Senin, 30 Oktober 2023

King Charles Kenya trip: Mau Mau uprising hangs over visit - BBC

Grave of Elijah Kinyua

King Charles and his wife Camilla are on a four-day state visit to Kenya, where he will acknowledge "painful aspects" of the UK's colonial past.

More than 10,000 people were killed and others tortured during the brutal suppression of the Mau Mau uprising in the 1950s, one of the British Empire's bloodiest insurgencies. In 2013 Britain expressed regret and paid out £20m ($24m) to more than 5,000 people - but some feel that didn't go far enough.

One of those is 90-year-old Agnes Muthoni.

With a steady stride despite a stoop, she leads us to the grave site at her home in Shamata, central Kenya.

She plucks weeds that have grown next to her husband's grave. Elijah Kinyua died two years ago, aged 93. He was also known as General Bahati, and like his wife was a fighter during the bloody uprising against the British Empire's colonial government in the 1950s.

She held the rank of a major in the Kenya Land and Freedom Army - more commonly known as the Mau Mau.

Ms Muthoni breaks into a radiant smile as she shows us her wedding ring. They only met after the revolt ended and he was released from detention.

"He said if there were women fighters who survived, he would like to marry one of them because she would understand his problems and not call him Mau Mau."

Agnes Muthoni
BBC
Human beings forgive each other and continue living together, but I would like to be given land
Agnes Muthoni
Mau Mau veteran

The struggle united them. But even after Kenya gained independence from British colonial rule, the couple continued to live in the shadows - like many former Mau Mau fighters.

The resistance group remained outlawed. It was designated a terrorist organisation by the colonial government and subsequent administrations in independent Kenya did not overturn the ban. "Three Mau Mau members could not meet; it was an offence," says Kenyan lawyer and politician Paul Muite. "It was atrocious."

It was only in 2003 that the law was changed, and members of the Mau Mau were finally recognised as freedom fighters.

But this also meant that post-independence generations knew little of the past.

"So many children and grandchildren had no idea about the roots of the country's suffering that gave birth to independence," says historian Caroline Elkins, who conducted interviews on the topic in the 1990s.

Her observations are echoed on the streets of Nairobi today. Many young people hardly know about the detention and torture of the Mau Mau. They are more concerned about the economy and wonder if King Charles's visit will have any impact.

Ms Muthoni's 36-year-old grandson, Wachira Githui, is one of the few who heard about it first-hand. But he is also at ease with several of the lasting impacts of colonialism on Kenya's social, political and economic life. "I speak English and I'm proud of that," he says, adding that he is a fan of Chelsea football club.

Kenyan social media comes alive when a crucial English Premier League game is on. Fans trade banter for hours on end.

A Kenyan boy in a Manchester United shirt plays football in Nairobi
Getty Images

From the streets to offices, the legacy of empire remains unmissable in Nairobi.

A neatly pressed black gown and white neck bands hang behind Paul Muite's desk in his office in the Kilimani neighbourhood. He dons a wig as well when appearing in court. Much of the British legal, governance and educational structures were inherited not only in Kenya but across much of the former empire.

But knowledge of many aspects of the "more painful past" which the King is expected to acknowledge was seldom passed down through the generations, and remains hidden from the public.

Mr Muite is calling for a commission of inquiry to be set up by both the Kenyan and UK governments to go to every part of Kenya and document the colonial period in detail. He was part of the legal team that took a test case to British courts in 2009, which ended with an out-of-court settlement four years later.

The British government expressed regret and paid the compensation to Mau Mau veterans.

Women protest against King Charles's planned visit to Kenya
Reuters

But Mr Muite says only those fighters still alive who could be examined by doctors and confirmed as torture victims received payments. Those who provided services and maintained supply lines for fighters, as well as Kenyans outside the centre of the country who fought against colonialism, were not included, he says.

Among them are members of the Talai clan, who have recently renewed their calls for the British government to return the skull of their leader Koitalel arap Samoei. He led the Nandi community's resistance to colonial settlement, disrupting the plans to occupy the highlands of the Rift Valley for over a decade. Eventually, he was lured to a peace meeting where he was killed in 1905.

Mr Muite argues that recognising "those who were killed, those who provided services including meals to Mau Mau fighters and those who were raped, and giving them a bit of compensation" would help bring closure.

Historian Caroline Elkins says the anticipated announcement by the monarch will be "an extraordinary moment" but adds that the right thing would be to "insist upon proper investigations, done by the government, to change history books, to change museums in Britain and to provide funding in Kenya to establish its own museums and cultural artefacts".

She says the atrocities committed during the state of emergency - declared by the colonial government in October 1952 in response to the Mau Mau revolt - were done in the monarch's name. Queen Elizabeth II acceded to the throne just eight months earlier while on a visit to central Kenya where the rebellion had been brewing.

"It was Her Majesty the Queen whose picture hung in detention camps, [and] as they were being tortured and forced to labour, they had to sing God Save the Queen."

The Mau Mau attacks could be brutal, and would often occur at night. Images of six-year-old Michael Ruck - hacked to death along with his parents and a farmhand - and his bloodied teddy bears, were published in newspapers abroad, and drew no sympathy for the fighters.

The colonial government used its air power and ground forces that included many Kenyans - known as the home guards - to mount a brutal crackdown on the Mau Mau.

Ms Elkins estimates that as many as 320,000 people were interned in detention or concentration camps. Prisoners were reportedly castrated, flogged to death, and even set on fire.

British troops guard suspected rebels in Kenya in 1952
Getty Images

More than 1,000 were executed by hanging during the emergency period. The total death toll is estimated to be in the thousands. Historians have described the operations to crush the revolt as the bloodiest post-war conflict the UK was involved in last century.

"There were no houses for us to live in," says veteran Agnes Muthoni of the conditions in the forest during the emergency. "There were hyenas, hunger and rain."

She now lives in a blue-roofed house made of corrugated iron sheets and timber which overlooks the undulating green ranges of the Aberdare mountain range.

The vast fertile land stretching across central Kenya to the Rift Valley was once known as the "White Highlands". Almost all of it was exclusively owned by settler farmers. Local people, like Ms Muthoni, were pushed to the fringes to pave the way for European farmers to occupy the best land.

After independence much of it went to the home guards, as the Mau Mau continued to be considered a terrorist organisation.

But Ms Muthoni is ready to let go of the past. "We are not bitter in our hearts because the past is gone," she says.

"Human beings forgive each other and continue living together, but I would like to be given land."

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2023-10-31 01:27:26Z
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Rishi Sunak and Elon Musk to host 'in conversation' event after AI summit - Sky News

The prime minister will host an event with X owner Elon Musk following the UK's AI summit.

Rishi Sunak's X account posted on Monday that he will be "in conversation" with the Tesla and SpaceX boss on Thursday.

It is likely he will also be present in some way at the summit, although it is not clear whether he will attend in person or virtually.

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Reports emerged on Monday that the value of X had fallen to $19bn (£15.6bn) according to the company's internal documents. Musk bought the site - then called Twitter - for $44bn (£36.2bn) last year.

US vice president Kamala Harris will also attend the summit.

While in the UK, she will discuss the Israel-Hamas conflict with Rishi Sunak during a whirlwind visit.

More on Artificial Intelligence

The pair will also "consult on next steps in our support for Ukraine," according to a White House official.

Ms Harris's presence at the AI summit means that President Joe Biden is not making the trip.

Downing Street has denied Mr Sunak is feeling snubbed by international counterparts, with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz all believed to be unlikely to show.

Read more:
ChatGPT predicted Rishi Sunak's speech about AI
Musk launches long-awaited AI start-up
Looking back on Elon Musk's first year of owning Twitter

An updated guest list could not be provided by the UK government on Monday, although a spokesperson claimed they "remain confident that we have brought together the right group of world experts in the AI space, leading businesses, and indeed world leaders and representatives who will be able to take on this vital issue".

This came amid reports the invite to China has been upgraded to include asking President Xi Jinping to attend.

Downing Street insist it is a "significant achievement" to host the first AI safety summit of its kind.

After arriving in the UK on Tuesday, Ms Harris and her husband will travel to Winfield House in London.

She will give a "major policy speech" on the US's vision for AI on Wednesday at the US embassy, before heading to Downing Street to meet with Mr Sunak.

Ms Harris will travel to Milton Keynes on Thursday to attend the AI summit, which will take place at Bletchley Park - where British codebreakers worked in secret, using early computer technology, during the Second World War.

Click to subscribe to Politics at Jack and Sam's wherever you get your podcasts

The vice president will then leave the UK later that day to return to the US.

Mr Biden signed an executive order earlier today aiming to guide the development of AI, requiring firms working on potentially dangerous models to share safety data with the government before their release, among other measures.

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2023-10-30 22:32:10Z
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Minggu, 29 Oktober 2023

Storm Ciarán to bring flooding and strong winds to UK - live - The Independent

What is extreme weather? | Decomplicated

The Met Office has warned of “strong winds and heavy rain” as Storm Ciarán is set to sweep across the UK later this week.

Ciarán is due to bring gusts of 80mph winds to areas along the south coast of England, with a small risk of some more exposed areas seeing wind speeds of up to 90mph. Meanwhile, up to 60mm of rain is expected to fall in some areas.

Met office Deputy Chief Meteorologist, Chris Almond, said: “Heavy and persistent rain will fall onto already saturated ground bringing a risk of further impacts such as flooding in areas that are already struggling to clean up from the heavy rainfall we have seen over the last week or so.”

The Environment agency currently has a staggering 72 flood warnings in place across England and a further 172 flood alerts. Meanwhile in Scotland, 18 flood warnings and 11 flood alerts are currently in place.

The third named storm of this year’s season comes after areas across Scotland and north-east England were battered with the worst of Storm Babet, which caused serious damage and several deaths when it hit last week.

1698584387

Met Office name latest storm set to bring 90mph winds to the UK this week

The Met Office has named the third storm of the season as it’s set to bring 90mph winds to the UK from Thursday.

The forecaster said Storm Ciarán is set to bring “strong winds and heavy rain” as it sweeps across the UK next week.

It comes after areas across Scotland and north-east England were battered with the worst of Storm Babet, which caused serious damage and several deaths when it hit last week.

Met office Deputy Chief Meteorologist, Chris Almond, said: “Heavy and persistent rain will fall onto already saturated ground bringing a risk of further impacts such as flooding in areas that are already struggling to clean up from the heavy rainfall we have seen over the last week or so.”

The Environment agency currently has a staggering 71 flood warnings in place across England and a further 172 flood alerts. Meanwhile in Scotland, 18 flood warnings and 11 flood alerts are currently in place.

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 12:59
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Weather set to worsen this week

The weather is expected to worsen as the week progresses with rain warnings in place until Wednesday.

A “deep area of low pressure” is set to arrive on Thursday which has been named by the Met Office as Storm Ciaran, threatening strong winds and heavy rain to southern parts of England and Wales.

Met Office deputy chief meteorologist Chris Almond said: “Winds associated with Storm Ciaran are likely to gust to 80mph along the south coast of England, with a small risk of somewhere exposed seeing 90mph, and winds could even gust up to 50 or 60mph further inland.

“This deep low-pressure system will also bring heavy rain to much of the UK, but the heaviest rain is expected in southern and western areas with 20 to 25mm quite widely across the region, but up to 40 to 60mm potentially over higher ground.

“Heavy and persistent rain will fall on to already saturated ground, bringing a risk of further impacts such as flooding in areas that are already struggling to clean up from the heavy rainfall we have seen over the last week or so.”

Katy Clifton30 October 2023 04:00
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Flooding hits UK over weekend

Flooding has been seen across Sussex over the weekend, including at the Priory Meadow Shopping Centre in Hastings which was evacuated on Saturday. Photos on social media showed floodwater coming through the entrance.

On Sunday, a caravan park in Bognor Regis was left under water, while the town’s Tesco supermarket car park also flooded.

And a house had its roof ripped off in Littlehampton, West Sussex, on Saturday in what the Tornado and Storm Research Organisation (Torro) has provisionally called a tornado with a rating of T4, signifying it as being of “severe” force.

The rating suggests the tornado would have involved winds of up to 61m/s (136mph) capable of causing damage to buildings and lifting up and carrying sheds or uprooting trees.

Katy Clifton30 October 2023 02:00
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What does a yellow weather warnings mean?

So far, several yellow weather warnings for wind and rain have been issued this week ahead of Storm Ciarán’s arrival.

When Storm Babet hit last week, amber and even rare red weather warnings were also issued.

Here’s what a yellow weather warning means:

“Yellow warnings can be issued for a range of weather situations,” says the Met Office.

“Many are issued when it is likely that the weather will cause some low level impacts, including some disruption to travel in a few places. Many people may be able to continue with their daily routine, but there will be some that will be directly impacted and so it is important to assess if you could be affected.“

Other yellow warnings are issued when the weather could bring much more severe impacts to the majority of people but the certainty of those impacts occurring is much lower. It is important to read the content of yellow warnings to determine which weather situation is being covered by the yellow warning.”

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 23:30
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Full report: Met Office issues fresh weather warnings as storm officially named

The forecasters have said severe weather warnings are to be expected until Thursday, before the latest named storm is due to arrive.

Ciarán is due to bring 80mph gusts to areas along the south coast of England, with a small risk of some more exposed areas seeing wind speeds of up to 90mph. Meanwhile, up to 60mm of rain is expected to fall in some areas.

Read more:

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 21:30
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What is extreme weather?

Storm Ciarán is the latest extreme weather event the UK has seen in recent weeks. The third named storm of this year’s season comes after areas across Scotland and north-east England were battered with the worst of Storm Babet, which caused serious damage and several deaths when it hit last week.

From flooding to heatwaves, wildfires to droughts, Earth’s weather cycles have shown signs of becoming increasingly more erratic, severe and prolonged, and though there is no blanket explanation for this change in weather patterns, human-induced global warming is a major underlying factor.

The Independent looks at extreme weather below:

What is extreme weather? | Decomplicated
Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 19:30
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Met Office advice for staying safe in a storm

With Storm Ciarán set to batter the UK on Thursday, here’s the Met Office’s advice for staying safe in a storm:

  • Stay indoors as much as possible
  • If you do go out, try not to walk or shelter close to buildings and trees
  • Keep away from the sheltered side of boundary walls and fences - if these structures fail, they will collapse on this side
  • Do not go outside to repair damage while the storm is in progress
  • If possible, enter and leave your house through doors in the sheltered side, closing them behind you
  • Open internal doors only as needed, and close them behind you
  • Take care when driving on exposed routes such as bridges, or high open roads, delay your journey or find alternative routes if possible
  • Slow down and be aware of side winds, particular care should be taken if you are towing or are a high sided vehicle
  • Do not drive unless your journey is really necessary
<p>Waves at Stonehaven Harbour</p>

Waves at Stonehaven Harbour

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 18:30
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UK’s five day weather forecast

This Evening and Tonight:

Rain will affect eastern Scotland and northeast England overnight, heavy and persistent at first. Elsewhere there will be clear spells and showers, the showers heaviest near to southern and western coasts of England and Wales. Patchy frost in the north.

Monday will be cloudy with patchy rain across eastern Scotland and northern England. Some sunshine elsewhere, but with heavy showers, some thundery, becoming more widespread from the south and west.

Outlook for Tuesday to Thursday:

Tuesday and Wednesday will see showers or longer spells of rain moving north and east across all parts, and generally becoming windy. Storm Ciarán arriving from the southwest later Wednesday.

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 17:30
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In pictures: Britons brave the heavy rain

Here are the latest pictures of the weather from Sunday as the UK prepares for the arrival of Storm Ciarán.

<p>A view of the flooded car park at a Tesco store in Bognor Regis after heavy rain the area. </p>

A view of the flooded car park at a Tesco store in Bognor Regis after heavy rain the area.

<p>A view of the entrance to the Riverside Caravan Centre in Bognor Regis which has flooded after heavy rain the area.</p>

A view of the entrance to the Riverside Caravan Centre in Bognor Regis which has flooded after heavy rain the area.

<p>People braving the rain as they attend the Whitby Goth Weekend in Whitby, Yorkshire.</p>

People braving the rain as they attend the Whitby Goth Weekend in Whitby, Yorkshire.

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 15:57
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Further weather warning issued for Northern Ireland

The Met Office has issued a new weather warning for Northern Ireland, ahead of Storm Ciarán’s arrival on Thursday.

The yellow weather warning for heavy showers will come into place at 4pm on Monday and remain until Tuesday at 3pm.

Athena Stavrou29 October 2023 15:30

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2023-10-30 04:21:26Z
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Man arrested on suspicion of murder after woman, 19, stabbed to death in Croydon - Sky News

A 19-year-old woman, believed to be an Indian national who is thought to have arrived in the UK recently, has been stabbed to death.

A 23-year-old man who was known to the victim was arrested at the scene in Croydon, south London, on suspicion of murder and taken to hospital after suffering a minor head injury.

The Metropolitan Police said officers were called to a home in Ash Tree Way on Sunday afternoon.

A 19-year-old woman was found with stab injuries and was pronounced dead at the scene.

The Met said in a statement: "The woman is believed to be an Indian national who is thought to have arrived in the United Kingdom relatively recently. Officers are working to trace and inform her family."

The force said no one else is being sought in connection with the murder investigation.

Police are appealing for witnesses, including anyone who saw or heard a disturbance at the address.

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2023-10-29 22:36:25Z
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Labour frontbenchers in revolt over Gaza stance as Starmer warned he could lose seats - The Independent

Sir Keir Starmer has been warned Labour could lose seats over his stance on the Hamas conflict, as more frontbenchers defied his leadership by openly calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

A host of shadow ministers broke ranks with Sir Keir on Saturday to voice their support for the move – either with express endorsements or by sharing a demand from the Labour Friends of Palestine group.

Shadow ministers Naz Shah, Paul Barker and Afzal Khan all challenged Sir Keir’s refusal to support a ceasefire. Shadow veterans minister Rachel Hopkins, shadow local government minister Sarah Owen and shadow domestic violence minister Jess Phillips, and Labour whip Kim Leadbeater all retweeted calls for a ceasefire on X/Twitter.

It means 13 frontbenchers are now opposed to Mr Starmer’s position. Labour MPs have told The Independent that at least 100 of Sir Keir’s MPs – half his parliamentary party – want him to shift stance to avoid losing further support.

They warned the Labour leader that the party faces an “existential threat” in seats with a large number of Muslim voters, as councillors quit and local parties pass motions in favour of a ceasefire.

It comes as a YouGov survey found that 42 per cent of 2019 Labour voters think Sir Keir has handled his response to the conflict badly, while only 26 per cent think he has responded well.

Ms Shah, Mr Starmer’s shadow minister for crime reduction, appeared to stray furthest from the leadership’s position, accusing Israel of “disproportionate attacks on a civilian population” with a post on X, adding: “We cannot be silent.”

Shadow exports minister Mr Khan tweeted: “We need an immediate ceasefire now.” And Ms Barker, who is shadow devolution minister, said she “fully supports these calls”.

Ms Hopkins and Ms Owen – both said to be on resignation watch over the issue – retweeted a ceasefire demand by Labour Friends of Palestine. Shadow solicitor-general Andy Slaughter also retweeted the statement, while Ms Phillips and Ms Leadbeater retweeted UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres’s call for a ceasefire.

Keir Starmer is under huge pressure to change his stance on a ceasefire

Shadow minister for small business, Rushanara Ali, shadow development minister Yasmin Qureshi, shadow levelling up minister Imran Hussain, shadow democracy minister Florence Eshalomi, and Mary Foy, a principal private secretary to Angela Rayner, all indicated support for a ceasefire earlier this week.

Ms Phillips criticised Israel’s cutting of communication to Gaza, saying: “How can this be a solution?” Senior Labour MP Sarah Champion, chair of the international development committee, also condemned the move. She said: “How can this be a proportionate response?”

London mayor Sadiq Khan, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar all broke ranks on Friday to challenge Sir Keir’s stance.

Sir Keir has joined Rishi Sunak in calling for a “humanitarian pause” to allow aid to enter Gaza. But he has consistently argued that Israel has the right to defend itself after the attack by Hamas terrorists.

The Labour leader has also angered many in the party with comments on LBC Radio in which he appeared to back the cutting of power and water to Gaza – which he clarified 10 days later, insisting: “I was not saying that Israel had the right to cut off water, food, fuel or medicines.”

One Labour MP said Mr Starmer had made a “catastrophic decision” to stick with Israel “unconditionally” – arguing that it had alienated millions of voters. “He’s got himself into a serious mess,” they said.

The backbencher told The Independent: “There is an existential threat to a lot of Labour seats with a large number of Muslims voters. I know it’s about a humanitarian disaster – but people do count numbers and worry about their seats. There are MPs on the right of the party and soft left who are very uneasy.”

They added: “A wide group are really, really unhappy. I would say around 100 MPs [want a ceasefire]. The numbers are moving away from him [Sir Keir] quite rapidly. So I can’t see how the position will hold, especially if there’s wider escalation in the conflict.”

Keir Starmer visited the South Wales Islamic Centre mosque last weekend

Labour MP Khalid Mahmood, who helped organise a meeting between Sir Keir and Muslim MPs this week, said: “I certainly hope Keir does [back a ceasefire]. We had a very productive meeting. We were heard, we’re now in dialogue. That’s positive.”

While more than 50 MPs have gone public with their support for a ceasefire, many more are believed to be unhappy – and four shadow cabinet ministers are reportedly on resignation watch as the leadership battles to shore up support for the position.

Another Labour MP said there were “easily” 100 MPs who wanted to change the position. They added: “I fear there will be people around Starmer telling him he needs to stick to backing the US and Israel – telling him he has to be willing to burn our base.”

Over 300 Labour councillors have now signed an open letter to Sir Keir backing calls for a ceasefire. And the Romford Constituency Labour Party (CLP) voted unanimously for a motion backing a ceasefire and opposing an Israeli ground invasion – the first CLP to do so.

Party sources made clear the Labour leader was not about to change his position on Friday despite the revolt from the mayors in London and Greater Manchester and the Scottish party leader.

A Labour Party spokesperson said: “Of course, we understand why people want to call for a ceasefire. The Palestinian people are not Hamas, and they are suffering terribly. That’s why we support humanitarian pauses ... We also have to recognise Israel was subject to a vile terrorist attack. Israel has a right and a duty to defend itself.”

Meanwhile, ex-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn addressed pro-Palestine protesters in Parliament Square on Saturday. He was scathing about the government’s decision to abstain on a UN general assembly vote on a humanitarian truce. “It is an eternal stain that the British government abstained on that vote,” said Mr Corbyn.

Senior Tory MP Alicia Kearns, chair of parliament’s foreign affairs select committee, said she supported the humanitarian truce voted for in the UN. The UK government criticised the motion’s failure to include unequivocal condemnation of Hamas’s terrorist attacks.

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2023-10-29 09:26:04Z
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Nottingham Panthers’ ice hockey player Adam Johnson dies after ‘freak injury’ - The Guardian

Ice hockey player Adam Johnson has died after a “freak accident” during Nottingham Panthers’ Challenge Cup match with Sheffield Steelers on Saturday night.

The 29-year-old American reportedly suffered a slashed neck during the second period of the game at Sheffield’s Utilita Arena.

Nottingham Panthers said on Sunday morning: “The Nottingham Panthers are truly devastated to announce that Adam Johnson has tragically passed away following a freak accident at the game in Sheffield last night.”

“The club will dearly miss him and will never ever forget him,” they added.

“Adam, our number 47, was not only an outstanding ice hockey player, but also a great team-mate and an incredible person with his whole life ahead of him.

“The Panthers would like to send our thoughts and condolences to Adam’s family, his partner, and all his friends at this extremely difficult time.

“Everyone at the club including players, staff, management and ownership are heartbroken at the news of Adam’s passing.”

More to follow …

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2023-10-29 09:34:00Z
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Hundreds of thousands march worldwide against Israeli bombardment of Gaza - Al Jazeera English

Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators rallied in cities across Europe, the Middle East, the United States and Asia on Saturday to show support for the Palestinians amid brutal Israeli military onslaught on the Gaza Strip.

In one of the biggest marches, large crowds marched through the centre of the British capital, London, to demand the government of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak call for a ceasefire.

Saturday’s march in London was mostly peaceful, but police said they had made nine arrests: two for assaults on officers and seven for public order offences – some of which were being treated as hate crimes.

Police estimated the turnout at between 50,000 and 70,000 people.

Echoing Washington’s stance, Sunak’s government has stopped short of calling for a ceasefire, and instead advocated humanitarian pauses to allow aid to reach people in Gaza.

The United Kingdom has supported Israel’s “right to defend” itself after the October 7 attack by Hamas killed more than 1,400 people, mostly civilians.

The death toll in Gaza has crossed 7,700, also mostly civilians, since Israel’s bombardment began three weeks ago, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

In Malaysia, a large crowd of demonstrators chanted slogans outside the US embassy in Kuala Lumpur.

An estimated 100,000 people rallied in the southern Indian state of Kerala in solidarity with Palestine.

Addressing hundreds of thousands of supporters at a huge rally in Istanbul, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Israel was an occupier, and repeated his stance about Hamas not being a “terrorist” organisation.

Erdogan drew a sharp rebuke from Israel this week for calling the armed group “freedom fighters”.

Protests were also held in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Palestinian protesters in Hebron in the occupied West Bank called for a global boycott of Israeli products. “Don’t contribute to the killing of the children of Palestine,” they chanted.

Elsewhere in Europe, people took to the streets of Copenhagen, Rome and Stockholm.

Some cities in France have banned rallies since the war began, fearing they could fuel social tensions. But despite a ban in Paris, a small rally took place on Saturday. Several hundred people also marched in the southern city of Marseille.

In New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, thousands of people holding Palestinian flags and placards reading “Free Palestine” marched to Parliament House.

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https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMidmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vZ2FsbGVyeS8yMDIzLzEwLzI5L2h1bmRyZWRzLW9mLXRob3VzYW5kcy1tYXJjaC13b3JsZHdpZGUtYWdhaW5zdC1pc3JhZWxpLWJvbWJhcmRtZW50LW9mLWdhemHSAXpodHRwczovL3d3dy5hbGphemVlcmEuY29tL2FtcC9nYWxsZXJ5LzIwMjMvMTAvMjkvaHVuZHJlZHMtb2YtdGhvdXNhbmRzLW1hcmNoLXdvcmxkd2lkZS1hZ2FpbnN0LWlzcmFlbGktYm9tYmFyZG1lbnQtb2YtZ2F6YQ?oc=5

2023-10-29 08:48:23Z
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