are concerns that if Zuma, still popular with many of his fellow Zulus, is declared ineligible at this late stage there may be another round of unrest.But the party, named after the ANC’s armed wing during the anti-apartheid struggle, will remain on the ballot and could cut into Ramaphosa’s vote.“We see him as our Moses from the religious text,” said 55-year-old job seeker Nomthandanzo Nhlapho. Observers do not credit the MK with much support outside Zuma’s native KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa’s key electoral battleground.But at the stadium in Soweto, the symbolic heart of ANC support, speaker after speaker declared that the party was on course for a two-thirds super majority.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682793/international/sas-zuma-stages-rally-despite-candidacy-doubts

N Korea confirms missile launch

North Korea has test-fired a tactical ballistic missile equipped with a “new autonomous navigation system”, state media said on Saturday, with leader Kim Jong-un vowing to boost the country’s nuclear force.Kim oversaw the Friday test-launch into the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan, on a mission to evaluate the “accuracy and reliability of the autonomous navigation system”, Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.The launch was the latest in a string of ever more sophisticated tests by North Korea, which has fired off cruise missiles, tactical rockets and hypersonic weapons in recent months, in what the nuclear-armed, UN-sanctioned country says is a drive to upgrade its defences.The Friday launch came hours after leader Kim’s powerful sister Kim Yo Jong denied allegations by Seoul and Washington that Pyongyang is shipping weapons to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.Seoul’s military on Friday described the test as “several flying objects presumed to be short-range ballistic missiles” from North Korea’s eastern Wonsan area into waters off its coast. The suspected missiles travelled around 300km before splashing down in waters between South Korea and Japan, the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said.“The accuracy and reliability of the autonomous navigation system were verified through the test fire,” Pyongyang’s KCNA said Saturday, adding leader Kim expressed “great satisfaction” over the launch. In a separate report released on Saturday, KCNA said Kim visited a military production facility the previous day and urged for “more rapidly bolstering the nuclear force” of the nation “without halt and hesitation”.During the visit, he said the “enemies would be afraid of and dare not to play with fire only when they witness the nuclear combat posture of our state”, according to KCNA.Pyongyang’s nuclear force “will meet a very important change and occupy a remarkably raised strategic position” when its munitions production plan, aimed to be completed by 2025, is carried out, it added. Seoul and Washington have accused North Korea of sending arms to Russia, which would violate rafts of United Nations sanctions on both countries, with experts saying the recent spate of testing may be of weapons destined for use on battlefields in Ukraine.North Korea is barred by UN sanctions from any tests using ballistic technology, but its key ally Moscow used its UN Security Council veto in March to effectively end UN monitoring of violations, for which Pyongyang has specifically thanked Russia. But leader Kim’s sister Kim Yo-jong said on Friday that Pyongyang had “no intention to export our military technical capabilities to any country”, adding that the North’s priority was “to make the war readiness and war deterrent of our army more perfect in quality and quantity”.She accused Seoul and Washington of “misleading the public opinion” with their allegations that Pyongyang was transferring arms to Russia. The Friday launches come as Russian leader Vladimir Putin was in China on Friday, the final day of a visit aiming to promote crucial trade with Beijing - North Korea’s most important ally - and win greater support for his war effort in Ukraine.North Korea’s latest weapons tests were likely intended to attract the attention of Putin while he was in China, said Ahn Chan-il, a defector-turned-researcher who runs the World Institute for North Korea Studies. The North would benefit greatly from an expected visit by Putin to Pyongyang, and “they want their country to be used as a military logistics base during Russia’s ongoing war (in Ukraine)”, he told AFP.Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said: “China and Russia’s irresponsible handling of North Korea, riding on the new Cold War dynamics, is further encouraging Pyongyang’s nuclear armament.”Inter-Korean relations are at one of their lowest points in years, with Pyongyang declaring Seoul its “principal enemy”. It has jettisoned agencies dedicated to reunification and threatened war over “even 0.001 mm” of territorial infringement.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682791/international/n-korea-confirms-missile-launch

Two Palestinians martyred in Israeli airstrike on Rafah

Two Palestinians were martyred in an Israeli airstrike on Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, early Saturday morning.According to the Palestinian news agency WAFA, Israeli aircraft targeted a house in central Rafah, resulting in the deaths of two Palestinians. Additionally, Israeli artillery targeted areas in the east and center of the city.The airstrikes extended to the Al Farahin area, east of Abasan Al Kabira town in Khan Younis, in the southern part of the Strip.Israeli forces continue their ground invasion of wide neighborhoods in Rafah, defying international warnings against attacking this densely populated city.The Israeli occupation persists in committing genocide in the Gaza Strip for the 225th consecutive day. This ongoing aggression includes dozens of air raids and artillery shelling across Gaza, resulting in the martyrdom of 35,303 Palestinians, the majority of whom are children and women. Additionally, 79,261 others have been injured. These numbers are not final, as thousands of victims remain buried under the rubble.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682760/international/two-palestinians-martyred-in-israeli-airstrike-on-rafah

Friday, 17 May 2024

New Caledonia ‘calm’ after deadly rioting

French marines patrolled on Friday the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia, which local authorities said was “calmer” after days of riots over voting reform that have left five dead and hundreds injured.Military and police “reinforcements will control areas that have got out of our hands in recent days”, said French high commissioner Louis Le Franc, the top state official in New Caledonia.Anger over France’s plan to impose new voting rules has spiralled into the deadliest violence in four decades in the archipelago of 270,000 people, which lies between Australia and Fiji – 17,000km from Paris.French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said on Thursday that about 1,000 extra security forces were being sent to New Caledonia – adding to the 1,700 already present.They began landing on Thursday at the French army-controlled La Tontouta International Airport and could be seen moving through the capital Noumea in red berets, toting rifles, gas masks and riot shields.France’s EFS blood supply agency said that supplies of blood were being sent over to deal with the “critical” situation.President Emmanuel Macron cancelled a video conference with local leaders on Thursday for lack of willing participants, but began contacting pro- and anti-independence officials individually on Friday, his office said.Using state of emergency powers, security forces had imposed “a calmer and more peaceful situation” around Noumea for the first time since the unrest broke out on Monday, the high commission said.However, there were fires at a school and two companies, it added.On Friday AFP journalists saw flames and smoke pouring from a shopping centre, smouldering buildings, dozens of burned-out cars and residents dragging the remnants of vehicles off the roads.Hundreds of people lined up outside shops for desperately needed food and supplies, although authorities have promised to bring in essential goods.Le Franc described areas “where there are several hundred rioters waiting for just one thing: contact with the security forces”.Ten independence activists accused of organising violence have been placed under house arrest, according to authorities.Two gendarmes have been killed: one shot in the head and a second shot in friendly fire, officials said.Three other people – all indigenous Kanaks – have also been killed: a 17-year-old and two men aged 20 and 36.One suspect in an unspecified homicide handed himself in and a second has been arrested on suspicion of killing two Kanaks.France has accused Azerbaijan of “interference” in the politics of its Pacific territory, but Baku has rejected the claims.A French government agency, Viginum, said on Friday that it detected a “massive and coordinated” online campaign pushing claims that French police had shot pro-independence demonstrators in New Caledonia.The government pointed to the involvement of “Azerbaijani actors” in the campaign.The violence is the worst seen in New Caledonia since unrest involving independence radicals rocked the French overseas territory in the 1980s.New Caledonia has on three occasions rejected independence in referendums, but the cause retains strong support among the Kanak people, whose ancestors have lived on the islands for thousands of years.Colonised by France from the second half of the 19th century, it has special status with some local powers transferred from Paris.French lawmakers this week pushed forward plans to allow people who moved to New Caledonia at least 10 years ago to vote in the territory’s elections.Pro-independence forces say that would dilute the vote of Kanaks, who make up about 40% of the population.Groups of Kanaks have set up roadblocks around the main island, waving the territory’s flag, burning tyres and blocking or slowing traffic.Other mostly non-indigenous residents, some armed, piled up garden chairs, crates and other belongings in neighbourhood barricades.A local business group estimated the damage, concentrated around Noumea, at €200mn ($217mn).French Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti has called on prosecutors to “take the strongest possible action against the perpetrators of the violence” and also indicated he was considering transferring the “criminals” to mainland France.The Noumea public prosecutor’s office opened an investigation targeting “the instigators” of the riots.Paris has accused a group known as CCAT, which gathers the most radical separatists, of being behind the riots.CCAT issued a statement on Friday calling for “a time of calm to break the spiral of violence”.Paris has closed the airport to commercial flights, shuttered schools, imposed a night-time curfew and banned gatherings, carrying weapons and the sale of alcohol.The government has also blocked social network TikTok, saying that it was being used by protesters.On Friday the Pacific Conference of Churches joined regional inter-governmental groups in calling for France to withdraw the constitutional bill, and said the United Nations should lead a dialogue mission to New Caledonia.In a statement, the churches said there had been a breakdown in dialogue between the French government and Kanak people.Pacific Elders Voice, a group of former Pacific leaders, said decisions were being made in Paris without meaningful consultation and France should listen to “indigenous Kanak voices and the Pacific-wide support for self-determination”.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682756/international/new-caledonia-calm-after-deadly-rioting

‘Black history is American history,’ Biden says in fresh appeal to voters

President Joe Biden launched a fresh bid on Friday to bolster support from African American voters, looking to seal up cracks in the Democratic coalition that carried him to victory over Republican Donald Trump in 2020.Biden visited the popular National Museum of African American History and Culture in downtown Washington and greeted his audience by declaring: “Black history is American history.”He and Vice-President Kamala Harris later will meet privately at the White House with the Divine Nine, a group of historically black sororities and fraternities.Harris joined one of those sororities, Alpha Kappa Alpha, when she attended Howard University.On Thursday, Biden met families who had relatives involved in the Supreme Court’s landmark May 17, 1954, Brown v. Board of Education ruling 70 years ago that led to the desegregation of schools.“We learn better when we learn together,” Biden said at the museum.This leads up to Biden’s commencement speech tomorrow at Morehouse College in Atlanta, a historically black school that was the alma mater of slain civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.He will attend an event in Georgia today focused on engaging black voters.Democrats are deeply divided over Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, a new Reuters/Ipsos poll found, fraying the coalition that he relied on four years ago to beat Trump.A New York Times/Siena College poll released early this week found Trump winning 20% of the black vote, a sign that he has made inroads into a bloc of voters who have traditionally overwhelmingly voted for Democrats.Biden singled out Trump and other Republicans for attacking programmes aimed at improving diversity, equity and inclusion.He said during the museum visit that the “extreme” Republican and his allies were trying to “erase history”.“My predecessor and his extreme MAGA friends are now going after diversity, equity and inclusion all across America,” he said, referring to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement.“They want a country for some, not for all,” he said at the museum, which was opened in 2016 by Barack Obama, America’s first black president, and has since become a Washington landmark.Biden also criticised the “extreme” US Supreme Court which, with three judges appointed by Trump, has issued a string of controversial rulings on abortion, voting rights and diversity.Biden joined Atlanta radio show host Darian “Big Tigger” Morgan on Wednesday and had some sharp criticism for Trump, the former president who is trying to regain the office in the November 5 election.“Look, Trump hurt black people every chance he got,” Biden said. “Black unemployment, uninsurance rates went up under Trump. Trump’s tax plan reinforced discrimination.”“Typical white households got double the cut of the typical black household,” he continued. “They botched the coronavirus (Covid-19) response, leaving black people dead and Black-owned businesses shuttered.”Some Morehouse faculty members and students had wanted the college to withdraw its invitation to Biden over his administration’s staunch support for Israel’s war in Gaza, where the death toll has mounted to more than 35,000.However, the White House said the visit would go ahead as planned.Biden has taken steps that benefit black Americans, such as expanding access to healthcare coverage, and has fostered economic gains that led to record low black unemployment rates and the Child Tax Credit expansion, which helped cut childhood poverty in half in 2021.Opinion polls show the November 5 election shaping up to be a close match between Biden and Trump, making turnout among black Americans – who comprise sizable populations in key battleground states like Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania – a crucial aspect of Biden’s path to victory.Biden’s re-election campaign, in a memo released by senior adviser Trey Baker, said that the president is not taking a single voter for granted.“We are not, and will not, parachute into these communities at the last minute, expecting their vote. Every day, from now until election day, we will continue working diligently to ensure that come November, black voters send Joe Biden and Kamala Harris back to the White House to continue delivering for black America in unprecedented ways,” he said.“We are meeting black voters where they are,” Baker said in an e-mail. “After Donald Trump failed us, no administration has delivered for black America like President Biden and Vice-President Harris.”

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682752/international/black-history-is-american-history-biden-says-in-fresh-appeal-to-voters

Palestinians martyred after Israeli warplanes bomb school in Nuseirat Camp in Gaza

Four Palestinians were martyred and several others were injured at dawn Friday in an Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering refugees in the Nuseirat Camp in central Gaza Strip.Since Thursday evening, the occupation warplanes have launched a series of airstrikes targeting various parts across the Gaza Strip, simultaneously with artillery bombardment.Local sources reported that the occupation warplanes bombed a house in the Shatea Camp, west of Gaza City, and launched airstrikes on the central of Gaza City.Earlier, one Palestinians was martyred and two others were injured in Israeli shelling near Al-Awda Roundabout in the center of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip. The east of the city was also subjected to artillery shelling.Meanwhile, a number of Palestinians were injured in violent air raids launched by the occupation warplanes on the Jabalia Camp. The occupation artillery also bombed various areas in the northern Gaza Strip, and the forces blew up residential squares in the Jabalia Camp.Medical sources announced that the bodies of 9 martyrs had arrived at the Gaza European Hospital near Khan Yunis in last hours.In an infinite toll, the death toll in the Gaza Strip surged to 35,272, in addition to 79,205 injuries, since the start of the Israeli occupation aggression on Oct. 7.

source https://www.gulf-times.com/article/682732/international/palestinians-martyred-after-israeli-warplanes-bomb-school-in-nuseirat-camp-in-gaza

Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 Specifications Revealed

Volkswagen has revealed the specifications of the Golf GTI Edition 50. The special-edition model has been rolled out to celebrate the 50th...