Minggu, 11 Juni 2023

Several killed, wounded in Vietnam police station attacks - CNA

HANOI: Several people were killed and wounded in shootings at two police headquarters in Vietnam's Central Highlands on Sunday (Jun 11), authorities said.

Six people were arrested in connection with the shootings in Cu Kuin district of Dak Lak province, according to the ministry of public security's website.

Investigators were searching for more suspects, it said.

The attacks on the police headquarters of both Ea Tieu and Ea Ktur communes occurred in the early hours of Sunday, according to the site.

It said a number of people, including police, local officials and civilians were killed and wounded but did not provide exact figures.

Police could not be reached immediately be reached for comment.

The Central Highlands, home to a number of ethnic minorities, is considered a sensitive area for Vietnam's authoritarian government and has long been a hotbed of discontent over issues that include land rights.

Some tribes in the area - collectively known as Montagnards - sided with the US-backed south during Vietnam's decades-long war. Some are calling for more autonomy, while others abroad advocate independence for the region.

Several state media outlets withdrew their reports about the incident earlier on Sunday before republishing them hours later.

Gun violence is extremely uncommon in Vietnam, where it is illegal for citizens to own firearms and the black market for weapons is limited.

Four people were shot dead at an illegal cockfighting betting ring on the outskirts of Ho Chi Minh city in January 2020.

In another rare shooting in 2016, two senior officials in northern Yen Bai province were killed by a colleague at their office before the gunman shot himself.

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2023-06-11 08:06:14Z
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Indigenous upbringing helped children survive Amazon ordeal - The Straits Times

BOGOTA – Lost for 40 days in the Colombian Amazon, four indigenous children survived eating seeds, roots and plants they knew were edible thanks to their upbringing.

And it was in part down to the local knowledge of indigenous adults involved in the search alongside Colombian troops that they were ultimately found alive.

“The survival of the children is a sign of the knowledge and relationship with the natural environment that is taught starting in the mother’s womb,” according to the National Organisation of Indigenous Peoples of Colombia (Opiac).

The four siblings survived a small plane crash on May 1 that took the lives of the pilot, their mother and a third adult.

The family of the children clung to hope that the siblings’ familiarity with the jungle would see them through.

The “children of the bush”, as their grandfather called them, survived eating yucca flour that was aboard the doomed plane, and scavenging from relief parcels dropped by search helicopters.

But they also ate seeds, fruits, roots and plants that they identified as edible from their upbringing in the Amazon region, Mr Luis Acosta from the National Indigenous Organisation of Colombia (Onic) told AFP.

‘Spiritual force’

Mr Acosta, who took part in search operations, said the children were imbued with “spiritual force”.

That is a shared perception among indigenous leaders, and Mr Acosta noted that a guardian was to be posted outside the military hospital where doctors were attending to the children to help accompany them “spiritually”.

“We have a particular connection to nature,” Mr Javier Betancourt, another Onic leader, told AFP.

“The world needs this kind of special relation with nature, to favour those like the indigenous who live in the jungle and take care of it.”

During the search, soldiers worked side by side with indigenous trackers for 20 days.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro praised what he called a “meeting of indigenous and military knowledge” that he said showed respect for the jungle.

Army helicopters broadcast recordings of the children’s grandmother telling them in the indigenous Huitoto language to stay put in one spot until rescuers reached them.

“It was President Petro who brought us together,” Mr Acosta told local media, referring to soldiers and indigenous experts.

“In an initial meeting, eight days before our search began, the President told us we needed to go with the army because the army couldn’t do it alone,” he added.

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2023-06-11 05:45:00Z
2120931869

Convicted 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski dead at 81 - CNA

Ted Kaczynski, a former math professor and "twisted genius" who came to be known as the "Unabomber" when he carried out a 17-year spree of mysterious bombings that killed three people and baffled the Federal Bureau of Investigation, died on Saturday (Jun 10) at the age of 81.

Kaczynski, who made and sent many of his bombs while living in a primitive cabin with no running water in rural Montana, was found unresponsive on Saturday morning at the Federal Medical Center Butner, a facility for prisoners with special health needs, in Butner, North Carolina, and pronounced dead at a local hospital.

"He is dead," Kristie Breshears, a spokesperson for the Federal Bureau of Prisons, told Reuters.

The Harvard University graduate, a loner since childhood, targeted academics, scientists and computer store owners and even tried to blow up a commercial airliner in a one-man terror campaign from 1978 to 1995 against what he believed were the evils of modern technology.

For years, he frustrated police who, with no solid clues to the killer's identity, dubbed his case UNABOM, for University and Airline Bombings.

A breakthrough came when Kaczynski released a rambling, 35,000-word manifesto entitled Industrial Society and Its Future that was published in the media in September 1995.

Kaczynski's younger brother, David, tipped off police that the author's ideas sounded like those of Ted. Agents arrested the disheveled "Unabomber" at his cabin in April 1996.

After rejecting his lawyers' attempts to have him plead insanity, Kaczynski pleaded guilty to all federal charges relating to the bombings in 1998 and a California court sentenced him to four life terms plus 30 years in prison.

Described by the FBI as "a twisted genius who aspires to be the perfect, anonymous killer," Kaczynski was sent to ADX Florence, a "supermax" prison in Florence, Colorado. He was transferred to the North Carolina facility in 2021.

Kaczynski was born on May 22, 1942, in Chicago to working-class Polish-American parents. He was a bright, quiet child who graduated from high school aged 15 and won a scholarship to Harvard University where he studied mathematics.

"He wasn't exactly gregarious, but he was extremely articulate," Dale Eickelman, Kaczynski's friend in his early high school years, told the Daily Southtown newspaper in Chicago after Kaczynski's arrest.

"I remember Ted was very good at chemistry ... I remember Ted had the know-how of putting together things like batteries, wire leads, potassium nitrate and whatever, and creating explosions at the age of 12 and 13," Eickelman said.

While it is not known exactly what caused Kaczynski to channel his natural talent toward creating bombs, his participation in an infamous science experiment at Harvard may have been one reason.

There, psychologists subjected volunteer students, including Kaczynski, to hours of extreme verbal and emotional abuse as part of an attempt to measure how people handled stress. The experiment, now regarded as unethical, lasted three years.

Others have cited a period in Kaczynski's childhood when he spent long periods in isolation due to a severe outbreak of hives.

Kaczynski earned a doctoral degree in mathematics in 1967 at the University of Michigan before he got a job as an assistant mathematics professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

He resigned from his post and moved to Montana in 1971 where he bought land and built himself a tar-paper cabin near Lincoln, a town of under 1,000 people in winter. Kaczynski became upset by the destruction of the surrounding forests by development.

The cabin served as the main base for his homemade bombing campaign, which began in 1978 when he left a package for an engineering professor at Chicago's Northwestern University. The package exploded, lightly wounding a police officer. A graduate student at the college became the second victim when a small bomb went off in his hands, giving him superficial burns.

Kaczynski then took aim at a bigger target, placing a bomb in 1979 in the cargo hold of an American Airlines plane that gave off smoke during a domestic flight, forcing an emergency landing at Dulles International Airport near Washington.

That attack caught the attention of the FBI and agents would spend years trying to catch a bomber who left no clear demands and little forensic evidence. A six-year period between 1987 and 1993 in which no bombs were sent further confused investigators.

In 1980, Kaczynski sent a package bomb that exploded and injured United Airlines president Percy Wood at his Illinois home.

His first fatal victim was computer store owner Hugh Scrutton, 38, who died when a bomb loaded with nails and splinters went off in the parking lot of his store in Sacramento, California in 1985.

As his bombs became more sophisticated, Kaczynski also killed New Jersey advertising executive Thomas Mosser, who had worked on improving the public image of oil major Exxon, with a mail bomb in 1994.

He then murdered Gilbert Brent Murray, the head of a California timber industry lobbying group, with a mail bomb in 1995.

In all, the Unabomber set off 17 bombs, injuring around 25 people, some of whom lost vision, hearing or fingers.

Kaczynski triggered his own downfall in 1995 when he sent letters to media organisations demanding that they publish his 35,000-word essay about the perils of industrialisation.

"The Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race," the essay began. Kaczynski detailed how modernisation had destabilised society, subjected humans to indignities and "inflicted severe damage on the natural world".

Still short on leads, the FBI and then United States attorney general Janet Reno approved the publication of the manifesto in the Washington Post in the hope that someone would recognise it.

The move paid off when David recognised phrases and topics in the essay and told police he believed it was written by his brother.

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2023-06-11 03:18:00Z
2115382155

Man City's Champions League win, treble down to Pep Guardiola - ESPN - ESPN

ISTANBUL -- It was mission accomplished for Pep Guardiola on Saturday night at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium, and he did it with the big boss watching from the stands. By delivering Manchester City's first Champions League title, Guardiola has done precisely what he was hired to do by owner Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al Nahyan, but by achieving a treble at the same time, he has added the most incredible flourish.

Simply put: Manchester United are no longer the only English club to win the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League in the same season. Their 1999 triumph has now been matched by Guardiola's City after Rodri's 68th minute goal sealed a 1-0 win against Inter Milan.

Since arriving at the Etihad in 2016, Guardiola has won five Premier Leagues, masterminded a domestic treble in 2019 and guided City to 100 points -- the only team to do so in the Premier League era -- in the 2017-18 season. Despite all that success, the Champions League had been a tale of failure and near-misses, including losing the 2021 final against Chelsea in Porto.

Guardiola had even said before this game that his City side -- and his time at the club -- could not be regarded as legendary until they won the Champions League. But the wait is finally over, and Istanbul will always now mean just one thing to City and their supporters: ultimate glory.

"It was written in the stars," Guardiola said. "It belongs to us. I'm tired. Calm. Satisfied. It's so difficult to win it."

This was certainly City's night, but it is really Guardiola's achievement and his tearful relief at the final whistle told the story of the pressure he has been under to make the club European champions. Sheikh Mansour's presence at the game probably added to that stress. Despite pumping over £2 billion into the club since buying City in September 2008, he had only previously been to one game, a home win against Liverpool in 2010. The prospect of having to say "sorry, better luck next time" to the man who has bankrolled Guardiola's team-building project was one the former Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach probably didn't want to contemplate.

There's no doubt Guardiola has been indulged like a favourite child by Sheikh Mansour and the club's Abu Dhabi hierarchy, but he is the best manager in the world, and perhaps the best of all time -- he has been indulged for a reason. He has welcomed the players he's wanted like forward Erling Haaland, midfielders Rodri and Ilkay Gundogan, winger Jack Grealish, defender Ruben Dias and goalkeeper Ederson, who made two crucial saves from Romelu Lukaku and Robin Gosens as Inter chased a late equaliser, but he has made them all better.

So many clubs have spent fortunes on shiny new signings and failed to see their investment repaid with success. Just look at Chelsea over the past 12 months or United in the 10 years since Sir Alex Ferguson retired. Money doesn't guarantee success. It helps, of course, but no manager or coach in the game right now is able to demand -- or get -- so much from his players like Guardiola. Some, including John Stones, Kyle Walker and Manuel Akanji, have had their games elevated to a whole new level by the former Barca midfielder.

And yet the irony of their victory against Inter is that it was achieved without any of the flair or dominance that have come to mark Guardiola's City. In the end, Inter didn't meet the same fate as other elite teams like Liverpool, Arsenal and Real Madrid, all of whom were ruthlessly dismantled over the closing weeks of the season. The Serie A side were dogged and disciplined, with coach Simone Inzaghi's tactical plan clearly frustrating City.

Guardiola was pained on the touchline at times, especially when an Akanji mistake gifted a chance to Lautaro Martinez that was wasted by the Inter forward. (Ederson did well to narrow the angle and keep his body behind the ball, making the stop look easy.) The City manager also had his head in his hands when Lukaku and Gosens went close to equalising in the final minutes, which could have taken the game into extra time.

- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

Even though Inter made City fight for the victory, Guardiola's side found a way. Phil Foden, a first-half substitute for the injured Kevin De Bruyne, was the spark who upped the tempo, which led to Rodri scoring the game's only goal after Inter failed to prevent Bernardo Silva's cross from reaching the defensive midfielder near the edge of the box.

However, City were still unconvincing after taking the lead. It was probably their worst performance for months -- Inter also hit the crossbar via Federico Dimarco -- but they held on to win.

"This is a really proud moment for everyone at this football club," City captain Gundogan said. "We work so hard every single day and we have wanted to win this trophy for so long. The Champions League is a beautiful competition and we are all incredibly happy to have won. This team deserves the highest recognition, and winning the Champions League elevates us to the very top of the game.

"To win the treble is something amazing. It is the ultimate achievement for any club team, and we have done it. It reflects the quality we have in our squad, but it also shows how dedicated we are."

play

1:32

Michallik on Man City's UCL win: Sometimes you have to grind it out

Janusz Michallik discusses how Manchester City adjusted in the game after Kevin De Bruyne's injury.

It is a triumph that also means Guardiola can now look Sheikh Mansour in the eye and say he's done everything asked of him and more. His City side have consistently been the best in England, and now they are definitively the best in Europe. They have broken records galore and even taken United's proudest claim of being the only treble winner in England. United are now not even the only treble winner in their own city.

All of that is down to Guardiola. While he remains at the Etihad, anything is possible and City can now target other milestones. For example, no team has won four successive English titles, but City can do that next season. No English club has retained the European Cup since Liverpool in 1978, another mark City could match in 2023-24.

Guardiola has taken City to the sport's highest possible peak and they don't look like leaving it anytime soon.

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2023-06-11 00:04:32Z
2112198078

Sabtu, 10 Juni 2023

I worried about leaving my daughters for 7 weeks. Here's why I went ahead. - CNA

SINGAPORE: Tam Wai Jia was clearing emails one Saturday afternoon in October 2021 when a new message came in.

It was from her mentor, a professor at the National University of Singapore’s Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, where she worked. It was a call for humanitarian assistance for the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organisation (WHO).

“Wanna go?” the professor had written.

For Tam, 35, it was an opportunity to fulfil a long-buried childhood dream. But as she stared at the email, her first response was, simply, “no”.

“This is not for me,” she remembers telling herself. “It’s for other people who are free and single and don’t have to be a mom to two young kids.”

Tam is a humanitarian doctor and speaker who has written and illustrated several children’s books. She also runs an international non-profit, Kitesong Global, which aims to inspire people to realise their dreams through tools such as storytelling and partnerships with grassroots organisations.

But the heart of her identity, she says, is that of a mother.

Tam, whose two daughters Sarah-Faith and Esther-Praise were aged four and two at the time, tucked the email aside. But for weeks, it continued to bug her.

“I think deep down inside … a part of me was disappointed because this was my dream,” she said.

Finally, she confided in her husband, Cliff, a stay-at-home dad. She was not prepared for his response. “Wai Jia, this is what you’ve been training for your entire life,” he told her.

“You just have to go.”

In the fifth episode of the podcast Imperfect by CNA Insider, Tam talks about how she grappled with guilt and realised she’d made the right decision to spend seven weeks as a risk communication and community engagement consultant in Eswatini, a land-locked kingdom that is one of the smallest countries in Africa.

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2023-06-10 22:00:00Z
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Zelenskyy says Ukraine counteroffensive has begun as Trudeau visits Kyiv - CNA

"DIRECT CONSEQUENCE"

Trudeau denounced Russia's role in the destruction of the Russian-controlled Kakhovka dam in southern Ukraine on Tuesday.

The flooding from the breached dam has forced thousands to flee their homes and sparked fears of humanitarian and environmental disasters.

Ukraine accuses Russia of blowing up the dam, while Moscow says Kyiv fired on it.

Pledging 10 million Canadian dollars (US$7.5 million) in new funding for flood relief, Trudeau said the dam's destruction was the "direct consequence" of Russia's invasion.

"There is absolutely no doubt in our minds that the destruction of the dam was a direct consequence of Russia's decision to invade a peaceful neighbour," Trudeau said.

He added he was certain that Moscow would be held accountable for its actions in Ukraine.

"Russia's war in Ukraine has devastated infrastructure, has destroyed families and taken lives and is causing economic, food, energy shortages around the world. Russia is responsible and will be held to account."

PILOT TRAINING

The Canadian leader said he would provide 500 million Canadian dollars in new funding for military assistance to Ukraine.

He also pledged Canada would be part of the multinational efforts to train Ukraine's fighter pilots.

Ottawa will also provide 10,000 ammunition rounds and 288 AIM-7 missiles to be repurposed in the United States and used in air defence systems.

Earlier in the day Trudeau placed flowers by a wall of remembrance displaying the faces of soldiers killed in combat while a military orchestra played.

He also visited an open-air exhibition featuring destroyed Russian military vehicles.

Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Oleksandr Polishchuk handed Trudeau a box that he said held shrapnel from a rocket that fell on the Black Sea port city of Odesa.

He said the gift was intended to remind Trudeau of Ukraine's suffering from Russian strikes.

Three people were killed on early Saturday in a fire sparked by debris from shot-down Russian drones in the Odesa region.

A group of Ukrainian soldiers who had received training in Canada spoke with Trudeau.

One of them, Colonel Petro Ostapchuk, told reporters the troops received specialised training for snipers, engineers and young commanders.

"It's a great privilege to meet the prime minister," he said.

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2023-06-10 15:51:00Z
2103523462

As Singapore heads into dangerous times, SAF must be strong and credible: DPM Wong - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - As the country adjusts to a new era of more dangerous and troubled times, Singapore must ensure a strong and credible armed forces, said Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong on Saturday.

The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) must be one that can give weight to Singapore’s voice on the international stage, enable the nation to stand firm in defence of its interests, and keep the nation safe and secure, he added.

Globally, there is great change and uncertainty with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the tense US-China relationship as well as other threats such as terrorism, violent extremism and cyber attacks, said Mr Wong at an Officer Cadet Commissioning Parade at the Safti Military Institute in Jurong, where he was the reviewing officer.

“Here in Asia, flashpoints like Taiwan and the South China Sea have become more dangerous and the risks of an accident or miscalculation have increased significantly.”

He noted that Asia has enjoyed relative peace and stability for nearly 50 years since the end of the Vietnam War, and it may be hard for us to imagine how things can be different.

“But as Europe’s experience shows, things can easily go wrong – conflict can break out, and war in Asia is a scenario that we cannot rule out,” said Mr Wong.

He noted: “We are entering a world where countries think less about mutual benefit and more about their own national security. We must, therefore, be prepared for more shocks that can severely disrupt the world and our region, and surely Singapore.”

He said Singapore will continue to build a network of friends to advance shared interests and strengthen its partnerships with all the major powers to keep them engaged in the region. “We will strive to preserve our sovereignty and the right to determine our own future, as we have done since our independence.”

The parade on Saturday marked the completion of 38 weeks of rigorous training at the Officer Cadet School (OCS).

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2023-06-10 12:30:00Z
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