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UK rioters as young as 14 charged as government promises ‘swift justice’

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UK rioters as young as 14 charged as government promises ‘swift justice’

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Rioters as young as 14 years old appeared in court in the UK on Monday, as the government promised that those involved in recent violent unrest will face “swift justice”.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer called for perpetrators to be named and shamed as soon as possible, as he vowed to “ramp up criminal justice” and said a “standing army” of specialist police officers was being assembled to curb disorder.

The Cobra emergency response group of senior ministers and police and prison leaders met earlier in a bid to halt violence that has spread to more than a dozen towns and cities across England and Northern Ireland and led to hundreds of arrests.

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Authorities were braced for more violence on Monday evening, while further protests are expected later in the week.

On Monday, Lord Alex Carlile, a former independent reviewer of the UK’s terrorism legislation, said prosecutors should consider charging riot ringleaders with terrorism offences.

“Fundamentally what they’re doing is being done for a political reason — trying to undermine the polity of the nation,” Carlile told the Financial Times, adding that any organisations involved in orchestrating violent demonstrations could also be proscribed by the state as terrorist groups.

The police have not requested that the army be called in, while Downing Street insisted the police have the powers and resources they need.

No 10 is also resisting demands from opposition MPs for parliament to be recalled over the crisis.

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Several countries — including the UAE, Nigeria and Indonesia — have nonetheless issued alerts urging their citizens to avoid travel to the UK or attend gatherings while in the country due to the anti-immigration demonstrations and disorder.

Middlesbrough community members clean up after demonstrators caused damage in their neighbourhood © Ian Forsyth/Getty Images

Communities across northern England in particular started the week with efforts to clear up the aftermath of the weekend’s disorder, while the first people appeared in court charged in connection with it.

They included a 14-year-old accused of setting off fireworks in the direction of a police van in Liverpool, who pleaded guilty. The first sentencing hearings have been scheduled for later this month.

Suspects also appeared before magistrates in Sheffield, South Tyneside and Belfast. The ages of those appearing in court ranged from teenagers to pensioners, with a 69-year-old in the dock.

Since violence broke out in the wake of the Southport mass stabbing last week there have been 378 arrests, with the tally expected to rise.

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Starmer drew attention to the suspected participants appearing in court on Monday, adding: “I have asked for early consideration of the earliest naming and identification of those involved in the process who will feel the full force of the law.”

Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, also told the BBC: “We do expect swift justice to take place. We do expect those cases to be reaching court this week.”

However, some suspects will not appear in front of a judge for weeks as the stretched legal system deals with a backlog. Avon and Somerset police said people accused of taking part in criminal unrest in Bristol are likely to attend court in September.

A demonstrator runs from police in Rotherham
A demonstrator runs from police in Rotherham © Hollie Adams/Reuters

Meanwhile, Downing Street warned that foreign state actors could be involved in amplifying online misinformation fuelling disorder on UK streets.

In some parts of the country police stressed that people from a range of backgrounds had taken part in disorder.

Greater Manchester Police chief constable Stephen Watson said that “it was clear that across all events, there were people of all political and cultural backgrounds who attended with the intent of causing trouble and breaking the law”.

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He added: “Justice will be forthwith.” The force tackled violent disorder in both Manchester city centre and Bolton last weekend and said it had made 23 arrests.

Following the Cobra meeting in London, Sir Mark Rowley, the most senior police officer in the country, appeared to grab a reporter’s microphone and cast it to the ground when he was asked about “two-tier policing” — the slogan accusing forces of dealing with some protests and activists more harshly than others.

Sir Mark Rowley
Sir Mark Rowley, Met police commissioner © Carl Court/Getty Images

The Met commissioner had been “in a hurry” when the incident occurred, the force said later.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage claimed over the weekend that the “impression of two-tier policing” had “become widespread” in the UK.

The government also faced criticism from the left over its handling of the disorder.

Jeremy Corbyn, the former Labour leader, and four other independent MPs who campaigned heavily on a pro-Palestinian platform in the election, accused ministers of “pandering to those who have helped foment the ugly racism behind these protests”, as they hit out at “racist terror”.

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In a joint letter to Cooper published on Monday — the latest sign of co-ordination between Corbyn, Ayoub Khan, Adnan Hussain, Iqbal Mohamed and Shockat Adam — the quintet welcomed the home secretary’s condemnation of “far-right thuggery”, but said she had not gone “nearly far enough” in identifying hatred against migrants and Muslims that was “driving this violence”.

“When people are under attack for the colour of their skin and their faith, government references to ‘understandable fears’ send mixed messages and only give succour to those seeking to sow hatred and division,” the five MPs said.

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Video: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

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Video: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

new video loaded: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

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One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

The mayor of Palm Springs, Calif., said it was unclear how or whether the victim was connected to a blast that damaged a fertility clinic.

“It’s kind of hard to see.” “It’s hard to tell if it was just the car.” “The explosion was so crazy, it blew out the glass of this liquor store. Look at this liquor store. Oh, my God. Look at this, dude. Damn. Crazy explosion. Glass and everything everywhere.”

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Recent episodes in U.S.

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Hong Kong stocks outperform mainland China by most since 2008

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Hong Kong stocks outperform mainland China by most since 2008

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Hong Kong shares have outperformed their mainland peers by the largest margin in nearly two decades, as money pours in from China due to worries about the domestic economy and enthusiasm for the territory’s technology stocks.

The benchmark Hang Seng index is up 16.4 per cent this year compared with a 1.2 per cent decline in mainland China’s CSI 300 index — the biggest outperformance year to date since 2008.

The rally has been boosted by the rise of DeepSeek, the Chinese start-up that claims artificial intelligence advances using far less computing power than US rivals, which has encouraged investor appetite for Hong Kong-listed technology stocks.

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The territory’s stocks, which plummeted more sharply than mainland equities after US President Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariff announcement in April, have also been helped by easing tensions in the US/China trade war.

The rally comes as money from mainland China flows into Hong Kong at record high levels.

“The majority of the strong outperformance this year from Hong Kong has been driven by southbound flows [from the mainland],” said James Wang, head of China equity strategy at UBS.

“A lot of that has been driven by the AI trade,” he added, pointing to the higher proportion of AI stocks in Hong Kong than the mainland.

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Hong Kong’s outperformance also “stems from fundamental differences in market composition”, said Wei Li, head of multi-asset investments for China at BNP Paribas.

“The Hang Seng index’s heavy weighting towards globally liquid sectors — such as technology and finance — has allowed it to capitalise on the Federal Reserve’s dovish pivot and renewed appetite for Chinese tech stocks.”

Chinese technology companies such as Tencent and Alibaba are listed in Hong Kong and the US but not on the mainland. Alibaba first became available to mainland investors in September after the company upgraded its listing in Hong Kong.

A meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and the country’s technology companies in February was also seen as positive for both mainland and Hong Kong stocks, but particularly for the latter.

“Investors feel the government is giving the green light for the tech sector to grow again,” said Tai Hui, chief Asia market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management.

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China’s economy has been hit hard by the collapse in the property market and the trade war with the US, which has helped Hong Kong’s outperformance.

“There has generally been concern about the domestic economy in China being weak,” said Andrew Tilton, chief Asia-Pacific economist and head of EM economic research at Goldman Sachs.

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Hong Kong is likely to benefit from any moves out of US equities into other markets and from further Fed rate cuts in the second half of the year, said JPMorgan’s Hui.

“Hong Kong is gathering capital both from Chinese investors and international investors” as it is easier for overseas investors to buy equities in the city than in mainland China, Hui added.

International money flowing into Hong Kong appears to be from shorter-term investors, such as hedge funds, rather than longer-term market participants such as pension funds, according to UBS’s Wang.

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“I wouldn’t say there’s a huge influx of long-only money coming back into the China equity market just yet,” he added. “Investors have been burned for quite a long time in China.”

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Watch: Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors seen dangling – Times of India

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Watch: Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors seen dangling – Times of India

Chaos as Mexican Navy ship collides with Brooklyn Bridge, sailors left dangling

Two people have died and 17 others were injured when the Mexican Navy’s training vessel Cuauhtémoc crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday night, creating a harrowing scene as sailors were seen dangling from damaged masts high above the deck.The incident occurred around 8:30 PM local time when the three-masted ship, measuring nearly 300 feet in length, apparently lost power and drifted backwards into the historic bridge. The collision caused the vessel’s towering masts, some exceeding 150 feet in height, to strike the bridge’s underside and snap in succession.“Sailors were seen aloft in the rigging on the damaged masts but, remarkably, no one fell into the water,” news agency AP reported quoting officials.

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Do you believe the Mexican Navy’s training vessel Cuauhtémoc should continue its voyage after the accident?

New York City Mayor Eric Adams confirmed on Sunday that of the 277 people aboard, 19 sustained injuries, with two fatalities and two others in critical condition. “Earlier tonight, the Mexican Navy tall ship Cuauhtémoc lost power and crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge,” Adams posted on social media platform X.Eyewitnesses described dramatic scenes as sailors clung to ropes, unable to descend for several minutes after the impact. “We saw someone just hanging there,” recalled witness Lily Katz. “He was dangling from a harness near the top for like 15 minutes before help got to him.”The Cuauhtémoc, launched in 1982, was on a global goodwill voyage and had just completed a stop in Manhattan. The vessel, primarily carrying naval cadets, was scheduled to visit 22 ports across 15 countries before returning home in December. Prior to the accident, the ship had welcomed visitors at Pier 17 from May 13-17.

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Brooklyn Bridge hit by Mexican navy training ship, injuring several

While the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, dating back to 1883, was struck during the incident, preliminary inspections revealed no significant structural damage. Though traffic was temporarily suspended, the bridge has since reopened. City officials have initiated a comprehensive inspection by the department of transportation.Also Read: Brooklyn Bridge crash: NYPD explains why Mexican Navy Ship collided with Brooklyn BridgeThe ship’s next destination was to be Iceland as part of its extended training mission, which included planned stops in France, Scotland, Cuba, and Jamaica.

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