Senin, 02 November 2020

2 killed in Vienna 'terror attack'; manhunt under way for several gunmen - CNA

VIENNA: Gunmen fired shots at six locations in central Vienna starting near the central synagogue on Monday (Nov 2), killing at least two people - including one attacker - and wounding others in what Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz described as a "repulsive terror attack".

A manhunt is under way for several suspected perpetrators Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said are "heavily armed and dangerous". 

"We have brought several special forces units together that are now searching for the presumed terrorists. I am therefore not limiting it to an area of Vienna because these are mobile perpetrators," Nehammer told broadcaster ORF, urging the public to stay indoors until the all-clear is given.

Police said there was "one deceased person" and several injured, including one police officer.

Meanwhile, one suspect had been "shot and killed by police officers", Vienna police said on their Twitter account.

The attack had been carried out by "several suspects armed with rifles", and police added that there had been "six different shooting locations".

Gunshots were fired at around 8pm, beginning at the Seitenstettengasse in the city's centrally located first district.

The shooting began just hours before Austria was to re-impose a coronavirus lockdown to try to slow the spread of COVID-19, and bars and restaurants were packed as people enjoyed a final night of relative freedom.

Nehammer told ORF that the attack was carried out in the immediate vicinity of the street housing the central synagogue.

"At the moment I can confirm we believe this is an apparent terror attack," he said.

"We believe there are several perpetrators. Unfortunately there are also several injured, probably also dead."

Frequent sirens could be heard in central Vienna as emergency services responded to the incident.

ORF reported that 15 people were being treated for injuries in Vienna hospitals, and that seven were in serious condition.

Armed police control a passage near the opera in central Vienna
Armed police control a passage near the opera in central Vienna on Nov 2, 2020, following a shooting near a synagogue. (Photo: AFP/Joe Klamar)

Authorities gave no indication of the identity of the assailants or reason for the attack.

The president of Vienna's Jewish community Oskar Deutsch said that shots had been fired "in the immediate vicinity" of the Stadttempel synagogue but added that it was currently unknown whether the synagogue itself had been the target of an attack.

He said that the synagogue and office buildings at the same address had been closed at the time of the attack.

"It sounded like firecrackers, then we realised it was shots," said one eyewitness quoted by ORF.

A shooter had "shot wildly with an automatic weapon" before the police arrived and opened fire, the witness added.

An armed policeman guards the passage of the state opera in central Vienna
An armed policeman guards the passage of the state opera in central Vienna on Nov 2, 2020, following a shooting near a synagogue. (Photo: AFP/Joe Klamar)

Videos circulated on social media of a gunman running down a cobblestone street shooting and shouting. Reuters could not immediately verify the videos.

In 1981, two people were killed and 18 people were injured during an attack by two Palestinians at the same synagogue. In 1985, a Palestinian extremist group attacked Vienna airport with hand grenades and attack rifles, killing three civilians.

In August, authorities arrested a 31-year-old Syrian refugees suspected of trying to attack a Jewish community leader in the country's second city Graz. The leader was unhurt.

'COWARDLY ACT'

Austria had until now been spared the sort of major attacks that have hit other European countries.

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted that "we French share the shock and sorrow of the Austrian people".

"After France, it's a friendly nation that has been attacked," he added, referring to the killing on Thursday of three people by a knife-armed attacker in southern city Nice and the beheading of a schoolteacher by a suspected extremist outside Paris several days before.

EU Council chief Charles Michel tweeted that the bloc "strongly condemns this cowardly act".

And Germany's foreign ministry tweeted that the reports from Austria were "horrifying and disturbing".

"We can't give in to hatred that is aimed at dividing our societies," the ministry added.

Czech police said they had started random checks on the border with Austria.

"Police are carrying out random checks of vehicles and passengers on border crossings with Austria as a preventive measure in relation to the terror attack in Vienna," Czech police tweeted.

Czech Interior Minister Jan Hamacek said in a tweet Czech police were in touch with Austrian colleagues following the "dreadful news from Vienna".

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte also "strongly condemned" the shootings.

"There is no room for hatred and violence in our common European home," he said on Twitter in Italian and German.

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2020-11-02 23:03:45Z
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Biden leads in polls going into Election Day but battlegrounds tight - CNA

WASHINGTON: Democrat Joe Biden leads in the national polls and most of the battleground states going into Election Day but President Donald Trump is insisting they're wrong and he'll repeat his upset victory of 2016.

Biden, the 77-year-old former vice president, has enjoyed a solid lead over Trump, 74, in the national polls for months, at times reaching double digits.

But US presidential elections are not decided by the popular vote.

They are won in the 538-member Electoral College, where each state has a number of electoral votes equivalent to its representation in the House and Senate.

And the electoral votes of battleground states such as Florida and Pennsylvania could determine the winner of Tuesday's battle for the White House.

Here is a look at the latest national polls and polls in key battleground states:

NATIONAL POLLS

An average of national polls by the RealClearPolitics (RCP) website gives Biden a 6.8 point lead over Trump - 50.7 per cent to 43.9 per cent.

That is roughly in line with the averages of other leading outlets such as FiveThirtyEight.com, which has Biden up by 8.4 points nationally.

Biden's lead nationally is more than double that of Hillary Clinton going into the 2016 election, when the polls were relatively accurate concerning the popular vote, which she won while losing in the Electoral College.

FLORIDA

In Florida, Biden has a 1.7 point lead over Trump, according to the RCP average of state polls.

A Siena College/New York Times poll has Biden up by three points in the Sunshine State but a Washington Post/ABC News poll has the Republican incumbent up by two points.

Trump won Florida and its 29 electoral votes in 2016 and winning the state again is seen as crucial to his hopes of victory.

PENNSYLVANIA

In Pennsylvania, Biden has a 2.9-point lead, according to the RCP average of polls in the Keystone State, which has 20 electoral votes.

Trump won Pennsylvania by just 44,000 votes in 2016 and his reelection hopes could hang on taking the state again.

MICHIGAN, WISCONSIN

Michigan and Wisconsin are two Midwestern states Trump won narrowly in 2016 but the RCP averages have him trailing in both this time.

According to the RCP averages, Biden is up by 5.1 points in Michigan, which has 16 electoral votes, and by 6.6 points in Wisconsin, which has 10 electoral votes.

ARIZONA, NORTH CAROLINA

The battleground states of Arizona and North Carolina, both of which Trump won in 2016, are also being closely watched.

According to the RCP averages, Biden has a 0.5 point lead in Arizona, which has 11 electoral votes, while Trump leads by 0.5 points in North Carolina, which has 15 electoral votes.

GEORGIA, IOWA, OHIO, TEXAS

Four other states are also being closely watched this time - Georgia (16 electoral votes), Iowa (six), Ohio (18) and Texas (38).

Trump won all four states relatively easily in 2016 but the polls are showing close races there this time.

Trump is up by 0.2 points in Georgia, according to the RCP average, a state Trump won by 5.1 points in 2016.

Trump is up by 1.4 points in Iowa - he won by 9.4 points four years ago - and by 1.4 points in Ohio, a significantly smaller margin than his 8.1-point win last time around.

Trump won Texas, one of the biggest prizes of the night, by nine points in 2016 but the RCP average gives him a narrow 1.2 point lead there ahead of Tuesday's vote.

An average of national polls by the RealClearPolitics (RCP) website gives Biden a 6.7 point lead over Trump - 51 per cent to 44.3 per cent.

That is roughly in line with the averages of other leading outlets such as FiveThirtyEight.com, which has Biden up by 8.5 points nationally.

Biden's lead nationally is more than double that of Hillary Clinton going into the 2016 election, when the polls were relatively accurate concerning the popular vote, which she won while losing in the Electoral College.

FLORIDA

In Florida, Biden has a one-point lead over Trump, according to the RCP average of state polls.

A Siena College/New York Times poll has Biden up by three points in the Sunshine State but a Washington Post/ABC News poll has the Republican incumbent up by two points.

Trump won Florida and its 29 electoral votes in 2016 and winning the state again is seen as crucial to his hopes of victory.

PENNSYLVANIA

In Pennsylvania, Biden has a 4.3-point lead, according to the RCP average of polls in the Keystone State, which has 20 electoral votes.

Trump won Pennsylvania by just 44,000 votes in 2016 and his reelection hopes could hang on taking the state again.

MICHIGAN, WISCONSIN

Michigan and Wisconsin are two Midwestern states Trump won narrowly in 2016 but the RCP averages have him trailing in both this time.

According to the RCP averages, Biden is up by 5.1 points in Michigan, which has 16 electoral votes, and by 6.6 points in Wisconsin, which has 10 electoral votes.

ARIZONA, NORTH CAROLINA

The battleground states of Arizona and North Carolina, both of which Trump won in 2016, are also being closely watched.

According to the RCP averages, Biden has a one-point lead in Arizona, which has 11 electoral votes, while Trump leads by 0.6 points in North Carolina, which has 15 electoral votes.

GEORGIA, IOWA, OHIO, TEXAS

Four other states are also being closely watched this time - Georgia (16 electoral votes), Iowa (six), Ohio (18) and Texas (38).

Trump won all four states relatively easily in 2016 but the polls are showing close races there this time.

Biden is up by 0.4 points in Georgia, according to the RCP average, a state Trump won by 5.1 points in 2016.

Trump is up by 1.4 points in Iowa - he won by 9.4 points four years ago - and by 0.2 points in Ohio, a significantly smaller margin than his 8.1-point win last time around.

Trump won Texas, one of the biggest prizes of the night, by nine points in 2016 but the RCP average gives him a narrow 1.2 point lead there ahead of Tuesday's vote.

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2020-11-02 22:42:09Z
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Trump dismisses 'fake' polls, Biden says time to end the 'chaos' - CNA

FAYETTEVILLE: President Donald Trump entered his final day of campaigning for reelection on Monday (Nov 2) by dismissing polls that show him headed for a humiliating loss, while Democrat Joe Biden urged Americans to draw a line under the "chaos" of the last four years.

"I watch these fake polls," Trump, 74, told a crowd in Fayetteville, North Carolina, on the eve of Election Day. "We're going to win anyway."

The Republican's gripe at pollsters - combined with angry swipes at everybody from journalists, social media CEOs, his defeated 2016 opponent Hillary Clinton and Democratic opponents in Congress - reflected the bitter mood as he faces the possibility of being removed from the White House after one term.

When he wasn't complaining about his "crooked" opponents, Trump focused back on his months-long attempts to paint Biden as "sleepy" and "corrupt," leading the crowd to chant: "Lock him up!"

And Trump sought to recapture the spirit of his shock win four years ago by casting himself as the rebel against an "arrogant, corrupt, ruthless" establishment.

"You elected an outsider as president who is finally putting America first," he told the crowd. "Get out and vote, that's all I ask."

US President Donald Trump is behind in the polls but has five more rallies on the last day of
US President Donald Trump is behind in the polls but has five more rallies on the last day of campaigning. (Photo: AFP/Brendan Smialowski)

But Biden, who has built his campaign on casting Trump as a reckless failure during the coronavirus pandemic, scents victory.

Opinion polls give him small but steady advantages in all the swing states that tip close elections and even threatening Republican strongholds like Georgia and Texas.

Opinion poll averages for Donald Trump and Joe Biden nationwide and in 6 key battleground states, as
Opinion poll averages for Donald Trump and Joe Biden nationwide and in 6 key battleground states, as of Nov 1. (Graphic: AFP)

"It's time for Donald Trump to pack his bags and go home," Biden, 77, told supporters in Cleveland, Ohio.

"We're done with the chaos! We're done with the tweets, the anger, the hate, the failure, the irresponsibility," said Biden.

FEARS OF VIOLENCE, CHAOS

Tuesday is formally Election Day but in reality it marks the culmination of a drawn-out election month.

With a huge expansion in mail-in voting to safeguard against the COVID-19 pandemic, more than 95 million people are estimated to have already cast ballots, highlighting the raw passion in what is turning into a referendum on the norm-shattering Republican's first term.

All over central Washington, businesses boarded up windows in expectation of unrest and NBC News reported that a new "unscalable" fence was planned around the White House, which has been behind growing layers of fortifications since a summer of anti-racism protests.

While the Trump administration warned of left-wing extremists causing havoc, the president's supporters made their own show of force, driving in caravans of flag-bedecked pick-up trucks and blocking roads around the country.

The FBI said it was investigating an incident in Texas where Trump supporters in trucks swarmed around a Biden campaign bus while it was on a highway.

READ: Trump decries FBI probe of supporters surrounding Biden bus

Biden was closing up his startlingly low key campaign with socially distanced events in Ohio and Pennsylvania, the fiercest battleground of them all.

Pop superstar Lady Gaga was to join the 77-year-old, while former president Barack Obama was lending his own political star power by rallying for Biden in Florida and Georgia - a steady Republican state targeted by the Democrats.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden flies off to the final campaign stops of 2020
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden flies off to the final campaign stops of 2020. (Photo: AFP/Jim Watson)

Trump, who mocks Biden's modestly attended events as proof that the opinion polls must be wrong, was capping his closing surge of 14 rallies in three days with visits to North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan.

The last rally will be in Grand Rapids - the site where Trump delivered the final speech of his victorious 2016 campaign and where he hopes he will once more spark an upset.

TRUMP ATTACKS ELECTION INTEGRITY

The president, who for months has been falsely claiming that mail-in votes will lead to mass fraud, upped the ante in the final days by suggesting that he will push to disqualify votes that arrive after Tuesday - a practice which is in fact legal in several of the key states, provided that the ballots are postmarked in time.

Together with Republican attempts to get a court to throw out more than 100,000 ballots in Texas and other aggressive legal measures, Trump's hostility to the election rules is raising fears that he will try to declare premature victory or refuse to accept defeat.

The Axios news site reported Sunday that Trump has told confidants he will declare victory right away if it looked like he was ahead.

Trump called it a "false report" but repeated his argument that "I don't think it's fair that we have to wait for a long period of time after the election."

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2020-11-02 20:07:19Z
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Footage of man beating wife to death on Chinese street sparks outrage - TODAYonline

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Footage of man beating wife to death on Chinese street sparks outrage  TODAYonlineView Full coverage on Google News
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2020-11-02 08:49:15Z
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Footage of man beating wife to death on Chinese street sparks outrage - TODAYonline

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Footage of man beating wife to death on Chinese street sparks outrage  TODAYonlineView Full coverage on Google News
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2020-11-02 08:40:20Z
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Minggu, 01 November 2020

Trump decries FBI probe of supporters surrounding Biden bus - CNA

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Sunday (Nov 1) suggested the FBI should stop investigating an incident in which his supporters were seen surrounding a Biden campaign bus in Texas, which led Democrats to cancel an event there.

The president’s tweet came hours after the FBI confirmed that it was “aware of the incident and investigating”.

On Sunday night, Trump retweeted a screenshot of the FBI statement, adding: “In my opinion, these patriots did nothing wrong. Instead, the FBI & Justice should be investigating the terrorists, anarchists, and agitators of ANTIFA, who run around burning down our Democrat run cities and hurting our people!”

An FBI spokesperson said the bureau had no comment about the president’s tweet.

Trump’s tweet came as tensions remained high between the president and FBI Director Christopher Wray, and as Trump has pressed the Justice Department and FBI to act against his rivals, including Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden himself.

The president has also told people around him that he is frustrated with Wray over the FBI director’s public statements on issues like voting fraud, Russian election interference and antifa, and has discussed the possibility of removing Wray if he wins re-election.

In videos posted on Twitter, a group of cars and pickup trucks - many adorned with large Trump flags - can be seen riding alongside the campaign bus on Friday, and at times boxing it in, as it travelled from San Antonio to Austin. 

At one point, one of the pickup trucks can be seen colliding with an SUV that was driving behind the bus.

Neither Biden nor his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, was aboard the bus.

The campaign cancelled an event later in the day.

READ: Biden condemns Trump fans allegedly harassing campaign bus

READ: Will it be Trump or Biden? A weary world is watching

On Saturday, Trump tweeted a video of his supporters following the Biden campaign bus, adding, “I LOVE TEXAS!”

The Texas Democratic Party chairperson did not directly address the incident, but said people should “ignore the noise and go vote”.

“Voting is the only thing that matters right now,” the chair, Gilberto Hinojosa, said in a statement.

This weekend, caravans of Trump supporters also blocked the Mario Cuomo Bridge in New York, which spans the Hudson River between Tarrytown and Nyack, and snarled traffic on the Garden State Parkway in New Jersey.

Videos posted online showed some of the supporters hopping out of their cars on the bridge as rain fell on the roadway, waving Trump flags and cheering.

“We’ve never had anything like this. At least we’ve never had a president who thinks it’s a good thing,” Biden said during a campaign event in the Philadelphia suburbs.

Trump’s tweet on Sunday underscored the larger effort by the Trump administration to spotlight and crack down on protest-related violence, especially in cities run by Democratic mayors in an effort to showcase what Trump says is his law-and-order prowess.

Trump has derided protesters and played up the violence around protests, though the majority of them have been peaceful.

The Justice Department has brought over 300 cases against defendants in unrest cases nationwide since May.

An Associated Press review of thousands of pages of court documents found that very few of those charged appear to be affiliated with highly organised extremist groups, as the president has suggested.

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2020-11-02 05:16:46Z
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Philippine president to inspect typhoon damage as death toll rises to 16 - CNA

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte will inspect on Monday (Nov 2) areas hit by Typhoon Goni, the world's strongest typhoon this year, as authorities claimed mandatory evacuations had prevented a higher death toll even as some areas remained cut off.

The country's disaster agency said in a statement Goni had killed at least 16 people with three people reported missing.

Goni, the 18th cyclone to hit the Philippines this year and among the strongest typhoons to hit the nation since Haiyan that killed more than 6,300 people in 2013, battered provinces south of the capital on Sunday.

Aftermath of Typhoon Goni in Daraga, Albay province, Philippines
A house stands amidst debris after Typhoon Goni swept through Daraga, Albay province, Philippines, November 2, 2020, in this photo obtained from social media. David Lee/via REUTERS

"The goal should be zero casualties but since people were forcibly evacuated our casualties were reduced," Harry Roque, spokesman for Duterte, told a news conference.

READ: Philippines evacuates nearly 1 million as world's strongest typhoon this year approaches

Duterte will fly to Manila from his home town of Davao on Monday and conduct an aerial inspection of some of the worst-hit areas, Roque said. Duterte had been in his home town when the typhoon struck, prompting some public criticism.

The Philippine police chief was on his way to Guinobatan in Albay province after a local lawmaker reported around 300 houses had been buried under volcanic rock and mud flows from the Mayon Volcano.

Aftermath of Typhoon Goni in Daraga, Albay province, Philippines
A house is partially submerged in debris brought about by Typhoon Goni in Daraga, Albay province, Philippines, November 2, 2020, in this photo obtained from social media. David Lee/via REUTERS

Goni, which had gusts of up to 310kmh, destroyed up to 80 per cent of homes in several towns in Catanduanes, Senator Richard Gordon, chief of the Philippine Red Cross, told DZBB radio station.

Catanduanes, a province of 275,000 people, was cut off, with communication and power lines down, said Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi.

Goni affected 2.1 million residents in Luzon, which accounts for more than two thirds of the economy, and 50,000 homes were without power on Monday.

Metro Manila residents take shelter in evacuation centers following Typhoon Goni
A woman wearing a mask for protection against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) carries a baby inside a modular tent at an evacuation center, where residents from low-lying areas took shelter following Typhoon Goni, in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines, November 2, 2020. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez

Ahead of Goni's landfall, the Philippines was still reeling from typhoon Molave that killed 22 people, mostly through drowning in provinces south of the capital Manila.

READ: Vietnam tackles typhoon's deadly aftermath as new storm threatens region

Another storm, Atsani, is gaining strength in the Pacific Ocean as it approaches the Philippines, which is usually hit by around 20 tropical storms annually.

Meanwhile, Vietnam's government said Goni is forecast to make landfall on the country’s central coast on Wednesday night, dumping more heavy rain in an area where floods and landslides have already killed around 160 people and left dozens of others missing over the past month.

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2020-11-02 05:16:18Z
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