World
Thousands attend funeral of three Kurds killed in Paris shooting
A xenophobic gunman is suspected of killing two males and one lady at a Kurdish cultural centre final month.
With tears and cries of “Martyrs dwell eternally”, hundreds of Kurds from throughout Europe have come to the suburbs of Paris to say farewell to a few of their very own killed in a December assault within the French capital.
Buses have been chartered to convey individuals from throughout France and a few neighbouring nations to the politically charged funeral in Villiers-le-Bel, north of Paris.
The coffins of the three individuals – one lady and two males – have been wrapped within the flags of the Kurdistan Employees’ Occasion (PKK) and the Kurdish-controlled Rojava territory in northern Syria.
The gang adopted the funeral on large screens erected in a carpark, exhibiting the coffins surrounded by wreaths beneath a portrait of PKK chief Abdullah Ocalan, who’s serving a life sentence on a jail island off Istanbul.
Police and safety volunteers have been on obligation exterior a corridor employed for Tuesday’s funeral.
A xenophobic gunman is suspected of killing the three Kurds on December 23. The victims have been shot inside and in entrance of the Ahmet-Kaya centre, a cultural organisation for the Kurdish group in Paris’s tenth district.
The three victims have been recognized as Abdurrahman Kizil; singer and political refugee Mir Perwer; and Emine Kara, a frontrunner within the Motion of Kurdish Girls in France.
William Malet, 69, was formally charged within the shootings on December 26. He advised investigators he had a “pathological” hatred for foreigners and needed to “homicide migrants”, prosecutors stated.
Finger pointed at Turkey
Malet, a retired prepare driver, had earlier convictions for assault and possession of an unlawful weapon. He had simply left a 12 months of detention for a sword assault at a migrant camp.
However many Kurds in France’s 150,000-strong group refuse to imagine that he acted alone, calling his actions a “terrorist” assault and pointing the finger at Turkey.
“The anger of the individuals gathered right this moment has once more confirmed to us how a lot the Kurdish group believes these murders are political,” stated a spokesman for the Democratic Council of Kurds in France.
In January 2013, three Kurdish feminine activists – together with Sakine Cansız, a co-founder of the PKK – have been shot lifeless close to the cultural centre.
Their suspected killer, Omer Guney, a Turkish nationwide believed to have had ties to Ankara’s secret companies, died of a mind tumour in a Paris hospital in 2016 in pre-trial detention.
Extra just lately, males have been crushed with iron bars in April at a Kurdish cultural centre within the japanese French metropolis of Lyon. That assault was blamed on members of the banned Turkish ultra-nationalist group Gray Wolves.
The PKK, which has waged an nearly four-decade armed battle for better rights for Turkey’s Kurdish minority, is categorised as a “terrorist” group by Ankara, the European Union and the US.
Clashes between police and Kurdish demonstrators within the fast aftermath of the December killings ratcheted up tensions between nominal NATO allies Turkey and France.
Ankara’s overseas ministry summoned the French ambassador to complain of “black propaganda launched by [the] PKK”.
Activists with the Democratic Council of Kurds in France have deliberate a march on Wednesday for the December taking pictures victims on the road the place they have been killed.
On Saturday, a “grand march” of the Kurdish group, initially deliberate to mark the tenth anniversary of the 2013 shootings, will set off from Paris’s Gare du Nord railway station.
World
Video: She Moved to New Delhi for a Fresh Start, but the Air Made Her Sick
new video loaded: She Moved to New Delhi for a Fresh Start, but the Air Made Her Sick
transcript
transcript
She Moved to New Delhi for a Fresh Start, but the Air Made Her Sick
Since moving to New Delhi, which had the world’s worst air quality on Monday, Ameesha Munjal hasn’t been able to exercise or see friends. She has been on several medications to battle sickness caused by the pollution.
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The pollution was so bad that I went to the doctor, and he just said that, ‘you should move out of the city. You won’t be able to survive in this air.’ There’s a steroid nasal spray, allergy medicines, fever medicines. I can’t go for a walk downstairs. I can’t even go to the balcony to do yoga. I have not been able to meet friends because the doctor just advised me not to go out, which is obviously very heartbreaking. Like, I have to leave the city that I’ve grown up in just because of the air.
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World
Iran told Biden administration it won't try to assassinate President-elect Trump: report
In an unusual assurance to the Biden administration last month, Iran promised it would not assassinate Donald Trump in a secret exchange intended to ease tensions, U.S. officials told the Wall Street Journal, according to a Friday report.
The assurances reportedly came in a written message to the administration on Oct. 14, after the White House in September said it would take any attempt on Trump’s life as a serious national security that would reportedly “be treated as an act of war.”
IRAN DENIES INVOLVEMENT IN TRUMP ASSASSINATION PLOT OUTLINED IN DOJ REPORT: ‘MALICIOUS CONSPIRACY’
The Department of Justice last week outlined allegations levied at Tehran that detailed a plot by an Iranian agent to assassinate the former president from the campaign trail.
The allegations came after a Pakistani man involved in an Iranian murder-for-hire scheme was charged by federal prosecutors in August with plotting to kill Trump.
Fox News Digital could not immediately reach the White House for comment on how it will act following the department’s charges last week.
Iran has long said it would seek revenge for the 2020 killing of its top military commander and chief of Iran’s Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani, who was assassinated after then President Trump directed the U.S. military to kill him in Iraq.
IRAN DENIES INVOLVEMENT IN TRUMP ASSASSINATION PLOT OUTLINED IN DOJ REPORT: ‘MALICIOUS CONSPIRACY’
Soleimani has since been dubbed a hero and a martyr.
In response to the news that Iran has since pledged not to assassinate the now president-elect, the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations told Fox News Digital, “We do not issue public statements on the details of official messages exchanged between the two countries.”
“The Islamic Republic of Iran has long declared its commitment to pursuing Martyr Soleimani’s assassination through legal and judicial avenues, while adhering to the recognized principles of international law,” the Mission added.
The White House has not publicly commented on the report, and Fox News Digital could not immediately reach Trump’s transition team for the president-elect’s reaction to it.
The Iranian Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, appeared to dismiss the Department of Justice’s allegations, calling the claims “third-rate comedy” earlier this week.
World
Bangladesh ex-ministers face ‘massacre’ charges, Hasina probe deadline set
International Crimes Tribunal asks to complete probe against ex-PM Sheikh Hasina and submit a report by December 17.
More than a dozen Bangladeshi former top government officials arrested after a mass uprising in August have been charged with “enabling massacres” before a special tribunal which also told investigators they have one month to complete their work on former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
Dozens of Hasina’s allies were taken into custody since her regime collapsed, accused of involvement in a police crackdown that killed more than 1,000 people during the unrest that led to her removal and exile to India.
Prosecutor Mohammad Tajul Islam on Monday said the 13 defendants, who included 11 former ministers, a judge and an ex-government secretary, were accused of command responsibility for the deadly crackdown on the student-led protest that toppled the regime.
“We have produced 13 defendants today, including 11 former ministers, a bureaucrat, and a judge,” Islam, the chief prosecutor of Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal, told reporters. “They are complicit in enabling massacres by participating in planning, inciting violence, ordering law enforcement officers to shoot on sight, and obstructing efforts to prevent a genocide.”
Hasina, who fled to New Delhi by helicopter on August 5, was also due in court in Dhaka on Monday to face charges of “massacres, killings, and crimes against humanity”, but she remained a fugitive in exile, with prosecutors repeating extradition demands for her.
Golam Mortuza Majumdar, the head judge of the three-member International Crimes Tribunal, set December 17 for investigators to finish their work. The deadline came after prosecutors sought more time for the investigation.
Hasina’s nearly 16-year tenure saw widespread human rights abuses, including the mass detention and extrajudicial killings of her political opponents.
“The crimes that led to mass murders and genocide have occurred over the past 16 years across the country,” said Islam.
The tribunal’s chief prosecutor has already sought help from Interpol through the country’s police chief to arrest Hasina. India is a member of Interpol, but this does not mean New Delhi must hand Hasina over as each country applies their own laws on whether an arrest should be made.
On Sunday, interim leader and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus said his administration will seek her extradition from India – a request that could strain relations with a key regional ally, which maintained close ties with the removed leader throughout her time in power.
Yunus said as many as 3,500 people may have been abducted during Hasina’s “autocratic” rule.
Protests broke out across Bangladesh this summer after college students demanded the abolition of a controversial quota system in government jobs that they said favoured supporters of the governing party. Though Bangladesh’s top court scrapped the quota, the protests soon morphed into a wider call for Hasina’s removal from power.
The government’s response was one of the bloodiest chapters in Bangladesh’s history as security forces beat and fired tear gas and live ammunition on peaceful demonstrators, killing more than 1,000 people in three weeks and arresting thousands.
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