Tag: InternationalNews

  • Deadly suicide car bombing rocks Baghdad’s Sadr City

    {Powerful blast kills at least nine people and wounds dozens in crowded street of mainly Shia suburb of Iraqi capital.}

    A suicide bomber detonated a pick-up truck packed with explosives in northern Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least nine people, according to Iraqi officials.

    Thirty more were wounded in the powerful blast in the Habibiya area, near Sadr City, a Shia-majority neighbourhood in the Iraqi capital.

    The explosion targeted a crowded street full of garages and used car dealers.

    The attack came a day after a car bomb explosion in southern Baghdad killed at least four people.

    The Iraqi capital was rocked by a wave of deadly suicide bombings during the first days of 2017 but relatively few explosions had been reported since.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday’s blast, but nearly all suicide attacks are claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) armed group.

    On January 2, ISIL, which often targets crowded areas to maximise casualties, claimed responsibility for a suicide car bombing that killed 39 people in a busy market in Sadr City.

    ISIL is defending Mosul, its last major stronghold in Iraq, against a massive, four-month-old operation by an alliance of forces.

    The blast targeted a crowded street full of garages and used car dealers

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • DACA recipient Daniel Ramirez sues US over his arrest

    {Mexican immigrant, protected from deportation under programme established in 2012, sues government after being arrested.}

    A Mexican immigrant is suing the US government after being arrested, even though he has special status protecting him from deportation.

    Daniel Ramirez, who has no criminal record, was arrested in his father’s home in Seattle on Friday. His lawyers say the arrest violates his constitutional rights to live and work in the US without the fear of arrest and deportation.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents (ICE) arrived at the home to arrest Ramirez’s father, but also took him into custody, even though he has a work permit under Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme, court documents said.

    The DACA programme was established in 2012 to protect children, who were brought into the US without documents, from deportation. It allows recipients, sometimes called “the dreamers”, to attend school and work.

    Ramirez’s lawyers say this could be the first time under US President Donald Trump that a person covered by DACA has been taken into immigration custody.

    ICE spokeswoman Rose Richeson said in a statement that Ramirez, 23, had told agents he was a gang member and was taken into custody for being a “risk to public safety”.

    In response, one of Ramirez’s lawyers said that his client “unequivocally denies being in a gang”.

    “While in custody, he was repeatedly pressured by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to falsely admit affiliation,” Mark Rosenbaum said.

    Trump, a Republican who took office on January 20, has promised a crackdown on the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the US, most of whom come from Mexico and other Latin American countries.

    US immigration authorities arrested at least 680 people across the country last week, and a move against DACA recipients like Ramirez would represent a significant broadening of immigration enforcement under Trump.

    In an interview with ABC News last month, Trump said that his administration was devising a policy on how to deal with people covered by DACA, without indicating any concrete plans.

    “They are here illegally. They shouldn’t be very worried. I do have a big heart. We’re going to take care of everybody. We’re going to have a very strong border,” Trump said at the time.

    Rallies were planned in response to Ramirez’s detainment by grassroots movements, such as United We Dream and One America, asking for his immediate release.

    Daniel Ramirez was arrested even though he is legally protected under DACA

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Two journalists killed during Facebook Live broadcast

    {Attackers burst into the studio and shot the presenter mid-broadcast, a shooting that was also caught on Facebook live.}

    Police in the Dominican Republic have arrested three men after two radio journalists were shot dead during a Facebook Live broadcast, according to officials.

    The shooting took place on Tuesday in San Pedro de Macoris, east of the capital Santo Domingo.

    The attackers burst into the 103.5 FM studio and shot dead presenter Luis Manuel Medina as he was reading the news on air.

    Gunfire and a woman’s voice shouting, “Shots, shots!” can be heard on a Facebook live video streamed by one of the journalists there at the time.

    Moments earlier, the station’s director Leonidas Martinez was killed in his office, witnesses at the radio station told local media.

    “Two people have died and one has been injured,” national police spokesman William Alcantara told reporters. He identified the wounded person as the station’s secretary.

    No charges have yet been filed against the arrested men.

    According to media rights watchdog, Reporters Without Borders, journalists who tackle corruption and drug trafficking in the Dominican Republic often fall victim to attacks.

    Family and friends mourn journalists Luis Manuel Medina and Luis Martinez, announcer and director of the radio station FM 103.5

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Juma Mohammed Abdullah al-Kaabi dies after Afghan blast

    {Ambassador Al-Kaabi was critically wounded in Kandahar attack that also killed five Emirati aid workers.}

    The ambassador of the United Arab Emirates to Afghanistan died on Wednesday of wounds sustained in a bomb attack in Kandahar last month that also killed five Emirati aid workers, the UAE’s foreign ministry announced.

    “With great sadness and sorrow, we mourn the martyr of the nation and his duty, the righteous son Juma Mohammed Abdullah al-Kaabi, who gave his pure soul for the sake of humanity,” the ministry said in a statement quoted by official news agency WAM.

    The diplomats were expected to open a number of UAE-backed projects as part of an aid programme in Afghanistan.

    The Taliban denied carrying out the bombing, saying the attack was a result of “internal local rivalry”.

    Juma Mohammed Abdullah al-Kaabi, centre, has died of wounds sustained in the Kandahar attack

    Source:Reuters

  • Trump and Netanyahu to hold first White House talks

    {Netanyahu to meet Trump at White House, as US suggests it may abandon efforts of creating independent Palestinian state.}

    US President Donald Trump will host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Wednesday, their first meeting since the inauguration and one that could shape policy in the region for years ahead.

    Trump and Netanyahu are likely to discuss peace efforts between Israel and Palestine, as well as expanding settlements, the Iran nuclear deal and the war in Syria.

    Trump’s campaign pledge to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a move that would infuriate Palestinians and the Muslim world, will also be a discussion point.

    White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump was working to achieve a comprehensive agreement ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    “The way forward toward that goal will also be discussed between the president and the prime minister,” he said.

    Trump, who is relentlessly pro-Israel and has repeatedly spoken disparagingly about Palestinians has challenged the legitimacy of Palestinian demands for a state.

    On Tuesday, a White House official said Trump supported the goal of peace between the Israel and the Palestinians, even if it does not involve the two-state solution.

    A two-state solution – the idea of Israel and Palestine living side-by-side and at peace – has been the bedrock of US diplomacy for the past two decades.

    While Netanyahu has said he is committed to a two-state goal, he has broadly reiterated the aim since bringing it up since 2009.

    The right-wing Israeli leader has spoken of a “state minus,” suggesting he could offer the Palestinians deep-seated autonomy and the trappings of statehood without full sovereignty.

    The Palestinians want an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza, with the capital in East Jerusalem, which Israel seized in the 1967 Middle East war.

    Netanyahu, who is under investigation at home over allegations of abuse of office, spent much of Tuesday huddled with senior advisers in Washington preparing for the talks.

    Officials said they wanted no gaps to emerge between US and Israeli thinking during the scheduled two-hour Oval Office meeting.

    The Israeli prime minister is also scheduled to have breakfast on Thursday with Vice President Mike Pence before departing back to Israel.

    American presidents have long struck a close friendship with Israel, lavishing the country with aid and advanced weaponry.

    But Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, also called out Israeli actions seen as undermining peace efforts, such as expanding settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Start of Syria talks in Astana delayed by one day

    {A new round of talks on the Syrian conflict led by Russia, Turkey and Iran were set to begin on February 15.}

    Talks on the Syrian crisis involving Russia, Iran, and Turkey that were due to start in the Kazakh capital, Astana, on Wednesday have been delayed by one day, Kazakhstan’s foreign ministry said without explaining the reason for the delay.

    “The negotiations have been moved to February 16 for technical reasons,” a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told AFP news agency by telephone without elaboration.

    Syrian rebels cast doubt on Monday over whether they would attend the talks, accusing Russia of failing to get Damascus to comply fully with a ceasefire or take any confidence-building steps.

    Kazakhstan, Moscow’s close political ally, said last week the two-day talks, to which the UN special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, had also been invited, would focus on consolidating the Syrian ceasefire.

    A new round of UN-backed peace talks is due to begin in Geneva next.

    The “closed format” negotiations come after representatives from Damascus and the armed opposition failed to make a breakthrough at indirect talks in the city in January.

    The meeting, pushed by key regime-supporter Moscow, is viewed as a warm-up for UN-led negotiations on the protracted war that are due to begin in Geneva on February 23.

    While Kazakh officials said they invited both the Syrian government and rebels for the new talks, several of the regime opponents who took part in the previous Astana talks told AFP that they have not received invitations.

    Russia is sending Alexander Lavrentiev, presidential envoy, while Iran said it is dispatching Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Jaberi Ansari.

    De Mistura said he would not participate personally in the latest Astana meeting but that his office would be represented by a “technical team”.

    Jordan will also be represented by a “high-level delegation” government spokesman Mohamed Momani said.

    The Astana initiative has left the West on the sidelines of the latest push to end the war in Syria that has claimed more than 300,000 lives since 2011.

    Moscow has invited the United States to participate as an observer but the US Department of State has yet to confirm Washington will be involved.

    Talks are likely to focus on bolstering a shaky ceasefire on the ground after Moscow, Tehran and Ankara agreed to establish a “mechanism” aimed at ensuring the truce.

    The Geneva negotiations are expected to be wider-ranging, focussing on the key issues that divide the government and rebel sides, including the fate of President Bashar al-Assad.

    Russia and Iran have helped turn the tables on the ground with their military backing for Assad, while Turkey has supported rebels fighting to oust the leader.

    Delegations of the Damascus government and the rebels attended the previous round of talks in Astana but refused to negotiate directly

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Evacuation lifted for Californians living below dam

    {Residents allowed to return home but must remain vigilant and flee to high grounds if repairs do not hold, sheriff says.}

    Nearly 200,000 Northern Californians who live downstream of the country’s tallest dam were allowed to return home on Tuesday after two nights of uncertainty, but they were warned they may have to again flee to higher ground on a moment’s notice if hastily made repairs to the battered structure do not hold.

    The fixes could be put to their first test later this week with the first of a series of small storms forecast for the region.

    But the real test is still to come in the weeks ahead when a record amount of snowfall melts in nearby mountains.

    “There is the prospect that we could issue another evacuation order if the situation changes and the risk increases,” Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said Tuesday, telling residents they could return home but to remain vigilant.

    Residents living below the Oroville Dam were suddenly ordered to evacuate Sunday afternoon after water authorities had assured them for nearly a week that the dam was sound despite a gaping and growing hole found in the structure’s main spillway.

    The order came after authorities feared an earthen emergency spillway used when the lake behind the dam overflows its capacity appeared ready to fail Sunday because of erosion.

    Over the weekend, the swollen lake spilled down the unpaved emergency spillway for nearly 40 hours, leaving it badly eroded.

    {{Government failures}}

    The problem occurred six days after engineers discovered a growing hole in the dam’s main concrete spillway.

    State and federal officials ignored calls in 2005 from environmental groups to armor the earthen spillway in concrete to prevent erosion.

    Federal regulators concluded the earthen spillway could handle a large amount of overflow after water agencies that would have had to pay for the upgrade argued it was unnecessary.

    On Tuesday, John Garamendi, a Democrat who represents an area near Oroville, called the government’s failure to coat the spillway in concrete “a classic case of woulda, coulda, shoulda”.

    He said that if the state had listened to the 2005 warnings and installed the concrete a decade ago, “this problem would not have occurred. But they didn’t, and there are probably multiple reasons why”, with cost a crucial one.

    The California Department of Water Resources said the lake was ready to take on rain and melting snow. State water officials said they have drained enough of the lake behind Oroville Dam that the emergency spillway will not be needed to handle runoff from an approaching storm.

    Forecasts call for 2 inches to 4 inches of rain and snow in the foothills and mountains starting Wednesday night. But the storm was looking colder than initially projected, meaning less rain and less runoff than last week’s storms.

    Acting department chief Bill Croyle said 40 trucks have dumped 30 tonnes of bags loaded with sand, concrete blocks and boulders every hour into the damaged areas, while helicopters have dropped bags of rocks and cement blocks onto the problem sites.

    The damaged main spillway has been stable for four days and handling a heavy flow of water, reducing the reservoir’s water level by 15 feet in preparation for coming rain and melting snow throughout the spring. Officials hope to drain the lake another 37 feet.

    “We still have a large snowpack; we will see quite a spring runoff,” Croyle said.

    Croyle said the goal is to keep the reservoir below capacity so the use of the auxiliary spillway wouldn’t be used. Still, Croyle said that spillway has been repaired and that he’s confident it could be used again if needed.

    Preliminary estimates say permanently fixing the hole in the main spillway could cost $100 million to $200 million, Croyle said.

    Experts are drawing up plans for repairs that will begin after the spring runoff season ends.

    But after two days away from home, tens of thousands of evacuees were growing weary. They welcomed the news they could return home.

    “You don’t appreciate home until it’s taken away from you,” said Margaret Johnston, 69, of Oroville, who spent two nights at a church with her two sons. She had packed a few blankets, pillows and clothes into a black garbage bag.

    Returning residents vowed to heed the sheriff’s warning to remain vigilant.

    Rod Remocal said he and his wife would now be ready to leave their Biggs home near the dam at a moment’s notice after fleeing in a rush Sunday.

    “We’re all coming back and pack and be ready this time,” Remocal said. “This time we’re going to be on call like they said.”

    About 188,000 people were ordered to evacuate their homes in the valley below the dam

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Turkey: Hundreds detained over alleged links to PKK

    {State media says more than 800 people have been detained in operations carried out in 37 provinces.}

    Turkish police have detained more than 800 people over alleged links to Kurdish fighters in nationwide operations, according to state media.

    Police conducted simultaneous raids in 37 different provinces and taken 834 people into custody, state-run Anadolu Agency quoted police forces as saying on Tuesday.

    Anadolu said authorities received intelligence that the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) would escalate attacks after February 15, the day marking the 1999 capture of imprisoned PKK leader, Abdullah Ocalan.

    Along with the suspects, two Kalashnikovs, 11 guns, 15 rifles and ammunition were seized, police said.

    The operations come as Turks prepare to vote on April 16 on replacing the parliamentary system with the stronger presidency sought by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    The referendum will be held under a state of emergency imposed after an attempted coup last July.

    Tens of thousands of people have been arrested since the abortive coup over suspected ties to Fethullah Gulen, the US-based Muslim leader and businessman accused by Ankara of organising the coup.

    {{HDP reaction}}

    The pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) said the raids aimed to weaken it.

    “The basic goal of these operations … is to hold the referendum without the HDP,” a statement from its executive committee said.

    Its statement, released before Tuesday’s arrests, said more than 300 of its members and executives had been detained on Monday, bringing those held this year to around 1,200.

    A dozen of its MPs and tens of Kurdish mayors from a sister party have been jailed pending trial.

    The government accuses the HDP, parliament’s second biggest opposition party, of being a political extension of the PKK.

    The HDP denies direct links with the PKK and says it wants a peaceful settlement in Turkey’s largely Kurdish southeast.

    The PKK, designated a “terrorist” group by Turkey, the EU and the US, launched an armed struggle against the Turkish state in 1984 and more than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

    A ceasefire between the PKK and the state broke down in July 2015 and thousands have been killed in the conflict since then.

    Turkey's pro-Kurdish HDP said the raids aimed to weaken it

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • UAE seeks to build human settlement on Mars by 2117

    {‘Mars 2117 Project’ is set to be developed and executed in partnership with major international research institutions.}

    The United Arab Emirates has unveiled a new project that aims to establish the first inhabitable human settlement on Mars by 2117.

    The initiative called “Mars 2117 Project” was announced on Tuesday by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai and vice president of the UAE, on the sidelines of the 5th World Government Summit, currently being held in the Emirate.

    “The landing of people on other planets has been a longtime dream for humans. Our aim is that the UAE will spearhead international efforts to make this dream a reality,” said Sheikh Mohammad.

    He said that his country was one of the world’s leaders in space science investments, adding that it aims to accelerate the research in this area.

    “The new project is a seed that we plant today, and we expect future generations to reap the benefits, driven by its passion to learn to unveil a new knowledge,” Sheikh Mohammed said.

    According to a statement released by the Dubai government media office, the project is set to be developed and executed in partnership with major international scientific research institutions.

    {{International team }}

    The project will initially focus on preparing the human cadres able to achieve scientific breakthrough to facilitate the arrival of humans to the Red Planet over the next decades, the statement said.

    It will start with an Emirati scientific team and will be extended to include international scientists and researchers, it added.

    The project will focus on developing faster means of transportation from and to the Red Planet. It will also come up with an integrated scientific visualisation of how the settlement will look, and how life there will be in term of food, transportation and energy among many others.

    In July 2014, the UAE announced that it would create a space agency with the aim of sending the first Arab unmanned probe to Mars by 2021.

    "Mars 2117 Project" was launched on the sidelines of the 5th World Government Summit

    Source:Al Jazeera

  • Michael Flynn quits as national security adviser

    {Michael Flynn resigns after misleading officials about communications with Russia before new administration took office.}

    Michael Flynn has resigned as national security adviser over his contact with Russian officials before US President Donald Trump took office.

    His resignation on Tuesday followed reports a day earlier that the Department of Justice warned the Trump administration weeks ago that such communications could leave him in a compromised position.

    It is illegal for private citizens to conduct US diplomacy.

    “Unfortunately, because of the fast pace of events, I inadvertently briefed the Vice President-elect and others with incomplete information regarding my phone calls with the Russian ambassador,” Flynn wrote in his official resignation letter.

    “I am tendering my resignation, honoured to have served President Trump, who in just three weeks has reoriented American foreign policy in fundamental ways to restore America’s leadership position in the world,” he added.

    Retired General Keith Kellogg, who has been chief of staff of the White House National Security Council, was named the acting national security adviser while Trump determines who should fill the position.

    Discussing sanctions

    Flynn’s departure less than one month into the Trump administration marks an extraordinarily early shake-up in the president’s senior team of advisers.

    Flynn was a loyal Trump supporter throughout the campaign, but his ties to Russia caused concern among other senior aides.

    Flynn initially told Trump advisers that he did not discuss sanctions with Sergey Kislyak, Russia’s ambassador to the United States, during the transition.

    Vice President Mike Pence, apparently relying on information from Flynn, publicly vouched for the national security adviser.

    Flynn later told White House officials that he may have discussed sanctions with the ambassador.

    His conversations raise questions about Trump’s friendly posture towards Russia after US intelligence agencies concluded that Moscow hacked Democratic emails during the election.

    {{‘Looseness with the truth’}}

    A US official on Monday told The Associated Press that Flynn was in frequent contact with Kislyak on the day the Obama administration slapped sanctions on Russia for the election-related hacking, as well as at other times during the transition.

    Flynn’s discussions with the Russian also raised questions about whether he offered assurances about the incoming administration’s new approach.

    Such conversations would breach diplomatic protocol and possibly violate the Logan Act, a law aimed at keeping citizens from conducting diplomacy.

    Mark Jacobson, a Democratic adviser to former Secretary of Defense Ash Carter told Al Jazeera: “This is not about the conversations [Flynn] had with the Russian ambassador or other Russian diplomats. This was about the way he characterised it to the vice president, plain and simple.”

    “Charges have never been brought against anyone based on the Logan Act. I’m less concerned about that, I’m more concerned about the fact he may have lied to the vice president,” Jacobson added.

    “It’s more of the cover-up that gets you here. There’s been a lack of transparency, there has been a looseness with the truth at this White House.”

    {{‘Russophobia’}}

    A senior Russian MP said Flynn’s resignation suggested Trump had been backed into a corner or that his administration had been “infected” by anti-Russian feeling.

    “Either Trump has not gained the requisite independence and he is consequently being not unsuccessfully backed into a corner, or Russophobia has already infected the new administration also from top to bottom,” MP Konstantin Kosachev was cited as saying by the RIA Novosti news agency.

    Kosachev is head of the upper house of parliament’s international affairs committee.

    Moscow-based Dmiitry Babich, a reporter at the state-funded Sputnik International news agency, told Al Jazeera the news signalled “a dangerous return of McCarthyism to American politics”.

    “It’s obvious that the special services of the United States who eavesdropped on that conversation between Michael Flynn and the Russian ambassador, they leaked this information,” he said.

    “That was used to remove a person from office for a very strange reason. Isn’t it natural that the future head of national security should talk to an ambassador of a foreign nation, not a hostile nation, about the possible removal of sanctions?”

    Source:Al Jazeera