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Zelensky calls on allies ‘not to hide’, respond to North Korean involvement in war

Zelensky calls on allies ‘not to hide’, respond to North Korean involvement in war
This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Service, shows Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (5thL) attending a meeting with Ukrainian and foreign reporters in Kyiv, on October 21, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 23 October 2024

Zelensky calls on allies ‘not to hide’, respond to North Korean involvement in war

Zelensky calls on allies ‘not to hide’, respond to North Korean involvement in war
  • NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Monday the dispatch of North Korean troops would significantly escalate the conflict

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called on allies on Tuesday “not to hide” and to respond to evidence of North Korean involvement in Russia’s war in Ukraine.
He said in his nightly address that Ukraine had information about the preparation of two units — possibly up to 12,000 North Korean troops — to take part in the war alongside Russian forces.
“This is a challenge, but we know how to respond to this challenge. It is important that partners do not hide from this challenge as well,” Zelensky said.
The head of Ukraine’s Main Directorate of Intelligence told the US publication “The War Zone” that Kyiv expected North Korean forces to turn up on Wednesday in Russia’s southern Kursk region, where Ukrainian forces launched an incursion in August.
“We are waiting for the first units tomorrow in the Kursk direction, Lt. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov told the media outlet. “It is unclear at the moment how many or how they will be equipped. We will see after a couple of days.”
In his remarks, Zelensky said neither North Korea nor Russia took any account of the number of dead in a conflict.
“But all of us in the world have an equal interest in ending the war, not in prolonging it. We must therefore stop Russia and its accomplices,” he said.
“If North Korea can intervene in a war in Europe, then the pressure on this regime is definitely insufficient.”
British Defense Secretary John Healey said on Tuesday it was “highly likely” that North Korea had begun sending hundreds of troops to help Russia in the more than 2-1/2-year-old conflict.
A senior official at South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol’s office said Seoul may consider directly supplying weapons to Ukraine as part of measures to counter military ties between North Korea and Russia.
A top US diplomat said on Monday that Washington was consulting with its allies on the implications of North Korean involvement and added that such a development would be a “dangerous and highly concerning development” if true.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Monday the dispatch of North Korean troops would significantly escalate the conflict.


UK loses bid to block challenge to Palestine Action ban under anti-terrorism laws

UK loses bid to block challenge to Palestine Action ban under anti-terrorism laws
Updated 3 sec ago

UK loses bid to block challenge to Palestine Action ban under anti-terrorism laws

UK loses bid to block challenge to Palestine Action ban under anti-terrorism laws
  • Huda Ammori, who helped found Palestine Action in 2020, was given permission to challenge the group’s proscription, with her case due to be heard next month
LONDON, Oct 17 : The British government on Friday lost its bid to block the co-founder of pro-Palestinian campaign group Palestine Action bringing a legal challenge over the banning of the group under anti-terrorism laws.
Huda Ammori, who helped found Palestine Action in 2020, was given permission to challenge the group’s proscription, with her case due to be heard next month.
Britain’s Home Office (interior ministry) asked the Court of Appeal to overturn that decision and rule that any challenge to proscription should be heard by a specialist tribunal.
Judge Sue Carr rejected the Home Office’s appeal, saying Ammori’s case could proceed in the High Court.
Palestine Action was proscribed as a terrorist organization by the government in July, making it a crime to be a member, which carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.
More than 1,000 people have since been arrested for holding signs in support of the group, with over 100 charged.
Before it was banned, Palestine Action had increasingly targeted Israel-linked companies in Britain, often spraying red paint, blocking entrances or damaging equipment. It accused Britain’s government of complicity in what it said were Israeli war crimes in Gaza.
The group had particularly focused on Israeli defense firm Elbit Systems and Britain’s government cited a raid at an Elbit site last year when it decided to proscribe the group.
Palestine Action was banned a month after some of its members broke into the RAF Brize Norton air base and damaged two planes, for which four members have been charged. (Reporting by Sam Tobin, editing by William James)

El Salvador’s president seeks help in caring for country’s thousands of stray dogs and cats

El Salvador’s president seeks help in caring for country’s thousands of stray dogs and cats
Updated 39 min 22 sec ago

El Salvador’s president seeks help in caring for country’s thousands of stray dogs and cats

El Salvador’s president seeks help in caring for country’s thousands of stray dogs and cats
  • San Salvador struggles with a problem widely seen in cities across Latin America, as free-roaming cats and dogs sleep on the streets with no one to care for them
  • “Thousands of dogs and cats live on our streets. We want to change that, but without cruelty. We have the financial resources, but we seek expert partners to make it a model for Latin America” the President wrote on X

SAN SALVADOR: After drubbing El Salvador’s gangs during a more than three-year state of emergency, President Nayib Bukele turned his attention this month to another persistent, but softer, problem: his country’s many, many stray cats and dogs.
“Thousands of dogs and cats live on our streets. We want to change that, but without cruelty. We have the financial resources, but we seek expert partners to make it a model for Latin America,” Bukele wrote on X on Oct. 8. “Who wants to come and help?”
San Salvador struggles with a problem widely seen in cities across Latin America, as free-roaming cats and dogs sleep on the streets with no one to care for them. Dogs can be spotted lying on the warm asphalt on road shoulders, skillfully crossing six lanes of traffic like it’s a walk through the park or picking through trash on edges of a market. But they’re often underfed, sick or injured, searching for food and water.
It’s not clear what kind of solution Bukele, a controversial leader fond of spectacles with a well-oiled government communications machine, is aiming for, but he likes a problem that lends itself to a grand solution.
Plus, the millennial leader appears to have a soft spot for rescues. He adopted a dog, Cyan, while he was mayor of San Salvador, the capital.
At the Good Fortune Rescue shelter in Zacamil, just north of the capital, Rafaela Pérez said something needed to be urgently done “because the number of abandoned animals you see daily and that are reported on social networks is minimal compared to those that really exist.”
“We need to change this bad culture of abandoning and getting rid of animals because they are living beings,” she said.
Bukele and his allies have already taken steps to address a shortage of public institutions to care for animals, which has left cash-strapped non-governmental organizations often filling in the gaps.
In 2021, a government controlled by his New Ideas party made animal abuse in El Salvador punishable by prison sentences ranging from two to four years, as well as fines.
In 2022, his administration opened the region’s first public veterinary hopsital, the Chivo Pets Hospital. It provides services at a symbolic cost of 25 cents, or its equivalent in Bitcoin.
Patricia Madrid of Fundación Gratitud, the head of an organization dedicated to spaying, neutering and providing care to stray dogs, has long worked with six other volunteers in the streets of Salcoatitan, around 50 miles from El Salvador’s capital. But they’ve struggled to keep up since their funding comes from just one Salvadoran woman living in the United States.
Madrid said she hopes that her organization can work together with the government to change that.
It wasn’t immediately clear where the money for Bukele’s latest project will come from. He has touted earnings from buying the cryptocurrency bitcoin, but the Central American country faces mounting debt and received a $1.4 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund earlier this year.
Bukele previously enlisted help from China to build a modern public library in the main square of San Salvador.
Praise for the animal welfare idea has also come from outside the country, from people like Niall Harbison, a Thailand-based social media influencer who said he’s “on a mission to save stray dogs around the world,” by raising money to finance their sterilization.
Harbison responded to Bukele’s public call on a social media post on X, saying he “would love to talk about how to help.” He added that he would hop on a plane to meet with people to see what he can do.
“I’ve always been looking for a country to partner with to show how collaboration between the private and public sectors can work — to make it so effective that other countries can copy and implement it,” Harbison wrote.
“Let’s do it,” the social media savvy president responded.


Clashes break out in Bangladesh capital as major political parties set to sign a new charter

Clashes break out in Bangladesh capital as major political parties set to sign a new charter
Updated 42 min 40 sec ago

Clashes break out in Bangladesh capital as major political parties set to sign a new charter

Clashes break out in Bangladesh capital as major political parties set to sign a new charter
  • Police have used teargas, stun grenades and batons to disperse protesters outside Bangladesh’s national Parliament complex
  • The clashes erupted Friday as tensions rose over the interim government’s new political charter

DHAKA: Police fired teargas and used stun grenades and batons to disperse protesters outside Bangladesh’s national Parliament complex Friday, as tensions soared over the interim government’s new political charter.
Some protesters vandalized a police vehicle and makeshift tents, and others clashed with soldiers and security officials in the capital Dhaka. Witnesses said several people were injured.
The clashes broke out after several hundred people, who described themselves as those whose protests ousted former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, started demonstrating Friday. They expressed anger that their concerns were not addressed in the new charter, despite their loved ones dying during last year’s mass uprising against Hasina.
The interim government, headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, has invited the country’s main political parties to sign a new political charter Friday to pave the way for a raft of political reforms.
The “July National Charter,” named after the national uprisings that started in July 2024, outlines a roadmap for constitutional amendments, legal changes and the enactment of new laws.
A National Consensus Commission formed by the Yunus’ government prepared the charter after a series of talks with the major political parties, except Hasina’s Awami League party.
The Bangladesh Nationalist Party, headed by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, and eight like-minded parties said they would sign the charter.
Hasina, who was toppled last August after huge protests, is in exile in India and is being tried in absentia on charges of crimes against humanity. The United Nations has said that up to 1,400 people may have been killed in the weeks-long uprising last year.
Yunus has promised to hold the next national election in February. But questions remain whether the election would be inclusive without Hasina’s party and its allies in the race.
The country’s largest Islamist party, Jamaat-e-Islami, has remained undecided about signing the charter, while a newly-formed student-led party, National Citizen Party, said it would not take part.


Two women’s bodies found after Greece migrant boat accident

Two women’s bodies found after Greece migrant boat accident
Updated 17 October 2025

Two women’s bodies found after Greece migrant boat accident

Two women’s bodies found after Greece migrant boat accident
  • On October 7, four bodies were recovered off the island of Lesbos after an inflatable boat sank with 38 migrants on board
  • Another group of 23 people were rescued near Crete on Friday, the coast guard said

ATHENS: The bodies of two women were found Friday on a rocky coast on the Greek island of Chios after a makeshift boat carrying 29 migrants ran aground, the coast guard said.
“During a rescue operation for migrants (whose boat ran aground on the coast), two women were found lifeless, and 10 people, including three seriously injured, were transferred to the hospital in Chios,” a coast guard spokesman told AFP.
Greek Aegean islands near Turkiye, including Chios, are one of the main entry points into Europe for people fleeing war and poverty.
These perilous crossings are often fatal.
On October 7, four bodies were recovered off the island of Lesbos after an inflatable boat sank with 38 migrants on board.
Greece saw a significant increase in migrant arrivals over the summer, mostly from Libya, and landing in Crete.
Another group of 23 people were rescued near Crete on Friday, the coast guard said.
The conservative Greek government, which has steadily tightened its migration policy, decided in early July to suspend for three months asylum applications for people arriving by boat from north Africa.
The measure has been criticized by numerous international organizations, including the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the Council of Europe.


Outrage as bomb destroys Italian investigative journalist’s car

Outrage as bomb destroys Italian investigative journalist’s car
Updated 30 min 55 sec ago

Outrage as bomb destroys Italian investigative journalist’s car

Outrage as bomb destroys Italian investigative journalist’s car
  • Sigfrido Ranucci’s vehicle was destroyed by the explosion in Pomezia, near Rome, which also damaged the family’s other car and the house next door, according to his investigative television show
  • Anti mafia prosecutors in Rome are investigating the attack on Ranucci, who has lived under police protection since 2014 due to death threats

ROME: A prominent Italian journalist threatened by the mafia had his parked car blown up by a bomb overnight, causing no injuries but sparking widespread outrage Friday from politicians and press groups.
Sigfrido Ranucci’s vehicle was destroyed by the explosion in Pomezia, near Rome, which also damaged the family’s other car and the house next door, according to his investigative television show.
“The force of the explosion was so strong that it could have killed anyone passing by at that moment,” Report, which broadcasts on RAI public television, said in a statement on X.
Anti-mafia prosecutors in Rome are investigating the attack on Ranucci, who has lived under police protection since 2014 due to death threats.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni strongly condemned what she called a “serious act of intimidation.”
“The freedom and independence of information are non-negotiable values of our democracies, which we will continue to defend,” she wrote on X.
Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi said he had ordered an increase in the journalist’s security “to the maximum.”
Video footage of the aftermath posted by Report on social media showed twisted metal and shattered car windows.
“At least one kilo of explosives was used,” Ranucci told the Corriere della Sera daily.
His son had used his car earlier, while his daughter had walked by 20 minutes before the bomb exploded, he said.

- Bullets -

Report is known for its in-depth investigative reports and Ranucci has also written a book on the mafia.
In a 2021 television program, he described how a former prisoner told him that mobsters “had given the order to kill you” after his book was published, but the hit “was stopped.”
Ranucci told Corriere he had also received various threats recently, including finding two bullets outside his house.
On Sunday, he revealed the highlights of the upcoming Report series on social media, including investigative reports into the powerful ‘Ndrangheta organized crime group in Calabria and the Sicilian Mafia.
According to campaign group Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Italy ranks 49th in the world for press freedom.
Pavol Szalai, RSF’s Europe head, told AFP it was “the most serious attack against an Italian reporter in recent years.”
“Press freedom itself is facing an existential threat in Italy.”
The group warned in its last update that journalists who investigate organized crime and corruption are “systematically threatened and sometimes subjected to physical violence.”
About 20 journalists currently live under permanent police protection after being the targets of intimidation and attacks, it said.
The most high profile is Roberto Saviano, best known for his international mafia bestseller “Gomorrah.”
Saviano linked the attack on Ranucci to a political climate in Italy in which journalist are seen as legitimate “targets.”