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Three police dead after blast during Italy eviction

Three police dead after blast during Italy eviction
AFP
Updated 2 min 42 sec ago

Three police dead after blast during Italy eviction

Three police dead after blast during Italy eviction

ROME: Three police officers were killed and a dozen people were injured in Italy overnight after an explosion in a house during an attempted eviction, firefighters said on Tuesday.
Two people, a brother and sister in their 60s, were arrested and a third family member fled, according to the ANSA news agency.
The house in Castel d’Azzano, near Verona, was filled with gas and the explosion was triggered when the front door was opened during the overnight operation, ANSA said, citing sources close to investigators.
It said the police had been trying to evict the three siblings, who had previously threatened to blow themselves up.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni led tributes to the victims, whose bodies were extracted from the rubble of the house, and said she was following developments.
Twelve law enforcement officers and a civilian woman were injured, firefighters said in a statement on X.


Cameroon’s opposition candidate Tchiroma declares victory in presidential vote

Cameroon’s opposition candidate Tchiroma declares victory in presidential vote
Updated 10 sec ago

Cameroon’s opposition candidate Tchiroma declares victory in presidential vote

Cameroon’s opposition candidate Tchiroma declares victory in presidential vote
  • Issa Tchiroma Bakary: ‘Our victory is clear. It must be respected’
  • Paul Biya, the world’s oldest serving head of state, is vying for an eighth term
LIBREVILLE: Cameroon’s opposition challenger Issa Tchiroma Bakary claimed election victory on Tuesday against incumbent President Paul Biya, who has been in power for 43 years, although official results for the weekend vote are not expected for two weeks.
“Our victory is clear. It must be respected,” Tchiroma declared in a post on Facebook.
He urged the government to “accept the truth of the ballot box” or “plunge the country into turmoil” and promised to publish detailed results by region.
“The people have chosen,” he added.
While the tally sheets are allowed to be published, final official results must be announced by the country’s Constitutional Council – a “red line that must not be crossed,” according to the government.
In the 2018 presidential election, opposition challenger Maurice Kamto declared himself winner the day after the vote.
He was subsequently arrested and his supporters’ rallies were dispersed with tear gas and water cannon, with dozens arrested.
Biya, the world’s oldest serving head of state, is vying for an eighth term to extend his decades in power.
But former employment minister Tchiroma generated unexpected enthusiasm among voters in the central African nation and a duel had been emerging, with supporters on both sides claiming victory.
Images of sheets and blackboards tallying the results have circulated on social media, fueling the victory claims among both Biya and Tchiroma’s camps.
Lively campaign
Biya faced 11 opponents, including Tchiroma, who resigned from the government in June to join the opposition after 20 years at Biya’s side.
He became the leading challenger after Kamto was barred from standing by the Constitutional Council.
Biya has been in power since 1982 and has won every election in the past 20 years with more than 70 percent of the vote.
Most of the eight million Cameroonians who were eligible to vote in Sunday’s one-round election have only known one ruler in their lifetime.
Cameroonian political scientist Stephane Akoa told AFP before the vote: “We shouldn’t be naive. We know full well the ruling system has ample means at its disposal to get results in its favor.”
But he said that the campaign had been “much livelier” during the final days than was usually the case at that stage and the vote was “therefore more likely to throw up surprises.”
When Biya first became president in 1982, US president Ronald Reagan’s era was in full swing and the Cold War had nearly a decade to run.
Biya, Cameroon’s second head of state since independence from France in 1960, has ruled with an iron fist, personally appointing and dismissing key officials and ruthlessly repressing all political and armed opposition.
He has succeeded in holding onto power through social upheaval, economic disparity and separatist violence.

Trump to attend signing of Thailand-Cambodia ‘peace deal’

Trump to attend signing of Thailand-Cambodia ‘peace deal’
Updated 1 min 29 sec ago

Trump to attend signing of Thailand-Cambodia ‘peace deal’

Trump to attend signing of Thailand-Cambodia ‘peace deal’
Kuala Lumpur: US President Donald Trump will attend the ceremonial signing of a peace agreement between Thailand and Cambodia at an upcoming summit of Southeast Asian nations, the foreign minister of host Malaysia said Tuesday.
Tensions between Thailand and Cambodia erupted in July into the deadliest military clashes in decades, killing more than 40 people and forcing around 300,000 to flee their homes.
The two sides agreed to a ceasefire — brokered in part by Trump — after five days of fighting, and have since repeatedly traded accusations of truce violations.
Trump “is looking forward to witness the Thailand-Cambodia peace deal,” Mohamad Hasan told reporters at a news conference in Kuala Lumpur.
Mohamad said the US leader would visit Malaysia on October 26 to attend the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in the Malaysian capital from October 26-28.
He said Malaysia and the United States would serve as facilitators to “see a more extensive ceasefire deal” between Thailand and Cambodia, which will require “both sides to remove all land mines and withdraw their military machinery from their borders.”
“We hope that both parties can fulfil these conditions and during the ASEAN summit a declaration can be signed.
“We can call it the Kuala Lumpur Declaration or the Kuala Lumpur Accord, we want to make sure that these two neighboring countries can come together to make peace and also implement their ceasefire,” Mohamad added.
Thai government spokesman Siripong Angkasakulkiat told reporters Bangkok was aware the United States was giving the dispute priority.
“But what Cambodia has to do first, before we accept the US offer, are our four points that we have raised,” he said.
Thailand Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said Thursday that he had received a letter from Trump, with the US leader saying he wanted to see the two neighbors resolve tensions.
Anutin also said Thailand was ready to negotiate if Cambodia withdrew heavy weapons from border areas, removed land mines, cracked down on Internet scammers and relocated its citizens from borderlands Thailand considers its own.
Cambodia has said its nationals have lived in the disputed border villages for decades.
Anutin’s remarks came a day after the Thai premier appeared to brush off a continued role for Trump — who has been chasing a Nobel Peace Prize — in any further negotiations between the two nations aimed at solving their border dispute.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet has said he nominated Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize, crediting him with “innovative diplomacy” that ended the military clashes.

Greeks strike again against 13-hour work reform

Greeks strike again against 13-hour work reform
Updated 19 min 34 sec ago

Greeks strike again against 13-hour work reform

Greeks strike again against 13-hour work reform
  • This is the second time this month that workers in Greek have withdrawn their labor
  • Unions fear the 13 hour work day could lead to layoffs if workers refuse longer hours

ATHENS: Transport and services in Greece were disrupted Tuesday for the second time this month as unions staged a 24-hour walkout against government plans to introduce an optional 13-hour workday.
The mobilization will shut down public and municipal services and paralyze ferries and trains, but flights are unaffected.
Urban transport in Athens will also operate on reduced hours.
Protests are scheduled in Athens and other major cities during the day.
The government has said the 13-hour workday, to be voted into law Wednesday, is optional but opposition parties and unions argue that workers will risk layoffs if they refuse longer hours.
Another general strike on the issue was held October 1.
“This (law) strengthens employees and facilitates businesses,” Labour Minister Niki Kerameus told SKAI TV on Tuesday.
It broadens benefits for working mothers and allows staff to negotiate a four-day working week, she said.
The legal working day in Greece is eight hours, with the possibility of performing paid overtime.
Greece has already legalized a six-day working week, especially during high demand in certain sectors including tourism.


Los Angeles County officials to vote on emergency declaration over immigration raids

Los Angeles County officials to vote on emergency declaration over immigration raids
Updated 14 October 2025

Los Angeles County officials to vote on emergency declaration over immigration raids

Los Angeles County officials to vote on emergency declaration over immigration raids
  • Move would allow the LA County Board of Supervisors to provide rent relief for tenants who have fallen behind
  • Since June, the Los Angeles region has been a battleground in the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration strategy

LOS ANGELES: Los Angeles County officials will vote Tuesday on whether to declare a state of emergency that would give them power to provide assistance for residents they say have suffered financially from ongoing federal immigration raids.
The move would allow the LA County Board of Supervisors to provide rent relief for tenants who have fallen behind as a result of the crackdown on immigrants. A local state of emergency can also funnel state money for legal aid and other services.
Funds for rent would be available to people who apply via an online portal that would be launched within two months, Supervisor Lindsey Horvath’s office said. The motion could also be a first step toward an eviction moratorium, but that would require a separate action by the supervisors.
Landlords worried it could be another financial hit after an extended ban on evictions and rental increases during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Since June, the Los Angeles region has been a battleground in the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration strategy that spurred protests and the deployment of the National Guards and Marines for more than a month. Federal agents have rounded up immigrants without legal status to be in the US from Home Depots, car washes, bus stops, and farms. Some US citizens have also been detained.
Horvath and Janice Hahn said the raids have spread fear and destabilized households and businesses.
“They are targeting families, disrupting classrooms, silencing workers, and forcing people to choose between staying safe and staying housed,” Horvath said in a statement, referencing actions by the Trump administration. She added declaring an emergency “is how we fight back.”
Last week the five-member board voted 4-1 to put the declaration up for a vote at its regular Tuesday meeting. The sole “no” vote came from Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who argued that the immigration raids did not meet the criteria of an emergency and that it could be unfair to landlords.
“I’m sure we’re going to be challenged legally,” Barger said. The county’s eviction moratorium during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in multiple lawsuits.
Landlords are “still reeling” from the COVID-era freezes that cost them “billions of dollars in uncollected rent and prohibited annual rent increase,” said Daniel Yukelson, CEO of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles.
He said housing providers are sympathetic to tenants and their family members affected by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement activities. But, he said, the association isn’t aware of anyone unable to pay rent due to immigration enforcement.
“If local jurisdictions once again allow rent payments to be deferred due to ICE enforcement activities, this will lead to the further deterioration and loss of affordable housing in our community,” Yukelson said.


WHO warns of contaminated India cough syrups

WHO warns of contaminated India cough syrups
Updated 14 October 2025

WHO warns of contaminated India cough syrups

WHO warns of contaminated India cough syrups
  • Affected medicines are specific batches of Coldrif from Sresan Pharmaceutical, Respifresh TR from Rednex Pharmaceuticals and ReLife from Shape Pharma

The World Health Organization on Monday issued a health advisory warning about three contaminated cough syrups identified in India, urging authorities to report any detection of these medicines in their countries to the health agency.
The WHO said the affected medicines are specific batches of Coldrif from Sresan Pharmaceutical, Respifresh TR from Rednex Pharmaceuticals and ReLife from Shape Pharma.
The agency said the contaminated products pose significant risks and can cause severe, potentially life-threatening illness.
India’s health authority, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization, informed the WHO the syrups were reportedly consumed by children, all under the age of five, who recently died in the central state of Madhya Pradesh’s Chhindwara district.
The cough medicine contained toxic diethylene glycol in quantities nearly 500 times the permissible limit.
CDSCO said none of the contaminated medicines have been exported from India and there is no evidence of illegal export.
The US Food and Drug Administration confirmed on Friday that these toxic cough syrups had not been shipped to the United States.