Venezuela set for new protests after Maduro win ratified

Venezuela set for new protests after Maduro win ratified
Supporters of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro rally after the presidential election in Caracas on August 2, 2024. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 03 August 2024
Follow

Venezuela set for new protests after Maduro win ratified

Venezuela set for new protests after Maduro win ratified
  • Venezuela's election authority, which is loyal to Maduro, on Friday proclaimed him the winner with 52 percent of the vote
  • The opposition has accused the election authority of hiding the true results showing Gonzalez Urrutia as the true winner
  • Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama, Uruguay and the US recognized opposition Urrutia as the true president-elect

CARACAS: Venezuela braced for fresh protests Saturday, after President Nicolas Maduro’s disputed election victory was ratified — and a growing number of nations recognized his opposition rival as the true winner.
Both Maduro and the opposition, led by Maria Corina Machado and her presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, have called on their supporters to demonstrate this weekend, in the wake of Sunday’s controversial vote.
The South American country’s CNE election authority, which is loyal to Maduro, on Friday proclaimed him the winner with 52 percent of the vote and said Gonzalez Urrutia had garnered 43 percent of ballots.
But Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama and Uruguay recognized opposition Gonzalez Urrutia as the true president-elect, joining the United States and Peru in rejecting the official results.
For his part, the 61-year-old Maduro — who has reacted fiercely to criticism of his victory — described allegations of vote fraud as a “trap” orchestrated by Washington to justify “a coup.”
He also has threatened Machado and Gonzalez Urrutia, saying they “should be behind bars.”
Maduro has led the oil-rich, cash-poor country since 2013, presiding over a GDP drop of 80 percent that pushed more than seven million of once-wealthy Venezuela’s 30 million citizens to emigrate.
Experts blame economic mismanagement and US sanctions for the collapse.
Gonzalez Urrutia did not show up to a hearing at the Supreme Court after Maduro requested the tribunal investigate and certify the election result.
However, other opposition candidates summoned to the hearing called for a detailed vote count to be made public after Sunday’s vote, which was held amid widespread fear the vote would be rigged.
Voting records “are fundamental for transparency, they are fundamental for peace,” said Enrique Marquez, who also ran against Maduro as part of a smaller opposition group.
The opposition this week launched a website with copies of 84 percent of ballots cast, showing an easy win for Gonzalez Urrutia. The government claims these are forged.

Machado, who was barred from running herself, wrote in The Wall Street Journal that she was in hiding and “fearing for my life,” along with other opposition leaders.
She called on supporters to rally Saturday in cities across the country to “assert the truth” about the opposition’s victory.
“We have the evidence and the world already recognizes it,” Machado wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Maduro has called for daily mobilization, with “the mother of all marches to celebrate the victory of peace” on Saturday.
He accused the opposition of plotting attacks against security forces during their rallies.
The NGO Foro Penal reported 11 dead in protests Monday and Tuesday as angry Venezuelans took to the streets, saying their votes had been stolen. Machado said at least 20 people had been killed.
Authorities said more than 1,000 people were arrested in post-election protests.
That crackdown has sparked fear among opposition supporters.
“We have dead, wounded, detainees, missing people... People know it. They are afraid. They know they are going to find themselves facing armed people,” said Katiusca Camargo, an activist in the Petare slum in eastern Caracas.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday there was “overwhelming evidence” that Gonzalez Urrutia had won the election.
Blinken spoke with Machado and Gonzalez Urrutia on Friday, expressing “his concern for their safety and well-being” and congratulating Gonzalez Urrutia “for receiving the most votes,” the State Department said.
In a joint statement, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico urged an “impartial verification” of the result, also calling for Caracas to publish voting data broken down by polling stations.
Maduro’s previous reelection, in 2018, was rejected by dozens of Latin American countries as well as the United States and European Union member states.
He enjoys loyalty from the military leadership, electoral bodies, courts and other state institutions, as well as the backing of Russia, China and Cuba.
 


Australia to cap foreign student numbers at 270,000

Australia to cap foreign student numbers at 270,000
Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Australia to cap foreign student numbers at 270,000

Australia to cap foreign student numbers at 270,000

SYDNEY: Australia plans to cap foreign student numbers from next year, the government said Tuesday, curbing a multi-billion dollar industry as it faces political heat on immigration.
New international student numbers for university, higher education and vocational training will be limited to 270,000 in 2025, Education Minister Jason Clare told a news conference.
“It will mean that some universities will have more students this year than next year. Others will have less,” Clare said as he unveiled the plan, which will require legislation.
Official data show that foreign students were worth more than Aus$42 billion ($28 billion) to Australian universities and vocational education centers in 2023.
Australian authorities granted more than 577,000 international student visas in the fiscal year to June 30, 2023.
Clare said the change would mean about the same number of international students starting a course next year as there was before the Covid-19 pandemic.
The 2025 breakdown will be 145,000 new foreign students for universities, 30,000 for other higher education providers, and 95,000 for vocational education and training, the government said.
The new limit aims to replace a recent policy of giving priority to students deemed to be at low risk of visa non-compliance — a system that has favored top-ranked universities while drastically slowing visas for other institutions.
“We acknowledge the government’s right to control migration numbers but this should not be done at the expense of any one sector, particularly one as economically important as education,” said Universities Australia chair David Lloyd.
International students were Australia’s second largest industry after mining, accounting for more than half of the growth in Australia’s economy last year, Lloyd said.
“Every dollar from overseas students is reinvested back into Australia’s universities. Having fewer students here will only widen the funding gap at a time universities need greater support.”
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said this month the industry was “absolutely vital” for Australia.
But he said universities should not be overly reliant on overseas students, in part because of the implications for migration.
About 69 percent of Australian respondents blamed immigration for high house prices, said an Essential poll for The Guardian published on Tuesday.
About the same share of people — 42 percent on each side — described immigration as “generally positive” or “generally negative,” it said.
Net migration to Australia surged 26.3 percent in calendar 2023 to 547,300, official figures show, with 751,500 people immigrating while 204,200 left.
Australia’s government also plans to protect the international education industry from “crooks who try to exploit it,” the education minister said.
More than 150 “ghost colleges” had recently been shut down, Clare said, describing them as “a back door” to let people work in Australia rather than get an education.


Four dead in second night of Russian attacks on Ukraine

Four dead in second night of Russian attacks on Ukraine
Updated 4 min 56 sec ago
Follow

Four dead in second night of Russian attacks on Ukraine

Four dead in second night of Russian attacks on Ukraine

KYIV: Ukraine said Tuesday that its air defense systems had downed five missiles and 60 attack drones in a second night of Russian aerial bombardments that killed four.
The overnight attacks came one day after the Kremlin launched one of its largest-ever aerial attacks on Ukraine that battered energy facilities and left several dead.
The air force said on social media Tuesday morning that Russia had launched a total of 91 projectiles including 10 missiles and 81 Iranian-designed attack drones from several regions of Russia.
“Unfortunately, despite the effective work of our air defense systems, four people were killed and 16 were wounded,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a post on social media.
He said rescue work was ongoing at the impact sites and vowed a response to the attacks.
“Crimes against humanity cannot be committed with impunity,” he added in the post.
AFP journalists in the capital Kyiv heard air raid sirens echo over the city throughout the night as well as explosions, likely from air defense systems.
Since invading in February 2022, Russia has launched repeated large-scale drone and missile attacks on Ukraine, including punishing strikes on energy facilities.
Local authorities said earlier on Tuesday that two people had been killed in the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region and two in the central city of Kryvyi Rig after a missile struck a hotel.
The hotel strike comes just days after a team working for the Reuters news agency were hit by a missile in their hotel in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, killing a safety adviser working with the agency.


UN nuclear chief to visit Russian atomic plant near front line

UN nuclear chief to visit Russian atomic plant near front line
Updated 23 min 5 sec ago
Follow

UN nuclear chief to visit Russian atomic plant near front line

UN nuclear chief to visit Russian atomic plant near front line
  • IAEA’s Grossi to visit Kursk nuclear plant
  • Russia says Ukraine has attacked the site

KURSK: UN nuclear agency chief Rafael Grossi will visit on Tuesday Russia’s Kursk nuclear power plant, which Moscow says has been repeatedly attacked by Ukrainian forces that are just 40 km (25 miles) away after carving out a slice of Russian territory.
The safety of nuclear power plants has repeatedly been endangered over the course of the Ukraine war, which began in February 2022 when Russia sent thousands of troops over the border into Ukraine.
Moscow and Kyiv have repeatedly blamed each other for drone and artillery attacks on the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine, though the Aug. 6 incursion by Ukrainian forces into Russia has put the spotlight on the Kursk plant — a major Soviet-era nuclear power station.
President Vladimir Putin accused Ukraine on Thursday of trying to attack the Kursk plant, which has four Soviet graphite-moderated RBMK-1000 reactors — the same design as those at the Chernobyl nuclear plant which in 1986 became the scene of the world’s worst-ever civilian nuclear disaster.
Ukraine has yet to respond to the accusations that it attacked the facility.
Grossi, who has repeatedly warned of a nuclear disaster if nuclear plants continue to be attacked, said he would lead an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) mission to the Kursk plant “given the serious situation.”
He said the only way the IAEA could assess the plant’s security and validate the information it was receiving was to visit the site, which is owned by Russia’s vast nuclear state corporation, Rosatom.
“The safety and security of nuclear facilities must, under no circumstances, be endangered,” Grossi said. “The safety and security of all nuclear power plants is of central and fundamental concern to the IAEA.”

Foreign attack
Thousands of Ukrainian soldiers punched through the Russian border on Aug. 6 and then carved out a portion of Russia’s western Kursk region, the biggest foreign attack on sovereign Russian territory since World War Two.
Russia says Ukraine sent in thousands of troops along with sabotage units, swarms of drones, heavy artillery, dozens of tanks and heavy Western weaponry. Moscow says it will eject the Ukrainian soldiers.
Just 40 km (25 miles) away from the fighting, the Kursk nuclear power station sits next to the town of Kurchatov, named after legendary Russian physicist Igor Kurchatov.
Of the Kursk nuclear power station’s four Soviet-era reactors, two are shut down, but two — Number 3 and Number 4 — are operational. Reactor Number 4 was disconnected from the grid on Aug. 25 for 59 days of cooling repairs.
Construction of Kursk-2, essentially new reactors of the VVER-510 type, began in 2018. The two reactors are not operational yet.
The IAEA said on Aug. 22 that it had been informed by Russia that the remains of a drone were found about 100 meters (330 ft)from the Kursk plant’s spent fuel nuclear storage facility.
Radiation levels in the area are normal, according to Russian monitoring stations.


Biden, Modi discuss Ukraine war after PM’s visit, situation in Bangladesh

Biden, Modi discuss Ukraine war after PM’s visit, situation in Bangladesh
Updated 55 min 56 sec ago
Follow

Biden, Modi discuss Ukraine war after PM’s visit, situation in Bangladesh

Biden, Modi discuss Ukraine war after PM’s visit, situation in Bangladesh
  • Last week, Modi visited Ukraine in the first visit by an Indian prime minister in modern Ukrainian history
  • Modi urged President Zelensky to sit down for talks with Russia to end the war and offered to help bring peace

WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday discussed the Russia-Ukraine war following Modi’s visit to Ukraine, along with the situation in Bangladesh where protests led to the ousting of former leader Sheikh Hasina earlier this month.

Modi posted online that he discussed the situation in Ukraine with Biden over the phone and “reiterated India’s full support for early return of peace and stability.” 

He also said the two leaders stressed “the need for early restoration of normalcy, and ensuring the safety and security of minorities, especially Hindus, in Bangladesh.”

The White House issued a separate statement, saying Biden commended Modi’s recent visit to Poland and Ukraine, and that both leaders expressed “support for a peaceful resolution of the conflict in accordance with international law, on the basis of the UN Charter.”

Last week, Modi visited Ukraine in the first visit by an Indian prime minister in modern Ukrainian history. It came at a volatile juncture in the war launched by Russia in February 2022. Moscow is making slow gains in eastern Ukraine as Kyiv presses a cross-border incursion.

Modi urged President Volodymyr Zelensky to sit down for talks with Russia to end the war and offered to help bring peace.

Modi’s Ukraine visit followed a visit he made to Russia in July where he embraced President Vladimir Putin on the same day that a deadly Russian missile strike hit a children’s hospital. That visit angered Ukraine and the US State Department said it raised concerns with India about ties with Russia.

Moscow has been a large weapons supplier to India since the Soviet Union days. Washington in recent years has looked to woo New Delhi to counter China’s influence.

Modi said the two leaders also discussed the situation in Bangladesh where about 300 people, many of them university and college students, were killed during protests that began in July with students agitating against quotas in government jobs before the events spiraled into demonstrations to oust long-serving former Prime Minister Hasina.

An interim government headed by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus was sworn in after Hasina fled to India. Attacks were reported against Muslim-majority Bangladesh’s minorities, especially Hindus, amid the protests.

Hindu nationalist Modi’s own government in Hindu-majority India has faced criticism over the years over attacks on minorities, especially Muslims.


US soldier who fled to North Korea to plead guilty to desertion: lawyer

US soldier who fled to North Korea to plead guilty to desertion: lawyer
Updated 27 August 2024
Follow

US soldier who fled to North Korea to plead guilty to desertion: lawyer

US soldier who fled to North Korea to plead guilty to desertion: lawyer
  • Private Second Class Travis King ran across the border from South Korea into the North in July last year
  • North Korea expelled King in September and the US Army later charged him with desertion and a raft of other crimes

WASHINGTON: A US soldier who fled to North Korea last year will plead guilty to desertion at a court martial as part of a plea deal, his lawyer said.
Private Second Class Travis King ran across the border from South Korea into the North in July last year while on a sightseeing tour of the Demilitarized Zone that divides the Korean Peninsula.
North Korea expelled King in September and the US Army later charged him with desertion and a raft of other crimes.
King’s lawyer Frank Rosenblatt said Monday the US Army had charged the soldier with 14 offenses and that he would plead guilty to five of them.
“He will plead guilty to five of those, including desertion, 3 counts of disobeying an officer, and assault on a noncommissioned officer,” Rosenblatt said in a statement.
“He will plead not guilty to the remaining offenses, which the Army will withdraw and dismiss.”
King’s guilty plea and sentencing hearing would take place on September 20 at a court martial in Fort Bliss, Texas, the lawyer said.
“There, he will explain what he did, answer a military judge’s questions about why he is pleading guilty, and be sentenced,” Rosenblatt said.
Desertion carries a jail sentence of up to five years.
“Travis is grateful to his friends and family who have supported him, and to all those outside of his circle who did not pre-judge his case based on the initial allegations,” his lawyer said.
At the time of the incident, King had been stationed in South Korea and after a drunken bar fight and a stay in South Korean jail, he was meant to fly back to Texas to face disciplinary hearings.
Instead of traveling to Fort Bliss, he walked out of the Seoul-area airport, joined a DMZ sightseeing trip and slipped over the fortified border where he was detained by the communist North’s authorities.
Pyongyang had said that King had defected to North Korea to escape “mistreatment and racial discrimination in the US Army.”
But after completing its investigation, North Korea “decided to expel” King in September for illegally intruding into its territory.
King’s border crossing occurred with relations between the two Koreas at a low point, with diplomacy stalled and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un calling for increased weapons development, including tactical nuclear warheads.