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Trump White House celebrates release of two Americans freed in a swap with Taliban brokered by Biden

Update Trump White House celebrates release of two Americans freed in a swap with Taliban brokered by Biden
Taliban security personnel stand guard at the police headquarters in Ghazni on January 19, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 21 January 2025

Trump White House celebrates release of two Americans freed in a swap with Taliban brokered by Biden

Trump White House celebrates release of two Americans freed in a swap with Taliban brokered by Biden
  • The Trump White House cheered the release and thanked Qatar for its assistance facilitating the deal
  • “The Trump Administration will continue to demand the release of all Americans held by the Taliban,” White House National Security Council spokesperson Brian Hughes said

WASHINGTON: A prisoner swap between the United States and Afghanistan’s Taliban freed two Americans in exchange for a Taliban figure imprisoned for life in California on drug trafficking and terrorism charges, officials said Tuesday.
The two Americans freed in the swap, Ryan Corbett and William McKenty, was brokered before President Joe Biden left office Monday, according to a Trump administration official who was not authorized to comment publicly and requested anonymity.
The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry in Kabul said the two US citizens had been exchanged for Khan Mohammed, who was sentenced to two terms of life imprisonment in 2008.
Biden, who oversaw the chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, on Monday handed power to President Donald Trump. The Taliban praised the swap as a step toward the “normalization” of ties between the US and Afghanistan, but that likely remains a tall order as most countries in the world still don’t recognize their rule and another two Americans are believed held.
The Trump White House cheered the release and thanked Qatar for its assistance facilitating the deal, but also pressed the Taliban to free other Americans held in Afghanistan.
“The Trump Administration will continue to demand the release of all Americans held by the Taliban, especially in light of the billions of dollars in US aid they’ve received in recent years,” White House National Security Council spokesperson Brian Hughes said in a statement.
US, Taliban and Qatar all involved in the swap
Corbett, who had lived in Afghanistan with his family at the time of the 2021 collapse of the US-backed government, was detained by the Taliban in August 2022 while on a business trip.
“Our hearts are filled with overwhelming gratitude and praise to God for sustaining Ryan’s life and bringing him back home after what has been the most challenging and uncertain 894 days of our lives,” the family’s statement said. They thanked both Trump and Biden, as well as many government officials, for their efforts in freeing him.
Corbett’s family also praised the Middle Eastern nation of Qatar “for their vital role in facilitating Ryan’s release, and for their visits to Ryan as the United States’ Protecting Power in Afghanistan.” Energy-rich Qatar has hosted negotiations between the US and the Taliban over the years.
A statement from the Qatar Foreign Ministry acknowledged the country’s role in the swap, saying all those traded passed through Doha on their way to their own countries.
Qatar hopes “that this agreement would pave the way for achieving further understandings as a means to resolve disputes through peaceful means,” the statement said.
It was unclear what McKenty was doing in Afghanistan.
Taliban prisoner first convicted of narco-terrorism
Mohammed, 55, was a prisoner in California after his 2008 conviction. The Bureau of Prisons early Tuesday listed Mohammed as not being in their custody.
Hafiz Zia Ahmad Takal, a Taliban Foreign Ministry deputy spokesperson, said Mohammed had arrived in Afghanistan and was with his family. Photos released by the Taliban showed him being welcomed back in his home province of Nangarhar, in the country’s east, with multicolored garlands.
Mohammed told Taliban-controlled media he had spent time behind bars in Bagram and also Washington, D.C.
“It’s a joy seeing your family and coming to your homeland. The greatest joy is to come and join your Muslim brothers,” he said.
He was detained on the battlefield in Nangarhar and later taken to the US A federal jury convicted him on charges of securing heroin and opium that he knew were bound for the United States and, in doing so, assisting terrorism activity.
The Justice Department at the time referred to Mohammed as “a violent jihadist and narcotics trafficker” who “sought to kill US soldiers in Afghanistan using rockets.” He was the first person to be convicted on US narco-terrorism laws.
Ahmed Rashid, the author of several books about Afghanistan and the Taliban, described Mohammed as the “biggest drugs smuggler the US had to deal with and key funder of the Taliban.”
Before Biden left office, his administration had been trying to work out a deal to free Corbett, as well as George Glezmann and Mahmood Habibi, in exchange for Muhammad Rahim, one of the remaining detainees at Guantanamo Bay.
Glezmann, an airline mechanic from Atlanta, was taken by the Taliban’s intelligence services in December 2022 while traveling through the country. Habibi, an Afghan-American businessman who worked as a contractor for a Kabul-based telecommunications company, also went missing in 2022. The Taliban have denied they have Habibi.
Habibi’s family welcomed the exchange and said they were confident the Trump administration would make a “greater effort” to free him, expressing their frustration with the Biden team.
“We know they have evidence my brother is alive and in Taliban hands and it could have been influential in encouraging the Taliban to admit they have him,” Habibi’s brother Ahmed said in a statement shared by the nonprofit Global Reach.
Biden officials “refused to use” the evidence, he claimed. “We know Trump is about results and we have faith he will use every tool available to get Mahmood home.”
Taliban try to gain international recognition
For their part, the Taliban called the exchange the result of “long and fruitful negotiations” with the US and said it was a good example of solving problems through dialogue.
“The Islamic Emirate looks positively at the actions of the United States of America that help the normalization and development of relations between the two countries,” it said.
The Taliban have been trying to make inroads in being recognized, in part to escape the economic tailspin caused by their takeover. Billions in international funds were frozen, and tens of thousands of highly skilled Afghans fled the country and took their money with them.


At a pumpkin festival near Berlin, powerful women take shape — one gourd at a time

At a pumpkin festival near Berlin, powerful women take shape — one gourd at a time
Updated 14 sec ago

At a pumpkin festival near Berlin, powerful women take shape — one gourd at a time

At a pumpkin festival near Berlin, powerful women take shape — one gourd at a time
  • The festival started in 2004 as more and more Germans were embracing the American tradition of Halloween
  • After exploring different topics over the past 21 years, this year is all about women’s power

BEELITZ, Germany: The pumpkin is the undisputed star of the show at the Klaistow farm near Berlin.
Over 100,000 pumpkins in various shapes and colors are laid out across the farm and on shelves along its winding paths — 500 different varieties from around the world, each labeled with its name and origin.
The huge pumpkin festival on the farm 56 kilometers (35 miles) southwest of the German capital, which is now taking place for the 22nd time, has become so popular that it draws up to 12,000 visitors on weekend days and more than 5,000 on weekdays.
This year it features 15 larger-than-life pumpkin sculptures and many kinds of sweet and savory food offerings — all made with pumpkin.
The pumpkins hail from the farm’s own pumpkin patches and from around the world.

A pumpkin sculpture depicting a goddess with six arms, is displayed at Klaistow farm's annual pumpkin festival, which this year celebrates "powerful women," in Beelitz near Berlin, Germany, on Oct. 21, 2025. (AP)

The festival started in 2004 as more and more Germans were embracing the American tradition of Halloween. In just a few short years it became common for Germans to put carved pumpkins in their yards, for kids to go trick-or-treating and for young adults to revel in gory costumes at parties.
The theme of the first exhibition was how the pumpkin came to Europe, said Antje Winkelmann, who co-runs the family farm, saying it was “a great topic, as it came from America to Europe.”
“Christopher Columbus brought it with him, and we rebuilt the ship that Christopher Columbus sailed on and told the whole story,” she said.
After exploring different topics over the past 21 years, this year is all about women’s power.
“We had sports, we had ancient Rome, we had the Alps and mountains and the world of stars and planets. And now it really felt like it was time for women to be the topic,” Winkelmann said.
They pored over lists of famous women, she said, and then chose a few “based on what would be easy to present, what would be appealing to the eye.”
Winners included Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, the beloved fictional Swedish book character Pippi Longstocking, and ancient Egypt’s Cleopatra — all of them, of course, created from colorful pumpkins.
“We realized there really were and are a lot of amazing women,” Winkelmann said.

A pumpkin sculpture depicting Mexican artist Frida Kahlo is displayed at Klaistow farm's annual pumpkin festival, which this year celebrates "powerful women," in Beelitz near Berlin, Germany, on Oct. 21, 2025. (AP)

On a recent day, families explored the vast farm, strolling past a huge Marge Simpson, her hair made up of dozens of brown, round winter squash, her dress created with small orange pumpkins. Nearby was Elsa from the children’s all-time favorite movie “Frozen,” dressed in pale yellow pumpkins.
Bertha Benz, the famous German automotive pioneer, sat on an early model Mercedes, the wheels decorated with the same kind of orange winter squash as her long skirt.
Gesine Struppert, who visited the farm with her little daughter from the town of Wittenberg, said she was inspired to make new pumpkin dishes at home and was impressed by the sculptures.
“It’s pretty crazy,” she said.
For sale were 30 different kind of pumpkins, both edible and decorative, and many pumpkin delicacies.
“Of course, pumpkin is also on the menu,” Winkelmann said. “We have stuffed pumpkin and chicken coated with pumpkin sauce. We have pumpkin tarte flambée, pumpkin crème brûlée, all kinds of things with pumpkin, so you can try them out. And in our bakery, of course, pumpkin is also in the spotlight, with pumpkin seeds, pumpkin seed bread, pumpkin cake, pumpkin cream slices.”
 


Met Police sack British officer over ‘racism’ revealed in BBC Panorama probe

Met Police sack British officer over ‘racism’ revealed in BBC Panorama probe
Updated 23 October 2025

Met Police sack British officer over ‘racism’ revealed in BBC Panorama probe

Met Police sack British officer over ‘racism’ revealed in BBC Panorama probe
  • Philip Neilson dismissed with immediate effect on Thursday after Met hearing upholds three allegations, including making ‘highly racist and discriminatory remarks’ about different ethnic groups
  • Neilson is the first of 10 current or former officers to face a hearing as part of the Metropolitan Police’s accelerated misconduct proceedings regarding footage recorded during the investigation

LONDON: A Metropolitan Police officer at Charing Cross police station in London has been sacked for gross misconduct after being secretly recorded in a BBC Panorama undercover investigation making racist comments and endorsing inappropriate force.

Philip Neilson was dismissed with immediate effect on Thursday after a Met hearing upheld three allegations against him, including making “highly racist and discriminatory remarks” about different ethnic groups.

Neilson was recorded by BBC undercover reporter Rory Bibb describing an “invasion” of “scum” from the Middle East, and making offensive remarks about individuals from Algeria and Somalia.

He is the first of 10 current or former officers to face a hearing as part of the Met Police’s accelerated misconduct proceedings regarding footage recorded during the Panorama investigation, according to the BBC.

The first allegation against Neilson involved glorifying the use of inappropriate force against a restrained detainee and promoting unlawful violence against migrants.

The second involved Neilson referring to Somalians as “scum” and claiming there was an invasion of the UK by migrants, comments the undercover reporter described as “floridly racist.”

Neilson was also recorded saying a detainee who had overstayed his visa stay in the UK should have a “bullet through his head.”

Commander Jason Prins, chair of the panel held in southwest London on Thursday, found all the allegations proven.

“It was or must have been obvious to him that the comments made were abhorrent,” Prins said. “The conduct of the officer is a disgrace.”

Neilson, who had worked for the Met Police for four years, denied being racist and said that the BBC undercover reporter had “breached his human rights.”

The officer acknowledged that the remarks were inappropriate, but argued that they only constituted misconduct, with some being made while he was intoxicated after consuming a large amount of alcohol.

A second police officer featured in BBC Panorama, Martin Borg, was also dismissed on Thursday after the Met’s panel upheld five out of eight allegations of gross misconduct against him.

The scandal is the second to affect Charing Cross police station in central London following the exposure of shocking messages exchanged by officers in 2022. Officers at the station were found by the Independent Office for Police Conduct to have joked about rape and domestic abuse, and also made racist comments in messages exchanged from 2016-2018, The Independent reported.


Reform UK’s only Black branch chair quits party

Reform UK’s only Black branch chair quits party
Updated 23 October 2025

Reform UK’s only Black branch chair quits party

Reform UK’s only Black branch chair quits party
  • Neville Watson cites rise of Islamophobia, anti-migrant sentiment
  • ‘I don’t want to see a society where we weaponize our faith against Islam’

LONDON: Reform UK’s only Black branch chair has resigned from the right-wing party.
Neville Watson told The Guardian that the tone of the migration debate in the UK is doing “more harm than good,” and that he is alarmed by the rise of Christian nationalism and Islamophobia among the party membership.
“Reform has so much momentum at the moment, but leaving has allowed me to proclaim who I am without flinching,” he said.
“I don’t want to see a society where we weaponize our faith against Islam. We respect our Muslim brothers and sisters.”
Watson, who chaired the party’s Enfield branch in north London, said he is worried that party members are “sympathetic” to far-right activist Tommy Robinson, and politics is “losing its compassion.”
Under his leadership, the Enfield branch drew in a diverse membership, including Nigerian and Turkish residents.
But he told The Guardian: “I know that down the track, there’s going to be other issues that I’m going to come into conflict (with Reform) on.
“The march in London recently, with Tommy Robinson, where the term Christian nationalism suddenly raised its head, where they were using Christian emblems to advance to me an ideology that is not Christian … I know that (Reform leader) Nigel (Farage) himself has distanced himself from anything to do with the likes of Tommy Robinson, but I do know that there are still people within Reform who are quite sympathetic to his ideas.”
Politicians “are stoking a fire,” Watson said. “Some might be stoking it with a smaller stick — and that type of conversation, with the boats, the (asylum) hotels, I feel it’s doing more harm than good in terms of community relations.”


Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets
Updated 23 October 2025

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets
  • “I hope that they will make a political decision, positive decision in one or another way to help Ukraine with funds,” Zelensky said
  • The move is fraught with legal and political perils

BRUSSELS: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky expressed hope Thursday that the European Union would move forward with plans to help Ukraine with a mammoth new “reparations loan” funded by frozen Russian assets.
Zelensky was in Brussels for talks with EU leaders, who discussed plans to hand 140 billion euros ($162 billion) to Kyiv over the next few years, to keep it afloat as the war with Russia drags on.
“I hope that they will make a political decision, positive decision in one or another way to help Ukraine with funds,” Zelensky told a press conference after the meeting.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive, has floated a complex scheme that would see Ukraine pay back the money only once Russia coughs up for the damages it has caused.
The move is fraught with legal and political perils. Belgium, where the bulk of the money is held, has demanded guarantees that the rest of the bloc will share any liabilities if Russia takes the matter to court.
EU officials are hoping that the EU’s 27 leaders will give a preliminary go-ahead on Thursday for the commission to draw up a formal legal proposal for the loan.
“I think that the dialogue was really, maybe not simple, but it was very good,” Zelensky said of the talks. “Really we count on decisions on this topic.”
“Russia brought war to our land, and they have to pay for this war,” he said.
Asked to sum up his meeting with US President Donald Trump last week, which Ukrainian officials described as “tense,” Zelensky suggested the outcome was better than it perhaps initially seemed.
Zelensky came back empty handed after traveling to Washington in the hope of securing US long-range Tomahawk missiles to hit back at Russia — but the meeting was ultimately followed by US sanctions on Russia’s energy sector.
“The result of this meeting — we have sanctions on Russian energy. We don’t have a meeting in Hungary without Ukraine, and we have not yet Tomahawks. That’s it. This is the result. I think, not bad,” Zelensky said.
“Each day brings something,” he added. “Maybe tomorrow we will have Tomahawks.”
The idea of a summit in Budapest between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin was floated after a call between the two leaders.
But the plan was shelved this week, with Washington expressing its disappointment at the lack of progress in ceasefire negotiations with Moscow and later slapping sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies.


F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate
Updated 23 October 2025

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate
  • The cost of the climate damage attributable to the war already exceeds $43 billion, de Klerk said
  • A separate study looking at the Israeli-Hamas war in Gaza estimates the carbon footprint for the first 15 months topped 32 million tons of emissions

LONDON: From fuel guzzled by fighter jets to wildfires sparked by shelling, the war in Ukraine has created vast amounts of planet-warming emissions, according to a new study that says Russia should pay for the damage to the global climate.
The first three years of conflict have generated almost 237 million metric tons of greenhouse gases (GHG), equivalent to putting 120 million fossil-fuel cars on the road, or the combined annual emissions of Belgium, Austria and Ireland, according to researchers.
“This is pushing us in the wrong direction at a time when we drastically have to cut emissions,” said climate researcher Lennard de Klerk, lead author of the report tallying the war’s emissions, which was published this month.
The cost of the climate damage attributable to the war — in which hundreds of thousands have been killed on both sides — already exceeds $43 billion, de Klerk said.
“Russia should pay compensation for this damage as part of wider war reparations,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
A separate study looking at the Israeli-Hamas war in Gaza estimates the carbon footprint for the first 15 months topped 32 million tons of emissions, when post-conflict reconstruction is factored in.
That is comparable to the annual emissions of Ivory Coast.
“The numbers are staggering for such an intense period,” said Benjamin Neimark, who led the research by UK and US-based experts.
“Most direct conflict emissions come from jet fuel, but what really surprised us were the projected emissions for reconstruction. That was a shock and made us sit up.”
The pioneering studies will be presented on the sidelines of next month’s COP30 climate summit in Brazil.
Climate researchers say conflicts and climate change create a cycle of destruction — not only does war drive climate change, but climate change can fuel conflict in fragile regions as competition intensifies over water and other resources.

WILDFIRES
While military activity is the biggest source of conflict-related emissions in Ukraine, de Klerk said he was surprised to find wildfires account for a fifth of the war’s carbon footprint since Russia’s 2022 invasion.
Relentless shelling has sparked thousands of blazes which have ravaged forests and farmland, with some likely exacerbated by the detonation of land mines and unexploded ordnance strewn across the landscape.
Nearly 850,000 hectares were torched last year, according to the report by the Initiative on GHG Accounting of War, an international research team led by de Klerk.
“This is more than 20 times the annual average,” he said. “The summer of 2024 was extremely dry, most likely due to climate change, which enabled fires to spread.”
With the expansion of the war in Gaza, missile strikes across the Lebanon-Israel border also ignited fires, destroying forests and farmland.
As in Ukraine, blazes quickly raged out of control due to the dangers firefighters face operating in these war zones.

RECONSTRUCTION
The destruction of energy infrastructure in both Ukraine and Gaza has also increased emissions.
Russia’s targeting of oil depots has sent tons of fuel up in flames, while attacks on gas and electricity infrastructure have released potent GHGs like methane and sulfur hexafluoride or SF6, which has a global warming potential 24,000 times greater than CO2.
Before Israel launched its assault on Gaza in October 2023, about a quarter of the enclave’s electricity came from solar panels – one of the highest shares in the world.
But the destruction of most solar infrastructure has increased reliance on polluting diesel-powered generators.
Neimark said the carbon footprint of post-war reconstruction in Gaza, where about 68,000 people have been killed, would dwarf emissions from the conflict itself.
Israel’s intense bombardment has destroyed more than 90 percent of housing and turned Gaza into a wasteland, creating 60 million tons of debris, according to UN estimates.
Rebuilding homes and infrastructure will require enormous quantities of concrete and steel, whose production are highly carbon-intensive.
The decimation of farmland, orchards and shrub land has also raised the risk of desertification in a region that is already vulnerable to the effects of climate change, said Neimark, a senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.
Both wars have additionally increased global emissions away from the frontlines.
Airspace closures have forced commercial flights to reroute, pushing up fuel consumption. Flights from London to Tokyo now take almost three hours longer, de Klerk said.
Unrest in the Middle East has similarly disrupted international shipping through the Red Sea, boosting emissions due to longer routes and the need for faster sailing speeds.

MILITARY DATA HOLE
This new research on Gaza and Ukraine is part of a wider push to increase transparency around global military emissions.
Even in peacetime, armies have large carbon footprints — maintenance of bases, transport of troops and equipment, military exercises and weapons production all add up.
The Conflict and Environment Observatory, a UK-based non-profit, estimates the world’s militaries are responsible for about 5.5 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions.
But countries are not required to report their military emissions to international climate bodies.
Experts say the data gap means we risk underestimating the size of emission cuts required to limit the global temperature increase to below 1.5 Celsius.
With many countries now ramping up defense spending in response to multiple crises, there are fears this will both increase military emissions and divert funding from efforts to tackle climate change.
Climate researchers say militaries must be forced to report their emissions.
“We can’t start making meaningful cuts without adequate baselines,” Neimark said.
“The military has long operated as if the emissions coming out of an F-35 don’t stink, and that has to stop.”