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Storm Kirk tears through Spain, Portugal, heads for France

By - Oct 09,2024 - Last updated at Oct 09,2024

LISBON — The remnants of Hurricane Kirk swept into western Europe Wednesday, tearing up trees in Portugal and Spain, before high winds and heavy rains hit France.
 
Portugal's civil protection authority reported more than 1,300 incidents overnight Tuesday to Wednesday, three quarters of which involved fallen trees in the north of the country.
 
Porto, the main northern city, was hit hardest, with 400 trees uprooted. Cars were also damaged and rail services interrupted near Barcelos, also in the north.
 
The storm also cut power to more than 300,000 households, said the country's electricity supplier.
 
Weather and civil protection officials, having predicted winds of up to 120 kilometres per hour and heavy rain, put the coast on a yellow alert, as waves reached up to seven metres high.
 
Spanish weather officials issued an orange alert for the north and northwest of the country warning of winds of up to 140 kilometres per hour in the Asturias region.
 
Galicia, in the northwest, reported some roads blocked by mud slides and fallen trees in urban areas, but no other major damage.
 
Meteo France put 30 of the country's departments on orange alert, with heavy rains and high winds expected.
 

UN rights council extends Sudan abuses probe

By - Oct 09,2024 - Last updated at Oct 09,2024

The UN Human Rights Council is holding its 54th session at the Palais des Nations in Geneva (AFP photo)

GENEVA — The UN Human Rights Council voted Wednesday to extend its probe into alleged rights abuses in the devastating war raging in Sudan, despite Khartoum's objections.
 
Twenty-three of the council's 47 member states voted in favour of prolonging for a further year the independent international fact-finding mission on Sudan, with 12 voting against and 12 abstentions.
 
The investigation was established by the United Nations' top rights body last October to probe all alleged human rights and international humanitarian law violations in the conflict.
 
Britain and a number of other countries brought forward a draft resolution to renew its mandate.
 
"The draft resolution, is unjust, unfair," Sudan's ambassador Hassan Hamid Hassan told the council before the vote.
 
"How can a resolution adopted by this council use this unjust approach that equates a national army fulfilling its role... with a rebellious militia?
 
"This is an erroneous approach and Sudan totally rejects the content of this resolution," he said.
 
Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, Japan, South Africa and the United States were among the countries which voted yes. 
 
Countries voting no included China, Cuba, Eritrea, Indonesia, Morocco, Qatar and Sudan itself.
 
Algeria, Bangladesh, India and Malaysia were among those to abstain.
 
The three-member fact-finding mission is chaired by Mohamed Chande Othman, a former chief justice of Tanzania.
 
He is joined by Joy Ezeilo, emeritus dean of law at the University of Nigeria, and Mona Rishmawi of Jordan and Switzerland, a former UN independent expert on human rights in Somalia.
 
War has raged since April 2023 between the Sudanese army under the country's de facto ruler Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
 

Pyongyang to 'permanently' shut border with South Korea

By - Oct 09,2024 - Last updated at Oct 09,2024

A car drives past barricades at a military checkpoint on the Tongil bridge, the road leading to North Korea's Kaesong city, in the border city of Paju on Wednesday (AFP photo)


SEOUL — North Korea's army said on Wednesday it was moving to "permanently shut off and block the southern border" with the South and had informed the US military to prevent an accidental clash.

Pyongyang said in a statement it would "cut off roads and railways" that might have made travel between the two Koreas possible.

However, it was largely a symbolic gesture because cross-border exchanges and travel between North and South Korea have been halted for years.

Inter-Korean relations are at one of their lowest points in years, with Pyongyang closing agencies dedicated to reunification and declaring South Korea its "principal enemy".

Some analysts thought the announcement could be a potential first step towards more serious action, such as amending the North's constitution to declare a new maritime border south of the current de facto line.

The nuclear-armed North had been expected to scrap a landmark inter-Korean agreement signed in 1991 at a key parliamentary meeting that ended on Tuesday, part of leader Kim Jong-un's drive to officially define the South as an enemy state.

However, state media made no mention of such action in a report on Wednesday announcing a new defence chief.

The army said hours later it planned "a substantial military step" that would "completely cut off roads and railways connected to the ROK [South Korea] and fortify the relevant areas of our side with strong defence structures".

It said it had sent a telephone message to US forces to "prevent any misjudegement and accidental conflict".

The border between the two Koreas is one of the most heavily militarised in the world, although it failed to prevent a North Korean from crossing to the South in August.

Seoul said in July that Pyongyang had spent months laying landmines and erecting barriers, turning the area into a wasteland.

The South Korean military said a month earlier North Korean soldiers had suffered "multiple casualties" from landmine explosions in the area.

Seoul's spy agency also said in June it had detected signs that North Korea was demolishing sections of a railway line connecting the two Koreas.

That demolition was "seemingly with the intention of completely severing its connection to the South", Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told AFP.

Yang described Wednesday's statement from the North as "official confirmation".

Harsher isolation 

The North Korean military described its decision as a "self-defensive measure" in response to South Korean "war exercises" and visits by US strategic nuclear assets.

Its counterpart in the South slammed the announcement as a "desperate measure stemming from the insecurities of the failed Kim Jong -un regime".

The South Korean military said the North's action would "lead to even harsher isolation" and warned it would "never stand idly by" if Pyongyang sought to change "the status quo".

Hong Min, a senior analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said North Korea could be waiting for the results of next month's US election before announcing any change to its constitution.

Pyongyang also named No Kwang -chol as its new defence minister on Wednesday, replacing Kang Sun -nam.

That announcement came a day after Seoul's defence chief said North Korean soldiers were likely fighting in Ukraine alongside Russian troops, with some believed to have been killed and more expected to be deployed.

Harris, Trump trade blows in US election media blitz

By - Oct 09,2024 - Last updated at Oct 09,2024

A man wears a t-shirt with a picture of former US president Ronald Reagan wearing a Trump hat as supporters line up for a rally with Republican presidential nominee, former US President Donald Trump at Santander Arena in Reading, Pennsylvania, on October 9, 2024 (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — Kamala Harris and Donald Trump exchanged barbs over the airwaves Tuesday as they reached out to the few remaining undecided voters in the final stretch of an election seen as one of the closest in modern US history.
 
Harris has maintained a lead of two-to-three points in national polling since mid-August, despite presidential and vice presidential debates, encouraging jobs data, an interest rate cut, escalating international crises and a devastating hurricane. 
 
"I literally lose sleep, and have been, over what is at stake in this election," the Democratic vice president, 59, told radio icon Howard Stern in a 70-minute live interview.
 
A poll from Siena College and The New York Times out Tuesday highlighted the deadlock, finding Harris ahead of her Republican rival by 49 percent to 46 per cent,  although it had the pair in a dead heat in September.
 
Poll-watchers expect the stalemate to break only in the last couple of weeks before election day on November 5, as the small fraction of wavering Americans who will decide the election break one way or the other. 
 
In the seven battleground states seen as likely to determine the election, the race is even tighter.
 
The new poll gave Trump the edge on who is the stronger leader but, crucially, revealed that registered voters see Harris as the change candidate.
 
 'Loser' 
 
Harris, who has spent much of the campaign under pressure to sit down for more interviews, is spending the week targeting women, Latinos and young voters through traditional media and via appearances on influential podcasts and YouTube shows.
 
"The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," a staple of the evening comedy talk show circuit, was set to air a pre-recorded interview late Tuesday with Harris, and in excerpts shared ahead of the broadcast she called Trump a "loser."
 
Trump "openly admires dictators and authoritarians," she said during a weighty section of what was, at times, a light-hearted conversation in which both host and interviewee sipped beer.
 
"He has said he wants to be a dictator on day one if he were elected again as president. He gets played by these guys. He admires so-called strongmen and he gets played because they flatter him or offer him favor," she said. 
 
Earlier, on popular ABC television show "The View," she talked about campaigning recently with Republican former congresswoman Liz Cheney.
 
There are more than 200 former officials from past Republican presidents George W. Bush and George H.W. Bush, as well as officials tied to Republican heavyweights John McCain and Mitt Romney, who have endorsed her, Harris said.
 
"We really are building a coalition around some very fundamental issues, including that we love our country and that we have to put country before party," she said.
 
 'Don't tax the rich' 
 
Trump meanwhile maintained his aggressive posture, attacking Harris as a "very low intelligence person" on conservative influencer Ben Shapiro's podcast.
 
The 78-year-old Republican claimed she had been "missing in action" over the federal response to Hurricane Helene, even though Harris visited the disaster zone last week.
 
Trump, who was on a blitz of several media organizations, then criticized Harris in an interview on right-wing network Newsmax over her plans to pay for her agenda, telling viewers: "You don't tax the rich... the rich pay most of the tax in the country." 
 
And, in a more personal moment, he told Los Angeles radio station KFI AM 640 he sees campaign interviews as therapeutic.
 
"You know what this is for me? Therapy, okay? I'm speaking to a smart man. This is like, some people go to a psychiatrist. I don't have time so this is, like, my therapy," he told host John Kobylt.
 
Both candidates were due to appear on the influential CBS show "60 Minutes" this week and while Harris fulfilled her commitment, Trump backed out, offering shifting explanations for his about-face.
 
He was mocked by Democrats and responded with a campaign statement demanding the transcript of the Harris interview be released, claiming that it had been "deceptively edited."
 

Russia denies talks on Azerbaijan gas transit via Ukraine

By - Oct 09,2024 - Last updated at Oct 09,2024

MOSCOW — Azerbaijani gas cannot be piped to Europe via Ukraine when a key transit deal between Moscow and Kyiv expires this year, Russia's top energy official said Wednesday, denying the idea was under discussion.
 
Moscow has supplied gas to Europe via Ukrainian pipeline infrastructure under a 2019 deal that has generated income for both sides, but Kyiv says it will not renew the agreement when it expires at the end of 2024.
 
Asked whether Azerbaijani gas could replace Russian gas once the deal ends, Russian Deputy Prime Minister in charge of energy, Alexander Novak, said this was "not under discussion".
 
"Firstly, there are no such proposals, and secondly, I do not think that the gas transport infrastructure is set up for this," he was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.
 
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in July said using gas from Azerbaijan was one of the proposals being discussed, without giving details.
 
Ukraine does not share a border with Azerbaijan, which would imply that Azerbaijani gas would still have to be transported by pipeline via Russia.
 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said in late July that the EU and Kyiv had approached him to help discussions with Moscow to reach an agreement.
 
Europe has drastically cut its gas imports from Russia since Moscow launched its offensive in Ukraine in 2022, with EU leaders looking to Baku as a key energy partner.
 
Most transit routes for Moscow to export gas to Europe have been shut off or rendered unusable since the conflict began, including the now defunct Nord Stream pipelines that were blown up in September 2022.
 
But Russia has still been able to supply gas to Europe via a single entry point in the border town of Sudzha, which was seized by Kyiv in a counteroffensive.
 

Category 5 Hurricane Milton roars towards storm-battered Florida

By - Oct 08,2024 - Last updated at Oct 08,2024

TREASURE ISLAND, UNITED STATES — Hurricane Milton exploded in strength on Monday to become a potentially catastrophic Category 5 storm bound for Florida, threatening the US state with a second ferocious hurricane in as many weeks.

The back-to-back hurricanes have whipped up a US election storm, with Vice President Kamala Harris slamming her White House rival Donald Trump and Florida's Republican governor Ron DeSantis for "political gamesmanship" and for spreading misinformation about the federal response.

Milton, which is forecast to batter Mexico's Yucatan peninsula as it churns eastward, rapidly intensified to the highest category on a scale of five, triggering evacuation orders and warnings of savage conditions on Florida's west coast.

The National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said the storm's maximum sustained winds were near 180 miles per hour, and that air pressure at the centre of the storm was at a "near record low".

Communities hit by Hurricane Helene, which slammed Florida late last month, raced to remove debris that could become dangerous projectiles as Milton barrels in.

"Last time, people's cars were underwater... but the bigger issue this time is going to be the wind," said David Levitsky, a retired homeowner on Treasure Island, in Pinellas County.

Residents on the low-lying island have been piling up debris from Helene's flooding in their front yards for removal.

"All this stuff is just wind fodder that's going to just be blowing down the street and hitting who knows what," the 69 year old told AFP.

Amid the wreckage, DeSantis, a conservative known to clash with the federal government, found himself under fire after broadcaster NBC reported he was ignoring phone calls from Harris on the Helene recovery.

DeSantis did speak to President Joe Biden about the preparations, the White House said late Monday. 

Harris slammed the Republican governor for "playing political games".

"It is about political gamesmanship, instead of doing the job you took an oath to do, which is to put the people first," she told reporters, while also criticising Trump as "extraordinarily irresponsible." 

The former president has tapped into real frustration about the federal response after Helene and fuelled it with disinformation, falsely claiming federal disaster money had been misappropriated and spent instead on migrants.

Worst hit in 100 years

 

As Milton barreled toward Florida, state authorities have issued mandatory evacuations orders for areas including some parts of Tampa, a metropolitan area of more than 3 million people that could take a direct hit.

"If the storm stays on the current track, it will be the worst storm to impact the Tampa area in over 100 years," the National Weather Service said.

A major storm surge for Florida's west coast is forecast for Tuesday night or early Wednesday, and Tampa could suffer an influx of water between eight and 12 feet above ground level.

Rainfall is expected to cause severe flash flooding.

In the central city of Orlando, under gray skies, hundreds of cars lined up to collect sandbags.

"We might evacuate, me and my pets, we might go to Georgia," Tony Carlson, 32, told AFP. "People think it's going to be pretty bad."

Maria Torres, 29, said her family was not planning to leave, but had prepared with a generator, food and water.

In Mexico's Yucatan, workers boarded up glass doors and windows, fishermen hauled boats ashore and schools were suspended.

In the south-eastern United States, emergency workers are still struggling to provide relief in the aftermath of Helene, which killed at least 230 people across several states.

Helene hit the Florida coastline on September 26 as a Category 4 hurricane, dumping rain and causing massive flooding in remote inland towns in states further north, including North Carolina and Tennessee.

Deanne Criswell, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, also dismissed the claims about money being diverted to migrants as false and slammed the misinformation as "dangerous”.

She warned on Monday that "these storms are bringing more water than they ever have and so while we have the wind risk, the water is what's killing people”.

Researchers say climate change likely plays a role in the rapid intensification of hurricanes, because there is more energy in warmer oceans for them to feed on.

Helene was the deadliest natural disaster to hit the US mainland since 2005's Hurricane Katrina, with the death toll still rising.

Russia says captured two more eastern Ukraine villages

By - Oct 08,2024 - Last updated at Oct 08,2024

MOSCOW — Russian forces have captured two more villages in eastern Ukraine, the defence ministry said on Tuesday, as Moscow's troops continue their steady advance in the region.
 
Russian units "liberated" the villages of Zoryane and Zolota Nyva in the Donetsk region, the ministry said in a statement.
 
The villages are located south of Russia's main push towards the city of Pokrovsk, a logistics hub for the Ukrainian army.
 
Russia said that taking the villages continued its progress deeper into Ukraine's defences and improved its tactical position.
 
A Russian attack on Tuesday on a suburb of the southern city of Kherson on the bank of the Dnipro River killed one and wounded five, regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin wrote on social media.
 
A missile attack on an industrial area of the northeastern city of Kharkiv hit a "civilian enterprise", wounding 21, including a teenager, and causing a major fire, the city's mayor Igor Terekhov said.
 

Biden, Harris mark Oct. 7 with call for Mideast peace

By - Oct 07,2024 - Last updated at Oct 07,2024

A demonstrator holds a sign with the portraits of US President Joe Biden that reads in spanish 'Murderer' during a pro-Palestinian rally to mark the first anniversary of the Israeli war on Gaza in Mexico City on October 5, 2024 (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — A somber US President Joe Biden lit a candle Monday at a Jewish ceremony of mourning to mark a year since October 7 attacks, as he and Kamala Harris stepped up what have so far been futile calls for Mideast peace.

Biden condemned the October 7 attacks but also criticized the civilian death toll in Gaza, underscoring the tightrope that he and Democratic presidential hopeful Harris are treading on a conflict that could impact next month's US election.

In a short ceremony at the White House, the 81-year-old president and First Lady Jill Biden stood in silence as a rabbi chanted a prayer for the dead, before Biden lit a single candle in memory of those killed.

"Far too many civilians have suffered far too much during this year of conflict," Biden said in a statement.

Biden lashed out at the "unspeakable brutality" of the October 7 attacks and said he and Harris were "fully committed" to Israel's security against Iran and its regional allies -- Hamas in Gaza, Hizbollah in Lebanon and the Huthis in Yemen.

But he also described October 7 as a "dark day for the Palestinian people" and said he and Harris "will not stop working to achieve a ceasefire deal in Gaza."

Harris said she was "devastated by the loss and pain of the Israeli people" but added that she was "heartbroken over the scale of death and destruction in Gaza over the past year."

Both Biden and Harris said in their separate statements that a "diplomatic solution" as Israel pounds Lebanon to tackle the Hizbollah militia was the "only path" to a wider peace.

 

Harris, with her husband Doug Emhoff, will separately plant a memorial tree at the vice president's residence in Washington, then deliver remarks at 4:00 pm (2000 GMT).

Republican Donald Trump, Harris's rival in a tooth-and-nail election, was due to mark the anniversary at an event in New York.

His campaign blasted Biden and Harris over their handling of the Middle East, saying in a statement: "It's imperative that President Trump is re-elected so he can end the bloodshed."

Gaza protests 

Trump was also to speak later in Miami to mark the anniversary of the surprise attacks by Hamas, in which 1,206 people were killed, most of them civilians, and 251 taken hostage.

More than 41,909 Palestinians, a majority of them civilians, have been killed in Israel's military campaign in the Gaza Strip since the war began, according to data provided by the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza. The United Nations has acknowledged these figures as reliable.

Protests against Israel's war in Gaza were expected in New York and several US cities. A man set his arm on fire Saturday at a protest outside the White House.

The Gaza war has caused political difficulties for Harris and Biden, with Arab and Muslim voters in key swing states and left-wing Democrats strongly opposed to the conflict.

The anniversary also underlines Biden and Harris's apparent powerlessness to influence Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanayhu's conduct as the Middle East threatens to slide into full-scale war.

Israel is expected to retaliate imminently for a mass ballistic missile strike by Iran last week.

Biden has urged Israel not to attack Iran's oil facilities, fearing it could push up oil prices, in turn hitting the US economy and harming Harris's election chances.

Over the last year however Netanyahu has repeatedly ignored Biden's calls for restraint.

Senior Democrats have questioned whether Netanyahu is trying to influence the election in favor of fellow right-winger Trump by holding off from any peace deal before the November 5 vote.

Biden said last week that "whether he's [Netanyahu's] trying to influence the election, I don't know" but chided Netanyahu, saying he "should remember" Washington's strong support for Israel.

Last week Trump said he believes Israel should strike Iran's nuclear facilities, after Biden advised against such an attack.

Ukraine says hit Crimea oil terminal, Russia claims gains

By - Oct 07,2024 - Last updated at Oct 07,2024

Ukrainian firefighters try to extinguish a fire in a house following an air attack in Kostyantynivka in the eastern Donetsk region (AFP photo)

KYIV — Kyiv said Monday its forces had struck a large oil terminal overnight on the occupied Crimean peninsula as Moscow claimed the capture of another village in east Ukraine.
 
Kyiv has ramped up strikes targeting Russia's energy sector in recent months aiming to dent revenues used by Moscow to fund its invasion, now grinding through its third year.
 
"At night, a successful strike was carried out on the enemy's offshore oil terminal in temporarily occupied Feodosia, Crimea," the Ukrainian military said in a post on social media.
 
Russian-installed authorities in Crimea said a fire had broken out at an oil facility in the Black Sea port town of some 70,000 people and that there were no casualties.
 
The defence ministry said that 12 Ukrainian attack drones had been downed over the peninsula overnight, out of a total of 21 deployed by Kyiv against Russian targets.
 
"The Feodosia terminal is the largest in Crimea in terms of transshipment of oil products, which were used, among other things, to meet the needs of the Russian occupation army," the Ukrainian military said, vowing to continue such attacks.
 
Ukraine insists the strikes are fair retaliation for Russian attacks on its own energy infrastructure that have plunged millions into darkness.
 
Russia's defence ministry meanwhile claimed the capture of a village in eastern Ukraine close to the strategically important city of Pokrovsk.
 
 Missiles target Kyiv 
 
The defence ministry in a briefing said it captured the village of Grodivka, a settlement in the Donetsk region near Pokrovsk, as Russian troops close in on the key logistics hub.
 
The settlement with an estimated pre-war population of around 2,000 is the latest in a series of towns in the Donetsk region to have fallen to Russian forces, as they push towards Pokrovsk.
 
Last week, Ukraine's army said that it had withdrawn from the mining town of Vugledar also in the Donetsk region, handing Russia one of its most significant territorial advances in weeks.
 
In a wave of separate attacks Monday, Ukrainian authorities said three civilians had been killed in overnight Russian attacks ,  two brothers aged 35 and 38 in the eastern region of Sumy and a 61 year old woman in the southern Kherson region.
 
The governor of Kherson later said a Russian strike on the town had wounded 19 people and damaged an educational facility and various residential buildings were damaged.
 
And in the Zaporizhzhia region, which Russia claimed to have annexed alongside three other Ukrainian regions in 2022, three people were wounded after Russian attacks on infrastructure facilities, local authorities said.
 
Russian forces also launched several missiles and dozens of drones overnight at Ukraine, the air force in Kyiv said, with two missiles shot down over the capital and the third exploding near an airfield in the central Khmelnytsky region.
 
Authorities in Kyiv said debris from the downed missiles had landed near a kindergarten.
 
Russian media company VGTRK, which operates the country's main state-run television channels, said earlier Monday it had been targeted in a "unprecedented" hacker attack, claimed by Kyiv.
 
"Despite attempts to interrupt broadcasting of federal TV channels and radio stations of the holding, everything is working in normal mode, there is no significant threat," state media reported.
 

Pope creates 21 new cardinals from around the world

By - Oct 06,2024 - Last updated at Oct 06,2024

Francis has looked past Europe to name more cardinals from Africa, Asia and the Americas (AFP photo)

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Sunday announced the creation of 21 new cardinals to represent the Catholic faith's worldwide reach, who will be nominated at a council held on December 8.

Five of the new cardinals come from the Argentine Pontiff's native Latin America while countries including Indonesia, Japan, Serbia, the Philippines and India will also be represented, according to a list published by the Vatican.

 "I am pleased to announce to you that on December 8 I will hold a consistory for the nomination of new cardinals," the pope declared as he delivered his Angelus prayer on St Peter's Square.

 "Their provenance expresses the universality of the Church and manifests the indissoluble bond between the seat of St Peter and the wider Churches of the world," the 87 year old added.

Italy will nonetheless take the lion's share with four new cardinals, although only three will be able to vote in elections for Francis's successor as the fourth has already passed the age limit for papal ballot eligibility.

At 44 years of age, Mykola Bychok, the Ukrainian current archbishop of Melbourne in Australia, is the youngest to be tapped for the high clerical mantle.

 

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