Rabu, 23 Oktober 2019

Iraqi defense minister gives US troops 4 weeks to leave Iraq - New York Post

BAGHDAD — US troops withdrawing from northeastern Syria to Iraq are “transiting” and will leave the country within four weeks, Iraq’s defense minister said Wednesday.

Najah al-Shammari made the remarks to The Associated Press following a meeting in Baghdad with visiting US Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who arrived as Iraqi leaders chafed over reports the US may want to increase the number of troops based in Iraq, at least temporarily.

Iraq’s military said Tuesday that American troops leaving northeastern Syria don’t have permission to stay in Iraq in a statement that appeared to contradict Esper, who has said that all US troops leaving Syria would continue to conduct operations against the Islamic State group from Iraq to prevent its resurgence in the region.

He later added that the troops would be there temporarily until they are able to go home, but no time period has been set.

Esper said earlier on Wednesday that the US has no plans to leave those troops in Iraq “interminably” and that he plans to talk with Iraqi leaders about the matter.

Al-Shammari said Esper traveled to Iraq based on an invitation from the Iraqis. In Wednesday’s talks, he said the two sides agreed that the American troops crossing from Syria are “transiting” through Iraq and will then head to either Kuwait, Qatar or the United States “within a time frame not exceeding four weeks.”

The Iraqi minister said the planes that would transport the American troops out of Iraq have already arrived.

Esper’s visit to Baghdad came a day after Russia and Turkey reached an agreement that would deploy their forces along nearly the entire northeastern border to fill the void left after President Donald Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of US forces from the area, a move that essentially cleared the way for the Turkish invasion earlier this month.

It was unclear Wednesday what that means for US forces.

Trump ordered the bulk of the approximately 1,000 US troops in Syria to withdraw after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated in a phone call that his forces were about to invade Syria to push back Syrian Kurdish fighters whom Ankara considers terrorists.

The pullout largely abandons the Kurdish allies who have fought the Islamic State group alongside US troops for several years. Between 200 and 300 US troops will remain at the southern Syrian outpost of Al-Tanf.

Esper said the troops going into Iraq would have two missions, one to help defend Iraq against a resurgence of Islamic State militants and another to monitor and perform a counter-IS mission.

The US currently has more than 5,000 American forces in Iraq, under an agreement between the two countries. The US pulled its troops out of Iraq in 2011 when combat operations there ended, but they went back in after the Islamic State group began to take over large swaths of the country in 2014.

The number of American forces in Iraq has remained small due to political sensitivities in the country, after years of what some Iraqis consider US occupation during the war that began in 2003. Iraqi leaders may privately condone more US forces to battle IS, but worry if it’s widely known that there will be backlash from the citizens.

US troops in Syria fought for five years alongside Kurdish-led forces in northeast Syria and succeeded in bringing down the rule of IS militants — at the cost of thousands of Kurdish fighters’ lives. Under the new agreement, much of that territory would be handed over to US rivals.

The biggest winners are Turkey and Russia. Turkey would get sole control over areas of the Syrian border captured in its invasion, while Turkish, Russian and Syrian government forces would oversee the rest of the border region. America’s former US allies, the Kurdish fighters, are left hoping Moscow and Damascus will preserve some pieces of the Syrian Kurdish autonomy in the region.

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https://nypost.com/2019/10/23/iraqi-defense-minister-gives-us-troops-4-weeks-to-leave-iraq/

2019-10-23 11:11:00Z
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39 bodies found in back of truck in southeastern England, suspect arrested - Fox News

Police in the United Kingdom on Wednesday arrested a 25-year-old driver from Northern Ireland on suspicion of murder after 39 bodies were found in the back of a semi-truck in Essex, which is east of London.

Essex police said that 38 of the bodies, which were found at the Waterglade Industrial Park in Greys, Essex, were adults and one was a teenager. The area has been cordoned off by police.

"This is a tragic incident where a large number of people have lost their lives. Our enquiries are ongoing to establish what has happened," Chief Superintendent Andrew Mariner said. "We are in the process of identifying the victims, however I anticipate that this could be a lengthy process."

"We have arrested the lorry driver in connection with the incident, who remains in police custody as our inquiries continue," he added.

BODY FOUND ENCASED IN CONCRETE IN NEVADA DESERT BELIEVED TO BE MISSING WOMAN: REPORTS

Waterglade Industrial Park

Waterglade Industrial Park (Google Maps)

The truck came from Bulgaria through the Welsh town of Holyhead, police said according to the BBC.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted that he was "appalled" by the incident. "My thoughts are with all those who lost their lives & their loved ones," he said in the statement.

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In 2000, 58 Chinese immigrants were found dead in the back of a truck in Dover, the BBC reported. The driver was found guilty of manslaughter.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/uk-polcie-arrest-murder-suspect-after-39-bodies-found-in-back-of-truck

2019-10-23 09:16:25Z
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39 bodies found in a truck container in southeast England - CNN International

Authorities believe the truck, which originated in Bulgaria, entered the UK through the Welsh port of Holyhead over the weekend. A regular ferry service connects Holyhead with the Irish capital, Dublin.
"We are in the process of identifying the victims, however I anticipate that this could be a lengthy process," Chief Superintendent Andrew Mariner said in a statement.
They have arrested a 25-year-old Northern Irish truck driver "on suspicion of murder" after finding the bodies early on Wednesday morning, Essex Police said.
"We have arrested the lorry driver in connection with the incident who remains in police custody as our enquiries continue " Mariner added.
"This is a tragic incident where a large number of people have lost their lives. Our enquiries are ongoing to establish what has happened," he said.
Police have placed a cordon around the area and say they are working with the local council "to mitigate against any impact our investigation scene will have locally."
The UK Home Secretary, Priti Patel, said she was "shocked and saddened" by what she called the "utterly tragic incident," according to her Twitter account.
Interior Minister Brandon Lewis also called the news "tragic" in a tweet. "Thoughts are with victims, their families & friends. Police are working to ensure those responsible are brought to justice," he wrote.
This is a developing story.

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https://edition.cnn.com/2019/10/23/uk/essex-truck-lorry-container-bodies-intl-gbr/index.html

2019-10-23 08:50:20Z
CBMiXGh0dHBzOi8vZWRpdGlvbi5jbm4uY29tLzIwMTkvMTAvMjMvdWsvZXNzZXgtdHJ1Y2stbG9ycnktY29udGFpbmVyLWJvZGllcy1pbnRsLWdici9pbmRleC5odG1s0gFcaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAuY25uLmNvbS9jbm4vMjAxOS8xMC8yMy91ay9lc3NleC10cnVjay1sb3JyeS1jb250YWluZXItYm9kaWVzLWludGwtZ2JyL2luZGV4Lmh0bWw

EU to rule on Brexit extension as UK faces possible election - CNBC

BRUSSELS — Brexit is set to be delayed for a third time after U.K. lawmakers rejected Prime Minister Boris Johnson's rushed timetable to force through the necessary laws to leave the European Union.

On Tuesday, a majority of MPs (Members of Parliament) signaled their support for the agreement that Johnson reached with the other 27 EU nations last week. However, in a follow up vote just 15 minutes afterwards, they refused to rush through the necessary legislation to leave the EU in three working days.

The U.K. is now in a holding pattern with Johnson pausing his Withdrawal Agreement Bill, which could still be scrapped altogether. This significantly reduces the chances that the U.K. will leave the EU on October 31, as the prime minister had vowed.

Media reports in Britain suggest that Downing Street will push for an election if Brexit is delayed until January. Potential dates for this vote would be December 5 or 12 and it would be the first winter general election in the country since 1974. Several betting firms now have the odds of a December election at over 50%.

But the immediate focus has now shifted from Westminster to Brussels. The other 27 countries need to decide if they will say yes to the U.K.'s request for an extension. Johnson had grudgingly informed the EU on Saturday that the U.K. Parliament needs more time, until the end of January 2020, to leave the EU.

"Following PM Boris Johnson's decision to pause the process of ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement, and in order to avoid a no-deal Brexit, I will recommend the EU27 accept the U.K. request for an extension," European Council President Donald Tusk, who is leading the extension discussions with the different EU leaders, said on Twitter Tuesday night.

It is unclear at this stage if the EU will accept the U.K. Parliament's request for a delay until January or decide on a different deadline. This decision will depend on the talks that Tusk has with the different leaders and whether any raise issues about a third delay. It needs to be a unanimous decision.

European leaders have been clear over the last week that their wish is to move on to the next phase of the process. The U.K.'s departure from the EU is made up of two steps: The divorce deal and a future trade deal.

"I hope we can stick to the timeline we gave ourselves and that the date of Oct. 31 is respected," Emmanuel Macron, France's president, told reporters in Brussels on Friday. Macron also said: "I do not think that another delay should be granted. We should end these negotiations and move on to talks on our future relations and get them done."

The EU believes that a further extension would prolong the uncertainty for citizens and businesses on both sides of the English Channel.

No emergency Brexit summit?

Tusk is also of the opinion that the EU should decide on the extension request by "written procedure," meaning without the need for an emergency Brexit summit in Brussels.

One EU official, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue, told CNBC that EU leaders could decide on the delay as early as Thursday. "But it could easily become next week," the official said.

A second official working in Brussels, who also wanted to remain anonymous, told CNBC that "there's no indication" about the timing of the decision. Overall, it will depend on how the various countries feel about a third delay to Brexit, the source said.

Nonetheless, a meeting between the 27 European ambassadors is due to take place Wednesday. This group usually performs the background work ahead of any decision by European heads of state.

Sterling sunk slightly on Wednesday morning to 1.2868 against the dollar. The pound has been trending lower since breaking above $1.30 late last week as Johnson sealed his agreement with Brussels.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/23/eu-to-rule-on-brexit-extension-as-uk-faces-possible-election.html

2019-10-23 07:41:29Z
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Hong Kong formally withdraws extradition bill - Fox News

The Hong Kong government on Wednesday said it formally withdrew its controversial extradition bill that sparked months of violent protests but will reportedly be the fulfillment of only one demand out of five by protesters who continue to take to the streets.

"I now formally announce the withdrawal of the bill," Secretary for Security John Lee told the city's legislature.

CROWD MEMBER AT NBA PANEL HOLDS UP HONG KONG FLAG

Hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets since June, originally due to the bill that would have allowed Hong Kong nationals to be sent to mainland China to be tried in Communist party-controlled court. The rallies have continued and now protesters demand political reforms and police accountability.

Reuters reported that pro-Democracy protesters have been insisting that all five of their demands are met "not one less." According to the Washington Post,  the other demands include an independent investigation into police conduct and amnesty for protesters who've been arrested.

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The Financial Times on Tuesday reported that the Chinese government is working on plans to replace Lam by March.

Lam was appointed for office in 2014 despite the fact her rival for the job, John Tsang, was far more popular with the general public, according to the Financial Times.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/hong-kong-formally-withdraws-extradition-bill

2019-10-23 07:37:08Z
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Murder suspect whose alleged crime sparked Hong Kong protests walks free - CNN

But as the global consequences of almost four months of unprecedented unrest continue to be felt, the story that started it all has slipped from the headlines. On Wednesday, one of the central players in that story walked free from a Hong Kong prison on minor charges, after authorities say he confessed to killing his girlfriend but, so far, avoided prosecution for it.
Chan Tong-kai was sentenced to prison by a judge in April 2019. Just over one year earlier, authorities say the then 19-year-old admitted to killing his girlfriend, 20-year-old Poon Hiu-wing, while the pair were in Taiwan. Poon would have been about 15 weeks pregnant at the time.
Though Chan was arrested in March 2018 and soon confessed to the killing, according to police, that wasn't why he was before a judge in April. Because Hong Kong and Taiwan have no extradition agreement, and do not usually provide cross-border legal assistance -- and because they couldn't prove the alleged murder was planned in Hong Kong beforehand -- prosecutors in the city were unable to charge Chan with murder. Instead, he was charged with the more minor offense of money laundering, in relation to cash and other valuables he stole from Poon after allegedly killing her.
Chan Tong-kai is transferred from court in April 2019 after being jailed for money laundering related offenses.
An attempt by Hong Kong's leader Carrie Lam to plug the extradition "loophole" with Taiwan, and at the same time allow suspects to be sent to China and Macao, led to months of intense anti-government protests, which were initially sparked by fears the extradition law could be used to rendition critics of Beijing across the border to face trial.
  • Chan Tong-kai case

  • 8 February: Chan and Poon travel to Taiwan.

    17 February: Chan and Poon argue in their Taipei hotel and he allegedly strangles her to death.

    13 March: Taipei police find Poon's body, Chan arrested in Hong Kong, police say he confessed to killing her.

    31 December: Chan pleads guilty to charges of money laundering in relation to cash stolen from Poon.

  • February: Hong Kong government proposes changes to extradition law to allow fugitives to be sent to Taiwan, China and Macao.

    29 March: Extradition bill published.

    12 April: Chan appears before the Hong Kong High Court on charges of money laundering, but not murder.

    29 April: Chan sentenced to 29 months in prison on charges of money laundering (having served over half his sentence).

    April-October: Protests escalate and become a weekly occurrence.

    23 October: Chan Tong-kai released from prison.


Source: CNN reporting
Those protests show no signs of stopping, and have only grown more chaotic and violent in recent weeks. But on October 23, Chan -- whose lawyers did not respond to a request for comment -- walked free, after 19 months behind bars on the money laundering charges.
What happens to him now is unclear. The Hong Kong government said Chan has offered to hand himself in to Taiwanese authorities, but how that will exactly take place is hotly contested. Taipei said it had requested Chan be handed into its custody in Hong Kong, along with his alleged confession and other documents relating to the case, but Hong Kong has pointed out Taiwanese police have no authority to operate in the city.
"The authority of Taiwan has no law enforcement power in Hong Kong. Chan is Taiwan's wanted person and his surrender decision is voluntary," Hong Kong's government said in a statement Wednesday. "As he will be a free man after released from jail, the (Hong Kong) Government has no authority to impose any restrictive measures on him. He could go to Taiwan accompanied by persons of his choice. Upon arrival, the authority of Taiwan can arrest him."
Chan is currently a free man. Speaking outside Pik Uk Prison on Wednesday morning, he said that "I understand that because of my irreversible wrongdoing, I have caused huge pain."
"I am willing to pay the price for my impulsiveness and my wrongdoing, which is to turn myself in to the Taiwanese authority and serve my sentence there," Chan said. "I can only say I am sorry. I hope everyone will forgive me, give me a chance to give back to the society."

Death at the Purple Garden Hotel

"She was a good daughter. In school, she was a good student," Poon Hiu-wing's mother told reporters in February. "What did she do to deserve this? Our family never imagined that such a horrible thing could happen to such a nice girl."
According to court documents, Poon and Chan met in July 2017.
On social media, Poon shared happy selfies of the two of them together. In one photo, she smiles at the camera, her eyes wide and her face framed by long, dark hair. She's holding Chan's arm as he stares into the camera, his bowl cut hair hiding his eyebrows. He has big ears which stick out from his hair, and a large birthmark under his left nostril.
Murder victim Poon Hiu-wing. Poon was five months pregnant when she was killed by her boyfriend Chan Tong-kai in Taiwan in February 2018.
In February 2018, the couple took a holiday to Taiwan. Before they left for Taipei, Poon wrote on Facebook that Chan had described her as "his first and last girlfriend."
Surveillance footage from the Purple Garden Hotel, verified by Taiwanese authorities, shows the couple returning soon after midnight on February 17. Chan is walking in front, carrying a large, apparently empty, pink suitcase with one hand. Poon follows a short distance behind him.
According to Chan's confession, as presented in court, that suitcase would be central to what happened next. In a WhatsApp message to her mother, authorities say Poon said they'd be returning to Hong Kong later on the 17th. But while they were packing in the early hours of the morning, they started arguing.
The spat soon turned into a blazing argument. According to Chan's confession, cited in court, Poon told him she was pregnant by her ex-boyfriend, not him. He says she then showed him a video of her having sex with another man.
That's when the situation escalated, the court heard -- Chan hit Poon's head against the wall of their hotel room and began strangling her from behind with both hands. They fell onto the floor, where they struggled for about 10 minutes until Poon was dead.
Confronted with the corpse of his pregnant girlfriend, Hong Kong officials say Chan turned again to the suitcase. He stuffed Poon's dead body into the pink case, folding her near in half to make her fit. He then threw her belongings into four plastic bags, according to court documents, and went to sleep.
At 11:25 a.m. on February 17, surveillance footage shows Chan leaving the hotel alone. He's lugging a now apparently very heavy pink suitcase behind him, and it moves awkwardly over the cobbles on the street outside. He has a baseball cap pulled lower over his head, and a black mask over his face.
He disposed of Poon's belongings in various trash bins near the hotel, according to court documents, and then dragged the suitcase to a nearby subway entrance. From Zhongshan station, Chan rode the red line north for 15 stops to Zhuwei station on the outskirts of Taipei, according to Taiwanese state media. There he started looking for a place to dump the body, eventually settling on a park, where he clumsily hid her in some bushes, Taiwanese police say.
Before he disposed of her belongings, authorities say Chan took Poon's iPhone, her digital camera and an HSBC ATM card. Prosecutors say he immediately withdrew the equivalent of about US$700, with plans to go on a shopping spree, but changed his mind and caught his flight back to Hong Kong. There he further withdrew the equivalent of about $2,400 from Poon's account, and deposited it to his credit card, according to authorities.
While authorities say Chan was enjoying Poon's money, her parents were growing increasingly frantic. Poon hadn't told them she was traveling with a boyfriend, but her mother found a copy of Chan's Taiwan Entry and Exit Permit at Poon's apartment, the court heard in April. On March 5, she filed a missing person report to police in Taiwan, and just over a week later they discovered Poon's now decomposing corpse in the Zhuwei park.
Chan was brought in for questioning by Hong Kong police, and he admitted to murdering Poon and hiding her body, prosecutors say.

Extradition woes

Chan had admitted to the crime, and he'd been caught spending Poon's money, according to authorities. But police could not prove that he had planned the alleged murder in Hong Kong, meaning authorities in the city had no jurisdiction over it.
Taiwanese prosecutors issued a warrant but without an extradition treaty, there was little chance of Chan being sent to Taiwan.
Hong Kong officials have described the lack of an extradition agreement with mainland China as a loophole, but a British official who worked on the agreement to hand over the city to Chinese control in 1997 said the building of a firewall with China's legal system was deliberate.
"The UK made a conscious decision to create a clear divide between the two systems so that the rule of law remains robust," former British foreign secretary Malcolm Rifkind wrote in June.
"The question of having a comprehensive arrangement for rendition, sending fugitives to mainland China, has been under discussion for more than 20 years, and of course got nowhere," former Hong Kong lawmaker Emily Lau told CNN. "And the reason, the main reason, is that Hong Kong and mainland China have two very different legal systems, and we cannot guarantee, and nobody can guarantee, that anyone sent to mainland China, would get a fair trial, because what they have there."
According to Washinton-based watchdog Freedom House, China lacks an independent judiciary and fails to protect the right to due process. The conviction rate in China has been widely estimated to be around 98%.
Demonstrations began over the extradition bill in April, and hundreds of thousands of people turned out to protest it on June 9. When the Hong Kong government pressed ahead, tens of thousands of protesters successfully blocked the city's legislature from holding a second reading, and in June, Lam agreed to suspend it, but not fully withdraw it.
By the time she did announce its withdrawal, in September, it was too late: the protest demands had sprawled and the unrest -- by then in its fourth month -- showed no sign of stopping.
As far as the Hong Kong legal system is concerned, now that he's left prison, Chan is a free man.
Last week -- after lobbying by lawmakers and religious figures -- Chan told the Hong Kong government he would hand himself over to Taiwanese authorities, willing to face justice on the island. This apparent solution was thrown into doubt, however, when Taipei raised concerns about accepting his surrender without full judicial cooperation from Hong Kong, including handing over evidence against Chan.
"The homicide case took place in Taiwan. The body of the deceased, key witnesses, exhibits and relevant evidence were all in Taiwan. Without doubt, Taiwan has jurisdiction over this offence," Hong Kong's government said Wednesday. "Now that Chan is willing to surrender, Taiwan should receive him, and initiate interrogation, evidence gathering and prosecution on him. Regarding the relevant evidence in Hong Kong, apart from those voluntarily brought with Chan, for other evidence, Hong Kong will, under the legal framework and following the procedures, provide all necessary assistance."
Poon's parents have called again and again for justice to be done, but there's not really anything more they can do. Lam has said over and over that the extradition bill is dead. Whether there is another way to send Chan to face justice for his alleged crime remains to be seen.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/23/asia/hong-kong-taiwan-murder-intl-hnk/index.html

2019-10-23 05:47:00Z
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Selasa, 22 Oktober 2019

Canada’s Justin Trudeau Loses Seats but Wins Reelection With Minority Government - Slate

Justin Trudeau

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers his victory speech at his election night headquarters in Montreal.

Cole Burston/Getty Images

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau managed to overcome a brownface scandal and waning enthusiasm to eke out a victory in the country’s federal election Monday. Trudeau’s Liberal Party sustained heavy losses in what was a referendum on his leadership, seeing its overall vote share drop by nearly 7 points and losing 20 seats in Parliament. Trudeau will form a minority government despite losing the popular vote by a point-and-a-half to the Conservatives, which had heavily concentrated support in Saskatchewan and Alberta, where it won in a near clean sweep. The party was unable to make sufficient inroads elsewhere in the country to translate support into seats.

Trudeau will be forced into a coalition government with the resurgent Bloc Québécois, which picked up 22 seats, or the New Democratic Party, which saw its parliamentary total reduced by 15 seats despite hopes it could capitalize on Trudeau’s missteps. The bruising, often personal campaign carried over even after the voting stopped, with the candidates breaking from the tradition where concession speeches are offered first. Trudeau began his victory speech shortly after Conservative leader Andrew Scheer began his remarks, effectively cutting him off.

“The Liberals, Conservatives and NDP focused the lion’s share of their policy proposals in the campaign on affordability issues, with the parties trying to outdo one another on programs, tax cuts and targeted help for new parents, seniors and post-secondary students in particular,” the Globe and Mail reports. “Other than the Conservatives’ focus on fiscal constraint, the area where the parties showed the clearest differences was on climate change policy. The Conservatives promised to tear up the Liberal climate plan and repeal the federal carbon tax as their first order of business if they formed government, while the other parties promised more ambitious targets.”

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https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/10/canada-justin-trudeau-loses-seats-wins-reelection-prime-minister.html

2019-10-22 11:47:00Z
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