World
Sri Lanka protesters storm President’s House, demand resignation
DEVELOPING STORYDEVELOPING STORY,
1000’s break police barricades and storm the president’s official residence in one of many largest anti-government marches within the nation this yr.
1000’s of protesters in Sri Lanka have damaged by police barricades and stormed the president’s residence and workplace in one of many largest anti-government marches within the crisis-hit nation this yr.
Some protesters, holding Sri Lankan flags and helmets, broke into President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s residence in capital Colombo, video footage from native TV information channels confirmed on Saturday.
Troops fired within the air to forestall offended crowds from overrunning the President’s Home, stories mentioned, including that the beleaguered 73-year-old chief has been moved to a safe however undisclosed location.
Unimaginable photographs from Sri Lanka. pic.twitter.com/OTLG8V4wMp
— Ahmer Khan (@ahmermkhan) July 9, 2022
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has known as an emergency assembly of political social gathering leaders amid rising anger over the federal government’s dealing with of an financial disaster.
Wickremesinghe additionally requested the speaker to summon parliament, an announcement from the prime minister’s workplace mentioned.
Many within the island nation of twenty-two million individuals blame the nation’s decline on Rajapaksa. Largely peaceable protests since March have demanded his resignation.
Sri Lanka is struggling underneath a extreme overseas alternate scarcity that has restricted important imports of gasoline, meals and drugs, plunging it into the worst monetary turmoil in 70 years.
Months of protests have practically dismantled the Rajapaksa political dynasty that has dominated Sri Lanka for many of the previous 20 years.
Considered one of Rajapaksa’s brothers resigned as prime minister final month, and two different brothers and a nephew stop their cupboard posts earlier.
Wickremesinghe took over as prime minister in Might and protests quickly waned within the hope he might discover money for the nation’s pressing wants. However individuals now need him to resign as nicely, saying he has didn’t fulfil his guarantees.
‘Full mayhem’
Reporting from Colombo, Al Jazeera’s Minelle Fernandez mentioned safety forces responded with tear gasoline after college college students and different members of the general public congregated on a highway resulting in the president’s home.
“There’s been a heavy safety and particular activity power presence. The comeback was fully excessive with tear gasoline canisters raining right down to disperse the protesters. There was full mayhem, virtually a stampede to get out,” mentioned Fernandez.
Police imposed a curfew in Colombo and several other different important city areas on Friday evening however withdrew it on Saturday morning amid objections by attorneys and opposition politicians who known as it unlawful.
Regardless of a extreme scarcity of gasoline that has stalled transportation providers, demonstrators packed into buses, trains and vehicles from a number of components of the nation to achieve Colombo to protest towards the federal government’s failure to guard them from financial wreck.
Discontent has worsened in latest weeks because the cash-strapped nation stopped receiving gasoline shipments, forcing college closures and rationing of petrol and diesel for important providers.
Sampath Perera, a 37-year-old fisherman, took an overcrowded bus from the seaside city of Negombo, 40km (25 miles) north of Colombo, to affix the protest.
“Now we have advised Gota over and over to go residence however he’s nonetheless clinging onto energy. We is not going to cease till he listens to us,” Perera mentioned.
He’s among the many thousands and thousands squeezed by power gasoline shortages and inflation that hit 54.6 p.c in June.
Political instability might undermine Sri Lanka’s talks with the Worldwide Financial Fund searching for a $3bn bailout, a restructuring of some overseas debt and fundraising from multilateral and bilateral sources to ease the greenback drought.
In April, Sri Lanka introduced it’s suspending repaying overseas loans as a consequence of a overseas forex scarcity. Its whole overseas debt quantities to $51bn of which it should repay $28bn by the tip of 2027.
The financial disaster has led to a heavy scarcity of necessities like gasoline, cooking gasoline and medicines, forcing individuals to face in lengthy strains to purchase restricted provides.
World
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SEE IT: China stuns with maiden flight of sixth-generation aircraft
China appears to have conducted the maiden flight of its new sixth-generation fighter aircraft, marking a significant milestone in the ever-evolving landscape of fighter jets.
Video and photos from social media showed the previously unseen aircraft conducting a daytime test flight, alongside a two-seat Chengdu J-20S fighter, which served as a chase plane.
The planes were soaring high in Chengdu, Sichuan, China on Dec. 26, which is notably the birthday of the founding father of the People’s Republic of China, Mao Zedong.
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Photos and video of the tailless Chinese aircraft came as the U.S. continues to work on developing its Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) fighter jet.
The NGAD fighter jet is intended to replace the F-22 Raptor, a fifth-generation stealth combat aircraft that has been in service with the U.S. Air Force since the early 2000s.
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Fifth generation aircraft incorporated stealth technology, with the sixth generation aircraft promising further advancements.
This new aircraft is the latest in a series of milestones for China’s aviation. At the Zhuhai Airshow, China unveiled the J-35A fifth-generation fighter jet and the J-15T fighter.
Fox News Digital has reached out to China’s Ministry of Defense for comment.
World
One in six children live in conflict zones this year: UNICEF
About 473 million, or more than one in six children, are estimated to live in conflict areas worldwide, according to the United Nations children’s agency.
UNICEF’s statement came on Saturday as conflicts continue to rage around the world, including in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine, among other places.
In Israel’s devastating war on Gaza in particular, at least 17,492 children have reportedly been killed in nearly 15 months of conflict that has reduced much of the enclave to rubble.
“By almost every measure, 2024 has been one of the worst years on record for children in conflict in UNICEF’s history – both in terms of the number of children affected and the level of impact on their lives,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.
According to Russell, a child growing up in a conflict zone is far more likely to be out of school, malnourished, or forced from their home compared with a child living in places with no conflict.
“This must not be the new normal. We cannot allow a generation of children to become collateral damage to the world’s unchecked wars,” the director said.
The proportion of children living in areas of conflict has doubled – from about 10 percent in the 1990s to almost 19 percent today, UNICEF said.
According to the report, 47.2 million children were displaced due to conflict and violence by the end of 2023.
The trends for 2024 indicate a further increase in displacement because various conflicts have intensified, including in Haiti, Lebanon, Myanmar, the Palestinian territories and Sudan.
Additionally, in the latest available data, from 2023, the UN verified a record 32,990 grave violations against 22,557 children – the highest number since UN Security Council-mandated monitoring began, UNICEF said.
There is an overall upward trend in the number of grave violations, with this year likely to see another increase, as “thousands of children have been killed and injured in Gaza, and in Ukraine”, the agency said.
Sexual violence against children has surged, their education has been affected, children’s malnutrition rates have risen and armed conflicts have taken a larger toll on children’s mental health, UNICEF also reported.
“The world is failing these children. As we look towards 2025, we must do more to turn the tide and save and improve the lives of children,” Russell said.
Gaza’s children ‘cold, sick, traumatised’
In Gaza – where the Israeli military has killed more women and children in the past year than in any recent conflict over a single year, Oxfam reported in September – the ongoing war is a “nightmare” for children, UNICEF Communication Specialist Rosalia Bollen said last week at a media briefing.
“Children in Gaza are cold, sick and traumatised,” Bollen said last Friday.
About 96 percent of women and children in Gaza cannot meet their basic nutritional needs, she said, lamenting the lack of aid able to reach children in the Strip.
“Gaza must be one of the most heartbreaking places on Earth for humanitarians. Every small effort to save a child’s life is undone by fierce devastation,” said Bollen.
“For over 14 months, children have been at the sharp edge of this nightmare.”
Bollen said that many children in the besieged enclave don’t have winter clothes, have to resort to searching through rubbish for provisions and are plagued with diseases.
She urged the use of political capital and diplomatic leverage to push for the evacuation of injured children and their parents to leave Gaza and seek medical care in East Jerusalem or elsewhere.
“This war should haunt every one of us. Gaza’s children cannot wait,” she pressed.
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