World
Pakistani women march across country seeking safe public space
Islamabad, Pakistan – Tens of 1000’s of Pakistani girls have rallied in main cities throughout the nation as a part of the sixth Aurat March (Ladies’s March) to mark Worldwide Ladies’s Day.
This 12 months’s march was held concurrently within the capital Islamabad, Lahore and Multan within the northern Punjab province, and Hyderabad within the southern Sindh province.
The Aurat March, held since 2018, has attracted backlash from a bit of the inhabitants resulting from its provocative slogans, banners and placards difficult patriarchy and highlighting points going through girls, corresponding to divorces and sexual harassment.
Karachi, the nation’s largest metropolis, will maintain the march on March 12.
Organisers needed to strategy the Lahore Excessive Court docket after the town authorities refused permission for the march over safety points. The court docket gave the inexperienced gentle for the march to proceed within the jap metropolis.
As girls and members of the transgender group marched in Islamabad, attempting to cross a police blockade, they have been baton charged by the police. A number of members of the transgender group have been injured.
Imaan Zainab Mazari-Hazir, one of many organisers in Islamabad, referred to as the state “anti-women”, including that what the contributors confronted as we speak was nothing new.
“We’ve been saying this for many years now. Be it the time of earlier dictators or as we speak. Nothing has modified,” she informed Al Jazeera.
“We converse of socialist feminism. We converse of democracy. We converse of anti-enforced disappearances. We converse of equality and entry to public areas for ladies. These are the the explanation why the state will at all times have an issue with us.”
‘Insecure and unsafe’
Though it was a weekday, many individuals turned up on the floor outdoors Islamabad’s Nationwide Press Membership to take part within the march, carrying placards and banners.
Maryam Fatima, a lawyer based mostly in Islamabad was carrying one such banner with a caption in Urdu that learn, “My shirt is vibrant, however don’t consider it as my consent.”
Chatting with Al Jazeera, Fatima, who’s initially from Karachi, stated she has attended all earlier marches and, for her, the occasion is a spot the place she will be able to categorical her opinion about her private experiences.
“For me, the Aurat March is sooner or later of the 12 months the place I can speak what about what I really feel,” she stated.
Nonetheless, Fatima stated that she felt that issues weren’t essentially enhancing or getting higher for ladies.
“I moved to Islamabad two years in the past and regardless of it being the capital, I really feel extra insecure and unsafe right here. We can not simply go to a public park resulting from fears of harassment and assault,” she stated, including that even at court docket, the place she practises legislation, males handled girls in condescending method.
One other participant, Khushbakht Sohail, stated in her expertise, whereas the Aurat Marches have given individuals a platform to come back out and lift their voice, the state’s response has solely turn into harsher.
“There’s a fixed backlash yearly you see earlier than the march,” she informed Al Jazeera, referring to photoshopped banners and slogans used to harass Aurat March organisers and contributors on social media in a coordinated method.
“We noticed, even as we speak, how the police inflicted violence upon us, but we’re going to stand our floor.”
The contributors have been scheduled to make a brief journey of roughly three kilometres (1.9 miles), from Nationwide Press Membership to D-Chowk, a city sq. in entrance of Presidency after the speeches ended, however the police initially refused to take away the containers and obstacles that blocked the contributors from starting their march.
Nonetheless, after greater than an hour of sloganeering, the authorities finally eliminated the barricades.
With common songs corresponding to singer Hasan Raheem’s, Peechay Hatt, (Transfer Again) blaring from the audio system, and highly effective chants from the gang, saying “Allow us to go to D-Chowk, or else depart your seat of energy,” and “We’re out in opposition to oppression, come stroll with us,” an enormous roar went out when the police eliminated the barricades.
Sohail, who labored within the improvement sector, stated that from the perseverance proven by the gang and sticking to their demand to march, it was evident that individuals’s anger is growing, and it will not cease.
“This nation belongs to us, as nicely. We’ll take it again if we’re not given our rights,” she stated.
The Aurat March organisers in varied cities offered their constitution of calls for, together with an finish to patriarchal violence, elevated illustration of ladies whereas making selections on climate-related issues, offering secure entry to girls for financial alternatives, and others.
Gender-based violence has remained a substantial downside in Pakistan. International rights organisation Human Rights Watch, in its 2022 report, stated that violence in opposition to girls and women, together with rape, homicide, acid assaults, home violence, and compelled marriage, is “endemic” all through the nation.
“Human rights defenders estimate that roughly 1,000 girls are killed yearly,” the report added.
Momal Malik, who was attending the march along with her mates, stated that the Aurat March and Worldwide Ladies’s Day, for her, have been a reminder that change was attainable.
“Highly effective girls have at all times been resisted in every single place, not simply Pakistan,” Malik stated.
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Russian forces capture former British soldier fighting for Ukraine in Kursk: report
Russian forces captured a former British Army soldier who was fighting with Ukrainian troops in the Kursk region, according to reports on Monday.
In a video, the prisoner of war was sitting on a bench with his hand restrained as he identified himself as 22-year-old James Scott Rhys Anderson.
Russia’s Tass news agency reported on Monday that Russian security officials confirmed a British mercenary had been captured in the Kursk area.
“I was in the British Army before, from 2019 to 2023, 22 Signal Regiment,” Anderson told Russian authorities while being recorded. “Just a private. I was a signalman. One Signal Brigade, 22 Signal Regiment, 252 Squadron.”
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He expressed regret for joining Ukraine in its fight against Russia, explaining he had nearly lost everything.
When he left the military, he got fired from his job and applied on the International Legion (of Ukraine) webpage.
“I had just lost everything. I just lost my job. My dad was away in prison. I see it on the TV,” Anderson said while shaking his head. “It was a stupid idea.”
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The International Legion for Defense of Ukraine was created at the request of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022.
The Associated Press reported that the Legion is a unit of Ukraine’s ground forces that mainly consists of foreign volunteers.
Anderson reportedly served as an instructor for Ukrainian troops and was deployed to the Kursk region against his will.
In the video, he said his commander took his stuff — passport, phone and other items — and ordered him to go to the Kursk region.
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“I don’t want to be here,” Anderson said.
The AP could not independently verify the report, but if confirmed, it said this could be one of the first publicly known cases of a Western national getting captured on Russian soil while fighting for Ukraine.
The U.K. Embassy in Moscow told the wire officials were “supporting the family of a British man following reports of his detention” though no other details were provided.
Anderson’s father, Scott Anderson, told Britain’s Daily Mail that his son’s Ukrainian commander informed him the young man had been captured.
The senior Anderson also said his son served in the British military for four years, worked as a police custody officer, and then went to Ukraine to fight. He told the paper he tried to convince his son not to join the Ukrainian military, and now fears for his safety.
“I’m hoping he’ll be used as a bargaining chip, but my son told me they torture their prisoners, and I’m so frightened he’ll be tortured,” he told Britain’s Daily Mail.
While being questioned, the younger Anderson talked about how he got to Ukraine from Britain, saying he flew to Krakow, Poland from London Luton. From there, he took a bus to Medyka in Poland, which is on the Ukrainian border.
Anderson’s capture comes amid reports Russia is recruiting hundreds of Yemeni men to fight in its war in Ukraine by luring them to Russia under false pretenses in coordination with the Houthi terrorist network, as reported by the Financial Times.
A senior Ukrainian defense official told Fox News that Moscow is trying to involve as many foreign mercenaries as possible in its war against Ukraine, whether from its allies or proxies in poor, impoverished countries.
The Ukrainian Ministry of Defense similarly confirmed the report to Fox News and said, “Russi[a] has escalated this war twice recently. First, when they brought North Korean fighters, and second, when they used [a] ballistic missile in Ukraine.”
Fox News Digital’s Caitlin McFall and Nana Sajaia, as well as The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
German FM questions if DHL plane crash was 'hybrid incident'
A cargo plane crashed into a house on its approach to Lithuania’s Vilnius Airport on Monday morning, killing one crew member and injuring others.
Authorities search for answers as they continue their investigation after a Boeing 737 cargo plane crashed into a house near Vilnius Airport in Lithuania on Monday morning.
The DHL cargo plane operated by Swiftair, departing from Leipzig in Germany, crashed while approaching the airport in Lithuania’s capital. A Spanish crew member was killed, and three other people on board were rushed to the hospital, one of them is in critical condition. No one on the ground was reportedly injured.
Speaking on the sidelines of the G7 Foreign Ministers’ meeting in Italy, Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock raised the question of whether the plane crash was a hybrid attack.
“We have to say at this point that we and our Lithuanian partners must now seriously ask ourselves whether this was an accident or, after last week, another hybrid incident. That shows what volatile times we are living in in the middle of Europe,” she said.
Lithuanian officials said one line of inquiry would examine Russian involvement but stressed that no evidence exists yet.
Last month, Western security officials warned that Russian military intelligence may be carrying out sabotage acts against nations in retaliation for their support to Ukraine.
Darius Jauniškis, the chief of Lithuania’s Intelligence, mirrored these concerns and said terrorism cannot be ruled out: “The State Security Department, together with the Department of Operational Services, have warned that these things are possible in the future. We see Russia becoming more aggressive.”
He added that however for now, “we really cannot make any attributions or point fingers at anyone, because there is no information about it.”
Lithuanian Defence Minister Laurynas Kasčiūnas said, “According to the information I have at the moment, I can say that there are no confirming facts that this was some kind of sabotage or terrorist incident. But the investigation will answer all the questions.”
The General Commissioner of the Lithuanian Police, Arūnas Paulauskas, chose not to speculate and said the cause of the crash might be the result of a technical failure or a human error. “But we are not aviation experts here to discuss this matter in such detail,” he added.
Paulauskas confirmed that investigators have visited the hospital, and will talk with the aircraft’s police and other aviation officials when they get the chance.
“As far as I know, the investigators have gone to the hospital. If there is an opportunity to communicate with the aircraft’s pilots to determine the initial causes, as well as with officials responsible for civil aviation.”
Experts say communication with Air Traffic Controller seemed ‘normal’
Several aviation experts who spoke to local media said they noticed nothing out of the ordinary when they listened to the communication between the crew and the Air Traffic Controller (ATC) that was shared online.
Aviation expert Vidas Kaupelis said it seemed there was “routine communication between the air traffic controller and the pilot”.
“They didn’t declare any emergency situation, they didn’t speak of any technical failures or fires,” the expert added.
The Chief of the Aircraft Accident and Incident Investigation under Ministry of Justice, Laurynas Naujokaitis, said German and Spanish investigators are due to arrive in Lithuania to assist local authorities with the probe.
“Currently we have an answer that a German safety probe institution is sending four investigators, Spain safety probe institution is sending two,” he said. “We are still gathering information regarding technical maintenance, meteorological, navigation and qualification information.”
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