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Putin appoints new governor to manage Kursk ‘crisis’

Putin appoints new governor to manage Kursk ‘crisis’
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin meets with parliamentarian Alexander Khinshtein to appoint him as the acting governor of the Kursk region at the Kremlin in Moscow, on Dec. 5, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 06 December 2024

Putin appoints new governor to manage Kursk ‘crisis’

Putin appoints new governor to manage Kursk ‘crisis’
  • Ukrainian troops launched a shock offensive into Kursk in August, forcing thousands to flee border areas
  • Putin appointed Alexander Khinshtein — a prominent pro-Kremlin lawmaker — as acting Kursk governor late on Thursday

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin has replaced the governor of the Kursk region — partly controlled by Ukraine — saying it needs a “crisis” manager, after residents voiced anger at the handling of the incursion.
Ukrainian troops launched a shock offensive into Kursk in August, forcing thousands to flee border areas. Ukraine’s army said in November it controls 800 square kilometers (310 square miles) of territory in the region.
Putin appointed Alexander Khinshtein — a prominent pro-Kremlin lawmaker — as acting Kursk governor late on Thursday.
“There is a need for crisis management there,” Putin said in a meeting with Khinshtein.
“The most important thing is to organize work on helping people,” he added.
Acknowledging communications failures, Khinshtein told Putin: “We have to do all we can so that all residents of Kursk region fully feel that they are part of our one big country.”
The previous regional chief, Alexei Smirnov, became acting governor in May and was inaugurated in September. He left voluntarily, according to the Kremlin and wrote on Telegram he has a new post.
Smirnov had drawn criticism over his appearances at televised meetings after the incursion, appearing formulaic and lacking a personal touch.
Putin considers Khinshtein “can better deal with this role,” said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, denying there was any “grievances” against Smirnov.
Since August, Kursk locals have taken to social media to voice anger at the lack of warnings over the incursion and the handling of the crisis.
Some have created video messages to Putin pleading for help, though discontent is rarely shown on official media.
Some residents of Olgovka, about 17 kilometers (10 miles) from the border, said their village looks “like a scene from a horror film” and “we have found ourselves homeless.”
“Some of our fellow villagers were killed, some are missing, since evacuation was not announced and some did not have time to leave,” a village spokesman said.
At a public meeting last month, former Kursk governor Roman Starovoit, now transport minister, acknowledged the Russian military had looted in a district under their control, after official media blamed Ukrainians.
Starovoit told a Life News journalist Friday: “I hope (Khinshtein) will have enough experience to organize communications, first and foremost,” calling it a “shortcoming” of the ousted Smirnov.


Japan says powerful quake has hit near Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula, issues a tsunami advisory

Cracks are seen on the ground in Wajima, Ishikawa prefecture, Japan Monday, Jan. 1, 2024, following an earthquake. (AP file phot
Cracks are seen on the ground in Wajima, Ishikawa prefecture, Japan Monday, Jan. 1, 2024, following an earthquake. (AP file phot
Updated 24 sec ago

Japan says powerful quake has hit near Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula, issues a tsunami advisory

Cracks are seen on the ground in Wajima, Ishikawa prefecture, Japan Monday, Jan. 1, 2024, following an earthquake. (AP file phot
  • The quake's epicentre was initially reported some 85 miles (136 kilometres) east of Petropavlovsk in the country's Kamchatka peninsula, at a depth of 12 miles (19 kilometres), USGS said
  • Russia’s Tass news agency reported from the biggest city nearby, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, that many people ran out into the street without shoes or outerwear

TOKYO: Japan’s meteorological agency said on Wednesday that a powerful, magnite 8.0 earthquake hit near Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula and issued a tsunami advisory for Japan.
The agency said the quake occurred at 8:25 a.m. (2325 GMT Tuesday) and registered a preliminary magnitude of 8.0. It issued an advisory for a tsunami of up to 1 meter (yard) along the Pacific coast of Japan.
So far no damage has been reported.
The quake was about 250 kilometers (160 miles) away from Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost of the country’s four big islands, and was felt only slightly, according to Japan’s NHK television.
The US Geological Survey said it hit at a depth of 19.3 kilometers (12 miles). The USGC said shortly after initial reports that the quake’s strength was 8.7 magnitude.
Russia’s Tass news agency reported from the biggest city nearby, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, that many people ran out into the street without shoes or outerwear. Cabinets toppled inside homes, mirrors were broken, cars swayed in the street and balconies on buildings shook noticeably.
Tass also reported power outages and mobile phone service failures in the capital of the Kamchatka region.
The National Tsunami Warning Center, based in Alaska, issued a tsunami warning for parts of the Alaska Aleutian Islands, and a watch for portions of the West Coast, including California, Oregon, and Washington, and Hawaii.
The advisory also includes a vast swath of Alaska’s coast line, including parts of the panhandle.
According to Japan’s tsunami advisory, which is a lower-level warning than a tsunami alert, a first wave of tsunami was expected in eastern Hokkaido around an hour and half after the quake. The government said it set up a taskforce for information gathering and response in case of any emergency.
A University of Tokyo seismologist Shinichi Sakai told NHK that a distant earthquake could cause a tsunami that affects Japan if its epicenter is shallow.
Japan, part of the area known as the Pacific ring of fire, is one of the world’s most quake-prone country.
Earlier in July, five powerful quakes — the largest with a magnitude of 7.4 — struck in the sea near Kamchatka. The largest quake was at a depth of 20 kilometers and was 144 kilometers (89 miles) east of the city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, which has a population of 180,000.
On Nov. 4, 1952, a magnitude 9.0 quake in Kamchatka caused damage but no reported deaths despite setting off 9.1-meter (30-foot) waves in Hawaii.

 


Florida has executed more people than any other state this year, with 3 set to die over next month

Florida has executed more people than any other state this year, with 3 set to die over next month
Updated 14 min 13 sec ago

Florida has executed more people than any other state this year, with 3 set to die over next month

Florida has executed more people than any other state this year, with 3 set to die over next month
  • Eight other executions have taken place in Florida this year, with a ninth scheduled for Thursday and a 10th scheduled for Aug. 19, all by lethal injection

TALLAHASSEE, Florida: There are three executions set to take place in Florida over the next month, including a man convicted of fatally shooting three people and wounding another person, under a death warrant signed Tuesday by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Curtis Windom, 59, is set to die by lethal injection Aug. 28 in the state with the highest number of executions this year. Experts say an uptick in executions around the country can be traced to aggressive Republican governors and attorney generals pushing to get through lengthy appeals processes and get executions done.
Also, President Donald Trump signed a sweeping executive order on his first day back in office to urge prosecutors to seek the death penalty, which may have also fueled the increase, according to John Blume, the director of the Cornell Death Penalty Project.
Windom is scheduled to be killed at Florida State Prison near the city of Starke. He was convicted in 1992 and sentenced to death for the murders of Johnnie Lee, Valerie Davis and Mary Lubin.
Eight other executions have taken place in Florida this year, with a ninth scheduled for Thursday and a 10th scheduled for Aug. 19, all by lethal injection. Edward J. Zakrzewski, II, was convicted of killing his wife and two children in 1994 after she sought a divorce, and Kayle Bates was convicted of killing a woman after abducting her from an insurance office in 1982.
According to court documents, Windom bought a .38-caliber revolver and ammunition in the Orlando area on Feb. 7, 1992. He then tracked down Lee and shot him multiple times over what Windom claimed was a $2,000 debt.
Windom then went to the apartment of Davis, with whom he shared a child, and shot her, officials said. Windom shot another man, who survived, while fleeing the apartment. Davis’ mother, Lubin, was driving home when Windom spotted her and shot her at a stop sign.
The Florida Supreme Court and the US Supreme Court will hear final appeals before the execution.
After Florida, Texas and South Carolina are tied for the highest number of executions, with four each this year. Alabama has executed three people, Oklahoma has killed two, and Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee each have killed one person.

 


Trump says Epstein ‘stole’ young women from Mar-a-Lago spa, including Virginia Giuffre

Trump says Epstein ‘stole’ young women from Mar-a-Lago spa, including Virginia Giuffre
Updated 59 min 21 sec ago

Trump says Epstein ‘stole’ young women from Mar-a-Lago spa, including Virginia Giuffre

Trump says Epstein ‘stole’ young women from Mar-a-Lago spa, including Virginia Giuffre
  • The Republican president has faced an outcry over his administration’s refusal to release more records about Epstein after promises of transparency, a rare example of strain within Trump’s tightly controlled political coalition

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said Tuesday that Jeffrey Epstein “stole” young women who worked for the spa at Mar-a-Lago, the latest evolution in his description of how their highly scrutinized relationship ended years ago.
One of the women, he acknowledged, was Virginia Giuffre, who was among Epstein’s most well-known sex trafficking accusers.
Trump’s comments expanded on remarks he had made a day earlier, when he said he had banned Epstein from his private club in Florida two decades ago because his one-time friend “stole people that worked for me.” At the time, he did not make clear who those workers were.
The Republican president has faced an outcry over his administration’s refusal to release more records about Epstein after promises of transparency, a rare example of strain within Trump’s tightly controlled political coalition. Trump has attempted to tamp down questions about the case, expressing annoyance that people are still talking about it six years after Epstein died by suicide while awaiting trial, even though some of his own allies have promoted conspiracy theories about it.
Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s imprisoned former girlfriend, was recently interviewed inside a Florida courthouse by the Justice Department’s No. 2 official, though officials have not publicly disclosed what she said. Her lawyers said Tuesday that she’s willing to answer more questions from Congress if she is granted immunity from future prosecution for her testimony.
Aboard Air Force One while returning from Scotland, Trump said he was upset that Epstein was “taking people who worked for me.” The women, he said, were “taken out of the spa, hired by him — in other words, gone.”
“I said, listen, we don’t want you taking our people,” Trump said. When it happened again, Trump said he banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago.
Asked if Giuffre was one of the employees poached by Epstein, he demurred but then said “he stole her.”
The White House originally said Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago because he was acting like a “creep.”
Giuffre died by suicide earlier this year. She claimed that Maxwell spotted her working as a spa attendant at Mar-a-Lago in 2000, when she was a teenager, and hired her as Epstein’s masseuse, which led to sexual abuse.
Although Giuffre’s allegations did not become part of criminal prosecutions against Epstein, she is central to conspiracy theories about the case. She accused Epstein of pressuring her into having sex with powerful men.
Maxwell, who has denied Giuffre’s allegations, is serving a 20-year-prison sentence in a Florida federal prison for conspiring with Epstein to sexually abuse underage girls.
A spokeswoman for the House Oversight Committee, which requested the interview with Maxwell, said the panel would not consider granting the immunity she requested.
The potential interview is part of a frenzied, renewed interest in the Epstein saga following the Justice Department’s July statement that it would not be releasing any additional records from the investigation, an abrupt announcement that stunned online sleuths, conspiracy theorists and elements of Trump’s political base who had been hoping to find proof of a government coverup.
Since then, the Trump administration has sought to present itself as promoting transparency, with the department urging courts to unseal grand jury transcripts from the sex-trafficking investigations. A judge in Florida last week rejected the request, though a similar request for the work of a different grand jury is pending in New York.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche interviewing Maxwell over the course of two days at a Florida courthouse last week.
In a letter Tuesday, Maxwell’s attorneys said that though their initial instinct was for Maxwell to invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, they are open to having her cooperate provided that lawmakers satisfy their request for immunity and other conditions.
But the Oversight Committee seemed to reject that offer outright.
“The Oversight Committee will respond to Ms. Maxwell’s attorney soon, but it will not consider granting congressional immunity for her testimony,” a spokesperson said.
Separately, Maxwell’s attorneys have urged the Supreme Court to review her conviction, saying she did not receive a fair trial. They also say that one way she would testify “openly and honestly, in public,” is in the event of a pardon by Trump, who has told reporters that such a move is within his rights but that he has not been not asked to make it.
“She welcomes the opportunity to share the truth and to dispel the many misconceptions and misstatements that have plagued this case from the beginning,” they said.

 


US citizen child repatriated from Syrian camp: State Dept

US citizen child repatriated from Syrian camp: State Dept
Updated 30 July 2025

US citizen child repatriated from Syrian camp: State Dept

US citizen child repatriated from Syrian camp: State Dept
  • “Approximately 30,000 individuals from more than 70 countries remain in two displaced person camps in northeast Syria, the majority of whom are children under the age of 12; they deserve a chance at life outside the camps,” the statement said

WASHINGTON: An American citizen child has been repatriated from a camp in northeast Syria for “unification” with family, the US State Department said Tuesday.
The child was described as “unaccompanied” in a State Department statement, which did not identify the camp the minor had been retrieved from, their age, or what family they would be unified with.
Since the defeat of the Daesh militant group, Kurdish forces have controlled several camps and prisons in northeastern Syria, where tens of thousands of people displaced by conflict or suspected of links to the terrorist organization live.
The release has “given this child, who has known nothing of life outside of the camps, a future free from the influence and dangers of Daesh terrorism,” the State Department said.
“Approximately 30,000 individuals from more than 70 countries remain in two displaced person camps in northeast Syria, the majority of whom are children under the age of 12; they deserve a chance at life outside the camps,” the statement said.
The State Department called on other countries to “repatriate, rehabilitate, reintegrate, and where appropriate, ensure accountability for their nationals. The same goes for former Daesh fighters held in detention centers in northeast Syria.”
For years, the Kurds have called for countries to repatriate their nationals, but most have only allowed limited returns, citing security concerns.
Kurdish leaders announced in February that they would work to empty the camps of displaced Syrians and Iraqis by the end of 2025, in coordination with the United Nations.
Syria is led by a coalition of Islamists who overthrew President Bashar Assad in December, taking power after more than 13 years of devastating civil war.

 


Israel accuses UK of turning ‘blind eye’ to terrorism over possible recognition of Palestinian state

Israel accuses UK of turning ‘blind eye’ to terrorism over possible recognition of Palestinian state
Updated 30 July 2025

Israel accuses UK of turning ‘blind eye’ to terrorism over possible recognition of Palestinian state

Israel accuses UK of turning ‘blind eye’ to terrorism over possible recognition of Palestinian state
  • No ‘token recognition’ will change the fact ‘there are those in the world who fight terrorists and extremist forces, and then there are those who turn a blind eye,’ says Israeli envoy
  • British PM Keir Starmer says UK will recognize Palestinian statehood unless Israel ends war and ‘appalling situation’ in Gaza, and commits to achieving a 2-state solution

DUBAI: In response to a three-day international conference at the UN headquarters in New York on a two-state solution to the decades-old conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, and an announcement earlier in the day by UK authorities that they are considering official recognition of Palestinian statehood, Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, said on Tuesday: “Israel has already agreed many times to a ceasefire.”

In a message posted on social media platform X, he added that no “token recognition” or UN resolution would “change the basic fact that there are those in the world who fight terrorists and extremist forces, and then there are those who turn a blind eye to them” or pursue appeasement.

He added that Israel would not waver after the “Hamas atrocities” of Oct. 7, 2023, and would do “whatever is necessary to bring home the hostages and defeat Hamas.”

His comments came hours after British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that the UK would officially recognize the State of Palestine during the UN’s General Assembly in September, unless Israel takes action.

He said: “So today, as part of this process towards peace, I can confirm the UK will recognize the State of Palestine, by the United Nations General Assembly in September, unless the Israeli government takes substantive steps to end the appalling situation in Gaza, agree to a ceasefire and commit to a long-term, sustainable peace, reviving the prospect of a two-state solution.”

Starmer also demanded that Hamas release all hostages, agree to a ceasefire, accept that it will play no part in governing Gaza, and commit to disarmament.

Speaking on the second day of the conference in New York, which was co-hosted by Ƶ and France, the UK’s foreign minister, David Lammy, said that it was “with the hand of history on our shoulders” that the British government “intends to recognize the State of Palestine when the UN General Assembly gathers in September … unless the Israeli government acts to end the appalling situation in Gaza, ends its military campaign, and commits to a long, sustainable peace based on a two-state solution.”

French President Emmanuel Macron previously stated that France will officially recognize the State of Palestine during the upcoming General Assembly.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry said it rejected Starmer’s demands. It accused the UK of rewarding Hamas and harming “efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and a framework for the release of hostages” by “following the French move and internal political pressures.”

Israeli authorities continue to reject any form of Palestinian statehood. On Monday, Danon said the UN conference “does not promote a solution but rather deepens the illusion.”