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After a year of rallies and no revolution, Georgia’s protesters still defiant

After a year of rallies and no revolution, Georgia’s protesters still defiant
Georgian anti government demonstrators protest outside Georgia's parliament in central Tbilisi. (AFP)
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After a year of rallies and no revolution, Georgia’s protesters still defiant

After a year of rallies and no revolution, Georgia’s protesters still defiant
  • After months of waning attendance at daily rallies outside the Georgian parliament, the opposition last month tried to galvanize the crowds once more
  • Tens of thousands flooded Tbilisi’s central Freedom Square in the largest demonstration for months

TBILISI: Standing in a crowd of demonstrators outside Georgia’s parliament, rights activist Davit Chkheidze is convinced that his year-long anti-government protest is still going strong, even as the ruling party intensifies a crackdown on dissent and tightens its hold on power.
Mass rallies have gripped the Black Sea nation since a disputed parliamentary election last October plunged Tbilisi into turmoil and prompted the European Union to effectively freeze its accession bid.
The governing Georgian Dream party responded forcefully, police dispersed rallies with rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannon, adopted repressive laws targeting independent media and NGOs, and arrested opposition leaders and protesters.
Almost a year on from the height of the rallies, Chkheidze, a 43-year-old former diplomat, is not giving up.
“Popular discontent keeps growing, no one is giving up,” he said as he watched students wave an EU flag.
But the turnout at recent demonstrations suggests, at least for now, a loss of momentum.
After months of waning attendance at daily rallies outside the Georgian parliament, the opposition last month tried to galvanize the crowds once more.
It held a mass protest earlier this month, coinciding with local elections that many parties boycotted, as a “last chance” to save democracy.
Tens of thousands flooded Tbilisi’s central Freedom Square in the largest demonstration for months.
But after a group of protesters tried to storm the presidential palace at the October 4 rally — an incident many of them believed damaged the peaceful reputation of the demonstrations — the government has vowed an even harsher crackdown.
Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze pledged “every person involved in this violent act will be prosecuted” and the interior ministry reported 45 arrests.

- ‘Blow to protesters’ -

Activists have made no secret of their wish to see Georgian Dream removed from power.
“I support a peaceful revolution,” said 40-year-old university lecturer Ana Zhorzholiani.
The storming of the presidential palace “was a blow to the protest’s legitimacy and peaceful character, and a perfect weapon for government propaganda,” said education specialist Gota Chanturia, 36.
Some are more suspicious.
Avtandil Imnadze, 85, who was a political prisoner in the Soviet Union, said “the attempt to storm the presidential palace was the work of provocateurs.”
Protester Chkheidze told AFP it had only hardened their resolve.
“Georgia has veered hard toward authoritarianism, off its European track,” and toward Russia, he said.
“The cradle of protest outside parliament is a symbol of resistance and proof that Georgians are not swallowing this.”
In power since 2012, the Georgian Dream party has faced accusations of democratic backsliding, drifting toward Russia and derailing Georgia’s EU-membership bid, which is enshrined in the country’s constitution.
The party rejects the allegations, saying it is safeguarding “stability” in the country of four million while a Western “deep state” seeks to drag it into the war in Ukraine with the help of opposition parties.

- ‘Revolution’ -

Some of those who flock to protest outside the parliament every day have little hope of change without the West hitting Georgia with sanctions.
“Mass sanctions will be the key precondition that gives the protest the strength to shake the regime... and ultimately allow us to carry out a real revolution, which must be peaceful,” said activist Lasha Chkhartishvili, 45.
Chkheidze is sure change will come.
“I can’t say when the spark catches, but it could be any moment,” he told AFP.
At a recent demonstration along Tbilisi’s central Rustaveli Avenue, protesters chanted, “no peace until there is justice!“
Then the crowd thinned out, ready to return the next day. Another rally to add to the count. Georgian Dream still firmly in power, die-hard activists undeterred.
“There is an uprising in Georgia. A revolution has not yet happened,” said Imnadze.
“Such an uprising cannot end without victory.”


Hong Kong runway set for reopening after crash but won’t be used regularly for now

Hong Kong runway set for reopening after crash but won’t be used regularly for now
Updated 59 min 7 sec ago

Hong Kong runway set for reopening after crash but won’t be used regularly for now

Hong Kong runway set for reopening after crash but won’t be used regularly for now
  • Boeing 747 skidded off to the left after landing in the early hours of Monday
  • The aircraft collided with a patrol car, causing both to fall into the sea

HONG KONG: Hong Kong authorities on Tuesday were preparing to reopen the runway where a cargo aircraft crashed a day ago, but said it would remain out of regular use until wreckage from the accident was fully cleared.
The Boeing 747 flown by Turkiye-based ACT Airlines flight from Dubai skidded off to the left after landing in the early hours of Monday and collided with a patrol car, causing both to fall into the sea. Two workers in the car were found dead, while four crew members on the plane had no apparent injuries.
Repairs to the runway and damaged fencing have been completed, Steven Yiu, the airport authority’s executive director for airport operations, told Radio Television Hong Kong. He added that that investigators had collected initial evidence at the scene.
But Yiu said the plane’s cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder have not yet been retrieved.
Authorities were aiming to put the runway on standby status, which means that it can be used for landings but will not be included in regular flight planning, from Tuesday noon.
The aircraft was being operated under lease by Emirates, a long-haul carrier based in Dubai.
Yiu said that the runway will remain on standby until the wreckage is fully cleared from the nearby sea.
Hong Kong authorities were in contact with barge companies to plan for the clearance but they could not begin removal work while Tropical Storm Fengshen was still affecting the city, he said. He said the airport planned to remove the wreckage and the car and complete other related work within a week, depending on weather.
Investigators will continue collecting evidence after the clearance as they continue working to determine the cause of the crash.
Yiu said both weather and runway conditions met standards during the incident, while mechanical and human factors were yet to be investigated.
Monday’s crash marked the second fatal incident for ACT Airlines. In 2017, a Boeing 747 flown by ACT Airlines under the name MyCargo crashed as it prepared to land in fog in Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan, killing all four crew on board and 35 people on the ground. ACT Airlines flew that route from Hong Kong on behalf of Turkish Airlines.
A later report on the crash by Kyrgyz authorities blamed the flight crew for misjudging the plane’s position while landing in poor weather. The crew was tired and had a heated exchange with air-traffic control before the crash, the report said.


Thick smog blankets New Delhi after Diwali fireworks, pushing air quality to hazardous levels

Thick smog blankets New Delhi after Diwali fireworks, pushing air quality to hazardous levels
Updated 21 October 2025

Thick smog blankets New Delhi after Diwali fireworks, pushing air quality to hazardous levels

Thick smog blankets New Delhi after Diwali fireworks, pushing air quality to hazardous levels
  • Revelers in New Delhi burst firecrackers late into Monday night, filling the air with smoke and fine particles that mixed with seasonal pollution and stagnant weather conditions

NEW DELHI: Thick smog blanketed India’s capital on Tuesday, a day after millions celebrated the Hindu festival of Diwali with fireworks that sent air pollution levels soaring to hazardous levels across the city.
Revelers in New Delhi burst firecrackers late into Monday night, filling the air with smoke and fine particles that mixed with seasonal pollution and stagnant weather conditions. By Tuesday morning, the city’s Air Quality Index had climbed above 350 in several neighborhoods, a level considered “severe” and dangerous to breathe, according to the World Health Organization’s daily recommended maximum exposure.
Visibility also dropped in some parts of the city as a gray haze enveloped streets, high-rises and historical monuments.
“I have never seen anything like this before. We can’t see anything here because of pollution,” said Vedant Pachkande, a tourist visiting New Delhi.
India’s top court last week eased a blanket ban on firecrackers in New Delhi during Diwali, allowing limited use of “green firecrackers” that emit fewer pollutants. Developed by federal research institutes, they are designed to cut particulate and gas emissions by about 30 percent. The court had said they could be used during specific hours from Saturday to Tuesday, but like past years the rule was mostly flouted.
New Delhi and its metropolitan region – home to more than 30 million people – routinely ranks among the world’s most polluted cities during the winter months when widespread Diwali fireworks coincide with cooler weather and smoke from crop residue fires set by farmers in nearby states.
Authorities in New Delhi have implemented a set of measures to curb pollution levels, which include limits on construction activity and restrictions on diesel generators. But environmentalists say long-term solutions, such as cleaner energy and stricter vehicle-emission controls, are needed to prevent the annual crisis.
Rising pollution also cuts the amount of sunshine India receives, a recent study found.
Indian scientists have found that sunshine hours – the time strong sunlight reaches the Earth – have steadily declined across most of India due to rising air pollution, according to a study published this month in Scientific Reports, a journal by Nature Portfolio. The researchers attributed the drop to increasing aerosols – tiny particles from industrial emissions, biomass burning and vehicle pollution.
“We see a greater impact in more polluted regions such as northern India,” said Manoj K. Srivastava, a scientist at Banaras Hindu University and one of the study’s authors.
Srivastava said the reduction in sunshine can affect the amount of solar power India can generate as well as the country’s agricultural productivity apart from impacting local environment and people’s health.


Memoir by Prince Andrew’s and Epstein’s accuser reignites a scandal that long dogged UK royals

Memoir by Prince Andrew’s and Epstein’s accuser reignites a scandal that long dogged UK royals
Updated 21 October 2025

Memoir by Prince Andrew’s and Epstein’s accuser reignites a scandal that long dogged UK royals

Memoir by Prince Andrew’s and Epstein’s accuser reignites a scandal that long dogged UK royals
  • Giuffre had for years accused Andrew of sexually abusing her on multiple occasions when she was under 18 years old and a victim of sexual trafficking by convicted sex offender Epstein and his former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell

LONDON: Britain’s royal family is once again under intense scrutiny as a memoir by one of Prince Andrew ‘s and Jeffery Epstein’s most outspoken accusers, Virginia Giuffre, hits bookstores Tuesday.
The memoir “Nobody’s Girl” is being published posthumously six months after Giuffre died by suicide in April.
Giuffre had for years accused Andrew of sexually abusing her on multiple occasions when she was under 18 years old and a victim of sexual trafficking by convicted sex offender Epstein and his former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell.
While her book did not break new ground, it has thrown fuel on a series of new accusations against Andrew, who has renewed efforts to control the damage to the monarchy from the long-running scandal over his friendship with Epstein.
The 65-year-old prince said last week he will stop using his titles including the Duke of York, but reiterated that he “vigorously” denies Giuffre’s claims.
In her book — which leapt to No. 1 on Amazon’s bestseller list on Monday ahead of its publication — Giuffre wrote in detail about how she first met Andrew in March 2001, as well as how the royal’s staff had tried to hire “Internet trolls” to hassle her when she sued him years later.
Accounts of three interactions with Andrew
Giuffre long alleged that she was recruited at age 16 by Epstein and Maxwell, who introduced her to Andrew in London in March 2001 when she was 17. She said she was forced to have sex with the royal on three separate occasions.
She wrote that on the day she first met Andrew, Maxwell woke her up and told her it was going to be a special day and that “just like Cinderella” she will meet “a handsome prince.”
She said when they met, the prince told her that “my daughters are just a little younger than you.” She said Maxwell instructed her to “do for him what you do for Jeffrey,” adding: “I knew better than to question her orders.” She said Epstein gave her $15,000 soon after for having sex with Andrew.
Giuffre wrote that she had sex with the royal a second time at Epstein’s house in New York about a month later, and a third time on Epstein’s private island in the Caribbean along with about eight other girls who she said appeared to be under 18.
2022 lawsuit settlement
Giuffre previously detailed how Epstein, Maxwell and Andrew forced her to have sex with the prince against her will in a lawsuit she filed New York in 2021.
Andrew reached an out-of-court settlement with Giuffre in 2022 for an undisclosed sum. While he didn’t admit wrongdoing, Andrew did acknowledge Giuffre’s suffering as a victim of sex trafficking and agreed to make a donation to her charity.
Of that settlement, Giuffre wrote: “After casting doubt on my credibility for so long — Prince Andrew’s team had even gone so far as to try to hire Internet trolls to hassle me — the Duke of York owed me a meaningful apology as well.”
“We would never get a confession, of course. That’s what settlements are designed to avoid,” she added. “But we were trying for the next best thing: a general acknowledgment of what I’d been through.”
New allegations against the prince
Andrew, the second son of the late Queen Elizabeth II, already stepped down from all of his public duties and charity roles in 2019, after an attempt to dispel reports about his friendship with Epstein backfired badly.
The prince was widely criticized for the BBC interview, in which he offered unbelievable explanations for his continued relationship with the disgraced financier. He also denied that he had ever had sexual contact with Giuffre, that he had “no recollection” of ever meeting her and “absolutely no memory” of a now-infamous photograph showing him with his arm around her waist in 2001.
Andrew also said in the same interview that he had cut off contact with Epstein in December 2010.
Last week, British newspapers published an email that purportedly showed that the royal had remained in contact with Epstein longer than he had admitted. In the note, reportedly from Feb. 28, 2011, Andrew said they were “in this together” and would “have to rise above it.”
Separately, on Sunday London’s Metropolitan Police said it was looking into a report in the Mail on Sunday that Andrew in 2011 asked a police officer assigned to be his bodyguard to find out if Giuffre had a criminal record.


Hundreds protest election of Bolivia’s new president

Hundreds protest election of Bolivia’s new president
Updated 21 October 2025

Hundreds protest election of Bolivia’s new president

Hundreds protest election of Bolivia’s new president
  • Protesters shouted “fraud” and attempted to march on the square in La Paz where the president and parliamentary offices are located, before being dispersed by police without any reported clashes

LA PAZ: Hundreds of protesters took to the streets Monday in Bolivia to denounce alleged election fraud and call for an audit after the country’s new center-right president was announced.
Rodrigo Paz, a 58-year-old economist, won the second round of voting on Sunday with 54.5 percent of the votes against former right-wing president Jorge Quiroga.
Protesters shouted “fraud” and attempted to march on the square in La Paz where the president and parliamentary offices are located, before being dispersed by police without any reported clashes.
Quiroga conceded defeat and congratulated Paz while announcing the records would be verified in coming days in response to accusations of irregularities.
Several allegations circulated on social media but remain unproven.
Paz’s victory marked the end of 20 years of left-wing government in Bolivia, which is currently experiencing its worst economic crisis in four decades.
The Supreme Electoral Tribunal announced results on Sunday and its president Oscar Hassenteufel denied any possibility of irregularities on Monday, adding “the word fraud should be banned from Bolivia.”
Student Pablo Perez, 23, refuses to accept Quiroga’s defeat and told AFP “what is outrageous is that there was fraud and the vote was not respected.”


Japan’s parliament is set to elect Sanae Takaichi as nation’s first female prime minister

Japan’s parliament is set to elect Sanae Takaichi as nation’s first female prime minister
Updated 21 October 2025

Japan’s parliament is set to elect Sanae Takaichi as nation’s first female prime minister

Japan’s parliament is set to elect Sanae Takaichi as nation’s first female prime minister

TOKYO: Japan’s parliament is set to elect ultraconservative Sanae Takaichi as the country’s first female prime minister Tuesday, one day after her struggling party struck a coalition deal with a new partner that would pull her governing bloc further to the right.
Takaichi will replace Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, ending a three-month political vacuum and wrangling since the Liberal Democratic Party’s disastrous election loss in July.
Ishiba, who lasted only one year in office, resigned with his Cabinet earlier Tuesday, paving the way for his successor.
The LDP’s off-the-cuff alliance with the Osaka-based rightwing Japan Innovation Party, or Ishin no Kai, ensures her premiership in a vote later in the day because the opposition is not united. Takaichi’s untested alliance is still short of a majority in both houses of parliament and they need to court other opposition groups to pass any legislation – a risk that could make her government unstable and short-lived.
“Political stability is essential right now,” Takaichi said at Monday’s signing ceremony with the JIP leader and Osaka Gov. Hirofumi Yoshimura. “Without stability, we cannot push measures for a strong economy or diplomacy.”
The two parties signed a coalition agreement on policies underscoring Takaichi’s hawkish and nationalistic views.
Their last-minute deal Monday comes 10 days after the Liberal Democrats lost its longtime partner, the Buddhist-backed Komeito, which has a more dovish and centrist stance. The breakup threatened a change of power for the LDP, which has governed Japan almost uninterrupted for decades.
Once she is elected prime minister, Takaichi, 64, will present a Cabinet with a number of allies of LDP’s most powerful kingmaker, Taro Aso, and others who backed her in the party leadership vote.
JIP will not hold ministerial posts in Takaichi’s Cabinet until his party is confident about its partnership with the LDP, Yoshimura said.
Takaichi is running on deadline — a major policy speech later this week, talks with US President Donald Trump and regional summits. She needs to quickly tackle rising prices and compile economy-boosting measures by late December to address public frustration.
While she would be the first woman serving as Japan’s prime minister, she is in no rush to promote gender equality or diversity.
Takaichi is among Japanese politicians who have stonewalled measures for women’s advancement. Takaichi supports the imperial family’s male-only succession and opposes same-sex marriage and allowing separate surnames for married couples.
A protege of assassinated former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Takaichi is expected to emulate his policies including stronger military and economy, as well as revising Japan’s pacifist constitution. With a potentially weak grip on power, it’s unknown how much Takaichi would be able to achieve.
When Komeito left the governing coalition, it cited the LDP’s lax response to slush fund scandals that led to their consecutive election defeats.
The centrist party also raised concern about Takaichi’s revisionist view of Japan’s wartime past and her regular prayers at Yasukuni Shrine despite protests from Beijing and Seoul that see the visits as lack of remorse about Japanese aggression, as well as her recent xenophobic remarks.
Takaichi has toned down her hawkish rhetorics. On Friday, Takaichi sent a religious ornament instead of going to Yasukuni.