d Column: Why reporting from South Sudan is so difficult — and critically needed By www.pbs.org Published On :: Sun, 15 Oct 2017 14:27:40 +0000 Simona Foltyn walks down a mountain slope shortly after crossing into South Sudan. Photo by Jason Patinkin In August, fellow reporter Jason Patinkin and I crossed on foot from northern Uganda into rebel-held South Sudan. Over the course of four days, we walked more than 40 miles through the bush, escorted by rebel soldiers, to shed light on one of the world’s most underreported conflicts. Reporting on South Sudan’s war, which began in 2013, has always been a challenge due to the risk and logistical hurdles associated with accessing remote areas where fighting takes place. But over the past year, covering the war and its humanitarian fallout has become particularly difficult. Since the beginning of this year, South Sudan’s government has banned at least 20 foreign journalists in an apparent effort to silence reporters who had a track record of critically reporting on the government. The war has had a devastating impact on South Sudanese communities, but much of it has remained out of the limelight of international media. This systematic crackdown on the foreign press (South Sudanese journalists have long risked imprisonment and death for doing their work) coincided with two important developments. In November 2016, the United Nations warned that the violence being committed against civilians in the southern region of Equatoria risked spiraling into genocide. Then, in February, the UN declared a man-made famine, warning that 100,000 people were at risk of starving to death as a result of civil war. Journalists seeking to cover these events were left with two equally unsavory options: self-censorship or a risky trip to rebel-held parts of the country. Only a handful of journalists have attempted the latter since fighting escalated in July last year. For us, this was our second embed with the rebels this year. Martin Abucha (second from right) rests with his troops in rebel-held South Sudan. Photo by Jason Patinkin We set off from a town in northern Uganda at five in the morning, bouncing along a bumpy dirt track towards the South Sudan border. Crammed into our four-wheel drive were rebel commander Martin Abucha, a dual American and South Sudanese citizen who we planned to profile for our PBS NewsHour Weekend segment, a couple of guides, and several duffle bags stuffed with our tents, sleeping bags, emergency medical kits and provisions to last us four days. Just as the sun began to rise above a distant range of hills that we aimed to cross later that day, our car came to a halt in front of a stream. Because of the rainy reason, it carried more water than usual. It was time to disembark and start walking, or “footing,” as South Sudanese tend to call it. We took off our shoes and waded through the stream’s chilly waters. This was the first of a many rivers we’d have to cross along the way, either on foot or in small flimsy canoes dug out from tree trunks. Each time, we dreaded the idea of falling in with our camera gear. The first part of our journey in northern Uganda felt very much like a hike through a national park. Passing beautiful landscapes and idyllic farming villages, one could almost forget we were headed into a war zone — but we were about to get a reality check. We had just crossed into South Sudan when out of nowhere, two dozen armed men popped out of the tall grass and surrounded us at gunpoint. “Stop! Who are you and where are you going?” a soldier called out in Juba Arabic from his hideout no more than 20 yards away, pointing his AK47 at us. Another one next to him had a rocket-propelled grenade propped on his shoulder, also unequivocally aiming it in our direction. Instinctively, we threw our hands in the air and exchanged a baffled glance. Had we accidentally bumped into government soldiers? Or perhaps we had come onto the “wrong” rebels? Abucha’s group, called the Sudan People’s Liberation Army In Opposition, is the biggest but not the only armed group in Equatoria, an area rife with rival militia and bandits who exploit the security vacuum left by war. To our relief, and only after Abucha answered a series of questions, this routine security check quickly gave way to a warm welcome. The platoon would be our escort for the next four days as we trekked to their base and to Loa, Abucha’s hometown. Keeping up with the rebels was no easy task. Given the country’s pervasive lack of basic infrastructure, South Sudanese grow up walking for dozens of miles just to go about their daily lives. For sedentary Westerners, keeping the target pace of “two meters per second” (around five miles an hour) proved challenging amid 90-degree temperatures, all while filming and plowing our way through dense, itchy elephant grass. The upside of the cumbersome terrain was that it kept us safe. During our four-day trip, we didn’t cross a single road, instead walking along a dizzying network of narrow bush paths the rebels seemed to know like the backs of their hands. An unwanted encounter with government troops, who tended to stick to roads and move around in vehicles as opposed to on foot, was highly unlikely. The closest we got to government-controlled area was a visit to Loa, located just two kilometers away from a main road frequently patrolled by government soldiers. We couldn’t stay long, but the hour we spent on the ground offered us a glimpse into what villages must look like in many parts of Equatoria: burned mud huts, looted schools and clinics, fallow fields and – most strikingly – no civilians. The war has had a devastating impact on South Sudanese communities like the one in Loa, but much of it has remained out of the limelight of international media. Our four-day venture into rebel-held South Sudan offered us a rare opportunity to report ground truths, and we are thankful for that. The post Column: Why reporting from South Sudan is so difficult — and critically needed appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article NewsHour Weekend Reporter's Notebook South Sudan
d Hundreds dead after massive truck bomb strikes Mogadishu By www.pbs.org Published On :: Sun, 15 Oct 2017 16:27:49 +0000 Civilians evacuate from the scene of an explosion in KM4 street in the Hodan district of Mogadishu, Somalia October 14, 2017. Photo By Feisal Omar/Reuters At least 231 people were killed and hundreds more wounded after a massive truck bomb on Saturday struck Somalia’s capital city of Mogadishu. The Somali government has blamed the al-Qaida-linked militant group al-Shabab for the attack, and called it the deadliest ever to hit the nation. The blast took place outside the Safari Hotel, where rescue workers dug through the rubble of collapsed buildings overnight in search of survivors. Witnesses described a devastating scene with large-scale carnage, as doctors worked feverishly to attend to the dead and injured, many badly burned. “The hospital is overwhelmed by both dead and wounded,” Dr. Mohamed Yusuf, the director of Medina hospital located near the blast, told the Associated Press. “We also received people whose limbs were cut away by the bomb. This is really horrendous, unlike any other time in the past.” Photos and videos of the bombing, which took place on a busy street near a section of the city housing foreign embassies, showed collapsed walls, twisted metal, and sporadic fires spewing smoke. The Qatari government said its embassy was “severely damaged” in the strike. There should be an embedded item here. Please visit the original post to view it. Family members searched through the wreckage and waited at local hospitals with the hopes of finding relatives who survived the bombing. Somali President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed announced three days of mourning. The attacks received international condemnation, including from the United States. The post Hundreds dead after massive truck bomb strikes Mogadishu appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article al-Shabab Mogadishu NewsHour Weekend
d South Sudan civil war causes Africa’s worst refugee crisis By www.pbs.org Published On :: Sun, 15 Oct 2017 19:26:17 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioThe United Nations says South Sudan’s four-year-old civil war has left half of the nation’s population — 6 million people — in need of humanitarian aid. The conflict began when South Sudan’s army split between factions loyal to President Salva Kiir and former Vice President Riek Machar. The two men mobilized their respective tribes, the Dinka and the Nuer. The war has caused what is now one of the world’s worst refugee crises. SIMONA FOLTYN: Civil war is emptying huge swaths of South Sudan. The violence has uprooted four million people, including two million who’ve fled to neighboring countries. In the last year, more than a million South Sudanese have poured into northern Uganda alone, crossing makeshift bridges like this one to flee fighting, hunger, and brutal attacks on civilians. SEME LUPAI, REFUGEE: They started fighting very, very severely. So that made us to escape with our properties to this side. SIMONA FOLTYN: When Seme Lupai’s family went to one of the refugee camps, initially, he stayed behind to look after the family’s most precious commodity — their cattle. He hid for a year to escape the violence. The refugees carry whatever they can salvage — mattresses, pots, clothes, notebooks — remnants of once peaceful lives turned upside down. At checkpoints, Ugandan soldiers search their belongings for weapons, before the refugees proceed to reception centers. After entering Uganda, the refugees sign in at small waystations. For many, it’s the first night spent in safety after walking for days to escape fighting. Levi Arike fled with his wife and four children. LEVI ARIKE, REFUGEE: When the gunshots started, we laid under a tree with the whole family, because there was nowhere else to hide. We waited for the fighting to stop, and then we got up and started walking to Uganda. SIMONA FOLTYN: Uganda now shoulders most of the burden of Africa’s biggest refugee crisis, managing a constellation of camps which require food, water, healthcare, and policing. At Imvepi Camp, now home to more than 120,000 South Sudanese, new arrivals receive vaccinations, hot meals, and basic items such as soap and plastic tarps to build a house. The government also gives each refugee family a small plot of land, about a twentieth of an acre, where they can build a tent shelter and grow crops to eat or sell. But the land often proves too rocky for farming. SIMONA FOLTYN, IMVEPI REFUGEE CAMP, NORTHERN UGANDA: After completing the registration process, the new arrivals will receive their plot, to start a new life as refugees in Uganda. While they are safe here, there are many challenges ahead, not least processing the trauma of what they experienced back home. This woman, who we’ll call “Agnes,” agreed to tell us about her harrowing experience. She says four government soldiers from President Salva Kiir’s Dinka tribe stopped her as she was fleeing South Sudan and raped her right in front of her family. AGNES (translated to English): When they started raping me, they told me not to raise alarm, otherwise they would shoot me. Still when I’m sleeping, I’m dreaming of the Dinka, that they are coming to rape me again. SIMONA FOLTYN: How often do you have those dreams? AGNES: Daily, every time I lie down, those dreams come. SIMONA FOLTYN: A recent Human Rights Watch report on South Sudan found “…a clear pattern of government forces unlawfully targeting civilians for killings, rapes, torture…and destruction of property..” The victims are from ethnic groups suspected to support the rebels. AGNES: They are doing it, because they know very well that those soldiers are our brothers. So they do it to punish them.. SIMONA FOLTYN: Although the rebels, known as the Sudan People’s Liberation Army In Opposition, purport to protect local communities, there are also reports of their fighters assaulting civilians near the Ugandan border. Josephine Yanya told us she didn’t feel safe in the presence of either side’s soldiers. Her family and neighbors fled their village after government soldiers killed her uncle. They hid in the mountains only to find themselves under attack again, this time by opposition fighters from the Nuer tribe loyal to former vice president Riek Machar. Yanya says ethnic Nuer soldiers from the SPLA-IO rebel group raped a member of her group and stole her father’s’ cattle. JOSEPHINE YANYA (translated to English): Before we were thinking that the rebels would protect us, but if they are lacking food, they just come and take things by force. SIMONA FOLTYN: With nowhere left to hide, Yanya fled to Uganda with her son. But instead of finding a place to rebuild their lives, they are in limbo. And aid groups don’t have enough food to distribute. JOSEPHINE YANYA (translated to English):We are getting small food rations. I know it won’t be enough even for one month. SIMONA FOLTYN: According to the United Nations, the international community has given less than a-third of the $1.4 billion dollars needed for the refugee response in South Sudan’s neighboring countries. These refugees foresee more hardship and have no idea when they might return home. JOSEPHINE YANYA (translated to English): I’m always praying for peace in South Sudan, and until then, I’ll just stay here. The post South Sudan civil war causes Africa’s worst refugee crisis appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article africa NewsHour Weekend refugee crisis South Sudan
d Iraqi, Kurdish forces in standoff, weeks after Kurdish vote for independence By www.pbs.org Published On :: Sun, 15 Oct 2017 20:33:23 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioHARI SREENIVASAN: The desire of the Kurds along Iraq’s northern border to govern themselves is receiving more resistance from Iraq’s central government. Iraqi army forces are demanding Kurdish troops withdraw from oil fields and military bases around Kirkuk, a city in the Kurdistan region that voted for independence last month. Kirkuk also has 10% of Iraq’s known oil reserves. Washington Post’s Loveday Morris is in Baghdad covering this standoff joins me now via Skype. First of all the significance of this. Why is it so important? LOVEDAY MORRIS: There’s been a longtime conflict between Baghdad and Kurdistan over these disputed territories. Most significant of which is Kirkuk because of the oil reserves. But the referendum last month has really sharpened these disputes because you have Baghdad opposing independence and so it feels like they have to restate its territorial claims these areas. So that’s why we’re seeing a lot of tension right now. HARI SREENIVASAN: And just to give people a little bit of a brief timeline – Iraqi forces control this area for a while and then in June ISIS took over the area and now it’s kind of back in Kurdish hands? LOVEDAY MORRIS: Right. So in June 2014 Iraq lost control of a lot of the areas and we have this huge collapse in the face of an ISIS offensive. Over 100,000 soldiers fled and Kurdish forces moved in some of these areas – some of them maybe took from ISIS and others just moved into into the vacuum. And so Iraqi forces have been in these areas since June 2014. And that’s their main demand that they return to the areas. HARI SREENIVASAN: What’s the likelihood that this standoff right now turns violent? Into some sort of a civil war? LOVEDAY MORRIS:: I think at this point both sides don’t want violence. Al-Abadi, the prime minister, is really trying to defuse the situation by saying there’s going to be no military attack. But at the same time there is this buildup of forces so that I think they are trying to, in a way, intimidate the Kurds to withdraw from some areas but they don’t want to see a fight per say. But in this really tense situation there can be a small spark and things can turn violent quite easily. HARI SREENIVASAN: Thank you. The post Iraqi, Kurdish forces in standoff, weeks after Kurdish vote for independence appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article iraq Kurdistan middle east NewsHour Weekend
d Rex Tillerson says continue diplomacy with North Korea ‘until first bomb drops’ By www.pbs.org Published On :: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 11:08:00 +0000 U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson makes a statement to the media that he is not going to resign, at the State Department in Washington, U.S., October 4, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas – RC148B19CBA0 WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Rex Tillerson says diplomatic efforts aimed at resolving the North Korean crisis “will continue until the first bomb drops.” That statement comes despite President Donald Trump’s tweets a couple of weeks ago that his chief envoy was “wasting his time” trying to negotiate with “Little Rocket Man,” a mocking nickname Trump has given the nuclear-armed nation’s leader, Kim Jong Un. “I think he does want to be clear with Kim Jong Un and that regime in North Korea that he has military preparations ready to go and he has those military options on the table. And we have spent substantial time actually perfecting those,” Tillerson told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. “But be clear: The president has also made clear to me that he wants this solved diplomatically. He’s not seeking to go to war.” Recent mixed messaging from the top of the U.S. government has raised concerns about the potential for miscalculation amid the increasingly bellicose exchange of words by Trump and the North Korean leader. Trump told the U.N. General Assembly last month that if the U.S. is “forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea.” Trump also tweeted that Korea’s leadership “won’t be around much longer” if it continued its provocations, a declaration that led the North’s foreign minister to assert that Trump had “declared war on our country.” Tillerson acknowledged during a recent trip to Beijing that the Trump administration was keeping open direct channels of communications with North Korea and probing the North’s willingness to talk. He provided no elaboration about those channels or the substance of any discussions. Soon after, Trump took to Twitter, saying he had told “our wonderful Secretary of State, that he is wasting his time trying to negotiate with Little Rocket Man … Save your energy Rex, we’ll do what has to be done!” Trump offered no further explanation, but he said all military options are on the table for dealing with North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs. Analysts have speculated about whether the president and his top diplomat were playing “good cop, bad cop” with North Korea, and how China might interpret the confusing signals from Washington. Beijing is the North’s main trading partner, and the U.S. is counting on China to enforce U.N. sanctions. “Rest assured that the Chinese are not confused in any way what the American policy towards North Korea (is) or what our actions and efforts are directed at,” Tillerson said. Asked if Trump’s tweets undermined Tillerson, the secretary said: “I think what the president is doing is he’s trying to motivate action on a number of people’s part, in particular the regime in North Korea. I think he does want to be clear with Kim Jong Un and that regime in North Korea that he has military preparations ready to go and he has those military options on the table and we have spent substantial time perfecting those.” He added that Trump “has made it clear to me to continue my diplomatic efforts, which we are, and I’ve told others those diplomatic efforts will continue until the first bomb drops.” North Korea has launched missiles that potentially can strike the U.S. mainland and recently conducted its largest ever underground nuclear explosion. It has threatened to explode another nuclear bomb above the Pacific. The post Rex Tillerson says continue diplomacy with North Korea ‘until first bomb drops’ appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article Donald Trump Kim Jong Un North Korea Rex Tillerson
d News Wrap: Dozens missing after deadly Mogadishu truck bombing By www.pbs.org Published On :: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 22:45:17 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioJUDY WOODRUFF: And in the day’s other news: More than 300 people are now confirmed dead after Saturday’s massive truck bombing in Somalia, one of the world’s worst attacks in years. Nearly 400 more were wounded. The government blamed the al-Qaida-linked Al-Shabaab group. Rescue crews today searched for survivors at the scene of the bombing, a crowded street in the capital, Mogadishu. With dozens still missing, officials say they expect the death toll to rise. OSMAN LIBAH IBRAHIM, Deputy Minister for Natural Resources, Somalia (through interpreter): More bodies are gradually being found and removed from the rubble. There are other people who are under the rubble. We have heard them as they scream for help. My biggest worry is that even the wounded are succumbing to their injuries. JUDY WOODRUFF: The attack happened two days after Somalia’s defense minister and army chief resigned for undisclosed reasons. There’s been yet another shift to the right in European politics; 31-year-old conservative Sebastian Kurz, Austria’s foreign minister, is set to become that country’s next leader. But he’s short of a majority in Parliament and will likely form a coalition with the far-right Freedom Party. It was founded by ex-Nazis in the 1950s. Kurz has called for the European Union to focus more on internal trade and securing borders. He celebrated in Vienna. SEBASTIAN KURZ, Austrian People’s Party (through interpreter): I have a big request for you. Use today to celebrate. You all have earned it through hard work and dedication. At the same time, I need to tell you that tomorrow the work starts. We didn’t just run to win the elections. We did so to bring Austria back to the top. We ran in this election to achieve real change. JUDY WOODRUFF: A final result in the election is likely to be decided on Thursday. Wildfires that broke out over the weekend in Portugal have killed at least 35 people, including a one-month-old infant. Today, more than 5,300 firefighters with some 1,600 vehicles were battling the fires, some of which officials say were started by arsonists. Wildfires have also left at least four people dead in neighboring Spain. Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl pleaded guilty today to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy. He was captured by the Taliban in 2009, after leaving his post in Afghanistan. It prompted an intense search and a prisoner swap. Bergdahl appeared before a military judge in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, today. The 31-year-old could be sentenced to life in prison. He said his actions were very inexcusable, adding he didn’t — quote — “think there’d be any reason to pull off a crucial mission to look for one guy.” The truck driver in deadly immigrant smuggling run has pleaded guilty in court. San Antonio police found at least 39 immigrants, 10 of whom died, packed into a sweltering semi-trailer last year and died. The driver, James Matthew Bradley Jr., pleaded to conspiracy and transporting immigrants, resulting in death. He faces now up to life in prison. A New Jersey man has been convicted of planting two pressure-cooker bombs on New York City streets last year. Ahmed Khan Rahimi faces a maximum sentence of life in prison for charges including using a weapon of mass destruction. One of the bombs exploded in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood, wounding 30. The second didn’t detonate. Officials said Rahimi was inspired by ISIS and al-Qaida. JOHN MILLER, Deputy Commissioner, NYPD Intelligence & Counterterrorism: Ahmed Khan Rahimi learned a lesson which we keep reminding people of. This is the wrong place to try and carry out an act of terrorism. Witnesses will come forward, evidence will be developed, arrests will be made, prosecutions will be brought forth, and they will be successful. JUDY WOODRUFF: Prosecutors said Rahimi also planted a pipe bomb in Seaside Heights, New Jersey, but no one was injured. Colin Kaepernick has filed a grievance against the national football league. The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback says that he remains unsigned due to collusion by team owners over his national anthem protests. Kaepernick sparked a debate when he kneeled during the anthem last year, protesting police mistreatment of African-Americans. On Wall Street today, the Dow Jones industrial average gained 85 points to close at 22957. The Nasdaq rose 18. And the S&P 500 added four. It was a milestone day in the world of astronomy. For the first time, researchers say they have detected gravitational waves with a flash of light from the same cosmic event. The dual observation supports Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. The ripples in space and the light burst were caused by the collision of two neutron stars. They were first detected in August. The post News Wrap: Dozens missing after deadly Mogadishu truck bombing appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article al-Shabab Austria Mogadishu Sebastian Kurz
d U.S., Japan agree to maximize diplomatic pressure on North Korea By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 13:01:05 +0000 Monitor in Tokyo shows news of North Korea firing a ballistic missile on July 4. File photo by Toru Hanai/Reuters TOKYO — U.S. and Japanese diplomats agreed Tuesday to maximize pressure on North Korea to resolve tensions over its nuclear program, while citing the need to be prepared for the worst if diplomacy fails. U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan, after meeting his Japanese counterpart, Shinsuke Sugiyama, told reporters that the focus at the State Department is still on diplomacy to solve the problem and eventually denuclearize the Korean Peninsula. “We must, however, with our allies in Japan and South Korea and elsewhere, be prepared for the worst should diplomacy fail,” he said. The U.S. must be prepared to defend itself and its allies, he said. Sugiyama, briefing reporters separately, reiterated Japan’s support for President Donald Trump’s policy of keeping all options open, but stressed the need for a diplomatic solution by bolstering cooperation among Japan, U.S. and South Korea, as well as via cooperation with China and Russia. The two diplomats will join their South Korean counterpart in Seoul for further talks Wednesday on North Korea. READ MORE: Rex Tillerson says continue diplomacy with North Korea ‘until first bomb drops’ The talks come as the U.S. and South Korea hold joint naval drills this week. They regularly conduct joint exercises, though North Korea condemns them as an invasion rehearsal. North Korea’s deputy U.N. ambassador warned on Monday that the situation on the peninsula “has reached the touch-and-go point and a nuclear war may break out any moment.” Kim In Ryong told the U.N. General Assembly’s disarmament committee that North Korea has been subjected to a direct nuclear threat from the United States and has the right to possess nuclear weapons in self-defense. He pointed to military exercises and what he called a U.S. plan to stage a “secret operation aimed at the removal of our supreme leadership.” Kim’s speech follows increasingly tough U.N. sanctions. Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country is curtailing economic, scientific and other ties with North Korea in line with U.N. sanctions, and the European Union announced new sanctions as well. The post U.S., Japan agree to maximize diplomatic pressure on North Korea appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article japan North Korea north korea nuclear program
d WATCH: Trump and Greek prime minister hold joint news conference By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 16:28:24 +0000 Watch President Donald Trump and the Greek prime minister’s joint news conference in the player above. WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump says the U.S. stands with Greece as they recover from their economic crisis. He is speaking with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras at the White House in a joint news conference. The U.S. president says the two leaders have discussed defense, energy, commerce and trade. Trump is praising Greece for its defense spending under NATO and is noting a potential sale to Greece to upgrade its F-16 aircraft, which he says would be worth up to $2.4 billion and generate thousands of U.S. jobs. Tsipras says his country has made economic strides and is “leaving behind the economic model that led to the crisis.” He says Greece’s relationship with the U.S. is “more important than ever.” The post WATCH: Trump and Greek prime minister hold joint news conference appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article Alexis Tsipras Donald Trump Greece
d U.S.-backed Syrian forces recapture Raqqa from Islamic State group By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 16:57:20 +0000 Fighters of Syrian Democratic Forces celebrate after Raqqa in Syria was liberated from Islamic State militants on Oct. 17. Photo by Erik De Castro/Reuters U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces announced Tuesday that they had captured the city of Raqqa from Islamic State militants. “Everything is finished in Raqqa, our forces have taken full control of Raqqa,” SDF spokesman Talal Sello told AFP. A formal declaration would be announced after operations to clear any remaining sleeper cells and to remove landmines in the city were completed, Sello added. The move is a major setback for the Islamic State which considered Raqqa the de-facto capital of its self-declared caliphate. It comes on the third anniversary of the global effort to defeat ISIS. Raqqa was the first provincial capital to fall from government control in March 2013 after it was captured by a rebel army. The army included both Syrian opposition groups and more hard line parties including al-Nusra and the Islamic State. A civilian government that was established in the city divided two months later, and less than a year later ISIS recaptured Raqqa and named the the capital of their caliphate. About 900 civilians have been killed since the the start of the five-month operation, including 570 people in coalition air raids, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the civilian death toll at 1,130 people. American journalist James Foley was beheaded in the mountains south of the city. SDF fighters pulled down the Islamic State’s black flag from the city’s National Hospital near the city’s stadium, according to a Reuters report. Special presidential envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS Brett McGurk said in August that the U.S. would attempt to perform a “stabilization” in Raqqa — including demining, removing rubble from major pathways to allow trucks and equipment through, and “basic electricity, sewage, water, the basic essentials to allow populations to come back to their home.” It is not clear when the 300,000 civilians who have fled Raqqa since April during the operation will be able to return. The post U.S.-backed Syrian forces recapture Raqqa from Islamic State group appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article islamic state group raqqa Syria
d Far-right groups gain ground in Sweden and Germany amid migrant influx By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 22:30:37 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioJUDY WOODRUFF: But first: Sunday’s elections Austria were the latest ample of a shift to the right Europe’s politics, as 31-year-old Christian Kurz was elected chancellor on an anti-immigration platform. He may now form a government with a far-right party founded in the 1950s by former Nazis. That follows recent elections in Germany, where a far-right party roiled the race and dealt a blow to returning leader Angela Merkel. In Sweden, too, there is a strong challenge from the right and a neo-Nazi group that looks stand in elections next year. Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant ha been surveying the political landscape in Germany and Sweden, and he begins his report in Scandinavia. MALCOLM BRABANT, Special Correspondent: In a Gothenburg parking lot, supporters of the Nordic Resistance Movement form up for what they hope will be their biggest-ever march, to propagate an ideology espoused by mother of eight Paulina Forslund. PAULINA FORSLUND, Nordic Resistance Movement: When white becomes the minority, they will be destroyed. I want my children to have a secure future. I want them not only for them to have a secure Sweden. I want them to have a secure world. And I want other people to fight for the same thing. MALCOLM BRABANT: When addressing her fellow neo-Nazis, Forslund’s rhetoric sharpens. PAULINA FORSLUND (through interpreter): I’m the welder’s daughter, the forester’s grandchild. My line consists of hardworking men and women. It’s people like them we can thank for the welfare system that our lying politicians are now giving away to imported scum. MALCOLM BRABANT: Clearly expecting trouble, the movement’s leaders have a muscular protection detail, marching past a silent protest. The sign reads “No Nazis on our streets.” This protester would only give her name as Johanna. JOHANNA, Anti-Nazi Protester: They are racist people. They are people who think that certain people are better than others, and I will not stand for that. It’s not something I think has a place in a modern society. MALCOLM BRABANT: Experts say the resistance movement is recruiting aggressively, and believe this demonstration is emblematic of the rise of the far right. It took place on Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement. Allan Stutzinky is leader of Gothenburg’s Jewish community. ALLAN STUTZINKY, Jewish Community Leader (through interpreter): Nazism has returned. The descendants of the murderers are organizing the same marches today, waving the same flags, shouting the same slogans, and have the same racist agenda. MALCOLM BRABANT: Anna Johansson is a member of the governing Social Democrat Party. It’s considering outlawing the Nordic Resistance Movement. ANNA JOHANSSON, Swedish Social Democratic Party: In Sweden and in Denmark, and in other countries, extreme parties are growing, and the hatred is spreading around. MALCOLM BRABANT: “Go home to mama,” he shouts. “Nazi pigs,” chant the anti- fascist protesters, as a bottle flies through the air. DAMON, Nordic Resistance Movement: If someone calls themselves a Nazi, most of us would dissociate with that person. That’s nothing we stand for ourselves. I never call myself a Nazi. I’m a national socialist. MALCOLM BRABANT: Hitler’s party was also called National Socialist, but Damon, a 40-year-old welder, insists he’s a nonviolent family man. DAMON: The demographic landscape of our — of the whole of Europe is changing, so, basically, it’s a concern on preserving my heritage for my family and our kin. MALCOLM BRABANT: This demonstration has been stopped short of its destination. The Nordic Resistance Movement is currently trapped between a line of police and anti-fascist protesters. And it looks as though this demonstration isn’t going any further. Violence briefly erupts as the resistance movement tries to break through police lines, and several marchers are arrested. PAULINA FORSLUND: We are not your enemy. We are the government’s enemy. They say we live in a democracy, but we have never had an election about if we want to take all these people in. MALCOLM BRABANT: When Europe’s refugee crisis began in 2015, Sweden copied Germany’s open-door policy, and 160,000 migrants entered the country. Two years on, Sweden has tighter borders and has begun deporting some of the newcomers. The new atmosphere alarms Floid Gumbo, entertaining an anti-Nazi rally. FLOID GUMBO, Singer Originally from Zimbabwe: I came to Sweden over 20 years ago. The climate in Sweden, the people were so friendly, and things were completely different, more welcoming. And I feel like things have sort of gradually changed. I’m very concerned, because I have children, because I’m thinking what I experienced here is not the same kind of climate, atmosphere that they are going to experience here. ANNA JOHANSSON: It’s not so long ago that the Nazis ruined Europe. And that makes me very worried. The German elections were terrifying, I think. MALCOLM BRABANT: Johansson is referring to last month’s success of the right-wing Alternative For Germany Party, or AFD, when it entered Parliament for the first time with 13 percent of the vote. HUGH BRONSON, Alternative For Germany Party: The AFD only came into existence because Merkel deserted the traditional conservative Christian voters. They were looking for a home, and the AFD has offered them a safe place. MALCOLM BRABANT: Hugh Bronson is deputy leader of the AFD in Berlin. Now his party, the third largest in Parliament, is demanding that Angela Merkel imposes tougher immigration rules. Your opponents claim that you are a party of hate. What’s your response to that? HUGH BRONSON: We embrace foreigners who respect our laws, pay their taxes, send their children to school, and go about their normal life. The problem is with people who abuse the system to have a better life, or let others pay for their better lives, or who are criminals. MALCOLM BRABANT: Outside the opera house in Dresden, former East Germany, singer Luca Bergelt is dismayed by the political landscape shifting to the right. LUCA BERGELT, Singer: My fear is that they will tear Europe apart. They are going to raise up the walls again. They’re going to build new walls between the countries, and that Europe will get more close into itself. MALCOLM BRABANT: Anti-immigrant sentiment is strong in Dresden. The city was the birthplace of a pan-European anti-Islamic movement, and it delivered the largest number of votes for the right-wing party. On a holiday to celebrate German unification after the fall of communism, retired engineer Wilfried Schmidt explained why he sent a message to Angela Merkel. WILFRIED SCHMIDT, Retired Engineer (through interpretor): Let’s put it this way. We all need to recognize that Germany is undergoing social changes that are becoming harder to control. For one, there is mass immigration from difficult regions that is increasingly uncontrollable, of people with entirely different concepts of life, from fundamental differently structured societies that are problematic. MALCOLM BRABANT: About one million migrants poured into Germany in 2015. Chancellor Merkel consistently defended her pro-refugee policies, but now she has been punished by voters who believe she ignored their concerns. Chancellor Merkel has promised to listen to the people who voted for the AFD, and she says she’s going to try to win them over with what she calls good politics. But she will not countenance having the party in her coalition. But the chancellor needs to find new partners who are prepared to be tough on immigration. As she tries to forge a coalition, the chancellor has agreed to put an annual cap of 200,000 on the number of immigrants, something she previously refused to do. But will it be enough to woo back people who deserted her at the election? A question for Werner Patzelt, a political scientist at Dresden University. WERNER PATZELT, Dresden University: Since Chancellor Merkel has made so many U-turns in German domestic politics, it wouldn’t be a surprise if she would try to do a U-turn, also winning back AFD voters. But this is a really hard political task, because so many of them are so much disappointed by the Christian Democratic Union in general, and by Chancellor Merkel in particular, that they will do anything to avoid going back. MALCOLM BRABANT: Back in Sweden, the governing party is horrified at the concept of conceding ground to right-wingers, and is trying to isolate them. ANNA JOHANSSON: Experience shows that, when you adopt the ideas from these right-wing parties, they spread. These parties have their agenda implemented by other parties. And I wouldn’t want to see that happen in Sweden. FLOID GUMBO: We’re all human beings. We share this world. We’re all here. There’s enough space for us all. MALCOLM BRABANT: But that’s an appeal that an increasing number of Swedes are rejecting, as the country and much of Europe go through a crisis of identity. For the PBS NewsHour, I’m Malcolm Brabant in Gothenburg. The post Far-right groups gain ground in Sweden and Germany amid migrant influx appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article Austria elections europe Far-Right Politics
d The battle for Mosul is over, but this hidden ISIS danger could lurk for years By www.pbs.org Published On :: Wed, 18 Oct 2017 22:20:26 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioHARI SREENIVASAN: But first: The de facto capital of the Islamic State, Raqqa, in Syria fell yesterday to U.S.-backed forces. However, the largest city the militants once held was Mosul in Iraq. They were ousted from it in July after a brutal 10-month-long fight that killed thousands. Now a new major task: finding and destroying the ISIS mines, booby-traps and bombs that litter the city. Special correspondent Marcia Biggs reports from Iraq. MARCIA BIGGS, Special Correspondent: It was once a center of learning for over 6,000 students of technology, agriculture, and medicine. Today, Mosul Technical Institute’s classrooms are burnt to the ground, laboratories reduced to rubble, and books charred and shredded. It’s one of the city’s five universities ravaged by the Islamic State and the battle to oust it. Now that the battle is over, a new danger looms, the trail of land mines and booby-traps left by ISIS. So this is the wire, and this is where it was buried. CHRISTIAN, Team Leader, Janus Global Operations: Yes, they would cut the asphalt, and then they lay the wire in and put the main charge here. MARCIA BIGGS: We spent the day with Christian, a team leader from Janus Global, a security and risk management firm hired by the U.S. government to sweep and clear major areas of unexploded ordnance and mines. He’s not allowed to show his face or use his last name, for security reasons. CHRISTIAN: There’s actually two more on that road before we get to the target building that have to be excavated and/or rendered safe. MARCIA BIGGS: So, the first building you have to clear, you have got to get rid of the IEDs on the road to that building? CHRISTIAN: Yes. MARCIA BIGGS: It’s a long process. CHRISTIAN: It is, but that’s what makes it interesting. MARCIA BIGGS: The United States has sunk $30 million this year into clearing former ISIS territories all over Northern Iraq. Under this program, Janus has already cleared 727 buildings, removing 3,000 IEDs, which they say ISIS was producing on assembly lines at an industrial scale. But State Department officials and experts say the number of unexploded ordnance in Mosul itself is unprecedented. What’s your first line of attack, in terms of trying to clear Mosul? CHRISTIAN: Our priority is more the community, rather than the individual, you know, infrastructure. You have got schools, power, sewer, water, so that the area can accept people back into it. And then, once this stabilization phase is over, we can move into the individual homes, so that they can be safer. MARCIA BIGGS: Clearing Mosul is a process that they say could take years, even decades. So Janus is training local Iraqis to do the job, sending them out as a front-line search team, then investigating and removing any suspicious items themselves. CHRISTIAN: We’re not going to be here the whole time, so when we — it’s our time to leave, they will have the capacity built from us, and the mentoring we have done, so that they can do it on their own. MARCIA BIGGS: How are they doing? CHRISTIAN: They’re — a lot of them are very apt to learn. They’re quick. They’re smart. MARCIA BIGGS: Fawzi al Nabdi is the team leader for the Iraqi local partner. He’s cleared mines all over Iraq for the last six years. CHRISTIAN: What you got? FAWZI AL NABDI, Team Leader, Al Fahad Company (through interpreter): We are ready for this, because it’s my job and I love it. The Americans are here to complete our work and to help us. They have greater experience than we do. If we find any mines, we have to stop and they will investigate it and make a plan to remove it. MARCIA BIGGS: But he says Mosul is the biggest project he has ever seen, and we’re told it could take at least a month to just get the campus cleared of mines. Only then can they start cleaning it up, so that students can resume classes, this itself a huge task. ISIS fighters closed the university back in 2014, and used it as a military base. As coalition forces pounded ISIS targets, this seat of higher learning became a battleground. Ghassan Alubaidy is the institute’s dean. GHASSAN ALUBAIDY, Dean, Mosul Technical Institute (through interpreter): ISIS used our university to manufacture mines and bombs. For this reason, it was the target of airstrikes in the beginning. They struck the institute nine times, and they struck our workshops, too. Now we can’t use them. MARCIA BIGGS: The former commander of coalition forces in Iraq, Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, recently listed 81 locations where bombs were dropped, but had not yet exploded. Facilities used to make weapons were often on the list of high-value targets for the coalition. So now those places are twice as likely to contain dangerous items. So, this was once a workshop for electrical engineering students. You can still see the lab tables here. It was hit by an airstrike in 2015. Afterwards, members of the university staff found bomb-making instructions among the rubble. This was likely an ISIS bomb-making factory, and judging by the crater, a high-value target. Despite the damage, Dean Alubaidy says he will hold classes this fall in alternate buildings, until the campus is ready. He’s expecting registration to be in the thousands, students who lost three years of education during the fighting and don’t want to lose another one. GHASSAN ALUBAIDY (through interpreter): On our Facebook pages, we found a great number of students posting that they were full of encouragement to come back. For us, it was unbelievable. We couldn’t imagine it, to see how many students wanted to start again, how they were dreaming of the first day of classes, when they could sit in front of teachers again and start to live their lives again. MARCIA BIGGS: Next door, Mosul University has already started classes. Students even volunteered to help in the cleanup. But across the river, West Mosul was the site of ISIS’ last stand and bore the brunt of the battle. It’s densely packed Old City, with its flattened buildings, is a challenge for mine-sweeping. FAWZI AL-NABDI (through interpreter): Most of the homes here were full of mines. And just here in front of us, a man with two kids came back to his home, and when he opened the door, the bomb killed him and his kids. MARCIA BIGGS: Ahmed Younes fled back in early July with only the clothes on his back. Residents have been virtually banned from returning to his neighborhood on the outskirts of the Old City, but Ahmed said he got special permission, in order to retrieve some personal items. AHMED YOUNES, Local Resident (through interpreter): We came on our own. We got permission to come, but they are not responsible if anything happens to us. MARCIA BIGGS: Right now, there is no plan to begin clearing the Old City or even to determine how many mines there are. It is still out of bounds to anyone but the Iraqi security forces. So the Janus team is focusing on progress in the rest of the city, building by building, bomb by bomb. CHRISTIAN: Whoever made this device had a set goal. And to allow him to win, people get hurt. So you kind of compete against him to be better than him to take it out before it can do any harm. MARCIA BIGGS: So, you feel like you’re winning the battle against ISIS? CHRISTIAN: Yes, one IED at a time. MARCIA BIGGS: For the PBS NewsHour, I’m Marcia Biggs in Mosul, Iraq. HARI SREENIVASAN: Tune in later. Frontline’s latest film, “Mosul,” was on the ground filming the fight as it unfolded street by street and house by house. That’s tonight on PBS. The post The battle for Mosul is over, but this hidden ISIS danger could lurk for years appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article iraq islamic state land mines Mosul
d Xi Jinping celebrates China’s rising power — and his own By www.pbs.org Published On :: Wed, 18 Oct 2017 22:35:21 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioHARI SREENIVASAN: President Xi Jinping opened China’s twice-per-decade Communist Party Congress today with a lengthy list of his achievements during his first five-year term, and his vision of where he hopes to take his nation. But beyond the words, Xi is asserting power like no Chinese leader in decades. William Brangham reports. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The applause, the music, it was a reception befitting the commanding role that Xi Jinping has taken since being named party leader five years ago. He opened today’s proceedings by hailing reforms he’s put in place, and proclaiming a — quote — “new era for China.” PRESIDENT XI JINPING, China (through interpreter): The Chinese nation has realized a great leap, from declining in modern history to twisting its fate fundamentally and continuously moving to prosperity. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Over 3.5 hours, Xi laid out his vision to shape the nation of 1.4 billion people into what he called a — quote — “great modern socialist country” over the next three decades. PRESIDENT XI JINPING (through interpreter): Achieving the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation will be no walk in the park, and it will take more than drumbeating and gong-clanging to get there. The whole party must be prepared to make more arduous, strenuous efforts. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Susan Shirk is chair of the 21st Century China Center at the University of California, San Diego. SUSAN SHIRK, University of California, San Diego: Xi Jinping has a vision of China’s role in the world that is much more ambitious than anything we have seen before, talking about China kind of moving toward the center of the world and having a lot more influence than it did before. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: In his address, Xi largely ignored the question of political reforms in China, and he didn’t mention President Trump or North Korea’s nuclear weapons program. But in a rare move, he did acknowledge that with global demand weakening, there were challenges facing China’s export-driven economy. PRESIDENT XI JINPING (through interpreter): While China’s overall productive forces have significantly improved and in many areas our production capacity leads the world, the more prominent problem is that our development is unbalanced and inadequate. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Xi was one of the first foreign leaders to meet with President Trump. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: The relationship developed by President Xi and myself, I think, is outstanding. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: That was decidedly warmer than Mr. Trump’s past criticism of China and its economic and trade policies. But other U.S. officials are more critical of Beijing’s actions. REX TILLERSON, Secretary of State: China, while rising alongside India, has done so less responsibly. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson today criticized China’s aggressive displays of economic and military power, particularly its expansion on man-made islands in the South China Sea. REX TILLERSON: We will not shrink from China’s challenges to the rules-based order, and where China subverts the sovereignty of neighboring countries and disadvantages the U.S. and our friends. SUSAN SHIRK: I think there are things to worry about in Chinese foreign policy that are mostly related to these maritime sovereignty issues and to a kind of bullying in Asia, but the global ambition could turn out to be positive. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Susan Shirk says China has filled a vacuum left by the United States’ withdrawal from global agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Paris climate accords. Perhaps the most important thing to watch for in the next few days is who Xi establishes as his likely successor. SUSAN SHIRK: That is why there is a lot of speculation now that he may be trying, much like Putin, to stay on beyond his normal term or to rule behind the scenes even after he retires. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: President Trump will be traveling to Beijing to meet Xi next month. For the PBS NewsHour, I’m William Brangham. The post Xi Jinping celebrates China’s rising power — and his own appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article china Communist Party of China Xi Jinping
d Boomers hold breath on Bogut By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Andrey Bogut’s knee injury has potentially sidelined him for the NBA playoffs and casts doubt on his role for the Boomers. Full Article
d Cartwright is ready to fire By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Bryce Cartwright admits he has something of a split personality in his first NSW State of Origin camp. Full Article
d Eels director ready for fight By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Paul Garrard has no plans to walk away but has urged Geoff Gerard to resign if he has lost his desire to fight. Full Article
d Smith lashes Daley’s ref bashing By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Queensland captain Cameron Smith says Laurie Daley’s attack on the referees gave NSW an excuse they didn’t deserve. Full Article
d Taxman joins gold rush By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT The Bank of Mum and Dad has been a major sponsor of Olympic athletes for more than a century, but may be about to be superseded. Full Article
d Tigerair chaos as Bali flights cancelled By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Wed, 11 Jan 2017 23:52:00 GMT HUNDREDS of travellers’ holiday plans are in disarray after all Tigerair flights in and out of Bali were cancelled again today and early tomorrow. Full Article
d Pauline Hanson’s ‘pain in her backside’ By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Thu, 12 Jan 2017 00:47:00 GMT PAULINE Hanson has described Rod Culleton as a “pain in the backside”, and despite being disqualified from the Senate he’s continuing to cause her pain. Full Article
d Shorten: ‘Don’t underestimate Labor’ By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Sat, 25 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT BILL Shorten believes Labor can still win next Saturday’s election despite new opinion polling predicting his party will struggle. Full Article
d Turnbull and Shorten speak of mistakes By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Mon, 27 Jun 2016 11:32:00 GMT ROLLING UPDATES: Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten have given candid interviews to Four Corners, where they reveal more about themselves and their hopes for winning the election. Full Article
d Shorten blasted for ‘treaty bomb’ By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Mon, 27 Jun 2016 20:23:00 GMT LEADING Aboriginal academic Marcia Langton has blasted Bill Shorten over his claim Labor could sign a treaty with Indigenous Australians. Full Article
d ‘Thrown under the bus’: Jones unleashes By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Mon, 27 Jun 2016 21:51:00 GMT RADIO shock jock fan Alan Jones unleashed on both sides of politics on Q&A last night — and came out in defence of Brexit. Full Article
d ‘Being secret doesn’t make sense’ By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Mon, 11 Jul 2016 09:50:00 GMT UPDATES: Senator Nick Xenophon said it doesn’t make sense for the agreement between the Liberal and National parties to be kept as a private secret. Full Article
d Dundee ice hockey player jailed for rape of teen girl in his car By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 14:34:23 +0000 A Dundee ice hockey player has been jailed after being found guilty of raping a teenage girl in his car. Full Article
d Scotch whisky distiller with famous brands reveals key change By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 11:11:18 +0000 The Scotch whisky distiller has announced a major change Full Article
d 'Systematic racism' in social work in Scotland to be addressed in review after report By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 15:23:47 +0000 A national review of social work in Scotland has been launched in a bid to address ‘systemic racism’ within the sector. Full Article
d Nicola Sturgeon has made 'no decision' on standing for Holyrood election in 2026 By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 16:25:18 +0000 The Herald understands that former first minister Nicola Sturgeon has made no decisions on whether she will stand for election in 2026. Full Article
d Two thirds of Celtic fans want fan board put in place as 'poor' engagement called out By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 16:35:51 +0000 Two thirds of Celtic fans believe the club should have an independently elected Fan Advisory Board according to new research from the University of Glasgow. Full Article
d SNP ministers urged to 'mitigate' UK Government's ‘chilling’ anti-terror strategy By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 05:00:00 +0000 Human rights campaigners are calling on SNP ministers to do all they can to “mitigate” Prevent, the UK Government's controversial anti-terror strategy. Full Article
d SNP MSP welcomes contest with Flynn as she declares bid to restand for seat By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 10:16:08 +0000 "I look forward to any contest, where of course it will be for branch members to select those they wish to represent them in Holyrood in the 2026 Scottish Parliament elections.” Full Article
d Analysis: The long battle to succeed John Swinney as SNP leader has now begun By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 11:42:18 +0000 "Kate Forbes still has her own leadership ambitions, setting them aside this Spring in the interest of party unity to accept Mr Swinney's offer to become Deputy First Minister." Full Article
d Mhairi Black rules out standing for Holyrood in 2026 By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 15:37:01 +0000 "I hear journalists are wondering if I’ve put my name in for the Scottish Parliament. Big news re 2026 coming in the next hour…watch this space." Full Article
d Stephen Flynn slammed by SNP colleagues over Holyrood bid By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:56:08 +0000 Stephen Flynn has been criticised by SNP colleagues after saying he would stay on at Westminster, even if elected to Holyrood. Full Article
d Sarwar: Scottish Government must follow Chancellor and extend rates relief By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:43:29 +0000 Ministers must follow the UK Government and extend rates relief for businesses in Scotland, Anas Sarwar has said. Full Article
d 'We had to come and help, to do what we can'- Valencia flood volunteers fear and hope By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:11:00 +0000 As parts of Spain are on alert for new flood warnings, Dominic Hinde meets the volunteers still involved in the aftermath and recovery following the initial disaster Full Article
d Backlash after former Labour Spin Doctor's comment on Farmers and Thatcher By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:26:50 +0000 A former aid to Tony Blair has been criticised by the SNP after he said the Government "should do farmers what Thatcher did to the miners". Full Article
d Two runners saved by the same public defibrillator back new appeal By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:30:00 +0000 Two runners saved by the same public defibrillator appeal for all the life-saving devices to be publicly available. Tens of thousands of defibs are unregistered so ‘invisible’ in an emergency. Full Article
d New research to better understand the biological factors of suicidal behaviour By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:30:00 +0000 New research to better understand the biological factors of suicidal behaviour Researchers at the University of Glasgow are embarking on two new PhD projects to better understand the impact that biological factors may have on suicidal behaviour. Full Article
d Stunning Rangers and Celtic 3D chess sets are pitch perfect for Christmas By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:50:00 +0000 3D Scotland are an innovative, Glasgow-based company who specialise in the design and manufacture of unique chess sets. Their sets have proved extremely popular as Christmas gifts, graduation gifts, fathers’ day gifts and everything in between. Full Article
d Record obesity rates and a dental crisis: Survey lays bare state of nation's health By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:02:00 +0000 What does 2023's Scottish Health Survey tell us about Scotland's population - from smoking rates to obesity, and alcohol consumption? Full Article
d Is the UK now entering the SAD season? By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:34:00 +0000 AS the nights draw in, and we wake up and it’s still dark out, it just feels that little harder to get out of bed. For some, however, kicking off those warm, cosy covers is far harder than for others. Full Article
d Nordic-style Open Kindergarten to be trialled in Scotland ahead of potential roll-out By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 00:01:00 +0000 A new Nordic-style Open Kindergarten will be trialled in part of Scotland ahead of a potential roll-out across the country. Full Article
d 'Renowned' restructuring firm acquired by major sector player By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:31:00 +0000 A "renowned" restructuring advisory business has been acquired by a major player. Full Article
d Scottish family-run dairy wins major listing with world’s third largest retailer By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:33:00 +0000 Family business Graham’s Family Dairy has secured a multinational listing Full Article
d Scottish airport chief 'thrilled' as airline giant launches first advanced aircraft By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:34:00 +0000 The plane is hailed as 'one of the most advanced aircraft available on the market' Full Article
d Scotland second-top out of 12 UK nations and regions on key measure By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:35:00 +0000 Scotland was second out of 12 UK nations and regions on one key measure Full Article
d Housebuilder completes 'one of the largest' new Highland homes projects since 1970s By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:35:00 +0000 A rural housing project branded as ‘truly transformative’ has been completed Full Article
d Police arrest 46-year-old man following Cambuslang ‘disturbance’ By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:24:04 +0000 Emergency services were called to the Glebe Place area of the town Full Article
d Fire engine crashes with two cars while travelling under blue lights By www.heraldscotland.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:45:32 +0000 A fire engine on its way to a callout has been involved in a collision with two cars on a road junction in Edinburgh. Full Article