At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India

Update At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India
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Screengrab taken from a video in northern India where nearly 150 persons were admitted to hospitals after a stampede at a religious gathering in a village in Hathras district of Uttar Pradesh state. (X/@RT_India_news)
Update At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India
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Mourners gather as the deceased who died in a melee during a sermon, are brought to a hospital in Hathras in India’s Uttar Pradesh state on Jul. 2, 2024. (AFP)
Update At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India
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Policemen manage the mourners as the deceased who died in a melee during a sermon, are brought to a hospital in Hathras in India’s Uttar Pradesh state on Jul. 2, 2024. (AFP)
Update At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India
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People carry the deceased who died in a melee during a sermon at Hathras in India's Uttar Pradesh state on Jul. 2, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 02 July 2024
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At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India

At least 116 people killed in stampede at Hindu religious event in India
  • “The incident happened due to overcrowding at the time when people were trying to leave the venue,” said Ashish Kumar, administrator of the Hathras district of Uttar Pradesh
  • Chaitra V., another senior state official, told broadcaster India Today that people may have lost their footing as they sought water in the heat

NEW DELHI: At least 116 people, many of them women and children, were killed in a stampede at a Hindu religious gathering in north India on Tuesday, authorities said, in one of the country’s worst such tragedies in years. The stampede happened in a village in Hathras district, about 200 km (125 miles) southeast of the national capital New Delhi, where authorities said thousands had gathered in sweltering late afternoon temperatures.
“The incident happened due to overcrowding at the time when people were trying to leave the venue,” Ashish Kumar, administrator of the Hathras district of Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, told reporters.
Chaitra V., another senior state official, told broadcaster India Today that people may have lost their footing as they sought water in the heat.
“There was wet mud at one place where people may have slipped. Also because of the heat, people may have made their way to the spot where water was kept and that could have caused the incident as well,” she said.
Video clips recorded by news agency ANI, in which Reuters has a minority stake, showed bodies piled into the back of trucks and laid out in vehicles.
Purses and bags covered in dust, were heaped up at the venue, with people sitting on their haunches sifting through them to identify their belongings.
Mobile phones were similarly piled together, waiting to be claimed by their owners.
A video on social media showed a large crowd packed into a tented area, standing and listening to devotional tunes as they waved their hands in the direction of the religious leader who sat on a stage.
It also showed some women hanging on to the bamboo poles holding up the canopy to get a better view above the heads of the large crowd.
Reuters could not immediately verify the social media images.
“There must have been about 50,000 people...at the gate on the highway, some people were going left and some people were going right, the stampede was caused in that confusion,” Suresh Chandra, a witness who was at the gathering, told local media.
Seema, a woman who traveled from a town almost 60 km away to attend the event, said she was leaving the venue when the stampede occurred. She was accompanied by three relatives, two of whom were killed.

Stampedes and other accidents
involving large crowds at religious gatherings and pilgrimage sites have happened in the past and are often blamed on poor crowd management.
While 115 people were killed in central India in a stampede in 2013, nearly 250 died in 2008 and more than 340 were killed during an annual pilgrimage in the western state of Maharashtra in 2005, according to local media reports.
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath ordered an investigation.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the federal government was assisting the state and announced a compensation of 200,000 rupees ($2,400) to the families of the dead and 50,000 rupees to those injured.


Greenland court extends anti-whaling activist’s time in custody as Japan seeks his extradition

Greenland court extends anti-whaling activist’s time in custody as Japan seeks his extradition
Updated 56 min 14 sec ago
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Greenland court extends anti-whaling activist’s time in custody as Japan seeks his extradition

Greenland court extends anti-whaling activist’s time in custody as Japan seeks his extradition
  • The court ruled Wednesday that Canadian-American Paul Watson must remain in detention until Oct. 2 while Denmark’s justice ministry considers the request
  • He was arrested on July 21 when his ship docked in Greenland’s capital

COPENHAGEN: A court in Greenland has again extended the time in custody for a prominent anti-whaling activist as Denmark considers an extradition request from Japan.
The court ruled Wednesday that Canadian-American Paul Watson must remain in detention until Oct. 2 while Denmark’s justice ministry considers the request. Greenland is an autonomous territory of Denmark, which doesn’t have an extradition treaty with Japan.
Watson is the former head of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, whose high-seas confrontations with whaling vessels have drawn widespread attention.
He was arrested on July 21 when his ship docked in Greenland’s capital. Japan’s coast guard sought his arrest over an encounter with a Japanese whaling research ship in 2010, when he was accused of obstructing the crew’s official duties by ordering the captain of his ship to throw explosives.
Watson is said to face up to 15 years in prison.
In a statement, the prosecution noted that Watson has appealed Wednesday’s decision by the Nuuk district court to the High Court of Greenland. One of Watson’s lawyers, Julie Stage, confirmed the appeal.
“We are not satisfied with the outcome,” Stage told The Associated Press.
Omar Todd, the CEO and co-founder of the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, has visited Watson in the detention center outside Nuuk. Todd told the AP on Tuesday that Watson “is doing fine. He is, I guess, getting a little bit accustomed to the life there at the moment. But he is doing well. He is determined and optimistic.”
Watson, who left Sea Shepherd in 2022, was also a leading member of Greenpeace but left in 1977 amid disagreements over his aggressive tactics.


Greta Thunberg arrested at pro-Palestinian demo in Denmark

Greta Thunberg arrested at pro-Palestinian demo in Denmark
Updated 59 min 19 sec ago
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Greta Thunberg arrested at pro-Palestinian demo in Denmark

Greta Thunberg arrested at pro-Palestinian demo in Denmark
  • Climate activist occupied a University of Copenhagen building to call for an academic boycott of Israeli universities

COPENHAGEN: Climate activist Greta Thunberg and several others were arrested Wednesday after occupying a University of Copenhagen building to call for an academic boycott of Israeli universities, Danish media reported.
Images on the daily Ekstra Bladet website showed the 21-year-old activist, wearing a black-and-white keffiyeh shawl draped over her shoulders, being escorted out of a campus building by police.
Thunberg herself shared images on Instagram of riot police entering a building where the group “Students against the Occupation” were staging a protest.
“I can’t confirm the names of those arrested, but six people have been arrested in connection with the demonstration,” a Copenhagen police spokesman told AFP.
Three of them “are suspected of forcing their way into the building and blocking the entrance,” he said.
The six were released several hours later, the spokesman told AFP, and video footage published by Ekstra Bladet showed Thunberg walking out of the police station.
Students against the Occupation said in an Instagram statement that “while the situation in Palestine only gets worse, the University of Copenhagen continues cooperation with academic institutions in Israel.”
“We are occupying” the university’s “central administration with one demand: academic boycott now.”
Pro-Palestinian protesters have set up encampments at universities around the United States and Europe since last spring to protest against Israel’s bombardment of Gaza and occupation of Palestinian territories.


Lavrov warns US not to mock Russia’s ‘red lines’

Lavrov warns US not to mock Russia’s ‘red lines’
Updated 04 September 2024
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Lavrov warns US not to mock Russia’s ‘red lines’

Lavrov warns US not to mock Russia’s ‘red lines’
  • Lavrov said the US was losing sight of the sense of mutual deterrence that had underpinned the balance of security between Moscow and Washington since the Cold War
  • “I won’t be surprised by anything — the Americans have already crossed the threshold they set for themselves,” Lavrov told a Russian TV interviewer

MOSCOW: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, responding to a question about the potential delivery of long-range US missiles to Ukraine, warned the United States on Wednesday not to joke about Russia’s “red lines.”
Lavrov said the US was losing sight of the sense of mutual deterrence that had underpinned the balance of security between Moscow and Washington since the Cold War, and that this was dangerous.
He was commenting on a Reuters report that the US is close to an agreement to supply Ukraine with long-range JASSM cruise missiles that could reach deep inside Russia — for which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been lobbying.
“I won’t be surprised by anything — the Americans have already crossed the threshold they set for themselves. They are being egged on, and Zelensky of course sees this and takes advantage of it,” Lavrov told a Russian TV interviewer.
“But they should understand — they are joking about our red lines here. They shouldn’t joke about our red lines.”
President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly warned the West since launching what he called his “special military operation” in Ukraine in 2022 not to try to thwart Russia, which has the world’s biggest arsenal of nuclear weapons.
But Washington and its allies have increased military aid to Ukraine, including by providing tanks, advanced missiles and F-16 fighter jets.
That has prompted some Western politicians to suggest Putin’s nuclear rhetoric is a bluff and that the US and NATO should go all-out to help Ukraine win the war. Zelensky has said Ukraine’s incursion into Russia, launched on Aug. 6, makes a mockery of Putin’s red lines.
Lavrov said Washington knew where these limits lay but was wrong if it believed the consequences of any escalation of the war in Ukraine would be suffered mainly by Europe.
“They have a genetic conviction that no one will touch them,” Lavrov said. This, he said, undermined all the principles that had underpinned strategic stability with Washington since Soviet times.
“This feeling of mutual deterrence — for some reason they are starting to lose it. This is dangerous,” he said.

WARNINGS
Lavrov alluded to remarks by White House national security adviser John Kirby, who said in June that President Joe Biden had repeatedly said Washington was not looking for “World War Three.”
Kirby said a major escalation of the Ukraine war could have “disastrous consequences, potentially, across the European continent” and would not be good for US interests.
It was the second time in just over a week that Lavrov has cautioned the US that a third world war would not be confined to Europe.
The Kremlin said on Wednesday Russia was making changes to its nuclear doctrine because Washington and its allies were threatening Russia by escalating the war in Ukraine and riding roughshod over what it called Moscow’s legitimate security interests.
It has not said how it plans to update the policy document setting out the circumstances in which it might use a nuclear weapon, or when the changes will take effect.


Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge

Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge
Updated 04 September 2024
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Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge

Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge
  • Razok, 39, fears racism will worsen in Thuringia even if the Alternative for Germany is unlikely to be able to form a government
  • “It’s like having a huge mole on your face as you walk down the street — people look at you in a strange way”

BERLIN: Syrian doctor Humam Razok felt relief when he arrived in Germany nine years ago after fleeing Damascus, where he had been jailed twice for his political beliefs.
But the far-right AfD party’s victory in an election on Sunday in the eastern state of Thuringia where he lives, and the daily racism he says his wife encounters, have convinced him to leave the state once she graduates.
Razok, 39, fears racism will worsen in Thuringia even if the Alternative for Germany is unlikely to be able to form a government because other parties refuse to work with it.
“It’s like having a huge mole on your face as you walk down the street — people look at you in a strange way. We are still seen as new or unfamiliar to them,” Razok said.
He was one of more than 10 migrants Reuters spoke to in Thuringia. All shared experiences of racism and said they were anxious about the rise of the far-right.
The nationalist, anti-migrant AfD won nearly 33 percent of votes in Thuringia and came a close second, with over 30 percent of votes, in neighboring Saxony. It is the first far-right party to win a state legislature election in Germany since World War Two.
Razok quickly learned German following his arrival from Syria, and works as an anaesthetist at a hospital near the state capital of Erfurt. He says he is respected by patients and is satisfied with the atmosphere at work but that his wife, who wears a headscarf, faces racism every day.
“I am very careful on the street. If I speak Arabic with my wife, I try to keep it down or switch to German if someone is close by,” Razok said.
He said he was not surprised by the AfD’s election success but was disappointed, and that its rise had emboldened some of his work colleagues to openly voice support for the party.
Other migrants he knows in Thuringia, where foreigners make up 7.6 percent of the population, are also afraid, Razok said.
“Only a minority (of them) still want to live here,” he said, adding that he plans to move to one of Germany’s western states once his wife graduates as a pharmacist.
Skilled workers are desperately needed in Thuringia, where more than three in four health care vacancies could not be filled with a suitable applicant within a year, according to data compiled by the IAB labor market research institute.
If this trend continues, it could exacerbate the labor shortage in Thuringia, where the number of employed people is expected to shrink by about 20 percent by 2040, twice the national average, according to a study by the Bertelsmann Foundation.

MIGRATION TRAUMA
Nearly half the people who voted in Thuringia supported either the AfD or the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), which also called for tighter asylum policies and won 15.8 percent of votes.
German Finance Minister Christian Lindner blamed the outcome on the federal government’s migration policy, saying Germans were fed up with the fact that the government may have lost control of immigration and asylum.
A deadly attack by a Syrian asylum seeker in the western city of Solingen a week earlier had intensified voters’ concerns about unregulated migration, said Hermann Binkert, head of the German Institute for New Social Answers (INSA).
“Also, there is still a bit of that trauma from 2015,” he said, referring to the impact of former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision in 2015 to allow over a million asylum seekers to cross the border into Germany.
The Solingen attack prompted Germany’s federal government to introduce measures to tighten asylum policies and accelerate deportations.
The arrival of refugees fleeing war in Ukraine and a rise in asylum applications in 2023 have also fueled public debate on migration, said Zeynep Yanaşmayan-Wegele, a researcher at the German Center for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM).
She said social problems, such as a lack of affordable housing and labor shortages, were often oversimplified by politicians and wrongly attributed to migration, making it very difficult to “depoliticize” the topic.

HATE CRIMES
Hate crimes surged nearly 50 percent in Germany to 17,007 cases in 2023, according to data released by the Federal Criminal Police Office, which put the rise down largely to a rise in xenophobic offenses which it said were mostly linked to right-wing extremism.
Yara Mayassah, an integration social worker in Erfurt, attributes the AfD’s rise to what she sees as the wrong focus in Germany’s integration policies.
“It’s an awareness problem. Since we arrived in Germany, all initiatives have focused on educating and raising awareness among migrants. But we’ve never worked on raising the awareness of the host community,” Mayassah said.
Ali Hwajeh, 28, a psychology student in Thuringia, said he feared the AfD’s success would embolden its supporters to physically attack refugees.
“I’ll stay for now and see how things develop. If the situation worsens — if there’s aggression, if people get injured— then my decision might change,” he said.


South Korea says North Korea has again launched suspected trash-carrying balloons across the border

South Korea says North Korea has again launched suspected trash-carrying balloons across the border
Updated 04 September 2024
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South Korea says North Korea has again launched suspected trash-carrying balloons across the border

South Korea says North Korea has again launched suspected trash-carrying balloons across the border
  • Seoul government advises people to stay indoors and beware of objects dropping from the sky
  • The tit-for-tat Cold War-style campaigns are adding to the tensions in the Korean peninsula

SEOUL: South Korea says it has detected suspected trash-carrying balloons launched by North Korea, in the latest round of a Cold War-style psychological warfare between the war-divided rivals.
The metropolitan government of Seoul, South Korea’s capital, issued text alerts Wednesday saying that objects likely to be North Korean balloons were spotted in regions north of the city. It advised people to stay indoors and beware of objects dropping from the sky.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that the direction of winds suggested that the balloons could drift into the northern part of Gyeonggi Province, near Seoul. It advised people to report to the police or military if they see fallen balloons and not to touch them.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage.
North Korea in recent weeks has flown thousands of balloons toward the South to drop waste paper, cloth scraps and cigarette butts, in what it described as a retaliation against South Korean civilian activists flying anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets across the border. North Korea is extremely sensitive to any outside criticism of its authoritarian leadership and the third-generation ruler Kim Jong Un.
Trash carried by at least one North Korean balloon fell on the South Korean presidential compound in July, raising concerns about the vulnerability of key South Korean facilities. Officials said the balloon contained no dangerous material and no one was hurt.
South Korea, in response to the North Korean balloons, has activated its front-line loudspeakers to blast broadcasts of propaganda messages and K-pop songs.
The tit-for-tat Cold War-style campaigns are adding to the tensions fueled by North Korea’s growing nuclear ambitions and the South’s expansion of joint military exercises with the United States.