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Yearly Archives :

2023

Qatari emir receives phone call from Biden on Gaza -report

Qatari emir receives phone call from Biden on Gaza -report 150 150 admin

CAIRO (Reuters) – Qatar Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani received a phone call on Tuesday from U.S. President Joe Biden to discuss the latest developments in Gaza and current joint mediation efforts for calming the situation in the besieged enclave to reach a permanent ceasefire, according to a report from the Qatari State News Agency.

Qatar and Egypt were mediators between Israel and Hamas in the late November truce during which Hamas released 110 women, children and foreigners it was holding in exchange for 240 Palestinian women and teenagers freed from Israeli jails.

(Reporting by Muhammad Al Gebaly and Adam Makary; Editing by Mark Porter)

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Biden administration allows ban on some Apple Watch imports to take hold

Biden administration allows ban on some Apple Watch imports to take hold 150 150 admin

The ban was ordered by the U.S. International Trade Commission due to a patent dispute over the devices’ blood oxygen monitor.
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Kamar de los Reyes, "One Life to Live" actor, dies at 56

Kamar de los Reyes, "One Life to Live" actor, dies at 56 150 150 admin

The longtime actor was also known for the popular video game “Call of Duty: Black Ops II,” and Oliver Stone’s “Nixon.”
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Stock market today: Asian markets advance in holiday-thinned trading but Chinese shares slip

Stock market today: Asian markets advance in holiday-thinned trading but Chinese shares slip 150 150 admin

Asian markets were mostly higher in holiday-thinned trading on Tuesday, with some markets in the region closed for holidays.

U.S. futures and oil prices edged higher.

Shanghai’s benchmark led losses in Asia on heavy selling of technology and computer chip-related shares as worries revived over trade tensions with the U.S. and other western countries.

The Shanghai Composite index sank 0.7% to 2,898.88. In Shenzhen, where relatively more high-tech companies are listed, the A-share index lost 1.2%. Semiconductor-related shares fell 2.7% while consumer electronics shares lost 2.4%.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 gained 0.2% to 33,305.85. In South Korea, the Kospi added 0.1%, to 2,602.59. Bangkok’s SET rose 0.3%. Taiwan’s Taiex gained 0.8% and the Sensex in Mumbai was up 0.3%.

Markets in Australia and Hong Kong were closed.

Japan’s unemployment rate remained stable at 2.5% in November, according to government data released on Tuesday. The job-to-applicants ratio experienced a slight easing, settling at 1.28, indicating there were around 128 job opportunities available for every 100 applicants.

On the other hand, Japan’s services producer price index, which measures the costs of goods and services provided by businesses to other firms and government entities, held steady at 2.3% in November. This indicates a gradual pass-on of rising labor costs and potential for sustained wage gains, supporting the Bank of Japan’s 2% inflation target.

U.S. and European markets were closed on Monday and some in Europe will remain closed for Boxing Day. On Friday, Wall Street closed its eighth straight winning week with a quiet finish following reports showing inflation is on the decline even as the economy appears stronger than expected.

On Friday, the S&P 500 rose 0.2% to sit less than 1% below its record set nearly two years ago, at 4,754.63. The Dow slipped less than 0.1% to 37,385.97, and the Nasdaq gained 0.2% to 14,992.97.

With its eight straight weekly gains, the S&P 500 is in the midst of its longest winning streak since 2017.

In other trading on Tuesday, a barrel of U.S. crude picked up 8 cents to $73.64 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, the international standard, was up 12 cents at $78.92 per barrel.

The U.S. dollar rose to 142.35 Japanese yen from 142.33 yen. The euro rose to $1.1024 from $1.1016.

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A school reunion for Albert Brooks and Rob Reiner

A school reunion for Albert Brooks and Rob Reiner 150 150 admin

Philippines not provoking conflict in South China Sea – military spokesperson

Philippines not provoking conflict in South China Sea – military spokesperson 150 150 admin

MANILA (Reuters) – The Philippines is not provoking conflict in the South China Sea, the country’s military spokesperson said on Tuesday, in response to China’s accusation that Manila is encroaching on Beijing’s territory.

“Philippines is not provoking conflict. We follow international law and we are only implementing our domestic law, meaning the limits of our territorial waters and exclusive economic zone where we have sovereign rights,” Medel Aguilar told state-run broadcaster PTV.

The comments come a day after the People’s Daily, the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, wrote that the Philippines has relied on U.S. support to continually provoke China, with “extremely dangerous” behaviour seriously harming regional peace and stability.

Aguilar said the Philippines is not conducting activities that will put vessels and seafarers in danger, and instead accused China of performing dangerous manoeuvres that sometimes result in collisions at sea.

“They are the ones committing all the violations,” Aguilar said.

Tensions between Manila and Beijing have risen in recent months with both sides trading accusations over a series of maritime run-ins, including China allegedly ramming a ship this month carrying the Philippines’ military chief.

On Tuesday, the Chinese embassy in Manila said the Philippines is causing tensions by sending construction supplies to its grounded navy vessel in the Second Thomas Shoal.

“The Philippines, bolstered by external support, has brushed aside China’s goodwill and restraint and repeatedly challenged China’s principles and red line,” the embassy said, citing the Chinese foreign ministry.

The Philippines regularly deploys resupply missions for Filipino soldiers living aboard an aging warship deliberately run aground in 1999 to protect Manila’s maritime claims.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea with its so-called nine-dash line that overlaps into the exclusive economic zones of rival claimants Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, Vietnam.

A 2016 arbitral tribunal ruling invalidated China’s claim in the strategic waters, which Beijing did not recognise.

(Reporting by Mikhail Flores; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor)

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Search resuming for Alaska woman lost in freezing river

Search resuming for Alaska woman lost in freezing river 150 150 admin

Alaska state troopers said the woman went into the water after her dog in the Eagle River near Anchorage, much of which has frozen over.
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The 5 best smart thermostats for 2024

The 5 best smart thermostats for 2024 150 150 admin

Discover the best smart thermostats of 2024 and how you can benefit from installing one.
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The Media Line: Bahrain Sole Gulf Country Publicly Supporting Prosperity Guardian Coalition; Others Will Benefit With Aim To Stop Houthis

The Media Line: Bahrain Sole Gulf Country Publicly Supporting Prosperity Guardian Coalition; Others Will Benefit With Aim To Stop Houthis 150 150 admin

Bahrain Sole Gulf Country Publicly Supporting Prosperity Guardian Coalition; Others Will Benefit With Aim To Stop Houthis

While Houthi attacks against ships are not new, many Arab countries feel the timing of this US-led international coalition benefits Israel, so they can’t publicly support it, even though it will benefit them.

Arab opinions were divided between supporters and opponents of the “Operation Prosperity Guardian” coalition, which US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced on Tuesday from the capital of Bahrain, Manama. This naval alliance, whose aim is to ensure the safety of navigation in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden in response to international demands, has the participation of 20 countries, of whom 12 have been publicly named, including Bahrain, the only Arab country so far.

Other public participants in Operation Prosperity Guardian include Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, and Seychelles, the UK, and the US.

“The coalition is an important new multinational security initiative under the CMF umbrella and its Task Force 153 command, focused on security in the Red Sea,” said Austin in a statement.

In a speech delivered at the US 5th Fleet headquarters, the US defense secretary added: “The attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea region constitute a global danger, and the joint forces led by the United States aim to enhance maritime navigation security and keep sea lanes open to the flow of global trade.”

Immediately after Austin’s announcement, the leadership of the 5th Fleet held a small press conference with the media during which American military officials confirmed that “the Operation Prosperity Guardian coalition is a defensive alliance to protect shipping and secure the flow of maritime navigation and not to carry out military strikes against the Houthis,” according to Bahraini media outlets.

A military source, who refused to reveal his name or identity, told The Media Line that “more than 50 countries were affected by Houthi attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea.”

“Israeli ships were not the only ones that were subjected to attacks. Rather, there were international cargo ships carrying goods to countries around the world, including Arab countries. The Houthis claim that their attacks are directed against ships heading to Israel only, as a response to the ongoing war in Gaza, but that’s not the truth,” the source added.

More countries are expected to join this international naval coalition in the coming days to repel Houthi attacks on ships, the source further asserted.

Although US Defense Secretary Austin announced Bahrain’s participation in Operation Prosperity Guardian, the GCC island did not issue any statement about its participation. The King of Bahrain Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa also did not mention his country’s involvement in the alliance during his meeting with Austin, the official Bahrain News Agency reported.

“The king expressed his pride about the historical relations between Bahrain and America and a close and lasting partnership whose foundations have been based for decades on trust, mutual respect, and joint coordination as partners and allies,” said a statement by Bahrain News Agency.

The statement continued: “During the meeting, views were exchanged on the latest regional and international developments … including the situation in the Gaza Strip, the importance of working to achieve a ceasefire, protecting civilians, releasing hostages and detainees, and ensuring the delivery of humanitarian aid to the residents of the Strip in accordance with of international humanitarian law, and the necessity of finding a horizon for comprehensive, just and lasting peace in the Middle East region.”

Arab media outlets were divided between supporters and opponents of the Operation Prosperity Guardian alliance, as media channels loyal to Iran or the Muslim Brotherhood attacked it. They stated that Bahrain’s participation as the only Arab country in the alliance is tantamount to a “betrayal” of the Palestinian cause.

Mubarak Al-Ati, a Saudi political analyst, told The Media Line, “Now, the United States is suffering from what Saudi Arabia previously warned about; Riyadh warned Washington of the Houthi attacks and their danger, but the Biden Administration’s response was to remove the Houthi group from the terrorist lists.”

He continued: “Saudi Arabia, from my point of view, did not participate in the Operation Prosperity Guardian coalition for several reasons. The first of which was that it came at the time of the Israeli war on Gaza, which means the anger of the Arab street will transfer from Israel to Saudi Arabia.”

“The Houthi attacks against ships are not new, but the United States did not move to form an international coalition in response to these attacks until after the Houthis attacked ships heading to Israel,” he added.

The other main reason that Saudi Arabia chose not to join the alliance is its ongoing efforts to end the war in Yemen that began in 2015. According to Al-Ati, the Saudi-led peace negotiations are in their final stages. “Therefore, any Saudi participation in an alliance against the Houthis will eliminate these negotiations and the peace that Riyadh seeks to achieve,” he explained.

“We must not forget that there was a Saudi-Iranian reconciliation under Chinese sponsorship that took place March 2023, and therefore joining an alliance against the Iran-backed Houthis means the collapse of the opportunity for peace with Tehran,” he added.

Al-Ati concluded by saying, “Under all circumstances, this [Operation Prosperity Guardian] alliance will serve Saudi Arabia. It will protect oil tankers that go to Europe and America, and some of these tankers are Saudi or carry Saudi oil. Riyadh benefits from this alliance even without participating in it.”

Alaa Habib, a researcher in Iranian affairs, told The Media Line, “The Houthi group is living its last days. It seems that the United States, under Israeli pressure, is serious about destroying the Houthis who have destabilized the security and stability of the region.”

He continued, “I see that Abdul-Malik al-Houthi will be eliminated by an air strike, and Iran will abandon him, or even report his whereabouts and give his coordinates.”

Criticizing Bahrain’s involvement in the coalition, Saad Amer, an Egyptian journalist, told The Media Line, “This coalition is directed to protect Israel’s interests only. Choosing Bahrain as the headquarters of this coalition, and announcing it, is to implicate the Gulf countries in America’s war to repel Israel’s enemies.”

According to Amer, “The Houthis will target Bahrain, and the GCC countries will not remain silent. Therefore, these countries will have the power to confront Al-Houthi, who obstructed Israel’s interests and caused it great losses.”

Abdullah Al-Ghanim, a retired military veteran, told The Media Line that “Bahrain is participating in this coalition because it is the headquarters of the US 5th Fleet.”

He continued to explain that “Bahrain suffered from Houthi terrorism, as it caused the death of many Bahraini soldiers participating in Operation Restoring Hope in Yemen. The last Houthi operation in Saudi Arabia was targeting a headquarters for the Bahraini forces, which led to the killing of 5 soldiers and the wounding of dozens in September 2023, despite the existence of a truce and negotiations in Yemen.”

According to Al-Ghanim, “There is Joint Task Force 153, which is with wide participation from various Arab countries, and this coalition is an extension of this military force, so the Arab countries are essentially present in this coalition, but in another form.”

This Joint Task Force 153 was formed to combat piracy in the Bab al-Mandab Strait, said Al-Ghanim, which is the same area in which the Operation Prosperity Guardian coalition will operate.

Mohammed Al-Maliki, a Saudi journalist, told The Media Line, “The Houthis worked to target Israel with drones, and seized a ship in order to whitewash their crimes in Yemen. The Houthis know very well that their end is near, but they worked to target Israel to gain Arab and international sympathy.”

Furthermore, explained Al-Maliki, “Several years ago, the Houthis were targeting the holy cities Mecca and Medina, and they targeted the border areas with Saudi Arabia on an almost daily basis, but the US was content with just condemning them.”

“The GCC countries also previously called for stopping the smuggling of Iranian weapons to the Houthis in Yemen, but the international community stood silent in the face of this smuggling, which led to the doubling of the Houthi power for several years,” added Al-Maliki.

“The United Nations, the United States, and the international community gave the Houthis full control over the port of Hodeidah in Yemen, and it has now become the center of ship hijacking operations, and now all countries are paying the price for inaction in preventing the Houthis from obtaining military and logistical resources,” concluded Al-Maliki.

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The right to protest is under threat in Britain, undermining a pillar of democracy

The right to protest is under threat in Britain, undermining a pillar of democracy 150 150 admin

LONDON (AP) — For holding a sign outside a courthouse reminding jurors of their right to acquit defendants, a retiree faces up to two years in prison. For hanging a banner reading Just Stop Oil off a bridge, an engineer got a three-year prison sentence. Just for walking slowly down the street, scores of people have been arrested.

They are among hundreds of environmental activists arrested for peaceful demonstrations in the U.K., where tough new laws restrict the right to protest.

The Conservative government says the laws prevent extremist activists from hurting the economy and disrupting daily life. Critics say civil rights are being eroded without enough scrutiny from lawmakers or protection by the courts. They say the sweeping arrests of peaceful demonstrators, along with government officials labeling environmental activists extremists, mark a worrying departure for a liberal democracy.

“Legitimate protest is part of what makes any country a safe and civilized place to live,” said Jonathon Porritt, an ecologist and former director of Friends of the Earth, who joined a vigil outside London’s Central Criminal Court to protest the treatment of demonstrators.

“The government has made its intent very clear, which is basically to suppress what is legitimate, lawful protest and to use every conceivable mechanism at their disposal to do that.”

Britain is one of the world’s oldest democracies, home of the Magna Carta, a centuries-old Parliament and an independent judiciary. That democratic system is underpinned by an “unwritten constitution” — a set of laws, rules, conventions and judicial decisions accumulated over hundreds of years.

The effect of that patchwork is “we rely on self-restraint by governments,” said Andrew Blick, author of “Democratic Turbulence in the United Kingdom” and a political scientist at King’s College London. “You hope the people in power are going to behave themselves.”

But what if they don’t? During three turbulent and scandal-tarnished years in office, Boris Johnson pushed prime ministerial power to the limits. More recently, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has asked Parliament to overrule the U.K. Supreme Court, which blocked a plan to send asylum-seekers to Rwanda.

Such actions have piled pressure on Britain’s democratic foundations. Critics say cracks have appeared.

As former Conservative justice minister David Lidington put it: “The ‘good chap’ theory of checks and balances has now been tested to destruction.”

The canaries in the coal mine of the right to protest are environmental activists who have blocked roads and bridges, glued themselves to trains, splattered artworks with paint, sprayed buildings with fake blood, doused athletes in orange powder and more to draw attention to the threats posed by climate change.

The protesters, from groups such as Extinction Rebellion, Just Stop Oil and Insulate Britain, argue that civil disobedience is justified by a climate emergency that threatens humanity’s future.

Sunak has called the protesters “selfish” and “ideological zealots,” and the British government has responded to the disruption with laws constraining the right to peaceful protest. Legal changes made in 2022 created a statutory offense of “public nuisance,” punishable by up to 10 years in prison, and gave police more powers to restrict protests judged to be disruptive.

It was followed by the 2023 Public Order Act, which broadened the definition of “serious disruption,” allowing police to search demonstrators for items including locks and glue. It imposes penalties of up to 12 months in prison for protesters who block “key infrastructure,” defined widely to include roads and bridges.

The government said it was acting to “protect the law-abiding majority’s right to go about their daily lives.” But Parliament’s cross-party Joint Human Rights Committee warned that the changes would have “a chilling effect on the right to protest.”

Days after the new act took effect in May, six anti-monarchist activists were arrested before the coronation of King Charles III before they had so much as held up a “Not My King” placard. All were later released without charge.

In recent months the pace of protests and the scale of arrests has picked up, partly as a result of a legal tweak that criminalized slow walking, a tactic adopted by protesters to block traffic by marching at low speed along roads. Hundreds of Just Stop Oil activists have been detained by police within moments of starting to walk.

Some protesters have received prison sentences that have been called unduly punitive.

Structural engineer Morgan Trowland was one of two Just Stop Oil activists who scaled the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge over the River Thames near London in October 2022, forcing police to shut the highway below for 40 hours. He was sentenced to three years in prison for causing a public nuisance. Judge Shane Collery said the tough sentence was “both for the chaos you caused and to deter others from seeking to copy you.”

He was released early on Dec. 13, having spent a total of 14 months in custody.

Ian Fry, the United Nations’ rapporteur for climate change and human rights, wrote to the British government in August over the stiff sentences, calling the anti-protest law a “direct attack on the right to the freedom of peaceful assembly.” Michel Forst, the U.N. special rapporteur on environmental defenders, in October called the British laws “terrifying.”

The Conservative government has dismissed the criticism.

“Those who break the law should feel the full force of it,” Sunak said in response.

Even more worrying, some legal experts say, is the “justice lottery” facing arrested protesters. Half the environmentalists tried by juries have been acquitted after explaining their motivations, including nine women who smashed a bank’s windows with hammers and five activists who sprayed the Treasury with fake blood from a firehose.

But at some other trials, judges have banned defendants from mentioning climate change or their reasons for protesting. Several defendants who defied the orders have been jailed for contempt of court.

Tim Crosland, a former government lawyer turned environmental activist, said it’s “Kafkaesque if people are on trial and they’ve got a gag around their mouth.”

“That feels like something that happens in Russia or China, not here,” he said.

To highlight concern about such judges’ orders, retired social worker Trudi Warner sat outside Inner London Crown Court in March holding a sign reading “Jurors – You have an absolute right to acquit a defendant according to your conscience.” She was arrested and later informed by the solicitor-general that she would be prosecuted for contempt of court, which is punishable by up to two years in prison. Britain has strict contempt laws intended to protect jurors from interference.

Since then, hundreds more people have held similar signs outside courthouses to protest a charge they say undermines the foundations of trial by jury. Two dozen of the “Defend Our Juries” protesters have been interviewed by police, though so far no one apart from Warner has been charged.

Porritt said the aim is “to bring it to people’s attention that there is now this assault on the judicial process and on the rights of jurors to acquit according to their conscience.”

Many legal and constitutional experts say the treatment of protesters is just one symptom of an increasingly reckless attitude toward Britain’s democratic structures that has been fueled by Brexit.

Britain’s 2016 referendum on whether to leave the European Union was won by a populist “leave” campaign that promised to restore Parliament’s – and by extension the public’s — sovereignty and control over U.K. borders, money and laws.

The divorce brought to power Boris Johnson, who vowed to “get Brexit done,” but appeared unprepared for the complexities involved in unpicking decades of ties with the EU.

Johnson tested Britain’s unwritten constitution. When lawmakers blocked his attempts to leave the bloc without a divorce agreement, he suspended Parliament — until the U.K. Supreme Court ruled that illegal. He later proposed breaking international law by reneging on the U.K.’s exit treaty with the EU.

He also became enmeshed in personal scandals – from murky funding for his vacations and home decoration to lockdown-breaking parties during the pandemic. He was finally ousted from office by his own fed-up lawmakers in 2022, and later found to have lied to Parliament.

“People were elevated to high office (by Brexit) who then behaved in ways which were difficult to reconcile with maintenance of a stable democracy,” said Blick, the King’s College professor.

The populist instinct, if not the personal extravagance, has continued under Johnson’s Conservative successors as prime minister. In November, the U.K. Supreme Court ruled that a plan by Sunak to send asylum-seekers on a one-way trip to Rwanda was unlawful because the country is not a safe place for refugees. The government has responded with a plan to pass a law declaring Rwanda safe, regardless of what the court says.

The bill, which is currently before Parliament, has caused consternation among legal experts. Former Solicitor-General Edward Garnier said “changing the law to declare Rwanda a safe haven is rather like a bill which says that Parliament has decided that all dogs are cats.”

But Blick says Britain’s unwritten constitution means that checks and balances are easier to override than in some other democracies.

“Nothing can actually be deemed clearly to be unconstitutional,” he said. “So there’s no real blockage (on political power) other than that’s where you come back to self-restraint.”

In Britain’s system, Parliament is meant to act as a bulwark against executive overreach. But in recent years, the government has given lawmakers less and less time to scrutinize legislation. Because the Conservative government has a large House of Commons majority, it can push bills through after perfunctory time for debate. Many laws are passed in skeleton form, with the detail filled in later through what’s known as secondary legislation, which does not receive the full parliamentary scrutiny given to a bill.

It increasingly falls to Parliament’s upper chamber, the House of Lords, to scrutinize and try to amend laws that the House of Commons has waved through. The Lords spent months this year trying to water down the anti-protest provisions in the Public Order Act. But ultimately the upper house can’t overrule the Commons. And as an unelected assortment of political appointees, a handful of judges and bishops and a smattering of hereditary nobles, it’s arguably not the height of 21st-century democracy.

“Of course the Lords is indefensible, but so is the Commons in its current form,” William Wallace, a Liberal Democrat member of the Lords, told a recent conference on Britain’s constitution. “The Commons has almost given up detailed scrutiny of government bills.”

Since Brexit, academics, politicians and others have been debating Britain’s democratic deficit in a series of meetings, conferences and reports. Proposed remedies include citizens’ assemblies, a new body to oversee the constitution and a higher bar for changing key laws. But none of that is on the immediate horizon — much less a written constitution.

The protesters, meanwhile, say they are fighting for democracy as well as the environment.

Sue Parfitt, an 81-year-old Anglican priest who has been arrested more times than she can remember as part of the group Christian Climate Action, has twice been acquitted of criminal charges. She, too, was interviewed by police after holding a sign outside court reminding jurors of their rights.

“It’s worth doing to keep the right to protest alive, quite apart from climate change,” she said.

“It would be difficult for me to get to prison at 81. But I’m prepared to go. … There is a sense in which going to prison is the ultimate statement you can make.”

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This story, supported by the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting, is part of an ongoing Associated Press series covering threats to democracy in Europe.

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