Charges dropped against 9 Egyptians in migrant shipwreck case

Update Charges dropped against 9 Egyptians in migrant shipwreck case
Police guard outside a court house in Kalamata, southwestern Greece, on Tuesday, May 21, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 21 May 2024
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Charges dropped against 9 Egyptians in migrant shipwreck case

Charges dropped against 9 Egyptians in migrant shipwreck case
  • International human rights groups argue the defendants’ right to a fair trial is being compromised as they face judgment before an investigation is concluded

KALAMATA, Greece: Greek prosecutors recommended dismissing charges against nine Egyptian men accused of causing a shipwreck that killed hundreds of migrants last year and sent shockwaves through the European Union’s border protection and asylum operations, as their trial was opening on Tuesday.

Speaking at the opening of a trial against the nine in the southern Greek city of Kalamata, public prosecutor Ekaterini Tsironi said that Greek jurisdiction cannot be established as the overcrowded trawler sank outside Greek territorial waters.

The defendants, most in their 20s, face up to life in prison if convicted on multiple criminal charges over the sinking of the “Adriana” fishing trawler on June 14 last year off the southern coast of Greece.

More than 500 people are believed to have gone down with the fishing trawler, which had been traveling from Libya to Italy. Following the sinking, 104 people were rescued — mostly migrants from Syria, Pakistan and Egypt — and 82 bodies were recovered.

International human rights groups argue that their right to a fair trial is being compromised as they face judgment before an investigation is concluded into claims that the Greek coast guard may have botched the rescue attempt.

Defense lawyer Spyros Pantazis asked the court to declare itself incompetent to try the case, arguing that the sinking occurred outside Greek territorial waters. “The court should not be turned into an international punisher,” Pantazis told the panel of three judges.

Kontaratou questioned all nine defendants through an interpreter. The accused said their intention was to travel to Italy, not Greece, and several declared their innocence.

Kontaratou acknowledged that there “were no Greeks on board, it was not under a Greek flag and all the documents refer to the (vessel being) 47 nautical miles away.”

It wasn’t immediately clear if the judge’s remarks indicated she would dismiss the case.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres last year described the shipwreck as “horrific.”

The sinking renewed pressure on European governments to protect the lives of migrants and asylum seekers trying to reach the continent, as the number of people traveling illegally across the Mediterranean continues to rise every year.

Lawyers from Greek human rights groups are representing the nine Egyptians, who deny the smuggling charges.

“There’s a real risk that these nine survivors could be found ‘guilty’ on the basis of incomplete and questionable evidence, given that the official investigation into the role of the coast guard has not yet been completed,” said Judith Sunderland, an associate director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch.

Authorities say the defendants were identified by other survivors and the indictments are based on their testimonies.

The European border protection agency Frontex says illegal border detections at EU frontiers increased for three consecutive years through 2023, reaching the highest level since the 2015-2016 migration crisis — driven largely by arrivals at the sea borders.


Far-right group blamed for stoking violence in English town

Far-right group blamed for stoking violence in English town
Updated 18 sec ago
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Far-right group blamed for stoking violence in English town

Far-right group blamed for stoking violence in English town
LONDON: UK police blamed supporters of the far-right English Defense League (EDL) for violent protests in a British town where a mass stabbing had left three children dead.
AFP takes a look at the Islamophobic organization following Tuesday’s disturbances in Southport, northwest England, that injured 39 police officers.
The fringe group demonstrates against what it sees as the perceived threat from Islamic extremism, but also targets Muslims and migrants more widely.
The group often holds counter-demonstrations to protests organized by left-wing activists and has frequently clashed with anti-fascist protesters.
The EDL was founded 15 years ago in the London suburban town of Luton. Its membership is overwhelmingly white and its supporters have been linked to football hooliganism.
Former activist Paul Ray was cited by Norwegian extremist Anders Behring Breivik as his “mentor.” Breivik massacred 77 people in Norway in 2011.
The EDL became most prominent between 2009 and 2013 when it was led by far-right co-founder Tommy Robinson.
Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley Lennon, has a string of criminal convictions on charges including assault, fraud and drugs possession.
He quit as EDL leader in October 2013, claiming he could no longer keep the group’s “extremist elements” at bay. While the EDL has since declined Robinson, 41, has maintained a high profile.
He was sentenced to 13 months in jail in 2018 for contempt of court in a case that saw ex-US president Donald Trump’s former top adviser Steve Bannon take up Robinson’s cause.
Robinson left Britain this week — ahead of a legal case against him — after organizing a far-right protest in London at the weekend in which nine people were arrested.
Despite EDL’s decline, it has shown a capacity to remobilize.
In March, seven men were jailed following violence outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Knowsley, northwest England, after a protest believed to have been organized by the EDL.
Former prime minister Rishi Sunak accused the EDL “and associated groups” of being behind clashes with police in November on the sidelines of protests over Israel’s war in Gaza.
Demonstrators set cars on fire, threw bricks at a mosque, damaged a local shop and set rubbish bins alight following a vigil for three girls killed at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on Monday.
Police commissioner, Emily Spurrell, told ITV television that there was a “strong feeling” that EDL members went to the town to “whip up hatred.”
A 17-year-old has been arrested over Monday’s stabbing that also left five children and two adults critically injured. Police have not released the suspect’s identity.
The Muslim Council of Britain said an Islamophobic backlash began with a false rumor about the attacker’s identity on the Internet which was stoked by misinformation from a Russian news site, which wrongfully associated the crime with Muslims.

Rescuers in India’s Kerala search for survivors, bodies after landslides kill 166

Rescuers in India’s Kerala search for survivors, bodies after landslides kill 166
Updated 31 July 2024
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Rescuers in India’s Kerala search for survivors, bodies after landslides kill 166

Rescuers in India’s Kerala search for survivors, bodies after landslides kill 166
  • Heavy rain in Kerala led to landslides that buried people while they were sleeping
  • Nearly 350 of the 400 registered houses in the affected region have been damaged

CHOORALMALA, India: Soldiers and rescuers worked through slush and rocks under steady rain, looking for survivors and searching for bodies in the hills of India’s Kerala state on Wednesday, a day after more than 165 people were killed in monsoon landslides.
Nearly 1,000 people had been rescued from the hillside villages and tea and cardamom estates in Wayanad district and 225 were still missing, authorities said on Wednesday.
They said at least 166 people died and 195 were injured, while the local Asianet news TV channel put the death toll at 179.
Heavy rain in Kerala, one of India’s most attractive tourist destinations, led to the landslides early on Tuesday, sending torrents of mud, water and tumbling boulders downhill and burying or sweeping people away to their deaths as they slept.
It was the worst disaster in the state since deadly floods in 2018. Experts said the area had been receiving heavy rain in the last two weeks which had softened the soil and that extremely heavy rainfall on Monday triggered the landslides.
The Indian Army said it rescued 1,000 people and has begun the process to construct an alternate bridge after the main bridge linking the worst affected area of Mundakkai to the nearest town of Chooralmala was destroyed.
Near the site where the bridge was washed away, a land excavator was slowing removing trees and boulders from a mound of debris. Rescue workers in raincoats were making their way carefully through slush and rocks, under steady rain.
“We are quite sure there are multiple bodies here,” said Hamsa T A, a fire and rescue worker, pointing to the debris. “There were many houses here, people living inside have been missing.”
The landslides were mostly on the upper slopes of hills which then cascaded to the valley below, M R Ajith Kumar, a top state police officer, told Reuters.
“Focus right now is to search the entire uphill area for stranded people and recover as many bodies (as possible),” he said.
WARMING ARABIAN SEA
Nearly 350 of the 400 registered houses in the affected region have been damaged, Asianet reported, citing district officials.
After a day of extremely heavy rainfall that hampered rescue operations, the weather department expects some respite on Wednesday, although the area is likely to receive rain through the day.
The Indian Navy said its disaster relief team had reached the area on Tuesday night and search and rescue helicopters were deployed early on Wednesday but “adverse weather conditions due to incessant rains” posed challenges.
India has witnessed extreme weather conditions in recent years, from torrential rain and floods to droughts and cyclones, blamed by some experts on climate change.
The region hit by the landslide was forecast to get 204 millimeters (8 inches) of rainfall but ended up getting 572 millimeters (22.5 inches) over a period of 48 hours, Kerala’s chief minister said on Tuesday.
“The Arabian Sea is warming at a higher rate compared to other regions and sending more evaporation into the atmosphere, making the region a hotspot for deep convective clouds,” said S Abhilash, head of the Advanced Center for Atmospheric Radar Research at Kerala’s Cochin University of Science and Technology.
“Deep developed clouds in the southeast Arabian Sea region were carried by winds toward land and produced this havoc,” he told Reuters.


India landslide toll hits 150 as rain hampers rescue work

India landslide toll hits 150 as rain hampers rescue work
Updated 31 July 2024
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India landslide toll hits 150 as rain hampers rescue work

India landslide toll hits 150 as rain hampers rescue work
  • Days of torrential monsoon rains have battered the southern coastal state of Kerala, with blocked roads into the Wayanad district disaster area complicating relief efforts

Wayanad: Relentless downpours and howling winds hampered Wednesday’s search for survivors of landslides that struck Indian tea plantations and killed at least 150 people, most believed to be laborers and their families.
Days of torrential monsoon rains have battered the southern coastal state of Kerala, with blocked roads into the Wayanad district disaster area complicating relief efforts.
With the only bridge connecting the worst-hit villages of Chooralmala and Mundakkai washed away, rescue teams were forced to cart bodies on stretchers out of the disaster zone using a makeshift zipline erected over raging flood waters.
Several who managed to flee the initial impact of the landslides found themselves caught in a nearby river that had burst its banks, volunteer rescuer Arun Dev told AFP at a hospital treating survivors.
“Those who escaped were swept away along with houses, temples and schools,” he said.
Senior police officer M.R. Ajith Kumar told AFP that around 500 people had been rescued since successive landslides struck before dawn on Tuesday.
“So far we have got more than 150 bodies,” he said.
“Still large areas are to be explored and searched to find out whether live people are there or not.”
Wayanad is famed for the tea estates that crisscross its hilly countryside, which rely on a large pool of laborers for planting and harvest.
A number of brick-walled row homes built to accommodate seasonal workers were inundated by a powerful wall of brown sludge as laborers and their families slept inside.
Other buildings were caked with mud as the force of the landslide scattered cars, corrugated iron and other debris around the disaster site.
“Catastrophic debris flows are extremely violent, so survival is very difficult,” Hull University earth scientist Dave Petley told AFP.
“This will have been exacerbated by the timing — in the early hours when people were asleep — and by flimsy structures that offered little protection.”
More than 3,000 people were sheltering in emergency relief camps around Wayanad district, the state government said.
At least 572 millimeters (22.5 inches) of rain fell in the two days leading up to the landslides, according to state chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan.
Kerala’s disaster agency said more rain and strong winds were forecast for Thursday with the likelihood of “damage to unsafe structures” elsewhere in the state.
Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, who until recently represented Wayanad in parliament, said he had been unable to go through with a planned visit to the disaster.
“Due to incessant rains and adverse weather conditions we have been informed by authorities that we will not be able to land,” he said in a post on social media platform X.
“Our thoughts are with the people of Wayanad at this difficult time,” he added.
Monsoon rains across the region from June to September offer respite from the summer heat and are crucial to replenishing water supplies.
They are vital for agriculture — and therefore the livelihoods of millions of farmers, and food security for South Asia’s nearly two billion people — but they also bring regular destruction.
The number of fatal floods and landslides has increased in recent years, and experts say climate change is exacerbating the problem.
“Events like landslides, they are part of these climate-change-triggered heavy rainfall disasters,” Kartiki Negi of the Indian environment think tank Climate Trends told AFP.
“India will continue to see more and more of these kinds of impacts in the future,” she added.
Damming, deforestation and development projects in India have also exacerbated the human toll.
India’s worst landslide in recent decades was in 1998, when rockfalls triggered by heavy monsoon rains killed at least 220 people and buried the tiny village of Malpa in the Himalayas.


Man shot and killed in ambush outside Philadelphia mosque, police say

Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage. (AFP file photo)
Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage. (AFP file photo)
Updated 31 July 2024
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Man shot and killed in ambush outside Philadelphia mosque, police say

Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage. (AFP file photo)
  • No suspect has been arrested and a motive wasn’t known

PHILADELPHIA: A man was ambushed, shot and killed while outside a North Philadelphia mosque Tuesday afternoon, police said.
Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small said at a media briefing that surveillance footage shows the victim, a 43-year-old man, walking with another male to the Al-Aqsa Islamic Society when the shooter runs up behind them and starts firing shots at the victim, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
Small said the shooter kept firing at the victim even after he was on the ground. The shooter then fled the parking lot in a vehicle.
“Clearly an execution-type homicide,” Small said.
Small said responding officers found the unresponsive victim lying in the parking lot with gunshot wounds to his head, chest and torso. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.
No suspect has been arrested and a motive wasn’t known. The person with the victim was not hurt, Small said. The victim’s name hasn’t been released.
Seventeen spent shell casings were found in the parking lot from a large-caliber semiautomatic weapon, Small said.
Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage.

 


Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed

Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed
Updated 31 July 2024
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Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed

Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed

Ohio Sen. JD Vance, Donald Trump’s running mate, praised the vision of Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts in the foreword of a forthcoming book that could conflict with the Trump campaign’s effort to distance itself from Heritage’s Project 2025 transition effort.
The Associated Press obtained a copy of the foreword to Roberts’ forthcoming book “Dawn’s Early Light” on Tuesday, the same day of a shakeup at Project 2025, which has become an important election-year issue as Democrats and others argue that the nearly 1,000-page vision it set out is extreme.
“Never before has a figure with Roberts’s depth and stature within the American Right tried to articulate a genuinely new future for conservatism,” Vance writes in his foreword. “The Heritage Foundation isn’t some random outpost on Capitol Hill; it is and has been the most influential engine of ideas for Republicans from Ronald Reagan to Donald Trump.”
Vance’s words, which echo Roberts’ frequent calls to tear down US institutions entirely to start anew, show the overlap between Trump’s closest allies and the people fueling Project 2025.
Still, Vance spokesman William Martin distanced Vance and the Trump campaign from Project 2025 in a statement on Tuesday.
“The foreword has nothing to do with Project 2025. Senator Vance has previously said that he has no involvement with it and has plenty of disagreements with what they’re calling for,” Martin wrote in an email. “Only President Trump will set the policy agenda for the next administration.”
Trump’s top aides have repeatedly criticized organizers of Project 2025 for what they say is a false impression that the transition effort is associated with the campaign. After Tuesday’s shakeup at Heritage, Roberts is now leading Project 2025 operations directly.
The book, scheduled to be published on Sept. 24, outlines a vision for what its publisher calls ” a peaceful ‘Second American Revolution’.” Its subtitle is “Taking Back Washington to Save America,” though earlier descriptions of the book listed it as ” Burning Down Washington to Save America.”
The publisher’s description says it identifies institutions that conservatives need to build or to take back, adding that some are “too corrupt to save.” Among those it lists are Ivy League colleges, the FBI, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the Department of Education and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Also, on Tuesday, Paul Dans, who had directed Project 2025, left the Heritage Foundation amid continued criticism of the plan. Roberts said his departure came after the project completed what it set out to do.
In his foreword, Vance calls for something more than removing bad policies of the past, but instead to “rebuild.”
“We need an offensive conservatism, not merely one that tries to prevent the left from doing things we don’t like,” Vance writes.
As Vance wraps up, he quotes Roberts as saying that when twilight descends and a person hears wolves, “You’ve got to circle the wagons and load the muskets.”
“We are now all realizing that it’s time to circle the wagons and load the muskets,” Vance adds. “In the fights that lay ahead, these ideas are an essential weapon.”
DNC spokesman Alex Floyd said in a statement that Vance’s language “echoes the same dangerous rhetoric we’ve heard from him and Donald Trump for years.”
Vance also writes about things he and Roberts have in common, including difficult upbringings, influential grandparents, and the Catholic faith. He also writes about parenthood, which has been a contentious issue for him recently after an interview resurfaced where he said Democrats running the country are “childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable, too.”
In the book, he praises the idea that we should “encourage our kids to get married and have kids,” and teach them that marriage is a sacred union, ideas that he says come from “the old American Right that recognized — correctly, in my view — that cultural norms and attitudes matter.”