Kamis, 22 Juli 2021

Pegasus spy claims probed as Macron switches phone - CNA

PARIS: Hungary, Israel and Algeria on Thursday (Jul 22) probed allegations that Israeli-made spyware was used on journalists, rights activists and 14 heads of state, as French leader Emmanuel Macron ordered tighter security and changed his phone over espionage concerns.

President Macron - whose name was on a list of alleged targets - ordered "a strengthening of all security protocols" following a specially convened meeting of the nation's Defence Council, his office said.

Macron "has himself changed his phone and number for certain exchanges", it said.

The NSO Group's Pegasus software - able to switch on a phone's camera or microphone and harvest its data - is at the centre of a growing storm after a list of about 50,000 potential surveillance targets was leaked to rights groups.

Amnesty International and French media nonprofit Forbidden Stories collaborated with a clutch of media companies, including the Washington Post, the Guardian and Le Monde, to analyse and publish the list.

The widening scandal is drawing in countries from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to Morocco, India and a host of other mostly emerging economies.

READ: Indian parliament disrupted over Pegasus snooping claims

Hungary was the only EU country listed as a potential user of the spyware, with hundreds of targets including journalists, lawyers and other public figures.

Hungarian prosecutors said on Thursday they had opened a probe "to establish the facts and to determine whether and, if so, what crime has taken place", the Budapest Regional Investigation Prosecutor's Office said.

WEAPON OF CHOICE

Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has insisted the government "has no knowledge of such data collection", while some critics decried the move as a time-wasting manoeuvre.

"They have years to investigate if they want ... This is merely an administrative step," said Andras Lederer from the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights.

NSO insists its software is only intended for use in fighting terrorism and other crimes, and that it exports to 45 countries, with approval from the Israeli government.

The Israeli government said it has set up a commission to review the software.

The priority was "to review this whole matter of giving licences", lawmaker Ram Ben Barak, a former deputy head of the Mossad spy agency, told Army Radio.

READ: Pegasus scandal shows risk of Israel's spy-tech diplomacy: Experts

Pegasus had "exposed many terror cells", he said, but "if it was misused or sold to irresponsible bodies, this is something we need to check".

NSO would "be very pleased if there were an investigation, so that we'd be able to clear our name", Chief Executive Shalev Hulio told Army Radio on Thursday.

Algeria's public prosecutor also ordered an investigation into media reports that the north African country may have been a target.

"NSO's spyware is a weapon of choice for repressive governments seeking to silence journalists, attack activists and crush dissent," Amnesty chief Agnes Callamard said.

'LIES AND FAKE NEWS'

Evidence of an attempted hacking was found on the phone of former French environment minister and close Macron ally Francois de Rugy, with the attempt allegedly originating in Morocco, according to the media reports.

Morocco is suing Amnesty and Forbidden Stories in France and "does not intend to let the multiple lies and fake news spread these past few days go unpunished", said Olivier Baratelli, a lawyer for the government.

A first hearing is set for Oct 8, though a trial might not open for another two years.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, meanwhile, dismissed allegations of their involvement.

UAE's foreign ministry on Thursday said the allegations "are categorically false" and "have no evidentiary basis".

Saudi Arabia's official SPA news agency reported an official source saying "such allegations are untrue, and that (the country's) policies do not condone such practices".

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2021-07-22 23:26:20Z
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'Utterly ruined': The debris-strewn aftermath of China's record rains - CNA

GONGYI: Homes in ruins, pulverised roads and a sea of mud coating cars, the once affluent central Chinese town of Mihe was still in shock on Thursday (Jul 22) as residents turned to food handouts and slept rough after record-breaking storms.

Devastated locals surveyed the damage as the rains finally subsided, treading carefully on smashed paving through tangles of collapsed electricity poles and wires.

"I've lost everything, it's all been washed away," said one middle-aged resident, before bursting into tears.

Many had barely eaten for days, with water, electricity and phone signal cut off.

"Mihe used to be a lively, prosperous town but now it's utterly ruined," a 22-year-old university student surnamed Du told AFP.

AFP was given rare access to join a rescue mission in stricken Henan province, joining a large team of volunteers that drove hundreds of miles through the night to offer help.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been affected by the floods across Henan province
Hundreds of thousands of people have been affected by the floods across Henan province. (Photo: AFP/JADE GAO)

With cars full of food, water and supplies, the Blue Sky Rescue team arrived at Mihe early on Thursday.

Volunteer Wang Lang said they arrived in that town in response to calls from local firefighters about stranded residents, and worked with the authorities to "evacuate residents and recover bodies".

READ: All 14 workers lost in tunnel flood in China confirmed dead

At least two people were killed in their homes in the area during the storms, they said, as calls kept coming in throughout the day of other fatalities - including a girl trapped by a falling tree.

So far 33 deaths have been reported across Henan province during the floods, but the number is expected to rise as storms subside and rescue operations continue across a heavily populated area where communications have been severely disrupted.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been affected by the floods across Henan province, with farmland ruined by floodwaters and transport paralysed.

READ: At least 25 dead as China's Henan province deluged by heaviest rains in 1,000 years

READ: City in China's Henan province picks through debris after record rains kill 33

With many out of signal, a student from the province started an open-source spreadsheet for relatives to list lost or stranded loved ones.

The list, shared on social media, quickly racked up hundreds of names.

Rescuers with shovels and helmets battled a thick layer of mud at least a foot deep
Rescuers with shovels and helmets battled a thick layer of mud at least a foot deep. (Photo: AFP/JADE GAO)

As their work continued through Thursday, rescuers with shovels and helmets battled a thick layer of mud at least a foot deep, trying to return some sense of normality to reeling residents.

"When I first arrived here and saw villagers scavenging for corn cobs from the fields, I felt very sad," said one volunteer in his thirties, surnamed Zhou.

READ: China orders immediate review of subway flood controls as storms spread northwards

Ths smaller, one-storey houses were the worst hit, and Blue Sky helped to drive some of the elderly relatives out of the devastated town to higher ground.

Locals recounted stories of being pulled from flooded homes to safety, scrambling to higher floors and watching neighbouring houses come down in the onslaught.

"We couldn't evacuate in time because my elderly disabled grandma couldn't leave the house," said one 16-year-old school student surnamed Zhang, who said their house had completely flooded.

"I was pretty scared I'd drown."

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2021-07-22 15:22:32Z
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Malaysia's ex-minister Syed Saddiq charged with criminal breach of trust - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR - The youngest man to be appointed to cabinet in Malaysia's history,  Mr Syed Saddiq Abdul Rahman,  was charged on Thursday (July 22)  with misappropriating RM1 million (S$323,070)  from Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin's Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu).

Syed Saddiq, 28, appeared  in a court in Kuala Lumpur charged with two counts of criminal breach of trust and another one for allegedly misappropriating RM120,000 of party election funds in 2018.

The offences were allegedly committed while he was serving as youth chief of Tan Sri Muhyiddin's party, days after the collapse of  the collapse of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) administration - in which he had served as youth and sports minister.

According to the charges read out at the Sessions Court in front of Judge Azura Alwi, Syed Saddiq allegedly withdrew party funds in the form of a cheque without the approval of the party's central committee in March last year.

He pleaded not guilty and claimed trial for both charges. Another opposition MP, Democratic Action Party's (DAP) Gobind Singh Deo, acted as defence counsel.

If found guilty, he could face up to 10 years imprisonment, caning and also a fine. He was released on a RM300,000 bail with one surety.

Reports on Wednesday said that Syed Saddiq could also face a separate money laundering charge in Johor, where he serves as MP for Muar ward.

The former cabinet minister currently heads his own party called Muda - Malaysia's first youth-based political party which is in the opposition bloc.

Syed Saddiq, who at age 25 became Malaysia's youngest minister and third youngest elected lawmaker, has denounced the charges as politically motivated, saying they were an attempt to obtain his support for Mr Muhyiddin's Perikatan Nasional (PN) administration ahead of Parliament reconvening next week.

In a Facebook Live session on Thursday, he said that all the funds  in question were accounted for.

He said that the RM120,000 raised in 2018 were for his own political campaign to contest the Muar parliamentary seat. He also said that the RM 1 million belonged to Bersatu's Youth wing, and all of its key leaders were aware of the withdrawal at the time. He also said that it was never a practice for Bersatu leaders to seek the central committee's approval to withdraw party funds.

"The RM1 million is not missing, it is all accounted for," Syed Saddiq said.

Malaysia's Parliament will sit for the first time this year from Monday, with doubts remaining over Mr Muhyiddin's wafer-thin majority.

In late March last year, Syed Saddiq lodged a police report over a sum of RM250,000 that allegedly went missing from a safe at his house in Selangor, which prompted a probe from the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.

Syed Saddiq claimed that the missing sum belonged to him and his family, and that it did not belong to Bersatu.

Syed Saddiq is the second ex-minister from the PH administration to face criminal charges since Mr Muhyiddin's PN administration took power last year.

Democratic Action Party leader Lim Guan Eng, who was the finance minister when PH ruled for  less than two years, is also facing corruption charges over the Penang undersea tunnel project that received the go-ahead during his tenure as Penang chief minister.

Parliament will convene for five days from Monday, after Malaysia's King, Sultan Abdullah Ahmad Shah, said last month it should meet as soon as possible.

It is expected to discuss measures taken by Mr Muhyiddin's administration to deal with the Covid-19 crisis in Malaysia, much of which was implemented without parliamentary approval following the state of emergency, which was imposed in January and is due to end on Aug 1.

The number of Covid-19 infections in the country worsened during  the emergency. Malaysia is currently registering new daily infections in the  five-figures, and is averaging more than 100 deaths a day.

Syed Saddiq's Muda is also currently engaged in a court battle with the Home Affairs Ministry over the lack of approval for Muda to be registered as a political party with the Registrar of Societies.

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2021-07-22 16:18:56Z
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China says WHO plan to audit labs in Covid origins probe 'arrogant' - Yahoo Singapore News

China on Thursday said a WHO proposal to audit Chinese labs as part of further investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic showed "disrespect" and "arrogance towards science".

Last week, the World Health Organization said a second stage of the international probe should include audits of Chinese labs, amid increasing pressure from the United States for an investigation into a biotech lab in Wuhan.

The proposal outlined by WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus included "audits of relevant laboratories and research institutions operating in the area of the initial human cases identified in December 2019" -- referring to the Chinese city of Wuhan.

But China's vice health minister Zeng Yixin told reporters Thursday that he was "extremely surprised" by the plan, which he said showed "disrespect for common sense and arrogance towards science".

Long derided as a right-wing conspiracy theory and vehemently rejected by Beijing, the idea that Covid-19 may have emerged from a lab leak has been gaining momentum.

Beijing has repeatedly insisted that a leak would have been "extremely unlikely", citing the conclusion reached by a joint WHO-Chinese mission to Wuhan in January.

At the same time, Chinese officials and state media have pushed an alternate theory that the virus could have escaped from the US military research lab at Fort Detrick, Maryland.

Nationalist tabloid Global Times said it had collected five million signatures from Chinese web users on a petition to investigate the US lab.

Top officials have also amplified theories that the virus may have been imported with frozen food.

- 'No accidents' -

Yuan Zhiming, director of the National Biosafety Laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, told Thursday's press conference "no pathogen leakage or staff infection accidents have occurred" since the lab opened in 2018.

Zeng hit back at what he called "rumours" about the lab, insisting that it had "never carried out gain-of-function research on coronaviruses, nor is there a so-called manmade virus".

His comments were in reference to the type of research that has featured heavily in theories about a possible lab leak.

China has in recent days faced accusations from the WHO that it had not shared the necessary raw data during the first phase of the investigation, with Tedros urging Beijing to "be transparent, to be open and cooperate" on a second phase.

Tedros on Friday also called for more studies of animal markets in and around Wuhan.

The UN health agency has been under intensifying pressure for a new, more in-depth investigation of how the disease that has killed more than four million people around the world first emerged.

The WHO was only able to send a team of independent, international experts to Wuhan in January, more than a year after Covid-19 first surfaced there, to help Chinese counterparts probe the pandemic's origins.

Thursday's comments come ahead of a weekend trip to China by US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman to address deteriorating ties between the two countries.

It is the highest-level visit under President Joe Biden and comes amid tensions between the two powers over issues including the pandemic's origins, human rights and cybersecurity.

tjx/rox/jah

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2021-07-22 05:48:11Z
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Hong Kong court sentences seven for 2019 attack on protesters at Yuen Long train station - CNA

HONG KONG: A Hong Kong court on Thursday (Jul 22) sentenced seven men to between three-and-a-half and seven years in prison for their role in a 2019 attack on protesters, reporters and bystanders at a train station at the height of anti-government protests.

The Jul 21, 2019 attack in the northern Yuen Long district by more than 100 people wearing white T-shirts and wielding sticks and poles was one of the most violent scenes of the 2019 unrest.

The attack sparked criticism of police for what democracy activists called a sluggish response, with some accusing them of colluding with gangsters suspected of carrying out the attack.

READ: Masked men assault protesters, commuters in Hong Kong MTR station

READ: Hong Kong protesters clash with police at Yuen Long MTR station

Police have rejected those accusations, blaming the slow response partly on protests elsewhere draining resources.

A man being assaulted by a group of men wearing white at Yuen Long MTR station on Jul 21, 2019
Screengrab of a video showing a man being assaulted by a group of men wearing white at Hong Kong's Yuen Long MTR station on Jul 21, 2019. 

Wong Ying-kit, Ng Wai-nam, Tang Ying-bun, Choi Lap-ki and Tang Wai-sum were found guilty of rioting as well as wounding with intent or conspiracy to wound with intent and sentenced to up to seven years, the maximum penalty the District Court could give for the crimes.

Lam Koon-leung and Lam Kai-ming, who unlike the other five had pleaded guilty to rioting, received a sentence of four years and eight months.

In handing the sentences, Judge Eddie Yip described the crimes as "mob justice which caused panic among the general public". 

The sentences marked the first convictions of any of the white-shirted attackers.

About a dozen people supporting those sentenced unfurled a banner outside the court reading: "They were forced to guard the homeland and were severely sentenced, where is the justice? Injustice will be vindicated."

READ: 45 injured after mob attack at Hong Kong MTR station

Police said last month they had arrested 63 people in relation to the Yuen Long events. Fifteen of those have been charged with taking part in a riot, and eight were also charged with "conspiracy to wound with intent".

Men wearing white attacking protesters and commuters at Yuen Long MTR station on Jul 21, 2019
Screengrab of a video showing men wearing white attacking protesters and commuters at Hong Kong's Yuen Long MTR station on Jul 21, 2019. 

Media tallies show seven of those charged were not part of the white-shirted mob. Former democratic lawmaker Lam Cheuk-ting, who was hospitalised after being wounded as he livestreamed the attack, was also charged with rioting.

An award-winning journalist, Bao Choy, investigating the police action that day for public broadcaster RTHK, was found guilty in April of obtaining vehicle registrations illegally to trace those behind the assault. 

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2021-07-22 04:42:07Z
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City in China's Henan province picks through debris after record rains kill 33 - CNA

ZHENGZHOU, Henan: Piles of cars were strewn across a central Chinese city on Thursday (Jul 22) as shocked residents picked through the debris of a historic deluge that claimed at least 33 lives, with more heavy rain threatening surrounding regions.

An unprecedented downpour dumped a year's rain in just three hours on the city of Zhengzhou, weather officials said, instantly overwhelming drains and sending torrents of muddy, swirling water through streets, road tunnels and the subway system.

Hundreds of thousands of people in the surrounding area have been affected by the flood, authorities said, as farmland was inundated and road and rail links severed.

In worst-hit Zhengzhou, grim images of the horror inside the subway system were relayed in real-time over social media, showing water rising during Tuesday's rush hour from the ankles of passengers to their necks.

At least a dozen people died before rescuers were able to cut survivors free from carriages.

Endless city sprawl is putting pressure on drainage in China
People look out at cars sitting in floodwaters after heavy rains hit the city of Zhengzhou in China's central Henan province on Jul 21, 2021. (Photo: AFP/STR)

As the water retreated - with piles of cars a monument to its deadly power - residents prepared for another day of bad weather, moving vehicles to higher ground and trying to plot journeys out from the stricken city, where communications and power were still patchy.

Trucks pumped muddy water from its underground tunnels as business owners counted the cost of torrent and meteorologists issued 'red' rain alerts, warning of the threat of fresh landslides and flooding in the surrounding areas.

READ: China orders immediate review of subway flood controls as rains continue

"I am waiting for the power to be restored, but it may take several more days I think," Chen, the owner of a local food and pork sandwich restaurant told AFP.

"My losses? They are okay, compared to what happened in the tunnel there," he said gesturing towards the tunnel where floods trapped many cars on Tuesday - potentially with motorists still inside.

TOPOGRAPHY, TYPHOON, CLIMATE

Questions turned to how China's bulging cities could be better prepared for freak weather events like Tuesday's storm, which experts say are happening with increased frequency and intensity due to climate change.

Anyang city, a short journey north of Zhengzhou, issued red alert on Thursday for heavy downpours after some areas had received over 100mm of rain, ordering schools to close and most workers to stay at home.

Weather experts dissected the reasons behind Tuesday's record rains.

Deadly flooding in central China
Factfile on the flooding in Henan province, China, as of Jul 21, 2021. (Image: AFP)

Chen Tao, chief forecaster of the National Meteorological Center (NMC), said a mix of Henan's topography and Typhoon In-Fa favoured the rains.

Although the typhoon has not landed in China, under the influence of winds, "a large amount of water vapour from above the sea gathered towards Henan", providing a source of water for the downpours, Chen said.

The changing climate is also making these kind of extreme weather events more common as the world continues to heat up, with catastrophes seen across the world.

Henan province like much of China is striated by rivers, dams and reservoirs many constructed decades ago to manage the flow of floodwater and irrigate the agricultural region.

READ: Chinese army warns dam battered by storms could collapse 

But endless city sprawl is putting pressure on drainage.

State media rebuked suggestions dams may have had a part to play in subverting the normal flow of water, with the Global Times citing experts as saying "construction had no direct connection to flooding".

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2021-07-22 04:34:44Z
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Malaysia's ex-minister Syed Saddiq charged with criminal breach of trust - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's ex-minister Syed Saddiq Abdul Rahman, who was the youngest Cabinet member in the country's history, was charged on Thursday (July 22) with misappropriating RM1 million (S$323,070) of funds from Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin's Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu).

Syed Saddiq, 28, was charged in a court in Kuala Lumpur with two counts of criminal breach of trust.

The offence was allegedly committed while he was serving as youth chief of Tan Sri Muhyiddin's party - days after the collapse of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) administration - in which he had served as youth and sports minister.

According to charges read out at the Sessions Court by judge Azura Alwi on Thursday, Mr Syed Saddiq allegedly withdrew party funds in the form of a cheque without the approval of the party's central committee in March last year.

Syed Saddiq pleaded not guilty and claimed trial for both charges. Another opposition MP, Democratic Action Party's (DAP) Gobind Singh Deo, acted as his defence counsel.

If found guilty, he could face up to 10 years imprisonment, caning and also a fine.

Reports on Wednesday said that Syed Saddiq could also face a separate money - laundering charge in Johor, where he serves as MP for Muar ward.

Syed Saddiq currently heads his own party called Muda - Malaysia's first youth-based political party that sits on the opposition bloc.

Syed Saddiq, who at age 25 became Malaysia's youngest minister and third youngest elected lawmaker, has said that the charges were politically motivated and an attempt to obtain his support for Mr Muhyiddin's Perikatan Nasional (PN) administration ahead of Parliament reconvening next week.

The Parliament will sit for the first time in 2021 from next Monday, with doubts remaining over Mr Muhyiddin's wafer-thin majority.

In late March last year, Syed Saddiq lodged a police report over a sum of RM250,000 that allegedly went missing from a safe at his house in Selangor, which prompted a probe from the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.

Syed Saddiq had claimed that the missing sum belonged to him and his family, and that it did not belong to Bersatu.

Syed Saddiq is the second ex-minister from the PH administration to be charged with corruption since Mr Muhyiddin's PN administration took power last year.

DAP leader Lim Guan Eng, who was the finance minister during the PH reign which lasted less than two years, is also facing corruption charges over the Penang undersea tunnel project that was greenlit during his tenure as Penang chief minister.

The Parliament will convene for five days from Monday following the wishes of Malaysia's King, Sultan Abdullah Ahmad Shah last month.

It is expected to discuss measures taken by Mr Muhyiddin's administration to deal with the Covid-19 crisis in Malaysia, much of which had been carried out without parliamentary approval following a state of emergency proclamation by the King in January.

The state of emergency is due to end on Aug 1, although Malaysia's Covid-19 infection numbers had only become worse during the period. It is currently recording five-figure fresh infection numbers every day, and is averaging more than 100 deaths a day.

Syed Saddiq, despite being a party colleague of Mr Muhyiddin, did not join the new PN administration that was formed via defections last year, aligning instead with former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad.

Both Tun Dr Mahathir and Syed Saddiq subsequently left Bersatu, but the latter chose not to join Dr Mahathir's new Bumiputra-centric political outfit Pejuang, instead opting to form Muda, a multiracial youth party.

Syed Saddiq's Muda is also currently engaged in a court battle with the Home Affairs Ministry over the lack of approval for Muda to be registered as a political party with the Registrar of Societies.

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2021-07-22 01:47:26Z
CBMicWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnN0cmFpdHN0aW1lcy5jb20vYXNpYS9zZS1hc2lhL21hbGF5c2lhcy1leC1taW5pc3Rlci1zeWVkLXNhZGRpcS1jaGFyZ2VkLXdpdGgtY3JpbWluYWwtYnJlYWNoLW9mLXRydXN00gEA