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Afghan man jailed for threat to kill Reform UK leader Farage in TikTok video

Afghan man jailed for threat to kill Reform UK leader Farage in TikTok video
Nigel Farage, leader of Britain's Reform UK party, arrives to attend the sentencing of Fayaz Khan, who was earlier found guilty of making a threat in a TikTok video to kill Farage, at Southwark Crown Court in London, Oct. 14, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 October 2025

Afghan man jailed for threat to kill Reform UK leader Farage in TikTok video

Afghan man jailed for threat to kill Reform UK leader Farage in TikTok video
  • Farage gave evidence that he was “genuinely worried” about Khan’s threat
  • Khan had denied his video was a genuine threat

LONDON: An Afghan national was jailed for five years on Tuesday after being found guilty of making a threat to kill Nigel Farage, leader of the populist Reform UK party that leads opinion polls in Britain.

Fayaz Khan was last week convicted by a jury at London’s Southwark Crown Court of a single count of making a threat to kill Farage in a TikTok video posted in October 2024, as he documented his journey from Sweden to Britain.

Prosecutors said Khan posted a video in response to one by Farage, in which Khan – who has an AK-47 assault rifle tattooed on his face – said “pop, pop, pop” while making gun gestures.

FARAGE SAYS HE HAS ‘MIXED FEELINGS’

Farage gave evidence that he was “genuinely worried” about Khan’s threat, describing the video as “chilling.” Khan had denied his video was a genuine threat.

Farage sat in the public gallery as Judge Karen Steyn sentenced Khan for making a threat to kill and a separate charge of attempting to enter Britain illegally, to which he had pleaded guilty.

Khan shouted at the judge and Farage after he was sentenced, telling Farage: “You want to be prime minister ... you … my life.”

Outside the court, Farage said he was pleased with Khan’s sentence but concerned he would be released relatively soon, though Khan is liable to automatic deportation.

Prosecutor Peter Ratliff said Khan had given a false name and date of birth on arrival in Britain on a small boat.

Steyn said she was sure Khan gave a false name because he had a six-month jail sentence pending in Sweden.

“The threat to kill Nigel Farage which you made ... quickly reached him, as you had intended,” she told Khan.

She said Farage understood that as a lawmaker and political party leader he faced public scrutiny, criticism and at times abuse.

“But your video was not mere abuse – it was a threat to kill with a firearm and it was, as Mr.Farage put it, ‘pretty chilling’,” she said.


At least 19 dead after bus catches fire in India’s Rajasthan, NDTV reports

Updated 11 sec ago

At least 19 dead after bus catches fire in India’s Rajasthan, NDTV reports

At least 19 dead after bus catches fire in India’s Rajasthan, NDTV reports
The police believe that a short circuit caused the fire, the report added.
Fifteen passengers, including two children, sustained serious burn injuries, with some suffering up to 70 percent burns

MUMBAI: At least 19 people died on Tuesday afternoon when a private bus in the western Indian state of Rajasthan caught fire, Indian broadcaster NDTV said, citing the police.
The bus was traveling from Jaisalmer to Jodhpur with 57 passengers on board when smoke emerged from the rear of the vehicle. The driver stopped the bus along the side of the road but flames engulfed the vehicle within moments, NDTV reported.
The police believe that a short circuit caused the fire, the report added.
Fifteen passengers, including two children, sustained serious burn injuries, with some suffering up to 70 percent burns, NDTV said.
Reuters could not independently verify details of the report. Rajasthan’s police did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.
“Distressed by the loss of lives due to a mishap in Jaisalmer, Rajasthan. My thoughts are with the affected people and their families during this difficult time,” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in an X post.
He also said the Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund will provide 200,000 rupees ($2,253) to the families of the deceased and 50,000 rupees to the injured.

Britain pushes Northern Ireland as model for disarming Gaza

Britain pushes Northern Ireland as model for disarming Gaza
Updated 54 min 13 sec ago

Britain pushes Northern Ireland as model for disarming Gaza

Britain pushes Northern Ireland as model for disarming Gaza
  • Starmer told parliament that decommissioning the enclave would be vital if Donald Trump’s ceasefire between Israel and Hamas is to last
  • Three European diplomats also said the Northern Ireland case was being cited as a possible future model for Gaza

LONDON: Britain could take a leading role in helping to disarm Hamas in Gaza, based on its experience of encouraging militant groups in Northern Ireland to lay down their arms, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Tuesday.
Starmer told parliament that decommissioning the enclave would be vital if Donald Trump’s ceasefire between Israel and Hamas is to last, the first stage of the US president’s 20-point framework to bring peace to the Palestinian enclave.
Starmer’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, was a chief architect of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement which largely ended three decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland, working alongside former prime minister Tony Blair, who has been tipped for a role in Gaza.
Three European diplomats also said the Northern Ireland case was being cited as a possible future model for Gaza, although they noted there was no comprehensive plan in place.
“Of course, this is going to be difficult, but it’s vital. It was difficult in Northern Ireland in relation to the IRA (Irish Republican Army), but it was vital,” Starmer said.
“That is why we have said that we stand ready, based on our experience in Northern Ireland, to help with the decommissioning process. I’m not going to pretend that’s easy, but it is extremely important.”
The IRA, an overwhelmingly Catholic group seeking a united Ireland, said in 2005 it would formally end its armed struggle. It refused to dispose of its weapons in public but agreed to the presence of independent monitors, who after three months said it had put its weapons beyond use.
The Northern Ireland peace deal dealt with everything from reform of the police to the early release of paramilitary prisoners, the disarmament of paramilitary groups and the “normalization” of security arrangements.
However, the IRA never governed Northern Ireland, unlike Hamas, which has been in control of Gaza since 2007 and has overseen all sectors of public life.
Powell was in Egypt on Monday for an international summit on Gaza, alongside Starmer. According to the BBC, he was there last week as the negotiations were being finalized.
Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff thanked Powell on X on Monday for his “incredible input and tireless efforts.” In Gaza, Israeli officials have said any final settlement must permanently disarm Hamas. Trump has also said he will establish a “Board of Peace” to oversee the governance of Gaza. He had initially suggested that Blair would serve on that, but he said on Sunday he needed to find out if that was an “acceptable choice to everybody.”


NGOs appeal UK-France migrant exchange deal

NGOs appeal UK-France migrant exchange deal
Updated 14 October 2025

NGOs appeal UK-France migrant exchange deal

NGOs appeal UK-France migrant exchange deal
  • “The implementation decree... is tainted with illegality, as it fails to comply with the procedure prescribed by the constitution,” the groups said
  • The groups include Utopia 56, which works with migrants, and medical charity Doctors of the World

PARIS: Humanitarian and activist groups filed an appeal Tuesday in France to block a British-French migration deal that aims to deter record numbers of immigrants crossing the Channel to the United Kingdom.
The agreement features a “one-in, one-out” exchange, in which Britain can detain and return to France migrants arriving by boat whom they deem ineligible for asylum, in exchange for London accepting an equal number of migrants from France after they have received a visa.
It was signed in July and came into force in August, with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government struggling to quell public discontent over immigration levels.
But a group of 17 NGOs appealed against the deal in France’s highest administrative court, the Council of State, arguing it should have been ratified by parliament.
“The implementation decree... is tainted with illegality, as it fails to comply with the procedure prescribed by the constitution,” the groups said in a joint statement.
The groups include Utopia 56, which works with migrants, and medical charity Medecins du Monde (Doctors of the World).
According to their lawyer, Lionel Crusoe, the French constitution requires the agreement to have been ratified by parliament before being signed into law.
Crusoe said he expected to hear from the court by the end of the week on whether they would schedule a hearing.
Under the deal, Britain has so far removed 26 people to France and taken in 18 migrants in return, the British government said last week.
British authorities had hoped the deal would curb record levels of irregular Channel crossings, which have fueled the rise of the hard-right Reform UK party.
The organizations argued that “the number of dangerous and illegal crossings of the Channel has not decreased” following the agreement.
More than 8,400 migrants have entered the UK on dinghies since the deal was implemented, according to an AFP count based on official British data.
Nearly 35,500 such migrants have landed on British shores since the beginning of the year.
At least 27 people have died trying to make the perilous Channel crossing by sea during that same period, according to an AFP tally of official figures.


Power cuts in 8 Ukraine regions after Russian strikes: operator

Power cuts in 8 Ukraine regions after Russian strikes: operator
Updated 14 October 2025

Power cuts in 8 Ukraine regions after Russian strikes: operator

Power cuts in 8 Ukraine regions after Russian strikes: operator
  • Russia has stepped up strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and railway network as winter approaches
  • Power outages had already occurred across Ukraine last week

KYIV: Ukraine’s energy provider on Tuesday said it had implemented power cuts in eight of the country’s regions following damage to energy infrastructure after Russian strikes.
“Due to the difficult situation in the energy system caused by previous Russian attacks — in Sumy, Kharkiv, Poltava, Dnipropetrovsk, as well as partially in Kirovograd, Kyiv and Cherkasy regions — emergency shutdowns have been implemented,” Ukrenergo said in a statement.
The main private network operator, DTEK, later announced on Telegram that the planned power outages in Kyiv had been canceled.
Russia has stepped up strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and railway network as winter approaches, raising fears that millions of people could be without power in freezing temperatures.
Power outages had already occurred across Ukraine last week, notably affecting parts of the capital for several hours.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Moscow of wanting to sow chaos with these strikes, which have also harmed the Ukrainian gas sector.
Ukraine, for its part, regularly targets oil refineries and hydrocarbon pipelines in Russia with drones, a strategy that has caused fuel prices in that country to rise since the summer.


3 Italian carabinieri killed in apparently deliberate farmhouse explosion

3 Italian carabinieri killed in apparently deliberate farmhouse explosion
Updated 14 October 2025

3 Italian carabinieri killed in apparently deliberate farmhouse explosion

3 Italian carabinieri killed in apparently deliberate farmhouse explosion
  • Authorities say the blast was allegedly set by three siblings fighting eviction from a family farm
  • Italian premier and defense minister each expressed their condolences for the deaths of the carabinieri

MILAN: Three carabinieri militarized police officers were killed and another 13 carabinieri and police officers were injured in an explosion allegedly set by three middle-aged siblings who had been fighting eviction from a family farm near the northeastern Italian city of Verona early Tuesday, authorities said.
Two brothers and a sister, identified as Dino, Franco and Maria Luisa Rampini, were detained in connection to the explosion in the town of Castel d’Azzano, 10 kilometers (six miles) southwest Verona, police said.
They were being investigated for premeditated murder, chief prosecutor Raffaele Tito told reporters at the scene.
“While our carabinieri were carrying out a judicial order, they were hit by an intentional explosion of a gas tank,’’ Verona’s carabinieri commander, Col. Claudio Pagano, told Sky TG24. He called it “an absolutely crazy gesture.”
Tito said the eviction had been carefully planned. “The reaction was so violent, that it was hard to predict,” the prosecutor said.
The two-story farmhouse had been filled with gas, and the explosion was set off when authorities opened the door in the predawn hours, regional governor Luca Zaia told Sky TG24.
It was the second time authorities moved to evict the siblings. Another attempt was thwarted last year when the Rampinis threatened to blow the house up, Zaia said.
Maria Luisa Rampini told Corriere della Sera last year that the siblings had been fighting what they perceived to be an unjust foreclosure of the family farm.
“They took away the agricultural company, the land and now the house, probably,” Maria Luisa Rampini said on a video filmed during last year’s attempt at evicting the siblings.
“Today they wanted to carry out the eviction. We are opposing it in every way. We have filled the house with gas to be able to fight,” she said on the video posted Tuesday by the newspaper.
Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni and Defense Minister Guido Crosetto each expressed their condolences for the deaths of the carabinieri, part of a national militarized police force that plays a central law enforcement role in Italy.