Biden calls criticism of Trump jury verdict ‘dangerous, irresponsible’

Biden calls criticism of Trump jury verdict ‘dangerous, irresponsible’
A US flag flies upside down outside a home in East Bangor, Pennsylvania on May 31, 2024, as part of a protest by Trump supporters against the guilty verdict slapped on the former president. (REUTERS)
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Updated 01 June 2024
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Biden calls criticism of Trump jury verdict ‘dangerous, irresponsible’

Biden calls criticism of Trump jury verdict ‘dangerous, irresponsible’
  • “It’s reckless, it’s dangerous, it’s irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged just because they don’t like the verdict,” Biden said
  • He added that Donald Trump was given every opportunity to defend himself

WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden said on Friday that it was dangerous for people to question the integrity of the guilty verdict in Donald Trump’s hush money jury trial.

In his first public comments since a New York jury on Thursday found Trump guilty on 34 counts over a payment to silence a porn star ahead of the 2016 election, Biden, a Democrat, struck out hard at Trump and other Republicans who have criticized the verdict.
“Donald Trump was given every opportunity to defend himself.” Biden said in remarks at the White House. He noted that the case against Trump in New York was brought by the state, that it was not a federal case, and that the verdict was delivered by “a jury of 12 citizens, 12 Americans, 12 people like you.”
The US justice system has endured for nearly 250 years, Biden said, and he criticized Trump and his supporters for attempting to tear it down with false allegations.
“It’s reckless, it’s dangerous, it’s irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged just because they don’t like the verdict,” Biden said.
In rambling remarks earlier on Friday at the Trump Tower lobby in Manhattan, Trump repeated his complaints that the trial was an attempt to hobble his White House comeback bid and said it showed that no American was safe from politically motivated prosecution.
“If they can do this to me, they can do this to anyone,” Trump said in an unscripted 33-minute speech.
Thursday’s guilty verdict catapults the United States into unexplored territory ahead of the Nov. 5 vote, when Trump, 77, will try to win back the White House from Biden, 81.
Later on Friday, Biden was asked by a reporter if he was worried that he could find himself in the same situation some day. “Not at all. I didn’t do anything wrong. The system still works,” he said.
Biden said he had “no idea” whether the conviction would help Trump in the 2024 election, when the two face a rematch. (Reporting By Steve Holland and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Heather Timmons, Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)


Wolfsburg cruise into Women’s Champions League group stage

Wolfsburg cruise into Women’s Champions League group stage
Updated 2 min 6 sec ago
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Wolfsburg cruise into Women’s Champions League group stage

Wolfsburg cruise into Women’s Champions League group stage
  • The two-time champions strolled to a 5-0 win at home to the Serie A side, rubber-stamping the dominant 7-0 victory last week in Tuscany
  • An extra-time winner by Nazlican Parlak edged Galatasaray into the group stage following a 4-3 win on aggregate against Slavia Prague

PARIS: Wolfsburg completed a 12-0 aggregate rout of Fiorentina on Wednesday to book their spot in the group stage of the Women’s Champions League.

The two-time champions strolled to a 5-0 win at home to the Serie A side, rubber-stamping the dominant 7-0 victory they recorded last week in Tuscany.

Fenna Kalma opened the scoring on Wednesday in the third minute, before Vivien Endemann scored a brace either side of halftime.

Jule Brand made it four on 77 minutes and Tabea Sellner rounded off the rout with one minute remaining. Fiorentina’s Lucia Pastrenge then collected her second booking to cap a chastening two-legged tie for the Italians as they finished with 10.

“I’m extremely proud of the performance again today,” said Wolfsburg coach Tommy Stroot.

“Going out with a 7-0 win last week and a 5-0 win this week makes a coach very happy.”

An extra-time winner by Nazlican Parlak edged Galatasaray into the group stage following a 4-3 win on aggregate against Slavia Prague.

The 100th-minute strike ensured a 2-1 away win on the night for the Turkish side, after the match finished 1-1 in normal time.

There was late drama in Portugal as well as Cathinka Tandberg’s goal in the 95th minute gave Swedes Hammarby a 2-0 win at Benfica to progress 3-2 on aggregate.

Norwegian team Valerenga beat Belgians Anderlecht 3-0 at home to complete a 5-1 aggregate win.

On Thursday, Arsenal will look to overcome their 1-0 aggregate deficit at home against Sweden’s Hacken, while Manchester City seem set to qualify for the group stage after winning 5-0 at Paris FC last week.

Real Madrid will welcome Sporting Lisbon to the Spanish capital, leading 2-1 thanks to Melanie Leupolz’s last-gasp winner in the first leg.

And last year’s semifinalists Paris Saint-Germain will need to come back from 3-1 down to keep their hopes alive when they host Juventus.

Barcelona, Lyon, Bayern Munich and Chelsea have all automatically qualified for the group stage of the Women’s Champions League.

The draw will take place in Nyon, Switzerland on Sept. 27.


IMF executive board approves $7 billion loan program for Pakistan

IMF executive board approves  $7 billion loan program for Pakistan
Updated 45 sec ago
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IMF executive board approves $7 billion loan program for Pakistan

IMF executive board approves  $7 billion loan program for Pakistan
  • Pakistani PM welcomes deal, thanks Saudi Arabia, UAE, China for continued support to get loan package
  • Economists say the program will strengthen macroeconomic stability, help in talks with other financial agencies

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif welcomed the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) decision to approve a $7 billion loan program for the country, his office said on Wednesday.
The IMF has approved the bailout package for Pakistan after the South Asian nation agreed to strengthen fiscal and monetary policy and implement reforms to broaden the tax base, secure a level playing field for investment and enhance human capital.
In July, the Fund reached a staff-level agreement on economic policies with Pakistan for 37-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF) of about $7 billion. The IMF executive board has now approved the 25th loan program that Pakistan has obtained since 1958.
 “We will continue to struggle to achieve economic progress targets,” the prime minister said while expressing satisfaction over approval of the IMF loan package.
“If this hard work continues, this will be Pakistan’s last IMF program,” he continued while thanking the friendly countries including Saudi Arabia, China and the United Arab Emirates for their support to get the program.
Economists have termed the loan approval a positive development that would help boost investors’ confidence and make it possible for the government to tap international markets for the commercial borrowing.
Dr. Khaqan Hassan Najeeb, senior economist and former adviser to the government, said Pakistan’s engagement with the IMF could strengthen the nascent macroeconomic stability.
“It will ensure the $26 billion, Pakistan’s gross financing needs are fully met and can bring the other lenders, commercial banks, bilateral and multilateral partners on board,” he told Arab News.
“More importantly, it buys Pakistan time and breathing space to do the structural work that is necessary to put the economy on a path that it does not have to go to the doorsteps of the IMF for the 26th time,” he said.
Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive officer of Arif Habib Corporation, one of Pakistan’s leading business groups termed the IMF loan approval “a positive development,” saying this would help the country get the bilateral and multilateral support from different financial institutions including activation of $2 billion loan from the Asian Development Bank.
“This IMF loan program will help the stocks reach new heights with a boost to investor confidence and stabilize the rupee against the US dollar,” Mehanti told Arab News.
The IMF said in its statement the three-year loan program “will require sound policies and reforms” to support Pakistan’s ongoing efforts to strengthen its economy “and create conditions for a stronger, more inclusive, and resilient growth.”
It acknowledged Pakistan “has taken key steps to restoring economic stability with consistent reforms,” though it noted that the country’s vulnerabilities and structural challenges remained formidable.
“A difficult business environment, weak governance, and an outsized role of the state hinder investment, which remains very low compared to peers,” it added.
IMF Chief Kristalina Georgieva also held a brief meeting with the Pakistani prime minister on the sidelines of the 79th United Nations General Assembly Session.
“We do have good news,” she told the media following the meeting. “We have completed the review of the [loan] program successfully. I want to congratulate the government of Pakistan and the people of Pakistan for moving forward with the home-defined, Pakistan-owned reforms, and they are bringing fruits. Growth is up. Inflation is down. The economy is on a sound path.”
“The government aims to collect taxes from the rich and strengthening the Benazir social program to support the poor,” she added.
With input from AFP


Osaka cruises through opening round at China Open with new coach

Osaka cruises through opening round at China Open with new coach
Updated 13 min 36 sec ago
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Osaka cruises through opening round at China Open with new coach

Osaka cruises through opening round at China Open with new coach
  • The 26-year-old Osaka began training with Mouratoglou in the lead-up to the Asian swing of the women’s tour, after splitting with Wim Fissette
  • Former Australian Open winner Sofia Kenin progressed with a 7-5, 6-2 win over Ana Bogdan of Romania

BEIJING: Former top-ranked Naomi Osaka started the China Open with a routine 6-3, 6-2 victory over Lucia Bronzetti of Italy on Wednesday to mark her first match with new coach Patrick Mouratoglou in positive style.

The four-time Grand Slam champion was the headline act on the opening day and showed her class in closing out the first-round match against the 77th-ranked Italian player in 83 minutes.

Osaka, who claimed the 2019 China Open before COVID-19 and a WTA boycott of China over the wellbeing of Peng Shuai forced the cancelation of tournaments in China for four years, next plays Yulia Putintseva, a 21st-seeded player from Kazahkstan, in the second round.

The 26-year-old Osaka began training with Mouratoglou in the lead-up to the Asian swing of the women’s tour, after splitting with Wim Fissette following a disappointing second-round exit at the USOpen.

“I think I’m at a stage in my life that I don’t want to have regrets,” the Japanese star said Wednesday after her match. “I’d rather pull the trigger on something and — I don’t want to say ‘fail’ — but I feel like I really need to learn as much as possible in this stage of my career.”

“Patrick seemed like the guy with I guess the information that I wanted to learn from.”

After trading breaks in the first set, Osaka made the decisive break in the seventh game of the first set.

On the back of some big serving she increased the pressure in the second set, breaking Bronzetti twice more to seal victory.

Former Australian Open winner Sofia Kenin progressed with a 7-5, 6-2 win over Ana Bogdan of Romania.

The 25-year-old Kenin, one of a record 15 American women in the draw in Beijing, next plays 12th-seeded Diana Shnaider in the second round.

American Taylor Townsend will join Kenin in the second round after beating Martina Trevisan 6-2, 4-6, 6-3, as will Katie Volynets who had a 7-5, 6-1 win over Dalma Galfi.

Another American, McCartney Kessler, lost in a tight match to China’s Zhang Shuai 7-6 (5), 7-6 (1).

Also, China’s Wang Xinyu beat Mai Hontama of Japan 6-1, 6-3 and Yuliia Starodubtseva defeated Laura Siegemund 6-4, 7-6 (3).

US Open champion and top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka begins her tournament in the second round on Friday against the winner of the match between Zarina Diyas and Mananchaya Sawangkaew.

Top-ranked Iga Swiatek, a winner of four WTA 1000 events this season, is not playing this week citing personal reasons.

The men’s tournament begins Thursday and is headlined by top-ranked Jannik Sinner and No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz, who accounted for all four Grand Slam titles this season.

Second-ranked Alexander Zverev said earlier in the week he would not be playing in Beijing as he recovers from an illness.

Japan Open

Second-seeded Hubert Hurkacz needed three sets to eventually subdue Marcos Giron 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-4 in the opening round of the Japan Open.

It was the 40th win of the season for the eighth-ranked Hurkacz, with the Polish player extending his head-to-head-record against the American to 3-0.

Matteo Berrettini started his campaign in Tokyo with a straightforward 6-3, 6-4 win over Botic van de Zandschulp of the Netherlands.

The big-serving Italian fired seven aces and broke van de Zandschulp four times.

Former sixth-ranked Berrettini, now No. 45, could next play top-seeded Taylor Fritz in the second round. Fritz, who made his first Grand Slam final at the US Open this month, plays Frenchman Arthur Fils in his opening match on Thursday.

Mariano Navone of Argentina beat Italy’s Luciano Darderi 6-4, 6-4.


Pakistan PM urges Security Council to end Israel’s ‘genocidal war’ in Gaza, demands sanctions

Pakistan PM urges Security Council to end Israel’s ‘genocidal war’ in Gaza, demands sanctions
Updated 29 min 11 sec ago
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Pakistan PM urges Security Council to end Israel’s ‘genocidal war’ in Gaza, demands sanctions

Pakistan PM urges Security Council to end Israel’s ‘genocidal war’ in Gaza, demands sanctions
  • The prime minister says the world body can no longer ignore the ‘festering’ dispute in Kashmir
  • He also seeks measures against the ‘resurgence of the threat of terrorism from Afghanistan’

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif urged the United Nations Security Council to end Israel’s “genocidal war” against the people of Palestine and impose sanctions against it while participating in the “Leadership for Peace” debate on Wednesday.
Israel launched a military operation in Gaza following a surprise attack by Hamas on October 7, 2023, which the group said was in response to the worsening conditions faced by Palestinians under Israeli occupation.
Since then, the conflict has claimed over 43,000 lives, including a significant number of women and children, according to Palestinian health officials.
World bodies, including the International Court of Justice, have condemned Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories and criticized the conduct of the war, which has targeted hospitals and residential areas, leading to disproportionate civilian casualties.
“We must compel Israel to halt its genocidal war in Gaza and prevent its attempt to provoke a wider conflict in the Middle East,” the prime minister said in a brief statement. “It is time to consider sanctions against Israel, including an arms and trade embargo.”
“It is time to hold its leadership accountable for its crimes against the Palestinian people,” he added.

Pakistan Prime Minister Speaks during UN Security Council’s open debate on “Leadership for Peace” on the sidelines of 79th UNGA in New York on September 25, 2024. (Screengrab/UN)

The prime minister noted that proliferating wars in the Middle East and Europe along with great power rivalries and growing poverty were threating the foundations of world order.
He urged the Security Council to develop an impartial plan for a ceasefire and peaceful solution for the war in Ukraine and not allow its prolongation or escalation.
Sharif also discussed the situation in Indian-administered Kashmir, saying the UN could no longer ignore the “festering” dispute.
“It poses an ever present threat to international peace and security,” he maintained. “The Council must call for a halt to the massive violations of the fundamental rights of the Kashmiri people and implement its own resolutions that demand a plebiscite for self-determination in Kashmir.”
The prime minister expressed concern over the regional security situation, asking the world body to “effectively address the resurgence of the threat of terrorism from Afghanistan” while mentioning Daesh and Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.
He called for “zero tolerance” for the illegal use of force and revival of global efforts to halt and reverse the arms race in nuclear and conventional weapons, promising his country’s full cooperation with other member states to pursue these objectives.


For Karachi’s gravediggers, hard lives meet daily death at city’s over 250 cemeteries

For Karachi’s gravediggers, hard lives meet daily death at city’s over 250 cemeteries
Updated 26 September 2024
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For Karachi’s gravediggers, hard lives meet daily death at city’s over 250 cemeteries

For Karachi’s gravediggers, hard lives meet daily death at city’s over 250 cemeteries
  • Many gravediggers in the port city have been involved in the profession through generations but struggle to make ends meet
  • As space for graves runs out in the city of 20 million, locals complain of overcharging and bribery by officials and gravediggers

KARACHI: This year, it will be over four decades since Muhammad Jameel, 52, first began digging graves as a nine-year-old.
Earlier this month, Jameel used his rusty shovel to break the soil for a new grave, looking forward to the $5 he will take home to his family of eight from Karachi’s Yasinabad Graveyard, one of over 250 cemeteries in the southern port city. The cemetery is officially closed, having run out of space, but the funerals keep coming.
Indeed, hundreds of graveyards have filled to capacity and become prime real estate in the city of over 20 million people. Yet, people like Jameel, who have been involved in the profession of gravedigging through generations, struggle to make ends meet.
“I have been working here since I was 9 years old,” Jameel, a third-generation undertaker, told Arab News as he wiped sweat from his brow and began to dig. “I used to pour water [on the graves]. My maternal grandfather used to be here. With him I would dig graves.”
Today, Jameel’s responsibilities involve digging new graves, lowering the dead into the ground, and washing and repairing graves and tombstones for little reward in terms of both money and respect.
“If a funeral or body comes, we work on it as if it were a member of our own family, it feels as if someone in our home has died, we work like that,” the gravedigger said.
“But people don’t think much of us … Making ends meet is very difficult for us. The children also bring in some income from various sources and that’s how we manage to get by.”
Younus Khan Niazi, a 40-year-old second-generation gravedigger at Karachi’s Mewa Shah Graveyard, said there were days when he went home empty-handed.
“A laborer who goes to work in the morning earns a daily wage and brings some money home, but in our cemetery, there’s a chance to earn something only if a body arrives,” he said.
Despite the small pay-off, the nature of the work of death means gravediggers often have to stop all of their life’s activities in the lime of duty.
Jameel recalled one such instance when he missed the birth of his child: 
“The delivery was happening there [at hospital], I was digging a grave here.”
And while Jameel said his family was likely to quit the profession due to a lack of respect and money, Niazi, who has four sons, said he intended to pass on the tradition to his children.
“Just as I took over after my father, my son will take over after me. Skill is wealth, and this cemetery work, grave digging and laying blocks, is a skill.”
Niazi acknowledged that his line of work meant he often had to miss out on important family occasions but said he could not be ungrateful that other people’s grief was putting food on his table.
“When someone passes away, they will come to me to dig the grave,” Niazi said. “I will dig the grave and it will provide livelihood for my children.”
GRAVE BUSINESS
Of the over 250 graveyards in Karachi, only 38 are managed by the state Karachi Municipal Corporation (KMC), and of these, six have reached capacity and are officially closed, namely Yasinabad, Paposh Nagar, Society, Model Colony, Qur’angi and Mehmoodabad. 
And while many of the cemeteries like Yasinabad and Society no longer have space for new graves, locals and experts say this has created opportunities for both officials and gravediggers to make money by overcharging grieving families and asking for bribes. 
One mourner, Owais Ali, an electronics trader, said he had wanted to bury his mother in the Society graveyard near his house but was asked by the supervisor of the graveyard and on-duty gravediggers to pay over $300 for a spot, instead of the KMC fee of around $35. Ali managed to negotiate the amount down to Rs35,000 ($126) “by using a contact,” he said. 
Those who don’t have such contacts end up paying as much as Rs200,000 ($719) for “prime locations,” said Zahid Farooq, a joint director at the nonprofit Urban Resource Center.
“People are forced to bury their loved ones in existing graves due to a lack of space. They are also forced to buy graves at exorbitant prices,” Farooq said, calling the graveyard business a “mafia.”
But he commiserated with gravediggers who he said received little in return for their hard work while cemetery supervisors enjoyed a “good lifestyle.” He said everyone from police to municipal and district administration authorities shared in the profits. 
“They all together share in the expensive graves and the excessive costs,” Farooq added. 
KMC spokesperson Ali Hasan Sajid admitted that graves were regularly sold at rates higher than the KMC fee but blamed gravediggers and families of the deceased for the corruption. 
People often wanted burials in graveyards where their relatives were already buried, he said: “They strongly insist on being accommodated, often tempting the gravediggers with money.”
Low paid gravediggers accepted bribes and assigned graves without the approval of KMC authorities, Sajid insisted. 
“When we investigate and ask the gravediggers if they made such a demand [for higher fee], they deny it,” the KMC spokesman said, admitting that burials were still taking place at the six officially closed graveyards in the city.
“People insist that they need a grave [at this place] in any case and at any cost.”
Gravediggers say they aren’t involved in either the politics or business of the trade. 
Muhammad Abid, a 38-year-old gravedigger, said his community barely made ends meet and had no say in the allocation of graves or how much they cost.
“Our job,” he said, “is only to dig graves.”