Tag: InternationalNews

  • Government failing to educate, integrate Roma children

    {Slovakia’s school system riddled with institutional racism, fails to prepare for life after school, rights groups say.}

    Romani children in Slovakia are segregated in schools, bullied by teachers and misdiagnosed as mentally disabled because of anti-Roma racism, according to human rights groups.

    The European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC) and Amnesty International said on Wednesday that Romani children in primary school, aged between five and 11, were systematically denied their rights to education, trapping them in a “cycle of poverty and marginalisation”.

    The report comes almost two years after the European Commission launched infringement proceedings against Slovakia for discrimination and segregation in education.

    “Slovakia’s abject failure to address deeply ingrained prejudices within the education system is blighting the future of generations of Romani children from the moment they step into the classroom,” said ERRC President Dorde Jovanovic.

    There are as many as 500,000 Roma in Slovakia, mostly in the country’s east and south, comprising almost 10 percent of the population.

    “The piecemeal reforms and periodic declarations of intent by successive governments cannot obscure the fact that the discrimination and segregation of Roma in primary education remains widespread, and that the Slovak authorities are fundamentally failing to address them,” the groups said in a joint report.

    “Under national, European and international law, discrimination in the field of education is prohibited in Slovakia. However, in practice, Slovak authorities have not accompanied the ban on discrimination with concrete measures to address or prevent it,” they added.

    Roma in Slovakia are the second largest minority after Hungarians.

    Wednesday’s report was based on research carried out by the two groups in October and November in four regions: Sarisske Michalany; Moldava nad Bodvou; Rokycany and Krompachy.

    Robert Kalinak, interior minister, said that programmes to “improve the situation” had been prepared as he accused the groups of exaggerating their claims on segregation, according to local media.

    {{Institutional racism}}

    Researchers visited six Romani settlements and studied dozens of schools.

    While many in the country blame Roma for failing to encourage their children to attend schools, little attention is paid to institutional racism, the report said.

    “Segregation of Romani children in mainstream primary schools persists in Slovakia, either in schools that are fully or primarily composed of Roma pupils, or in Roma-only classes,” the report said.

    “Romani children educated in mixed educational settings [including Romani and non-Roma children] often face racial prejudice and harassment by non-Roma classmates and teachers,” it added, calling on the education ministry to address the issue.

    At one school in Sarisske Michalany, a teacher told researchers that she would not send her own children to a school with Romani pupils.

    “Did you see the children from Ostrovany [a school for Roma]? How they speak? How they smell? No wonder the non-Roma don’t want to be with them … It’s a little zoo,” the teacher reportedly said.

    {{Fabricating mental disability}}

    According to a 2016 report by the state school watchdog, 21.74 percent of pupils reported the use of derogatory language, including anti-Roma slurs, by teachers in schools.

    “In Slovakia, Romani children have been overrepresented in special schools and classes for children with ‘mild mental disabilities’ for decades,” the report said.

    “Many have been misdiagnosed … as a result of culturally-biased diagnostic tools and anti-Roma prejudice among psychological and pedagogical experts. These children are condemned to low-quality education and limited opportunities for further education and employment.”

    The report also documented a so-called white flight, when non-Roma parents remove their children from schools when they feel there are too many Romani pupils.

    “Romani children do not start education on an equal footing with non-Roma children and segregation entrenches inequality at every stage of their lives,” the report said.

    Dafina Savic, founder of Canada-based Romanipe, a group advocating for human rights of Roma, told Al Jazeera: “Segregation not only deprives young Roma from a normal educational experience, but also from eventually successfully integrating into society, since their misdiagnosis prevents them from accessing higher education and certain jobs.”

    Schools across Europe have failed to integrate Roma children, she added, describing persistent racial segregation.

    “Roma are seated separately from non-Roma children, are placed at the back of the class, or are given a lower curriculum,” Savic said. “Educational systems across Europe are not proving safe spaces for Roma children, first and foremost because teachers and administrative [staff] have their prejudices.”

    She said that abuse against Roma would only be wiped out when governments addressed a history of persecution, including slavery, genocide during the Holocaust and forced sterilisation.

    “It is only then that the emancipation rather than the integration of Roma can occur,” she said. “An essential step in challenging the root causes of anti-gypsyism today lies in giving Roma the opportunity to voice their interests and influence the decision-making process which affects them directly.”

    Roma children are discriminated at school from an early age, rights groups warn

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • US House panel to probe alleged Trump-Russia links

    {Democrat says committee will investigate claims of collusion between Trump’s presidential campaign and Moscow.}

    The US House of Representatives intelligence committee will investigate allegations of collusion between Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and Russia, the top Democrat on the panel has said.

    “We have reached a written agreement, the minority and the majority in the House intelligence committee, that we will investigate allegations of Russian collusion with the Trump campaign,” Democratic Representative Adam Schiff told MSNBC on Wednesday.

    US intelligence analysts have concluded that Russia tried to help Trump win the White House by discrediting Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and her party through cyber attacks.

    President Barack Obama, a Democrat, expelled Russian diplomats in retaliation in December.

    Trump has denied any of his associates had contacts with Moscow before last year’s election and dismissed the controversy as a “scam” perpetrated by a hostile news media.

    Moscow has denied the accusations.

    Representative Devin Nunes, the Republican chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said on Monday that US intelligence officials had not yet presented the panel with evidence of contacts between Trump campaign staff and Russian intelligence.

    Nunes was a member of Trump’s presidential transition team.

    The committee, which has been probing contacts between Trump’s campaign and Russia, said in a statement that Nunes and Schiff had agreed on a classified six-page document laying out the scope of their investigation.

    It said one question they would seek to answer was whether the Russian actions included “links between Russia and individuals associated with political campaigns or any other US Persons”.

    The statement did not refer specifically to the Trump campaign.

    Earlier on Wednesday, Nunes told Fox News that the committee would receive a briefing from intelligence officials on Thursday.

    Trump fired his first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, last month for misleading Vice President Mike Pence over his conversations with Russia’s ambassador to the United States.

    Separately, then-US Senator Jeff Sessions spoke twice last year with Russia’s ambassador, encounters he did not disclose when asked during his confirmation hearing to become attorney general about possible contacts between Trump’s campaign and Russian officials, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday, citing justice department officials.

    One of the meetings was a private conversation between Sessions and Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak that took place in September in the senator’s office, the Post reported.

    Moscow has denied accusations of meddling in the race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Theresa May suffers House of Lords setback over Brexit

    {Upper house of parliament refuses to adopt Brexit bill without amendment to guarantee rights of EU citizens in the UK.}

    Britain’s upper house of parliament has voted to amend and thereby delay a bill empowering Prime Minister Theresa May to begin negotiations for the UK’s exit from the European Union, or Brexit.

    Peers at the House of Lords, an unelected body, voted by 358 to 256 for a change requiring ministers protect the rights of more than three million European Union and European Economic Area citizens after Britain leaves the bloc.

    The change requires the government to publish proposals on how to protect EU citizens currently living in the UK – including their residency rights – within three months of triggering exit negotiations.

    May’s Conservatives do not have a majority in the upper chamber.

    Al Jazeera’s Paul Brennan, reporting from London, said that the Lords have come under a large amount of pressure in the past couple of days “to stay loyal to the government”.

    “They have even been threatened with the idea that further down the pipeline the Lords themselves may soon be abolished if they stood in the way of public opinion on Brexit,” he said.

    “What’s clear is that the Lords had sufficient concern about the rights of the EU citizens within the UK to defy the government on this – and by a sizable majority.”

    The defeat is a blow to May, who had hoped to pass the legislation without changes.

    “We are disappointed the Lords (upper chamber) have chosen to amend a bill that the Commons (lower chamber) passed without amendment,” a spokeswoman for the Brexit department said in a statement.

    READ MORE – Brexit: The English gamble

    While May has said she wants to guarantee EU citizens’ rights, she has not been prepared to do so until other member states agreed to a reciprocal deal.

    The government can try to overturn the change using its majority in the lower chamber of parliament, but Wednesday’s vote will delay the final approval of the law.

    May is still expected to be able to fulfil her plan to trigger the exit process by the end of the month.

    A majority of British voters decided to leave the EU in a referendum in June last year.

    In January, May said Britain must leave the EU’s single market as it exits the bloc.

    She said it was necessary to make a clean break and not opt for anything that would leave the country “half-in, half out”.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Trump: Agency to support ‘victims of immigrant crimes’

    {In first speech to Congress, new president announces special office to assist victims of crimes committed by immigrants.}

    President Donald Trump said he has given orders to create a special office to assist victims of crime by immigrants: “VOICE” – Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement.

    According to the Independent, the VOICE agency is expected to publish a weekly list of all crimes committed by immigrants, suggesting that anyone who has moved to the US, both documented and undocumented, could find their name on the public document.

    Trump announced the initiative on Tuesday during his first speech to Congress, where there were audible groans and sounds of surprise from people in the audience when he said the name of the new office.

    The president said the United States must support law enforcement and victims of crime, adding it will provide a voice to people ignored by the media and “silenced by special interests”.

    Trump paid tribute to four guests in the audience, who, he said, had lost loved ones in violent crimes committed by immigrants living in the country illegally.

    He also suggested a new merit-based system to regulate entry to the United States, as he tried to square his campaign rhetoric with the goal of broad immigration reform.

    Addressing Congress, Trump stood by his plan to subject travellers from several mainly-Muslim countries deemed a risk to extreme vetting, insisting: “We cannot allow a beachhead of terrorism to form inside America.”

    But – alongside this promise of “strong measures to protect our nation from radical Islamic terrorism” – he held out the prospect of a merit-based immigration system that might win cross-party support.

    Arguing that mass immigration by unskilled workers costs US taxpayers billions of dollars and depresses wages and job opportunities of the working poor, Trump urged lawmakers to get behind reform.

    “If we are guided by the well-being of American citizens then I believe Republicans and Democrats can work together to achieve an outcome that has eluded our country for decades,” he argued.

    A merit-based system – such as those in use in Canada and Australia – would, he argued “save countless dollars, raise workers’ wages, and help struggling families – including immigrant families – enter the middle class”.

    {{Path to papers}}

    “It is a basic principle that those seeking to enter a country ought to be able to support themselves financially,” Trump told lawmakers.

    “Yet, in America, we do not enforce this rule, straining the very public resources that our poorest citizens rely upon,” he added.

    US lawmakers, encouraged by the previous administration under Barack Obama, have long sought to agree on a broad-based package to provide roughly 11 million undocumented migrants with a path to legal residency.

    But Republican members, in particular, faced opposition from their electoral base to any measure that smacked of an “amnesty” for illegal immigrants – a sentiment that Trump played up during his campaign.

    Vowing to build a wall on the Mexican border to keep out migrants he branded “drug-dealers, murderers and rapists”, Trump gave every appearance of planning a still tougher line on immigration.

    But his attempts to introduce a visa ban on visitors from seven mainly-Muslim countries have been halted by the courts and he faces opposition from influential quarters to toughen general controls.

    Silicon Valley software giants, with their huge lobbying reach, rely on recruiting foreign engineers – particularly from the Indian sub-continent – and Republican backers in construction and agriculture employ millions of migrants.

    Federal officers from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and from Customs and Border Protection have set about enforcing existing immigration law with renewed vigour – but their dragnet has triggered popular protests.

    Earlier Tuesday, Trump suggested in a meeting with television news anchors that he was open to a deal that would legalise millions of undocumented immigrants as part of a bipartisan compromise.

    {{‘Build the wall’}}

    That would mark a dramatic shift in policy.

    “The time is right for an immigration bill as long as there is compromise on both sides,” Trump reportedly told the anchors.

    But there is clearly a line that Trump cannot cross if he is to placate his electoral base. Blue-collar crowds in the key states that gave him victory cheered his “Build the Wall” mantra to the rafters.

    And Trump has firmly tied his pledge to fight illegal immigration to the prospect of jobs and security at home.

    “By finally enforcing our immigration laws, we will raise wages, help the unemployed, save billions and billions of dollars and make our communities safer for everyone,” he said.

    Al Jazeera’s James Bays, reporting from Capitol Hill, said the address was very different from previous Trump speeches.

    “It was a conventional speech, a presidential speech … with no references to ‘fake news’ or ‘dishonest media’”.

    “He said in his speech that ‘the time for trivial fights is behind us’… This feels a bit like a reset speech from the president. A new tone, but not much new in terms of policy,” said Bays.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Friends and family mourn for slain Srinivas Kuchibhotla

    {Hundreds of family and friends join funeral of slain engineer in his hometown amid growing fears of hate crimes in US.}

    Hundreds of grieving family and friends in southern India have attended the funeral of a 32-year-old man killed in an apparently racially motivated shooting in the United States that shocked the Indian American community.

    Srinivas Kuchibhotla, an engineer with the US GPS-maker Garmin, died after a navy veteran is suspected of opening fire in a crowded Kansas bar last week. Witnesses said the suspect yelled “Get out of my country!” before the shooting on Wednesday night.

    Kuchibhotla’s body was brought home late on Monday night to his hometown of Hyderabad, the capital of Telangana state, and cremated on Tuesday.

    His mother, Parvatha Vardhini, wailed as the flower-laden body was taken in an open carriage from his home to the crematorium in Jubilee Hills area where it was placed on a wooden pyre and lit as part of Hindu last rites.

    “I had asked him to return to India if he was feeling insecure there. But he used to say he was safe and secure,” she said as tears rolled down her face.

    Vardhini said she would not allow her younger son, also employed in the US, to return to the country.

    “My son had gone there in search of a better future. What crime did he commit?”

    The deceased engineer’s father, Madhusudhan Rao, was more philosophical. “I believe in destiny. Whatever was destined has happened,” he said.

    “Now I want the US government to take care of the security of our Indians who are working there.”

    Targeting of immigrants

    Adam Purinton, a 51-year-old US navy veteran, was arrested in Missouri on murder and attempted murder charges after the shooting at Austin’s Bar and Grill in Olathe.

    Another Indian, 32-year-old Alok Madasani, and 24-year-old American national Ian Grillot were wounded in the incident, which is currently investigated by local law enforcement agencies and the FBI.

    In a statement on Tuesday, the FBI confirmed for the first time that it is investigating the shooting as a hate crime, basing its probe on “the initial investigative activity” involving the attack.

    At a news conference in Kansas on Friday, Kuchibhotla’s widow Sunaina Dumala said she had expressed concerns about the targeting of immigrants in the US before the attack, but her husband told her not to worry.

    The couple was planning their first child.

    A statement by the Indian foreign ministry on Tuesday said that the US government and senior authorities in Kansas “have pro-actively responded to the unfortunate death of Kuchibhotla.

    “It is important to note that the US authorities are engaged with us on the larger concern regarding safety of Indians in the US, a matter which continues to receive the government’s top priority,” the statement said.

    US President Donald Trump has faced criticism for not commenting on the shooting incident, but the White House on Tuesday condemned the attack as an apparent act of “racially motivated hatred”.

    India’s Information and Broadcasting Minister M Venkaiah Naidu, who visited the bereaved family over the weekend, strongly condemned the attack.

    “Such incidents should not happen in one of the oldest democracies of the world,” he said.

    Kuchibhotla's last rites were performed at a crematorium in Hyderabad

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Russia and China veto UN resolution on Syria sanctions

    {Moscow and Beijing prevent UNSC from imposing sanctions on Syrian government for alleged use of chemical weapons.}

    Russia and China have vetoed a UN Security Council resolution backed by Western powers that would have imposed sanctions on Syria over the alleged use of chemical weapons by the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

    Drafted by Britain, France and the United States, the measure on Tuesday won nine votes in favour, while three countries – China, Russia and Bolivia – opposed it.

    Kazakhstan, Ethiopia and Egypt abstained.

    It was Russia’s seven veto in five years to save its Syrian ally. China, also one of the five veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council, has joined Russia in vetoing six resolutions on Syria.

    The resolution would have put 11 Syrians, mainly military commanders, and 10 entities linked to chemical attacks in 2014 and 2015 on a UN sanctions blacklist.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin had warned that imposing sanctions on Syria during the ongoing Geneva conference was “completely inappropriate” and would undermine the effort to end Syria’s nearly six-year war.

    Russian Deputy Ambassador Vladimir Safronkov echoed Putin’s view that imposing sanctions would have undermined peace talks and described the draft resolution as a “provocation” by the Western “troika”.

    ‘Sad day’

    The proposal marked the first major Security Council action by the new US administration under President Donald Trump, which is seeking warmer ties with Russia.

    “This resolution is very appropriate,” US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley told the Council after the measure was defeated in the vote.

    “It is a sad day on the Security Council when members start making excuses for other member states killing their own people.”

    “The world is definitely a more dangerous place,” she said, criticising the vetoes as “abominable and indefensible choices”.

    Commenting on Haley’s choice of words, Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera’s senior political analyst, pointed out that one could not differentiate between the US ambassador under ex-President Barack Obama and the current US envoy to the UN under the Trump administration.

    “In Washington, they don’t know what’s their policy in the Middle East,” he said, adding that the US strategy in the region was not articulated.

    “At the end of the day, everyone is reflecting their own core geopolitical calculus.”

    For his part, Safronkov described the statements made against Moscow in the Security Council as “outrageous”.

    “Today’s clash or confrontation is not a result of our negative vote. It is a result of the fact that you decided on provocation while you knew well ahead of time our position,” said Safronkov.

    The proposed resolution followed a UN-led investigation which concluded in October that the Syrian air force had dropped chlorine barrel bombs from helicopters on three opposition-held villages in 2014 and 2015.

    The joint panel of the United Nations and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) also found that Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) fighters used mustard gas in an attack in 2015.

    Russia and China also blocked in 2014 a request for the International Criminal Court to open up investigations of war crimes committed during the war in Syria.

    The Syrian government has repeatedly denied using chemical weapons in the war that has killed nearly 400,000 people and displaced almost half the country’s population since 2011.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Donald Trump vows to ‘demolish and destroy’ ISIL

    {Addressing Congress, US president also honoured Navy Seal killed in raid against in al-Qaeda in Yemen.}

    President Donald Trump said military plans have been set in motion to “extinguish” ISIL group as he vowed to keep “terrorists” from operating in the United States.

    During his speech to the US Congress on Tuesday night, Trump said it was the responsibility of his new administration to ensure improved vetting procedures to “keep those out who will do us harm”.

    The president said national security data shows the vast majority of people convicted of “terrorism” offences came from outside the United States.

    “We have seen the attacks at home from Boston to San Bernardino to the Pentagon. And, yes, even the World Trade Center. We have seen the attacks in France, Belgium, Germany and all over the world.

    “We cannot allow a beachhead of terrorists to form inside America. We cannot allow our nation to become a sanctuary for extremists,” said Trump.

    He specifically addressed the threat from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, also known as ISIS, during his address.

    “As promised, I’ve directed the Department of Defense to develop a plan to demolish and destroy ISIS – a network of lawless savages that have slaughtered Muslims and Christians and men, women and children of all faiths and all beliefs.

    “We will work with our allies, including our allies in the Muslim world, to extinguish this vile enemy from our planet,” the president said.

    Trump also honoured an American commando killed in a Yemen raid against al-Qaeda on January 29, which was ordered by the new administration in its first days.

    The widow of Navy Seal William “Ryan” Owens sat in the guest box with tears streaming down her face as the crowd stood and applauded at length.

    Owens’ death – as well as the killing of civilians, possibly including women and children – has raised questions about the effectiveness of the raid.

    Trump quoted his defence chief Jim Mattis in defending the operation. “Ryan was a part of a highly successful raid that generated large amounts of vital intelligence that will lead to many more victories in the future against our enemies,” he said.

    Owens’ father, Bill, has denounced the operation that took his son’s life and refused to meet with Trump. He told the Miami Herald newspaper last week the raid was a “stupid mission” and called for an investigation.

    President Trump pledged to "extinguish" ISIL from the planet

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom Break Up After Less Than a Year

    {Katy Perryand Orlando Bloom have gone their separate ways after about 10 months together, E! News has learned. In a statement from Perry and Bloom’s reps they share, “Before rumors or falsifications get out of hand we can confirm that Orlando and Katy are taking respectful, loving space at this time.”}

    The now-exes posed for a photo during Vanity Fair’s 2017 Oscars After-Party, though did not walk the red carpet by each other’s side. In mid-January, the “Chained to the Rhythm” songstress hosted a surprise 40th birthday bash for Bloom, which his mom attended. Additionally, the British actor joined Perry’s family over the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.

    Last March, E! News confirmed the lovebirds had become an “official couple” after taking their romance public at the 2016 Golden Globes. In the months that followed, it appeared Orlando and Katy were enjoying getting to know each other as they traveled abroad, enjoyed steamy makeout sessions and hit the campaign trails ahead of the presidential election.

    Over the summer, a source told E! News the duo had even discussed marriage and children, revealing, “They are in love and happier than ever. [Orlando] would like to get engaged to [Katy] before the year is up.”

    As for Perry’s mindset, our insider shared, “[Marriage and children] is something Katy has always wanted when she met the man she was ready to settle down with.” And during the 2016 UNICEF Snowflake Ball in November, she had nothing but kind words to say about Orlando, sharing with E! News, “He’s just got the most kind heart, ever.”
    Perhaps both stars’ demanding schedules are to blame for the surprise split as Katy is in the midst of promoting her upcoming fourth studio album with multiple award show performances and press appearances. Bloom, on the other hand, has dedicated much of his recent time to ongoing charity efforts with UNICEF.

    Katy Perry

    Source:E News

  • Malaysia to charge women for murder of Kim Jong-nam

    {Women accused of smearing VX nerve agent on North Korean leader’s half-brother officially charged in Malaysia.}

    Malaysia’s attorney general said on Tuesday the two women accused of killing the half-brother of North Korea’s leader with a nerve agent in a Kuala Lumpur airport terminal will be charged with murder.

    Police allege the women smeared VX nerve agent – a chemical on a UN list of weapons of mass destruction – on Kim Jong-nam’s face in an assault recorded on airport security cameras on February 13.

    Attorney General Mohamed Apandi Ali said Indonesian Siti Aisyah and Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong will be charged on Wednesday and would face a mandatory death sentence, if convicted.

    “They will be charged in court under Section 302 [murder] of the penal code,” Mohamed said.

    Indonesia’s deputy ambassador to Malaysia, Andriano Erwin, said on Saturday that Aisyah said she was paid $90 and repeated her previous claim that she was duped into the plot, thinking she was taking part in a prank. Huong told Vietnamese officials a similar story.

    Police have not said how the women were able to apply the nerve agent to Kim’s face and also avoid becoming ill themselves.

    Two other suspects have been arrested: a Malaysian who is out on bail and a North Korean who remains in custody.

    Asked if the North Korean will be charged, Apandi said it depends on the outcome of the investigation.

    Authorities also are seeking another seven North Korean suspects, four of whom fled the country the day of Kim’s death and are believed to be back in North Korea.

    North Korea sent a high-level delegation to Malaysia to seek the return of the body.

    The delegation includes Ri Tong-il, former North Korean deputy ambassador to the United Nations. He told reporters on Tuesday outside the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur that the diplomats were in Malaysia to seek the retrieval of the body and the release of the North Korean arrested in the case.

    Ri said the delegation also seeks the “development of friendly relationships” between North Korea and Malaysia.

    South Korean politicians said on Monday the country’s National Intelligence Service told them that four of the North Koreans identified as suspects are from the Ministry of State Security, the North’s spy agency.

    Two other suspects are affiliated with Pyongyang’s Foreign Ministry, one of the politicians alleged.

    Kim’s killing took place amid crowds of travellers at Kuala Lumpur’s airport and appeared to be a well-planned hit. Malaysian authorities say North Koreans put the deadly nerve agent VX on the hands of Aisyah and Huong, who then placed the toxin on Kim’s face.

    Malaysia has not directly accused North Korea of having masterminded the killing but is pursuing several North Korean suspects, including a diplomat at the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur.

    North Korea has repeatedly criticised Malaysia’s investigation and has not acknowledged the victim’s identity.

    Police last week identified the substance as the banned chemical weapon VX nerve agent, and Malaysia’s health minister said on Sunday the dose was so high it caused “very serious paralysis” and killed him within 20 minutes.

    Doan Thi Huong and her alleged accomplice could face the death penalty, Malaysia's attorney general said

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Die Welt’s Deniz Yucel held for ‘terror links’

    {Deniz Yucel, who holds both Turkish and German passports, has been charged with spreading ‘terrorist propaganda’.}

    A Turkish court ordered a journalist for Germany’s Die Welt newspaper to be jailed pending a trial on charges of terrorist propaganda and inciting hatred, media reports said.

    Deniz Yucel, who has both Turkish and German citizenship, was detained on February 14 after his reports about a hacker attack on the email account of Turkey’s energy minister, Die Welt newspaper said.

    Yucel was questioned by a prosecutor in Istanbul on Monday for three hours before a judge ordered him formally arrested pending the preparation of an indictment and a trial. Die Welt confirmed that he was ordered into custody.

    Yucel, 43, joins scores of journalists who have been jailed in Turkey following a July 15 coup attempt that prompted a government crackdown on alleged anti-government activists. This has included the closure of at least 100 news outlets in Turkey.

    The private Dogan news agency said Yucel was also questioned about an interview he conducted with Cemil Bayik, a commander of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) , as well as about articles he had written on Turkey’s policies towards the Kurds .

    Activists in Berlin demonstrated against Yucel’s detention by projecting #FreeDeniz on the Turkish embassy building in the German capital.

    The Die Welt journalist was asked whether he had any links to the hacker collective RedHack, which obtained the energy minister’s emails that were made available on WikiLeaks, Dogan reported. The energy minister, Berat Albayrak, is President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son-in-law.

    Germany’s foreign ministry said last week that Yucel’s case was of “greatest importance” for Berlin and that it would do “everything in our power to support press freedom” in Turkey.

    READ MORE: Turkey deports New York Times journalist

    In a statement, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel criticised the move as “bitter and disappointing” and called it “disproportionate”.

    “The German government expects that the Turkish judiciary, in its treatment of the Yucel case, takes account of the high value of freedom of the press for every democratic society. We will continue to insist on a fair and legal treatment of Deniz Yucel and hope that he will soon regain his freedom,” she said.

    There had been protests in Berlin following Yucel’s detention two weeks ago and on February 19, Festival director Dieter Kosslick closed the award ceremony of the 67th annual Berlin International Film Festival by raising his fist into the air in honour Yucel in front of a photograph of him.

    On Monday, hundreds of people demanded the journalist’s immediate release on social media, tweeting under the hashtag #Freedeniz.

    Protesters called for the freedom of Yucel during a rally in the streets of Berlin

    Source:Al Jazeera