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Haiti children displaced by violence nearly double in a year, UNICEF says

Haiti children displaced by violence nearly double in a year, UNICEF says
UNICEF Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean Roberto Benes, center, visits a shelter for families displaced by gang violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Oct. 7, 2025. (AP)
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Haiti children displaced by violence nearly double in a year, UNICEF says

Haiti children displaced by violence nearly double in a year, UNICEF says
  • The agency estimates that over 6 million people now need humanitarian assistance
  • “Children in Haiti are experiencing violence and displacement at a terrifying scale,” said Russell

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: Spiraling violence in Haiti has displaced 680,000 children, nearly twice as many as a year ago, as armed groups tighten control and public services collapse, UNICEF said on Wednesday.
The agency estimates that over 6 million people — more than half the population, including 3.3 million children — now need humanitarian assistance.

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT
The surge in displacement, combined with deteriorating health and education services and rising gang violence, underscores the growing risks to millions of Haitians, particularly children.

KEY QUOTE
“Children in Haiti are experiencing violence and displacement at a terrifying scale,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.
“Each time they are forced to flee, they lose not only their homes but also their chance to go to school, and simply to be children.”

BY THE NUMBERS
According to UNICEF, more than 1 million children face critical levels of food insecurity. Around 288,500 children under age 5 are projected to suffer from acute malnutrition in 2025. Some 2.7 million people are living in areas controlled by armed groups, while internal displacement has climbed to 246,000 so far this year.
More than 1.3 million people have been forced from their homes, with children increasingly bearing the brunt of the crisis, the agency warned.

CONTEXT
Armed gangs have expanded their control across large parts of Haiti, overwhelming local police forces and pushing humanitarian groups to scale back operations. Last month, the UN Security Council approved a US-backed plan to expand an international security mission deployed to support Haitian authorities. The force, launched more than 15 months ago, remains short on funding, personnel and equipment.

WHAT’S NEXT
UNICEF is urging immediate international funding to expand life-saving aid, including shelter, health care, education and clean water. Its appeal remains severely underfunded, threatening critical programs for Haiti’s children.


UK universities accused of monitoring students’ social media for arms firms

UK universities accused of monitoring students’ social media for arms firms
Updated 8 sec ago

UK universities accused of monitoring students’ social media for arms firms

UK universities accused of monitoring students’ social media for arms firms
  • According to Liberty Investigates, 37 out of 154 UK universities launched disciplinary proceedings against pro-Gaza student and staff activists between October 2023 and March 2025

LONDON: Several British universities assured major defense companies that they would monitor students’ chat groups and social media accounts amid fears of campus protests, according to newly released emails.

under freedom of information laws show that Loughborough, Heriot-Watt, and Glasgow universities responded to concerns raised by firms including Rolls-Royce, Raytheon UK, and BAE Systems ahead of careers fairs.

At Loughborough, officials told a recruitment firm hosting a “Rolls-Royce roadshow” that security teams were carrying out “active monitoring of social media to provide early intelligence about protests,” adding that “protest has been a concern for employers in recent times.”

A university spokesperson said previous masked demonstrations by the Loughborough Action for Palestine group had left some students feeling unsafe amid allegations of antisemitism.

“We observe the group’s public feed occasionally so as to forewarn those who may be affected in advance of any protests. We are unapologetic for this. We do not surveil students’ social media,” the spokesperson said.

In response, LAFP said: “We are extremely concerned but unsurprised that a few peaceful protests on campus have been perceived as threats to student safety and have been weaponised to ‘justify’ surveillance of students by university management.”

Emails from Heriot-Watt University suggest Raytheon UK asked it to “monitor university chat groups” before a visit, with the institution agreeing to “implement the measures you have suggested.”

A spokesperson for Heriot-Watt said the university “strongly refuted” any claims it monitored students’ private correspondence, adding that safeguarding staff had no access to private chat groups or forums.

Further correspondence indicates that BAE Systems required the University of Glasgow to complete a “security questionnaire” before attending events, asking if it was “aware of any social media protests posts or videos.”

In May, Glasgow’s careers staff met representatives from defense firm Leonardo, whose employee later wrote: “It’s reassuring to know that we’re not going to have the (sic) step back because we can’t find a route to engaging with students and keep (sic) our staff safe.”

In a separate case, Cardiff University moved a careers event online “in agreement with BAE” after spotting a social media post calling for a protest.

A Cardiff spokesperson said: “We reject the suggestion that we’ve put students ‘under surveillance.’ The protest was posted on a public-facing social media account. This was picked up as part of our day-to-day media monitoring.”

The statement added: “We routinely monitor mentions of Cardiff University, including those made on social media platforms, to measure engagement with our communications activity and in relation to reputation management. This type of activity is not unique to Cardiff University and is used by other universities and organisations.”

Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, criticized the practice, saying: “Student protesters should be supported by their universities, not surveilled by them. It is utterly shameful that so many universities have spent time and resources surveilling students who are engaged in peaceful protest against a genocide, and that some have seemingly done so on the say-so of defence companies.”

The Association of University Chief Security Officers, which represents security staff at more than 140 universities, also confirmed it had coordinated efforts to prevent protests “affecting our students’ career advancement.”

Notes from a January 2025 presentation to Universities UK said members “monitor(ed) media/social media” and used “static officers (at entrance points near the targeted company)” and “mobile officers (to monitor surrounding areas and for rapid response)” during events.

According to Liberty Investigates, 37 out of 154 UK universities launched disciplinary proceedings against pro-Gaza student and staff activists between October 2023 and March 2025, with up to 200 people affected.


French court sets November ruling in Sarkozy campaign finance appeal

French court sets November ruling in Sarkozy campaign finance appeal
Updated 19 min 9 sec ago

French court sets November ruling in Sarkozy campaign finance appeal

French court sets November ruling in Sarkozy campaign finance appeal
  • Sarkozy has been embroiled in legal problems since losing the 2012 presidential election
  • In November, Sarkozy will learn if his conviction is overturned or confirmed

PARIS: France’s top court said Wednesday it will rule in November on embattled former president Nicolas Sarkozy’s final appeal over illegal campaign financing in 2012, in a case that could cement his second criminal conviction.
Sarkozy, who remains an influential figure on the right, has been embroiled in legal problems since losing the 2012 presidential election.
Last month, Sarkozy was sentenced to five years in prison over a scheme for late Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi to fund his 2007 presidential run. He will be the first French postwar leader to serve jail time.
Sarkozy has denied the charges and appealed that conviction, though under French law his sentence will be implemented even as his appeal plays out. He will learn on Monday when his prison term will begin.
Separately, the right-wing politician in 2021 received a one-year jail sentence in the so-called “Bygmalion affair” for the financing of his 2012 presidential campaign.
An appeals court in 2024 confirmed the conviction but lightened his sentence to six months with another six months suspended. He has appealed that ruling.
In November, Sarkozy will learn if his conviction is overturned or confirmed.
On Wednesday, the country’s highest appeals court examined his final appeal in the case.
If the Court of Cassation upholds Sarkozy’s conviction in its ruling expected on November 26 — as demanded by the prosecutor’s office at the hearing Wednesday — he will serve a six-month term with an electronic bracelet.
The former head of state was sentenced on charges that his right-wing party worked with a public relations firm, Bygmalion, to hide the true cost of his 2012 re-election bid.
Prosecutors said Sarkozy spent nearly 43 million euros on his 2012 campaign, almost double the permitted amount of 22.5 million euros.
Sarkozy has accused Bygmalion of having enriched itself behind his back and dismissed the allegations against him as “lies.”
His lawyers on Wednesday reiterated that stance.
“Nothing was materially established by the court of appeal regarding active involvement of President Sarkozy” in the overspending of campaign accounts, said one of Sarkozy’s lawyers, Emmanuel Piwnica.
Sarkozy’s latest hearing comes at a sensitive moment for France, with the country thrown into uncertainty by the shock resignation of Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu after less than a month in power.


Manchester attacker pledged allegiance to Daesh: police

A police officer stands outside the Manchester synagogue, where multiple people were killed on Yom Kippur, in north Manchester.
A police officer stands outside the Manchester synagogue, where multiple people were killed on Yom Kippur, in north Manchester.
Updated 44 min 12 sec ago

Manchester attacker pledged allegiance to Daesh: police

A police officer stands outside the Manchester synagogue, where multiple people were killed on Yom Kippur, in north Manchester.
  • The attacker, identified as Jihad Al-Shamie, 35, was shot dead by police within seven minutes of the attack
  • Four people, two men and two women, remain in custody for questioning after the attack by Shamie

LONDON: The man who attacked a Manchester synagogue made an emergency call to police during the rampage to “pledge allegiance” to the Daesh group, UK counter terrorism police revealed Wednesday.
The attacker, identified as Jihad Al-Shamie, 35, was shot dead by police within seven minutes of the attack, in which two Jewish people were killed — one likely by a stray police bullet.
But “in the initial stages of the attack... a call was made by the attacker to police claiming to pledge allegiance to the so-called Islamic State,” a spokesperson for Counter Terrorism Policing in northwest England said Wednesday.
Adrian Daulby, 53, and Melvin Cravitz, 66, were both killed and three others seriously wounded in Thursday’s attack in the northwestern city on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.
The attack on Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue was one of the worst antisemitic incidents in Europe since the October 7, 2023, attack in Israel led by Hamas.
Four people, two men and two women, remain in custody for questioning after the attack by Shamie, a UK citizen of Syrian descent.
The Gaza conflict has inflamed passions in Britain, with frequent pro-Palestinian rallies in cities which some politicians and critics allege have stoked antisemitism.
Police have acknowledged that they likely shot two people during its operation to halt the attack, one of whom died and one who received serious injuries.
A UK police watchdog is probing the police shooting of Shamie, as well as Daulby’s death after he died from a fatal gunshot wound.
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said there was no evidence anyone other than police used firearms at the scene.
The investigation “will include whether police may have caused or contributed to the death of the man later found to have suffered the fatal gunshot wound,” it said last week.


Vietnamese pastor arrested on anti-state charges

Vietnamese pastor arrested on anti-state charges
Updated 57 min 52 sec ago

Vietnamese pastor arrested on anti-state charges

Vietnamese pastor arrested on anti-state charges
  • Y Nuen Ayun is a leader in the Montagnard Evangelical Church of Christ
  • State media outlet VNExpress said Wednesday that police arrested Y Nuen Ayun for “repeatedly providing fabricated information”

BANGKOK: A Vietnamese pastor and human rights activist was arrested on anti-state charges on Wednesday, state media reported.
Y Nuen Ayun is a leader in the Montagnard Evangelical Church of Christ, an unregistered independent Protestant church based in the hill tribes of the country’s Central Highlands.
The US State Department says the church and its members have faced “severe harassment” from Vietnamese authorities for engaging in allegedly anti-government activities.
Having been arrested and interrogated in the past, Y Nuen Ayun was designated as “at risk” by Project 88, a Vietnamese rights group that tracks political persecution.
State media outlet VNExpress said Wednesday that police arrested Y Nuen Ayun for “repeatedly providing fabricated information about religious activities in the Central Highlands, slandering the government and causing difficulties for the people.”
A US State Department report on religious freedom in Vietnam from 2019 said that he and other religious leaders have been publicly denounced by Vietnamese police and told they must leave their Christian churches if they wanted to remain in their communities.
The Montagnards are an ethnic minority belonging to various hill tribes from Vietnam’s Central Highlands who have long been at odds with the country’s communist government.
Montagnards sided with the US-backed South during Vietnam’s decades-long war, and some want more autonomy while others abroad advocate independence for the region.
VNExpress said another man, Huynh Ngoc Tuan, was arrested on Tuesday for “making, storing, disseminating, propagating information, documents, and items aimed at opposing the Socialist Republic of Vietnam” on his Facebook page.
A court sentenced him to 10 years in prison in 1992 for anti-government activities.
Human Rights Watch said in April that Vietnam was expanding its crackdown on dissent, targeting even ordinary social media users for posts criticizing the state.
State media outlet Vietnam News Agency reported Thursday that five exiled members of outlawed political party Government of Free Vietnam were prosecuted in absentia for “activities aimed at overthrowing the people’s government.”


Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says

Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says
Updated 08 October 2025

Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says

Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says
  • “Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical,” Kartapolov said
  • Kartapolov said he did not think Tomahawks would change anything on the battlefield

MOSCOW: Russia will shoot down Tomahawk cruise missiles and bomb their launch sites if the United States decides to supply them to Ukraine and find a way to retaliate against Washington that hurts, a senior Russian lawmaker said on Wednesday.
US President Donald Trump said on Monday he would want to know what Ukraine planned to do with Tomahawks before agreeing to provide them because he did not want to escalate the war between Russia and Ukraine. He said, however, that he had “sort of made a decision” on the matter.
“Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical. We will find ways to hurt those who cause us trouble,” Andrei Kartapolov, head of the Russian parliament’s defense committee, told the state RIA news agency.
Kartapolov, a former deputy defense minister, said he did not think Tomahawks would change anything on the battlefield even if they were supplied to Ukraine as he said they could only be given in small numbers — in tens rather than hundreds.
“We know these missiles very well, how they fly, how to shoot them down; we worked with them in Syria, so there is nothing new. The only problems will be for those who supply them and those who use them; that’s where the problems will be,” he said.
Kartapolov was also cited as saying that Moscow had so far seen no signs that Ukraine was preparing launch sites for Tomahawks, something he said Kyiv would not be able to hide if it got such missiles. If and when that happened, he said Russia would use drones and missiles to destroy any launchers.
Separately, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
urged Washington
to assess the situation around the potential supply of Tomahawks “soberly.” He said any such decision would be a serious escalatory step that would bring about a “qualitative” change in the situation.