Putin confirms run for Russian presidency in 2024 election | News

BREAKING,

Russian president confirms bid to extend term in March polls.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said that he will run for president in the 2024 presidential election, state news agency TASS reported on Friday.

More to come …

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Women’s football set to enter lucrative ‘NewCo’ era but pitfalls remain | Football News

The Women’s Super League and Women’s Championship’s decision to break free from the English Football Association and run independently from the next season will give the women’s game a newfound autonomy and play a vital role in shaping its future, experts say, although many pitfalls and uncertainties remain.

Last week, clubs from the top two tiers of women’s football in England announced they had unanimously agreed to form a new organisation (NewCo) to lead the women’s professional game from the 2024/25 season.

The English FA has run the Women’s Super League since its formation in 2010, with the addition of the second-tier Championship in 2014. However, in July 2022, the FA announced a desire for those leagues to change from being solely owned by the FA to being an independent entity.

NewCo, a working title at this stage, will function as an independent body with all 24 clubs from the Women’s Super League and Championship acting as shareholders. The organisation will be led by CEO Nikki Doucet, a former investment banker and Nike executive.

Kelly Simmons, former FA director of the women’s game, said the formation of NewCo will provide the women’s leagues a “laser focus”.

“The FA wasn’t the right long-term fit because it’s the governing body and regulator, and there are some commercial conflicts in that,” Simmons told Al Jazeera.

“We were concerned that if the women’s leagues just rolled into the men’s Premier League, it would not have sort of the laser focus or an independent voice, and might not be the highest priority.

“So we [at the FA] all agreed unanimously that the best model would be to set up a new company that has a laser focus, a board and an executive that is solely focused on making the best decisions for the women’s professional game.”

Simmons, who played a key role in developing the women’s game in England for three decades, believes that NewCo will enable the women’s game to have its own distinct voice, free from the men’s game.

“[The women’s game] has always been wrapped up in sort of the politics of whatever is going on in the men’s game and hasn’t been able to have that voice to call out what’s needed for the women’s game publicly and sometimes put pressure on the stakeholders,” added Simmons, who is now a sports consultant.

“So I think it’s good that, now it’s away from the FA, it’s got its own voice.”

However, some experts voiced concerns that the new structure could replicate some of the problems marring the men’s game and a lot remains unclear.

‘Right time’

Women’s football has seen a rapid rise in England, accelerated by the team’s success at the Women’s European Championship on home soil in 2022.

NewCo’s formation comes just over three months after England played in the Women’s World Cup final in Australia.

Alex Culvin, head of women’s football strategy and research at FIFPRO, said the leagues’ decision to function independently has come at the right time.

“The FA in England have probably taken the women’s game as far as they could go. And so I think, the time was was right in terms of the marketability of the game,” Culvin said. “The commercial value of the game is increasing … The women’s game in England has never been more appealing.”

Culvin, a former professional footballer who played for Everton, Leeds United and Liverpool, said an independent working structure is more beneficial for the growth of professional women’s leagues in general.

“For many women’s professional leagues across the world, the country’s football federations manage the development of the league. And what you find is that there’s a consolidation of power,” Culvin explained.

“So they manage the league and the international team. And that’s why consolidation of power can sometimes stunt the growth potential of women’s football because how do you strategically prioritise one over the other?”

Culvin highlighted the importance of independent governance by citing the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL), the top-tier women’s league in the United States that is owned by the clubs.

NWSL is among the top leagues in global women’s football and almost all US national team players ply their trade there. The league is also commercially lucrative – according to data by Sportico, NWSL teams will collectively generate $112m in revenue during the 2023 regular season. The WSL generated revenues of 32 million pounds ($40.2m) in 2021-22.

“If you look at the NWSL … it has the opportunity to grow year on year. I think, in England, having the independence and the ability to strategically prioritise the growth of the women’s league is something that hasn’t been done before. It’s important and I’m incredibly excited,” Culvin said.

The WSL now believes it can become the first billion-pound ($1.24bn) women’s football league in the world within a decade.

The establishment of NewCo, similar to the Premier League’s governance model, is anticipated to contribute to the rapid and sustainable growth of women’s football, according to freelance journalist Nancy Gillen.

“While the FA obviously wanted women’s football to grow, it is hard for the organisation to be fully dedicated to this when they also have other commitments,” Gillen said.

“It is similar to when the Premier League broke away from the Football League and FA in 1991-92, giving it commercial independence. The Premier League is now one of the most successful and profitable sports leagues in the world, so that’s where the Women’s Super League and Championship could potentially be heading.”

Simmons said the formation of a new company to run the leagues independently will also benefit women’s football in England.

“A very successful Women’s Super League helps the England team and I think one of the reasons why England has been so successful has been because the players are training and playing every day with some of the best players in the world,” she said.

“On the other hand, a strong Championship will help England because a lot of young English talent needs to get meaningful minutes in game time in competitive games maybe when they’re too young to break into the Women’s Super League.”

Revenue structure

The new company has not revealed details on the structure of its governance, but the Athletic reported the Women’s Super League clubs will receive 75 per cent of the combined revenues from the two divisions and have all the voting power on commercial and broadcast matters.

Culvin raised concerns about the power grab by the top clubs.

“For me, it is quite problematic, because, again, there’s a consolidation of power among the bigger clubs,” Culvin added. “For this new foundation, I think it’s important that there’s no vested interest in providing an undemocratic decision-making amongst clubs.”

Simmons advocated for revenue sharing with lower division leagues in the future.

“At some point, when those revenues grow, there will need to be another conversation about whether money should go further down the pyramid to the Women’s National League and the tiers below, just like it does in the men’s game,” she said.

The Athletic also reported that 11 out of 12 Championship clubs had rejected an initial agreement over voting power on certain matters regarding how NewCo will function. But after receiving an ultimatum from the Women’s Super League clubs, the Championship clubs voted unanimously in favour of the deal.

Gillen, a women’s football expert, said there is a risk of more disputes between the two divisions.

“I would really hope that all decisions would be made to benefit both leagues, but there is always the chance of the gap between the Women’s Super League and Championship getting bigger,” she said.

Meanwhile, no financial fair play rules have been announced for the leagues.

As the women’s leagues break away from the governing body, Simmons also stressed the importance of the FA maintaining a relationship with the women’s game.

“The FA will need to think through how they manage and develop the relationship with the new company to make sure that there’s a joined-up strategy, particularly across things like youth talent, talent development, and club development,” she explained.

NewCo’s to-do list

Simmons said NewCo’s first major task would be to secure a new broadcast deal for the Women’s Super League, with the FA’s multimillion-pound deal with Sky Sports and the BBC set to end next season.

Culvin suggested that NewCo should focus on establishing new licensing criteria for clubs and also emphasised the need for a review of the remuneration of players to avoid a huge wage gap between the clubs.

The former defender added that the new company should also take into consideration the recommendations put forth by Karen Carney to help improve the standards of women’s football in England.

Former player-turned-pundit Carney undertook an independent review into women’s football in England last year and published the findings in July, outlining recommendations aimed at leveraging the success of the England women’s team and establishing a pathway towards a successful and sustainable commercial future for domestic women’s football.

The British government has endorsed the recommendations and pledged its support to the FA and NewCo in the full professionalisation of the women’s game.

“While I’m encouraged by this kind of innovative sort of new governance structure of the Women’s Super League and Championship, I think there’s not a lot of information around actually how it will operate in practice,” Culvin said.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Ex-Sierra Leone president Koroma to be questioned over ‘failed coup’ | Government News

Koroma, who strongly condemned the attack, said he was ‘ready to support the police investigations to the fullest’.

A former president of Sierra Leone has been called in for questioning by police over recent attacks that officials say was a failed coup, an official said on Thursday.

The police summoned ex-president Ernest Bai Koroma to its headquarters “for questioning on the failed attempted coup” on November 26, information minister Cherno Bah said in a statement.

Koroma, who led the West African nation for 11 years until 2018, has been asked to appear at the criminal investigations department in the capital, Freetown, within 24 hours, the information ministry said.

His summons follows the earlier arrest of his former security aide.

Dozens of gunmen launched a brazen attack last month in Freetown during which they broke into Sierra Leone’s key armoury and into a prison, freeing most of the more than 2,000 inmates.

At least 18 members of the security forces were killed during the clashes, while more than 50 suspects – including military officers – have been arrested so far.

Among those arrested was Amadu Koita, who worked as a security guard for Koroma until 2018 when the former president left office. Police on Wednesday released an image that they say shows Koita with a gun in a surveillance photo captured when the prison was attacked. A bodyguard of the former president was also killed during the attack.

Koroma said that he would honour the police summons, and asked his supporters to be calm, according to a statement issued by his office.

“I maintain an open mind and stand ready to support the police investigations to the fullest. Let the rule of law reign supreme in our democracy,” said the former president who had “strongly condemned” the attack when it happened.

Although he has officially retired from politics, Koroma remains an influential figure within his political party and often hosts prominent politicians in his hometown of Makeni.

There have been political tensions in Sierra Leone since President Julius Maada Bio was re-elected for a second term in a disputed vote in June. Two months after he was re-elected, police said they arrested several people, including senior military officers planning to use protests “to undermine peace”.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Hunter Biden indicted for evading $1.4m in tax: What we know and what next? | Politics News

The younger Biden is charged for the second time this year amid a heated presidential election campaign.

United States President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, was indicted for multiple counts of tax evasion late on Thursday. Here’s what there is to know:

What are the recent charges against Hunter Biden?

The US Justice Department filed three felony and six misdemeanour tax offences against Biden, 53, on Thursday, according to an indictment filed in the US District Court, Central District of California. He is accused of failing to file and pay taxes, evading tax assessment and making a false or fraudulent tax return, according to court documents presented in Los Angeles.

Biden “engaged in a four-year scheme to not pay at least $1.4 million in self-assessed federal taxes he owed for tax years 2016 through 2019,” the indictment filed in a US district court in central California read.

It further added that Biden instead spent this money on personal expenditures including luxury hotels, cars, clothing and more than $70,000 on drug rehabilitation.

Prosecutors said that between 2016 and October 2020, he received more than $7m in total gross income.

Republican lawmakers have continually slammed the younger Biden for leveraging his family name to make money overseas such as with Burisma, one of the largest gas companies in Ukraine, where he made $2.3m from 2016 to 2019. He has also worked at a Chinese private equity fund. Joe Biden was US vice president from 2009 to 2017.

Has Hunter Biden been indicted before?

Biden is being charged this year for a second time by a special counsel investigating his personal and business dealings.

Previous charges accuse him of illegally owning a handgun alongside two counts of lying about his drug use on a federal application when he purchased the gun.

In July, a plea bargain between Hunter Biden and special counsel David Weiss – which would have erased the gun charges while Biden pleaded guilty to two tax charges and avoided prison – fell apart.

In October, he pleaded not guilty to these charges in Delaware, in the first criminal prosecution of a sitting US president’s child.

Can he face trial and go to jail?

The new charges mean that Hunter Biden could in theory go on trial twice next year. It was not clear when he would appear in court.

If convicted, Biden can face up to 17 years in prison. The Justice Department said its investigation into Biden is continuing.

What are the reactions to Biden’s indictment?

While the White House declined to comment, President Biden has previously insisted he stands by his son despite his past troubled behaviour.

Hunter Biden’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said in a statement that his client had repaid his taxes in full, accusing Weiss of renouncing a previous agreement, according to US media. He accused Weiss of “bowing to Republican pressure”.

“If Hunter’s last name was anything other than Biden, the charges in Delaware, and now California, would not have been brought,” Lowell was quoted as saying.

What does this mean for Joe Biden’s 2024 presidential campaign?

This indictment comes as Joe Biden likely faces former US President Donald Trump in the 2024 race for the presidency.

It also comes as congressional Republicans pursue an impeachment inquiry into President Biden, claiming he was engaged in an influence-peddling scheme with his son.

The House is expected to vote next week on formally authorising the inquiry. No evidence has emerged so far to prove that Joe Biden, in his current or previous office, abused his role or accepted bribes, though questions have arisen about the ethics surrounding the Biden family’s international business.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Will Netanyahu risk a tunnel conflict to ‘eradicate Hamas’, stay in power? | Israel-Palestine conflict News

Benjamin Netanyahu’s hold on his position as prime minister of Israel appears increasingly tenuous.

Many Israelis hold him and his cabinet responsible for the security failures of October 7, and he has come under heavy domestic criticism for his handling of the war on Gaza. Add to that the fact he has long been bogged down by corruption charges and criticism over plans to change the judicial system.

Several polls show he would be forced to step down if elections were held now.

Now, as Israeli forces march deeper into southern Gaza, Netanyahu could face a decision that may have huge political ramifications for his career: Whether to send Israeli troops into the 500km (310-mile) tunnel network below Gaza.

‘Each tunnel poses a significant threat’

If Israelis were to enter the tunnel network in Gaza, it would usher in a new phase in the war, significantly levelling the playing field between the opponents, according to Philip Ingram, MBE, a former British military intelligence officer.

Above ground, Israel has waged a relentless aereal bombardment and ground invasion of the 365sq km (141sq mile) enclave, using its superiority in arms.

Underground, Hamas would be able to rely on a sophisticated network of tunnels that would channel Israeli soldiers on foot into a single file.

The challenges for the Israelis would be “enormous” due to a lack of sufficient information on where the tunnels are, how far they stretch and what potential boobytraps were laid out by Hamas in preparation, Ingram said.

From a military point of view, the Israelis would want to “avoid actually having to fight in the tunnel”, he added.

Given Hamas’s expertise in setting booby traps and ambushes, “each tunnel poses a significant threat” to Israeli troops, Elijah Magnier, a military analyst who has covered the Middle East for more than 30 years, believes.

The “Palestinian resistance appears to have a strategic advantage” when it comes to tunnel warfare he said, referencing the high numbers of Israeli soldiers who die or are injured when searching for entrances to the tunnel network.

The Israel military boasts the Weasels (Samur), a specialised tunnel-warfare unit amongst its ranks, Ingram said, explaining that the specialised troops will have “all the gadgets” and trained dogs to help navigate the tunnels.

Still, no matter how much they will have practised, he says, the reality of what is down there remains largely unknown, making it very risky.

The preparations Hamas will have made and their intimate knowledge of the sprawling tunnel network would also shift the fighting from a “360-degree conflict” above ground to a “3D” one for the Israeli troops who could face an attack from any angle, he said.

Regardless, experts believe a potential conflict in the tunnels remains a probable outcome due to Netanyahu’s promise to eliminate Hamas and its underground command centres.

Magnier believes that the recent seven-day “humanitarian pause” in Gaza “allowed Hamas and Islamic Jihad to restructure their defensive strategies and prepare for the ongoing conflict”.

There were media reports weeks ago that Israel would consider trying to gain an advantage by using poison gas in the tunnels to try to eradicate Hamas fighters in them. The idea caused an international uproar.

The Wall Street Journal recently said Israel could be weighing up flooding the tunnels with seawater as an alternative to troops having to enter.

Citing US officials, the media outlet said Israeli forces had already assembled a system of five pumps just north of the Shati refugee camp in mid-November.

The pumps would draw water from the Mediterranean into the tunnels and would be able to flood the network within weeks, the article said.

‘Eradicate Hamas’

Netanyahu committed to “destroying Hamas” as one of the responses to the attack on October 7.

And he may ultimately decide to send troops into the tunnels to save his political career, despite the risk of huge casualties, Nader Hashemi, associate professor of Middle East and Islamic politics at Georgetown University, said.

Netanyahu, Hashemi added, knows that unless he can “eradicate Hamas and … claim an ultimate victory, he doesn’t have a chance to continue in Israeli politics”.

It is not just the defeat of Hamas that Netanyahu has promised but also the release of the 125 captives Israel says are still in Gaza.

Israel believes the captives are kept in the underground networks below Gaza, which means access to the tunnels will be viewed as crucial by the Israeli forces tasked with freeing them, according to Magnier.

A military operation in the tunnels could also put these captives at risk, something else that Netanyahu may be willing to risk to secure the defeat of Hamas.

Hashemi refers to the Hannibal Directive, a mysterious Israeli military policy that reportedly allows the use of maximum force in the event of a soldier being kidnapped, even if it resulted in the death of the soldier, as an indication that Israel could “prioritise its military objectives over the deaths of hostages”.

Military costs vs political benefits

Hashemi said that even as Netanyahu looks at a potential operation in the tunnels, the question on his mind will be “how many casualties is he willing to publicly suffer” to accomplish his goal.

Ingram feels the decision will be made after weighing risks against benefits and that a likely outcome will be Israel continuing to map the network from above, using ground-penetrating radar and looking to identify key command centres which they can target specifically by “blowing a hole” in the network.

He says that although there was tunnel warfare in many previous conflicts, the “underground city” Hamas has created has taken it to “a new level”. The Israeli military is facing an unprecedented task, he said, and will need to be incredibly cautious.

When Israel could attempt to enter the tunnels remains unclear.

Israel is under pressure, Magnier said, “in the face of mounting global criticism and war crimes and crimes against humanity” and while that implies that it would need to accomplish its goals faster, “setting a specific timetable for ground operations is a challenge for any military commander”.

The Israeli advance, he says, has been “remarkably slow despite being in a small but densely populated residential area”.

Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas has provided cover and shelter, inadvertently aiding the resistance, he explains.

If Israeli troops do enter the tunnel network, it could spell a prolonged conflict, played out underground in an information vacuum.

Hemmed in, Hamas may face fuel and supply shortages while, in contrast, Israeli troops could be “crawling for weeks and weeks just to progress 100 metres”.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Armenia, Azerbaijan agree to take steps towards normalisation | Politics News

EU and US welcome joint statement in which two sides agree to exchange prisoners of war and Armenia backs Azerbaijan COP29 bid.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have said they will exchange prisoners of war and work towards normalising their relations, in a move welcomed by the European Union and the United States.

The two countries have been locked in a decades-long conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, which Azerbaijan reclaimed after a lightning offensive against Armenian separatists in September.

In a joint statement issued late on Thursday night, the two sides said they had agreed to seize “a historical chance to achieve a long-awaited peace in the region” and hoped to sign a peace treaty before the end of the year.

“The two countries reconfirm their intention to normalise relations and to reach the peace treaty on the basis of respect for the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity,” the statement added.

September’s Azerbaijani offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh ended ethnic Armenians’ three decades of rule of the territory and led most of its 120,000 residents to flee the region, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan.

Until Thursday’s announcement, the two countries had argued bitterly on the outline of a peace process amid mutual distrust.

The statement said Baku will free 32 Armenian prisoners of war, while Yerevan will release two Azerbaijani servicemen, in agreements reached during talks between the office of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and the administration of Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev.

The two countries also said they “will continue their discussions regarding the implementation of more confidence-building measures, effective in the near future, and call on the international community to support their efforts”.

Armenia’s foreign ministry said Yerevan had “responded positively to the offer of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to organise the meeting of the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington”.

European Council President Charles Michel described the developments as a “major breakthrough in Armenia-Azerbaijan relations” while the US welcomed the statement and the prisoner exchange.

“This commitment represents an important confidence-building measure as the sides work to finalise a peace agreement and normalise relations,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said in a statement.

As part of the deal, Armenia also agreed to lift its objections to Azerbaijan hosting next year’s international conference on climate change.

Countries had been unable to agree on an eastern European host for the 2024 climate talks, with Russia vetoing countries in the EU and Azerbaijan and Armenia rejecting each others’ bids. A decision on the meeting’s location and presidency is due within the next week.

The joint statement said that “the Republic of Armenia supports the bid of the Republic of Azerbaijan to host the 29th Session of the Conference of Parties [COP29] to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, by withdrawing its own candidacy”.

Aliyev and Pashinyan have met on several occasions for EU-mediated normalisation talks, but the process had stalled over the last two months as two rounds of negotiations failed to take place.

Azerbaijan had refused to participate in talks with Armenia that were planned in the US on November 20, over what it said was Washington’s “biased” position.

In October, Aliyev declined to attend a round of negotiations with Pashinyan in Spain, that time accusing France of bias.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had been scheduled to join Michel as mediators at those talks.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at odds for more than three decades over Nagorno-Karabakh, which freed itself from Baku’s control in a bloody ethnic conflict that accompanied the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, surviving with financial, military and diplomatic support from Yerevan.

A second war erupted in 2020 before Azerbaijan’s September 19 attack led Armenian separatists to lay down their arms after just a single day of fighting.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Blinken urges Israel to finish probe into killing of journalist in Lebanon | Media News

Blinken’s comments come after rights groups say Israel should be investigated over possible war crime.

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has urged Israel to conclude and release the findings of a probe into artillery strikes that killed a journalist and wounded six others in Lebanon.

Blinken said on Thursday that it is “important and appropriate” that Israel thoroughly investigate the October 13 strike in southern Lebanon.

“My understanding is that Israel has initiated such an investigation, and it will be important to see that investigation come to a conclusion and to see the results of the investigation,” the top US diplomat said during a news conference.

Blinked also said he had “extraordinary admiration” for journalists working in dangerous regions around the world.

Blinken’s comments came after separate investigations by Human Rights Watch (HRW), Amnesty International and the Reuters and AFP news agencies found that an Israeli tank was responsible for the October 13 strikes in southern Lebanon.

The attacks killed Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah and injured six other journalists, including Al Jazeera cameraperson Elie Brakhia and reporter Carmen Joukhadar.

Israel’s military has said it is reviewing the circumstances of the strikes but has yet to release any findings from its investigations.

HRW said in its report on Thursday that the attacks appeared to be deliberate and, therefore, a war crime.

“Witness accounts and video and photo evidence that Human Rights Watch verified indicate that the journalists were well removed from ongoing hostilities, clearly identifiable as members of the media, and had been stationary for at least 75 minutes before they were hit by two consecutive strikes,” the rights group said.

“Human Rights Watch found no evidence of a military target near the journalists’ location.”

Amnesty said its investigation showed that the Israeli military had likely carried out a “direct attack on civilians” and should be investigated for committing a potential war crime.

At least 63 journalists have been killed since the start of the war in Gaza, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 653 | Russia-Ukraine war News

As the war enters its 653rd day, these are the main developments.

Here is the situation on Friday, December 8, 2023.

Fighting

  • Russia launched a swarm of Iranian-designed attack drones, damaging port infrastructure in Ukraine’s southern Odesa region and killing one civilian. The Ukrainian air force said it destroyed 15 of the 18 Shahed drones. The attack was the first on the Danube ports since November 21.
  • Ukraine urged residents to save electricity after Russia shelled a thermal power plant near the front line causing serious damage as temperatures plunge below freezing. The energy ministry, which did not name the plant, said two of its power units stopped working, leading to a “temporary shortage of electricity” in the grid.
  • United Nations officials told the Security Council in New York that intensifying Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy facilities were worsening humanitarian conditions across the country. Assistant Secretary-General Miroslav Jenca said Russia must stop its attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure that are “prohibited under international humanitarian law” while Ramesh Rajasingham, the UN humanitarian coordinator, said “the deaths, injuries and level of destruction of vital civilian infrastructure is staggering”.
  • Russia began using smaller attack groups with the backing of armoured vehicles and air cover in its long-running effort to capture Ukraine’s eastern town of Avdiivka, Ukrainian officials said. In its Thursday evening update, Ukraine’s General Staff said its forces had rebuffed 15 attacks in Avdiivka and nearby villages, after reporting 34 attacks in its morning bulletin.
  • Russia’s FSB security service said it had arrested a Belarusian man it accused of blowing up two trains in Siberia last month allegedly as part of a sabotage campaign conducted by the Ukrainian intelligence services.

Politics and diplomacy

  • An aid tracker from the Kiel Institute showed Ukraine’s allies have drastically scaled back their pledges of new aid to the country, which have fallen to their lowest level since the start of the war. The Germany-based institute said new military, financial and humanitarian aid promised to Ukraine between August and October 2023 fell almost 90 percent from the same period in 2022.
  • Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia hoped US lawmakers would continue to block White House requests for billions of dollars in aid for Ukraine as Republicans demand immigration concessions be included in the assistance package. Peskov accused US President Joe Biden of “demonising” Russia in his attempts to get Congress’s approval for the spending.
  • Visiting Beijing, top European Union officials urged China to do more to press Russia to end its war in Ukraine. European Council President Charles Michel said the EU would like China, which has not condemned Moscow’s full-scale invasion, to “be more assertive” and “be very clear they support the UN Charter and condemn this war caused by Russia against Ukraine”.
  • Speaking to journalists following the summit, a Chinese foreign ministry official insisted that, despite the bloc’s calls, Beijing would not be able to sway Moscow. Russia “is a very independent sovereign nation”, Wang Lutong, director general of the Chinese foreign ministry’s European department, told a press briefing. “President Putin is making his decision based on his own national interest and security,” he said.
  • Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida promised $4.5bn to Ukraine, including funding for generators and other power supplies, as well as measures to clear Russian mines.
  • British Foreign Secretary David Cameron, on a visit to the US, said there was a strong argument for seizing frozen Russian assets and using them to help rebuild war-ravaged Ukraine.
  • Andriy Yermak, chief of staff to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said he wanted to arrange a meeting between Zelenskyy and Hungarian leader Viktor Orban amid Budapest’s opposition to a proposal to start talks on EU membership for Kyiv. An EU summit is due to take place next week, and Orban has said leaders could fail to achieve a consensus on Ukraine’s membership.

Weapons

  • Oleksandr Kamyshin, Ukraine’s minister for strategic industries, said Kyiv will work with two firms from the US to jointly manufacture 155mm artillery shells in Ukraine. The shells are vital for the war, but Kamyshin said production was unlikely to start for at least two years because Ukraine had never produced such shells before.
  • Kyiv said it signed an agreement with the US to help develop weapons production in Ukraine. “The document will facilitate the building of production facilities in our country to provide the armed forces with the necessary weapons, in particular in the areas of air defence, production of critical munitions, and repair and sustainment,” the Ukrainian presidency said in a statement.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Hunter Biden charged over alleged scheme to avoid $1.4m tax bill | News

DEVELOPING STORY,

Indictment comes after President Joe Biden’s son last month pleaded not guilty to three firearms-related charges.

Hunter Biden, United States President Joe Biden’s son, has been charged with nine counts of tax-related crimes over his alleged failure to pay $1.4m he owes to the government.

Biden is accused of failing to file and pay taxes, evading tax assessment, and making a false or fraudulent tax return while spending millions of dollars on “an extravagant lifestyle”, according to documents filed in a Los Angeles court on Thursday.

“The Defendant engaged in a four-year scheme to not pay at least $1.4 million in self-assessed federal taxes he owed for tax years 2016 through 2019,” the indictment filed in a US district court in central California said.

Biden faces a maximum penalty of 17 years in prison if found guilty.

The indictment is the second criminal case brought against Biden by David Weiss, the special counsel appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to oversee investigations into the president’s son.

Weiss was nominated as a US attorney in Delaware by former President Trump but remained in his role after the election of Joe Biden.

Last month, Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to three firearms-related charges after a judge declined to sign off on a plea deal that would have avoided lengthy legal proceedings.

Under the deal reached with Weiss’s office in Delaware, Biden had agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanour tax charges and enter a diversion programme in lieu of pleading guilty to a more serious gun possession charge.

On Monday, Weiss urged a federal judge to deny Hunter Biden’s request to subpoena former president Donald Trump and ex-Justice Department officials, arguing that his lawyers had not provided evidence to support their argument that the investigation stemmed from an “incessant pressure campaign” under the previous administration.

The latest criminal case could complicate President Biden’s 2024 reelection bid amid claims by Republicans that his son improperly used his father’s position to make millions of dollars through business deals and consulting work in foreign countries including Ukraine, China and Romania.

On Thursday, Republicans pushed ahead with plans to hold an impeachment inquiry into Biden as lawmakers look for evidence of wrongdoing in his family’s business dealings.

Republicans have released material that they have characterised as incriminating but have yet to provide proof of wrongdoing by the president.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Q&A: ‘I need to be vindicated’: Leila de Lima on Duterte and the drug war | Politics News

Manila, Philippines – Leila de Lima was released from detention last month into what the former Philippines senator calls “a whole new world”.

In 2016, then-President Rodrigo Duterte promised to “destroy” de Lima, one of the loudest critics of his deadly drug war. The president’s supporters began targeting the first-term senator and former human rights commissioner – ridiculing her for an alleged romantic affair with her driver, and accusing her of involvement in drug trafficking.

In February 2017, she was arrested on drug charges she denies and that international observers have said are politically motivated.

“I had this deep sense of disbelief,” de Lima told Al Jazeera. “I never thought that Mr Duterte would go to that extent, that length, of jailing me. I thought it would just be daily vilification, personal attacks, attacks against my womanhood.”

In 2022, Duterte’s term came to an end and he was replaced by Ferdinand Marcos Jr, the son of dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr. While Marcos has abandoned much of Duterte’s incendiary rhetoric towards critics, drug war killings and human rights abuses have continued under his administration.

De Lima was finally granted bail last month after all but one of the witnesses who testified against her recanted their statements; some have said they gave forced testimonies. Duterte has now left politics, although his daughter, Sara, is vice president. Both could be subject to an investigation into the drug war by the International Criminal Court, even though Duterte pulled Manila out of the court in 2019.

A member of the opposition Liberal Party, de Lima spoke at length about Marcos, whose alliance with the Duterte family is beginning to fracture publicly. Marcos is now studying cooperation with the ICC after insisting earlier this year he would shut out its investigators.

De Lima, 64, says she plans to return to her private law practice and has no plans to run for office after losing a Senate reelection bid from prison last year. But she refuses to remain silent, promising not to give her political enemies the “satisfaction” after her prolonged detention. “I would ask myself, is it worth it?” she said. “The answer was always yes.”

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Al Jazeera: How are you adjusting to freedom?

Leila de Lima: I’m gradually adjusting and getting my bearings back. There’s a feeling of disorientation after spending almost seven years in closed, constricted, confined quarters.

It was painful for me to be away from my family and friends. There were nights that I would really cry. My mum [who suffers from dementia] didn’t know I was in jail. What she knew was that I was in the United States on study leave.

It was simply hurtful and revolting, at the same time, because I didn’t deserve to be in jail.

Al Jazeera: What did Duterte hope to achieve by arresting you?

Leila de Lima: He destroyed my public persona and my political life because so many people believed him. And that was, if I may say so, a brilliant strategy on his part, because [he and his allies] thought few people would believe those accusations about my alleged drug links. So they thought of first demeaning me and destroying my womanhood so that more people would believe their accusations.

It was so foul, it was so despicable of him to look into my private life, using that and demeaning my person, my character, my reputation.

Al Jazeera: You received extensive support from abroad, but less so in the Philippines. Were you surprised?

Leila de Lima: It was expected. I expected most in Congress, and even the Supreme Court, to be cowed. And the support of the international community was also expected because Duterte was not exactly the favourite of democratic countries. I just happened to be the symbol of opposition against his drug war, this murderous drug war.

I want the world to always be watching our country because it helped. Something worse could have been done to me were it not for the interest of the international community.

Leila de Lima pictured after a warrant was issued for her arrest in 2017 [File: Philippine Senate-Public Relations and Information Bureau via EPA]

Al Jazeera: Duterte and his allies habitually used misogynistic and gendered language to attack you and other women who opposed him. What has made such attacks so effective in the Philippines?

Leila de Lima: It’s still a male-dominated society. The machismo culture is still there. We see very successful women in almost all fields, but it’s still a challenge for us to be recognised for our own merits, not for our sexuality. Women have more empathy – it would be a more ideal society if more women leaders were in government.

After Duterte’s attacks, I got more than 2,000 hate messages on my cell phone. Unprintable words. So I had to get rid of my cell phone.

Al Jazeera: How did you react as you observed these tactics from within detention?

Leila de Lima: He caused a lot of harm to this country. He has demolished institutions, he has co-opted institutions, ruined our cultural values. But I never lost faith in the Filipino people, just as I didn’t lose faith in the justice system.

I worried about the desensitisation of the people, the madness of encouraging killings and not observing the rule of law and due process. I was alarmed that so few people were standing up against him.

Al Jazeera: Has that desensitisation carried over into the present under Marcos?

Leila de Lima: There are now some developments that show we are now in the normalisation process under the new administration. The approach to the drug problem has drastically changed, from [extrajudicial] and state-inspired killings to a more humane approach to the war on drugs. And there’s also some democratic space now. There’s less repression and less harassment of critics and dissenters.

I’d like to believe it’s a positive trend. We have to dismantle the bad legacies of the Duterte regime, especially in the area of human rights. Also, veering away from China and going back to our traditional allies is a very positive development.

Al Jazeera: When you were released, you thanked Marcos for “respecting the independence of the judiciary”. Do you think there’s still work to be done?

Leila de Lima: There’s still work to be done. But this administration just has to be clear in its respect for the independence of the judiciary. Duterte would always try to co-opt the judiciary, such as the removal [in 2018] of Chief Justice [Maria Lourdes] Sereno from the Supreme Court.

I don’t think there’s any country with a perfect justice system. But my case has been a visible example of how an independent judiciary can yield very positive results.

Al Jazeera: In September, activists Jhed Tamano and Jonila Castro accused the military of forcibly abducting them. Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla has publicly questioned their story, despite presumably being impartial, and their lawyer has accused the Supreme Court of failing to act after they filed a protection order. Should the Marcos administration be more proactive in such cases in ensuring judicial independence?

Leila de Lima: Of course, this administration should be more proactive in everything. It’s beset with a lot of challenges. And the remnants of the old regime are still there. So if the seeds are still there, and if nothing much is done to get rid of them, then you can expect the old ways to be revived.

The National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict [alleged to play a large role in the abduction] should be dismantled right away. It has served no purpose except to sow disunity and encourage human rights violations. That’s why we have the cases of Jhed and Jonila.

Environmental activists Jhed Tamano, left, and Jonila Castro accused the Philippine military of kidnapping them as they appeared at a government news conference in September [File: Jam Sta Rosa/AFP]

Al Jazeera: How well do you know President Marcos?

Leila de Lima: I don’t know him, I just know him as the son of the former dictator. We met once [in 2016], and we hardly talked.

I just know him as a president now. And I’ve been observing him. He’s trying his best, I think, to cut himself from the legacy and stigma of his father. Although they’re not at all acknowledging that, they’re not apologetic about it. But he’s trying as much as possible to build his own image.

We talked over the phone after I was taken hostage in prison. He asked how I was and said he could transfer me to a more secure place, but I said I would rather stay in my detention quarters. He said he would make sure my quarters were more secure, and sure enough, they reinforced my security there.

Al Jazeera: Marcos Jr’s reluctance to acknowledge the atrocities of his father’s martial rule has led critics to worry his presidency doesn’t bode well for democracy in the Philippines. Should he do more to distance himself from his father?

Leila de Lima: Yes. It’s quite tough on his part. He had little political experience. He needs more or better advisers around him, legal and political advisers and consultants. And he must get his priorities straight, must really attend to the challenges of the economy, to inflation. It’s tough on his part because he’s trying to build his own name.

Al Jazeera: As president, Duterte embraced the legacy of Marcos Sr, which many believe paved the way for his son to become president. Is it fair to say this presidency wouldn’t exist without the one before it?

Leila de Lima: What is clear to me is that it was an alliance of convenience. They needed each other. Duterte would have wanted his daughter to be the candidate, but [former President] Gloria Macapagal Arroyo forged a partnership [where Marcos and Sara Duterte would share a ticket] because [Liberal Party candidate] Leni Robredo was having a strong showing with voters. It was a formidable alliance.

Al Jazeera: With Marcos in power, that alliance is now starting to fracture. Is there a point where, just as Marcos and Duterte needed each other, Marcos may need to turn to Duterte’s critics, such as yourself and Maria Ressa?

Leila de Lima: That remains to be seen. It all depends on what values we can commonly share. Right now, we are sharing those values, those targets, especially in the matter of the ICC investigation and the human rights aspect of this country.

So for as long as we share those ideals and those values, there’s always that possibility. We’re not ruling that out. And for as long as he treads the right path of governance, there is the likelihood that some of the support will be there.

But we still consider ourselves, the Liberal Party, as the opposition. We are not that noisy because we are still observing him. But we can see the difference from Duterte. That’s why we cannot openly be hostile to him at this point.

Al Jazeera: Do you think Duterte supporters may break from Marcos over a potential ICC investigation?

Leila de Lima: There’s always that possibility. But we can see the weakening of the Duterte influence. He was perceived to be invincible. But we can see now that he is not. We can say the same thing with Sara. She may not be that powerful. When her father’s influence weakens, then that goes with her.

Protesters carry a mock coffin in protest at the thousands of killings under Rodrigo Duterte”s war on drugs in 2017 [File: Bullit Marquez/AP Photo]

Al Jazeera: What sort of role would you play in an ICC investigation?

Leila de Lima: Both advisory and proactive. It depends on what the ICC needs from me.

Al Jazeera: Last week, a group of families of drug war victims released a statement through their attorneys, saying: “We would not have needed the ICC had the Philippine government squarely addressed the war on drugs. But it did not, and has not.” Indeed, since Marcos took power in June 2022, there have been no convictions in what could be up to 30,000 deaths.

Leila de Lima: There’s no argument that the justice system is working. We have been investigating already, but it’s very deficient. The ICC is willing and very much capable of doing these investigations. And nothing was happening insofar as the higher echelons of those responsible for the killings, no government or domestic authority was investigating Duterte and Senator Ronald dela Rosa [previously Duterte’s police chief and top enforcer of the war on drugs].

The families of the drug war victims have every reason to complain and be frustrated about it all.

Al Jazeera: Should Marcos have ordered investigations into the drug war upon taking power?

Leila de Lima: Yes, that is the ideal situation. That is what we were expecting when the new administration came in. But as I said, more than one year, and there’s only an investigation into low-level perpetrators. We have not seen anything more than that.

So it would be too late now. The ICC is at a further stage of its investigation. So [deferring to the ICC] is reasonable, it’s practical, and it’s keeping with the dictates of justice and accountability.

The problem is just how soon the ICC investigation can move and result in a concrete development, like the issuance of a warrant of arrest. That would make people believe the ICC is serious, and that its investigation is something we can look forward to.

Al Jazeera: To you, would the prosecution of Duterte by the ICC feel like the beginning of a healing process?

Leila de Lima: He has to be made accountable for what he did to me. I’m not a vindictive person; it’s not for vengefulness. It’s a matter of justice. I’m a victim of gross injustice.

I need to be fully vindicated. I need people to know the truth about my innocence. I need people to know how and what he has done to me. So full vindication is what I’m after.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version